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PLEASE NOTE: If you do not see a GRAPHIC IMAGE of a family tree here but are seeing this text instead then it is most probably because the web server is not correctly configured to serve svg pages correctly. see http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/SVG:Server_Configuration for information on how to correctly configure a web server for svg files. ? ~1266 Joan ~1292 Roger Rohaut ~1296 Eleanor Lovell ~1109 Thomas Waleries ~1114 Walleries Roger III de Huntingfield 1584 - 1661 Joanna Kember 77 77 Some records show her surname as "Thember" 1560 William Reynolds "William Reynolds, of (I), b. 1560 Kent County, England, m. Esth Esther Ruth She was said to have been born in Stamford, Fairfield, CT. ~1585 - 1648 Dionis 63 63 "Principal Registry of the Bishop of Exeter, Devonshire, England 0816 - UNKNOWN Flotharius Roger Monant 20 Feb 1633/1634 - 1719 Nathaniel Starbuck 20 Feb 1644/1645 - 1717 Mary Coffin Rev. Mary Coffin was born February 20, 1644/45 in Haverh Bona Fitz Ellis Nathaniel Barnard ~1226 - >1230 Herbert Quatremain 4 4 ~1194 - 1200 Herbert Quatremain 6 6 Of North Weston and Ascot, Oxfordshire.  Holdings known as Quatremain Manor. ~1198 Lecia Knyvet Lecia or Lettice ~1168 Herbert Quatremain 1637 - ~1714 Henry I Watkins 77 77 Source:  The Curd Family in America, The Tuttle Publishing Co.

Henry Watkins of Henrico Co., Va, presumably the immigrant ancestor was b. in 1638.  He was a Quaker and member of the Society of Friends, a fact that caused him at times to clash with the ruling authorities in Virginia.  In the list of heads of families in Henrico County, 1679, he is listed as head of family with three tithables and shown as living in the vicinity of Turkey Island.  In 1679 he received a patent for 170 acres of land on the north side of James River in Henrico Co. adjoining land of John Lewis, Mr. Cocke, and Mr. Beauchamp, and touching the 'three runs' of Turkey Island Creek (patent book 7, p. 17).  In July 1690 he purchased of Lyonel Morris 360 acres of land in varina parish, Henrico Co., on the south side of Chickahominy Swamp, and in October of the same year he patented 60 acres of land "adjoining his own land and touching a run of Turkey Island Creek."  In 1699 he subscribed 500 pounds of tobacco towards building the Friends meetinghouse at Curls and in 1703 he paid 50 pounds of tobacco towards finishing the building.  He was the father of at least seven childred and in 1692 deeded his land in Henrico to his five sons. To William, Joseph and Edward he deeded each 120 acres of land on the south side of Chickahominy Swamp, to Henry the 'track of land on which his father then lived" acreage not given, and to Thomas 200 acres on the 'three runs.'  We quote from William Clayton Torrence, "Beginnings of the Families of Henrico," as follows: One of the most interesting families in Virginia from the point of view of economic, social and political development is the distinguished family of which Henry Watkins is the immigrant ancestor.

1704 Quit Rents of Virginia lists Henry Sr. with 100 acres in Henrico County.

Source: Henry Watkins of Henrico County, Jane Allen 1985. That Henry Watkins was the son of Henry, born 1585 in Wales, remains to be proved.  However, in 1634/35 there was a deed in which John Cawsey of Charles City County conveyed to Walter Aston acreage in Charles City near Shirly Hundred "bordering south upon a Creeke called Henry Watkins, his Creeke."  A Henry Watkins, therefore, lived not more than a few miles from the home in 1679 of Henry, born 1637/8.

Henry Watkins was a small but hard working farmer.  As a member of the Society of Friends, or Quakers, he clashed with the authorities.

In 1660 the Virginia Assembly had passed a strict law against Quakers. They were described as: ... an unreasonable and turbulent sort of people, who daily gather together unlawful assemblies of people, teaching lies, miracles, false visions, prophecies, and doctrines teneing to disturb the peace, disorganize Society and destroy the peace, disorganize Society and destroy all laws, and government, and religion.

In June, 1684, the Courts of Henrico refused his petition for a remission of fines imposed upon him "he not appearing himself to supplicate this Court but (as ye Court Conceives) continuing still in his Quakerism."

His daughter Elizabeth also held his loyalty to his faith.  At the age of 16 in April, 1685, she refused "for conscience sake" to swear to a deposition she had made.  The Henrico County Court ordered her imprisonment.  In June she was again brought to the bar and "still persisting in ye same obstinacy as she pretends out of conscience sake and seconding her request the court have out of their clemency in consideration of her young years remiteted her offence and releast her of her confinement."

On 21 January 1691/2, Henry Watkins conveyed 120 acres each to his sons Edward, William, Joseph, Henry, and Thomas near the Chickahominy.  He also on 25 Janurary 1691/2 made a gift of land "I now live on" to Henry Watkins and 200 acres to Thomas Watkins.

Henry made his will in November 1714, proved 7 February 1715, Henrico County, Virginia.

Jane Allen has different birthdates for nearly all of the children.  She has:
    Edward
    Henry      c.1660
    Mary                (JA has this Mary married to Nicholas Hutchins.)
    William    c.1667
    Elizabeth  c.1669
    Rachel     c.1670   (Rachel is not included in the Curd text above.)
    Thomas     c.1680

Here is an interesting message that contains some conflicting, but interesting information:

Henry II Watkins, [1637-abt 1710] s/o Henry I Watkins and Alice Moslin.  He m 1- Rachel Griffin abt 1658 and had 8 ch.  He married 2nd Katherine  Pride abt 1680 and perhaps the last 2 children I have for 1st marriage  are Katherine Pride's.  Henry was a Quaker and an ancestor of Henry  Clay.
0790 - 0850 Frotmund 60 60 1660 - 1714 Henry II Watkins 54 54 Henry was a member of the House of Burgesses.

Early Virginia Families Along the James River, Volume I, Foley, 1974, indicates Henry Wadkins, 60 acs. Henrico Co., in Varina Par., N. side of James Riv., 23 Oct. 1690, p. 122 (Patent book #8).  Adj. his own, Tho. Wales, and land of Madam Bland, on run of Turkey Island Cr.  Import of 2 pers:  Robert. Fellows, Jno. Trotman.
Source: Henry Watkins of Henrico County, Jane Allen 1985.  He was a sometime member of the House of Burgesses.  His will "Wadkins" was proved 7 Feb 1715. The order of children in this text is:John, Benjamin, Joseph, Henry, Stephen, and Mary.  Only Mary had a birthdate (1682).

Virgina Mag. of Hist. & Biog., Vol. 25, pp. 52-58, an article by William Clayton Torrence begins "One of the most interesting families in Virginia
from the point of view of economic, social and political development is the distin- guished Watkins family."  He gives some of the records of the first Henry Watkins, and then says "His life was to all appearances a rather hard one.  As a member of the Society of Friends, or Quakers, he naturally clashed with the authorities."  Mr. Torrence went on to enumerate several clashes that Henry had with the law and said
he also encountered rebuke from his "brethern in the faith."  He said further "The name of Watkins in the South has ever been synonymous with strength of character, and mental ability, and it is interwoven with the fabric of her spiritual and material life.  The church, the school, the state all bear the impress of this family's influence."

Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 44, p. 168, says "The Watkins genealogy includes many men and women of prominence, e.g., George Walton, signer of the Declaration of Independence from Georgia, Benjamin Watkins Leigh, U.S. Senator from Virginia, and Madame Octavia Walton Le Vert, the writer."
1682 - 1736 Mary Watkins 54 54 ~1390 Joan Basset Joan, daughter and heir of Thomas Basset, of Brailsford, Derbys.[Burke's Peerage] 1682 - 1735 Mary Trent 53 53 1842 - 1919 Quintella Paine 77 77 William Payne, Quintilla's brother was driving a team of horses on the Stalcup hill near Park , Indiana when the horses ran away. His mother Elizabeth (Betsy) was with him and she jumped out and hit her head on a stone and was killed.  Quintilla's brother John moved to Missouri . Her sister Rebecca married William May and moved to Missouri. Information from family Bible and interviews with maternal grandparents in 1972. 1755 - 1832 Jane Brasewell 77 77 Brassewell /or/ Brasswell,  The spelling has been diff. in records viewed. 1876 Rosetta King 1645 - 1729 Nicholas Hutchins 84 84 Early Virginia Families Along the James River, Volume I, Foley, 1974, indicates Nicholas Hutchins, 230 acres, Hernico Co., on N. side of James Riv., on W. side of 4 Mi. Cr. adj. Henry Pe w, and Mr. John Woodson, 25 Apr. 1702, p. 436 (of Patent book #9).  Trans. of 5 pers.*  Note:  5 rights paid for to Wm. B yrd, Esqr., Auditor. The April 1705 Perfect Roll of all the Lands held of her Majisie in Henrico County indicated Nicholas Hutchins had 240 acres. 1702/1703 - 1773 George Brandon Rowan County, North Carolina Will Abstracts, Vol. I; page 1, Line: A:7, : George Brandon. 1772, Wife: Marian, Sons: John, George, Abraham, Christopher,. Daugh: Mary McGuire, Sidney Withers,. Exrs: Wife Marian, Son John,. Witns: Samuel Stephenson, John Gram, Hugh Grimes

John Brandon Sex: M, Birth: 1662 in England, Death: in Pennsylvania  John Brandon, was a passenger on the ship "Patience and Judith" arriving from London on June 30, 1716.

Marriage 1 Mary Armstrong b: ABT 1664 in London, England,  Married: ABT 1687

Children

   1. John Brandon , Jr. b: ABT 1691 in London, England
   2. Thomas Brandon b: 1686 in London
   3. James Brandon b: 1693 in Huntington, Adams Co., Pennsylvavia
   4. George Brandon , Sr. b: 1702 in Of Monaghan, York, Pa
   5. William Brandon , Sr. b: 1688 in Nottingham, England

Parents of George Brandon Sr:  John Brandon Birth: 1662 in England Death: in Pennsylvania
1802 - 1886 Quintilly Hutchins 83 83 Family Bible and Grandmother both show that Q. married 1st cousin George C. Brandon at or around the age of 13.  They  then  migrated from N.C. to Indiana in 1828. In 1850 cens. Q is shown as a widow at age 49 with, Ellis Brandon age 20, Jennetta Brandon age 14, and Elijah Brand on age 10,still living at home. My records show Q. had 8 children with G.C.Brandon. 4 sons/ 4 daughters. 0762 - UNKNOWN Frodaldus Count of Brittany 15/16 Jul 1869 - 1943 John Wesley Troy John met Rosetta on a farm near Arthur, Illinois where he worked as a hired man on the farm of Roe Murphy, and she was helping in the home. They married soon therafter.

IGI Birth index: Number: 5012680 Sheet: 40 Source Call No.: 1553549 Type: Film, John Wesley Troy was born on July 15, 1869 in Bethel Twp, Clark, Ohio to a Martha Adams, no father listed. John W. Troy died on June 2, 1943.
IGI Marriage Index, Batch No.: M533966 Dates: 1878 - 1885 Source Call No.: 1312202 Type: Film  JOHN W. TROY Male Event(s): Birth: Ohio Parents: Father: JAMES H. TROY Mother: MARTHA ADAMS Marriages: Spouse: ROSETTA  ADAMS  Rosetta Adams was born in Indiana, parents listed as James M. King and Quintella King. Marriage: 11 AUG 1895 , Douglas, Illinois Husband Age at Marriage: 26 Wife Age at Marriage: 19
~1059 William de Molyneux D. 1869 Dale Watson Sr. John Brandon From: Index to Marriage Record of Greene Co. Indiana, 1821-1920, Vol 1. D. 1806/1807 Christopher Brandon Rowan County, North Carolina Will Abstracts, Vol. I; page 98, Line: F:7,: Christopher Brandon, Nov. 26, 1806/7.
Wife: Sarah. Son: George Brandon. Daughter: Sibbalen Tenneson. Noted: John Dickey. Exr: Wife Sarah Brandon.
Witns: Isaac Hudson and George Brandon, son.
1619 Nicholas? Hutchins 1692 - 1784 William Paine 91 91 1692 - 1721 Tabitha Waite 29 29 1565 - 1648 William Paine 82 82 William Paine, son of Anthony, was baptized at St. Mary’s Church, Dec 2, 1565. His wife was living April 20, 1606. They lived at Nowton, a Parish of St. Edmunds Bury, one of the shires an principals town of Suffolk County, St. Mary’s Church being one of the church of Nowtown. By the will of his father he was devisee of a part of his estate. The public records, as collected by the author of the “Visitation of Suffolk”, show that “William Paine sometimes Lord of the Manor (Nowton) was buried Nov. 21, 1648, and that his wife was buried April 29, 1648. He must thus have been at the time of his death of the age of 83 years. The children of William Paine now spoken of were as follows, besides Anne above mentioned:

William Paine b. in 1598-9
Robert, b. in 1601= ? Miss Whiting See: pg 1117, Genealogical Glen. Eng.
Elizabeth, who married William Hammond
Dorothy, who married Simon Eyer
Phebe, who married John Page

These all came to America and resided here during the remainder of their lives, being all of them active and intelligent citizens, who took most important parts in the work of the early colonists of New England.
1664 - 1741 William Paine 77 77 0735 - UNKNOWN Froamidus Count of Brittany ~1735 Alice Stanley 1660 Mary Kennon 1738 - 1825 John Hutchins 87 87 I have a copy of John's will from Surry Co. N. Carolina. He calls his dau.Quintilly, in the will dated 18 Sept. 1824.  The original will is in the N.C. State Archives in Raleigh, N.C.  The  will names 16 children.
1790 CENSUS SURRY CO., NC.
1800 CENSUS SURRY CO., NC.
1810 CENSUS SURRY CO., NC.
1820 CENSUS SURRY CO., NC.
Sources
1]1789 JOHN SLAVEN & ELIZABETH TO JOHN HUTCHIN, 130 ACRES BY SURVEY, 9
JUNE 1780, ON BLACK CREEK OF GREENBRIER RIVER, CORNER JACOB WARRICK.
(AGUSTA CO., DEED BOOK NO. 26, PP 328, 587)
2]OCT 20, 1788 JAMES REVIS & WIFE MARY TO JOHN HUTCHENS FOR 700 POUNDS, 378
ACRES ON THE NORTH FORK OF DEEP CREEK ADJOINING SIMON GROSS, FREDERICK
SHORES EPRING BRANCH. WITNESSED BY JOHN JOHNSON, JOHN REAVIS, EDWARD
CLANTON. (SURRY CO., NC, DEEDS 1771-1795 BK D:413)
3]NOV. 3, 1784 NC GRANT TO JOHN HUTCHENS FOR 100 ACRES SURRY CO., (BOTH OF
THESE GRANTS, THE SAME DAY, ARE FROM SURY CO., NC, DEEDS 1771-1795)
4]NOV 3. 1784 NC GRANT TO JOHN HUTCHINS FOR 350 ACRES ON BOTH SIDES MIDDLE
FORK BLEWS (BELEWS?) CREEK ADJOINING VANDERPOOL, ROBERT DRENON, JOHN
BRADLY AND CONDITIONAL LINE BETWEEN LINVILLE AND HUTCHINGS. BK C:21
5]DEED OF MATTHEW RIDDLE TO JOHN HUTCHINS, BOTH OF GOOCHLAND CO., IN
CONSIDERATION OF 89 POUNDS, 50 ACRES ADJOINING PHILIP RYAN, JOHN JOHNSON
AND JOHN HUTCHINS. WITNESSED BY ANTHANASIUS BARNETT, JESSE BLACKWELL,
AND JANE BARNETT.
6]OCT 12, 1768 WILLIAM FORD DEEDED TO JOHN HUTCHINGS, BOTH OF GOOCHLAND
CO., FOR THE CONSIDERATION OF 10 SHILLINGS, 6 ACRES OF LAND OF THOMAS
FORD, THE SAID HUTCHINS ET AL. WITNESSED BY JAMES JOHNSON, SARAH
HARDING, AND ANDERSON PEERS. (GOOCHLAND CO. DEED BOOK 9, PG 178-9)
1680 Elizabeth Tiffany D. 1862 Rebecca Jane Adams 1792 - <1850 George Calveness Brandon 58 58 George migrated from North Carolina to Indiana in 1828 and married a first cousin Quintilla who was only 13 years old. Source: Family Bible. 1667 - 1722 Ruth Grover 55 55 1801 - 1872 Williams Paine 71 71 1850 cens. Greene County, Indiana,  William[s] Payne (Paine) b. 1801,  age 50, from N.C.  Married to Elisabeth Brandon age 33,  also from N.C.  Ann is shown on cen. of 21 Aug. 1850 as being from N.C. while the rest of the children are shown as being born in Indiana. Dau. Ann Payne (Paine)  age 21,  1850, Birth date would be 1829.  William Payne married 1st Nancy Grover Nov. 23, 1816. Nancy died Aug. 4, 1830 one year after the birth of Laura Ann Payne. William[s] Paine then married 2nd Elizabeth Brandon b. Aug. 6, 1817 d. Oct. 1880 and moved to Greene County, Indiana. ~0887 - ~0950 Hywel ap Cadell of Wales 63 63 pg 435, WEurtz 'Magna Charta" ~0786 - 0873 Sigurd II Ragnarsson of denmark 87 87 1040 Griffith ap Llewllyn North Wales 1836 - 1891 James Marshall King 55 55 1563 - 1645 Agnes Ann Neves 82 82 Living April 20, 1606.  See Genealogical Gleanings p. 581- 582 and 1133 [index p.1565] living April 20, 1606.
Elizabeth Sparrow could be the wife of William.
Elizabeth Walton 1715 - 1755 Marian Mary Ann Armstrong 40 40 Aka: Mary Ann Armstrong. Married 1725-8 in Scotland as sited in the book " The Brandon, Hudspeth, Reavis and Steelman Book"  by Lewis Shore Brumfield, c 199, and is stated therein to be the daughter of James Armstrong. ~1000 - 1060 Aremburge of Vergy 60 60 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1220 John de Vipont Hereditary sheriff of Westmorland Elizabeth Sweetsir 2nd wife. D. 1807 Joel Paine Joel Paine, son of Edward married Miss. Azubah Williams of Mansfield, and died 1807 having 8 children: Peddy, Roxalina, Betsey married to William Story, Polly, Hosea born 1792 died 1812 aged 21, WILLIAM[s], Joel Jr., Nelson. D. 1830 Nancy Grover 1632 John Paine Came to America at age 3, and lived at Watertown and Ipswich, New England. 1042 - UNKNOWN Flaald (Fledaldus) Baron of St. Florent Flaad or Fleance, after his father's death, sought protection of Griffithap Llewllyn, Prince of North Wales, and abused his confidence by winningthe affections of his daughter, the Princess Gwenta, who, after a privatemarriage, though history fails to record one, gave birth to a son, whomall legends agree in naming Alan, but she and her lover were put to deathby her irate father. 1678 - 1734 Richard Cockes Cox 56 56 Signed some of his correspondence  as "Cockes" 1620 - 1696 John Cox 76 76 1641 Sarah Parker Source: P. 355, The Pioneers of Massachusetts. By:  Pope ~1578 John Cox Margaret Pultney D. 1915 Christopher Horn James Watkins Research needed:
James Watkins b. ?, Wales, Great Britain, Came to the US aboard the PHOENIX with Captain John Smith in 1608.  James had a son named Henry Watkins b. 1585, Wales, Great Britain; and Henry was the father of the Henry Watkins. James Watkins apparently had three sons who came to America. Henry's brother's Peregrin and Daniel, had come to Accomack County in 1621, Peregrin aboard the GEORGE.  He was 20 years of age (his muster of James City in 1624); 'Perregrim Watkinses, age 24, in the GEORGE, 1621.'  Daniel came aboard the CHARLES to James City County, Virginia."
1642 Katherine Pride KATHERINE WATKINS' COURT CASE, 1681. Henrico County Deed Book, 1677-1692, 192-195

   The examination of Katherine Watkins, the wife of Henry Watkins of henrico County in Virginia had and taken this 13 of September 1681 before us William Byrd and John Farrar two of his Majesties Justices  of the County aforesaid as followeth (vizt.)
  
The said Katherine aforesaid on her Oath and examination deposeth, That on fryday being in the Month of August aboute five weeks since,  the said Katherine mett with John Long (A Mulatto Belonging to Capt.  Thomas Cocke) at or neare the pyney slash betweene the aforesaid  Cokes and Henry Watkins house, and at the same tyme and place, the  said John threw the said Katherine downe (He starting from behind a  tree) and stopped her Mouth with a handkerchief, and tooke up the  said Katherines Coates [i.e., petticoats], and putt his yard into her  and ravished her; Upon which she the said Katherine Cryed out (as she  deposeth) and afterwards (being rexuced by another Negroe of the said  Cockes named Jack White) she departed home, and the said John  departed to his Masters likewise, or that way; after which abuse she  the said Katherine declares that her husband, inclinable to the  Quakers, and therefore would not prosecute, and she being sicke and  her Children likewise, she therefore did not make her complaint  before she went to Lt. Col. Farrass, which was yesterday, morning,  and this day in the morning she went to William Randolphs' and found  him not at home.  But at night met with the gentlemen Justices  aforesaid at the house of the aforesaid Cocke in Henrico County in  Virginia aforeaid before whom she hath made this complaint upon  oath . . ....
  
The deposition of John Aust aged 32 yeares or thereabouts  Deposeth, that on fryday being the twelvth of August or thereabouts  he came to the house of Mr. Thomas Cocke, and soe went into his  Orchard where his servants were a cutting downe weeds, whoe asked the  deponent to stay and drinke, soe the deponent stayed and dranke syder  with them, and Jacke a Mulatto of the said Thomas Cocke went in to  draw syder, and he stay'd something long whereupon the deponent  followed him and coming to the doore where the syder was, heard  Katherine the wife of henry Watkins say (Lord) Jacke what makes thee  refreaine our house that you come not oftner, for come when thou wilt  thou shalt be as well come as any of My owne Children, and soe she  tooke him aobut the necke and Kissed him, and Jacke went out and  drawed Syder, and she said Jack wilt thout not drinke to me, who sayd  yes if you will goe out where our Cupp is, and a little after she  came out, where the said Thomas Cockes negroes were a drinking and  there dranke cupp for cupp with them (as others there did) and as she  sett Negroe dirke passing by her she tooke up the taile of his shirt  (saying) Dirke thou wilt have a good long thing, and soe did several tymes as he past by her; after this she went into the roome where the  syder was and then came out agine, and between the two houses she  mett Mulatto Jacke a going to draw more syder and putt her hand on  his codpiece, at which he smil'd, and went on his way and drew syder  and she came againe into the company but stay'd not long but went out  to drinking with two of the said Thomas Cockes Negroes by the garden  pale, And a while after she tooke Mingoe one of the said Cocke's  Negroes about the Necke and fling on the bedd and Kissed him and putt  her hand into his Codpeice, Awhile after Mulatto Jacke went into the  Fish roome and she followed him, but what they did there this  deponent knoweth not for it being near night this deponent left her  and the Negroes together, (He thinking her to be much in drinke) and  soe this deponent went home about one houre by sunn . . .

Henry Watkins "In 1679  he received a patent for 170 acres of land on the north side of James  River in Henrico Co.  adjoining land of John Lewis, MR. COCKE, and Mr.  Beauchamp, and touching the 'three runs' of Turkey Island Creek."    So, (Capt. Thomas) Cocke, was indeed a neighbor, and apparently  the owner of the slaves involved in this case with Katherine Watkins.
D. 1672/1673 Richard Parker Merchant, Boston, 1639. Will probated 21 Feb. 1672/3. Will dated 3 Jan. 1672/3. Margery Ash 0986 - UNKNOWN Fratmaldus the Seneschal Thomas Pultney The ancestor of William Pultney, Earl of Bath, Minister of War and Premier of England in the early part of the last century. <1599 - <1656 William Cox 57 57 Margaret Halce Alice Moslin 1662 John Brandon John Brandon was a passenger on the ship " Patience and Judith" from London on June 30. 1716

John Brandon  Sex: M Birth: 1662 in England Death: in Pennsylvania John Brandon  was a passenger on the ship "Patience and Judith" arriving from Ireland via London on June 30, 1716. Marriage 1 Mary Armstrong b:  1664 in London, England,  Married:1686

Children :
   1. Thomas Brandon b: 1686 in London, England
   2. William Brandon , Sr. b: 1688 in Nottingham?, England
   3. John Brandon , Jr. b: ABT 1691 in London, England
   4. James Brandon b: 1693 in Huntington, Adams Co., Pennsylvavia
   5. George Brandon , Sr. b: 1702 in Of Monaghan, York, Pennsylvavia

DISTRICT OF BOSTON - PORT OF BOSTON
Vessells entered in ye month of June 1716
John Osborn ye Ship Patience & Judith from London

1 Adam    Woods               Woolcomber
2 Andrew  Forbes              Mercht.*
3 Mark    Hading              Joiner and his wife
4 Patrick Ogilve              Mercht.
5 Josh*[John]   Brandon     servant to Wm Allen
6 Thos.*  Tims                Mercht.
7 Thos*   Dresser             Marriner
8 John    Kimball             Marriner
9 Redmon  Johnin              Marriner
10 James   Hyde                Marriner
11 Thos*   Sherbon             Marriner
12 Thos*   Wincall             Marriner
13 John    Fitygerrill         Marriner
14 Thos*   Foster              Marriner
15 Josh*   Green               Marriner
16 Story   King                Marriner
17 William Symonds             Marriner

Passangers of the "Patience and Judith": From Ireland via London, England as shown from the records of the Irish Ships records.
John Fitzgerald
Patrick Ogilvie
John Brandon
1585 Henry Watkins  "Henry Watkins of Henrico City" by J M Allen, 1985: Gateway Press.
1-Henry Watkins [1585-?}  2-Henry Watkins [1637/8-c1714/5] m Katherine Pride  3-Edward Watkins [c1665-c1771]  4-John Watkins [c1710-1765] m Phoebe Hancock  5-Henry Watkins [1758-1829] m Elizabeth Hudson Clay>>  6-John Watkins [1785-1845] m Catherine T Milton  7-Thomas Bodley Watkins [1835-1903] m Annie Bell McMurty  8-Jane Worley Watkins [1885-1964] m George Marcus Allen. Henry I Watkins was overseer of Dale Plantation.  He had brothers Peregrin and Daniel.
Issue:  1-John who lived in Lower Norfollk  2-Lewis b 1640 lived in Henrico and descendants in New Kent  3-Thomas was of Mattiponi R, King Wm Co  4-Henry II [1637/8-1714/5] m Katherine Pride c 1658>> Issue of Henry II 1-Edward  2-Henry III [1660-Nov 1714/5 , Mary Crisp
     issue: 1-John m Elizabeth Sullivant or Daniels
              He died 1743-I need information on this family
            2-Benjamin m Jane Watkins
            3-Joseph m Mary Farrar
            4-Henry IV
            5-Stephen [d 1754+] m Judith Trabue
            6-Mary [1682]  3-Mary m 1701 Nickolas Hutchins>  4-William [1667] m Elizabeth ?  5-Elizabeth [c1669] m 1692 John Bottemly  6-Rachel [c1670] m Robert Woodson-his 2nd wife  7-Thomas of Swift Creek [1680-1760] m Elizabeth Pride 8-Joseph d c1725

This early presence in Virginia of Henry I is further supported by "The Complete Book of Emigrants 1607-1660" by Peter wilson Coldham.  On page 46, the text indicated that on 28 February 1624, a Henry Watkins signed a report from the Governor and Council of Virginia at James City to the king rebutting the accusations against the plantations made by Captain Nathaniel Butler, Six thousand, not ten thousand, persons have been transported to Virginia who, for the most part, were wasted by the cruelty of Sir Thomas Smyth's government.  Henry Wattkins, Peregree Wattkins, and Daniell Wattkins were living (in 1624) at the Eastern Shore.

According to Jane Allen's text "Henry Watkins of Henrico County", Henry Watkins was in Accomack County, Virginia, before 1621 and settled on the Eastern Shore.  Henry was the overseer of the Dale Plantation.  Sir Thomas Dale had died in 1619 and Henry made a claim against his estate for six barrels of corn.
Henry Watkins of the Old Plantation was one of the first two Burgesses to represent the Eastern Shore at the 1623 Assembly.  He was one of the listed burgesses on laws and orders concluded by the General Assembly 5 Marcy 1623/24.
On 3 July 1624 he was one of the signers of a petition of the Governor and Assembly of Virginia to the King as to the true state of the plantation.
In 1625 John Taylor made a disposition about a transaction which happened when Henry Watkins had been oversser for Lady Dale "about the tyme of our Lord 1620".
1612 Elizabeth Hutchens Some records say she might have been born in:  Henrico, Virginia. Further research will prove or dis-prove this. It is more likely she was born in England. ~1584 Robert Hutchens Reasearch shall prove or disprove the birthplace of R. Hutchens. Unknown William Paine 1104 Patrick deCarducis Patrick de Carducis or Chaworth, whose ancestors came out of Brittaine inFrance about the latter end of King William the Conqueror's reign. Thename was vulgarly called Chaworth, and they were natives of LittleBrittany. He made a grant of certain mills in Gloucester to the monks ofSt. Peter's Abbey. He had Paganus, Robert, who was called a knight in thetime of Henry I, Willi'us, and a younger son, Patrick de Carducis orChaworth. 1787 - 1876 Azubah Williams 88 88 1724 - 1784 Edward Paine 59 59 ~1175 - 1210 William IV deBraose 35 35 The Younge // William did not accompany King Richard on Crusade but fought with KingJohn against Philip in Normandy (1203/4).  King John demanded William asa hostage for his father's loyalty in 1208.  His mother Maud refused andthe fled to Ireland.  In 1210 John prepared an expedition to Ireland.Maud and William escaped Ireland, but were apprehended in Scotland.William the father was in Wales at the time.  It is believed that Maudand William were starved to death at Windsor Castle (Some say Corfe).
William, who perished by starvation with his mother at Windsor m. Maud,dau. of the Earl of Clare, with whom he had the town of Buckingham, infrank marriage, and left a son, John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,England, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]
1817 - 1880 Elizabeth Brandon 63 63 Aka: Betsy 1707 - 1792 Strangeman Hutchins 85 85 A Quaker family. I have a copy of his will dated 29th day of the 11th month,1791.Recorded Jul y 1792. His name is spelled in this will as :  " Hutchens ".Some records show his name as: Hutchins /or/ Hutchings. Death: Deep River MM: died Deep Creek 2-10-1792 in 85 years. 1662 - ~1716 Mary Crispe 54 54 Source: "Henry Watkins of Henrico County", Jane Allen 1985.  Her second husband was Edward Mosby.
"Some Watkins Families" by John Hale Statesman,  pg 29, father Thomas Crispe, Arrived in VA Dec 1621 on the ship: "Warwicke"

Will of Marrion Barker, 1635 Page 1159, Waters Gen. Glns England // Names Thomas Crispe and his Daughter Mary Crispe.
1713 - 1816 Elizabeth Cox 103 103 Sidney Mc Guire 1850 James H. Troy IGI Index records: James Troy;   Male  Birth Year  1850,   Birthplace:  Ireland,  Age  30,  Occupation stated to be:  Pudler In Mill,  Marital Status  M Race W, Head of Household:  James Troy     Relation Self   Father's Birthplace: Ireland,   Mother's Birthplace: Ireland. Source Information: Census Place  2nd Ward, Youngstown, Mahoning, Ohio. Martha Adams 0965 - 1030 Kenneth Thane of Lochaber 65 65 ~1720 - Between 1803-1810 Marie Magdelaine Chastain 1635 Marie Martin 1814 Nancy Martin 1159 Aline de Grey 1424 Elizabeth le Blount Note: Burke's Peerage states that Elizabeth (2nd wife) is daughter of SirJohn Blount, not Sir Thomas le Blount as most of World Connect has it.  Iwill leave it with Sir Thomas subject to further research. <1195 Henry de Shirley Henry de Shirley, of Shirley; living (of age by?) 1195; married 1205Joanna, daughter of John de Clinton, of Essex, and had, with a youngerson (Ralph) and a daughter (Avice married her cousin Serlo de Monjoye).[Burke's Peerage] <1371 Ralph Shirley Sir Ralph Shirley, a commander under Henry V at Battle of Agincourt 1415.  [Burke's Peerage]
Died in France at age 52
1780 - 1845 John Sallee 65 65 1413 - 1466 Ralph Shirley 53 53 Ralph Shirley, Constable of Melbourne Castle and the Castle of the Peak,both in Derbys.  [Burke's Peerage] ~1751 - 1820 Sarah Johnson 69 69 0967 - UNKNOWN Dunclina Princess of Scotland 1185 - 1245 Anne deBourgogne 60 60 1842 - 1917 Mary Yeast 75 75 ~1783 Mary Clark ~1175 Joan 1870 - 1944 Malinda M. Isham 73 73 Isham, Malinda M. "Lennie" 24 Apr 1870  16 Jan 1944  Spouse:  Lewis (Louis) Sallee  Father: Jacob S. Isham / Battle Cemetery 1712 - 1801 James Wickersham 89 89 1649 Richard Hogge D. 1727 Robert Eachus 1594 - 1677 Phoebe (Twin) Paine 83 83 1160 - 1 Jan 1224/1225 Amice of Gloucester Amice, Countess of Gloucester, d. 1 Jan 1224/5, daughter & heir of William fitz Robert, Earl of Gloucester, and Hawise de Beaumont.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

-----------------------------

But then she [Isabel, younger sister, but Countess of Gloucester] died only a few days later and her sister Amice, by now the only one of William FitzRobert's daughters still living, seems to have been recognised as Countess of Gloucester till her own death some seven and a half years later.  On the other hand Amice's son Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Hertford or of Clare (usually called the latter), was apparently acknowledged as Earl of Gloucester in addition to his other dignity from as soon as the month after his aunt Isabel's death back in 1217. [Burke's Peerage]
1811 - 1846 William Sallee 35 35 William Sallee
TYPE: Patent - mos XTWOOCOL Date: 10 Jun 1737 ref [Patent Book 17:357-1] to 24)William Sallee, 40s, 400 acres contract 40s Ref: 400 acres Goochlan/bs LowerManacanCreek& Buck Branch loc -33482 -39173 F127 L0 P255 - Point A) Goochlan/bs LowerManacanCreek& Buck Branch 0. Four pines line S52E; 31 poles on the French line - Point B) 1. White oak line S17W; 115 poles on Peter Chastain decd - Point C) 2. White oak line S34E; 27 poles - Point D) 3. Black oak line S25W; 88 poles - Point E) 4. Pine line S1.5E; 52 poles - Point F) 5. White oak line S44W; 39 poles - Point G) 6. White oak line N48W; 58 poles - Point H) 7. White oak line S30W; 38 poles - Point I) 8. Red oak line S45E; 23 poles - Point J) 9. White oak line S21W; 83 poles - Point K) 10. White oak line S14E; 45 poles - Point L) 11. White oak line ; 52 poles S??.5W - Point M) 12. Pine line S1E; 15 poles - Point N) 13. Pine line S51W; 87 poles on Henrico Co line - Point O) 14. __ line N28W; 250 poles on other land surveyed for William Sallee - Point P) 15. __ line N62E; 56 poles on Thomas Dickens - Point Q) 16. White oak line N62E; 38 poles sasme course cont - Point R) 17. White oak line N36.5E; 107 poles - Point S) 18. ?Marcklanks Corner black oak line N36.5E; 274 poles same course cont to beginning Shift: sta 17 of WSA2L737.INT to sta 2 of WBA2T740.INT Shift: sta 13 of WSA2L737.INT to sta 3 of TGODS749.INT - Quality of survey: Well located.
William Sallee
TYPE: Patent - mos XTWOOCOL Date: 10 Jun 1737 ref [Patent Book 17:342-1] to 23)William Sallee, 40s, 400 acres contract 40s Ref: 400 acres Goochlan/bs Buck Branch ofEast side of LowerManacanCreek loc -36641 -32116 F127 L0 P255 - Point A) Goochlan/bs Buck Branch ofEast side of LowerManacan Creek . 0. Corner pine of 'Long Acre' tract line N42W; 258 poles new line - Point B) 1. Ptrs line N10E; 41 poles on Thomas Dickens - Point C) 2. Pine line N62E; 240 poles - Point D) 3. Other land surveyed forsaid William Sallee line S28E; 250 poles - Point E) 4. __ line S51W; 212 poles on Henrico Co line - Point F) 5. Two White oaks line N10E; 8 poles to beginning Shift: sta 4 of WSA1L737.INT to sta 14 of WSA2L737.INT - Quality of survey: Well located.
1249 - <1299 Jordan II Lord Foliot 50 50 ~1400 Thomas Paine Arms: Argent, on a fess, engrailed, gules, between three martlets sable, as many mascles or, all within a bordure of the second, bezantee,  Crest: a wolfs head erazed, azure charged with five bezants salterwise.   Visitation of Suffolk County   Kinght.
Sir Thomas Payne, Knight.

Beginning with “Visitation”, of Suffolk we have first in the list, the name Sir Thomas Payne Knight, of Market Bosworth, who married Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Poultney, Knight, the ancestor of William Poultney, Earl of Bath, the celebrated statesman, who acted so important a part, first as Minister of War, and afterwards as Premier of England in the early part of the last century. The dates of Sir Thomas’ birth, or death, are neither of them given, but the dates at which his descendants came upon the stage of active life, show that he must have been born in the early part of the  fifteenth century. He had three sons:

Robert
William
Edmund

The dates of their births are neither of them given, but the record shows the younger of the three alive in the 32nd year of King Henry VIII., or A.D. 1540, at which time he had a grandson, then a rich and active man, as will be more apparent in what follows. This fact would seem to establish the birth of Sir Thomas, the great grandfather of a wealthy business man, according to the usual average of life and birth at or nearly as early as, the year 1400.
    What became of the two elder sons of Sir Thomas is not recorded, which shows conclusively that neither of them removed to Suffolk County, and as no mention is made of them in the “Visitation of Leicestershire,” it is equally clear that they did not remain there and have progeny. In the “Visitation of Huntingdonshire,” an adjoining cpounty, the genealogy of a “Robert Payne” is given, the particulars of which would seem to establish identity with Robert, the son of Thomas, except that his Coat of Arms was not identical. As different sons often did adopt different coats from their father, this fact alone does not disapprove the identity. This family was generally settled at St. Neot’s, a place but little remote from the place where Edmund’s family resided, in and about St. Edmundsbury and Nowton in the County of Suffolk.

Arms: Argent, on a fess, engrailed, gules, between three martlets sable, as many mascles or, all within a bordure of the second, bezantee,  Crest: a wolfs head erazed, azure charged with five bezants salterwise.   Visitation of Suffolk County
1695 - 1758 Elizabeth Harry 63 63 1809 - 1879 Sampson II Wickersham 69 69 1681 Perryman ? 1712 - 1783 Ann Eachus 71 71 Ann Eachus was born the 2nd month, 15th, 1717 of the Quaker calendar. Probably at Springfield, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. The Quaker Calendar is different than the ones used today. Their first month is March and ours is January, which makes Ann born 15 April1 717.  Biographical and Genealogical History of Chester County, Pennsylvania. John Pannell ~1205 - 1250 William de Notton 45 45 ~1678 - >1740 Olive Olympia Perrault 62 62 1673 - 1719 Marcus Abraham Sallee 46 46 Abraham Sallee, Jr. son of Marcus Abraham.
TYPE: Patent - mos XBDUPE Date: 5 Jul 1751 ref [Patent Book 30:462] to Abra Salley, 30 acres Ref: 30 acres Henrico/in ManakinTown loc -28474 -38164 F127 L0 P255 - Point A) Corner black oak of his old survey adjacent to Delpish line S48W; 184 poles on him - Point B) 1. Ash & gum in the head line on a small branch HYD line S52.5E; 52 poles - Point C) 2. Hickory on his old survey line N32E; 182 poles on it to beginning Shift: sta 2 of ASALL751.INT to sta 2 of ALAVE724.INT Shift: sta 1 of ASALL751.INT to sta 4 of ADELP751.INT Shift: sta 1 of ASALL751.INT to sta 4 of ADELP751.INT Shift: sta 2 of ASALL751.INT to sta 2 of ASALL711.INT - Quality of survey: Well located.

[Marcus]Abraham Sallee, Sr.
TYPE: Patent - mos XIPAREF: Date: 23 Mar 1715 ref [Patent Book 10:253-1] to 17) Abra Sallee Ref: 133 acres Henrico/lower part of 1st 5000 acres for French loc -24254 -36141 F127 L0 P255 - Point A) Henrico/lower part of 1st 5000 acres for French. 0. Black oak line S45W; 236 poles - Point B) 1. White oak line E12S; 116 poles - Point C) 2. White oak& red oak line N45E; 236 poles - Point D) 3. Black oak line W12N; 116 poles to beginning From P H Cabell Shift: sta 2 of ASALL715.INT to sta 1 of JMART719.INT - Quality of survey: Well located.

AT A COUNCIL HELD AT THE CAPITOL THE 18TH DAY OF NOVEM'R, 1710:
Present the Hon' ble Lieut.-Governour in Councill. On Reading at this Board a Petition of Abraham Sallee and Claude Phillipe de Richbourgh, in behalf of themselves and other French Refugees, Inhabitants of the Mannakin Town, setting forth: "That at their first arrival there was granted for the Settlement of the said Refugees a Tract of Ten Thousand acres of Land, to be laid out according to the rate of a hundred and thirty-three acres to each Family. That the said Refugees did settle upon some part of the said Land, and had about five Thousand Acres then laid out and divided among them; but the said division having Regard to the particular Settlement, so as to give to every man the proportion.... adjoining to his House, and therefore proposing that a more equal distribution of the said land may be made, and that those who have not their full proportion in the first Five Thousand Acres may have the same made up out of the last Five Thousand Acres, laid out and appropriated for the aforesaid Settlement.
This Board, taking the said Petition-with the proposals therein contain' d-into consideration, have thought fitt to Order that the Land above mention'd be laid out' and distributed in manner following (vizt): That all such heads of Families, and their Representatives as have been constantly resident at the said Manakin Town from the first Settlement, shall, in the first place, draw Lotts, and, according to the priority of their Lotts, shall have liberty to choose ; And shall Accordingly have as much Land laid out for them respectively in the last five Thousand Acres as will, with the land they have already, make up their full complement of 133 Acres to each Family. That all persons that have come in since the first Settlement, and have been constantly Resident at the Mannakin Town since their first Coming, shall, in the next place, draw Lotts, and, according to the Priority of their said Lotts, shall have their proportion of Land in the last 5,000 Acres to compleat with what they have already, the quantity of 133 Acres to each Family. And, in the last place, such as have deserted the said Settlement, and afterwards returned to Inhabit there, shall, in like manner, draw Lotts, and be preferr'd to the choice of Land in the last 5,000 Acres, to make up their Complement of 133 Acres for each respective Family, according to the priority of their Lotts. And it is Ordered, that the Surveyor of the county of Henrico do lay out the said respective proportions of Land at the charges of the Person desiring the same. In which he is hereby directed and required to take care that the breadth of the several Shares of Land bear a due proportion to the length. and that no small slips of Land be left between the Lotts that may not be useftill or fitt to be taken up by any Other Person.
And in case it shall be found that any Person hath, in the first five Thousand Acres of Land, more than the said proportion of 133 Acres, and his next Neighbour hath not enough, that such Neighbour shall have the Overplus Added to his Lott to make his said lott the Number of 133 Acres, and if any Improvements be made upon the same, the Owner of that Lott, to which it is added, shall pay to the other the value the said Improvements shall be appraised at.
And it is further Ordered, that such of the French Refugees as have bought the Plantations, or dividents of any other of the said Nation in the first 5,000 Acres, shall have and enjoy the same without prejudice to such Purchaser, to hold the Land due to him for his own share, and to take up as much more as will make his said Share the Compleat quantity of 133 Acres.
Provided, That no Person who hath sold his proportion of the first 5,000 Acres shall be Intitled to take up any more of the second 5,000 Acres than he should have had in case such Sale had never been made. And if any Person hath already Settled upon the last 5,000 Acres of Land, and hath made Improvements thereon, such Person shall have his whole quantity of 133 Acres laid out in the last 5,000, provided there be sufficient over and above the Proportion due to the other Inhabitants, and there be not, then the Houses and clear'd grounds of such Persons shall be reserved to him as part of his Proportion to the said Tract of Land.
And whereas, divers of the first heads of Families settled at the Mannakin Town are since dead, it is Ordered that the Heir or Children of the Deceas'd (if any be), and if not the Widdow, shall have and Enjoy the divident Allotted or which ought to be Allotted . . . . head of Family be dead without Heir or other Representatives, his Share or Proportion of the said Lands shall be confirmed to such person or persons (being of the same Nation) as are now in possession thereof. And to the end the Surveyor of Henrico county may be the better Enabled to Sett out and Assign to each particular person his share of the said land, it is Order'd that Mr. Robert Bolling, who Surveyed the first 5,000 Acres, do grant Certificates of the Bounds and quantities of the several lotts unto the Persons for whom he setts out the same, and to such as claim under them, without demanding any fee or reward, he having been already paid for the same out of his Majestie's Revenues. And if it shall happen that any person shall be contented with less than 133 Acres, so that there shall remain any quantity of land not taken up after the several Allottments above mention'd, it is hereby declar'd that such Overplus land shall be granted to any other French Refugees as shall hereafter come to settle at the Mannakin Town, for the Encouragement of the said settlement. And the Surveyor of the said County of Henrico is hereby ordered and required to lay out the lands aforesaid, having due regard to Rules and directions herein before sett down, and in any case any dispute or controversie shall arise among the said Refugees in the distribution of their several shares of Land, The Hon' ble the Lieut. Governour, with the advice of the Councill, doth hereby Authorize and Impower Cob. Wm. Randolph and Mr. Richard Cocke, of Henrico county, to hear and determine the said disputes, And in case they find any difficulties, that they Report the same specially to the Lieut. Governour for his final determination therein.
[Copia.] WM. ROBERTSON, Cl' k Co'n.
1711 - 1789 Guillaume William Sallee 78 78 REGISTER CONTAINING THE BAPTISMS MADE IN THE CHURCH OF THE FRENCH REFUGEES AT MANNIKIN-TOWN IN VIRGINIA, IN THE PARISH OF KING WILLIAM, IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD, 1721, THE 25TH MARCH.82-DONE BY JAMES SOBLET,83 CLERK.
The 16th April, 1728, anne Tammas was born; was baptized by Mr. Na[irn?] minister of Varaine ; had for godfather Guillaume Samson (?) for godmother, Olive Salle and Bnge't. The parties have declared that she was born the day and year above. - Jean Chastain, Clerk.

The 31St May 1728, was born to Isac Salle a black, named Guillaume.
The 4th July, 1728, was born Elizabeth Salle, daughter of Guillaume Salle and of Elizabeth, his wife; was baptized by Mr. Mason,92 minister of Nioukaint [New Kent] ; had for godfather, Thommas Girodan, and for godmother, Olive malet and anne cal....t.
The 21st August 1728, was born to Isac Salle a black, named Pierre.
The 12th October, 1728, was born a boy to Nicolas Soullie.
The 3d November, 1728, was born a boy to Etienne Chastain; he had for godfather, Gillaume Sall~; for godmother, Elizabeth Salle'; was baptized by Mr. Swift; was baptized the 27th December of the said year.
The 13th March, 1728, was born Elizabeth Salle, daughter of Abraham Salle and of Magdelaine Salle; was baptized the 21st March by Mr. Swift; had for godfather, Pierre Salle and for godmother, Elizabet Salle.
The 25 July, 1729, was born Elizabet Legrand, daughter of Jean Legrand and of Catherine Legrand; was baptized the 19th October of the said year, by Mr. Teler,96 in the church of St. James; she had for godfather, Guillame Salle; for godmother, Elizabeth Salle and Ollive Mallet. The parties have declared that she was born the day and year above.
The 21st February, 1729, was born Elizabeth Salle, daughter of guillaume Salle and of Elizabeth Salle; was baptized by Monsieur massom; had for godfather, Isac Salle; for godmother, Magdelaine Salle and Elizabeth Lesueur. The parties have declared that the child was born the day and year above.
The 27th January, 1729, was born to Isac Salle a black named Robert.
The 1st March, 1729, was born Jean Girodan, son of Thommas Girodan and of Judith, his wife; was baptized the 12th of April following by Mr. Massom; had for godfather, Guillaume Salle and Jaque Martain; for godmother, Md. Martain. The parties have declared that he was born the day and year above. - Jean Chastain, Clerk.
The 8 March, 1730. was born Marie Mallet, daughter of Etiene Mallet and of Olive Mallet, her father and mother; was baptized the 20th of May, 1730, by Mr. Mane;97 had for godfather, Gullaume Salle; for godmother, Elizabeth Salle and Susane Billiebo. The parties have declared that she was born the day and year above mentioned.
The 20th August was born to Maglaine Salle a girl named Marriane; was baptized the 12th 7ber by Mr. Marie; had for godfather, Charle Amonet; for godmdther, Md. Barriere and Mariane Chastain.
The 25th november, 1731, was born Estiene Malet, son of Estiene Malet and of Olive Malet; was baptized by Mr. Marye, the minister; had for godfather, Pierre Salle and Jean Pierre Billiebo, and Magdelaine Salle for godmother. Jean Chastain.
The 17th April, 1732, was born Guillieaume Salle, son of Guilijeaume Salle and Elizabet Salle; was baptized by Mr. Marye; had for godfather, David Leseur and Estienne Mallet; for godmother, Olive Malet.
The 8th January, 1731, was born a black girl to Guilleaume Salle, named anna.
The 4th February, 1732 [1733], was born to Guiheaume Salle a black girl named Mall
The 8th May, 1734, was born Guiheaume Salle, son of Guilheaume Salle and of Eli zabet, his wife; was baptized by Mr. Marye; for godfather, David Lesueur and the father; for god-mother, Sara Porter. The parties have declared that he was born the day and year above.
The 24th April, 1734, was born a little black girl to Guiheaume Salle, named Sarra.
The 5th 8ber, 1734, was born Isaac Salle, son of Pierre Salle and of Francoise Salle.
0947 - UNKNOWN Raganhild of Norway 1749 - >1831 Oliver Sallee 82 82 1868 - 1949 Lewis Sallee 80 80 Isham, Malinda M. "Lennie"  b: 24 Apr 1870  d: 16 Jan 1944  Spouse:  Lewis (Louis) Sallee  Father: Jacob S. Isham / located in Battle Cemetery. D. 1603 Martha Castell ~1240 Sybil de Brereton ~1650 - 1704 Robert Perryman 54 54  Robert Perryman, first of his family in Virginia, left the Port of Bristol, England in 1666 or 1667 "destination Virginia" and landed in York County. There he married Mary, daughter of John Scott, one of the early settlers on Skimino Creek in York County. . . The first record of Robert Perryman in York seems to be his appointment as  Constable for the upper precinct of Bruton Parish by the County Court of York on February 27, 16788/9. This was considered a post of some importance in those days. On May 8 1682 he appraised the estate of James Bullock, and Jan 24 1682-3 was a juror in the case of James Atkinson v. Robert Reade. On Aug 24, 1683 he was security for Robert Martin. On Jan 24, 1683-4 he was ordered to meet at house of Morris Hurd, decd., and appriase his estate. Archives of Virginia, [Boddie states]  Robert Perryman and Mary Scott had four children. Two have been identified and the other two found in a lawsuit records. Their names were Mary and John. Robert sued his Mother and her new husband Edward Young for his share of his fathers estate.
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Sources from:
Lee Perryman Deputy Director, Broadcast Services and Director of Broadcast Technology, Associated Press. 1825 K Street NW, Suite 800 Washington, DC 20006-1232 USA Phone: +1 (202) 736-1135 (GMT -05:00) Fax: +1 (309) 410-0394
"Bristol and America, A Record of the First Settlers in the Colonies of North America, 1654-1685 (1929, 1931)", in the section titled Servants to Foreign Plantations, Vol. II, 1663-79, page 105: ; Page 13,  Robert Perreman; destination, Virginia, This is the same reference and page number cited by John Bennett Boddie, which was for some reason published in his book "Virginia Historical Genealogies" as 1666/67;

"The Bristol Register of Servants Sent to Foreign Plantations, 1654-1686", by Peter Wilson Cobham (1988), page 196:  Robert Perreman to James Bisse,  4 yrs Virginia. 22 Aug 1663;

On-the-ground research: The Bristol Registers of Servants sent to Foreign Plantations (1654-1686)  22 Aug 1663 Robert Perreman to James Bisse 4 years; To try and expand on this I did find the original handwritten book  [ref: FC/SFP/1 (b) 2] and found the following entry;  "Robert Perreman bound to James Bisse for four years in  Virginia the same conditions”;  Every entry has “the same conditions” and I [Lee Perryman] assume that it must refer  to the first paragraph in the register which reads:  “The inrolment of apprentices and servants as shipped off the Port of  Bristol to serve in any of the forreigne plantations beginning the 26th  of March anno reign Carl. 2nd yr 15th dom. 1663. Sr. Robert Cann knight  Bart.,  being then Mayor John Wright and Sir Robert Yeamans knight sheriff”.  It is unfortunate that up until 1661 the place of origin of the persons  were given and after 1670 the ship that they traveled on.

In 1662, Sir Robt. Cann, Bart., Merchant, was listed as the Mayor of Bristol, and John Wright and Robert Yeamans were listed as Sheriffs. Information on Cann: In the early 1600s, Sir Robert Cann, the Lord Mayor of Bristol, England,  was heavily investing in the merchant trade with the colonies. He and  his family grew very rich from his investments in shipping. Like many  merchants of the time, he had license from the King to be a privateer,  which is a pirate in fancy words. Privateers were armed and allowed to  attack and possess any ship not flying the British flag. Sir Robert did  not personally go to the colonies, but many of his family did with his  blessing and aid. The list of "masters" shows few other people bound to/sponsored by James Bisse.  Further, it is often cited that Robert Perryman was *from* Bristol, which is also unproven. In 1857, descendant Elisha Perryman, or a friend shortly after his death, published "A Sketch of the Life, Labors and Adventures of Elder Elisha Perryman", and parts of that autobiography were republished in 1881 in a book titled History of Georgia Baptists. From his opening paragraph:  "My ancestors came from Wales; the time of their emigration to this  country, I do not know."
This substantiates that Bristol was simply a port of departure, not where Robert Perryman lived.   The late Emmett K. Perryman Jr., also a descendant of Robert Perryman and Mary Scott, self-published a book in 1993 in which he discussed possible origins of the family name in America. Excerpts:  While the name Perryman is generally considered to be of English origin, the   people so named were likely of Celtic blood, the original Britons who were  conquered by the Romans in the First Century A.D. and then by the Saxons  in the centuries following the death of King Arthur. While many of the surviving  Britons fled to France (Brittany) and Wales, others remained in Devon and  Cornwall, where they were known as the West Welsh.   In Devon and Cornwall, the name Perryman first appears in the early 1200s.  Surnames were not adopted until about the thirteenth century, and the name  Perryman took many forms -- Periman, Puryman, Periam, Perriam, including  a Norman version of De Puryham. Sometimes, father and son spelled their  names differently. Some historic documents seem to indicate that the  Perrymans were of property and known as "Lords of the Manor" in the  southwest counties; most authorities agree that the name evolved from the  association with pears, either as working or living in a pear orchard. History leaves little trace of the name Perryman. There was, in the court of   Elizabeth I, a Sir William Periam who was Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer.  His coat of arms was identical to a coat of arms granted to Sir John Perring,  Knight, and to a Perryman in 1710. The identical arms tie them to what  stabilized as the present day spelling of Perryman. " Or. on a pile vert a chev. engr. betw. 3 leopards faces of the field" Crest: 2 arms issuing out of clouds ppr. habited vert, cuffed ar. holding a leopards face or."   The Perrymans in America seem to traditionally have come from Wales;  however, I increasingly feel that they really come from "West Wales", i.e.  from Cornwall and Devon.  - Lee Perryman -
1675 - 1749 Roger Perryman 74 74 Marriage: Roger married Mary Burrage 4/13/1728 in St. Mary Anne's Parish in Maryland. Mary died on May 14, 1742. He then married Martha Armstrong 7/13/1742 in St. George's Parish Baltimore Maryland. 1837 - 1910 Serena A. Carter 73 73 Vital Statistics, Mercer Co., Ky - for the marriage date, Cemetery Listings, by the Harrodsburg Hist. Soc. Vital Statistics for the death date. 1472 Anne Shirley 1768 - 1854 Elizabeth Lessenger 86 86 1850 Mercer Co. KY census, p. 354: Elizabeth Wickersham 82 PA, living with dau Priscilla Isom; next door to Saunders & Phebe Claunch. ~1814 Margaret Martin 0900 - 0959 Murdoch Thane of Lochaber 59 59 1676 - 1730 Alice Hogg 54 54 1835 - 1900 John Pryor Sallee 64 64 Mary L. Lovell Children of RICHARD PERRYMAN and MARY are:
ROBERT PERRYMAN, married MARY DE JARNETTE.
**ROGER PERRYMAN, b. about 1708 in Skimono, York, Virginia; d. before August 24, 1749 in Baltimore, Maryland.
Married
(1) MARY BURRAGE, April 13, 1728; and
(2) MARTHA ARMSTRONG, July 13, 1742 in Baltimore, Maryland.** 
WILLIAM PERRYMAN, b. 1715, m. SUSANNA SMASSON 1735
RICHARD PERRYMAN, b. 1729; m. MARTHA DE JARNETTE d. 1784
DAVID PERRYMAN, b. before 1744 in Prince Edward, Virginia; d. Sept. 24, 1804 in Pendleton District, South Carolina. Married (1) FLORA ?? and (2) ANN DIXON, 1769, Lunenburg, Virginia
Elizabeth Walton 1653 Alice Pannell ~1571 - 1641 Rowland Owen 70 70 1668 - 1730 Thomas Wickersham 62 62 1660 - 1719 Elizabeth Brinton 59 59 ~1515 Jane Puleston The Magna Carta Sureties, 1215. 5th Edition, 1999 by Fredrick Lewis Weis, with additions and corrections by Walter Lee Shepard, with William R. Beall Media: Book Page: Line 105 Title: Plantagenent Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists, 2nd Edition, 1999 by David Faris Page: p. 102, 259
Lineages of Hereditary Society Members,Pedigrees of Charlemagne's Descendants, Volume III, ChapterXLIII,
1152 - UNKNOWN Patrick deCarducis 1800 - 1881 William W Carter 81 81 ~1598 - 1672 Thomas Owen 74 74 Edward Griffith 1799 - 1878 Pheobe C. Vanderipe 78 78 Catherine Vanderipe, b. 1797, marr James Jackson in Mercer Co., KY (I have found record of this marriage, and additional information is in "Bible Records of Mercer Co., KY Families," in the Family History Library in Salt Lake.)
Julia Vanderipe, marr William Adkinson
Sarah Vanderipe, marr Phillip Board
Phoebe Vanderipe, my ancestor, b. abt 1799, marr William W. Carter, 5 Sep 1821, Mercer Co., KY
John Vanderipe, marr Nancy Hancock
J. Harvey Vanderipe, marr Julia Edginton
D. 1638 Elizabeth ~1520 Rhys Thomas ~1546 Richard Pugh ~1630 - ~1684 Harry Thomas Owen 54 54 ~1550 Gaynor Thomas ~1600 Joyce Pughe D. UNKNOWN Daughter of Northumberland ~1575 Elizabeth Pugh 1712 Mary Scott ~1234 - 1290 Jordan de Standish 56 56 1837 - 1933 John H. Wickersham 96 96 Buired:  Wickersham, John H.abt 1836  1933  Serena A. Carter  Sampson Wickersham, Jr.  Berea Christian Church Cem. ~1632 Elizabeth 1847 - 1924 Catherine Frances Baker 77 77 Some sources shoe Catherine spelled with a K, as in Katherine with a nickname of: Kate. 1793 - 1871 Michael R. Isham 78 78 Found in the 1870 Census, Wash. Co., Ky., p. 346, age 77, en. with James & Nancy (Isham) Divine. 1660 - 1708 Hugh Harris Harry 48 48 1845 - 1921 Jacob S. Isham 76 76 It is stated Jacob had dark hair, blue eyes, stood 5'9", and had fair skin. 1850 Census, Mercer Co., Ky. p354, #978, Jacob, age 5.
Marrige found at: Washington Co, Ky marriage records, Page: Bk.5, pg.103
1805 - 1897 Pricilla Wickersham 91 91 1870 Census, Wash. Co., Ky., p. 346, age 77, en. with James & Nancy (Isham)  Divine also found in "Marriage Bonds and Consents" by Harrodsburg Hist. Soc. 0858 - 0936 Dior Thane of Lochaber 78 78 1799 Mary 20 Mar 1749/1750 - 1819 Sampson Wickersham Mercer Co., Ky - p. 257, Bk 6 - Sampson Wichersham - Will
A Will without preface.

I will and bequeath to my son Thomas Wickersham Job Wickersham Joel Wickersham Levi Wickersham and Ann Wickersham 25 cents each one the remainder I will to my loving wife Elizabeth Wickersham my hole estate as it now stands both real and personal for her to Poses in full as tho I was living her life time without any interruption whatever and lave it in her hands to give to the children as the stand in need so as for them all to fair aliK at the time the come of age to want it and at my wife death the whole estate to be divided as follows all that dout get trades to have a double share and the rest all alike I lave my wife Elizabeth my hole and sole Executor of this my last will and Testament in witness whereof I have set my hand and seal this 19 day of August
1815 in the presents of
Joseph Kirkland
James Wickersham

Sampson Wickersham (Seal)

N.B. I want no more done with this than to have it proved and recorded I want no Administration on it nor nothing onely every thing to stand as was.
Joseph Kirkland
James Wickersham

Sampson Wickersham (Seal)

Mercer County Sct. Feby. County Court 1820

The foregiong last will and Testament of Sampson Wickersham deceased was this day produced into Court and proved to be the hand writing of Sampson Wickersham dec.d by the Oath of Edward Willis and ordered to be recorded.

Attest Tho Allin C.C.
~1755 - 1842 James III Isham 87 87 Mary Polly ~1729 James II Isham 1738 Dorcas Stinnett 1710 - 1773 Benjamin H II Stinnett 63 63 1738 - >1770 Ursula Isham 32 32 Or: Ison. 1679 William Perryman 1729 Patience Perryman 0820 - 0878 Aedh (Ethus) Swift-Foot King of Scots 58 58 1632 - 1699/1700 William Brinton 1635 - 1699 Ann Bagley 64 64 1708 - 1742 Mary Burrage 34 34 1607 - 1689 Thomas Brinton 82 82 ABT 1610/1611 - 1684 Ann Biddle ~1610 - 1649 Edward Bagley 39 39 ~1612 Ann 1562 - 1660 Thomas Brinton 97 97 ~1584 William Biddle Biddul ~1588 Mrs Biddle Biddulph D. UNKNOWN Gareth Thane of Atholl <1580 - 1635 John Bagley 55 55 <1585 Sutton ~1539 - 1642 Ellin Mason 103 103 1557 Thomas Mason ~1559 Elizabeth Grazebrook ~1554 Edward Bagley ABT 1540/1550 Edward Sutton <1530 William Mason Further research needed on this person. <1540 Ann ~1516 - 1570 Robert Grazebrook 54 54 D. UNKNOWN Lachlan of Atholl ~1520 Ann Clayton ~1500 - 1546 John Gresbroke 46 46 ~1500 Elizabeth Rugeley ~1470 John Gresbroke ~1430 John Gresbrooke 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Plantagenet 60 60 1208 - 1265 Simon deMontfort 57 57 ~1390 Angharad Verch David Ap Goronwy Ap Iorwerth 1194 - ~1269 John III Le Strange 75 75 1210 - 1294 Lucy deTregoz 84 84 D. UNKNOWN Phaetus of Atholl 1040 - 1109 Alfonso VI de Castile Lâeon 69 69 ~1454 - 1550 Ellen Whitney 96 96 D. 1275 Owain Ap Maredudd Margaret verch Maelgon Angharad Verch Owain Matildis Richard Allyn ~0861 - ~0909 Cadell ap Rhodri Mawr 48 48 pg 434 Wurtz  "Magna Charta"  of Seisyllwg

pg 434 Wurtz  "Magna Charta"
Eleanor Goch Verch Philip Ap Ivor Philip Ap Ivar Catherine Verch Llewellyn the Great D. UNKNOWN King Osbert of Northumberland Ivar Ap Cadivor Cadivor 1252 Eleanor deMontfort ~1230 - 1282 Llywellyn The Great Prince Wales Y Llyw Gryffydd 52 52 ~1207 - 1244 Gruffydd Ap Llewellyn 37 37 ~1210 Senena Verch Caradog Ap Thomas Ap Rhodri ~1232 Joan deSomeri ~1225 John deWalton ~1225 Isabel deWalton ~1205 - 1273 Roger deSomery 68 68 1110 - UNKNOWN William FitzAlan Baron of Oswestry William Fitz Alan, who in the contest between King Stephen and theEmpress Maud, being then Governor of Shrewsbury and Sheriff of Salop,held the Castle for the Empress (daughter of Henry I, King of England andwidow of the Emperor of Germany. She married 2nd Geoffrey Plantagenet,Count of Anjou, and their son Henry II was first King of the House ofPlantagenet) until it was taken by assault. He was also with the Empressat the seige of Winchester Castle in the 6th of King Stephen (1140) whenshe and her whole party were put to flight. Afterwards, continuing toadhere stoutly to the same cause, he was reconstituted Sheriff of Salopso soon as Henry II obtained the crown. Nicole D' Aubigny D. 1306 Madog Vychan Ap Madog Crypl Ap Gruffydd Robert Whitney Robert Whitney David Ap Goronwy Ap Iorwerth 1358 - 1399 Robert Puleston 41 41 1586 - 1676 Elizabeth Paine 90 90 Richard Puleston Lleuki Verch Madog Foel Ap Llewellyn Ap Cynrig Roger Puleston 1114 - UNKNOWN Isabel deSay Angharad Verch Llewellyn Ap Ynyr Richard Puleston Angharad Warren D. 1294 Roger Puleston Hanged by the Welsh for being the tax collector of King Edward I Agnes Le Clerk David Baron Le Clerk ~1450 - 1480 Alice Lewis 30 30 ~1485 - 1551 John Puleston 66 66 ~1385 - >1413 Madog Puleston 28 28 ~1483 - 1551 John Puleston 68 68 The Magna Carta Sureties, 1215. 5th Edition, 1999 by Fredrick Lewis Weis, with additions and corrections by Walter Lee Shepard, with William R. Beall Media: Book Page: Line 105 Title: Plantagenent Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists, 2nd Edition, 1999 by David Faris Page: p. 102, 259


See paf puleston
1130 - 1216 William Fitz William Fitzalan Baron of Oswestry 86 86 ~1487 Gaynor Verch Robert Ap Meredydd Ap Hwlkin Lloy 1583 - 13 Feb 1659/1660 John Cary Will of Alice Cary, of Shadwell in the parish of Stebunheath, otherwise Stepney, Middlesex. Spinster, 24 April 1660,  proved 14 November 1660.
Names: Grandfather John Cary of Bristol, Woolen draper.
Names: Uncle Myles Cary of Virginia.
Names: Cousin William Hopson.
Names: Uncle Richard Cary and his wife Dorothy Cary.
Nabbs, 206

Will of Henry Hobson:
Dated 16 March, 1634 and proved 27 May 1636.
Henry Hodson of Bristol, Glost. To be buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol;
Names his late wife: Alice who was buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol;
Names grandchildren: Henry Cary, Matthew Cary, Richard Cary, Miles Cary, Honor Cary, Alice Cary and Mary Cary the children of my daughter Alice Cary wife to John Cary, draper.
Names grandchildren: Margaret and Anne Jackson daughters of my daughter Anne Jackson.
Names kinsmen:  Richard Burrowes, Christopher Raynoldes son of  George Raynoldes, Anne Raynoldes sister of Christopher.
Francis Creswicke, Thomas Hobson.
Names sons: William Hobson.
Son William to be executoir and Francic Creswicke and Thomas Hobson to be overseers.
Pile,52
1415 - 1461 John Puleston 46 46 ~1420 Alswyn Verch Howel Ap Han D. 1324 Madoc Crypl Ap Gruffydd Vychan Ithel Vychan Ap Ithel Gan Ap Meredydd Ithel Gan Ap Meredydd Ap Uchtryd Ap Edwin Gruffydd Vychan Margaret Verch Gruffydd Ap Cadwgan Margaret Verch Rhys Vychan Ap Rhys Mechell 1136 - UNKNOWN Agnes deLacy D. 1271 Rhys Vychan Ap Rhys Mechell Ap Lord Rhys Gwenllian Verch Ithel Vychan 1589 Judith Paine Gwladys Verch Gruffydd Ap Llewellyn D. 1265 Meredydd Ap Owen Ap Gruffydd Ap Lord Rhys D. 1275 Owen Ap Meredydd Ap Owen Ap Gruffydd D. 1309 Llewellyn Ap Owen Ap Meredydd Ap Owen 1256 - 1309 John V Le Strange 53 53 1256 - <1320 Maud Walton 64 64 1090 - UNKNOWN Helias deSay Lord of Clune ~1226 - ~1276 John IV Le Strange 50 50 ~1226 - 1291 Roger Davenport 65 65 ~1228 - ~1300 Mary Salemon 72 72 ~1204 - BET. 1291 - 1296 Vivian Davenport ~1208 - ~1280 Beatrix deHulme 72 72 ~1136 - ~1250 Richard Davenport 114 114 ~1292 - ~1347 John I de Stanley 55 55 ~1400 - 1493 Margaret Freville 93 93 The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, pp. 146-147.  Daughter & coheire of Sir Baldwin
Frevile Knight.  Margerett Freuile bought the wardship of Anne
Mortimer and married her to her son.

The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 121.  Margeret fil. et coh. Baldwini Freuill
Mili 'post nept' [sic] Hugh Willughby.
1225 Robert de Grey ~1215 - ~1265 William deStanlegh 50 50  Third Lord of Stoneley of Hooten, Cheshire, England. William Clark ~1345 - ~1395 Katherine Torond 50 50 1147 Amabilia Venables ~1240 - ~1290 Alice Witney 50 50 ~1274 William Venables ~1245 William Venables 5th Baron de Kinderton ~1250 - ~1310 Daughter Pulford 60 60 James Byron Adam Neale Visitation of Leiscestershire
Adam Neale de Weston [of Weston] in Com. Sussex AL's Adam Neale de Poultney = Matildas
~1270 - ~1320 William Bulkeley 50 50 Issabell The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.
Hannah Appleton ~1240 - 1312 Robert Bulkeley 72 72 ~1210 - ~1260 William Bulkeley 50 50 ~1180 - ~1230 Robert Bulkileh 50 50 ~1063 Hinydd Verch Einudd 1111 Howel Ap Meredydd Ap Bleddyn Ap Cynfyn Butler ~1235 Jane Butler James Hawsket Eva Verch Betrws Ap Ednowain Bendew Beaumont 1020 - 1054 Lambert deBoulogne II Count of Lens 34 34 1675 - 1739 Ann Coleman 63 63 1620 - 1658 George Bunker 38 38 Sailed to America from Bengeo, Hertfordshire, England.

Salem Quarterly Court Records, vol. 4, leaf 21/ Estate of George Bunker of Topsfield
Administration on the estate of George Bunker granted June 29, 1658to the widow, Jane Buncker; and the estate to be divided among saidwidow, son William Buncker, Elizabeth Buncker, Mary Buncker, Ann Bunckerand Martha Buncker, all under twenty-one years of age.

Essex Co. Quarterly Court files, vol. 4, leaf 60
Elizabeth Bunker was twelve years old; Will., ten years old; Mary, six;Ann, four; and Martha, one year and a half.

James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England
GEORGE, Ipswich, s. of William, a Huguenot in Eng. liv. at Topsfieldafter m. with Jane Godfrey, and there was drown. 26 May 1658. His wid.gave inv. of £300. 20 June foll. At the date of his d. the ch. were Eliz.aged 12; William, 10; Mary, 6; Ann, 4; and Martha, 1 and ½. His wid. soonm. Richard Swain, went to Nantucket with those ch. and she d. 31 Oct.1662, the earliest, in rec. of d. on that isl. Ann m. Joseph Coleman. Drowned while crossing river in wagon.

Henry L. Bunker III's 1984 Bunker Family History; 1965 Bunker Genealogy, Volume II, compiled by Edward C. Moran Jr.;
Nantucket branch of the Bunker family:  George Bunker is credited with founding the Nantucket branch of the Bunker family, although he never visited Nantucket. Only his wife and children made the journey when they settled there in 1659. Until June 1998, extensive research by family genealogists had not revealed whether Francis or Timothy Bunker was the father of George, who has been  given the Bunker Family Association designation as N-1. George Bunker (C-1) and George Bunker (N-1) were first cousins, grandsons of Roger Bunker of Tingrithwho died in 1515. The descendents of Francis Bunker stayed in England, thus the descendents of Timothy's son George (N-1) are now identified as the Nantucket Branch. George Bunker married Elizabeth Godfrey in the parish church of Maulden, Bedfordshire about seven or eight miles from Tingrith center. George and Elizabeth had two children born in Tingrith and three born in Topsfield. ///  Charlestown Branch in America the earliest mention of a Bunker is of George Bunker [c-1], who founded the Charlestown, Massachusetts branch of the Bunker family. George Bunker was designated C-1 in the Bunker genealogies. George, a wealthy emigrant, settled in Charlestown prior to January 1633. He was a great-grandson of Roger Bunker who died in 1515 in the parish of Tingrith, Bedfordshire, England.
1601 - 1682 Richard Swain 81 81 He came to America on the ship "Truelove" in 1635 and settled at Hampton. While living in Hampton, he was "Selectman and Commissioner for Small Causes." In 1639 he had liberty to "settle small claims."  He was one of nine persons who purchased the Island of Nantucket in 1659.
Also spelled: Richard Swayne OR Swain.
~1654 - 1698 Ann Bunker 44 44 1642 - 1690 Joseph Coleman 47 47 D. 1233 Ednyfed Vychan Richard Ap Cadwalladr Ap Griffith Ap Cynan 1301 - >1349 Matilda Timperley 48 48 ~1302 Joan Peche 1200 Robert Salemon 1004 - UNKNOWN Matilda deLouvain 1046 - 1093 Constance de Burgundy 47 47 William Drew Matthew Worsford 1662 - 1 Feb 1740/1741 Edward Allen Gryffydd Ap Madog Dhu Madog Dhu Gruffydd Ap Dafydd Ap Tudur Ap Madog 6 Mar 1629/1630 - 1662 Jane Godfrey Some records found show her name as Elizabeth. ~1059 Miss Owen Brogyntyn Ap Madog Ap Meredydd 0970 - UNKNOWN Gerberge of Brabant Eva Verch Llowarch Ap Bran D. 1270 Grono Ap Ednyfed Vychan Morfydd Verch Meyrick Ap Ithel Gwenllian Verch Lord Rhys Ap Gruffydd Ap Rhys ~1200 Thomas de Knowsley ~1298 William de Colewick 1445 Ellen Verch Gwilym Griffith John Peche ~1380 - 1466 Jonet Stanley 86 86 John Pikemere 1310 - 1331 Edmund deMortimer 21 21 Edmund was summoned to Parliament as Lord Mortimer Nov. 20, 1331. Hislordship married Elizabeth, one of the daughters and co-heirs ofBartholemew, Lord Badlesmere of Ledes Castle, in Kent, and by her had anonly surviving son, his successor in 1331. Lord of Gwent Merrick William Butler Morfydd Verch Rhys Ap Meredydd Ap Rhys Nest Verch Cynwrig Ap Meredydd Ddu Robert Parris  Chamberlain of Chester and North Wales in the time of Henry IV Ellen Bulkeley Catherine Verch Glyn Cyngar Goronwy Ap Einion Ap Evan Ap Iorwerth Goch John Streche Meredydd Ap Hwlkin Llwyd  Had the charge of the town of Caernarvon during Owen GlynDowers revolt. 0955 Adelaide de Ardenne Hwlkin Lloyd ~1170 - ~1220 Einion Ap Gwalchmai Ap Meilir 50 50 Meredydd Ap Iorwerth Ap Llowarch Iorwerth Ap Llowarch Ap Bran Gwenllian Verch Conan Ap Owen Gwynedd Glyn Cyngar  one of the council in Ireland Dafydd Ap Tudur Ap Madog Ap Iarddur Joan Worsford Tegwared Y Bais Wen D. >1440 Robert Ap Meredydd Ap Hwlkin Lloyd 0985 - UNKNOWN ErmengardeAdelaide de Lorraine Jane Puleston Gwenhwyfer Verch Llewellyn Ap Edmund ~1274 Margaret de Shoresworth 1307 Gilbert de Barton Roger Cheadle Grono Ap Meredydd Ap Iowerth Ap Llowarch Adles Verch Grono Ap Ednyfed Vychan D. >1300 Meredydd Ddu Ap Grono Ap Meredydd Gwenllian Verch Howel Ap Jefa Ap Ednowain Howel Ap Jefa Ap Ednowain 0953 - 0992 Charles Duke of Lower Lorraine 39 39 1330 - 1398 William III Stanley 68 68 Cynwrig Ap Meredydd Ddu Ap Grono ~1347 - ~1380 Alice Massey 33 33 Angharad Verch Howel Ap Meredydd Ap Bleddyn 1360 - Feb 1427/1428 William IV Stanley  [Five Generations.FTW]

Note by Merv.S. Latham May 11, 1999.
William carried on the family of "The Stanleys of Storeton and Hooton".
Iorwerth Vychan Ap Iorwerth Ap Heilyn ~1055 Pagan de Villiers Merwydd Goch Ap Collwyn Ap Tangno Evan Ap Iorwerth Goch Ap Ystrwyth Ap Ednowain Einion Ap Evan Ap Iorwerth Goch 0895 - 0968 Matilda Countess Of Ringleheim 73 73 Generis Verch Gwyn Ap Ednowain Ap Eginir Gwenhwyfer Verch Gruffydd Maelor Tudur Goch Ap Goronwy Ap Einion Morfydd Verch Howel Ap Iorwerth Vychan Angharad Ap Hwfa Ap Cynndelw Margaret Verch Einion Ap Siessylt Agnes Wigton Wiggon D. 1675 Thomas Allyn Llewellyn Ap Edmund Ap Gruffydd Edmund Ap Gruffydd Ap Ednyfed Ap Gruffydd D. UNKNOWN Eberhard Marquis of Frioul Iorwerth Goch Ap Ystrwyth Ap Ednowain Ystrwyth Ap Ednowain Ap Gwrydyr Ap Dyfnaint D. 1197 Lord Rhys Ap Gruffydd Ap Rhys Ap Tudur Mawr Gwenllian Verch Madog Ap Meredydd Jonet Verch Howel Ap Madog Ap Iorwerth Nest Verch Iorwerth Ap Llewellyn Ap Gwilim Lord Of Gwent Ithel Llowarch Ap Bran, Lord Of Menai Tudur Ap Madog Ap Iarddur Angharad Verch Madog Ap Urien 0910 - 0966 Berenger II Italy 56 56 1  NAME Berengar II or Berengarious of /Italy/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 907
2  PLAC of, Italy
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1157, 1160, 1194, 1458; RC 94, 106, 263, 332; Coe, A.
Roots, Pfafman and AF.
Marquis/Margrave (or Count) of Ivrea. King of Italy, 950-961.
Pfafman has 966 death date.
RC does not specify which wife ofAdalbert was the mother of Berengar II,
but second wife, Ermengarde, was bornin 901 and Berengar in 907.
Iorwerth Ap Llewellyn Ap Gwilim Ap Einion Llewellyn Ap Gwilim Ap Einion Ap Rhirid Flaidd Gruffydd Maelor Gwyn \Ap Ednowain Ap Eginir Ap Meredydd Ednowain Ap Eginir Ap Meredydd Eginir Ap Meredydd Ap Collwyn Eva Verch Ifan Ap Trahaiarn Ap Iorwerth Ifan Ap Trahaiarn Ap Iorwerth Trahaiarn Ap Iorwerth,Lord Of Garth Y Moel. Cyfnerth Ap Morgenau Ynad Ap Gwrydyr Ap Dyfnain 0930 Willa Tuscany 1  NAME Willa (or Gilla) of /Arles/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date ofImport: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 918
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1157, 1160, 1194, 1449, 1157; RC 94, 263, 332; Coe, AF
and A. Roots.
K: Willa (Gilla) d'Ivrea and Gilla (Willa) d'Arles.
Ieuan Ap Tegwared Y Baisen Angharad Verch Ednyfed Vychan Iorwerth Ap Heilyn Ap Cyfnerth Ap Morgenau Ynad Heilyn Ap Cyfnerth Ap Morgenau Ynad D. 1197 Rhys Ap Gruffydd, King Of deheubarth 1730 Elizabeth Perryman 1734 John Perryman 1735 Samuel Perryman 1741 Jacob Perryman 1679 Martha Armstrong 1040 - 1113 Adela of Betewe 73 73 0990 - 1057 Renaud I deBurgundy 67 67 1743 Mary Perryman 1745 - 1810 Isaac Perryman 65 65 Appointed under the King of England which required his residence in the colony further South, in fact, in the Carolinas, he being something of an executive office and militry protector.  Perriman Pathways Quarterly, Vol 12, No. 2, Issue 46. 24 Aug 1749 is when an  inventory of his estate was filed in Baltimore, Maryland. Perriman Pathways Quarterly, Vol 12, No. 2, Issue 46; Child of Mary Burrage and Roger Perryman. 1761 - 1849 Elizabeth Perriman 88 88 1763 - <1850 Isaac Perryman 87 87 1745 Margaret 1764 - 1840/1859 Joseph Perryman 1769 Nancy Gates 1787 Samuel Perryman 1789 Ann Perryman 1790 John Perryman SOUTH CAROLINA DEED ABSTRACTS 1719-1772 Vol. I Abstracted by Clara A.  Langley Book F page 182 21 Jan, 1723 Release Sarah BEAMOR, Widow, to John BARTON, gentleman both of Berkley County,  for L100 South Carolina money, whereas his excellency John, Lord Granville,  Palatine, & the Lords Proprietors under the hands of Joseph Morton, Esq. Gov.  Arthur MIDDLETON, Andrew PERCIVAL, Maurice MATTHEWS, & John GODFREY, on Mar 1683  granted to Paul GRIMBOLD (GRIMBALL?) that point of 30 acres on Cooper River,  bounding on SW on Paul GRIMBOLD, NE on a marsh, SE & SW on 2 marshes, & whereas  Sarah BEAMOR, widow purchased the tract now she sells to BARTON.  Witnesses: Daniel McKILLVEY, John (his mark) PERRYMAN, Benjamin DENNIS,  Before John BARKSDALE, Jacob MOTTE, Registrar 0790 - 1 Feb 0849/0850 Ramiro I King of Asturias 1791 - 1822 Joseph Wilson Perryman 30 30 ~1193 - <1254 Nichole d' Aubigny 61 61 pg 64,81, 113,171 & 222 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
published 1988

pg 3, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
0978 - 1057 Leofric III 79 79 Jointly with his lady were founders of the abbey dedicated to the Virgin Mary, St. Peter an d St. Osburgh at Coventry. Margaret of Ireland 1807 Ransom Perryman 1155 - 1233 Alan Basset 78 78 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron of Wycomb 1804 - 1857 Nancy Ann Ward 52 52 1805 Margaret Perryman 1809 Elizabeth Perryman 1765 John Perryman 0848 - 0910 Alfonso III King of Austurias 62 62 1769 - <1814 James Amis Perryman 45 45 James Perryman.was born in North Carolina and reared to martial life. During the Revolutionary War, he was with the Colonists, and reached the rank of Colonel under Gen. Wayne. He participated in the battles of Saratoga, Germantown, Brandywine and Yorktown. After the war, he settled in Clairborne County Tennessee, and married Miss Nancy Condray, becoming the father of a large family. 1771 Ann Perriman 1773 Margaret Perryman 1780 - 1848 Jacob Perryman 68 68 Land  Certificate No. 7181, pre 1838, Oct. 7, 1844. The OGS Cemetery Book had the wrong date for Jacob and it really should be 1848. 1747 Susanah Perryman 1683 - 1769 Richard Perryman 86 86 York County Virginia; King and Queen County Virginia 1709; Amelia County Virginia 1751 (Prince Edward). Perriman Pathways Quarterly, Vol 12, No. 2, Issue 46 shows marriage date abt 1728. 1685 Perryman 1628 Judith Dudley Marriages of Goochland County, Virginia, 1733-1815" by Kathaleen Booth Williams, Page 50. 1677 - 1769 Robert Perryman 92 92 1625 - 1673 John Scott 48 48 Col. 0830 - 0866 Ordo I King of Leon 36 36 1648 Edward Young 1795 - 1832 Edmund Perryman 37 37 1821 - 1899 Milton P. Gates 78 78 Rockingham County formed from Guilford County in 1785, Milton was a Reverand, Milton moved to Illinoise then to Missouri. 1794 Philip Gates The link to Ben is not clear at this time. Documention is needed.

Found in the 1860 Census of Illinois, Clinton, Carlyle PO, Ser. M653, Roll 163, Page 660
Listed with his wife.
1792 Sarah Mariah Wright 1817 Charles S. Gates 1829 - 1904 Philip Gates 75 75 Polly Gates Minne Gates Mary Graham D. 1064 Regulide of Lorraine Susan Gates Henry I Trent Henry was possibly born in Stafford, England. He was the son of French immigrants. He came to Norfolk, VA and was there before 1673. Records show he owned 200 acres in Henrico County at that time. Henrico was the relocation site of Jamestown.According to Scott W. Trent, Jr., Henry (Henri) was a Huguenot.
Children:
William Trent
James Trent
Henry Trent
1760 - 1806 Benjamin Gates 46 46 Served in American Revolutionary war. Might have a middle name of Franklin. Named in the will of his father in law, Isaac Vernon. Mary Jane Vernon Children: Benjamin Gates Jr,
John "Jake" Gates,
Patsy Gates, Thomas Gates,
Allen Gates,
Sarah "Sally" Gates, born Georgia: April 25, 1790 died April 17, 1856
James Gates,
Jane Gates,
Rebecca Gates,
William Gates



Aka:  Jane Irene Vernon
Stated to have married  John Mc Cune.
George Gates 1793 Isaac Peryman 1797 - WFT Est. 1826-1888 Phillip Gates Peryman 1801 - 1887 Allen Peryman 86 86 1803 - 1870 Jacob Perryman 66 66 ***Joel Jacob Perryman, born 14 Sep 1803 in Rockingham Co, NC and died 12 Feb 1870 in Shelby Co, IL.
He was the son of Nancy Gates and Joseph Perryman.
***Joel married Nancy Ann Ward on 13 Mar 1823 in Wilson Co, TN.
***Nancy was born 14 May 1804 in Wilson Co, TN and died 12 Jan 1887 in Shelby Co, IL.
They had 11 children; of which John William Perryman was born abt 1821
***Nelson Owen Perryman was the second child out of the 11. He was born 17 Sep 1829 in Shelby Co, IL.
He married 1st to Elizabeth Jane Knight on 10 Apr 1851 in Shelby Co, IL.
A second marriage to Ella M. Sunderland on 11 Jul 1872 by Joseph Gordon was never recorded in the state records.
***Julia Ann Perryman was the fourth out of eight children to Elizabeth Jane and Nelson Owen Perryman.
Listed in the 1880 Federal Census for Oconee Township, IL, page 219 #142/145 is Nelson O. Perryman, born 1879 in Shelby Co, IL.
He was the fourth child born out of four children to Francis Marion Perryman, born 20 Apr 1835 in Lakewood Township, Shelby Co, IL and died 6 Mar 1930 in Oconee Township, IL.
***Francis was married to Emily Hulsey, born 1842 at Fort Smith, AR.
1112 - <1193 William II de Braose 81 81 William was very fortunate in his marriage to Berta.  All of her brothersdied young without heirs, so she brought a number of important lordshipsto the de Braoses in 1166.  These included Brecon and Abergavenny.William became Sheriff of Hereford in 1174.  His interest in Sussex wasmaintained as he confirmed the grants of his father and grandfather forthe maintenance of Sele Priory and extended St Mary's, Shoreham. William m. Berta, dau. of Milo de Gloucester, Earl of Hereford, andco-heir of her brother, William, Earl of Hereford, by whom he acquiredBrecknock, with other extensive territorial possessions. He had two sons,William and Reginald, and was s. by the elder. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]  From c1173 to 1230 successive fathers, sons, and younger brothers calledde Briouze were feudal lords of Abergavenny.  William de Briouze, thefirst of them, who derived his name from his lordship of Briouze inNormandy, married the sister and coheir of the 2nd Earl of Hereford (alsodaughter of 1st Earl) mentioned above, which seems to account for hiscoming into possession of a lordship in that part of the Welsh marches.[Burke's Peerage]

"The Victoria County History of Sussex (The Rape ofBramber)" and  "The De Braose Family". 3rd Baron de Braiose; Sheriff Of Herfordshire
Amedeo de Spoleto ~1130 - 1204 Bertha de Gloucester 74 74 Heiress of Brecon Jane Milliken Matilda ~1022 - ~1094 Roger de Beaumont 72 72 Roger de Beaumont; Seigneur (feudal Lord) of Beaumont, Pontaudemer,Brionne and Vatteville, Normandy; married Adeline, sister of Hugh Countof Meulan and daughter by his 1st wife of Waleran Count of Meulan.[Burke's Peerage]

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The well-known Roger de Beaumont held Sturminster Marshal, Dorset, in1086; it descended to the counts of Meulan through Roger's eldest son,Robert count of Meulan.  That Roger took his name from Beaumont is a partof the general history of Normandy.  It follows that Roger's descendants,the counts of Meulan, the Earls of Leicester, and the Earls of Warwick,all derive from Beaumont-le-Roger.  [The Origins of Some Anglo-NormanFamilies]
~1014 - 1081 Adeline de Meulan 67 67 0975 - 1044 Humphrey de Pontaudemer 69 69 0984 - 1045 Aubreye de la Haye 61 61 1092 - 1143 Miles Fitzwalter 51 51 In 1141, during the struggle between the Empress Maud and Stephen I for the throne the former conferred the Earldom of Hereford on Miles of Gloucester, his father being hereditary Constable of the shire.  Only two years earlier the new Earl had supported Stephen, but  he went over to the Empress's in part because his over lord, the Earl of Gloucester, was one of Henry I's many bastard sons, Maud's half brother. Shot while hunting in Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, England
[Burke's Peerage]
<1093 - >1143 Sybil de Neufmarche 50 50 ~1070 - 1129 Walter Fitz Roger 59 59 0885 - 0989 Ermengarde of Burgundy 104 104 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1070 Emma de Baallun 1045 - 1089 Roger de Pitres 44 44 ~1190 Roger Pilkington ~1448 - 1516/1517 Ralph III Shirley ~1081 - 13 Feb 1130/1131 Isabel Elizabeth de Vermandois 1050 - 1101 Hugh deCrepi Magnus 51 51 ~1050 - 1120 Adelaidede Vermandois 70 70 ~1032 - 1080 Herbert IV Count of Vermandois 48 48 1032 - 1080 Adela de Vexin 48 48 ~1050 - 1093 Bernard de Neufmarche 43 43 1313 - 1355 Elizabeth deBadlesmere 42 42 ~1075 - Bet. 1107 - 1173 Nesta verch Osborn ~1084 Miss ~1080 Richard de Villiers 0990 Oda de Conteville 1027 - 1087 William The Conqueror 59 59 William I, byname WILLIAM The CONQUEROR, or The BASTARD, or WILLIAM ofNORMANDY, French GUILLAUME le CONQUÉRANT, or le BÂTARD, or GUILLAUME deNORMANDIE (b. c. 1028, Falaise, Normandy--d. Sept. 9, 1087, Rouen), dukeof Normandy (as William II) from 1035 and king of England from 1066, oneof the greatest soldiers and rulers of the Middle Ages. He made himselfthe mightiest feudal lord in France and then changed the course ofEngland's history by his conquest of that country.

Early years

William was the elder of two children of Robert I of Normandy and hisconcubine Herleva, or Arlette, the daughter of a burgher from the town ofFalaise. In 1035 Robert died when returning from a pilgrimage toJerusalem, and William, his only son, whom he had nominated as his heirbefore his departure, was accepted as duke by the Norman magnates and hisfeudal overlord, King Henry I of France. William and his friends had toovercome enormous obstacles. His illegitimacy (he was generally known asthe Bastard) was a handicap, and he had to survive the collapse of lawand order that accompanied his accession as a child.

Three of William's guardians died violent deaths before he grew up, andhis tutor was murdered. His father's kin were of little help; most ofthem thought that they stood to gain by the boy's death. But his mothermanaged to protect William through the most dangerous period. These earlydifficulties probably contributed to his strength of purpose and hisdislike of lawlessness and misrule.

Ruler of Normandy.

By 1042, when William reached his 15th year, was knighted, and began toplay a personal part in the affairs of his duchy, the worst was over. Buthis attempts to recover rights lost during the anarchy and to bringdisobedient vassals and servants to heel inevitably led to trouble. From1046 until 1055 he dealt with a series of baronial rebellions, mostly ledby kinsmen. Occasionally he was in great danger and had to rely on Henryof France for help. In 1047 Henry and William defeated a coalition ofNorman rebels at Val-ès-Dunes, southeast of Caen. It was in these yearsthat William learned to fight and rule.

William soon learned to control his youthful recklessness. He was alwaysready to take calculated risks on campaign and, most important, to fighta battle. But he was not a chivalrous or flamboyant commander. His planswere simple, his methods direct, and he exploited ruthlessly anyadvantage gained. If he found himself at a disadvantage, he withdrewimmediately. He showed the same
qualities in his government. He never lost sight of his aim to recoverlost ducal rights and revenues, and, although he developed no theory ofgovernment or great interest in administrative techniques, he was alwaysprepared to improvise and experiment. He seems to have lived a moral lifeby the standards of the time, and he acquired an interest in the welfareof the Norman church. He made his half brother, Odo, bishop of Bayeux in1049 at the age of about 16, and Odo managed to combine the roles ofnobleman and prelate in a way that did not greatly shock contemporaries.But William also welcomed foreign monks and scholars to Normandy.Lanfranc of Pavia, a famous master of the liberal arts, who entered themonastery of Bec about 1042, was made abbot of Caen in 1063.

According to a brief description of William's person by an anonymousauthor, who borrowed extensively from Einhard's Life of Charlemagne, hewas just above average height and had a robust, thick-set body. Though hewas always sparing of food and drink, he became fat in later life. He hada rough bass voice and was a good and ready speaker. Writers of the nextgeneration agree that he was exceptionally strong and vigorous. Williamwas an out-of-doors man, a hunter and soldier, fierce and despotic,generally feared; uneducated, he had few graces but was intelligent andshrewd and soon obtained the respect of his rivals.

New alliances.

After 1047 William began to take part in events outside his duchy. Insupport of his lord, King Henry, and in pursuit of an ambition tostrengthen his southern frontier and expand into Maine, he fought aseries of campaigns against Geoffrey Martel, count of Anjou. But in 1052Henry and Geoffrey made peace, there was a serious rebellion in easternNormandy, and, until 1054 William was again in serious danger. Duringthis period he conducted important negotiations with his cousin Edwardthe Confessor, king of England, and took a wife.

Norman interest in Anglo-Saxon England derived from an alliance made in1002, when King Ethelred II of England married Emma, the sister of CountRichard II, William's grandfather. Two of her sons, William's cousinsonce removed, had reigned in turn in England, Hardecanute (1040-42) andEdward the Confessor (1042-66). William had met Edward during thatprince's exile on the Continent and may well have given him some supportwhen he returned to England in 1041. In that year Edward was about 36 andWilliam 14. It is clear that William expected some sort of reward fromEdward and, when Edward's marriage proved unfruitful, began to develop anambition to become his kinsman's heir. Edward probably at timesencouraged William's hopes. His childlessness was a diplomatic asset.

In 1049 William negotiated with Baldwin V of Flanders for the hand of hisdaughter, Matilda. Baldwin, an imperial vassal with a distinguishedlineage, was in rebellion against the Western emperor, Henry III, and indesperate need of allies. The proposed marriage was condemned asincestuous (William and Matilda were evidently related in some way) bythe Emperor's friend, Pope Leo IX, at the Council of Reims in October1049; but so anxious were the parties for the alliance that before theend of 1053, possibly in 1052, the wedding took place. In 1059 Williamwas reconciled to the papacy, and as penance the disobedient pair builttwo monasteries at Caen. Four sons were born to William and Matilda:Robert (the future duke of Normandy), Richard (who died young), WilliamRufus (the Conqueror's successor in England), and Henry (Rufus'successor). Among the daughters was Adela, who was the mother of Stephen,king of England.

Edward the Confessor was supporting the Emperor, and it is possible thatWilliam used his new alliance with Flanders to put pressure on Edward andextort an acknowledgment that he was the English king's heir. At allevents, Edward seems to have made some sort of promise to William in1051, while Tostig, son of the greatest nobleman in England, EarlGodwine, married Baldwin's half sister. The immediate purpose of thistripartite alliance was to improve the security of each of the parties.If William secured a declaration that he was Edward's heir, he was alsolooking very far ahead.

Between 1054 and 1060 William held his own against an alliance betweenKing Henry I and Geoffrey Martel of Anjou. Both men died in 1060 and weresucceeded by weaker rulers. As a result, in 1063 William was able toconquer Maine. In 1064 or 1065 Edward sent his brother-in-law, Harold,earl of Wessex, Godwine's son and successor, on an embassy to Normandy.William took him on a campaign into Brittany, and in connection with thisHarold swore an oath in which, according to Norman writers, he renewedEdward's bequest of the throne to William and promised to support it.

When Edward died childless on Jan. 5, 1066, Harold was accepted as kingby the English magnates, and William decided on war. Others, however,moved more quickly. In May Tostig, Harold's exiled brother, raidedEngland, and in September he joined the invasion forces of Harald IIIHardraade, king of Norway, off the Northumbrian coast. William assembleda fleet, recruited an army, and gathered his forces in August at themouth of the Dives River. It is likely that he originally intended tosail due north and invade England by way of the Isle of Wight andSouthampton Water. Such a plan would give him an offshore base andinterior lines. But adverse winds detained his fleet in harbour for amonth, and in September a westerly gale drove his ships up-Channel.

The Battle of Hastings.

William regrouped his forces at Saint-Valéry on the Somme. He hadsuffered a costly delay, some naval losses, and a drop in the morale ofhis troops. On September 27, after cold and rainy weather, the windbacked south. William embarked his army and set sail for the southeastcoast of England. The following morning he landed, took the unresistingtowns of Pevensey and Hastings, and began to organize a bridgehead withbetween 4,000 and 7,000 cavalry and infantry.

William's forces were in a narrow coastal strip, hemmed in by the greatforest of Andred, and, although this corridor was easily defensible, itwas not much of a base for the conquest of England. The campaigningseason was almost past, and when William received news of his opponent itwas not reassuring. On September 25 Harold had defeated and slain Tostigand Harald Hardraade at Stamford Bridge, near York, and was retracing hissteps to meet the new invader. On October 13, when Harold emerged fromthe forest, William was taken by surprise. But the hour was too late forHarold to push on to Hastings, and he took up a defensive position. Earlythe next day William went out to give battle. He attacked the Englishphalanx with archers and cavalry but saw his army almost driven from thefield. He rallied the fugitives, however, and brought them back into thefight and in the end wore down his opponents. Harold's brothers werekilled early in the battle. Toward nightfall the King himself fell andthe English gave up. William's coolness and tenacity secured him victoryin this fateful battle, and he then moved against possible centres ofresistance so quickly that he prevented a new leader from emerging. OnChristmas Day 1066 he was crowned king in Westminster Abbey. In a formalsense the Norman Conquest of England had taken place.

King of England

William was already an experienced ruler. In Normandy he had replaceddisloyal nobles and ducal servants with his own friends, limited privatewarfare, and recovered usurped ducal rights, defining the feudal dutiesof his vassals. The Norman church flourished under his rule. He wanted achurch free of corruption but subordinate to him. He would not tolerateopposition from bishops and abbots or interference from the papacy. Hepresided over church synods and reinforced ecclesiastical discipline withhis own. In supporting Lanfranc, prior of Bec, against Berengar of Toursin their dispute over the doctrine of the Eucharist, he found himself onthe side of orthodoxy. He was never guilty of the selling of churchoffice (simony). He disapproved of clerical marriage. At the same time hewas a stern and sometimes rough master, swayed by political necessities,and he was not generous to the church with his own property. The reformerLanfranc was one of his advisers; but perhaps even more to his taste werethe worldly and soldierly bishops Odo of Bayeux and Geoffrey of Coutances.

William left England early in 1067 but had to return in December becauseof English unrest. The English rebellions that began in 1067 reachedtheir peak in 1069 and were finally quelled in 1071. They completed theruin of the highest English aristocracy and gave William a distaste forhis newly conquered kingdom. Since his position on the Continent wasdeteriorating, he wanted to solve English problems as cheaply aspossible. To secure England's frontiers, he invaded Scotland in 1072 andWales in 1081 and created special defensive "marcher" counties along theScottish and Welsh borders.

In the last 15 years of his life he was more often in Normandy than inEngland, and there were five years, possibly seven, in which he did notvisit the kingdom at all. He retained most of the greatest Anglo-Normanbarons with him in Normandy and confided the government of England tobishops, trusting especially his old friend Lanfranc, whom he madearchbishop of Canterbury. Much concerned that the natives should not beunnecessarily disturbed, he allowed them to retain their own laws andcourts.

William returned to England only when it was absolutely necessary: in1075 to deal with the aftermath of a rebellion by Roger, earl ofHereford, and Ralf, earl of Norfolk, which was made more dangerous by theintervention of a Danish fleet; and in 1082 to arrest and imprison hishalf brother Odo, bishop of Bayeux and earl of Kent, who was planning totake an army to Italy, perhaps to make himself pope. In the spring of1082 William had his son Henry knighted, and in August at Salisbury hetook oaths of fealty from all the important landowners in England,whosoever's vassals they might be. In 1085 he returned with a large armyto meet the threat of an invasion by Canute IV (Canute the Holy) ofDenmark. When this came to nothing owing to Canute's death in 1086,William ordered an economic and tenurial survey to be made of thekingdom, the results of which are summarized in the two volumes ofDomesday Book.

William was preoccupied with the frontiers of Normandy. The danger spotswere in Maine and the Vexin on the Seine, where Normandy bordered on theFrench royal demesne. After 1066 William's continental neighbours becamemore powerful and even more hostile. In 1068 Fulk the Surly succeeded toAnjou and in 1071 Robert the Frisian to Flanders. Philip I of Franceallied with Robert and Robert with the Danish king, Canute IV. There wasalso the problem of William's heir apparent, Robert Curthose, who, givenno appanage and seemingly kept short of money, left Normandy in 1077 andintrigued with his father's enemies. In 1081 William made a compromisewith Fulk in the treaty of Blancheland: Robert Curthose was to be countof Maine but as a vassal of the count of Anjou. The eastern part of theVexin, the county of Mantes, had fallen completely into King Philip'shands in 1077 when William had been busy with Maine. In 1087 Williamdemanded from Philip the return of the towns of Chaumont, Mantes, andPontoise. In July he entered Mantes by surprise, but while the townburned he suffered some injury from which he never recovered. He wasthwarted at the very moment when he seemed about to enforce his lastoutstanding territorial claim.

Death

William was taken to a suburb of Rouen, where he lay dying for fiveweeks. He had the assistance of some of his bishops and doctors, and inattendance were his half brother Robert, count of Mortain, and hisyounger sons, William Rufus and Henry. Robert Curthose was with the Kingof France. It had probably been his intention that Robert, as was thecustom, should succeed to the whole inheritance. In the circumstances hewas tempted to make the loyal Rufus his sole heir. In the end hecompromised: Normandy and Maine went to Robert and England to Rufus.Henry was given great treasure with which he could purchase an appanage.William died at daybreak on September 9, in his 60th year, and was buriedin rather unseemly fashion in St. Stephen's Church, which he had built atCaen. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD, 1996, WILLIAM I]

[Note: UnLinked FromRobert I, of Normandy and his wife Herleve de Falaise. Line correct.]

Duke of Normandy, 1035-1087; king of England, 1066-1087

Source:  David C Douglas, William the Conqueror:  The Norman Impact Upon England, University of California Press, 1964, p 394-395.: It may therefore be concluded that William and Matilda had four sons, born in the following order:  1. Robert, later duke of Normandy.  Born 1051-1054.  Died 10 February 1134.  2. Richard.  Born before 1056. Died circa 1075?  3. William, later king of Englnd.  Born 1056-1060. Died 2 August 1100.  4. Henry, later king of England.  Born late 1068. Died 1 December 1135.  (P) It would appear also that William and Matilda may have had six daughters who (without reference to seniority) might be enumerated as follows:  1. Agatha, betrothed successively to Harold, earl of Wessex, and to Alphonse of Leon (and possibly previously to Herbert, count of Maine).  Died a virgin.  2. Adeliza.  3. Cecily, born before 1066, subsequently abbess of Holy Trinity, Caen.  Died 1127.  4. Adela, married, 1080, Stephen I, count of Blois.  Died 1137.  5. Constance, married, 1086, Alan IV, count of Brittany.  Died 1090.  6. Matilda.  (P) Dogmatism would here, however, be out of place.  The separate existence of Agatha and Adeliza is not certain, and the evidence about Matilda is less than satisfactory. [Footnote:  The matter is complicated by the fact Ordericus (vol. II, p. 182) says that one of William's daughters was betrothed to Edwin of Mercia..]  The relative ages of the daughters is moreover not known, and one at least of them, Cecily, was born before Henry I. Finally, it may deserve a note of surprise (and admiration) that a lady of such diminutive size as was William's wife should have produced so large a family before her death in 1083 [see below for physical descriptions of William and Matilda]."  p 394-395.  One of the pieces of  *Ordericus Vitalis [vol. II, pp. 189, 391, 392; vol. III, p. 159] mentions five daughters of William's marriage whom he names and describes as follows:  (i) Agatha, who was betrothed successively to Harold of Wessex and Alphonso of Spain.  She protested vigorously against going to Spain, and died a virgin, being buried at Bayeux;  (ii) Adeliza, who undertook religious vows early in life and lived under the protection of Roger of Beaumont;  (iii) Constance, who married Alan IV of Brittany; (iv) Adela, who married Stephen I, count of Blois;  and (v) Cecily, who became abbess of Holy Trinity, Caen. Douglas also observes *Domesday Book* mentions a daughter of William named Matilda.


Source:  Leslie Gilbert Pine, *They Came with the Conqueror*, London (Evans Brothers Limited) 1954, p 23-24,;    "To start our [English] national story at the year 1066 is to split asunder the seamless robe of England's past; we have a thousand years of recorded history before William sailed into Norman's Bay at Pevensey.  A population which by careful research has been estimated (for England) at one million to one million and a half suddenly had imposed on it a ruling class of Normans and other foreigners.  (The Conquest began in 1066, and was not over until 1073.)  By 1065 William had parcelled out most of the land, and for revenue purposes he wanted a complete survey to be made of the whole country.  This which was completed in 1086 is the popularly named Domesday Book.  From this wonderful work we are able to see that the King's chief tenants -- the barons or King's men, as they were called -- numbered about 200!  The land was given to them on condition that they supplied William with soldiers, and the unit of land was a knight's fee. There were about 5, 000 of these knights' fees.  If we reckon that each knight had with him or attached to him not less than ten other fighters and followers, we reach a figure of some 50,000 men; not all were warriors, but perhaps some 30,000 of them were.  We have to remember that these 30, 000 were dispersed through perhaps 50 garrisons, where either the King had built a castle or one of his barons had a stronghold.  On the borders of Wales and Scotland and on the coast-line facing Scandinavia garrisons tended necessarily to be stronger than in parts of the Midlands or in Surrey.  In the harsh north of England a Norman lord needed more retiners than in once-for-all subdued Sussex.  (P) To those 50,000 military and quasi-military persons we muct add many others who had no warlike capacity; Norman clerics, priests, womenm children, tradesmen, workmen and the like  I wuld therefore reckon that by 1086, when the Conquest had been achieved and the new system was settled, some 100,000 persons of Norman or foreign stock had come into England --- one-tenth of the old population, or one-fifteenth if the upper estimate of the English population is accepted.  (P) This estimate does not mean that the old fable of 60,000 men-at-arms at Hastings can be accepted.  Considerations of shipping and provisioning alone make this impossible.  On the other hand estimates which put the Conqueror's army at Hastings as low as 6,000 are not, I think, realistic.  Hastings was won after a hard day's fight against an army which had wiped out Harold Hardrada of Norway and his Vikings.  I do not think that William could have gone into the battle with less than 12,000 effectives and with a camp behind that.  (P) However, after Hasting, when William was accepted by the English as King, no doubt many cautious person came over from Normandy to join in their Duke's good fortune.  No doubt William had many creditors, and where the property is, these vultures are wont to flock.  They were satsified with lands filched from the English and Danish lords on the harsh plea that they were traitors to a King they had never acknowledged. William had much to bestow and was soon surrounded by needy and greedy courtiers.  Every bloodthirsty swashbuckler, every penniless or landless younger son flocked to William at London or Winchester. Every saintly psalm-droner between Rome and Coutance, who saw his chance to cash in on the forfeiture of English sees and abbeys, found his way to England."
1032 - 1083 Matilda Maud of Flanders 51 51 For many years it was assumed that Gundred, who married William deWarrene, was a daughter of William I and Matilda (as indicated in ThePlantagenet Ancestry).  However it is now known that Gundred was adaughter of Gherbod the Fleming (as indicated in Ancestral Roots).  Thefollowing information strongly suggests that Gundred's mother was Matilda(thus the mistaken notion that she was daughter of William I).

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copied from Bill Crawford's ancestry: crawfolk data base on World ConnectProject, rootsweb.com
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Had Matilda of Flanders as many husbands as Adelaide, Countess ofPonthieu, and, like her, issue by each? What was the real cause of theinhibition of her marriage with William, Duke of Normandy, — its delayfor six years? What truth is there in the story of her unreturnedaffection for the Angio-Saxon Brihtric Meaw, and of her vindictiveconduct to him after she became Queen of England? I have hesitated tobelieve in the popular tradition that Duke William grossly assaulted thedaughter of Baldwin in the street or in her own chamber, not that I haveany doubt about his being capable of such an outrage, but because he wastoo politic to commit it, and she was not the woman to have forgiven it,assuming that the offence was the simple refusal of his hand on theground of his illegitimacy. It is obvious, however, that the early lifeof Matilda is involved in mystery, and it is highly probable that aclearer insight into it would enable us to account for much which we nowreject as legend, or fail to reconcile with acknowledged facts. If therebe any foundation for the story of William's brutality, the outburst ofungovernable fury might have been due to a much greater provocation thanhas been assigned for it. Brihtric, the son of Algar or Alfar, sumamedMeaw (Snow), from the extreme fairness of his complexion, an Anglo-SaxonThegn, possessor of large domains in England, had been sent on an embassyfrom King Edward the Confessor to the Connt of Flanders. Matilda, we aretold, fell desperately in love with him, and offered herself to him inmarriage! Either disgusted by her forwardness, or preferring another, hedeclined the flattering proposal. "Hell hath no fury like a womanfoiled," and she kept her wrath warm till she was in a position to ruinthe man she had so passionately loved. She had no sooner become the Queenof England than she induced William to confiscate, on some pretence, allBrihtric's estates, and obtained the greater proportion for herself. Theunfortunate Thegn was arrested at his house at Hanley, in Worcestershire,on the very day Saint Wulfstan had consecrated a chapel of his building,dragged to Winchester, and died in a dungeon! The truth of this story issupported by the impartial evidence of Domesday, in which Hanley and theprincipal manors held by Brihtric in the time of King Edward are recordedas the possessions of Queen Matilda, and the remainder passed to FitzHamon.

After her hand had been rejected by the noble Saxon, it is presumed shebecame the wife of a Fleming, named Gherbod, who appears to have held thehereditary office of Advocate of the Abbey of Saint Bertin, in St. Omers,and by whom she had at least two children, viz., Gherbod, to whom Williamgave the earldom of Chester, and Gundred, "the sister of Gherbod," andwife of William de Warren. Was this a clandestine or an informalmarriage, which, as it has never been acknowledged by any chronicler,contemporary or other, might have been unknown to the Duke of Normandy,when he proposed to one whom he believed to be the maiden daughter of theCount of Flanders, and the corporal chastisement inflicted, howeverunworthy of a man, passed over, sub silentio, for prudential reasons, bythe parties wlio had been guilty of a disgraceful suppression of facts?The subsequent marriage under such circumstances will awaken no surprisein any one who has studied the character of William. Utterlyunscrupulous, destitute of every generous, noble, or delicate feeling,every action of his life was dictated by POLICY alone. An alliance withthe Count of Flanders might be considered by the crafty schemersufficiently advantageous to warrant his overlooking any objectionableantecedents in the conduct of a granddaughter of a king of France, hisfirst discovery of which had provoked his savage nature into a momentaryebullition of fury. Her being the mother of two children was a point inher favour with a man whose sole motive for marrying was the perpetuationof a dynasty, and the fair prospect of legitimate issue, in whose veinsthe blood of the Capets should enrich that of the Furrier of Falaise,would overcome any hesitation at espousing the widow of an Advocate ofSt. Bertin. On the other hand, Count Baldwin would be too happy toembrace the opportunity of reinstating his daughter in a positionbefitting her birth, and, as well as the lady herself, gladly condonepast insults for future advantages and the hope of smothering, in thesplendour of a ducal wedding, the awkward whispers of scandal.

I have said thus much simply to show the view that may be taken of thesemysterious circumstances, in opposition to the rose-colouredrepresentations of some modern historians, who, upon no strongerevidence, elevate the Conqueror into a model husband, and describeMatilda as the perfection of womankind.

Queen of England and  Countess of Flanders
Source: Charles Homer Hoskins, The Normans in European History, 1915, p 61"And so an important part of Norman history has to treat of the struggles with the duchy's neighbors, Flanders on the north, the royal domain on the east, Maine and Anjou to the southward, and Brittany on the west. Fortunately for Normandy, the Bretons were but loosely organized, while the Flemings, compacted into one of the strongest of the French fiefs, were generally friendly, and the friendship was in this period cemented by William's marriage to Matilda, daughter of the count of Flanders, one of the few princely marriages of the time which was founded upon affection and observed with fidelity."
~1006 - 1060 Henry I Capet France 54 54 ~1024 - >1075 Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna of Kiev 51 51 1595 - 1681 John Peckham 86 86 Source: Ancestors of American Presidents, Gary Boyd Roberts 1009 - 8 Jan 1078/1079 Aelis Adele France 1689 James Archer ~1175 - 1210 William IV deBraose 35 35 William did not accompany King Richard on Crusade but fought with KingJohn against Philip in Normandy (1203/4).  King John demanded William asa hostage for his father's loyalty in 1208.  His mother Maud refused andthe fled to Ireland.  In 1210 John prepared an expedition to Ireland.Maud and William escaped Ireland, but were apprehended in Scotland.William the father was in Wales at the time.  It is believed that Maudand William were starved to death at Windsor Castle (Some say Corfe).
William, who perished by starvation with his mother at Windsor m. Maud,dau. of the Earl of Clare, with whom he had the town of Buckingham, infrank marriage, and left a son, John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,England, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]
~1025 Walderne deSt. Clair ~1027 Helene deNormandy 1059 - >1123 Jukel Judeal de Totnes 64 64 1060 Miss de Picquigny 1029 Alured de Totnais ~1196 Robert Byron 1018 Geoffrey Sire de Neufmarche 1027 Ada de Hugleville 0988 Thurcytel de Neufmarche 1070 - 1145 Ralph IV de Beaumont 75 75 1011 - 1063 Gruffudd ap Llewelyn 52 52 0980 - 1023 Llywelyn ap Seisyll 43 43 0982 Angharad verch Maredudd ~0982 Cynfyn ap Gwerystan ~1041 - >1086 Edith of Mercia 45 45 <1030 - 1059 Aelfgar III Earl of East Anglia & Mercia 29 29 0968 - 1057 Leofric III Earl of Mercia 89 89 0946 - 1028 Leofwine I Mercia 82 82 0980 - 1067 "Lady" Godiva 87 87 This is the famous Lady Godiva.  She complained constantly to her husbandthat the taxes were too high on the townspeople of Coventry.  He finallysaid that he would reduce the taxes if she would ride nude through themarketplace on market day.  She arranged for all of the men to remaininside and covered her entire body, except her legs, with her hair.Supposedly one person named Tom did not remain inside during her ride andbecame known as "Peeping Tom".   Leofric eliminated all taxes, except for one on horses.  During Edward I's reign, a check was made and the onlytax in Coventry was one on horses.  Since 1678 the town of Coventry stillcelebrates the ride during its annual fair.

Concerning her dates of birth and death.  I originally had 980-1067, butthis was not in agreement with Ancestral Roots line 176a-2, which has herbirth at c1010 and her marriage at c1030.  Nor was it consistant with theEncyclopedia Britannica which had Godiva fl. 1040-1080.  However the 980birth date was consistant with her gr grandaughter Nesta b. c1055/7, dauof Edith, dau of Aelfgar, son of Godiva.  With some serious scrunching ofdates I could conceive of:

     Godiva b. 1010 (originally 980)
     Aelfgar b. 1025 (originally 1002)
     Edith    b. 1041 (originally 1030)
     Nesta   b. 1057

with two other daughters of Leofric born to a "first wife or mistress".It is physically possible for 3 generations in a row born at the 15/16thyear of their parents life (however unlikely), so that is what I havedone.
0955 Thorold of Coventry 1040 Hubert de Beaumont 0987 - 1070 William II de Provence 83 83 ~0997 Aelfgifu England <1600> - 1634 Susanna Gollop Annora Pierrepont D. 0517 Cadwallon ap Einion of N Wales 1040 Bertha Roberts Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1069 Hawise de Vitre Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1054 - 1139 Andre de Vitre 85 85 ~1056 Agnes de Mortaigne ~1220 - 1278 Geoffrey de Worsley 58 58 D. 1642 Edward Allen James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England
EDWARD, Ipswich, ace. a very doubtful tradit. came from Scotland, 1636,m. a Kimball, and had, as runs the same story, fifteen s. and three ds.That acco. was giv. by Hon. Samuel C. Allen to Farmer. In the Hist. ofHubbard, wh. was his neighb. the burn. of his barn, 1670, is ment. Withw. Sarah, wh. d. 12 June 1696, he rem. to Suffield, having had nine ch.and there had one, b. 1683; and ano. 1685. Of seven s. the names aretold, but without dates, exc. John, wh. is said to have been b. a. 1660,and was k. by the Ind. 11 May 1704 at Deerfield, where he had liv. from1685; Edward, wh. also liv. at D. there d. 1740, leav. a fam. William,wh. d. at Suffield, 1702; Benjamin, the anc. of Hon. Samuel C. hadJoseph, wh. sett. at Deerfield; David, and Samuel, both, it is said, wentto N. J. and Caleb, b. 31 Mar. 1685, prob. the youngest. Four ds. too arenam. Sarah, wh. m. 21 Apr. 1685, Edward Smith; Martha, wh. m. SamuelKent, jr.; Abigail, m. Timothy Palmer; and Mary, of wh. nothing is told.
0740 Ragnar Lodbrock The celebrated and heroic warrior Ragnar, so called because he alwayswore in battle a pair of enchanted breeches, made of a bear skin with thehair outwards. King Reymer Lodbrok having invaded England in 794, wastaken prisoner by Aella, King of Northumberland, who put him to death ina most cruel manner, he being thrown into a pit hole full of adders,which stung him to death. When news of his death reached Denmark his fivevaliant sons were furious. When being told that their father had said,"How the young cubs would rage when they learned of the old bear's fate,"they vowed instant revenge. An expedition led by eight crowned headsinvaded England. In a battle at York the Anglo-Saxons were entirelyrouted and King Aella was made prisoner and subjected to the mostbarbarous treatment. The sons of Lodbrok ordered an eagle to be cut onthe fleshy part of his back, the ribs were severed from the spine and theheart and lungs extracted. After this victory Northumbria appears nolonger as a Saxon kingdom. Ivor was made King of Northumbria and Danishmerchants and people flocked to England. Bjorn, another brother, was madeKing of Sweden. Gotefrid became King of Jutland. Another son, Sigurd,called the Snake Eye, inherited the Danish crown. 1648 Samuel Hill ~1570 Henry Scott 1698 - 1763 Mary Allen 65 65 1058 - 1102 Roger de Montgomery 44 44 1062 - 1116 Almodis de la Marche 54 54 Roger Wentworth ~0986 - 1032 Constance of Provence 46 46 ~0980 - 20 Feb 1053/1054 Jaroslaus I "The Wise" Grand Duke of Kiev 1001 - 10 Feb 1049/1050 Ingegard Olafsdottir 1204 - 1263 Margaret verch Llewelyn 59 59 Margaret, died 1263, daughter of Llewellyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of Wales. [Magna Charta Sureties] 1018 - UNKNOWN BertradePrincess of Norway ~1095 Susanna verch Gruffudd 1  NAME Susanna Verch /Gruffydd/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: A. Roots 176; Kreantzler 1123, 1409; Young.
K. has Susanna as wife of Madog and mother of Margaret. Unknow for sure if
she was the mother of the other two children.
Roots: Susanna,daughter of Gryffyd ap Cynan.
Young: Susanna of Gwynedd.
*******
Roots: Noteerror in Dict. of Welsh Biog. which shows Susanna as daughter of
Owen Gryffydd. Correct father shown in Dictionary of National Biography.

SOURCES:
1.  Ancestral File gives her name as Susanna.  Other sources do not identify
her byname.
1190 - 1236 Joan Plantagenet England 45 45 The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon and Griffith.
THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500 IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305[colvill1286a.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305[colvill1286b.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305[colvill1286c.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305

pg 34, 149, 196 & 221, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1167 - 1216 John I Plantagenet England 48 48 Plantagenet
John was born on Christmas Eve 1167. His parents drifted apart after hisbirth;his youth was divided between his eldest brother Henry's house,where he learnedthe art of knighthood, and the house of his father'sjusticiar, Ranulf Glanvil,where he learned the business of government.As the fourth child, inherited lands were not available to him, givingrise to his nickname, Lackland. His first marriage lasted but ten yearsand was fruitless, but his second wife, Isabella ofAngouleme, bore himtwo sons and three daughters. He also had an illegitimate daughter, Joan,who married Llywelyn the Great, Ruler of All Wales, from which the Tudorline of monarchs was descended. The survival of the English governmentduring John's reign is a testament to the reforms of his father, as Johntaxed thesystem socially, economically, and judicially.
The Angevin family feuds profoundly marked John. He and Richard clashedin 1184 following Richard's refusal tohonor his father's wishessurrender Aquitane to John. The following year HenryII sent John to ruleIreland, but John alienated both the native Irish and the transplantedAnglo-Normans who emigrated to carve out new lordships for themselves;the experiment was a total failure and John returned home within sixmonths. After Richard gained the throne in 1189, he gave John vastestates in an unsuccessful attempt to appease his younger brother. Johnfailed to overthrow Richard'sadministrators during the German captivityand conspired with Philip II in another failed coup attempt. UponRichard's release from captivity in 1194, John wasforced to sue forpardon and he spent the next five years in his brother's shadow.
John's reign was troubled in many respects. A quarrel with the Churchresulted in England being placed under an interdict in 1207, with Johnactually excommunicated two years later. The dispute centered on John'sstubborn refusal to install the papal candidate, Stephen Langdon, asArchbishop of Canterbury; the issue was not resolved until Johnsurrendered to the wishes of Pope Innocent III andpaid tribute forEngland as the Pope's vassal.
John proved extremely unpopularwith his subjects. In addition to theIrish debacle, he inflamed his French vassals by orchestrating the murderof his popular nephew, Arthur of Brittany. By spring 1205, he lost thelast of his French possessions and returned to England.The final tenyears of his reign were occupied with failed attempts to regain theseterritories. After levying a number of new taxes upon the barons to payfor his dismal campaigns, the discontented barons revolted, capturingLondon in May 1215. At Runnymeade in the following June, John succumbedto pressure from the barons, the Church, and the English people at-large,and signed the Magna Carta. The document, a declaration of feudal rights,stressed three points. First, the Church was free to make ecclesiasticappointments. Second, larger-than-normal amounts of money could only becollected with the consent of the king's feudal tenants. Third, nofreeman was to be punished except within the context of common law. MagnaCarta, although a testament to John's complete failure as monarch, wasthe forerunner of modern constitutions. John only signed the document asa meansof buying time and his hesitance to implement its principlescompelled the nobility to seek French assistance. The barons offered thethrone to Philip II's son,Louis. John died in the midst of invasion fromthe French in the South and rebellion from his barons in the North.
John was remembered in elegant fashion bySir Richard Baker in AChronicle of the Kings of England: ". . .his works of piety were verymany . . . as for his actions, he neither came to the crown by justice,nor held it with any honour, nor left it peace."
MAGNA CARTA The Great Charter of English liberty granted (underconsiderable duress) by King John at Runnymede on June 15, 1215 John, bythe grace of God King of England, Lord of Ireland, Duke of Normandy andAquitaine, and Count of An

Matthew Paris wrote, 'Foul as it is, hell itself is defiled by the presence of King John', and this pretty well sums up John's reputation--until 1944, that is. For in that year Professor Galbraith demonstrated in a lecture to an astonished world that the chief chronicle source for the reign of John was utterly unreliable. Since then bad King John has been getting better and better, until now he is nearly well again, and a leading scholar in the field has seriously warned us that the twentieth century could well create it own John myth.



John was a paunchy little man, five feet five inches tall, with erect head, staring eyes, flaring nostrils and thick lips set in a cruel pout, as his splendid monument at Worcester shows. He had the tempestous nature of all his family, and a driving demoniac energy: Professor Barlow says that 'he prowled around his kingdom,' which is an evocative phrase, but it would be truer to say that he raced around it. He was fastidious about his person--taking more baths than several other medieval kings put together, and owning the ultimate in luxury, for that time, a dressing-gown. He loved good food and drink, and gambled a great deal, though he usually lost--the results of his typical impatience and carelessness are recorded on his expense rolls; above all things he loved women. Some say his 'elopment' was the cause of his loss of Normandy. He was generous to the poor (for instance, he remitted to them the penalties of the forest law), and to his servants; at the least he went through the motions of being a Christian king. He was extortionate, though if one considers the terrific increase in his outgoings (a mercenary soldier cost him 200 per cent more in wages than he would have in Henry II's day) one can understand some of his actions in the field. He was deeply concerned about justice, took care to attend to court business, and listened to supplicants with sympathy; he had also an urgent desire for peace in the land, saying that his peace was to be observed 'even if we have granted it to a dog.' But for all that, he had two totally unredeeming vices; he was suspicious, and enjoyed a cloak-and-dagger atmosphere--simply he did not inspire trust in his subjects. Dr. Warren says of him with some justice that if he had lived in the twentieth centure he would have adored to run a secret police.

He was born at Oxford on Christmas Eve 1167. He was oblated for a monk at the abbey of Fontevrault at the age of one year, but was back at court by the time he was six--plainly he had no vocation, but he probably picked up at this early stage his fastidiousness and his passion for books: his library followed him wherever he went. He was his father's favourite, but he turned against the old man when his chance came, as he did against Richard (who had been very generous to his brother) when the latter was in captivity in 1193. The episode was a miserable failure, but it possibly sowed the seeds of distrust for John in England, where they began to sprout luxuriantly in 1199 when Richard died and John came to the throne.

Immeditaely the challenge came: Philip Augustus, the wily King of France, was backing John's nephew, Prince Arthur of Brittany (son of John's elder brother Geoffrey) as a contender for the throne, and England's French possessions fell prey to civil war. John found grave difficultly in dealing with the situation for a number of reasons, but in 1202 he made the remarkable coup of capturing Arthur by force-marching his troups eighty miles in forty-eight hours; but then his prosecution of the war became listless, and he lost much sympathy by his brutal murder of Arthur whilst in a drunken rage. By 1204 Normandy was lost.

The loss of Normandy seemed to wake John up, and he now deployed his every energy in building up the coastal defences of Britain, now faced with an enemy the other side of the Channel, instead of just more of her own territory. The navy was built up, and the army, and John poured a quarter of his annual revenue into defence. But he could not persuade the baronage to support him in a counterstroke to regain Normandy: the barons of the north country had never owned land in Normandy and did not see why they should pay to regain southerners's castles for them. These 'Northerners' as they called themselves, were a hive of discontent, and more was to be heard from them. Meanwhile, John sailed angrily about in the Channel, cursing ineffectually.

Other troubles were to come first, however. In 1205 the Archbishop of Canterbury, Hubert Walker, died, and John assumed that he would have the choice of the new archbishop. However, Pope Innocent III was no man to support secular control over church appointments, and supported the right of the monks of Canterbury to select their own archbishop. For two years the storms blew betwen England and Rome, then Stephen Langton was appointed. Meanwhile John had driven the monks into exile and appropriated the revenues of the archdiocese. He had fallen out also with his half-brother, Geoffrey Archbishop or York, over tax-collection, and he too fled abroad while John collected his revenues. Four bishops joined in his fight--tension was growing to the snapping point. In 1208 the Pope put an Interdict on England, which in effect meant the clergy went on stike, or, in certain cases and areas, worked to rule. John began negotiations with Innocent, but, finding that he demanded unconditional surrender, stopped them and took over all ecclesiastical properties and incomes. He did leave the clergy sufficient to live, though barely; but he still gained a large increment to his usual finances. In November 1209 the Pope took the final step of excommjunicating the King, which, in that it made him an outlaw in Christendom, did far more damage than the Interdict.

John used his enlarged treasury to restore order in Scotland, Ireland and Wales, and to rebuild the old alliance with Otto IV of Germany and the Count of Flanders against Philip Augustus. He planned a two-pronged attack on France, to take place in 1212. But that year turned out an unlucky one for John, for the barons again refused to serve abroad, and the army he had was needed to put down a revolt in Wales; the Pope was threatening to demote him, and Philip Augustus was planning a massive invasion of England. John had to give in in one direction, for the prssure was much too great: he chose the Pope, and wisely so. He agreed to return to the status quo in the matter of church property and establishment, and to pay compensation; he further resigned his kingdom into the hands of the Pope, to receive it back in return for his homage and an annual tribute of 1,000 marks (a mark being two-thirds of a pound].

He had won a notable ally in Innocent III, who supported him faithfully throughout his troubles. Then his fleet, his own creation, had the good luck to find the French fleet at anchor and unprotected, destroyed it, and so made a French invasion impossible. On the crest of a wave, John determined to put his two-pronged invasion plan into action, but once more the northern barons refused to play, and he set off to punish them. Stephen Langton had arrived on the scene by now and managed to persuade John not to provoke the barons further.

In 1214 he finally managed to put his long cherished plan into action, but the two attacks were not properly coordinated; Otto was defeated at Bouvines, and John was deserted by his Poitevin knights.

In 1215 John faced a baronage in turmoil: they could point to the failure of his expensive schemes, he ascribed his failure to their total lack of support. The situation could not be more tense. John's nervousness can be seen in his taking of the cross, a blatant attempt to reinforce his alliance with the papacy. In April the Northerners met at Stamford; they were by now a mixture of northerners and southerners--the name was now merely a nickname--but by and large they were the younger element in the kingdom, roughnecks out for a spree. They moved south and were let into London by a faction, and received the expected encouragement from Philip Augustus in the form of siege engines brought over by one Eustace, a renegade monk turned pirate.

John offered arbitration, but the barons turned it down, and while he put his faith in an appeal to Rome, Stephen Langton, in cooperation with William Marshal and other more stable and sensible barons, were working on the Northerners' demands to incorporate them into a general charter, which would not only govern feudal relationships, but would also lay down a more general pattern of legality in government. On 15 June John fixed his seal to the draft of Magna Carta, and on 19 June attested copies were sent to all parts of the kingdom.

The King did his part thoroughly, though for how long he would have continued is another matter, but the barons continued to distrust him. They remained in arms, organising tournaments as their excuse, saying that the prize would be 'a bear a certain lady would send.' This was civil war, and John took to it with a fiendish glee. He reduced the north and the east, and was about to mop up the remainder of the opposition in London when Philip Augustus' son Louis landed in force to help the barons (May 1216). John had been riding hard for months, and was sick with dysentery after a bout of over-eating; whilst crossing the Wash, the whole of his baggage-train was lost. At Neward Castle on 18 October, he died, desiring to be buried near his patron saint Wulfstan in Worcester Cathedral.

He was by no means a good man, and his energies could well have been put to a better use, but in a different situation he might well have made a great king. His constant failure was discipline, over himself first, and others second. John reminds me of nothing so much as the type of person who is brilliant in many ways, and has many gifts, but leaves after two terms 'not suited to teaching in this type of school.' [Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York, 1995]

"Lackland" refered to John's status as the youngest son, resulting in nosignificant inherited fiefs from his Father. His titles included King ofIreland 1177, Count of Mortain 1189, Earl of Gloucester. John succeededhis brother Richard I as King in 1199. In 1215 he put his seal on theMagna Carta (Great Charter). The Magna Carta is the foundation of EnglishConstitutional law and liberties and placed the King, like the subjectshe ruled, subject to the rule of law. He is Interred in WorcesterCathedral. "The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor,General Editor.

This is King John of the Magna Charta.

The Magna Charta is recognized today as one of the most important documents in
the history of human freedom. Coming near the end of the Dark Ages, it
challenged the "divine right" of kings to rule arbitrarily.

King John of England was a tyrant who seized the throne in 1199 by imprisoning
and probably murdering young Prince Arthur, the rightful heir. King John threw
people into prison at the drop of a hat, confiscated their property by heavy
taxes and unjust decrees, and despoiled the wives and daughters of his Nobles.
His quarrels with the pope caused the pope to excommunicate all England for a
period of six years.  The King had a tiresome habit of forcing th e peasants to
buildbridges over streams he might wish to cross while hunting, and at one time
he made the whole of England his own private game preserve, so that none of the
starving peasantry could kill even a rabbit for supper.

The King's Nobles finally refused to fight for him abroad, and as a result he
was utterl y defeated at the Battle of Bouvines during the summer of 1214. The
King then turned in fury on his Barons at home, but he underestimated the
powers arrayed against him. The Barons, as sembled in conference by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, each took a solemn oath on the altar that they would
stand united and not relinquish their efforts until they had either compelle d
the King to confirm their liberties or had waged war against him to the death.

During the winter of 1214-15, the Barons prepared and presented to King John a
list of their demands.  When the King saw the Articles, heis supposed to have
sworn by "God's teeth" , his favorite oath, that hewould never agree to such
demands or any part of them.  But the Barons were not to be denied.  They
raised an army and launched a "holy crusade"against the King to recover their
rightful liberties.  The King was finally forced to surrender at Runn emede on
June 15, 1215.  After four days of negotiations, the King's seal was affixed to
all copies of the historic Magna Charta.

The Magna Charta is recognized today as a foundation stone of free government
and has been referred to as "The Mother of Constitutions." It was an important
forerunner of the United States Constitution. Sections39 anbd 40 of the Charter
state: "No free man shall be taken , orimprisoned, or dispossessed, or
outlawed, or banished, or in any waydestroyed...excep t by the legal judgment
of his peers or by the law ofthe land.  To no one will we sell, to n o one will
we deny, or delay,right of justice." The Barons offered to their sub-tenants
the same concessions that they were demanding from the King.

Section 61 authorized the election of 25 Surety Barons to see that the
provisions of th e Charter were enforced.  These Sureties were given the right
to distress and harass the King by any means in their power if he did not keep
his pledges.  Several of these Sureties are included inthis royal line
pedigree: Hugh Bigod,  Robert De Vere,  Roger Bigod, Alan Galloway,  [ Lord]
Gilbert De Clare, William De Albini,  Richard De Clare[Sir] William Marshal
(Marshall) John De Lacy William De Warren Sahar DeQuincy William [Earl Of
Salisbury] etc...

King John was given a interdict by Pope Innocent III.  King John did notrespond
as agreed upon so his excommunication was soon to follow. WhenKing John still
would not agree to live up to his agreements, (such asthe will of the dead King
Richard) the Pope in 1212 absolved all subjectsof John from their oaths of
allegiance, coupling with this declarationthat the ban of excommunication would
thenceforth apply to anyone whocontinued to serve him, who lived in his
household, who sat or served athis table, who held the stirrup when he set orth
to ride or who everspoke a word to him in public or private.

Signer of the Magna Charta.aka: John of England

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th  ed.

John was the youngest of the 4 sons of King Henry. He first claimed

the crown in 1193 when news broke that his brother, King Richard (theLion
Hearted), was held prisoner "somewhere in Germany." In April 1193Richard was
offered for ransom by the Holy Roman Emperor. (See WinstonChurchill's detailed
account of this  episode in Vol. 1 of "A History ofthe English Speaking

Peoples - The Birth of Britain" at pgs.236-237) Richard reclaimed thecrown in
1194 after his release. Richard was killed by a crossbow in asmall skirmish in
1199. He died on April 6, 1199 from the wound, and John had been declared his
heir before Richard died.

Much is written about King John in Chapter 15 of Churchill's book

(above) because it was he who was king at the signing of the Magna Carta on
June 15, 1215. He died the following summer.

Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition: Crowned at Westminster 27May
1199; signed Magna Charta 15 Jun 1215;
Pedigrees of some Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants - Langston-Buck
The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition: Crowned at Westminster 27May
1199; signed Magna Charta 15 Jun 1215;

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216

King of England, 1199-1216

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216

pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg lii, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 4, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928

In 1215 John faced a baronage in turmoil: they could point to the failure of his expensive schemes, he ascribed his failure to their total lack of support. The situation could not be more tense. John's nervousness can be seen in his taking of the cross, a blatant attempt to reinforce his alliance with the papacy. In April the Northerners met at Stamford; they were by now a mixture of northerners and southerners--the name was now merely a nickname--but by and large they were the younger element in the kingdom, roughnecks out for a spree. They moved south and were let into London by a faction, and received the expected encouragement from King Philip Augustus of France  in the form of siege engines brought over by one Eustace, a renegade monk turned pirate. John offered arbitration, but the barons turned it down, and while he put his faith in an appeal to Rome, Stephen Langton, in cooperation with William Marshal and other more stable and sensible barons, were working on the Northerners' demands to incorporate them into a general charter,which would not only govern feudal relationships, but would also lay down a more general pattern of legality in government. On 15 June John fixed his seal to the draft of Magna Carta, and on 19 June attested copies were sent to all parts of the kingdom. King John was called "LackLand"

John and Magna Carta

John (reigned 1199-1216) was an able administrator interested in law and
government but he neither trusted others nor was trusted by them. Heavy
taxation, disputes with the Church (John was excommunicated by the Pope
in 1209) and unsuccessful attempts to recover his French possessions made
him unpopular. Many of his barons rebelled and in June 1215 they forced
the King to sign a peace treaty accepting their reforms.

This treaty, later known as Magna Carta, limited royal powers, defined
feudal obligations between the King and the barons, and guaranteed a
number of rights. The most influential clauses concerned the freedom of
the Church; the redress of grievances of owners and tenants of land; the
need to consult the Great Council of the Realm so as to prevent unjust
taxation; mercantile and trading relationships; regulation of the
machinery of justice so that justice be denied to no one; and the
requirement to control the behaviour of royal officials. The most
important clauses established the basis of habeas corpus ('you have the
body'), i.e. that no one shall be imprisoned except by due process of
law, and that 'to no one will we sell, to no one will we refuse or delay
right or justice'.

The Charter also established a council of barons who were to ensure that
the Sovereign observed the Charter, with the right to wage war on him if
he did not. Magna Carta was the first formal document insisting that the
Sovereign was as much under the rule of law as his people; and that the
rights of individuals were to be upheld even against the wishes of the
sovereign. As a source of fundamental constitutional principles, Magna
Carta came to be seen as an important definition of aspects of English
law, and in later centuries as the basis of the liberties of the English
people.

As a peace treaty Magna Carta was a failure and the rebels invited Louis
of France to become their king. When John died in 1216 England was in the
grip of civil war.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Miss Ogle Visitation of Northumberland, page 88-89 and page 2. Ogle Pedigree.
Visitations of the North, Surtees Vol. 144, page 55,56. Ogle Pedigree.
1034 - 1079 Josselin I (Jocelin) Sire de Courtenay 45 45 1040 Elizabeth Isabel de Montlhery 1040 Erenburg 1030 Gervase Seigneur deChateau du Loire 1168 Agatha de Ferrers  L.R. Tucker THE ARISTOCRATIC & ROYAL ANCESTORS; Vol 1;; FamilyHistory
Library; Jack Davis

pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

It is known that Agatha was a mistress of John, but it is only supposition
that she is the mother of his child.
1010 - ~1063 Hildouin IV Count of Montdidier 53 53 0925 Gunhild Princess of Denmark Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1014 - 1062 Alix de Roucy 48 48 1022 - 1094 Roger de Montgomery 72 72 According to Winston Churchill, the Montgomeries (a very great house ofNorman England) sided with Robert, Duke of Normandy, against his brotherHenry I, in the war of succession after William Rufus, William TheConqueror's designated heir for England was killed in a huntingaccident.  Henry I destroyed the power of the Montgomeries starting inSeptember, 1100.  He captured Robert in Normandy in the battle atTinchebrai and combined England and Normandy again.

pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1010 - 1086 Alberic III Count de la Marche 76 76 ~1035 Ponce ~0985 - >1040 Roger de Montgomery 55 55 1000 - 1070 William II Talvas 70 70 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Lord of Bellême & Alençon
1026 - 1079 Mabel deTalvas 53 53 0985 Hildeburge de Beaumont 1099 - 1137 William VIII deAquitaine 38 38 William VIII Count of Poitou X Duke of Aquitaine 1075 - 1151 Aimery (Almeric) I Viscount of Chastellerault 76 76 D. 1728 Samuel Appleton ~1100 - AFT. MAR 1130/31 Eleanor de Chastellerault 1071 - 10 Feb 1126/1127 William VII deAquitaine William VII Count of Poitou IX Duke of  Aquitaine, Crusader 1101, 1st known singer/poet in the vernacular ~1340 Margery Rishworth ~1073 - 1117 Maud Philippa Toulouse 44 44 1050 - 1092 Boson II Viscount of Chastellerault 42 42 1054 Eleanor deThouars 1015 - 1093 Aimery IV Thouars 78 78 1017 Aurengardede Mauleon ~1008 - 1075 Hugues Rouche Foucaud Viscount of Chastellerault 67 67 ~1024 Gerberga de la Rochefoucauld Samuel Appleton Died young without issue and thus the Paine/Appleton line became extinct in name. ~1040 - 1093 William IV Toulouse 53 53 ~1055 - 1080 Emma de Mortaigne 25 25 1031 - 1095 Robert de Mortaigne 64 64 ~1041 - 1107 Maud de Montgomery 66 66 ~1015 - 1060 Pons III Count of Toulouse 45 45 ~1024 - 1086 William Geoffrey VI dePoitou 62 62 William Geoffrey VI Count of Poitou ~1044 - >1104 Hildegardeof Burgundy 60 60 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey IV Plantagenet 38 38 Geoffrey IV, also called GEOFFREY PLANTAGENET, byname GEOFFREY THE FAIR,French GEOFFROI PLANTAGENET, or GEOFFROI le BEL (b. Aug. 24, 1113--d.Sept. 7, 1151, Le Mans, Maine [France]), count of Anjou (1131-51), Maine,and Touraine and ancestor of the Plantagenet kings of England through hismarriage, in June 1128, to Matilda (q.v.), daughter of Henry I ofEngland. On Henry's death (1135), Geoffrey claimed the duchy of Normandy;he finally conquered it in 1144 and ruled there as duke until he gave itto his son Henry (later King Henry II of England) in 1150.

Geoffrey was popular with the Normans, but he had to suppress a rebellionof malcontent Angevin nobles. After a short war with Louis VII of France,Geoffrey signed a treaty (August 1151) by which he surrendered the wholeof Norman Vexin (the border area between Normandy and Île-de-France) toLouis. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]

--------------------------------------------------------------

The Plantagenet family name was originally just a nickname for Geoffrey.He many times wore a sprig with yellow flowers in his hat.  The flowerwas named "genet" or "genistae" in the French of the times--thus hisnickname was "Plant-a-Genet".  Genet was supposedly a traditional flowerof the Anjou family dating back to the time of Fulk, The Great, Count ofAnjou 898-941 who was scourged (in order to atone for past sins) withbroom twigs of the Genet while on pilgrimage in Jerusalem.   Most peopleof the times had personal nicknames such as "Beauclerc",  "Curtmantel","Longshanks", and "Lackland", but Geoffrey's stuck and eventually (manygenerations later) became the family name.  Geoffrey's immediatedescendants were probably not known as the Plantagenet family at the timethey lived, it was only later that the Plantagenet family name wasapplied to all descendants of Geoffrey.
1079 - 1118 Matilda Princess of Scotland 39 39 1031 - 1093 Malcolm III Canmore King of Scotland 62 62 Malcolm III CANMORE (b. c. 1031--d. Nov. 13, 1093, near Alnwick,Northumberland, Eng.), king of Scotland from 1058 to 1093, founder of thedynasty that consolidated royal power in the Scottish kingdom.

The son of King Duncan I (reigned 1034-40), Malcolm lived in exile inEngland during part of the reign of his father's murderer, Macbeth(reigned 1040-57). Malcolm killed Macbeth in battle in 1057 and thenascended the throne. After the conquest of England by William theConqueror, in 1066, Malcolm gave refuge to the Anglo-Saxon prince Edgarthe Aetheling and his sisters, one of whom, Margaret (later St.Margaret), became his second wife.

Malcolm acknowledged the overlordship of William in 1072 but neverthelesssoon violated his feudal obligations and made five raids into England.During the last of these invasions he was killed by the forces of KingWilliam II Rufus (reigned 1087-1100). Except for a brief interval afterMalcolm's death, the Scottish throne remained in his family until thedeath of Queen Margaret, the Maid of Norway, in 1290. Of Malcolm's sixsons by Margaret, three succeeded to the throne: Edgar (reigned1097-1107), Alexander I (1107-24), and David I (1124-53). [EncyclopaediaBritannica CD '97]

According to Brian Tompsett, "interred at Escorial, Madrid, Spain."

Malcolm III built Kindrochit Castle, Braemar, Aberdeenshire between1057-1093.
Click here for <ahref="http://www.darkisle.com/k/kindrochit/kindrochit.html">Photo ofKindrochit Castle</a> (use browser back arrow to return)
1156 - 1240 William deWarenne 5th Earl of Warren & Surrey 84 84 ~1196 - >1243 Pernel 47 47 ~1020 - >1067 Agatha of Hungary 47 47 1152 - 1208 Margery Umfreville 56 56 ~1009 - 1040 Sibyl Biornsson 31 31 Plantagenet Ancestry has Sibyl daughter of Sigurd, but I think it morelikely she was his sister.  The dates just seem entirely incompatiblewith her being born that late. ~0417 Einion ap Cuneda of Gwynedd ~1091 - 1160 Madog ap Maredudd 69 69 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Prince of Powys
1  NAME Madog (Meda) ap /Maredudd/
2  SOURS033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1091
2  PLAC of, Powys, Wales
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1159
2  PLAC Winchester, Hampshire, England
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1123, 1408; History of the Morgan Family; A.Roots 176;
Young; Dictionary of National Biography.
K: Madog ap Maredydd, Prince of Powys.
Roots: Madog ap Maredudd, ruler of Powys, by his wife, Susanna.
Young: Madog ap Maredudd.

SOURCES:
1.  Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of theMorgan Family_.
2.  _Dictionary of National Biography_.
3.  Bartrum, Peter C.  _Welsh Genealogies AD 300-1400_.  "Gruffydd ap Cynan
4", page 446.
~1100 - 1169 Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffudd 69 69 ~1098 - <1155 Gwladus verch Llywarch 57 57 ~1060 Dyddgu verch Iorwerth ~1166 - >1225 Jordan I Foliot 59 59 1122 - 1190 Frederick Barbarosa I Holy Roman Empire 68 68 Frederick was the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1152-1190. He was Dukeof Swabia 1147. ~0960 Avelina (Duvelina) de Crepon Avelina, sister of Gundra, wife of Richard I, Duke of Normandy.  [Burke'sPeerage] 1092 - 1143 Foulques V deAnjou 51 51 King of Jerusalem 1043 - 1109 Foulques IV deAnjou 66 66 "Le Rechin" Count of Anjou ~1092 - 1126 Erembourg du Maine 34 34 ~1059 - 14 Feb 1116/1117 Bertradede Montfort ~1000 - 1046 Geoffroy II Gatinais 46 46 Mary Fowler 1741 - 1822 Ann Merritt 81 81 1735 - 1802 Elizabeth Robinson 67 67 1660 - 1660 Alice Merritt 9d 9d 1266 - 9 Mar 1301/1302 Richard FitzAlan Earl of Arundel Richard was in the Welsh wars of 1288, in Gascony in 1295, in Scotlandwars 1298-1300. He married before 1285, when but 18, Alasia, daughter ofTomasso, Marquis of Saluzza, by Luisa, daughter of Giorgio, Marquis ofCeva in Italy.

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

vol 2, pg 36, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"

pg 33 & 79, , "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1731 - 1821 Thomas Underhill Merritt 89 89 ~0953 - 1015 Godfrey Fitz Richard 62 62 ~0985 Girard Flatel ~1075 - 1110 Helias dela Fleche Count du Maine 35 35 ~1070 - 1099 Matilda deChateau du Loire 29 29 ~1040 Agnes Evereux ~0993 - AFT. 4 FEB 1052/53 Amaury II Seigneur de Montfort ~1001 Betradede Gometz 1009 - 1095 Guy Seigneur de Montlhery 86 86 1014 Hodierne de Gometz 1270 - ~1317 Alice deSaluzzo 47 47  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

of Salazza, Italy
Married about 1284

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

of Salazza, Italy
Married about 1284

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

pg 33, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 79, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 311, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0979 Toustien le Goz ~0979 Judith de Montanolier Mary Van Wert 1801 - 1874 Daniel Van Wert 73 73 1104 - 1168 Robert II de Beaumont 64 64 On Leicester, Earldom of [Burke's Peerage, p. 1671]:

Robert de Beaumont, a companion in arms of William I (The Conqueror) atHastings was granted after the Conquest much land in the Midlands ofEngland, but most of it was in Warwickshire rather than Leicestershire.Indeed his younger brother became Earl of Warwick.  Robert also heldterritory in Normandy and is usually referred to as Count of Meulan.  Hewas a leading political figure in the reigns of William II and Henry Iand on the death of one Ives de Grandmesnil in the First Crusade, thefunds for campaigning in which Ives had raised from Robert on thesecurity of his estates, [Robert] came into full possession of them,including a sizeable part of Leicester.  The rest of the town was grantedhim by Henry I and it is possible that he became Earl of Leicester.  Hisson, another Robert, certainly called himself Earl of Leicester.
1108 Amice de Montfort ~1249 Margaret deDutton 1090 - 1136 Richard FitzGilbert de Clare 46 46 Richard de Clare first bore the title of Earl of Hertford and, being oneof those who, by power of the sword, entered Wales, there planted himselfand became lord of vast territories as also of divers castles in thoseparts, but requiring other matters of moment from the king, in which hewas unsuccessful, he reared the standard of revolt and soon after fell inan engagement with the Welsh. His lordship in 1124 removed the monks outof his castle at Clare into the church of St. Augustine at Stoke, andbestowed upon them a little wood, called Stoke-Ho, with a doe every yearout of his part at Hunedene. He m. Alice, sister of Ranulph, 2nd Earl ofChester, and had issue, Gilbert, his successor, with two other sons, anda dau. Alice who m. Cadwalader-ap-Griffith, Prince of North Wales. Hislordship d. 1139 and was s. by his eldest son, Gilbert de Clare, 2nd Earlof Hertford. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford,Earls of Gloucester] ~1050 - 10 Mar 1106/1107 Robert FitzHamon [From Burke's Peerage-see source for details]

An undoubted Earl of Gloucester, perhaps the first authentic one, at anyrate after the Conquest, is Robert FitzHamon's son-in-law, anotherRobert, who was an illegitimate son of Henry I and was so created 1122.The Earldom passed to his eldest son, William FitzRobert, and from him toJohn, later King John and husband from 1189 to 1199 (when he divorcedher) of Isabel, the youngest of William FitzRobert's three daughters.  OnJohn's coming to the throne the title did not merge in the Crown for itwas not his in his own right but in right of his wife.
~1098 - >1142 Adeliza Alice de Meschines 44 44 Elizabeth Lunenburg County, Virginia Court Orders, 1746-1748 (Miami Beach, Florida: T.L.C. Genealogy, 1990)
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 2, 1747-1752 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publicaitons, 1995).
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 2½, 1752-1753 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publicaitons, 1997)
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 2½-B, 1753-1754 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publications, 1998)
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 3, 1754-1755 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publicaitons, 1997).
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 4, 1755-1757 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publicaitons, 1998).
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 5, 1757-1759 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publicaitons, 1998).
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 6, 1759-1761 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publications, 1998).
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 7, 1761-1762 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publications, 1999).
June Banks Evans, Lunenburg County, Virginia Order Book 8, 1762 (New Orleans, Louisiana: Bryn Ffyliaid Publications, 1999).
Lunenburg County, Virginia, Court Order Book No 9, 1763-1764 (Miami Beach, Florida: T.L.C. Genealogy, 1999)
Raimund Berenger II deBarcelona ~1029 Emma de Conteville ~1090 - 1147 Robert de Caen 57 57 [From Burke's Peerage-see source for details]

An undoubted Earl of Gloucester, perhaps the first authentic one, at anyrate after the Conquest, is Robert FitzHamon's son-in-law, anotherRobert, who was an illegitimate son of Henry I and was so created 1122.The Earldom passed to his eldest son, William FitzRobert, and from him toJohn, later King John and husband from 1189 to 1199 (when he divorcedher) of Isabel, the youngest of William FitzRobert's three daughters.  OnJohn's coming to the throne the title did not merge in the Crown for itwas not his in his own right but in right of his wife.
~1094 - 1157 Maud FitzHamon 63 63 ~1163 - <1235 Piers (Peter) FitzHerbert 72 72 Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honor of whichhe obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees, part of the landsof William de Braose, and he was made Governor of Pickering Castle inYorkshire, and Sheriff of that county by the same monarch. This Peter wasone of the barons named in Magna Carta and, by his signature, fourth inrank amongst the barons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, agreat baron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, andsister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering, Lord ofCallaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son and heir, ReginaldFitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. and coheir of William de Braose,and widow of David Llewellin, Prince of Wales, and by the allianceacquired the lordships and castle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in thecounty of Brecknock, with other possessions in Wales. He fortified hiscastle of Blenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, ReginaldFitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of the Commoners ofGreat Britain and Ireland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley, London, 1834, p. 728,Jones, of Llanarth]

----------

Peter Fitz-Herbert, who, being very obsequious to King John, was reputedone of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he was constitutedgovernor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriff of the shire; butafterwards falling off in his allegiance, his lands at Alcester wereseized by the crown, and given to William de Camvill. Returning, however,to his duty upon the accession of Henry III, those lands were restored tohim. He m. 1st, Alice, dau. of Roger Fitz-Roger, a great baron inNorthumberland, but by her had no issue; and 2ndly, the 3rd dau. andco-heir of William de Braose, Baron of Brecknock, and d. 1235, leaving ason, Herbert Fitz-Peter. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited,and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 206,Fitz-Herbert, Baron Fitz-Herbert]

NOTE: Brian Tompsett has him married to Isabel de Ferrieres (de Ferrers)rather than to Isabel de Braose.
~1070 - Jan 1128/1129 Ranulph de Meschines Ranulf or Randle de Meschines, surnamed de Bricasard, Viscount Bayeux, inNormandy, (son of Ralph de Meschines, by Maud, his wife, co-heir of herbrother, Hugh Lupus, the celebrated Earl of Chester), was given by KingHenry I the Earldom of Chester, at the decease of his 1st cousin, Richardde Abrincis, 2nd Earl of Chester, of that family, without issue. By somehistorians, this nobleman is styled Earl of Carlisle, from residing inthat city; and they further state that he came over in the train of theConqueror, assisted in the subjugation of England, and shared, of course,in the spoil of conquest. He was lord of Cumberland and Carlisle, bydescent from his father, but having enfeoffed his two brothers, William,of Coupland, and Geffrey, of Gillesland, in a large portion thereof, heexchanged the Earldom of Cumberland for that of Chester, on conditionthat those whom he had settled there should hold their lands of the king,in capite. His lordship m. Lucia, widow of Roger de Romara, Earl ofLincoln, and dau. of Algar, the Saxon, Earl of Mercia, and had issue,Ranulph, his successor; William, styled Earl of Cambridge, but of hisissue nothing in known; Adeliza, m. to Richard Fitz-Gilbert, ancestor ofthe old Earls of Clare; and Agnes, m. to Robert de Grentemaisnil. Theearl d. in 1128 and was s. by his elder son, Ranulph de Meschines. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages,. Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 365, Meschines, Earls of Chester] ~1055 - >1130 Lucy of Mercia 75 75 ~1050 - >1089 Ranulph de Meschines 39 39 ~1054 Margaret d' Avranches ~1008 - >1084 Richard le Goz d' Avranches 76 76 Crispin, M 1969 (pp. 79-80) is no doubt incorrect in showing Emma deConteville as Richard's wife.  Moriarty, 1985 (p. 11) says the marriageis probably unfounded. ~1017 - 1057 Ranulph Vicomte of Bessin 40 40 Elizabeth ~1021 Alice of Normandy 1060 Sybil de Montgomery 1116 - 1173 Roger de Clare 57 57 Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford, is likewise said to have born thetitle of Earl of Clare. In the 3rd Henry II, this nobleman obtaining fromthe king all the lands in Wales which he could win, marched into Cardiganwith a great army and fortified divers castles thereabouts. In the 9th ofthe same reign, we find him summoned by the celebrated Thomas-à-Becket,archbishop of Canterbury, to Westminster, in order to do homage to theprelate for his castle of Tonebruge; which at the command of the king herefused, alleging that holding it by military service it belonged ratherto the crown than to the church. His lordship m. Maude (who m. after hisdecease William d'Aubigny, Earl of Arundel), dau. of James de St.Hillary, by whom he had a son, Richard, his successor. This earl who,from his munificence to the church and his numerous acts of piety, wascalled the Good, d. in 1173, and was s. by his son, Richard de Clare, 4thEarl of Hertford. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages,Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls ofHertford, Earls of Gloucester] ~1132 - 1173 Maud deSt. Hilary 41 41 Matilda of Flint 1116 - 1183 William FitzRobert 2nd Earl of Gloucester 67 67 [From Burke's Peerage-see source for details]

An undoubted Earl of Gloucester, perhaps the first authentic one, at anyrate after the Conquest, is Robert FitzHamon's son-in-law, anotherRobert, who was an illegitimate son of Henry I and was so created 1122.The Earldom passed to his eldest son, William FitzRobert, and from him toJohn, later King John and husband from 1189 to 1199 (when he divorcedher) of Isabel, the youngest of William FitzRobert's three daughters.  OnJohn's coming to the throne the title did not merge in the Crown for itwas not his in his own right but in right of his wife.
1129 - 1197 Hawise de Beaumont 68 68 ~0720 - 0754 Rhodri Molwynog ap Idwal of Anglessy 34 34 ~0991 - 1062 Lambert II "Baudry" Count of Louvain 71 71 ~0995 - 1044 Oda of Lorraine 49 49 1617 - 1683 John Minshall 66 66 John was listed as a prisoner for 24 hours in Lanchashier,1659, by Besse's "The Suffering of the Quakers," for which he paid 2s. He was fined 14 shillings for not taking the oath of loyalty to the King in 1664. His will names wife Margaret, sons Samuel (to whom he gave his house), John of Great Sankei and Thomas, and daughters Elinor, (wife of Robert Vernon), Mary (wife of Thomas Barnes) and Elizabeth (wife of Randle Speakman). It was written in 1699 in Mobberley, England. (C-1073) 1112 Concubine 1136 - 1193 William d' Aubigny 57 57 William de Albini, 3rd earl, who, in 1218, embarked in the Crusade andwas at the celebrated siege of Damietta, but died in returning, anno1221. He m. Maud, dau. and heiress of James de St. Hillary, and widow ofRoger de Clare, Earl of Hertford, by whom he left issue, William andHugh, successors to the earldom; Mabel, m. to Sir Robert de Tateshall;Isabel, m. to John FitzAlan, Baron of Clun and Oswestry; Nicola, m. toRoger de Somerie, Lord of Dudley; Cecilia, m. to Roger de Montalt; andColet. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 3, Albini, Earls ofArundel]

NOTE: "His lordship left by Adeliza, his wife, widow of King Henry I,four sons and three daughters, the eldest of whom, Alice, m. John, Earlof Ewe. The eldest son, William de Albini, 2nd earl, had a grant from thecrown, 23rd Henry II [1177-78], of the Earldom of Sussex, and in the 1stof Richard I [1189-90], had a confirmation from that prince of the castleand honour of Arundel, as also of the Tertium Denarium of the county ofSussex. He d. in 1196 and was s. by his son, William de Albini, 3rdearl...[who] m. Maud, dau. and heiress of James de St. Hillary." [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 3, Albini, Earls of Arundel]

All other sources that I've found say that the William who m. Maud de St.Hillary was the son of William, the 1st Earl, and Adeliza. I have, thus,compressed this pedigree by omitting the intervening William who Burkestyles 2nd earl.
1116 - 1151 Adeliza Adela of Louvain 35 35 ~1105 - ~1154 James deSt. Hilary 49 49 ~1109 Aveline ~1025 - ~1087 Simon I Seigneur de Montfort 62 62 ~0987 - >1031 Ancitel Vicomte of Bessin 44 44 Philipp Englefield temp. Henry 4. Robert Englefield temp. Edw 4. ob. 3: E: 4. <1096 - 6 Jan 1147/1148 Isabel Elizabeth de Beaumont 1556 John Eccleston 1078 Ralph Seigneur deGael Montford 1075 Emma Avice de Vermandois 1040 - 1095 Ralph deGael 55 55 Seigneur 1059 - 1095 Emma FitzOsbern 36 36 1011 - Feb 1067/1068 Ralph "The Staller" Earl of Norfolk 1030 - 20 Feb 1070/1071 William FitzOsbern Alice [de Toeni] married William fitz Osbern, 1st Earl of Hereford, ofthe creation made shortly after the Conquest.  [Burke's Peerage] 1033 Alice de Toeni ~0990 Osbern de Crepon ~1008 Emma de Ivry ~1015 - 1071 Almondede la Marche 56 56 1200 - 1230 Theolbald le Botiller 30 30 ~1085 - 1162 Renauld II Count of Clermont 77 77 1030 - 1101 Hugh deCreil Count of Clermont 71 71 1045 - 1110 Margaret de Roucy 65 65 1010 - 1098 Renaud deClermont 88 88 Renaud De Creil 1010 Ermengardis of Clermont 1042 - <1097 Jean de Beaugency 55 55 1060 Paule du Maine 1060 - 1130 Edward of Salisbury 70 70 1025 Hugh Chaworth ~1000 Ernald de Chaworth 1160 - 1205 Theobald FitzWalter 45 45 Theobald Walter or Fitzwalter, son and heir of Hervey Walter of WestDereham, Norfolk (owner of large estates in Norfolk and Suffolk, by Maud,daughter and co-heir of Theobald de Valoignes, who accompanied John,Count of Mortain, Lord of Ireland, afterward King John of England, in1185, into Ireland, who conferred vast estates in that kindom, including,before 1189, the fief of Arklow, etc., and in or before May, 1192 theimportant Office of Butler or le Botiller, a dignity which, of itself,probably comprised (even if it did not comprise more) "Baronial rank andposition" for himself and his successors. Under the name of Butler or leBotiller, these barons appear on the roll of every Parliament to whichthey were summoned, the office giving henceforth the surname to thefamily. He is said subsequently to have obtained the vauable monopoly ofthe prisage of wine and is styled Theobald Butler as early as 1199.Returning to England he obtained from Richard I, in 1194, a grant of theWapentake of Amounderness with the lordship of Preston in Lancaster. Hewas Sheriff of Lancaster, personally or by deputy 1194-1199, and wasfounder of the Abbey of Cockersandin, that County. In 1197 he was one ofthe justices itinerant. He founded the Abbey of Nenagh in CountyTipperary in 1200, the Abbey of Wotheny, County Limerick, in 1205, andthe monastery of Arklow, County Wicklow. He married in or shortly before1200 Maud, daughter and heir of Robert le Vavasour, with whom he acquiredthe Manors of Edlington, Newborough, etc., County York. He died betweenAug. 4, 1205, and Feb. 14, 1206, and was buried at Wortheny Abbeyaforesaid. His widow, Maud, married 2nd in 1207 Fulke Fitzwarine.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1070 Maud FitzHubert 1008 - >1053 Richard deSt. Valery 45 45 Seigneur de Hugleville ~1011 Ada Heiress de Hugleville D. 1623 Richard Warham Some sources have as a father for this person: Thomas Wareham,  Christening: 18 Jan 1571, from Bishopstach Brooke, Warwickshire, England. Mother is shown as: Suzan Cotterell, Christening: 11 Nov. 1566, same place. Further research will solve this question. 1128 Eleanor de Domnart D. 1190 Isabella of Hainault 1094 - 1166 Reginald II deSt. Valery 72 72 1117 - 1190 Bernard IV deSt. Valery 73 73 1178 Maud Le Vavasor Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1187
2  PLAC Edlington & Newborough, Yorkshire, England
1  DEAT
2  DATE BEF. 1226
2  PLAC Hazelwood, Yorkshire, England
1061 - 1099 Bernard III deSt. Valery 38 38 1035 - >1097 Walter Gauthier deSt. Valery 62 62 1005 - 1066 Bernard II deSt. Valery 61 61 ~1132 - >1184 Adeliza (Alice) de Dunstanville 52 52 ~1290 John Eland ~1076 Alice ~1040 - >1088 Thurston Basset 48 48 "Immediately after the Norman conquest," says Collins, "arose into powerand importance, more especially in the midland counties, the greatbaronial family of Basset," descended from Thurstan the Norman. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 26, Basset, Barons Basset, of Drayton] ~1015 Fouque de Aulney ~1035 - 1093 Rhys ap Tewdwr 58 58 Rhys ap Tewdwr, Prince of Deheubarth (technically Seisyllwg and Dyfed)1153-97.  [Burke's Peerage]
Killed fighting Norman English in Brycheiniog, Wales
1026 - 1069 Rhiwallon ap Cynfyn 43 43 Sources:
Royal Descents; A. Roots 178; Young; Dakota; Kraentzler 1447. Roots: Rhiwallon ap Cynfyn of Powys.
Young: Rhiwallon ap Cynfyn ap Gwerstan,prince of Powys. K: Rhiwallon ap Cynvyn, killed at the Battle of Mechain in 1068. Descents: Rhywallon, Prince of Powys, died 1070. Dakota: Rhysivallan apCynfyn and brother of Bleddyn, King of Powys. A. Families  says died 1073. King Rhiwallon ap Cynfyn was killed at the battle of Mechain.
1130 - UNKNOWN Hervey Walter ~1000 Tewdwr "Mawr-The Great" ap Cadell ~1224 - BEF. 6 JAN 1290/91 William V de Braose William was only 12 when his father died.  The wardship of William andthe de Braose lands were granted by Henry III to Peter des Rievaux.  Onhis fall in 1234 these custodies were passed on to the king's brotherRichard, Earl of Cornwall.  When William came of age he took control ofthe Braose lands in Gower, Bramber and Tetbury.  He confirmed the grantsmade by his father of the rents of cottages in Tetbury (they are stillthere) to the priory at Aconbury, founded in the memory of Maud de StValery by her daughter Margaret.

He was plagued throughout his life by a series of legal battles over landrights with his female relatives.

See Cottages of Tetbury.


William de Braose, in the 41st Henry III [1257], when Llewellyn apGriffith menaced the marches of Wales with a great army, was commanded bythe king to defend his own marches about Gower, and the next year he hada military summons to attend the king Chester. In two years afterwards,he was again in arms under Roger de Mortimer against the Welsh, and wasone of the barons who became pledged for King Henry, abiding the award ofLouis, King of France. He d. in 1290, leaving by Isabel de Clare, hisfirst wife, a son, William de Braose. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]

----------

Peter de Braose, half-brother of William, Lord Braose, of Gower. Peter'sson, Thomas, was found heir to his grandmother, Mary de Ros (hisgrandfather, William de Braose's 2nd wife). [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London,England, 1883, p. 73, Braose, Barons Braose]

NOTE: From the above information it is certain which William de Braosewas Peter's father, for only this one William was summoned to parliamentas a baron. However, in attempting to connect Mary de Ros to William,there are some pretty glaring date inconsistencies. e.g., William died in1290, and Mary wasn't born until around 1298. It's possible theapproximated year of birth for Mary is somewhat off, but surely not thatfar off. According to Burke, her father, William de Ros, was b. 1255,thus, she could have been born as early as perhaps 1271. Her father d. in1316, and her grandfather died 16 June, 1285. Her 2nd husband, Thomas ofBrotherton, was born 1 June, 1300. Had she been born as early as 1271,she would have been 29 years older than her 2nd husband. It's almost asif there had been two separate individuals named Mary de Ros, yet Burkesays "Mary m. 1st, to William Braose, and 2ndly, to Thomas de Brotherton,Duke of Norfolk."
D. 1677 John Moore 1049 Bartholomew deL'Isle Bouchard 1053 Gerberge 1019 Archimbaud Bouchard 1023 Agnes Dame ~1000 - >1079 Ednywain I ap Neiniad 79 79 ~1000 - >1070 Gwerful verch Lluddica 70 70 D. ~1055 Dalmace I of Semur pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1169 - 1231 Nicholas deVerdun 62 62 Nicholas de Verdon, 5th son, who died 1231. In the 6th of John he paid tothe King œ100, as also a courser and palfrey, for livery of those landsin Ireland, whereof his father died possessed. But in twelve yearsafterwards he took part with the rebellious barons, whereupon all hislands were seized by special precepts from the Crown to all sheriffs ofWarwick, Leicester, Stafford, Lincoln, Bucks and Oxford Counties, andplaced in the custody of William de Canteloupe during the King'spleasure. On his submission to King Henry III those lands were restoredto him in the first year of that monarch, 1216, and he appears afterwardsto have enjoyed the favour of the King. ~0958 Angharad verch Iago ~1030 - 1081 Trahaearn ap Caradog 51 51 ~1070 - ~1129 Llywarch ap Trahaearn 59 59 ~1220 Richard de Brereton ~1042 Gwenllian verch Aron 1021 Aaron ap Paen ~0975 Cadwgon ap Elystan ~0979 Efa verch Gwrgan ~0953 - 1030 Gwrgan ap Ithel 77 77 ~1024 Iwerydd verch Cynfyn 1  NAME Iferydd Verch /Cynfyn/


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Young; Kraentzler 1406, 1409.
Young: Iferudd verch Cynvyn.
K: Gwerydd verch Cynvyn.
SOURCES:
1.  Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, page 47 (Powys).
Iwerydd verch Cynfyn.
1062 - UNKNOWN Bertrum deVerdun Bertram Verdon, who at the General Survey, possessed Ferneham, or FarnhamRoyal in Buckinghamshire, holding the same by grand serjeanty, viz., bythe service of providing a glove upon the day of the King's coronationfor his right hand; and of supporting the monarch's right arm during thesame ceremony, so long as he bore the royal sceptre. Bertram had threesons--Norman, his heir; Milo, who died in Ireland, and William--who wasthe ancestor of the Verdons of Norfolk, Suffolk and Northampton. 1020 - 1073 Edwin ap Gronwy 53 53 ~0956 Gwenllian verch Einion D. 1578 John Miller 0968 Neiniad ap Gwaethfoed ~0940 - 0996 Idwal ap Meurig 56 56 ~0949 Gwair ap Pill ~1004 - 1060 Cynan ap Iago 56 56 1  BIRT
2  PLAC of, Aberffraw, Wales
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Dateof Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1406, 1409; AF; A. Roots and Hist. of Morgan Family;
Young.
Roots: Prince of North Wales. Exiled in Dublin. "History" says, "After his
father's death, Cynan fled toIreland and married Ragnhildr, the daughter of
Olaf, the son of Sitric of theSilken Beard, the Viking King of Dublin. His son
was Griffith."
K: Cynan apIago, born about 1014.
~1031 Ragnaillt O'Olaf of Dublin 1638 - 1728 Elizabeth Moore 90 90 ~0983 Ethelfleda verch Edwin 1132 - 1192 Bertram deVerdun 60 60 Bertram de Verdon, eldest son, was Sheriff of Leicester from 16th to 30thof Henry II's reign, inclusive. He subsequently attended King Richard Ito the Holy Land and was at the siege of Acon, which place, upon itssurrender, was committed to his custody. This Bertram founded the Abbeyof Croxden in County Stafford, anno 1776, and was otherwise a liberalbenefactor to the church. He married 1st Maud, daughter of RobertFerrers, Earl of Derby, by whom he had no issue, and 2ndly, Roesia .....,but of what family is unknown. He died at Joppa 4th of Richard I in 1192,having had issue William, died sine prole, in 1199, Thomas, Bertram,Robert, Nicholas and Walter. His son Thomas succeeded him, but died sineprole in 1199, and was succeeded by his brother, Nicholas de Verdon. Mathilda Maud D' Apulia ~1047 - ~1124 Maredudd ap Bleddyn 77 77 ~1020 Einydd ap Morien ~1024 Efa verch Llywelyn ~1020 Bleddyn ap Morien 1638 - >1696 Abigail Warham 58 58 1138 - ~1185 Isabel Avenal 47 47 ~1035 - >1086 William deArques 51 51 From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families":
William of Arques has been the subject of an exhaustive study by Professor D. C. Douglas in the introduction to his edition "The Domesday Monacharum of Christ Church Canterbury", where full references are given to the authorities;  Briefly he held Folkestone, Kent, and was the son of Godfrey Vicomte of Arques.  The identity of the tenant of Folkstone is established by the fact that it passed to Nigel de Monville who had married his daughter and coheiress Emma.  He must not be confused with William of Arques, a monk of Moleme who was a counsellor of Robert Curthose, and still less with  William, Count of Arques, the uncle of William the Conqueror.  The ruined castle of Arques-la-Bataille is well known.
~1035 Beatrice deBolbec ~0945 - 1035 Osbern I deBolbec 90 90 ~1224 - BEF. 6 JAN 1290/91 William V deBraose William was only 12 when his father died.  The wardship of William andthe de Braose lands were granted by Henry III to Peter des Rievaux.  Onhis fall in 1234 these custodies were passed on to the king's brotherRichard, Earl of Cornwall.  When William came of age he took control ofthe Braose lands in Gower, Bramber and Tetbury.  He confirmed the grantsmade by his father of the rents of cottages in Tetbury (they are stillthere) to the priory at Aconbury, founded in the memory of Maud de StValery by her daughter Margaret. He was plagued throughout his life by a series of legal battles over landrights with his female relatives. William de Braose, in the 41st Henry III [1257], when Llewellyn apGriffith menaced the marches of Wales with a great army, was commanded bythe king to defend his own marches about Gower, and the next year he hada military summons to attend the king Chester. In two years afterwards,he was again in arms under Roger de Mortimer against the Welsh, and wasone of the barons who became pledged for King Henry, abiding the award ofLouis, King of France. He d. in 1290, leaving by Isabel de Clare, hisfirst wife, a son, William de Braose. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower] Peter de Braose, half-brother of William, Lord Braose, of Gower. Peter'sson, Thomas, was found heir to his grandmother, Mary de Ros (hisgrandfather, William de Braose's 2nd wife). [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London,England, 1883, p. 73, Braose, Barons Braose] 1097 - 1155 Norman deVerdun 58 58 ~1044 Hildegardeof Beaugency pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 188, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~1045 Thurstine 1035 Miss de Essex ~1050 - 1130 Forne FitzSigulf 1st Lord of Greystoke 80 80 King Henry I confirmed the Barony of Graystock unto Phorne, son of thesaid Lyulphe, whose posterity took their surname from the place, and werecalled de Greystock. Phorne was s. by his son Ivo. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd, London, 1883, p. 254,Greystock, Barons Greystock] ~1100 - 1165 Edith d' Oyly 65 65 ~1025 Sigulf FitzForn Ranulph de Meschines gave the Barony of Greystock to one Lyolf, orLyulphe, (or Sigulf). [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited,and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 254,Greystock, Barons Greystock] ~1030 de Vitre ~1045 Hugh FitzBaldrick D. 1587 Margaret Miller ~1040 - 1085 Eustace Comte de Picquigny 45 45 1205 - 1246 Rose de Verdun 41 41 ~1013 - 1085 Guermond Comte de Picquigny 72 72 ~1020 Adele ~1108 - ~1141 Robert de Condet 33 33 ~1307 Joane 0997 - >1005 Almodis Van Gevaudan 8 8 ~1105 - >1165 Gilbert Basset 60 60 ~1072 - 1152 Edith FitzForne 80 80 ~1075 - 1142 Robert II d' Oyly 67 67  3rd Lord of Hooknorton 1090 Thomas Basset No Source is given for this generation.  Gilbert may be son of Ralphbecause birthdays would work better. ~1040 - 1115 Nigel d' Oyly 75 75  2nd Lord of Hooknorton, Elder brother Robert was 1st Lord 1205 - 1251 Gladys Wales 46 46 ~1050 Agnes ~1040 Alvarissa Malet The marriages of Aelfgar are found in Faris,TPA, 140:8i, 191:9, 270:9ii, 210:8.  Also Weis, MCS, 4th ed., 12-11. Ist wife Elgiva, d/o Ethelred the Unready, issue: Agatha m 1) Harald 2)Griffith ap Llewelyn, Morkere, Bouchard, Eadwine. Wife 2:  Alvarissa Malet, d/o William Malet and Elise Crispin. Issue: Lucy, m Ivo Talyboys.
Source: Kenneth Harper Finton, Editor/ Publisher, THE PLANTAGENET CONNECTION


I see that everyone is tending to accept that Lucy is not Godiva'sgranddaughter and I appreciate the reasoning behind it.  Yet, two thingspuzzle me greatly and pull me away from this modern interpretation. Oneis the naming patterns in the following generations.

(1) 1 Leofric III --Lord Coventry, Earl Mercia, Leicester 1
  b. 0975, of Mercia, England
  d. 31 Aug 1057, Bromley, Staffordshire, England
& Godiva --Lady of Lincoln 2
  b. abt 0980, of Mercia, England
  d. 10 Sep 1067
  m. bef 1030
(2) 1a Alfgar III --Earl Mercia* 3
  d. 1062
& Alvarissa Malet
(3) 1a Lucy Talboys* 4
& Ivo Talboys --Earl of Anjou 5
(4) 1 William de Tailbois
  b. of Lancaster, England
& Margaret Tailbois
(5) 1 Goditha Tailbois/Lancaster & Gilbert de Lancaster --4th Baron Kendal

Notice that Lucy's granddaughter is named Goditha.  Why, if Lucy is notGodiva's granddaughter, would her grandchild be named after Godiva? It issuch a common naming pattern. If Lucy's parents were Turold the Sheriffand a daughter of William Malet, as suggested by Katherine Keats-Rohan,there would be no relationship at all with Godiva and no reason for thename to appear in the person of Lucy's granddaughter.  I realize that thename is not spelled the same, but certainly it is the same name.

Neither Lucy's birth date nor death date are known. Leofric d in 1057 atage 85. Godiva died ten years later at age 87. Their son Aelfgar died in1062, five years before her mother. If Lucy was 15 when she had her firstchild, she would have been born around  1047. She would have been only 19at the time of the Conquest.  There are no chronological problems.

_The Complete Peerage_ says: "The link between Lucy and Aelfgar is themanor of Spalding, County Lincoln, which was held by Aelfgar before theConquest and by Lucy's first husband, Ives Taillebois (in her right), atthe time of Domesday. No close family connection between Aelfgar and Lucyis mentioned in any contemporary document, and chronology is opposed tothe relationship of father and daughter. Moreover, the only knownchildren of Aelfgar are Edwin, Morcar and Aeldgitha, wife of Harold, andconsequently the passing of the manor of Spalding cannot be held tojustify the inference that Aelfgar (a) was father of Lucy."

The second thing that bothers me is the land transfers.  It is the basisof the Keats-Rohan argument.  But if Lucy's father was Aelfgar III whomarried Alvarissa Malet daughter of William Mallet and William marriedthe daughter of Thorold the Sheriff, then the naming patterns areconsistent and the land transactions make sense.

Complete Peerage: "Other manors of Thorold which passed to Lucy areBelchford, Scamblesby, Stenigot, Tetney and Donington. (a) Lucy also heldAlkborough, (b) which had belonged in the time of the Confessor toWilliam Malet, (c) father of Lucy's uncle Robert Malet. If Lucy's motherwas William Malet's daughter, this may have been her maritagium; and thefact that Thorold gave tithes in this place (d) has been advanced asevidence that he was her husband."

Though I accept that the evidence is unclear, I can find no more weightto one argument than the other.

There is more than one Thorold. I am willing to accept the traditionalview that he was actually Godiva's father and sheriff of Lincoln asrecorded by Faris in _The Plantagenet Ancestry_. After all the electrons'spilled' here and all the ink 'spilled' elsewhere, this is stillbefuddled.

This is one of the last puzzles I was trying to conclude before actuallyprinting THE ANCESTRY OF ELIZABETH OF YORK.  Marlyn Lewis, the compiler,has kept the ancestry along the traditional lines as recorded by Farisand Turton, i.e, Lucy's father is the son of Leofric and Lady Godiva.Even though some modernists believe that the Leofric connection isinvalid, I still tend to think that it makes more sense than thealternatives, therefore I am solving the problem by noting that theconnection is disputed and printing the traditional information anyway.

There are several reasons for so doing:

CP: "The link between Lucy and Aelfgar is the manor of Spalding, CountyLincoln, which was held by Aelfgar before the Conquest and by Lucy'sfirst husband, Ives Taillebois (in her right), at the time of Domesday.Other manors of Thorold which passed to Lucy are Belchford, Scamblesby,Stenigot, Tetney and Donington. (a) Lucy also held Alkborough, (b) whichhad belonged in the time of the Confessor to William Malet, (c) father ofLucy's uncle Robert Malet. If Lucy's mother was William Malet's daughter,this may have been her maritagium; and the fact that Thorold gave tithesin this place (d) has been advanced as evidence that he was herhusband... the only known children of Aelfgar are Edwin, Morcar andAeldgitha, wife of Harold, and consequently the passing of the manor ofSpalding cannot be held to justify the inference that Aelfgar was fatherof Lucy. "

The Croyland Charter is dismissed because it is a late or forgedcharter--not quite contemporary--rewritten by the clergy to justify theirpossession of lands, as is the case with most forged charters. That doesnot necessarily mean that the genealogical information is absolutelyfalse, but it does mean "stop, look and listen." Nor does that fact thatLucy was not mentioned as Aelfgar's daughter mean that she was absolutelynot his daughter. The only daughter mentioned was Agatha (Aeldgitha) whomarried Harold II--killed at Hastings and she married a very famousfigure. This is neither proof nor disproof that Lucy was her sister.

Regarding the confusion about the Lancasters, it seems that the monkswere confused and had the wrong information. "To this the monkishchroniclers have added the fiction that he was the son of Ketel, son ofEldred, son of Ivo Taillebois (Mon Angl iii 553 & Cockersands Cartulary,Chethem Soc (New Series) xxxix 305), whereas he was almost, if not quite,contemporary with Ivo."

Richard Borthwick wrote:  "If Lucy had a son by Ivo, presumably he wouldhave been heir to her lands and thence to the Lancaster family. From whatI can recall this is not what happened." An answer may be that the son,William, died before his sister Beatrice. Then he would have been capableof inheriting only a very small (4x8) plot of land.  Beatrice,  marriedRibald, the illegitimate son of Eudes. Also, Ivo had at least one--if notmore--illegitimate children. William may not have been Lucy's offspring,but still a son of Ivo.

Faris has Aelfgar III married to Alvarissa Malet, daughter of WilliamMalet.  Though Alfgar died in 1061, before the conquest, this marriagecould still be valid. Their daughter, according to this reconstruction,was Lucy.

Though this scenario seems to make the most sense to me, it will likelynever be proven. Neither will any alternative scenario be proven. For allthe revisionist 'ink spilled', and all the trillions of rearrangedelectrons, no proof is obtainable now or in the future unless the futuresees a major archaeological discovery. Therefore, one can let theemotional side have some weight ... and there is an emotional side:

Lady Godiva is one of the most famous of all women in the entire span ofhistory.  The legend of her ride through the village stark naked on ahorse has inspired adolescent boys to late night visions for a thousandyears.  Each and every one of these boys have become the 'peeping Tom'who could not help but gaze upon that erotic scene.

If Lady Godiva is to remain in the historical record as a Plantagenetancestor, then the scenario of her family connections cannot--and shouldnot be--summarily discarded. To do so is a disservice to her memory andthe fantasies of young boys  throughout the ages.

Kenneth Harper Finton
Editor/ Publisher
THE PLANTAGENET CONNECTION
1023 - 1071 William I Malet 48 48 William Malet, of Granville, Normandy; also held lands in Lincs before1066 (possibly by virtue of his mother's putative status ofEnglishwoman); granted the feudal Barony of Eye, Suffolk, following theConquest, in which he was one of William I's chief lieutenants, beingallegedly given the task by William of burying Harold's body afterHastings; Sheriff of Yorks 1068; married Hesilia Crispin (living 1086),gggdau of Rollo The Dane, Duke of Normandy, and died c1071.  [Burke'sPeerage]

----------------------------------------------

Note: Malet is a dimunitive of "Mal" meaning evil.

The Peytons, Camden observes, have had a common progenitor with theUffords, who became Earls of Suffolk, the founder of both being WilliamMallet, a Norman baron, who was sheriff of Yorkshire in the 3rd ofWilliam I, and obtained grants of sundry lordships and manors from thecrown, amongst which were Sibton and Peyton Hall, which he possessed atthe time of the survey. "Iselham," says the same author, "formerlybelonged to the Bernards, which came to the family of the Peytons bymarriage, which knightly family of Peyton flowed out of the same malestock whence the Uffords, Earls of Suffolk, descended; albeit theyassumed the surname of Peyton, according to the use of that age, fromtheir manor of Peyton Hall, in Boxford, in the county of Suffolk." [JohnBurke & John Bernard Burke, Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England,Ireland, and Scotland, Second Edition, Scott, Webster, & Geary, London,1841, p. 408, Peyton, of Isleham]

Note: Domesday states that Walter de Caen held Sibton (given to him byWilliam's widow) and Swein of Essex held Peyton--Walter having been deadsince 1071.

                    ---------------------------------------------------

William, according to some, was grandson of Lady Godiva & brother ofHarold Godwyn's wife, while not necessarily entirely true, probably therewas some relationship.

                    ---------------------------------------------------

According to Crispin and Macary, "William (Guillaume) Malet de Gravillestands out as one of the most imposing figures at the Conquest. There canbe no doubt about his presence there, which is subscribed to by Williamof Poitiers, Guy of Amiens, Orderic Vital, and all the historians of thisepoch. So much has been placed on record concerning him that just a fewfacts of his life will be recited here. He was probably descended fromGerard, a Scandinavian prince and companion of Duke Rollo, which gave thename of the fief of Gerardville or Graville, near Havre. Robert, theeldest son, occurs in a document of about 990 in Normandy. On hismother's side William Malet was of Anglo-Saxon origin, for she wasprobably the daughter of Leofric, Earl of Mercia, and Godwa or Godgifu,the supposed sister of Thorold the Sheriff in the time of Edward theConfessor, and therefore the aunt of Edwin and Morcar, Earls ofNorthumberland. He was nearly killed in the battle of Hastings but wasrescued by the sire de Montfort and William of Vieuxpont, and wasappointed by William the Conqueror to take charge of the body of Harold,a statement that has been disputed. The consensus of opinion favors it,and it is most logical if William Malet's mother was as stated the sisterof Algar II., 7th Earl of Mercia, who was the father of Alditha, wife ofHarold. He accompanied King William at the reduction of Nottingham andYork in 1068, for which he was rewarded with the shreivalty of land inthat county. Gilbert de Gand and Robert Fitz Richard were also commandersin this expedition. The following year he was besieged in the castle ofYork by Edgar, the Saxon prince, and was only saved from surrender by thetimely arrival of the Conqueror. In the same year he was attacked by theDanes, who captured the city of York with great slaughter and tookWilliam Malet, his wife and children, prisoners, but their lives werespared, as was that of Gilbert de Gand, for the sake of their ransoms.There is evidence that he was slain in this year, but it is uncertain andthe date of his death is unknown. An entry in Domesday that "WilliamMalet was seized of this place (Cidestan, Co. Suffolk), where heproceeded on the King's service where he died," would indicate that hisdeath occurred during the compilation of that book. He was witness to acharter of King William to the church of St. Martin-le-Grand, in London,and is there styled "princeps," which title, however, was honorary andnot hereditary, having ceased with his death."

                         ------------------------------------------

William Malet, or Guillaume, as he may have been called, "Sire deGraville", came from Graville Sainte Honorine between Le Havre andHarfleur, in what is today the French province of Normandy. He is said tohave had a Norman father and a Saxon (read English) mother, and had somesort of association with King Harold of England before the conquest.William, through his Saxon mother, may actually have been related to KingHarold, and also to the well known Lady Godiva. It is also possible thatWilliam and Harold were both God fathers of Duke William of Normandy'sdaughter, Abela.

The Malet Castle at Graville Sainte Honorine had an important strategiclocation, at the mouth of the Seine. It has now fallen into the sea,though some remnants of it may still be visible. A large section of wallwith large iron rings attached was still there just over 100 years ago.The Abbey church, in which some of the Malets are buried, is now in thetown of Le Havre. Though William Malet had connections to both sides inthe conflict to come, his main allegiance was to Duke William of Normandy.

William fought with distinction at Hastings, as the following Excerptfrom Wace's "Roman de Rou" attests:



William whom they call Mallet,
Boldly throws himself among them;
With his flashing sword
Against the English he makes furious onset;
But his shield they clove,
And his horse beneath him killed,
And himself they would have slain,
When came the Sire de Montfort
And Lord William de Vez-Pont
With the great force which they had,
Him they bravely rescued.
There many of their men they lost;
Mallet they remounted on the field
On a fresh war-horse.


When the battle was over, Duke William entrusted William Malet to attendto the burial of the dead English king. The body was buried under a heapof stones on top of a cliff at Hastings overlooking the shore that Haroldhad so bravely defended. William placed a stone on the grave with theepitaph:


"By command of the Duke, you rest here a King, O Harold, that you may beguardian still of the shore and sea".
This burial of Harold was only temporary and the body was later re-buriedat Harold's Abbey at Waltham.

William and his brother Durand held lands in Lincolnshire, England,during the reign of Edward the Confessor, and through the reign of Haroldright up to the conquest, in addition to those in Normandy. TheseLincolnshire holdings, all in the Danelaw, probably came from William andDurand's mother. After the conquest William's English holdings weregreatly increased, again, principally in the Danelaw, as English landswere taken from their Saxon owners and handed over to Norman Barons. Itis likely that Duke William conferred these estates on William, partlybecause of his loyalty and skill in battle, but also because of his priorconnections with his Danish "cousins" there. Perhaps the Duke felt thatWilliam was the best man to bring these proud, warlike and independentsettlers under the control of their new King.

William was dead at the time of the Domesday survey in 1086, but theholdings at that time of his son Robert, and of his wife, give a goodindication of the extent of his estates. He held large parts of what aretoday Suffolk and Norfolk, with smaller amounts of land in Lincolnshireand Yorkshire. Eye, in Suffolk appears to have been William's stronghold.Here he built a Motte and Bailey castle, after the Norman fashion.Nothing remains of the Norman fortifications, but the outline of thebaileys and "Castle Mound", are still evident. There is even a slightindication of where the Market, founded by William Malet under RoyalLicense would have been held.

William married Hesilia Crispin, by whom he had two sons, Robert andGilbert, and one daughter, Beatrice. Robert and possibly Gilbert, alongwith their uncle Durand, accompanied their father at the battle ofHastings. The arms shown at the top of the page, likely carried by theMalets at Hastings, were used by many generations of the Malet family,both in England and in France, and can be seen on the Bayeux tapestry.

William was made Sheriff of York and granted considerable lands inYorkshire following the building of the first Norman castle there (themound now supports 'Clifford's Tower') in 1068. He and his fellowcaptains, Robert Fitz-Richard and William of Ghent, with 500 pickedknights had to fight off a local revolt, headed by Edgar the Atheling;this in or shortly after January 1069. Robert Fitz-Richard and many ofhis men were killed and it was only by the timely arrival of King Williamthat the City was saved. The natives remained restless and had another,token go, as soon as King William left but were quickly put down. Thetroops were strengthened and another castle built on the other side ofthe river from the original but, notwithstanding, in September 1069,William, his wife and two of his children were captured by a combinedforce of Danes and English under Sweyn of Denmark supported by EarlsWaltheof and Gospatric and the Northumbrians, when York fell to themafter a terrible fight. This led to King William ordering the burning andkilling of everything in the north and Domesday, even 16 years later,records most of northern England as still being waste and uninhabited.

William, his wife and two children must have been released some timelater and William retained most of his lands apart from those inYorkshire, which will have come with the office of Sheriff, which hadbeen taken from him. At some point the King awarded William theappellation of "Princep", and in the Chart granted by the King to thechurch of St. Martin le Grand, his signature appears as "Wilielmus MaletPrincep". In the context of the times, Princep would likely have beeninterpreted as "leader, or chief". William is believed to have diedfighting "Hereward the Wake" in the Fens near Ely Cathedral, which liesbetween South Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk (and in the middleof the Malet holdings), in 1071. The Domesday book records that "...Hewent into the marsh", and that "...he went on the King's service, wherehe died".

William is generally accepted to be the progenitor of many of the variousbranches of the Malet family (those that can trace their lines back thatfar), both in England and in France. The descendants of Durand continuedto hold lands in Lincolnshire, and are recorded in Irby on Humber up tothe 16th century.

                    -----------------------------------------

NORMAN SHERIFFS
By 1066, when William the Conqueror seized power, he replaced all of theexisting sheriffs with his own loyal comrades in arms. When Williamconveyed the offices of sheriff to his Normans, he also bestowed to themthe title "Vicomte," which added nobility to their positions. He allowedVicomte sheriffs to build castles, a powerful symbol of privilege and afar greater honor than had ever been granted to prior Anglo-Saxonsheriffs. The castles were a sign of aggressive force. This fortificationsymbolism helped identify William as the incomparable authority in thenewly conquered land.

The most famous William the Conqueror sheriff was a man named WilliamMalet, a ferocious warrior. During the Battle of Hasting his horse waskilled from under him. Mounting a fresh horse, he continued leading thecharge, killing the enemy along the way, to a Norman victory. Williamcontinued to use Malet to crush insurgent forces within his reign.. . .As a reward, William named Malet the sheriff of Yorkshire.

King William sought aggressive types for the office of sheriff whoseambitions were consistent with his. Those willing to squeeze the peasantsto their maximum were the best qualified in William's eyes. He institutedthe practice of selling the office to the highest bidder. This broughtforth evil men willing to pay exorbitant prices for the office and thenwilling to do whatever it took to recoup their investment. . . No onespoke out for the peasantry because their only representative to the kingwas the very sheriffs embezzling them. The most notorious was Picot,Sheriff of Cambridgeshire. . . . Monks describe him as:

a hungry lion, a prowling wolf, a crafty fox, a filthy swine, a dogwithout shame, who stuffed his belly like an insatiable beast as thoughthe whole country were a single corpse.

If events reduced production within the shires and thereby reduced theprosperity of King William, the sheriff was then forced to press thepeasants even more to make up for the deficiency. In 1083, William leviedthe highest tax assessment of his reign to make up for the previousyear's famine and low production. . . . To enhance their income, sheriffscommonly pillaged Church properties. . . .

The only coin in circulation in twelfth century England was the silverpenny. It was the responsibility of the sheriff to police the silvercontent in the coinage. If the sheriff failed to see that the tender didnot meet quality assurance in the amount of silver content versus thealloy percentage, he was held personally liable for the shortage. Becausethis burden was placed on the sheriffs in the area that effected them themost, their pocketbooks. . . .Enforcement of the matter was particularlyunkind under the reign of King Henry II to punish offenders thatcirculated "bastard" coins. The first offense routinely resulted in thesevering of a hand or castration. . . .

The coming of King John in 1199 brought about one of the most stirringperiods in the history of the medieval sheriff. . . . As King John wagedwar against the Welsh, the French, and the Irish, he placed the emphasisupon the sheriffs to finance his wars. . . . Because of the sheriff'sauthority and ability to raise funds, the 13th century saw the sheriff asthe most powerful administrative force in medieval England. . . .

King John personally knew every one of the 100 or so sheriffs that heappointed between 1199 and 1216. Some were his intimate friends and mosttrusted advisors. In contrast to the prior practice of King Richard, heappointed only two members of the Church to the post. He instead chose toselect intense, secular men, with strong military backgrounds. . . . Hisdeliberate selection of men of harsh demeanor . . . was considered bypeople of his time as a substantive answer for the difficult issues ofthe day . . . tough men for tough times. . . .
~1020 - >1086 Hesilia (Elise) Crispin 66 66 ~0960 Heloise de Guines ~0985 Fulk deAnjou ~0985 Beatrice de Goz ~1000 - >1067 Emma 67 67 1003 Mr. Malet 1005 Daughter of Leofric Earl of Mercia 1256 - 1292 Peter de Geneville 36 36 ~1052 - >1133 Patrick de Chaworth 81 81 pg 111, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1090 Hasculf deSt. Hilary 1258 - 20 Jan 1326 [19th Edward II] Richard de Windsor ~1006 Hamon "Dapifer" Crevecouer ~0967 - 1047 Hamo "dentatus (Buck-Toothed)" Sire de Cruelly 80 80 ~0971 Godchildede Belesme ~1151 - 1213 Adam de Port 62 62 ~1000 - 1034 Olaf Sihtricsson King of Dublin 34 34 ~1000 Maelcorcre of Leinster ~0970 - 1042 Sihtric "Silken Beard" King of Dublin 72 72 Acceded 989. Deposed 1036. King of Northumberland, King of
Denmark,King of York.
1230 - 1303 Maud deLacy 73 73 ~0980 Slani O'Brien 1004 - 1047 Mauger deSt. Clair 43 43 ~1005 deBassenville ~1020 - >1070 Gherbod the Fleming 50 50 1014 Caradog ap Gwyn Janet 1217 - 1291 Eleanor of Provence 74 74 1171 - 1230 Alfonso IX, The Slobberer, King of Leon 59 59 1  NAME Alfonso Pierre Raimund /Alphonsez/ III 1298 - ~1349 Thomas Workesley 51 51 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII, King of Castile 58 58 1210 - 1269 Isabel Bigod 59 59 Bigod, FitzGeoffrey, Sources:
      Americans of Royal Descent, by Browning, pp. 11/12, 389.
      Magna Charta Barons and Desc., by Browning, pp. 87-90, 218, 224.
      Dormant and Extinct Peerage, by Burke, pp. 357/8, 321, 208, 353,568/9.
      Lewis Manuscripts, pp. 132, 326, 136, 281, 202.
      Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 2, p. 99; Vol. 3, p. 259.
      Clay's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, pp. 188-190.
      Harleian Soc. Pub., Vol. 16, pp. 274, 318.
      Ormerod's History of Cheshire, Vol. 3, pp. 394/5.
      Burke's Landed Gentry (1939), Vol. 3, pp. 2759-60.
Eleanor Plantagenet England D. 1143 Geoffrey V Plantagenet Geoffrey V Plantagenet Foulques, Count of Anjou 1096 - 1126 Ermengardedu Maine 30 30 D. 1136 Aimery deChastellerault Dangerose del'Isle Bouchard Boso II Eleanor deThouars ~1024 Aimery IV 1017 Aurengarde de Mauleon ~1250 - 1330 Margery de Newmarch 80 80 1239 - 1307 Edward I "Longshanks" King of England 68 68 Edward I was King of England 1272-1307 and was one of the most powerfulEnglish Kings of the middle ages. Edward made permanent achievements inboth political and constitutional fields. : "The Middle Ages" by H.R.Loyn and "The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, GeneralEditor.

I

I

[Source: Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York, 1995]



There was little time to enjoy it at first, for Edward was now pitched into the discords of the English baronial revolt. His father was neither a good leader of men, nor a good soldier, so the burden was thrust upon his young son. The barons' leader, Simon de Montfort, was Edward's uncle, and there is no doubt that the prince was both attracted to his uncle's ideas of government, and also deeply influenced by his military tactics. But after the defeat at Lewes, and a humiliating imprisonment, his admiration turned to hostility, which was only sated with the rout of Evesham in 1265.

In the next few years he acted as a moderating influence on his father's vindictive wrath, and saw to it that the settlement with the baronial opposition should not in itself provoke a further uprising.

In 1270 he was at last able to go off on crusade, when he brought relief to Acre. His military reputation now soared, and in 1272 he suffered an attack from an assassin, in which he was grazed by a poisoned dagger in the scuffle. He recovered, and was able to negotiate a ten-year truce before returning home, covered with honour.

On landing in Sicily he heard of his father's death, but he did not hurry to get back to England, spending a whole year settling his affairs in Gascony first. It was 1274 before England saw him. Once properly seated on the throne, however, he gave every evidence of his vigour and determination to rule. Within two months of the coronation, commissioners were scouring the land completing a survey as large and efficient as any that had been understaken since Domesday. The commissioners enquired into encroachments upon royal rights, and into injustices committed by the king's servants; their detailed reports are know to historians as the Hundred Rolls, based as they were on the administrative unit of the hundred.

The evidence of the Hundred Rolls was to be the basis of Edward's legislative reforms. A long series of statutes, enacted at the enlarged parliaments introduced by Simon de Montfort, aimed at the improvement of justice at the local as well as the national level, and also tried to rationalise the bewildering array of jurisdictions, known as liberties, the feudal government had seen grow up. Edward had a genuine concern to see justice done, which gained for him the deep admiration of his subjects. He was also very well informed about the localities, for he was constantly on the move, covering distances of about 2,000 miles a year, with a court of perhaps a thousand horses lumbering behind him on the muddy and dangerous medieval roads.

Much larger groups travelled with him when he went to war, and Wales was the first to see his unwelcome visitation. Llewellyn, Prince of Wales, had rather foolishly refused to do homage for his lands at Edward's coronation, and in 1277 the King attacked and reduced his dominions by half. Five years later the Prince's brother David rose in rebellion, and Llewellyn was forced to join him, only to be killed in a petty foray. With no great leader left to them, the Welsh submitted to annexation, and saw gigantic castles rise in key-points such as Conway, Caernarvon and Harlech, castles that would prevent future revolt. Edward was an arrant colonist, and typically brought back from Wales the great cross of Neath to carry in procession to Westminster for the service of thanksgiving. The Abbey was to see many more proud trophies plundered for its decoration and distinction.

Edward was eager to be off to Palestine once more, but the European situation prevented a new crusade: France and Aragon struggled over the body of Sicily, and the Pope was hopelessly committed as a partisan. Edward now spent long months attempting to bring peace to Europe so that the Christian nations could unite in crusade.

His design for Europe was interrupted by troubles at home. In his prolonged absence corruption throve, and in 1289 the King was forced to conduct an enquiry which resulted, among other things, in the banishment of his chief justice. The same year he had to go north to convene the court that was to judge between the various 'competitors' for the throne of Scotland. The legalism fascinated him, but in the middle of this interesting judicial wrangle, his wife died. He was heartbroken, and as he accompanied the body from Lincolnshire to London, he ordered elaborate crosses to be set up wherever the cortEge rested. The last was Charing Cross. A most beautiful monument was set up in Westminster Abbey, and those who view it can see something of Edward's loss.

Back in Scotland he finally adjudged John Balliol's claim for the crown to be the best, but forced him to accept vassal status as a quid pro quo. Years of trouble lay ahead: the French made war, the Welsh rebelled, and the Pope made life extrememly difficult for the hard-pressed English king. He continued to demand Edward's presence on crusade---which he would have dearly loved, but found impossible; his only contribution was the expulsion of Jews in 1290. Furthermore the Pope had suddenly issued a Bull declaring that the state had no right to tax the clergy, and Edward was desperately short of money for war on three fronts.

These diffficulties explain but do not excuse the viciousness of his actions in the next few years. Scotland had refused to accept him as overlord, and he annexed the land, deposed Balliol, and removed the Stone of Scone to Westminster Abbey in 1296. When Wallace rose as a leader in Scotland, Edward increased the fury of his attack; the rebels received no mercy.

Gradually the King seemed to be achieving his aims. France was satisfied by his marriage to the sister of the French king, and by 1304 Scotland seemed well under his heel, controlled by a policy of ruthless savagery. Edward could at last turn his attention back to English affairs, where disorder was rampant. New justices were sent round on the 'Trailbaston' commission to seek out the unsavoury Robin Hoods of the land, and gradually order returned.

Inagine then the fury of the aged king when, in 1306, Robert Bruce, who had been his man for the past four years, suddenly went north and was crowned King of Scots. Old, tired, and sick, Edward moved up country to deal with this fresh menace to peace, but was taken very ill on the way. He had to direct the campaign from his bed, and vitriolic letters showered on his commanders accusing them of inaction and failure.

In a last tremendous effort the King got up and gave his litter to Carlisle Cathedral---a typical gesture, again---and set off on horseback. The progress was desperately slow---some two miles a day---but even that was too fast for the sick king, who quickly succumbed and died in July 1307.

Son and father of weak and inefffectual kings, Edward I had many fine qualities which seem to make nonsence of heredity. He was tall and strong, a fine horseman and a doughty warrior. A great leader of men, he was also able to lead to success. He was interested in government and law in a very genuine way. As a personality he was pious, but easily provoked to rage and often vindictive. He was fond of games---so passionately did he love his hawks that when they were ill he sent money to shrines to pray for their recovery. He was generous to the poor, and often a gay companion: he played chess, and loved music and acrobats; once he bet his laundress Matilda that she couldn't ride his charger, and she won! Every Easter Monday he paid ransom to his maids if they found him in bed. He loved his two wives, and fussed over their health and that of his children with a pathetic concern---sometimes threatening the doctor with what would happen to him if his patient did not recover. His people feared, respected and remembered him.
Malcolm III of Scotland Canmore 1045 - 1093 St Margaret Aetheling of Scotland 48 48 MARGARET OF SCOTLAND, SAINT (b. c. 1045, probably Hungary--d. Nov. 16,1093, Edinburgh; canonized 1250; feast day November 16, Scottish feastday June 16), queen consort of Malcolm III Canmore and patroness ofScotland.

Margaret was brought up at the Hungarian court, where her father, Edward,was in exile. After the Battle of Hastings, Edward's widow and childrenfled for safety to Scotland. Her brother Edgar the Aetheling, defeatedclaimant to the English throne, joined her there. In spite of herleanings toward a religious life, Margaret married (c. 1070) Malcolm IIICanmore, king of Scotland from 1057 or 1058 to 1093. Through herinfluence over her husband and his court, she promoted, in conformitywith the Gregorian reform, the interests of the church and of the Englishpopulation conquered by the Scots in the previous century. She diedshortly after her husband was slain near Alnwick, Northumberland.[Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]
Agatha of Hungary D. 1040 Duncan I of Scotland Sybilla deNorthumberia Siward Biorsson of Northumbria 0978 - 1045 Crinan deThane 67 67 0983 Bethoc (Princess) of Scotland Malcom II MacKenneth of Scotland Aefgifu D. UNKNOWN Sabran Du Cailar 1027 - 1087 William The Conqueror 60 60 1032 - 1083 Matilda (Maud) Fleming 51 51 0990 - 1035 Robert II `the devil' (Duke) of Normandy 45 45 D. 1027 Richard II Unknown 0982 - >1026 Judith Brittany 44 44 1240 - 1280 Margaret de Quincy 40 40 Ermangarde de Anjou 1012 - 1067 Baldwin 55 55 D. 1078 Alice Capet France 0980 - 1036 Baldwin 56 56 0896 - UNKNOWN Eadgifu Ogive of Luxembourg 0961 - 0987 Arnulf (Arnold Arnolph) II deFlanders 26 26 D. 1002 Susanna Lombard of Ivrea D. 0961 Baldwin (Baudouin) III deFlanders D. 1008 Mathilda of Burgundy Robert I `the Old' (Capet) of Burgundy D. 1109 Helie de(Ella of) Semur Dalmas Aremburge Hugh deChastellerault 0980 - 1016 Bruno II Count Of Brunswick 36 36 1066 - 27 Jan 1101/1102 Etienne I deMacon Gergerba deLa Rochefoucauld Geoffrey II Robertr Fitz- Other Sprote deBretagne Aymer (The Sordmaker) deTaillefer Isabelle\ elizabeth deCourtenay ~1081 - 1137 Louis VI Capet France 56 56 Aka: The Fat King of France D. 1154 Adelaide de Savoy de Maurienne 0924 - 0944 Aethelflaed of Damerham 20 20 1052 - 1108 Philip I Capet 56 56 1054 - 1094 Bertha of Holland 40 40 Hugues Magnus France Hedwige Hartwige Germans Adbelahide Princess of Aquitaine D. 1032 Constance of Provence 1717 Moses Warner 1547 - 1628 Eleanor 81 81 See: Radcliffe and Hervy Pedigrees in part 2 of this book. Some genealogists feel that due to the timeline and Eleanors will she desends from one of these two families. We have included the pedigrees for further research by other researchers.
Source: Clarence Almon Torrey , The Whitbread Family (TAG 32). The first Thomas Whitbread, of Upper Gravenhurst, was alive in 1552, when mentioned in the will of his son Lawrence, but no probate record was found. Sir William Gasgoyne, knight, had made a feoffment of the manor of Schepoe with appurtenances in Great and Little Gravenhurst and Clopton to Thomas Whytebrede on 12 April 1538. The will of Lawrence, son of Thomas, proved 1552, mentioned his brother John, father Thomas, and minor sons Henry and John, etc. Almon Torrey estimated that this William was born about 1573, but William Whitbread, yeoman, of Gravenhurst, swore deposition in 1625, stating that he was then 55 or thereabouts, or born about 1570.
Source:  The American Genealogist, Whole Number 127, Vol 32, Nr.3, July 1956. John Whitbread , born about 1548, a resident of Upper Gravenhurst as early as 1571, appears to have been the John Whitbred as  written in the parish register buried 28 Nov 1598. A search failed to find a will or other probate record and no deeds to or from him have been located. John married Eleanor/Ellenor. [as noted is probate record found] Ellen was of Elstow in her nuncupative will  which was probated 18 April 1629, and was most likley then living with her youngest son John, who had settled in Elstow. But she was the "Widow Whitebread" buried at Upper Gravenhurst 20 Nov 1628, in the churchyard near her husband's grave. Eleanor may have been related in some way to the Radcliffe or the Harvey family.  The evidence of such a relationship is: 1] 1 August 1611, Sir Edward Radcliffe, of "Eluestowe" sold John Radwell of Kempston, ploughwright, in consideration of 32 pounds, and a messuage or tenement with yard garden and adjoining orchard in Eluestowe between land of the King and Lambes Lane alias Lambesyate on the west highway leading from Eluestowe to Kempston on the north and the Common green there on the south, to be held of the chief lord of the fee by the rents and services therefore due.  2] Edw: Radcliffe then signed a "Covenant of assurance against Dame Isabel Radcliffe late of Eluestowe deceased his mother." Isabel (Hervey) Radcliffe was already dead, the covenant was to guard against claims from any of her heirs. 3] That same day, Sir Edward Radcliffe entered a bond for 60 pounds to secure the deed poll just made to John Radwill. 4] also that same day, John Whitbread of Eluestowe, husbandman, also entered a bond for the sum of 20 pounds to John Radwell, "assuring him quiet enjoyment of above premises against Elner Whitbread of Eluestowe, widow, his mother."
Source: Bedfordshire Deeds compiled by F. A. Page-Turner, Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, v. 4. Sir Edward Radcliffe noted in these records was son of Sir Humphrey Radcliffe, who died 13 Aug 1566, aged 57, by his wife Isabel Hervey, who died 8 May 1594. Eleanor, a generation younger than Isabel, failed to appear on the Radcliffe pedigree in the Visitation of Bedfordshire, 1566. [See Pedigrees Part 2]Sir Edward presumably was giving assurance against any encumbrance that might have been placed on the property by his mother Isabel, or perhaps against claims of her creditors or heirs, as this property may have an inheritance claim from the Hervey family. It is unknown at this time how Eleanor may be related to the Radcliffes or Herveys. "The last will and testmt, of Ellenor Whitebread of Elstowe deceased, uttered by her in her life time and since her death put into writings as followeth. The said Ellenor Whitebread beinge of pfect memorie did in the prsence of William Whitebread and Henrye Whitebread utter her minds touchings the disposing of her worldlie goods as followeth vizt. Imprimis she gave unto Willia' Whitebread her eldest sonne her silver measure and after his decease to his eldest sonne Henery Whitebread and after his decease to his eldest sonne Willia' for to be a standard for ever unto the heire of the Whitebreads. It' she gave unto Willia' Whitebread her godsone a silver spoone. It' she gave unti Henery Whitebread her godsonne a silver spoone and unto Ellenor Whitebread her goddaughter his sister a silver spoone and a porridgpot. It' she gave unto Willia' Spencer a silver spoone beinge my godsonne. It' she gave unto Ellenor Whitebread her goddaughter unto John Whitebread a silver spoone & a porridgpot. It' she gave unto Ellenor Chapman her godaughter (sic) a porrigpott if ever she do come for it. It' she gave unto John Whitebread her godsonne a silver spoone. It' she gave unto Thomas Spencere xlvj s. viij d. It' she willed her sonne John Whitebread to pay all her debts and to be her Executor." No signatures or date Probate: 18th April to Executor named.  Source: Copy of the Will of Ellenor Whitbred of Elstow 1629, Bedord Archdeaconry Court, 1628/9, No. 122. Ellenor’s eldest son William in 1639 styled himself a gentelman.  The recorded marriage of Alice Whitbread in 1600 to Gerard Spencer, the known baptisms of her Spencer children, and the fact that two of them, William and Thomas received legacies in Eleanor's will, one of them being her godson, insures that Alice belongs to the family of John and Eleanor Whitbread. William Whitbred and Gerrard Spencer sold to John Whitbread 11 messuages, 1 pigeon house, 11 gardens, 11 orchards, 200 acres arable, 200 acres meadow, and 60 acres pasture, in Shillington, Over Gravenest, Nether Gravenest, Flitton, Silsoe, Elstoe, Kempston, and Stotfolde, Easter, 9 James I 1611. Feet of Fines for Beds. P.R.O., CP. 25, 2, 270. The children listed, William, Henry, Alice and John are positively proved as belonging to John and Eleanor. The children of John , probably all born in Upper Gravenhurst, were: i. Elizabeth (3), bapt. 28 Sept. 1571; ii. William, b: (1573); m. Elizabeth. iii. Henry, bapt. 9 Jan 1575/6; m. Elizabeth Leventhorpe iv. Alice, b. (1578) m. 10 Nov 1600, Gerard Spencer (supra, 27:84). Four of her sons came to New England and all left descendants. v. Francis, bapt. 30 Apr 1581; no further record. vi. John, bapt. 8 Nov 1584; m. Mary Newman vii. Judith, bapt. 6 June 1591; m. 23 July 1626, Richard Poulter.
~1040 - 1093 William IV 53 53 Emma deMortaigne 0944 - 0975 Edgar The Peacful King of England 31 31 King of Mercia and Northumbria 957 and King of England 959-975. 0990 - 1060 Pons III 70 70 Boso I deChastellerault Amelia Foucauld Gersinde Waltheof II of Huntington Fulbert `the Tanner' deFalais Doda Amauri deMontford Agnes deGarlande D. UNKNOWN Athelflaed The Fair Simon D'evreux deMontford Amicia deBeaumont Bertrade de Montfort Hugh Kevelioc de Meschines Robert deBeaumont Amicia (deGael) de Montfort Almodis Le Marche de La Haute 0974 - ~1072 Amelie d' Aubnay 98 98 1135 - 1183 Maldred FitzDolfin 48 48 Joan deStuteville D. UNKNOWN Aelfrthryth of devon Robert deBeaumont Petronilla deGrandmesnil Hugh deGrandmesnil Aelflaed II of Northumberland Biorn Bjorn Ulsisson Anna Brocke See Visitation Pedigrees. Bartholemew del'Isle Bouchard Gerberga Archambaud Agnes del'Isle Bouchard 1005 Ealdgyth D. 1110 Elias I (Count) deMaine Maud deChateau- du-Loire Theobald "Le Tricheur" of Blois Luitgardeof Vermandois Odo (Eudes) II (Count) of Blois Ermengarde D'auvergne Herbert I (Count of Maine) Bertha of Chartres Gervase (Sire deChateau-du- Loire) Erenburg 0942 - 1014 Sigrid The Haughty Skoglar-Testedot 72 72 D. 1158 Sancho III D. 1185 Alphonso II (King) of Castile Berenguela of Barcelona D. 1107 Raymond of Burgundy Urraca Alfonsez (Countess\ queen) of Castile D. 1087 William II `the Great' of Burgundy Stephanie (Etienette) deLongwy D. 1057 Raynold (Count) I (Lombard) of Burgundy Alice deNormandy 1030 - 1109 Alfonso 79 79 0900 - <0941 Thyri Klacksdottir 41 41 D. 1092 Constance (Capet) of Burgundy Raymond IV Marquis of Barcelona ~1095 - 1190 Dulce Aldonza Milhaud 95 95 1055 - 1082 Raimund Berenger II (III) Count of Barcelona 27 27 1059 - 1083 Mathilda D'apulia 24 24 1023 - 1076 Raimund Berenger Count of Barcelona 53 53 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Barcelona Roger deMontgomery Adelaide(Adeliza) of Normandy Lambert II Von Boulogne Eustache I deBoulogne D. UNKNOWN Cnut II The Great King of England & denmark Maud of Louvain Robert, Sire deChateau du Loire Ludolphe Margrave of Saxony & Brunswick Gertrude Gand Brunon II Margrave of Saxony Gisele of Schwaben 1017 - 1061 Floris I, Count Holland 44 44 1639 Randel Vernon Randal Vernon was a member of the Colonial Assembly in 1687. Rainer I Lorraine Judith of Lens 0963 - 1026 Richard II Normandy 63 63 Duke of Normandy from 996 to 1026. Hugh III (Count) of Maine 1073 - 1117 Philipe Matilde Maud de Toulouse 44 44 1071 - 10 Feb 1125/1126 William IX deAquitaine Hildegarde(Aldegarde) (Capet) of Burgundy William VIII deAquitaine William VIII VI; III; Duke of  Aquitaine William V deAquitaine Agnes (Lombard) of Burgundy William IV deAquitaine Count of Poitou Emma of Blois (de Champagne) William III deAquitaine  Count of Poitou; Duke 0979 - UNKNOWN Astrid Inegrid of the Obotrites 1133 - 1158 Blanche Garcia deNavarre 25 25 Adela Gerloc of Normandy Robert deBurgo (Count; de) Mortaigne Harlette deFalaise Herlevin (deBurgo) de Conteville Humbert II "The Fat" deMaurienne Gisele of Burgundy Amadeo II Count Savoy Oddone deMaurienne D. 1048 Humbert I "Whitehands" deMaurienne Margaret Bromhall 1020 - UNKNOWN Gunhilda D. 1206 Adele of Champagne Ryksa Silesia Alix France Ermentrude de Roucy Otto- William deBourgogne Robert I deHauteville Robert I "Guiscard" de Hauteville King of Sicily Duc de Apulia Sigelgaita Princess of Salerno Tancreed deHauteville Fredistina deNormandie Ainor 0910 - 0945 Sprota Adela deSenlis 35 35 Hawise deDonjon Renaud (Reginald) Courtenay Milo deCourtenay Ermengarde de Nevers Josceline deCourtenay Isabel deMontlhery Renaud Count of Nevers Ida deForez Frederic deDonjon Joan Geneva 0989 - 1039 Conrad II "The Salic" King of Germany 50 50 Holy Roman Emperor Richard III Unknown D. 15th, King Hen. VI Robert Ogle Burkes Dormant and Extinct Peerages Page 413 states Robert had 8 daughters and 3 sons. Arnoul deGand Lietgarde de Cleves 1176 - 1188/1248 Mathew de Whitfield Matthew de Whitfield, Lord of Whitfield, held "Whitfield of the Prior and Convent of Hexham" from 1174 to 1214 AD.  His son Ralph de Whitfield had Matthew de Whitfield to whom the lands of Whitfield were confirmed by the Great Charter of Inspectimus of King Edward I about 1280 AD. Richard FitzPons 1088 Maud dePtres Conrad I (Count) of Luxemburg 1000 - 1048 Adalbert III deLongwy Count of Longwy 48 48 Clemence deFoix 1245 Robert de Driby Ermensinde de Longwy 1023 - 1078 William Peter V dePoitou 55 55 William V (VII) Duke of Aquitaine Count of  Poitou D. 1045 Gerhard II of Metz Gisela of Lower Lorraine Frederick I of Luxemburg Count of Luxemburg Ermentrude Von Gleiberg Maude de Dunstanville Guy II `the Red' deMontlhery Adele-Hedwige of France Countess of Auxerre Renaud I of Nevers Count of Nevers 1026 - 1057 Ralph The Timid deSuDeley Earl Of Hereford 31 31 0985 - 1039 Dirk (Dietrich) III, Holland 54 54 Otehilde Germany 0961 - 0993 Arnulf, Count of Holland 32 32 0963 - 0995 Liutgard, Countess of Luxembourg 32 32 0967 Otto II Germany Alianore De Wilington Burke's Landed Gentry Bertrade(Princess) of Norway Foulques V deAnjou Adelaide de Angers 1002 - UNKNOWN Walter Dreux Count of Mantes & Vexin Constance of Castile Gilbert (Vicount) deMilhaud Gerberga Bertrand of Provence Fulk Bertrand Hildegarde de Toulouse Berenger II deGievaudin Adele (Heiress) of Carlat Richard II deGievaudin Roxinde(Dame) of Lodeve Gilbert I of Carlat 1346 Geoffrey Chaucer Geoffrey Chaucer was the famous Poet and author of The Canterberry Tales.
Grant, 1427, Feb. 27; 1427, January 29. 5 Henry VI. 1 item : parchment ; 11 x 30.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Thomas Chaucer son of Geoffrey Chaucer and Richard Wyot to John, duke of Bedford, Ralph Crumwell, lord of Tateshale, Thomas, lord de Morlee, Henry Inglose, knight, Edmund Barry, knight, William Sponne, clerk, William Bernham, clerk, William Paston of Paston, Nicholas Appilyerd, esq., John Manning, and William Yelverton, of all their manor of Gresham with its appurtenances in Norfolk, which they, along with Thomas Walsyngham, who has released his right to them, had of the demise of Thomas Faukoner, William Crowmere, and John Barton the Elder by their charter dated the feast of S.S. Peter and Paul the Apostles 29 June , 3 Henry VI 1425 ; to hold to them and to their heirs in perpetuity from the chief lords of the fee.
WITNESSES: Simon Felbrugge, knight, Edmund Wynter, Clement Herward, John Mortoft, William Mariot. Palimpsest, with 2 seals of red wax: (1) (2.6 cm.) bearing arms and crest with legend: "Sigillum thome chaucer." (2) (2.5 cm.) bearing arms with legend: "Sigillu. . . Wy. ."
NAMES: I. Chaucer, Thomas, 1367?-1434. II. Wyatt, Richard. III. Cromwell, Ralph, Lord of Tatishall. IV. Appleyard, Nicholas. V. Yelverton, William, d. 1476. VI. Faukoner, Thomas. VII. Barton, John, the Elder. VIII. Inglose, Henry, Sir. IX. Barry, Edmund, Sir. X. Sponne, William. XI. Bernham, William. XII. Paston, William. XIII. Manning, John. XIV. Walsingham, Thomas, fl. 1360- 1420. XV. Cromer, William. XVI. Felbrigg, Simon, Sir. XVII. Wynter, Edmund. XVIII. Herward, Clement. XIX. Manot, William. XX. Mortoft, John. Bedford, John Plantagenet, Duke of, 1389- 1435. Morley, Thomas de Morley, Baron, 1354-1416.
SUBJECTS: 1. Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400-- Manuscripts. 2. Deeds--England--Norfolk. 3. Deeds--England--Gresham. 4. Norfolk (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 5. Gresham (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 6. Paston (England) 7. Marley (England)
HOLLIS number: -AQC5108
Agnes Von\de Mels Agnes dePointou Agnes of Aquitaine de Pointou 1032 Anna dePerigord Ferdinand I `the Great' of Castile Sancha (Heiress) of Leon Sancho (Garcie) III of Castile Munia Mayor (Nuna) deCastile Alfonso V (King) of Leon Elvira Melendez Bernard Roger deFoix 1212 Ida deLongespée  Ida (Idonea) Longspee (d >1267) was daughter of William Longspee, 1st Earl of Salisbury (1176-1225) and Ela d'Evereux of Salisbury (c 1190-1261). She married, after 1212 and before 1220, William de Beauchamp of Bedford (c 1185-1262) and had several children including Beatrice who married Thomas fitz Otes. Idonea had been married before 1212 to Ralph de Somery (c 1199-1212).

Ida Longspee (>1230->1261), was Idonea's niece, being daughter of William Longspee, 2nd Earl of Salisbury (>1204-1250) and Idoine de Camville (c 1212-1252). She married (c 1247) Walter fitz Robert of Dunmow (c 1220-<1258). They had several children.
Gersindeof Bigorre Gerberga of MacOn Adalbert II D' Ivrea (King) of Italy Ranulph IV deMeschines Matilda (Maud) FitzRobert deGloucester Ranulph III Le Meschines Lucia Tailboys Ranulph II Le Meschines Margaret d' Avranches Adelhyde de Gaunt 1133 - 1198 Walter FitzRobert Lord Baynard 65 65 Walter FitzRobert, 2nd Lord of Dunmow Castle, who in the controversybetween the Earl of Moreton, brother of Richard I, and the Bishop of Ely,Walter adhered to the Bishop, and was given custody of the Castle of Eyein Suffolk. He married 1st Maud, died 1140, daughter of Richard Lucie,and with her had the lordship of Disce in Norfolk.  Married 2nd Margaretde Bohun and dying in 1198 was succeeded by his eldest son, Robert. Hugh (Hugo) I deGrandmesnil Alice Adeliza deBeaumont Yves II Beaumont Count of Beaumont ~1135 Robert de Molyneux Robert (FitzRoy) deCaen Amicia (Mabel Maud) FitzHamon deMeullent Alice deMontfort Adelaide de Crecy Roger II Bigod Judith (Alice) of Huntingdon 1128 Maud deLucy Lady of Diss. 0963 Ermengarde De Moselle 1050 - 1105 Frederick I Von Hohenstaufen de Swabia 55 55 Ralph IV deToeni 1100 - 1144 Geoffrey deMandeville 44 44 Custom Field:<_FA#> EARL de ESSEX Marguerite deTurenne Matilda FitzHenry Routrou II Unknown Matilda deLa Perche Raymond I deTurenne Mabel Talvas Wm. II Talvas deAlencon Hildeburge Mabel deBeaumont 1112 - 1134 Robert Fitz Richard de Clare 22 22 Robert FitzRichard, 5th son of Richard FitzGilbert, Earl of Clare, whowas stewart to Henry I, and obtained from that monarch the barony ofDunmow in Essex, as also the honour of Baynard's Castle in the City ofLondon, both of which came into the possession of the crown by theforfeiture of William Baynard. This Robert, who died 1134, married 1112Maud de St. Liz, Lady of Branham, daughter of Simon St. Liz, 1st Earl ofHuntingdon, and by her (who died in 1140 and married 2nd Saire deQuincey) had two sons, Walter, his successor, and Simon, to whom he gaveDaventry in Northamptonshire. Hugh Aimerie Thouars Alan III Brittany 1036 - 1094 Ivo FitzRichard Roumare 58 58 Nest Nesta Verch Rhys Geva deBurci Anseau deGarland (Miss) deMontlhery Elise (Elizabeth) deCorbeil 1626 - 1688 Nathaniel Loomis 62 62 ~1138 Beatrice de Villiers 1158 - UNKNOWN Alice FitzWalter Hildebrante deNeustria Hugh FitzBaldric Jeanne deTallebot Robert I deEstouteville Hildegarde de Chateau- Landon Lancelin I deBeaugency Landry deBaugency Paule du Maine Adelaide de Vermandois Guy I deMontlhery 1054 - 1136 Lucy Taillebois 82 82 Hodierna deGommetz Robert III deStuteville Ernberga Skipworth Matilda of Normandy Herbert FitzHerbert Nest Verch Osborn 1605 - 1675 Nathaniel Ely 70 70 Ralph III deToeni Isabel deMontfort Baldwin D. UNKNOWN Ryall ap Conyn Corbeil ~1050 Everard deDonjon Bef 1050 In - 1131 Gilbert deGant Robert I deEstuteville Baldric deThane Sibyl deMontgomery Robert FitzHamon William I deNevers Ermnegarde de Tonnerre 1090 - 1180 Galfrid (Gerard) deLindsay 90 90 Custom Field:<_FA#> LORD de LINDSAY 0762 - 0800 Halfdan II 'Milldi' Eysteinsson 38 38 Jean deBourg de Tonsburgh de Conteville Renaud deTonnerre Helvise 0915 Fulk deBelleme Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Corbonais ~1240 Nichola Maud deMontgommery Constance Brittany Savoryn III deThouars Savaric Bernard II of Saxony Elica von Schweinfurt 1666 Jane Merritt Ingeborg Serlo de Burci ~1000 Maldred ~1015 Edith Aglithia Morcarson ~1077 Uchtred FitzMaldred Adelicia deDurham John deStuteville Agnes Athon deCourtenay Thibault deMontlhery 1762 - 1865 Robert Merritt 103 103 Giraud Count of Forez Name Suffix:<NSFX> II Adelaide Artaud Count of Lyons And Forez Name Suffix:<NSFX> IV Ida Alberic II Count of MacOn Alberadeof Lorraine Renaud deRoucy Melisende de Rethel Harold deEwyas Hugh V deLusignan  "Le Debonnair" 1084 - 1149 Hugh I deMortimer 65 65 Hugh Mortimer opposed the accession of King Henry II on the death of KingStephen, and as result he was taken prisoner and detained until he paid aransom of 3000 marks of silver. He built the Abbey of Wigmore, which wasbegun by his father, and in his old age he became a conon there. Gauthier deSt. Valery Ealdred Emelia Eudes Count of Champagne Blanche Garcia VI The Restorer Margaret del'Aigle Ramiro II Christina Diaz Rodrigo Diaz of Castro el Cid 0967 - 1015 Godfrey 48 48 Dona Jimena Diaz Sancho IV Constanza of Moranon Sancho Fortun Seigneur of Moranon Velasquita Garcia IV Stephanie de Foix Diego Lanez Heinrich von Schweinfurt Gerberga of Henneberg 0790 - UNKNOWN Ragnvald Gudrodsson of Agder 0914 Geoffrey II de Gatinais Bernard I deSaxony Hildegarde von Stade 1410 Margaret deLancaster Guilliame Normandy Count of Arques Berthe of Gloucester ~1220 - ~1268 William II Le Latimer 48 48 Roger deMontgomery Josceline of Pont- Audemer William IV Taillefer Walfrin Taillifer 0822 Ragnvald I Nefia Hrolf Eysteinsson Ponse deMontgomery Adelbert IV deMontgomery Boso I, Vicomte deTurrene Richildi of Hainaut ~1020 - ~1066 Hugh III de Montfort 46 46 SIRE de MONTFORT &  MARSHALL de NORMANDY Alice deBeauffou ~1045 Maldred ~1105 - ~1138 Dolfin FitzUchtred 33 33 Alice D. UNKNOWN Tora Sigurdsdottir 0950 Duncan Mormaer ~1548 - 1598 John Lawrence Whitbread 50 50 Source: The American Genealogist, Whole Number 127, Vol 32, Nr.3, July 1956.
Source: Publications for the Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, 4:22-23
Source: Copy of the Will of Ellenor Whitbred of Elstow 1629, Bedord Archdeaconry Court, 1628/9, No. 122.
Source: Feet of Fines for Beds. P.R.O., CP. 25 (2) 270.
~1521 - <1585 Thomas Whitbread 64 64 See: Whitbred Pedigrees in Part 2 of this book. Research Essex branch of Whitbred family as shown in Essex pedigrees.
Source: Whitbread Collection at Bedford Record Office, also Anthony R. Wagner, Richmond Herald.
Source: The American Genealogist, Whole Number 127, Vol 32, Nu.3, July, 1956.  The Whitbread Family of Gravenhurst, Bedfordshire, England by Clarence Almon Torrey, PH.B, of Boston, MA. TMG (27.84)   Gerard Spencer married at Upper Gravenhurst, co., Bedford, England, 10 Nov 1600, Alice Whitebread or Whitbred. The Spencer Ancestry, [same source] page 79, Volume 27. After the year 1500, records of two branches of the family were found. The 1st. Thomas was born,  by 1500, and the 2nd. Thomas, about 1522.  The 2nd Thomas Whitbread's Line: Thomas Whitbread born about 1522; married,  about 1546, The name of only one child is known. Death dates of Thomas and his wife are unknown. He may be the Thomas buried at Upper Gravenhurst 6 June 1585, but this record may refer to a young child of his son John. The authority for his existence is a land transaction in 1639 years after his death. This  record states: Conveyance of Wm. Whitbred of Ion alias Ine, Upper Gravenhurst, gent; Henry Whitbread of the same, son and heir apparent of Wm. and Elizabeth his wife;  Wm. Carter of Offley, Hertsfordshire, gent; and John Shepard of Upper Gravenhurst, yeoman; to Wm. Aleyn, citizen & grocer, of London; for 2, 200 pounds paid to Wm. and Henry Whitebred; with convenat to levy a fine. A capital house or manor house in the tenure of Wm. and Hen. Whitbred; 4 cottages in Upper Gravenhurst (names occupants ). Covenant as to "tytles troubles charges incumbrances and demands whatsoever heretofore donne or wittingly suffered by them the said Wm. Whitbred and Hen. Whitbred or either of them or by John Whitbred deceased father of the sd. Wm. Whitbred or by Thomas Whitbread his deceased grandfather." 8 October 1639.
1575 - 1628 Robert Day 53 53 This line is unfinished. This persons name could be Richard Day who married Anna Kirby. 1604/1605 - 1648 Robert Day Two persons by the name of Robert Day took passage to New England, one in 1634 and the other in 1635; this has caused  confusion between the two. [Farmer, Banks and Pope]  # Robert Day, Number one: age 30, sailed on the "Hopewell" of London early in April 1635 and arrived at Boston in June. He was of Stanstead, Abbots, Hertfordshire, England. He made his first residence at Ipswich, Massachusetts where he apparently remained.
# Robert Day,Number two:  Came on the ship "Elizabeth," of Ipswich, Suffolkshire, England, William Andrews Master. Leaving the last of April and arriving at Boston in July 1634. According to the ships manifest, he was 30 years old and his 1st wife Mary  who came in the "Elizabeth" from Ipswich, co. Suffolk to Boston in Apr 1634 he was aged 30, Mary aged 28; freeman MA. 6 May 1635. An original proprietor at Hartford; his home lot in 1639 was on the road from Centinel Hill to the North Meadow near the juncion of the streets now Main and Village Streets. Viewer of chimneys and ladders 1643. His first wife is said to have died bef. his rem. to Hartford. m.2) Edith, sister of Dea. Edward Stebbins. Will dated 20 May; inv. 14 Oct 1648 142/13/06, His daughter Sarah was killed with her son Joseph by the Indians 19 Sep 1677

***
"Planters of the Commonwealth" states Robert Day went to Ipswich, Massachusetts. Others who accompanied the Day's on the journey were: Edward Lewis and family - Thomas Scott and family - Isaac Mixer and family - and the family of Richard Kimball, who all settled at Ipswich or Cambridge after arriving. Within a month, on 4 August 1634, Robert was granted three acres of land in the West end of Cambridge, Massachusetts and, by May 6, 1635, he had been admitted into the Cambridge church and became a freeman.

During late 1635, Robert was one of the sixteen advanced people who had traveled into the wilderness looking for a suitable area to start a new plantation. Finding it, they spent the winter at what was to become Hartford, Connecticut. Here he became one of its original proprietors and has his name inscribed on the founders monument.

In the January 3, 1639 division of land at Hartford, Robert Day is recorded as receiving fourteen (14) acres. In 1643, Robert was chosen by the town to act as its chimney viewer. This was a necessary task that could prevent a house fire that may possibly spread throughout the whole town.

The will of Robert Day was dated on 20 May 1648, at Hartford, and by 14 Oct. l648 an inventory of his estate was taken and proved.
***
" Result of some Researches among the British Archives for information relative to the Founders of New England, Made in the years 1858, 1859 and 1860. Drake. : P. 17:  " ....... names of those who embarked on the Hopewell and cert's:..... per. cert. from Stanstede Abbeyin Com. Hert's: .... Robert Day, aged 30......"
***
"A Catalogue of the names of the first Puritan Settlers in Connecticut". p. 21 : Day, Robert, Hartford. He was a cleaner of chimneys and ladders in 1643. Died 1648 and left a comfortable estate for his widow and children. He was a good citizen in the colony and was the first ancester who came to Connecticut of President and Sec. Day.
***
Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England 1620- 1650, Banks. P. 70, Hertfordshire, Name of Emigrant: Day, Robert, Parish Name: Stanstead Abbot, Ship: Hopewell, New England town: Cambridge, Mass. to Hartford Conn. Referance: Hooton."
***
" Directory of the Ancestral Heads of New England families, 1620 - 1700., Holmes, P. LXVI, : Robert Day, of Welsh descent, b. 1604, came from Ipswich England to Cambrige Mass and removed to Hartford Conn, 1636."
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The American Genealogist;  Cited by Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England 1620-1633. Great Migration Study Project, New England Historic Genealogical Society. Boston 1995;    Page: 31:193-201
***
The English Ancestry of Edward Holyoke and of His Nephew, Thomas Morris of New Haven," New England Historical and Genealogical Register;  Author: Richardson, Douglas ; Publication: Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1993; Page: vol. 147, p. 21
***
Hale, House and Related Families; Author: Jacobus, Donald Lines, and Waterman, Edgar Francis
Publication: Hartford: The Connecticut Historical Society, 1952; Page: p. 644
***
Ancient Families of Dee & Day of Wales, England; Title: Ancient Families of Dee & Day of Wales, England, and Ireland; Author: Leonard F. Day; Publication: 1972;
***
Samuel Richardson and Josiah Ellsworth; Author: Ruth Ellsworth Richardson; Publication: Privately Published, 1974; Page: Page 280
***
Genealogical Register of the Descendants in the Male Line of Robert Day; Author: George E. Day
Publication: J & L Metcalf, Northampton, MA ;  Robert migrated from England to America in April 1634 on the
"Elizabeth" with his first wife, Mary, aged twenty eight. They first settled at Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he was admitted a freeman (allowed to vote) on 6 May 1635.
***
The Vinton Memorial; Author: John Adams Vinton; Publication: Boston: Published For The Author, By S. K. Whipple And Company, 161 Washington Street. 1858
***
A Genealogical Register of the Descendants in the Male Line of  Robert Day by George E. Day Connecticut Probate Records  Families of Early Hartford Connecticut John Ladwig New England  Families by William R. Cutter The Colonial History of Hartford; by William DeLoss Love; Copy of the Will and Inventory of Robert Day.--Colony Records, vol. 1. pp. 255, 6. May 20th, 1648.
***
The will of Robert
      Day hee being sick and weake, yet in perfect memory : doth
      order and dispose of his estate to his wife and children, in
      the manner following: Impr'mis I give vnto my beloued wife
      Edatha Day my now dwelling howse and howsing thereto adjoyning,
      howse Lott, Allso all my Land whereof I stand possessed, or
      that of right doth belong vnto mee, lying in Hartford, during
      the tearme of her naturall life : And at the end of her life,
      my will is that the said howse and land shall bee deuided in an
      equall proportion : my will allso is that all my howsehold
      stuff, and Cattle and other moueable goods shall bee my wiues
      to bring vp my children : And in case my wife should bee
      married to another man, then my surviers of my will shall haue
      power if they thinke good to take security for the bringing vp
      of the children, and for so much estate as shall bee though
      meete by them, and to this my last Will and Testament I make
      my wife my Executrix, and I doe desire my Deare Brethren Mr.
      Tailecoate, Willerton, and Stebbing, to take care of and Assist
      my wife in the ordering her selfe and my children, and I give
      them power to doe what in their Judgements may bee for the
      best, to bring vp my Children and dispose of them, and that I
      leaue, for theire good : And to this my will I sett to my hand
      the day aboue written. EDWARD STEBBING, ROBERT DAY WALLTER
      GAYLERD. 14th October, 1648.
      An Inventory of the Goods of Robert Day deceased. s. d. In
      the Chamber. Impr. one Bedstead ; one fether bed, and fether
      Boulster and flock boulster : 2 pillowes, & bedcase &
      Curtaines. 07 00 00 Item : 2 blankitts, one red & yellow
      Couerlitt Item : 1 chest 10s : 1 Box 3s : 1 desck box 3s : 00
      16 00 Item : 1 table 5s : 1 Cubberd 5s and Chaiers 00 16 00
      Item : 3 paier of sheetes 02 00 00 Item : 6 table napkins 12s :
      1 table cloth 5s. 00 17 00 Item : 6 pillow beeres 01 10 00
      Item : the wearing Clothes with 3 skinns 05 00 00 Item : in
      Linnen yearne and Cotton wool yearne 01 10 00 Item : 2 Cushins
      6s : 1 paire of Bellowes 3s. 00 09 00 Item : 1 Little Baskitt
      12d : 1 warming pann 6s. 00 07 00 In the Hall. Item : 1 Brass
      Kettle 02 10 00 Item : 1 Little kettle 12s : 1 little brass
      kettle 00 15 00 Item : 1 brass possnett (€) 4s : 1 brass pott
      16s : 1 Iron 01 14 00 pott 14s. Item : 1 brass Chaffin dish 3s
      : one skimer 00 05 06 Item : 7 pewter dishes, and some broken
      pewter : 1 saser : 2 pewter potts : 1 Candlestick : 1 salte : 1
      small bottle : 01 10 00 6 ockum (€) spoons, 2 porringers and 4
      old spoones. Item : 1 Lattin (€) dripping pann : 1 spitt, 1
      pistoll : 1 00 10 00 smoothin Iron Item : in earthern ware, and
      wooden ware 00 10 00 Item : 1 muskitt Bandleers () and sword 01
      00 00 Item : 1 table and 2 Chaires 00 05 00 In the sellar, Item
      : in tubbs and Tables and formes 01 00 00 In ye little chamber
      : It : one flockbed, 2 blankitts : 1 couerlitt, 1 04 12 00
      feather houlster, 2 feather pillowes, 2 bedsteads Item : 3
      hogsheads, 2 Linnen wheeles, 1 woolen wheele, 00 19 00 one
      Barrill. Item : 1 table, 1 wheele, 1 hatchett 00 05 00 Item :
      in working tooles 01 08 00 Item : 1 Leather Bottle 2s : VId : 1
      paire tongs : 00 15 00 fier pann, grid Iron : frying pann, one
      trammell Item : in Bookes, and Sackes, and Ladders 01 00 00
      Item : one Cow : 1 3 yeare ould heifer : one 2 yeare 14 10 00
      old heifer, with some hay to winter them Item : 2 hoggs 3€. 03
      00 00 Item : in seuerall sortes of Corne with some hemp and
      flax 15 00 00 Item : the dwelling howse and out howsing, howse
      lott 45 00 00 and Garden. Item : about 6 Akers of meadow, in
      severall parcells 26 00 00 with vpland ________________ Summa :
      Totalis 142 : 13 : 06 JOHN TAILECOATE GREGORY WILLTERTON EDWARD
      STEBBING : _________________

***
Genealogical Register of the Descendants in the Male Line of Robert Day, Hartford, Conn.
"It has been handed down in tradition that the family of Day originally came from Wales. This tradtion is undoubtedly correct. In a bood of Heraldy , containing the Arms of William Day, B.D. Proviost of Eton College and dean of Windsor, confirmed by William Flower, Norroy, on the 21st of October, 1582, in the twenty fourth year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, he is said to be descended from the Dees of Wales, viz. being younger son of Richard Day, who was the son of Nicholas Day, the son of John Dee, called by the English Daye. He was the son of Morgan Dee, younger brother of Richard Dee, Welshman"

DEE, signifying, it is said, dark and dingy, is the name of a small river in Wales, and was probably applied to some ancestors of the family, dwelling upon its banks, inorder to distinguish him from others.... and in time, the word Dee came to be written, accpording to the apparent sound, Daye or Day. This name still prevails in Wales and there pronounced as in England and this country (America). Within the first thirty years after the settlement of New England eight persons of the thame of Day are found on the record, viz- 1.; Robert Day, first of Cambridge, then of Hartford,Conn.

Robert arrived in America in 1634 and settled first in Cambridge, then called Newton, Mass. He had a wife Mary who died soon after arriving. He was one of the 100 people who made their way through the woods with Rev. Thomas Hooker to found Hartford, Conn. Robert Day's name is on the monument as a founder of Hartford along with that of William Whiting. His second wife was Editha Stebbins (Stebbing) of Hartford.
****
1632/1635 - 1692 Daniel Warner Source: The Descendants of Andrew Warner, Author: Warner, Lucien C. Publication: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, New Haven, Conn., 1919  Source: Bassett-Preston Ancestors, Author: Preston, Belle Publication: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Co., New Haven, Conn., 1930  Source: The American Genealogist, Publication: Demorest, Ga, .Vol. 26
The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633, R.C. Anderson, 1995
~1100 - 1183 William Muellent Of Gloucester FitzRobert 83 83 1665 - 1735 Elizabeth Wolcott 69 69 1718 - 1757 Sarah Porter 38 38 Source: The Descendants of John Porter, Volume I Author: Henry Porter Andrews, Publication: Saratoga Springs: G.W. Ball, 1893 ~1200 - 1253 William de Ferrers 53 53 Earl of Derby 1681 Martha Marshall Edward Hussey See: Pedigrees part 2 of this book. Johanne 1218 - 1280 Margaret deQuincy 62 62 William X Duke of Aquitaine Robert Noel ~1324 - 1386 Henry de Trafford 62 62 1613 - 1688 Editha Stebbins 75 75 ~1079 Nesta fil Trahern John Milborne 0770 - 0840 Olaf Gudrodson 70 70 ~1062 Agne deGant ~1048 - 1094 Gilbert deGand 46 46 Earl Folkingham ~1050 Alice deMontfort Heiress ~1022 - ~1047 Ralph deGand 25 25 Custom Field:<_FA#> LORD de ALOST ~1028 Gisele deLuxemburg ~1015 Alice deBeauffou Gersinde(Garsinde Gersende) of Provence ~1054 - 19 Jan 1119/1120 Adeliza (Adeline) dePoitou ~1062 - 1113 William "The Elder" Peverell 51 51 Earl Of Hereford
Note: William de Peveral is usually said to be an illegitimate son of the Conqueror. He had at least four children, William, d. s. p., and William again, who succeeded him, and two daughters, Maud and Adelise, the wife of Richard Redvers. The Conqueror gave William Peveral the custody of Notts Castle, when it was built in 1068, and extensive possessions, afterwards known as the honour of Peveral, consisting of 100 lordships in counties Notts and Northants, 14 in Derby, and some 20 others in other counties. William Peveral died Jan., 1113.
D. UNKNOWN Hilf Daysdottir 1605 - 1670 Matthew Allyn 64 64 1558 - 1598 John Wyatt 40 40 1620 - 1684 Robert Boltwood 64 64 1688 - 1747 Ruth Ely 59 59 ~1608 - 1688 Martha 80 80 1594/1595 - 1684 Andrew Warner Clues in Records of Essex, England to the Origin of CT Colony Settlers, Author: Mrs. Genevieve Tylee Kiepura,  The American Genealogist, Vol. 26, 1950


Croziers General armory, Page 132: Warner, Mass. Andrew Warner, Cambridge, 1632. Hertfordshire. Or. a bend engrailed between six roses gules.

The Descendants of Andrew Warner, Author: Warner, Lucien C. Publication: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, New Haven, Conn., 1919   Bassett-Preston Ancestors, Author: Preston, Belle Publication: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Co., New Haven, Conn., 1930  The American Genealogist, Publication: Demorest, Ga, .Vol. 26.

Pioneers of Massachusetts, Pope, Page 480: Andrew, Cambridge, 1633, Frm. May 14, 1634, Town Officer. He sold in 1636, removed to Hartford Conn., Removed to Hadley 1659. Died December 18, 1684. Will dated 18, June 1681. Probate March 31 1685. Names wife Ester, Sones: Jacob, Daniel, Isaac, Andrew, Robert, John. Daughters, Ruth, Mary.

Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-33
MARRIAGE:
(1) Thaxted, Essex, 5 October 1624 "Andrew Warner of Hatfield Magna married Mary Humfrey daughter of Robert of Thaxted" [TAG 26:152, 217]; she was baptized at Thaxted 13 February 1602[/3?], and was daughter of Robert and Ann (Holland) Humfrey [TAG 26:217-19]. She died by 1657.
(2) By 1657 Esther (Wakeman) Selden, widow of Thomas Selden (inventory December 1693) and sister of SAMUEL WAKEMAN; she died by 27 September 1693 when Thomas and Joseph Selden [her sons with her first husband] took out administration on her estate [Goodwin Anc 1:35, citing HamPR Box 129, File 9].


The early church members in Middletown, were, Nathaniel Collins, ThomasAllen, Thomas Wetmore, John Hall, jr., Samuel Stocking, sen'r., WilliamHarris, John Savadge or Savage, sen'r., Robert and Andrew Warner,sen'r., (and George Hubbard, sen'r., after his return from the New Havencolony.) The first meeting house erected there was in 1652--and the size of it, 20 by 20 feet. They had but one society there until 1703, when asecond society was formed. Andrew came to America with nephew Thomas Sanford, and his wife and 3children on the ship "Arabella" with Winthrop group to Charlestown abt1632. Was part of the emigration with Thomas Hooker to leave England to avoid persecution for Puritanism un King James I.. Was a Deacon in the First Church of Hartford with Thomas Hooker,co-founded Hartford, founded Farmington, moved to Hadley MA abt1659-60. Also owned property in Hoccanum CT
1601 - 1672 Mary Humphrey 71 71 Andrew Warner was of Hatfield Magna, Essex Co., England when he married Mary Humphrey of Thaxted, Essex Co. there in 1624. She was the Mayor's daughter.  Andrew Warner is first mentioned in America in Cambridge, then called "New Town," MA, on 7 January 1633 in the second entry in town records regarding the erection of houses and the division of the pale to enclose the common with the number of rods each settler was to build. 42 names are listed including Andrew Warner, 20 rods. 24 of the 42 built less than 10 rods and only 11 built as much as 20 rods, indicating the possibility that Andrew was already a resident of Cambridge and among the wealthier of the town. He was made a Freeman 14 May 1634 and served in many public positions in the town.  "The Descendants of Andrew Warner" indicates that Andrew may have settled first at Mt. Wollaston, later Quincy, MA, as a member of the Braintree Co., but no proof has been established. It is believed that Andrew was an adherent of the outspoken minister, Rev. Hooker, and may have known of his preaching in Essex Co., England before Hooker's removal to Holland and, later, America. It is known that the Braintree Company was known as "Hooker's Company" and they later removed to Newtowne.  "The homestead occupied by Andrew Warner is thus described in the 'Proprietor's records of the town of Cambridge:' 'June The 4th (1635)' 'Andrew Warner In the Towne one Howse and about one Roode for a Backside and garden, March Lane on the south west, Creeke Lane on the northwest, Will Kellsey northeast, Mathew Allen on the southeast.' According to Paige's History of Cambridge, Marsh Lane corresponds to the present Elliot Street, and Creek Lane to Brattle Square. This places Andrew Warner's early home within a few rods of Harvard University, in the very heart of Cambridge. Besides this home lot he also owned six other parcels land of land in Cambridge..." (The Descendants of Andrew Warner," pg. 16)  On 20 December 1636 Andrew Warner sold his dwelling house and all his other lands in Cambridge to Capt. George Cook and either before or after this moved to Hartford, CT with Rev. Hooker and a group from the Cambridge area. The first mention of Andrew Warner in Hartford records describes his home lot in February, 1639, on the north side of the present Charter Oak Ave., a little east of Main Street. He also had 4 other parcels, totalling about 80 acres. He was described as Deacon of the Church of Christ in Hartford and it is believed that he was made deacon while still in Cambridge. He was active in civic affairs while in Hartford, acting as Surveyor of Highways in 1639 & 1647, surveyor to divide the lands on the east side of the river in 1640, appointed to lay out highways in January, 1640, and more. Andrew's name is listed on the Founders Monument in Hartford.  His name does not appear in Hartford records from Jan. 1648 to April, 1650 and he may have resided in Farmington, CT during this time. In March, 1648, he owned 4 parcels of land in that town, but sold his property there by Feb. 1650 and returned to Hartford.  After the death of Rev. Hooker in 1647, Rev. Stone was in charge of the church, but differences arose between Stone's position on some doctrinal issues regarding baptism, membership, and discipline. Andrew was of the anti-Stone faction, known as the "Withdrawers." The result was that in 1659 a group of 59 people from Hartford, Wethersfield and Windsor, moved from their homes and established the new town of Hadley, MA, up the Connecticut River. Andrew was about 65 years old at this time and had been a resident of Hartford for 20 years. Others in the group included Thomas Graves and Nathaniel Dickinson (see these names elsewhere in this genealogy). Andrew sold his Hartford homestead 17 Nov. 1659 to William Loveridge for 130 pounds, to be paid 1/3 in peas, 1/3 in wheat and 1/3 in hats - suggesting that, perhaps, Andrew was in the mercantile business or a trader. However, subequent entries in Hadley records indicate he was a maltster.  Andrew was living in Hadley by 8 Oct. 1660, one of the first settlers, when a meeting was held at his house. His homestead was located on the west side of the street leading to the river at both ends, the 12th lot from the north end. The road from Amherst to Northhampton runs to the south of his lot. He later also owned 8 other pieces of poroperty totalling 42 acres. Andrew was also active in civic affairs in Hadley, despite his age, being named Selectman in 1660, 1667 and 1673.  Andrew died in Hadley 18 Dec. 1684 at age 90; son Daniel was executor of his estate. His will was probated 31 March 1685 in Hampshire Co. court. The inventory valued the estate at 365 pounds, 11, 4 and included 9 parcels of land, some at Hoccanum, Hartford Township. 1594 - 1635 Thomas Newbury 41 41 One of the first settlers of Dorchester, and a man of unusual business ability, and many of his descendants have been prominent in business, military and professional circles.

"THOMAS NEWBURY, 4th son [of Richard] (6th ch.), b. Yarcombe, 10 Nov. 1594, to America Apr. 1634, to Dorchester, Mass., where d. Dec. 1635; m. (1) ca. 1619, Joan, b. ca. 1600, dau. of Christopher Dabinott of Yarcombe, d. Eng. ca. 1629; m. (2) ca. [date missing] a Jane, who may have been Jane Dabinott, cousin of his (1) wife.  She m. (2) 1637, as (2) wife, Rev. John Warham of Norwalk, Conn., where she d. 3 Apr. 1655 (J. Gardner Bartlett, *Newberry Genealogy* (Boston, 1914, p 35-44)."
   --- Frederick Lewis Weis & Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr, *Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700*, 7th Edition, Baltimore MD (Genealogical Publishing Co) 1992, p 227 (Line 253)

"THOMAS [NEWBERRY/NEWBURY], Dorchester, may have come in the Mary and John 1630, freem. 3 Sept. 1634, rep. 1635, was engag. to go with Warham and most of his congreg. to plant Windsor, but d. bef. the migrat. by his will of 1 Dec. 1635, of wh. abstr. is in Geneal. Reg. VII. 29 [sic---lines may be missing here] leav. large prop. of wh. #200 [# = pounds] to w. Jane, beside what she brot. at m. and residue equally to childr. exc. that the three youngest ds, should ea. have #50 less than the others [daughters are mentioned below, but no sons, although Savage says under Benjamin NEWBERRY, which see, that he, Benjamin, is son of Thomas NEWBERRY of Dorchester --- perhaps missing lines contained names of other children]. Instead of #50, as I had read some yrs. bef. Mr. Trask, who usually is a careful copier of the old writings, gives 50s.  in that abstr. wh. might, in case of some petty estate, seem large enough. This may have affected his eyesight, as the fact of great prop. on my reexamination, wh. led to conforming my first transcript, possib. may have influenced me to judge, that so rich a man would not make so poor a differ. betw. his ds.  The inv. tak. Jan. foll. (includ. ld. in Eng. at #300) was of #1520, 4, 7. Sarah m. 8 Nov. 1640, Henry Wolcott; Mary m. 13 June 1644, Daniel Clarke; Rebecca was sec. w. of Rev. John Russell of Hadley; and Hannah m. Rev. Thomas Hanford, and d. early."
   ---James Savage, *A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England*, vol. 3, 1861, p. 269.

"THOMAS NEWBERRY was one of the earliest settlers and largest landed proprietors of Dorchester, Mass., receiving from the General Court, in March, 1634, one hundred acres of land at Neponset, and many other grants from the proprietors of the town.  He was made a freeman September 3, 1634, and was chosen a Deputy or Representative in 1635.  He became interested in the Connecticut settlement, and disposed of all his estate in Dorchester, with the intention of removing to Windsor, Conn., with the Rev. Mr. Warham and his party.  He died, however, before the departure of this company. in December, 1635, or January, 1636. (Stiles's *History of Windsor*.)  He had been in Windsor a short time before, preparing for removal, and his lands were recorded to his children in 1640.  His widow, Jane, and children, made the journey to the new settlement, and she became the second wife of Rev. John Warham (perhaps before the migration to Windsor), and died in Norwalk, Conn., April 23, 1645.
   --- William F J Boardman, *The Ancestry of William Francis Joseph Boardman, Hartford, Connecticut*, 1906, p 314

"THOMAS NEWBERRY (1636), from Dorchester, after making preparations here, returned to Dorchester to bring his family, and died there, 1636, leaving three sons and four daughters.  His widow married the Rev. John Warham; his lands were not recorded to him, but directly to his children under date of 1640.  His son Joseph had a lot granted, ten rods wide.  A part of this lot, with a frame standing thereon (a few rods south of the present residence of David Rowland), was sold to Mr. Warham, 1644, and Joseph removed.  His attorneys sold his lands for him, 1653. John had land granted, but he soon disappears.  Captain Benjamin married Mary, daughter of Matthew Allen, 1646. He had two sons and seven daughters.  He bought the Roger Williams place."
   --- Jabez H. Hayden, "Early Windsor Families," in *The Memorial History of Hartford County, Connecticut, 1633-1884*, ed J Hammond Trumbull, v. 2, 1886, p 555

"NEWBERRY, NEWBURY,  THOMAS.  Bapt. Yarcombe, co. Devon. Eng., 10 Nov 1594. Apparently came on the "Recovery" 1634.  d. Dec 1635.  Deputy. *Descendants of Thomas Newberry* 1914, *Newberry genealogy* 1975; (ancient anc claimed); N.G.S.  Q. 71:171."
   Meredith B Colket, *Founders of Early American Families*, Cleveland OH 1985, p 219

"Thomas Newberry -- Bpt. 11 Nov. 1594, Yarcombe, Devon.  He died suddenly in December, 1635, in Dorchester, MA, as he was preparing to move to Windsor, CT. He married (1) Jane Dabinot, a. 1619 (b.a. 1600), dau. of Christopher Dabinot (See Search series Vol. 11, p. 98) of Yarcombe, Devon and Charstock, Marshwood, and Upway, Dorset.  Will of Christopher Dabinot, 1 July 1637 (PCC 112 Goare). Christopher;s estate was between 2,000 and 6,000 pounds, so Thomas Newberry evidently enhanced his fortune by his marriage.  Jane died about 1629, leaving five small children.  (P) Thomas married (2) Jane (Dabinot?), about 1630, perhaps the cousin of his first wife and dau. of John and Joan Dabinot of Chardstock, Dorset. John Dabinot wrote his will in 1624, bequeathing 150 pounds to his dau., Jane, when she married with the consent of her mother and his overseers, Christopher Dabinot and Thomas Newberry.  Jane Dabinot was batpized 12 June 1611, Chardstock, Dorset.  Perhaps Thomas "consented" she should marry himself, soon after he became a widower with five children, ages 10,8,6,4, and 1.  She married (2) Rev. John Warham, 1637, as his second wife and died, 23 Apr. 1655, Norwalk, CT.  (P) In 1626 Thomas was living in Marshwood, Dorset, 7 miles N. of Lyme Regis, on an estate called "Coweleyes". In 1625 this property belonged to his father-in-law, Christopher Dabinot, on a 99 year lease for lives, with remainder of term to Joseph Newberry (b. 1620) and Benjamin Newberry (b. 1624), sons of Thomas. (P) Thomas Newberry apparently continued at Marshwood (Marshwood Vale) until he siled forr New England.  There are two conflicting records on when he sailed.  William Whiteway of Dorchester, Dorset, an associate of Rev. John White, kept a diary (now in the British Museum, London), which states that "1634 April 17, Mr. Newburgh of Marshwood Vale and many others set sail from Weymouth towards New England." This agrees with the first appearance of Thomas Newberry in the Dorchester, MA records on 1 Sept. 1634.  (P) However, Thomas Newberry's name also appears on the passenger list of the "Recovery" of London, which sailed from Weymouth, Dorset, 31 March 1634.  This ship carried other people associated with the "Mary & John" group of 1630, including Jonathqan Gillett and Stephen Terry, returning to New England with their new wives.  (See search series Vol. 2, p. 112).  (P) By 1635 Thomas Newberry had acquired a large, 400 acre farm, one mile in length two-thirds of a mile wide, an area now in the city of Quincy, MA.  He soon became one of the most prominent citizens of Dorchester and in 1634 he was one of the ten men chosen to order the affairs of the Dorchester plantation.  (P) He wrote his will, 12 Oct. 1635, and died soon after.  The inventory of his estate was taken, 28 Jan.  1636, and it totaled 1520 pounds.  Only one out of one hundred early settlers possessed such wealth at that time.  The most valuable items in his inventory were his Dorchester farm and livestock -- 693 pounds, land in England -- 300 pounds, meadows nad livestock in Dorchester -- 270 pounds.  He left 200 pounds to his wife and all her "household stuff she brought with her at her marriage".
  The remainder of his estate was to be divided equally among his seven children.  (P) Thomas Newberry's widow, Jane, married (2) Rev. John Warham, in 1637, whose first wife died in late 1634, and they both moved to Windsor with all of the Newberry Children."
   --- Burton Spear, * ... Mary & John 1630*, v 17, 1992, p 106-107

{ This is another Thomas Newberry: "Newbury, Thomas, Windsor---died in 1688 [seems an error; see Boardman below]. Children, Hannah, 8, Thomas 6, Joseph 4, and Benjamin one year old.  He married Ann Ford in 1676.  Benjamin, of Windsor, married Mary Allyn in '46 and had nine children."
   ---R R Hinman, *Catalogue of the Names of the First Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut*, Hartford (E Gleason) 1846, No. 3, p. 154 }

"*Mr. Thomas Newberry*, of Dorchester, Mass.  bap. Nov. 10, 1594; son of *Richard and Grace (Matthew) Newberry* of Yarcombe, Devon, England, Gent. m. about 1619, *Joane Dabinott*.  d. probably in Dec. 1636. ... (P) He was one of the richest men among the colonists and a merchant; he had an excellent education and was engaged in legal study in London during several terms of the Court of Chancery. .....  In 1626, he occupied an estate called "Coweleyes" in Marshwood, co. Dorset.  He turned Puritan when a young man and sailed for New England in April, 1634.  His first appearance on the records of New England is as a grantee of lands in Dorchester, Mass., Sept. 1, 1634; he subsequently received several other large grants of land there. His name invariably appears on the records with the prefix "Mr." for he was ofthe highest social standing.  He joined the church in Dorchester soon after his arrival and on Sept. 3, 1634, was admitted a Freeman of Mass., and immediately became prominent in public affairs, being chosen Selectman Oct. 28, 1634, when it was "agreed that their shall be Tenn men chosen to order all the affayres of the Plantation, to continue for one yeare & to meete monethly according to the order Oct: 9, 1633."  On Mar. 4, 1634-5 and May 6, 1635, he was Deputy for Dorchester to the General Court.  On May 6, he was "chosen overseer of the worke att Castle Ileland, in the roome of Roger Ludlowe, Esq., etc.  At the session of July 8, he was appointed one of a committee of two "to sett out the bounds betwixte Wessaguscus & Barecove." He was an active leader in the project for the settling of Windsor but died before its accomplishment; he had, however, visited the site of the new town and his widow and children went there after his death.  He had married a second wife namerd *Jane ----- *.  After his death, this wife, *Jane* (by whom he had Rebecca, whom. Rev. John Russell as his second wife; Hannah, who m. Rev. Thomas Hanford, and a dau. b. about 1635, who d. y.), became the wife of *Rev. John Warham*."
   --- Ernest Flagg, *Genealogical Notes on the Founding of New England*, Hartford CT, 1926, p 281

"THOMAS NEWBERRY, GENT.  (Richard Newberye, Newberowe, or Newburgh, Gent.; Richard Newberowe or Newburgh, Gent.; Walter Newborough or Newburgh, Gent.; Thomas Newborough or Newburgh, Esq.; John Newburgh, Esq.; John Newburgh, Esq.; John Newburgh, Esq., Sir Thomas Newburgh, Knt.; Sir Robert de Newburgh, Knt.; John de Newburgh; Henry de Newburgh; Robert de Newburgh; Robert de Newburgh; Roger de Newburgh; Robert de Newburgh; Henry de Newburgh, Earl of Warwick; Roger de Beaumont, Sire du Ponteaudemer; Humphrey de Veulles, Sire du Ponteaudemer; Touroude, Sire du Ponteaudemer; Torf, Seigneur de Torville), was baptized at Yarcombe, co. Devon, England, 10 Nov. 1594, fourth son of Richard and Grace (Matthew) Newberye, Newberowe, or Newburgh, Gent.  He evidently obtained an excellent education for his times, as in the next mention that has been found of him (the suit in chancery in 1623 of William Councell vs. Richard Newberye, Gent., his father, account of which has been given on page 23), it appears that Thomas Newberry had engaged in legal study in London, during several terms of the Court of Chancery.  (Chancery Proceedings, Series 2, 342-65.) He has next been found as an overseer of the will of his first wife's uncle, John Dabinott of Chardstock, co. Dorset, dated 1 Nov. 1624, being given a gold ring for his expected services.  (P.C.C., 30 Clarke.) Two years later he appears in Marshwood, co. Dorset (then a chapelry of the parish of Whitchurch Canonicorum), where he occupied an estate called "Coweleyes", the lease of which for nine-nine years from 1625 was the property of his father-in-law Christopher Dabinott for life with remainder of the term to Joseph and Benjamin Newberry, sons of Thomas Newberry. (See "Newberry vs. Hayne" in Chancery Proceedings, Six Clerks Series, Collins 546-48, details of this suit being hereafter given on pages 47-50 in the account of Joseph Newberry.)  In 1626 and 1628/9 he had children baptized at Whitchurch Canonicorum; and in 1628, as "Thomas Newberye", he is listed in a subsidy of 4 Charles I., being assessed 21s. 4d. on goods in Marshwood of value of L4. (Lay Subsidies, Dorset, 105-317.)  In his early manhood the wave of Puitanism swept over England with continually increasing force; and it is evident that Thomas Newberry when a young man embraced the Puritan faith of the founders of New England.
   "Mr. Newberry apparently continued in Marshwood (also called Marshwood Vale) until April 1634, when he sailed for New England, as is disclosed by the diary of William Whiteway of Dorchester, co. Dorset, England, who has been previously mentioned as an associated of Rev. John White, Rev. Walter Newburgh, cousin of Thomas Newberry, and many others, in the company of "Dorchester Adventurers" whose operations in connection with New England culminated in the sailing from Plymouth, England, in March 1630, of the ship *Mary and John* with a party of colonists from Somerset, Dorset, and Devon, who founded Dorchester, Mass.  ... This original diary of William Whiteway is now preserved in the Manuscript Department (Egerton Mss., p 201) of the British Museaum, London, and extends from 1618 to 1534. Several meetings of the associates of the "Dorchester Adventurers" are mentioned; and one of the last entries in the diary is as follows, quoted verbatim:  "1634 April 17.  Mr. Newburgh of Marthwood [sic] Vale and many others set saile from Waimouth towards New England".  This record agrees perfectly with the arrival of Thomas Newberry in New England, where his first appearance on records is as a grantee of lands in Dorchester, Mass., 1 Sept. 1634. (Records of Dorchester, printed vol., p. 7.)  Mr. Whiteway was a man of education, large estate, and prominent position in county affairs, and his spelling of the name "Newburgh" (pronounced "Newberowe" or "Newberry") indicates an intimate acquaintance with the family and consequent knowledge of the ancient spelling of the name used by the chief representatives of the family.
   "Soon after his arrival in Dorchester, Mass., Thomas Newberry purchased for a dwelling a house formerly built there by Mr. William Pyncheon, and received grants of land .....
   "Soon after his arrival in Dorchester, Mass., Thomas Newberry evidently joined the church there, as on 3 Sept. 1634, he was admitted a freeman of Massachusetts, church membership at that time being requisite for a freeman. (Records of Massachusetts, printed vol. 1, p. 369.)  He immediately became prominent in public affairs, being chosen first selectman on 28 Oct. 1634, when it was "agreed that their shall be Tenn men chosen to order all the affayres of the Plantation, to continue for one yeere, & to meete monethly according to the order [of] Oct: 8: 1633", etc.; and on 2 Nov. 1635, "Mr Newbery" appears among "The names of such as are chosen for ordering the affayres of the Plantation, November 1635, to continue for halfe a yeere". (Dorchester Records, printed vol., pp. 7, 13.)  On 4 March 1634/5 and 6 May and 8 July 1635, he was a deputy for Dorchester to the General Court of Massachusetts, held at "Newe Towne" (now Cambridge).  (Records of Massachusetts, printed vol. 1, pp. 135, 145, 149.)  At the session on 6 May he was "chosen overseer of the worke att Castle Ileland, in the roome of Roger Ludlower, Esq., & it is ordered that hee shall have the same power to presse carts for such allowance as hee thinks meete".  (Ibid., p. 147.) This work doubtless concerned the fortifications there.  At the session of 8 July "Mr Neweberry & William Phelpes were appoyncted [sic] to sett out the bounds betwixte Weeaguscus & Barecove [Weymouth and Hingham)".  (Ibid., p. 149.) Mr. Newberry was one of the active leaders in the project of settling Windsor, Conn., but died suddenly, probably in December 1635, before he had completed arrangements to remove thither with his family.
   "On account of his high social position, Thomas Newberry is invariably termed "Mr." in all records of him found in New England, and his superior education, large wealth, and natural abilities would have assured him a very prominent part in early New England history, if he had not been prematurely cut off by death.  Judging from his inventory, he evidently brought with him from England a large stock of goods, intending to trade as an importing merchant; but he also was a planter and like nearly all the early settlers engaged in farming. The inventory of his estate totalled over L1500, a very large estate for New England at that time, probably not over one pioneer colonist in a hundred possessing so much property.  Of honorable descent, he worthily sustained an estimable position in the community, performing well his part during a limited time, in laying the foundations of a new nation, and becoming the progenitor of an American family which while small in numbers, has always been one of worth and distinction.
   "A short time before his death, Mr. Newberry made his will [dated 12 Oct 1635} .....  [a copy of the will and an inventory of goods omitted here]  .....
   "After the death of Mr. Newberry, his widow and children removed to Windsor, Conn., where his children were granted lands for his rights in that plantation, which were recorded 10 Oct. 1640.  (Windsor Land Records, vol. 1, pp. 2-7.) .....
   "Thomas Newberry married first, about 1619, JOANE DABINOTT, born about 1600, daughter of Christopher Dabinott of Yarcombe, co. Devon, and Chardstock, Marshwood, and Upway, co. Dorset.  This marriage is proved by the will of Christopher Dabinott of Upway, co. Dorset, dated 1 July 1637, which gave L50 each to Joseph, Benjamin, John, Sarah, and Mary Newbery [sic] "children of Thomas Newbery and Joane his wife my daughter, deceased".  (P.C.C., 112 Goare.) The marriage is further established by evidence in the suit of Joseph Newberry vs. Gideon Hayne in Chancery Proceedings, Six Clerks Series, Collins 546-48, details of which are given later on pages 47-50 in account of Joseph Newberry; from this suit it also appears that Christopher Dabinott was a man of wealth, leaving an estate variously claimed to be worth from L2000 to L6000, so Thomas Newberry evidently much enhanced his fortunes by this marriage to Joane Dabinott. She died in England about 1629, leaving three sons and two daughters. (See Dabinott Pedigree in Appendix [here under DABINOTT names].)
   "He married second, about 1630, JANE -----, by whom he had three daughters. Her maiden name and parentage have not been established; but perhaps she was Jane Dabinott of Chardstock, the will of said John Dabinott in 1624 bequeathing L150 to his daughter Jane when married with the consent of her mother and his overseers Christopher Dabinott and Thomas Newberry; perhaps the latter "consented" she should marry himself. (See Dabinott Pedigree in Appendix [here under DABINOTT names.)  Jane the second wife of Thomas Newberry came with him to Dorchester, Mass., in 1634, and shortly after his death removed with the Newberry children to Windsor, Conn., where she married secondly, in 1637, as his second wife, REV. JOHN WARHAM, and died at Norwalk, Conn., 23 Apr. 1655.  This marriage is proved by a lease for four years made 1 May 1639 by William Gaylard, as agent for John Warham pastor of the church of Windsor, Conn., and Jane his wife executrix of the will of Thomas Newbery, Gent., deceased, to Richard Wright, husbandman, of the farm of the said Thomas Newberry on the Southerly side of the Neponset River. (Lechford's Note Book, printed vol., pp. 124-126.)
   "[An aside in smaller type:] Rev. John Warham, born about 1595, was a family of gentry of Dorset and Devon, and was a graduate of St. Mary Hall, Oxford University, B.A. 14 Nov. 1614, and M.A, 18 May 1618, and on 23 May 1619 was ordained at Silverton, co. Devon, by the Bishop of Exeter.  Later he preached in the City of Exeter, and having embraced the Puritan doctrines came to New England in the *Mary and John* in the Spring of 1630 as one of the ministers of the party of colonists who founded Dorchester, Mass., where he served six years. In 1636 he joined in the settlement of Windsor, Conn., where he was pastor for thirty-four years until his death, 1 Apr. 1670. According to Cotton Mather, Mr. Warham was an energetic minister and vigorous preacher, and although "as pious a man as most that were out of Heaven, yet Satan often threw him into those deadly pangs of melancholy that made him despair of ever getting thither".  (Mather's Magnalia, vol. 1, pp. 441-2.)  Several early New England ministers were similarly afflicted, doubtless from being steeped in the dismal theology of the period.  His first wife, whom he married in England, died at Dorchester, Mass., about December 1634; by his second wife Mrs. Jane Newberry, he had four daughters, the youngest of whom was grandmother of the celebrated Calvinist theologian, Rev. Jonathan Edwards. Mrs.  Jane Newberry-Warham died at Norwalk, Conn., 23 Apr. 1645; and Mr. Warham married third, 9 Oct. 1662, ABIGAIL BRANKER, the widow of John Branker of Windsor.  [End of aside about Warham]
   "Children of Thomas and Joane (Dabinott) Newberry, born in England: .....
   --- J Gardner Bartlett, *Newberry Genealogy*, Boston, 1914, p 35-46

"NEWBERRY, THOMAS (1594-1635) -- Of Yarcombe, Devon and Dorchester, MA. He came on the "Revoery of London" in 1634 with his second wife.  He m. (1) Jane [often said to have been JOAN] Dabinott a. 1619, daughter of Christopher Dabinott (1564-1637) and granddaughter of Thomas Dabinott and Rawlin ----- of Chardstock. Thomas had another son, John Dabinott of Chardstock, who had a daughter, also Jane Dabinott (b. 1611) who is believed to have married Thomas Newberry a. 1630, as his second wife. Thomas had five children by his first wife (1620-1629) and three by his second (1631-1635).  His widow m. (2) Rev. John Warham a. 1627 and had another five children (1637-1644).  So the last three children of Thomas Newberry and the last five children of Rev. John Warham had a common Dabinott ancestry. (Ref: Search Series, Vol. 17, pp. 103-110 and pp. 164-174)"
   --- Burton W Spear, * ... Mary & John 1630 ... *. v 18, 1992, p 164


Alt Death: 1 Dec 1636 Windsor, Hartford, CT
~1639 - 1692 Samuel Ely 53 53 1568 - 1627 Mary Purchase 59 59 Purchas 1030 - 1103 Hugh deClermont 73 73 1542 - 1584 John Warner 42 42 Source: Will dated 23 May 1584.
See: Visitation of Essex:
Berry's Essex Pedigrees, page 714.
Misc. Essex Pedigrees, page 580.
1641 - 1725 Mary Day 83 83 Records of the Descendants of Nathaniel Ely, the Emigrant, Who  Settled First in Newtown, Now Cambridge, Mass,  Publication: Short & Forman, Printers & Stationers, Cleveland, Ohio ~0958 - 0994 William I Count deProvence 36 36 Custom Field:<_FA#> COUNT de ARLES
Custom Field:<_FA#> MARQUIS de PROVENCE
~0942 - 1026 AdelaideBlanche de Anjou 84 84 1207 - 1276 Richard Basset 69 69 ~1011 - 1085 Berthe of Blois 74 74 pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0927 - 0992 Conan I deBretagne 65 65 Conan I de "le Tort" Brittany
Sources: RC 24, 167, 334; Kraentzler 1156, 1174, 1180, 1194, 1211, 1218, 1432; A. Roots 39,, 40, 121, 121E; Pfafman. RC: Count of Rennes. Duke of Brittany, about 970-990. Roots: Conan I "le Tort", Count of Rennes, Duke of Bretagme (Brittany), ca. 970-990, killed 27 June 992 near Conquereuil. K: Conan I,le Tort. Count de Rennes and Nantes. Duke of Bretagne. Pfafman takes this line back another 53 generations to one Nemhidh, a descendant of Magog. Duke of Brittany
0952 - 0992 Ermengarde D'Anjou 40 40 1647 - 1718 Abiah Goffe 71 71 ~0980 Doda deFalaise ~0620 Lambert I of Neustria D. 1245 Gilbert Umfreville Margery Umfreville 1657 - 1726 John Merritt 68 68 1574 Susan Nichols ~1046 - 1115 Simon I deSt Liz 69 69 Custom Field:<_FA#> BARON de BELVIOR
Custom Field:<_FA#> EARL de HUNTINGTON &NORTHAMPTON
~1072 - 1131 Maud (Mathilde) deHuntingdom 59 59 D. <1195 William Umfreville Reginald deAnnesley D. 1212 Petronilla deGrentesmaisnel ~0985 - 1043 Geoffroi II of Thouars 58 58 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
1118 - 1169 Maud deMontfort 51 51 ~1108 Amicia ( Countess) Lady deGael Custom Field:<_FA#> COUNTESS de LEICF ~1305 Unknown Elizabeth 0965 - >1005 Hugh Robert I deMeulan 40 40 ~0970 Alix Alice deVexin Elizabeth Wentworth D. 1143 Ralph (Raoul) II deGael Havoise deHede ~1092 - 10 Feb 1097/1098 Hugh (Lord) deGrentesmaisnel Custom Field:<_FA#> LORD de HINCHLEY MANOR
Custom Field:<_FA#> STEWARD de ENGLAND
~1064 - 1118 Ivo Baron deGrentesmaisnel 54 54 ~1070 Filia deGant 1045 Robert Fitzhamon Earl of Gloucester. Lord of Creully in Calvados, Governor of Caen. Onlyreferred to as Earl of Gloucester by Dugdale. The Complete PeerageVol.v,p683. ~0980 - >1039 Gisele Chevreuse 59 59 ~0975 - 1059 Ivo III Bellemontensis 84 84 ~1194 - AFT 6 Jan 1232/1233 Margaret deHuntington D. 1174 Uchtred deGalloway Gunhilde de Dunbar ~1062 - 1138 Waldeve (Lord) Earl deDunbar 76 76 Custom Field:<_FA#> LORD de ALLERDALE 1052 Sibyl deMontgomery 1090 Reginald II deSt. Valerie ~1075 - >1126 Sigrid deAllerdale 51 51 ~1143 - 1189 Richard deMoreville 46 46 Custom Field:<_FA#> CONSTABLE de SCOTLAND D. 1191 Avicia (Avice) deLancaster ~1105 - 1162 Hugh (Roger) deMoreville 57 57 Custom Field:<_FA#> CONSTABLE de SCOTLAND Beatrice deBeauchamp 1660 - 1758 Matthew Allyn 97 97 1082 - 1141 Alberic deVere 59 59 Custom Field:<_FA#> CHAMBERLAIN to Henry I of England ~1636 Abraham Sie www.gamber.net/gamber/ ~1030 - 1088 Alberic deVere 58 58 1040 Beatrice deGhent 0975 - UNKNOWN Mathilde de Ganelon Roger Corbet Robert Clifton ~1117 - >1166 Gundred Adelaide de Warenne 49 49 D. 1164 Somerled II Lord deIsles Ragnhild deMan Gillebridge de Argyll N.N. deOrkney D. 1154 Olaf I King deIsle de Man Ingebiorg deOrkney 1022 - 1079 Mabel Talvas 57 57 Mabel was murdered by Hugh Bunel. 1084 - 1153 David I deScotland 69 69  "The Saint" ~1062 - 1116 Adelaide(Heiress) de Breteuil 54 54 Custom Field:<_FA#> HEIRESS de la HAUTE MARCHE
Custom Field:<_FA#> Ruled 1091-1116
~1030 - UNKNOWN Agnes deEvereux Maud de Peverel 1080 - 28 Feb 1141/1142 Alice deBourgogne ~1090 - 1172 William III deAlencon 82 82 ~1019 - 1089 Robert Count deEu 70 70 ~0970 - >1032 Damas I Count deSemur 62 62 Custom Field:<_FA#> SIRE de SEMUR ~1329 Unknown Miss 0740 - 0794 Anmchaid King Of Ossary 54 54 1054 Agnes deMortaigne 0990 Ruivallon Signeur deVitre Genergan dela Vicaire 0962 Martin I Signeur deVitre Custom Field:<_FA#> SIGNEUR de ACIGNE & MARCILLY Robert (Earl) deBurgh Custom Field:<_FA#> EARL de MORTAIGNE & CORNWALL Maud deMontgomery 1681 - 1749 Ebenezer Warner 67 67 Coles of Hartford, Connecticut, Author: Edward Cole Geoffrey (Constable) deMandevilla Custom Field:<_FA#> CONSTABLE de LONDON TOWER 1040 - >1085 Athelaise deBalts 45 45 ~1075 - >1112 Philip Lord deBraose 37 37 Custom Field:<_FA#> LORD de BRAMBER, RADNOR, & BUILTH

Philip confirmed his father's gifts to the abbey of St Florent in 1096.He was the first Braose Lord of Builth and Radnor, their initial holding in the Welsh Marches.  Philip returned from the 1st Crusade in 1103.  Hebuilt the Norman Church of St Nicolas at Old Shoreham and founded theport of New Shoreham.  His lands were confiscated by Henry I in 1110, due to his traitrous support of William, son of Robert Curthose, but they were returned in 1112.  Philip de Braose went on 2nd Crusade and died in Palestin. Philip confirmed the gifts of his nephew, Philip de Harcourt, to the newly established Knights Templar.  Philip de Harcourt, Bishop of Bayeux, bestowed the manor and church of Shipley on the Templars between 1125 and1130 and in 1154 added St Mary's, Sompting.
0952 - 0996 Gilla-Patrick King of Ossory 44 44 1084 Aenor Eva deTotness ~0970 - 1047 Bernard I Le Marche 77 77 Count de la Haute ~0974 Amelia deMontignac D. 0997 Adalbert I Le Marche Count de la Haute D. ~1010 Almode de Limoges Suzanne deWarenne 1100 - 1141 Robert de Ferrers 41 41 Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Earl of Derby, in the 12th Henry II, upon levyingthe aid for marrying the king's daughter, certified the knights' feesthen in his possession to be in number seventy-nine for which he paid thesum of 68 marks. This nobleman was also a liberal benefactor to thechurch. His lordship was buried at the Abbey of Meervale, co. Warwick,one of the religious houses which he had founded, wrapped in an ox's hideaccording to his desire. His lordship m. Margaret, dau. and heiress ofWilliam Peverel, of Nottingham, by whom he had issue. He was s. by hisson, William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1114 Margaret de Peverel Custom Field:<_FA#> COUNTESS de DERBY

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
18 Jan 1662/1663 - 1738 Mary Rockwell ~1014 Mahaut de Durbury 0950 - UNKNOWN William deMontgomery ~1595 - 1675 Richard Kimball 80 80 ~1635 - 1696 Sarah Kimball 61 61 ~1098 - 1153 Simon II deSt Liz 55 55 EARL DE NORTHAMPTON ~1121 - >1188 Isabel deBeaumont 67 67 1102 - 1151 Roger (2nd Earl) deNewburgh 49 49 Custom Field:<_FA#> 2nd EARL de WARWICK

Earl of Warwick
1651 - 1710 Martha Boltwood 59 59 Raimond du Sabran du Cailar ~1544 John Day This Line Is Unproven as of the date of publication of this book. Further research is on going on the desent.
See: Visitation Pedigrees for the marriage of Elizabeth Wentworth and a John Day.

Day-Wentworth marriage. Apparently it was 7 Aug 1559 at Adwick-le-Street in Yorkshire.
~1125 - >1185 Amicia de Bidun 60 60 ~1104 - ~1185 Hanelade de Bidun 81 81 0952 Sibell deCrepon ~1106 - ~1160 Sara 54 54 Emma Umfreville Aufrick deGalloway ~1240 Richard deTankersley Sarah Thornhill ~1200 Henry deTankersley ~1175 Henry deTankersley ~1180 Miss dePoitevin ~1150 Robert Poitevin ~1180 - ~1249 John Thornhill 69 69 0961 - UNKNOWN Senfrie deCrepon ~1184 - ~1240 Oliva dela Mare 56 56 ~1150 - 1208 Richard Thornhill 58 58 ~1154 - ~1204 Alice 50 50 ~1124 - 1195 Jordan Thornhill 71 71 ~1125 - ~1174 Ethelrida 49 49 ~1100 - >1189 Essulf 89 89 ~1075 Ulf ~1150 William dela Mare ~1155 Mabel deMalherb ~1125 Ralph dela Mare 0960 - UNKNOWN Thorold of Pont- Audemer ~1100 William dela Mare ~1102 Amabel ~1075 Alan dela Mare ~1130 John II deMalherb ~1130 Maud Fitz Swayne ~1105 John I deMalherb ~1105 Adam Fitz Swayne ~1107 Matilda ~1080 Swaine Fitz Alaric ~1082 Miss deVesci 0995 - 1048 William Talvas II Lord of Bellême & Alençon 53 53 1798 - 1857 William Van Wert 59 59 1140 - 1186 Godehuet de Toeni 46 46 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1626 - 1672 Mary Gernor 46 46 1568 - 1614 John Warner 46 46 Source: The Descendants of Andrew Warner, Author: Warner, Lucien C. Publication: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, New Haven, Conn., 1919  Source: Bassett-Preston Ancestors, Author: Preston, Belle Publication: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Co., New Haven, Conn., 1930  Source: The American Genealogist, Publication: Demorest, Ga, .Vol. 26


In 1609, John and his family had evidently settled in Hatfield BroadOak, about ten miles from Great Waltham, as the "Lay Subsidies" orpersonal taxes for Essex showed that John Warner of Hatfield Broad Oakin that year paid a tax on œ3 of household goods, but there is no recordof a tax on land. On March 10, 1614, the record of deeds shows that hebought 35 acres of freehold land consisting of garden, meadow, andpasture, for which he paid œ41.

Hatfield Broad Oak is located about 25 miles north of London. It wasoriginally known as Hatfield Regis, or Kings' Hatfield, to distinguishit from several other Hatfields in the kingdom, and because the manor was owned by the Kings of England. It is the supposed burial place of Harold, the last of the Saxon Kings.

In the will of John Warner made on July 16, 1614, a few months after the purchase of the land, he calls himself a yeoman, that is, one who owns and works his own land. Therefore, he was of the "middle class"not attendant farmer and not a landlord. This sort of land usually consisted ofseveral detached pieces; one for a homestead, another for pasture, and others for the cultivation of crops.

The children mentioned above are mentioned in the will of John Warner, along with four grandchildren. The will of Mary, his wife, made May 12,1627, 13 years later, lists 19 grandchildren. These two wills are given in The Descendants of Andrew Warner. This book is the source of most ofthe material given here. Text: Vol. 26 "Clues in Records of Essex, England to the Origin of CT Colony Settlers"
Vol 1, page 484/489/ p 253-5/p 9-12

Born about 1640, per William Richard Cutter, Genealogical & Family History of the State of Connecticut, Vol. III, (Orig. publ. NY, 1911; repr. by Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1997), pg. 1325.
~1075 - 1134 William (Lord) Fitz Nigel 59 59 ~1116 - DECEASED Ralph dePicot Name Suffix:<NSFX> Sheriff Of Kent 1158 John de Grey John de Grey lived in the time of Henry II and John. He married probably 1st Hawise .....; 2nd, according to Nichol's Leicester, Elena, daughterof Roger de Clare, the Good. They had Robert, Walter, John, Sir Henry,Eve and Agnes ~1307 Joane ~1290 John Eland ~1260 Robert Latham 0625 - UNKNOWN Crundmael King Of Ossary 0952 - 0972 Adalbert Italy 20 20 <1274 - ~1309 Hugh de Eland 35 35 ~1240 John de Eland ~1215 Hugh de Eland ~1190 Henry de Eland ~1160 Leisigus de Eland ABT 1530/1540 - 1577 John Hooper ~1125 - DECEASED Ethelreda dePort ~1100 Henry dePort ~1075 Henry dePort Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
Name Suffix:<NSFX> Sheriff of South Hamptonshire
~1050 Hugh dePort 0963 - 1028 William I Lord of Bellême & Alençon 65 65 ~1085 - DECEASED Roger dePicot ~0975 Sunifredo II deLluca ~0980 Ermensenda deBalsareny 1545 - 1614 John Purchase 69 69 ~1502 Mrs Warner 1500 - 1546 Thomas Warner 46 46 See Kingscott pedigree in Visitation of Glostr. This person is unconfirmed. 1546 Margaret 1626 - 1706 Daniel Cone 80 80 1642 - 1691 Mehitable Spencer 49 49 The Connecticut Soceity of Genealogists "The Connecticut Nutmegger"  June 1994 and June 2000 has  information on the Spencer family back to the 1400s. See: Spencer pedigrees Part 2 of this book. 1666 - 1725 Daniel Cone 59 59 0940 - 0997 Yves deCreil I de Belleme & Alençon 57 57 1693 - 1791 Weeks I Williams 98 98 This person and his son need further research. 1699 - 1742 Mehitable Cone 43 43 16 Mar 1674/1675 - 1742 Mary Gates 1634 - 1724 George Gates 90 90 1641 - 1709 Sarah Olmstead 68 68 1612 - 1684 Nicholas Olmstead 72 72 Aka; Capt.Olmsted 1617/1618 - 1689 Sarah Loomis 1580 James Olmsted 1582 - 1621 Joyce Cornish 39 39 1590 - 1658 Joseph Loomis 68 68 Witnessed the will of John Hawkings of Brayntree, Essex 1633. 0885 - UNKNOWN Arnulf of Germany 1590 - 1652 Mary White 61 61 1551 - 1595 James Olmsted 44 44 Aka:Olmstea 1554 - 1595 Jane Bristow 41 41 1579 - 1641 Richard Olmsted 62 62 1562 - 1619 John Loomis 57 57 Aka: Lummys 1564/1565 - 1619 Agnes Lingwood Aka: Linwoo Johanne Milborne 1562 - 1605 Bridget Allgar 43 43 1520 - 1595 James Olmsted 75 75 1536 - 1567 John Loomis 31 31 Aka: Lummuys  or Lummys 1307 - 1362 Isabel Berkeley 55 55 1536 - 1575 William Allgar 39 39 James Olmsted 1500 Beatrice Olmsted 1512 - 1551 Thomas Lummys 39 39 1525 Ann Stephen 1520 William Lingwood 1519 Mary Wilson See Visitation pedigrees. 1515 - 1597 William Marlar 82 82 1522 Margaret Perye 1480/1500 William Allgar 1318 - UNKNOWN Catherine deMortimer 1510 Mary Smith 1614 - 1685 Gerard Jarrard Spencer 71 71 Source: Will of Richard Spencer of London, Gent. 17 Mar. 1645, codicil dated 29 May 1646, will proved 8 June 1646://
Names: Thomas Spencer, son of my brother Thomas Spencer,
.... Daniel Spencer of London, son of my brother John Spencer, deceased,
...... Sarah Bland and Hannah Bland,  daughters of my sister Katherine Bland deceased,
....... Elizabeth Tomlyns, widow, daughter of my brother Jarrard Spencer deceased,
..... Anthony Spencer and Jarrard Spencer sons of my brother Thomas Spencer deceased,
........ Two children of Margaret Spencer deceased,
..... Elizabeth Carter their aunt,
....... Jarrard Spencer, Michael Spencer, Thomas Spencer sons of my brother Jarrard Spencer deceased,
..... The children of William Spencer son of said brothers Jarrard Spencer deceased//

Source: Banks shows Jerrard, Michael, Thomas and William were from the parish of Stotfold in the County of Bedfordshire. The New England town the emigrants came to was: Cambridge, Mass, and Lynn, Mass.


Source: A DIGEST OF THE EARLY CONNECTICUT PROBATE RECORDS. 1677 to 1687. Page 225   Name: Ensign Jarrad Spencer   Location: Haddam, Invt. 124-12-00 of Estate not disposed of by Will. Taken 29 June, 1685, by Joseph Arnot & Alexander Rollo. Will dated 17 September, 1683.
Source:  Court Record, Page 111--3 September, 1685: Adms. to Daniel Braynard and William Spencer, with the Will annexed.
Source: The last Will of Ensign Jarrad Spencer of Haddam: I give unto my son William the Land which I bought of Steven Luxford's Estate. How I come by it the Court Record will show. I give unto my son William 1-3 part of 48 acres lying by that wch was commonly called Welles his Brook. I give to my son Nathaniel my now Dwelling house wth the Lott that was the Houselott, with an Addition lying by the side of it, granted by the Committe. I give unto my daughter Rebeckah that Houselott I bought of Thomas Smith. Likewise I give unto my daughter Rebeckah 1-3 part of the Lott by Welles his Brook. I give unto my son Thomas 40 acres on Matchamodus Side. I give unto my son Thomas his son, Jarrad Spencer by name, my Rapier. I give unto my son Timothy Spencer the remainder of that 6 score acre lott whereof his 2 brothers had their shares. The other 6 score thereof I dispose of as followeth: To Grace Spencer, the daughter of my son John Spencer, 40 acres; to Alice Brooks, the daughter of my daughter Brooks, 40 acres; to Grace Spencer, the daughter of my son Samuel Spencer, I give the other 40 acres. I give unto Jarred Cone, the son of my daughter Cone, my Carbine. A pewter Flagon and Urim Bason I give to the Church at Haddam, if there be one within five years. It is my Will that my son John Spencer his Children and my son-in-law Daniel Cone his Children have an equal proportion of my Estate with my other Children. It is my Will that however my Estate
falls out for portions to my Children, that my daughter Ruth Clarke's portion shall be 15, which was my Covenant with her father at her marriage, which 15 she hath received some part thereof, as my Books will testify; & to son Joseph Clarke I give him 40 acres of land at Matchemodus. It is the humble request of Jarrad Spencer that the honoured Major John Talcott and Capt. John Allyn would be pleased to oversee this his Will. I appoint my two sons Daniel Brainard and William Spencer Adms. to the Estate. Witness: John James, Joseph Arnot. Signed: Jarrad Spencer.// Source:  Court Record, Page 111--3 September, 1685: Adms. to Daniel Braynard and William Spencer, with the Will annexed.
Hannah Hill Rebecca Rebecca Wakeley 1755 - 1813 Azubah Warner 57 57 Mary Lord Hannah Thurston Mr. Skinner Thomas Wilson 1281 - 1326 Maurice The Magnanimous II Lord Berkeley 45 45 Governor of Gloucester 1312, Governor of Berwick-on-Tweed 1314. Stewardof the Duchy of Aquitaine 1319. Justiciar of South Wales. Beatrice Thomas Lummyus Jane Saperton Jane Saperton Robert Allgar 1693 - 1784 Caleb Loomis 90 90 ~1709 Joannah Skinner 1753 - 1812 Samuel Williams 59 59 Source: Families Of Early Hartford,Ct Author: Barbour,Lusius Barnes Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc.,1977 James Armstrong Noted in the will of Richard Peake, April 19, 1689. Aka: John. 1722 - 1793 Weeks II Williams 71 71 1281 - 1314 Eva La Zouche 33 33 1731 Joanna Loomis Source: Descendants of Joseph Loomis in America And his Antecedents In the Old World Author: Elias Loomis Publication: 1875, 1908 by Elias Loomis, Copyright, 1909 by Elisha Scott Loomis, Published November, 1909. 1754 - 1813 Eli Warner 58 58 Source: The Descendants of John Porter, Volume I Author: Henry Porter Andrews, Publication: Saratoga Springs: G.W. Ball, 1893
Source: DAR records/Pedigrees:  Children of Moses Warner and Sarah Porter are:
i. Col. Seth Warner, born October 28, 1739; married Mary Clark.  ii. Phinahas Warner, born March 29, 1742. iii. Martha Warner, born January 17, 1742/43; married Sylvanues House. iv. Eli Warner, born December 17, 1745; died January 1813 in Hartford, CT; married Azubah Allyn December 15, 1752.
v. Jonathan Warner, born 1751; married Mary ?. vi. Sarah Warner, born 1753. vii. Sumit Warner, born October 24, 1756; married Samuel Clark. viii. Moses II Warner , Jr., born 1758; married Mary King. ix. Ichobod.
Note: Some records have Ely as son of Ebenezer Warner. The dates of these records do not match.
1754 - 1774 Azubah Allyn 20 20 Some records show this persons birth as 1741 in Windsor Conn. ~1460 John Olmstead 1478 Alice Hankey ~1430 - 1440 Richard Olmstead 10 10 ~1430 Mrs. Richard Olmstead 1404 John Olmsted Beatrice 1522 - 1553 Alice Hawkyns 31 31 Aka:  Sorre D. UNKNOWN Garsinde Forcalquier 1491 - 1540 Laurent Lummyus 49 49 ~1493 Laurent 1469 - 1535 Oliver Lummyus 66 66 1526 Kyrsten Pasfield Or Jackson? 1493 Thomas Wilson 1530 Jane Marlar 1478 - 1540 Thomas Marlar 62 62 1484 - 1540 Margaret White 56 56 1448 William Marler ~1460 Mrs. William Marlar 1111 - 25 Jan 1156/1157 Agnes Princess of Austria ~1458 William White 1414 - 1450 John Marlar 36 36 1418 Miss Falstolfe 1375 - 1419 John Marler 44 44 ~1352 Mrs. John Marlar ~1348 - >1389 John Marlar 41 41 1546 - 1592 John Lingwood 46 46 1492 Thomas Perye ~1496 Mrs. Perye ~1320 Unknown Miss 1044 - UNKNOWN Adelaida of Hungary 0952 - 0991 Gerberge Countess Of Burgundy 39 39 ~1440 Margaret 1400 - 1468 William Algere 68 68 1379 John Algor 1540 - 1652 Margaret Ann Parye 112 112 Susan Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees.
This person is stated as sole da. and heir of her father.
Margaret 1696 - 1738 Thomas Allyn 42 42 Sources state: Capt. Peletiah Allyn, was son of Hon. Matthew and Elizabeth W(olcott) Allyn; grandson of Capt. Thomas and Abigail (Warham) Allyn, and great-grandson of Hon. Matthew and Margaret (Wyant) Allyn, all of Windsor Ct.. This family is covered in Stile's Hist of Windsor and other books. 1698 Elizabeth Wills 1576 - <1646 Gerard Jarrard Spencer 70 70 Gerard Spencer was born abt. May 20, 1576, St. Mary's Parish, Stotfold, Bedfordshire, England. He married Alice Whitbread on Nov 10, 1600 at Upper Gravenhurst, Bedfordshire, England. Gerard was the oldest son of Michael Spencer of Stotfold, Bedfordshire. He was baptized there May 20th, 1576. He married Alice Whitbred. He died prior to 1646. William, Thomas, Michael and Gerard (not John), migrated to New England about 1632.
Source:  Frank R. Holmes, Dictionary of the Heads of New England Families, 1923, Jared (Gerard) son of Michael, baptized Stratford, Eng., 1576, came  to Cambridge, Mass. 1632, with five sons, of whom John returned to England. Thomas, known as Sgt Thomas, and William removed to Hartford, CT, 1636. Michael located Haddam, where his father joined him, 1662.
Source: The American Genealogist, Whole Nr. 105, Vol. 27, Nr. 1, Jan 1951. Source: Aspinwall Notorial Records 1903, 182, 190 The New England line of the  Spencers made efforts to obtain payment of the 50 pounds apiece bequeathed to them by their uncle, Richard Spencer of London, whose chief heir and executor was their cousin, Daniel Spencer of London. On 8 Jan 1648/9, Garrard (Gerard) Spencer appointed Thomas Broughton of Watertown, Mass., and Samuel King of London, England, his attorneys to collect his legacy under the last will of Richard Spencer, late of London, linen draper, deceased; and the same date, "Michaell Spencer of Linne" did likewise. On 19 Jan 1648, i.e. 1648/9, Michaell Spense  signed in Boston a bill of exchange to Mr. Thomas Ruck, "haberdasher att the Seauen starres on London bridge," for 30 pounds, "part of the Legacy gyuen mee  by my Unckle Richard Spencer," and directed to my "my Louinge Cousen, Mr Danyell Spencer Grocer in Friday Streete in London." This bill of exchange was protested, 5 Apr 1650, by a London notary, who swore that upon presentation "the said Danyell Spencer answered, that hee will pay noe monneyes nor haue to doe wit the sayd bill of exchange." Source: Quarterly Courts of Essex County, 4:385; quoted also in Waterres, op cit., 515. The cousin Daniel Spencer was at death of Cony Hatch, co. Middlesex, citizen and grocer of London, and left a will dated 26 July 1665, proved 6 Nov 1668 Source: Waters.  He evidently died a wealthy man, mentioning messuages or lands in Lothbury, near Greene's Court, London; in Hitchin, Hippoletts and Preston, co. Hertsford, including the Red Lion Inn in Hitching; in Gravesend and Rochester, Kent, and in Tilbery, Essex. He named wife Sarah; eldest son Samuel; son Daniel; daughters Rebecca and Hannah Spencer, daughters Mary
wife of Thomas Thatch and Anne wife of William tilsley; and kinsman William Carter. The son Samuel died by 1674, leaving a widow Rebecca and daughter Mary Spencer.
D. 1583 Michael Spencer Source: The Spencer Family, American Genealogical Research Institute, Heritage press, Inc. Washington, D.C. 1975  The division of Michael's children wife Elizabeth is hard , because of the discovery of the burial of a  first wife, Agnes, early in 1562. The name of the true mother is not stated in the Edworth baptisms, but Elizabeth is stated as mother of two children, Gerard and Richard, who were baptized at Stotfold.  Elizabeth was mother of the other children who were born after 1562 and  before the birth of Gerard in 1576. The removal of the family from Edworth to Stotfold occured between 1571 and 1576. The above statements taken from: The American Genealogist, Whole Nr.105, Vol 27, Nr. 1, Jan. 1951 Additional Notes from Rev.John Holding. Michael was the oldest son of John and Anne Spencer. J. Holding:  "We find Anne Spencer in her Will, conveying her interest in the lease to Michael, her eldest son, who must have remained there as long as the lease was in force, and then, if not further confirmed or continued in the tenancy, he must have removed elsewhere. The later event took place, for we find him in Stotfold in 1576, where first evidence of his appearance there is the record in the register of this parish of the baptism of Gerard Spencer, son of Michael and Elizabeth Spencer, May 20, 1576." An entry in the church record that on November 5th, 1597, among those present at a church meeting, was Michael Spencer. The first wife of Michael Spencer was Anne Lorimer. They were married January 22nd, 1555. His second wife Elizabeth  J. Holding, on page 33, says: "While Richard and Thomas were flourishing in London, Michael and his sons who remained at Stotfold, seem to have been less prosperous, for we find Michale filing a bill in chancery in 1581, and we find Gerard Spencer, his son, and his wife Alice, leasing their land in Stotfold to Thomas, his brother in London, in 1615, and then the next year they conveyed these lands to Thomas. This decadence in this branch of the of the family, no doubt was one great reason for William Spencer, and his brothers, Thomas, Michael and Gerard migrating to New England in 1632." J. Holding is of the opinion that the name "Micael" was given for the reason that his parents lived in St.Albans, which is in St. Michael's parish. Source: Flora Clark, "Genealogy of the Four Spencer Brothers." 0998 - 1063 Richenza Countess Of Palatinate-Lorraine 65 65 ~1578 - 1628 Alice Whitbread 50 50 1505 - 1559 John Spencer 54 54 Source: Genealogical Cleanings in England. Henry F. Waters, Am.
John was called "senior" at burial. The recorder in entering the burial of Ann Spencer, widow, paid her respect by the following tribute: "the good hospitallity keeper; and she did give to the township of Edworth ii of her best beasts, to be let to the pore folks in the town for iii s. a cow and the parson and church warden to have the letting of them and the distributing of the money to the poor and to see the stock maintained each of them to have iiii d. of the vi s. for their pains to see this truly done according to her last will." Her will dated 13 June 1560, proved 21 April 1561, calls her Widow, in Edworth, Bedfordshire and names heir Gerard (age 17); son Michael, to have the chest that was his brothers John's; John Spencer, so Michaels child, to have 20 Marks, Elizabeth Lymer, to have 4 Marks at marriage; Alice Aystin, to have a callf; servants; for the mending of "London Brygge Waye" 10s.; brother Edward's children, to have the 1 Mark that he
borrowed of her; Nicholas Merrll and John Meryll his brother, to have the barley their father gave her sons; and the poor of Edworth, to have the gift already mentined. Michael Spencer was a witness.
Source: The American Genealogist, Whole Nr. 105, Vol 27, Nr. 1, Jan. 1951
Source:  Mr. J.  Holding " John Spencer was a son of John Spencer of South Mylls. From an extensive search of records in Bedfordshire J. Holding ascertained to his satisfaction that John Spencer, the 18th in descent from Robert the steward of King William, was the John Spencer who resided at St.Albans, England in the 1553, and who later moved to Kempton and Edworth, Bedfordshire, and is the ancestor of the Massachusetts and Connecticutt Spencers. In the year 1553 a Royal charter was given to the town of St. Albans by Edward VI. One of the chief burgesses or alderman was John Spencer. Shortly afterwards he moved to Edworth, where he died a few years later, in 1558, and where his family resided. He was buried at Edworth. In the parish register is this entry: John Spencer, Senior Buried June 9, 1558 Anne Spencer died June 16, 1560. She left a will bequeathing her property to her children, and to certain public charities. The Will is set forth in the brochure of the Rev. John Holding.  "There is every indication that previous to his advent at Edworth. John resided at St.Albans, where he was held in such high esteem as to be chosen one of the first chief burgesses of that town, and as such is named in the Royal charter granted to that town by King Edward VI in 1533."

Research made by Mr. Holding stated that John Spencer occupied a farm of about 600 acres at Edworth, as lessee of Robert Parry of Ellington, who was then lord of the Manor. About the Will of Anne Spencer, Mr Holding says: "It is interesting as showing the position in life she occupied, and her kindly, thought nature. The ennumeration of stock and chattels, and her bequests certainly show that the family was at least that of a prosperous gentleman." "She nowhere makes mention of land or tenements belonging to her. There is only the lease of the farm which evidently refers to the ones of which she was then the tenent, and which is handed on to her oldest son Michael." Regarding the Edworth farm Mr Holding says: "Edworth is a parish on the borders of Hertfordshire, and is situatied half way between Baldock and Biggleswade. There have always been two large farms in Edworth, comprising really the whole land in the parish, with the exception of about 8 acres glebeland attached to the rectory, giving a totla of about 1122 acres." "So that the Spencer farm would cover about 600 acres in extent, a large farm even at that present time, and gave employment to half the laboring poor of the place. The Hall, where the Spencers resided, is still standing, although much modernized. It is now occupied a gentleman named 'Smyth'." In 1923, H.R. Spencer, author of the Spencers of East Haddam, visited Edworth. The old church is still standing. The old Baptismal font is still in use. The church register is still in a good state of preservation, and dates back several hundred years prior to the time when John and Anne Spencer resided there. Origianl entries show the dates of christening the Spencer children, and the date of the death of both John and Anne Spencer. There is nothing in the churchyard to indicated at what precise spot John and his wife are buried. On the interior wall of the church H.R. Spencer placed a brass tablet containing the words: In Memoriam John and Anne Spencer 1558-1560.
1509 - <1560 Anne Merrill 51 51 1478 - 1532 John Spencer 54 54 It is not know at this time which wife is the mother of John, the son of this John Spencer. We have kept both untill the facts are known. ~1474 - >1532 Christian Baker 58 58 ~1480 - 1560 Ann Gerrard 80 80 Elizabeth 1542 - 1585 Margaret Kreables 43 43 1544 Elizabeth Wentworth See: Visitation of Yorkshire, p.340.  See: Pedigrees part 2 of this book. 1572 - 1607 Nathaniel Ely 35 35 0955 - 1034 Ezzo of Palantine & Lorraine 79 79 1576 - >1611 Susan Dowle 35 35 ~1542 - 1615 George Ely 73 73 ~1546 - 1615 Florence Tylden 69 69 ~1517 William Ely ~1520 Nathaniel Tylden ~1520 Mrs. Tylden ~1503 Thomas Wentworth ~1507 - 1584 Elizabeth Flintell 77 77 John Wentworth ~0942 - 0990 Berthold Count Palatine Of Bavaria 48 48 0976 - 1025 MathildePrincess of Saxony 49 49 Heliksuinda Von Waldeck ~1110 Ranulph de Engaine Lord of  Isell in Cumberland and hereditary forester of that country in the right of his wife ~1217 - 1291 Eleanor Berenger 74 74 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comtesse De Provence Bet. 1195 - 1198 - 1245 Raymond Berenger V Comte deProvence ~1058 Margery Bacoun ~1160 - 1218 Aymer deTaillefer 58 58 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Valence & Angouleme ~1138 Agnes Capet France D. 1199 Richard I Plantagenet England 1099 - 1137 William X deAquitaine 38 38 1065 - 1141 Englebert of Carinthia 76 76 D. UNKNOWN Dobromir Prince Of The Western Slavs V, Holy Roman Emperor Henry ~1015 - >1076 William D'Eu 61 61 1010 - 1095 Guy I deMontlhery 85 85 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Rochefort 1031 - 1093 Malcolm III Scotland 62 62 Canonized as a saint in 1250 1045 - 1093 Margaret Atheling England 48 48  St. Margaret of Scotland ~1084 - 1153 David I Scotland 69 69 ~1069 - 1118 Anselme deGarlende 49 49 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Seneschal of France ~1090 - 1147 Frederick II Von Hohenstaufen 57 57  Duke of Swabia 1182 - 1230 Gilbert deClare 48 48 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 4th Earl of Gloucester
1  NAME Gilbert /De Clare/, Earl ofGloucester
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1182
2  PLAC Hertford, Hertfordshire, England
1DEAT
2  DATE 25 OCT 1230
2  PLAC Penrose, Brittany, France
1187 - 1226 Louis VIII Capet France 39 39 0877 - 0921 Vratislav I Duke of Bohemia 44 44 1200 - 17 Jan 1239/1240 Isabel Marshall Name Suffix:<NSFX> Countess of Cornwall
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1206
2  PLAC Pembrokeshire, Wales
1  DEAT
2  DATE 16 JAN 1239/40
2  PLAC Berkhamstead, Hertfordshire, England
1170 - <1252 Isabel deFerrers 82 82 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1007 - 1040 Duncan I MacCrinan Scotland 33 33 The Gracious

Duncan I (d. Aug. 1, 1040, near Elgin, Moray, Scot.), king of the Scotsfrom 1034 to 1040. Duncan was the grandson of King Malcolm II (ruled1005-34), who irregularly made him ruler of Strathclyde when that regionwas absorbed into the Scottish kingdom (probably shortly before 1034).Malcolm violated the established system of succession whereby thekingship alternated between two branches of the royal family. UponMalcolm's death, Duncan succeeded peacefully, but he soon faced therivalry of Macbeth, Mormaor (subking) of Moray, who probably had a betterclaim to the throne. Duncan besieged Durham unsuccessfully in 1039 and inthe following year was murdered by Macbeth. Duncan's elder son laterkilled Macbeth and ruled as King Malcolm III Canmore (1058-93).

Even though it was not built for a couple of hundred years:
Click here for <a href="http://www.darkisle.com/e/elgin/elgin.html">Photoof Elgin Cathedral</a> (use browser back arrow to return)
1014 - 1040 Aelflaed Sybilla FitzSiward of Northumbria 26 26 ~0972 Ecqfrida of Durham 0984 - 1045 Bethoc Beatrix of Scotland 61 61 0958 - 1034 Malcolm\Mael- Coluim II King of Scotland 76 76 The first to reign over an extent of land roughly corresponding to muchof modern Scotland. Malcolm succeeded to the throne after killing hispredecessor, Kenneth III, and allegedly secured his territory bydefeating a Northumbrian army at the Battle of Carham (1016). He not onlyconfirmed the Scottish hold over the land between the rivers Forth andTweed but also secured Strathclyde about the same time. Eager to securethe royal succession for his daughter's son Duncan, he tried to eliminatepossible rival claimants, but Macbeth, with royal connections to bothKenneth II and Kenneth III, survived to challenge the succession. ~0960 - 1014 Sigurd II "Digri" Hlodversson 54 54 D. DECEASED Finlay MacRory Name Suffix:<NSFX> Mormaer of Moray 1017 - 1057 Edward Atheling England 40 40 D. UNKNOWN Bozena of Bohemia 1018 - 1074 Agatha Liudolfing Princess of Brunswick 56 56 ~1008 - 1038 Liudolf Von Brunswick 30 30 Liudolf Mar De Saxony  Von Brunswick 0989 - 1016 Edmund II England 27 27 Ironside Ealgyth of Northumbria 0950 Ermentrude 0948 - Bet. 981 - 985 Alberic II deMacon 0974 Beatrice deMacon 0970 - 1000 Geoffroy I deGastinois 30 30 1108 - 1171 Baudouin IV Count of Hainault 63 63 Also Known As:<_AKA> /le Batisseur/
1  NAME Baldwin IV Count of /Hainault/
1BIRT
2  DATE 1108
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1171
~1124 - 1168 Alix Comtesse deNamur 44 44 1  NAME Alice /De Namur/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1120
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1168
0892 - 0962 Ziemomsyl Prince Of Poland 70 70 ~1073 - 1139 Godfrey de Namur 66 66 ~1060 - >1129 Clemence dePoitou 69 69 ~1053 - 1102 Hugues deCrepi 49 49 Le Grand ~1050 - 1121 Adelaide de Vermandois 71 71 1028 - 1080 Herbert IV deVermandois 52 52 1008 - 1060 Henri I Capet France 52 52 1036 - Bet. 1076 - 1089 Anastasia Agmunda Yaroslavna of Kiev Also Known As:<_AKA> Grand Duchess of /Kiev/ ~1001 - 10 Feb 1049/1050 Ingrid Olaffsdotter Also Known As:<_AKA> /Ingegerda/ ~0962 - 1002 Rogneda Princess of Polotsk 40 40 0931 - 0972 Taksony Of Hungary 41 41 0972 - 1031 Robert II Capet 59 59 Sources: RC 134, 140, 154, 232, 333;Coe; A. Roots 53, 101, 107, 108, 141A; Kraentzler 1160, 1171, 1176, 1179, 1181, 1218, 1224, 1225, 1258, 1265, 1290; Pfafman; AIS; Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants.  Roots: Robert II, the Pious, King of France 1 Jan. 996-1031; Count of Paris. RC: King of France from 988-1031. Descents: Robert II, King of France, died 1031. K: Robert II, le Pieux, King of France. AIS: Robert II, King of France. Joyce de Engaine 0952 - 1004 Adbelahide 52 52 Princess of Aquitaine/ Sources: RC 134, 163, 244; Kraentzler 1161, 1171, 1181, 1202, 1218, 1258,
1291, 1492, 1515; Coe; A. Roots 53, 106, 144A; Pfafman; P of W; Roberts/Reitwiesner; Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants; AF. Roots: Adelaide (or Alice) of Poitou. K: Adelaide de Poitiers.
Roberts/Reitwiesner and P of W: Adelaide of Poitou. Descents: Adelaide of Poitou.
~0924 Rainier III deHainault 1005 - <1071 Gilbert II Vicomte deCarlat 66 66 1029 - 1073 Berenger deRoDes 44 44 ~1130 - 1218 Agnaes de Baudemont 88 88 ~1092 - 1154 Alix deMaurienne Comtesse De Savoie 62 62 Also Known As:<_AKA> /Adbelahide/ ~1015 - 1085 Robert Guiscard 70 70 The Astute, Duke of Apulia ~1024 - 1087 William I deBurgundy 63 63 William The Great Count of  Burgundy 1598 - 1650 Dorothy Paine 52 52 ~1035 - >1092 Stephanie deLongway 57 57 ~1020 - <1059 Beatrice deVascoeuil 39 39 ~1059 - 1083 Mathilda D'Apulia 24 24 ~0986 - 1057 Renaud I deBurgundy 71 71 Count Palatine of  Burgundy ~1007 - 1037 Adelais deNormandie 30 30 ~0963 - 1027 Richard II Normandy 64 64 0982 - 1017 Judith deBretagne 35 35 1050 Everard deDonjon Hugh de Windsor 1047 Unknown Hedwig ~1129 Marared verch Madog 0933 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Alberade De Lorraine 1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 870
2  PLAC Lorraine, France

MLC/RA; GERBERGE'S 1ST MARRIAGE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1047 Ulric Von Putten 1045 Engelbert I of Lavanthal 1031 - 1063 Geoffroy I D'Arles 32 32 <1053 - 1108 Philippe I France 55 55 ~1226 - 1314 Geoffrey deGeneville 88 88 ~1206 - 1234 Gilbert deLacy 28 28 ~1186 - 18 Feb 1224/1225 Hugh Bigod Earl of Norfolk & Suffolk Bet. 1144 - 1146 - 1219 William Marshall Name Suffix:<NSFX> 1st Earl of Pembroke ~1172 - 1220 Isabel Fitzgilbert deClare 48 48 1768 - 1843 Isaac Van Wart 75 75 ~1190 Idonia de Buslie Heir of John de Buslie, Lord of Maltby whose ggg grandfather, Roger de Buslie, Lord of Tickhi ll, came to England with William the Conqueror ~1141 - 1177 Eva (Aoife) McMurrough 36 36 ~1111 - 1171 dermot MacMurrough King of Leinster 60 60 ~1085 - 1126 Enna King of Leinster 41 41 ~1025 - 1070 Murchad MacDiarmata King of Leinster & Dublin 45 45 ~1000 - 1080 dearbhrghaill of Leinster 80 80 Also Known As:<_AKA> /Devorgilla/ Margaret Gubium 1643 - 1707 John ODell 64 64 ~1081 - 13 Feb 1130/1131 Isabel deCrepi De Vermandois Isabella deIreland ~0990 - 1069 Waleran Beaumont 79 79 1030 Guelph IV Duke of Bavaria ~0965 Robert deMeulan 1528 - <1593 Thomas Dabinott 65 65 "Thomas Dabinot -- Born about 1520.  He married Rawlin -----, about 1544. He died before 1593.  Source: Burton Spear,  Mary & John 1630, v 17, 1992, p 108-109/  Was buried 28 Feb. 1611/12, Chardstock, Dorset. ... Thomas was a substantial yeoman of Yarcombe, Devon and in 1565 he moved to Chardstock, Dorset.  (P) Children of Thomas Dabinot & Rawlin -----.  a. Joane Dabinot -- Bpt. 3 June 1545, Yarcombe, Devon.  She m. ----- Smith. ...  b. Thomas Dabinot -- bpt. 4 Feb. 1546/8, Chardstock, Dorset.  Died after 1607. ... [2 children of this Thomas listed].  c. John Dabinot .  d. Rawlin Dabinot -- Bpt. 11 Dec. 1557.  Married ----- Ford.  ...  She had a duaghter.  e. Bridget Dabinot -- Bpt. 31 Mar. 1560.  d.y.  f. Christopher Dabinot ."

Source:  J Gardner Bartlett, Newberry Genealogy, Boston, 1914, p 129-130
ThomasS Dabinott, born about 1520, was a substantial yeoman of Yarcombe, co. Devon, whence he removed about 1565 to the neighboring parish of Chardstock, then in co. Dorset, where he died before 1593. (P) He married about 1544, RAWLIN dated 21 Jan 1607/8, proved 16 Apr 1612].  (P) Children recorded at Yarcombe:  i. JOANE, bapt. 3 June 1545; m. ----- SMITH.  ii. THOMAS, bapt. 4 Feb. 1547/8, living in 1607.  iii. JOHN, bapt. 29 Jan. 1553/4, was a yeoman of Chardstock where he was buried in 1624.  (P) He married about 1600, JOHANE -----, who survived him.  (P) Children: 1. THOMAS, b. about 1602.  2. RAWLIN, b. about 1604; was m. and had a daughter Sarah in 1624.  3. JOHANE, b. about 1606; m. at Yarcombe, 26 June 1625, EDWARD SMITH,  4, JOHN, b. about 1608.  5. JANE, b. about 1610; pssobly became about 1630 the second wife of THOMAS NEWBERRY, the colonist of New England.  ...  iv. RAWLIN, bapt. 11 Dec. 1557; m. ----- FORD.  v. BRIDGET, bapt. 31 Mar. 1560; d. young.  vi. CHRISTOPHER, bapt. 3 Fev. 1563/4 .
~0980 - 1044 Humphrey deHarcourt 64 64 ~0945 - ~0979 Tourude De Pontaudemer 34 34 Seigneur De Harcourt ~0942 Senfrie deCrepon Aka: Wevia Duceline & Senfrie. Correct name unknown. 1540 - 1636 Richard Odell 96 96 The American Genealogist, 14:224 states he was married (2) Anne (or Agnes) Rogers in 1580/81 and has Richard baptised in 1581, which, if correct, could  make him a son of Ann Rogers Odell. Known children of William and Ann (Rogers) Odell: Thomas (1583), William (1585), Ann (1587), Dorothy (1589), Susan (1592), Margaret (1595), Mary (1598).

Other death date found: 31 March 1611, Salford, Bedford, England
John (Knight) deClinton ~1045 - ~1110 Margaret deMontdidier De Roucy 65 65 ~1014 - 1081 Adeliza Adeline Meulent 67 67 ~0985 - 1033 Ebles I deRoucy 48 48 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Rheims & Roucy
1  NAME Ebles I Comte /De Roucy/
1027 - UNKNOWN Judith Of Northumbria Paulus Jurckse ~1190 Alicia Bickerstaff ~1189 Letitia de Brinley ~0974 Avelina deCrepon 1674 Rose Merritt ~1154 Ida Isabel Plantagenet 1130 - 1202 Hamelin Plantagenet England 72 72  4th Earl Of Surrey 1118 - 19 Jan 1147/1148 William III deWarenne Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Surrey ~1110 - 1174 Adelia de Talvas 64 64 Also Known As:<_AKA> /Talvace/ ~1090 - 1171 William Talvace deMontgomery 81 81 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte D'Alençon 1054 - 1106 Magnus Duke Of Saxony 52 52 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V D'Anjou 38 38  Geoffrey V Comte De Maine et D'Anjou The first to use the SurName: Plantagenet. ~1112 Adelaide de Angers 1092 - 1143 Foulques V D'Anjou 51 51 King Of Jerusalem ~1096 - 1126 ErmengardeComtesse Du Maine 30 30 Also Known As:<_AKA> /Ermentrude/ ~1060 - 1110 Elias (Helie) Comte Du Maine 50 50 ~1055 - 1099 MatildeDe Chateau Du Loire 44 44 ~1030 Gervase Seigneur Du Chateau Du Loire 1043 - 1109 Foulques IV "Rechin" Comte D'Anjou 66 66 ~1025 - 1087 Simon I de Montfort 62 62 Alice Fitz Ranulf 0976 - 1037 Vazul Vazoly Prince Of Hungary 61 61 ~1004 - Bet. 1035 - 1098 Adele de Toni De Barcelona ~0965 - 1037 Robert Richard D'Evreux 72 72 Archbishop ~1001 Bertrade De Gometz ~1000 - 1046 Geoffrey II de Gastinois 46 46 1018 - Bet. 18 - 21 Mar 1075/76 Ermengarde D'Anjou 0967 - 1040 Foulques III D'Anjou 73 73 ~0960 - 0999 Elizabeth Adela Bouchard 39 39 ~1095 - BEF 6 Mar 1175/1176 Hugh Bigod Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Norfolk ~1116 - Bet. 1199 - 1200 Juliane deVere Annie Golding 0978 - 1050 Anastasia Princess Of Hungary 72 72 1606 - 1674 Rebecca Brown 68 68 William Odell, born 1602 in Bedfordshire, and died June 6, 1676 in Fairfield, Connecticut was among the group of Puritans who emigrated under the leadership of the Rev. Bulkley between 1635 and 1639. Paul Odle Sr.claims William was the son of William Woodhull and Audhed, and claimed to be a direct descendent of Walter de Flandrensis. Nancy Stern (Gen Forum) states that William was the son of Richard of Newport Odell, born about 1576 at Pagnall, Buckinghamshire. Both agree that he married Rebecca Brown. William is generally credited as the original common ancestor of the O'Dells in the US.  Sources other than those mentioned is "Odell - The English Village" and the Encyclopedia Britanica.  Reference tracing the barony initiated for Walter de Flandrensis can be found in the 3 Bedfordshire volumes of "The Victoria History of the Counties of England 1182 James deBisey ~1005 - DECEASED Henri Castellan deGhent ~1025 Sybilla Manasses deGhisnes ~1000 Alphonso Ghesnes 1038 - 1107 Roger II Bigod 69 69 Earl of Norfolk 1066 - 1136 Adeliza de Tosni 70 70 1030 - 1088 Robert deTosni 58 58 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Belvoir
Historical 1086 Domesday landholder
Event: Historical Companion to William I
Event: Military 14 OCT 1066 Hastings
Event: Political Advisor to William I

PROP: 80 lordships in Yorkshire, Essex,Suffolk, Cambridge, Hertfordshire, Bucks, Gloucestershire, Bedfordshire, Northamptonshire, Rutland, Lincolnshire and Leicestershire. 2

PROP: Erected Belvoir Castle in Lincolnshire.

Residence: Belvois Castle, Lincolnshire

Event: Surname Variant Toeny, Toeni, Tony, Toni, Todeni

Event: Title or Name Lord Of Stafford
Joan Valoines Thomas Frebodye 1001 - UNKNOWN Andrus I King of Hungary Richard Wintershall ~0989 Toustien Le Goz  Vicomte D'Avranches Judith deMontanolier ~1160 - 24 Feb 1240/1241 Walter deLacy Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Meath ~1177 Margaret deBraose Alicia deRabacy ~1117 - 1192 Bernard IV deSaint Valery 75 75 ~1128 Matilda ~1094 - 1166 Reginald II deSaint Valery 72 72 ~1065 - DECEASED Bernard III de Saint Valery 0970 - 1050 Ottone Orseolo Doge Of Venice 80 80 ~1035 - ~1097 Walter (Gauthier) de Saint Valery 62 62 Thomas de Valoines ~0957 - Bet. 1007 - 1052 Gilbert (Gaultier) de Saint Valery ~1070 - 1093 Bernard deNeufmarche 23 23 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Brecknock ~1000 - 1063 Gruffydd Ap Llewellyn 63 63 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Prince of Wales 1025 - >1086 Ealdgyth of Mercia 61 61 ~1002 - 1059 Alfgar III of Mercia 57 57 1002 - 1098 Elfgifu England 96 96 0980 - 1067 Godiva 87 87  Lady Godiva ~0955 - Bet. 971 - 1049 Alwara Athelstansdottar 0955 - 0985 Michael Regent Of Poland Hungary 30 30 ~1025 Geoffroy deNeufmarche ~1030 Ada Saint Valery deHugleville ~0990 - Bet. 1023 - 1081 Richard Saint Valery 0990 - Bet. 1022 - 1084 Ada Hugleville ~0990 Thurcystel deNeufmarche Amphilisia Samson ~1054 Agnes deSt. Clare Some records show this person's birth in: Barnstaple,Devonshire,England ~1090 - 1149 Rohesia deClare 59 59 1  NAME Rohese FitzRichard /De Clare/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1067
2  PLAC Tunbridge Castle, Kent England
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1121
~1105 - ~1138 Hambeline de Baudemont 33 33 1158 - 21 Mar 1236/1237 Jean Count deBrienne Name Suffix:<NSFX> King of Jerusalem 0932 - 0990 de Kumans 58 58 0987 - 1068 Agnáes de Burgundy 81 81 Bet. 1193 - 1199 - 1237 Berengeula Princess of Leon and Castile John Milford Bet. 1121 - 1122 - 1204 Elbeonore deAquitaine <1102 - 1169 Matilda Maud Germany 67 67 1  NAME Matilda the /Empress/ 1068 - 1135 Henry I England 67 67 Beauclerc
BIOGRAPHY: Henry was in reality a usurper. He imprisoned his older brother, Robert in Cardiff Castle in Wales, and it is said he had Robert's eyes put out. Henry reigned thirty-five years, not only over England, but over one third of France. In 1120 the White Ship went down on a hidden rock in the English Channel with the Crown Prince on board and it is said Henry Iis never known to have smiled again. He had only one child left, Maude, then a widow of the German Emperor Henry V. For political reasons she was next married to Geoffrey of Anjou, a boy of sixteen, ten years her junior. After the death of Henry I there was civil war between Matilda and her nephew Stephen,who got the throne for nineteen years. At one point in this contest Matilda had to escape from the Robert Doyley tower of Oxford Castle by sliding down a rope with gloved hands, the rope held by her favorite knight, Alain. She, with a few others dressed in white to avoid detection, crossed in the snowy night over the frozen Thames. The condition of the English people was deplorable during the reign of Henry I, owing to the blood-curdling cruelty of the Barons. Henry established a vigorous police system to check this, and tried to stop counterfeiting the money by mutilations. He oppressed his people by taxation.

Henry I was Duke of Normandy from 1106-1135 and King of England from1100-1135. William I left Normandy to his oldest son Robert II Curthoseand England to his next oldest son, William II Rufus. Henry was leftgreat wealth and eventually outmanuvered his brothers to become King ofEngland in 1100 and ruled 35 years. Henry is remembered for expanding andstrengthening royal justice, integrating the Norman and Anglo-Saxon legalsystems, and laying the foundation for more centralized royal rule. "TheEncyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.

Beauclerc King of England
D. 1118 Matilda Atheling Edith Canmore Scotland 1  NAME Matilda of /Scotland/ 0999 - 1077 Gertrude Von Egisheim 78 78 ~1105 - Bet. 1164 - 1165 John "The Marshall" FitzGilbert Marshall ~1139 Sibilla deSalisbury ~1100 - 1147 Walter FitzEdward deEvreux De Salisbury 47 47 0896 - 0950 Zoltan Prince Of Hungary 54 54 >1060 - <1140 Edward deEvreux De Salisbury 80 80 ~1075 - <1130 Gilbert "The Marshall" FitzRobert Marshall 55 55 ~1190 Robert de Vipont Hereditary sheriff of Westmorland by grant of King John WFT EST 1056-1110 - WFT EST 1094-1188 Ralph Whitfield 1145 - ~1184 Iowerth Ap Owain 39 39 Prince of North Wales ~1087 - 1169 Owain "Fawr" Ap Gruyffyd 82 82 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Prince of Gwynnedd ~1098 Gwladus Verch Llwarch 1055 - 1137 Gruffudd ap Cynan 82 82 King of Gwynedd, 1081.
Bio: "Griffith was born in Dublinand married Angharad, daughter of Owen. He returned to Wales in 1081, foundedthe first of five Royal Tribes, and was restored to the Crown of Gwynedd in 1081. Griffith was imprisoned by the Normans in Chester, England, from 1081 to 1093 and is buried in Bangor Cathedral. Children were Cadwallon, Owen, Cadwaladr and Gwenillian. From Owen's line came King Edward IV of England."
Dictionary has 2 1/2 pages of details, beginning on Page 301. Says he had five legitimate daughters and several illegitimate children. Gruffydd ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd, 1081.  Weis says that his father's name was Conan.  Morgan and Ancestral File say it was Cynan.
Sources:
A.Roots 176, 239; Kraentzler 1406, 1409; AF; Dictionary of National
Biography; Young; History of Morgan Family.
Young: Gruffydd ap Cynan, prince of Gwynedd, 9th in descent from Ragnar Lodbrok, 4th from Brian Boromhe, King of all Ireland. King Gruffydd ap Cynan, Prince of North Wales.
Roots 176: Gruffydd ap Cynan,ruler of Gwynedd (North Wales).
Roots 239: Griffith, born in Dublin 1055, died1137. Prince of North Wales.
Roots 239, comes from book: "The History of Gruffydd ap Cynan."
Weis, Frederick Lewis.  _Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists_.  6th
Edition. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1988; line 239.
Dictionary of National Biography.  Has 2 1/2 pages of details, beginning on Page 301.  Says he had five legitimate daughters and several illegitimate children.
Morgan, Dennis.  A History of the Morgan Family.  "Griffith was born in Dublin and married Angharad, daughter of Owen. He returned to Wales in 1081, founded the first of five Royal Tribes, and was restored to the Crown of Gwyneddin 1081. Griffith was imprisoned by the Normans in Chester, England, from 1081 to 1093 and is buried in Bangor Cathedral. Children were Cadwallon, Owen, Cadwaladr and Gwenillian. From Owen's line came King Edward IV of England."
Jones, Arthur.  The History of Griffith ap Cynan.  Manchester, 1910, a translation and analysis of a twelfth century biography of Griffith (cited as the source of the pedigree given in Weis, line 239).
Bartrum, Peter C.  Welsh Genealogies AD 300-1400, page 41.

King of Gwynedd
1065 - 1162 Angharad Verch Owain 97 97 Sources: Young; Kraentzler 1406, 1409; AF;  A. Roots 239; History of Morgan Family.
Anst.Roots 7th Ed. : Angharat of Tegaingl, daughter of Owain ap Edwin.
Lloyd, John E., The History of Wales, Vol. II: P. 464: "By hiswife Angharad, the flaxen-haired daughter of Owain ab Edwin, whom he married about 1095, he had three sons, Cadwallon, Owain, and Cadwaladr, and five daughters...." Footnote 7, same page, statess the daughters as Gwenllian (wife of Gruffydd ap Rhys), Marared, Rannillt (named for her paternal grandmother), Susanna(who married Madog ap Maredudd), and Annest. P. 488: Owain Gwynedd fell into a deep melancholy when his mother died in 1162.  Weis, Frederick Lewis.  Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists.  6th Edition. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1988. Morgan,Dennis.  A History of the Morgan Family.
0905 - 0989 Princess Of Bihar Men 84 84 ~1090 - 1136 Gwenllian II Verch Gruffydd 46 46 1  NAME Gwenlian Verch /Gruffydd/
1  NAME Gwenllian Verch /Gruffydd/
2  SOURS033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1090


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: History of Morgan Family and Dictionary of National Biography.
Married (1) Cadwgan ap Bleddyn and (2) Gruffydd ap Rhys.
In 1136, Gruffydd ap Rhys, under attack in Gower, hurried into North Wales
to obtain assistance from his brothers-in-law. His wife, meanwhile, "like an
Amazon and a second Penthesilea," commanded his followers in the south. She was
slain in battle by Maurice of London, Lord of Kidwelly. Morgan, one of her
youthful sons by Gruffydd, perished with her, and a second, Maelgwn, was taken
prisoner. But Owain and Cadwaladr, sons of Gruffydd ap Cynan, now came down
from the north, destroyed Aberstwith Castle, and in the second week of October
they fought along with Gruffydd ap Rhys a great battle near Aberteivi
(Cardigan), inwhich they won a decided victory over Stephen, constable of
Aberteivi and "all the Flemings, all the marchers, and all the French from
Abernedd to Aberteivi." Quoted material from Dictionary.
*****
Gruffydd ap Rhys, Prince of Deheubarth...m. shortly after 1116, Gwenllian
(killed 1136 while leading an attack on the troops of Maurice de Londres, lord
of Kidwelly, where the field of battle is called Maes Gwenllian), daughter of
the royal house of Gwynedd (whose mother was Ragnhildr, dau of the royal house
of the Scandinavians of Dublin)...[Source 1]

Married (1) Cadwgan ap Bleddyn and (2) Gruffydd ap Rhys.  In 1136, Gruffydd ap
Rhys, under attack in Gower, hurried into North Wales to obtainassistance fromhis brothers-in-law.  His wife, meanwhile, "like an Amazon and asecond
Penthesilea," commanded his followers in the south.  She was slain inbattle by
Maurice of London, Lord of Kidwelly.  Morgan, one of her youthful sons by
Gruffydd, perished with her, and a second, Maelgwn, was taken prisoner.But
Owain and Cadwaladr, sons of Gruffydd ap Cynan, now came down from the north,
destroyed Aberystwyth Castle, and in the second week of October, they fought
along with Gruffydd ap Rhys a great battle near Aberteivi (Cardigan), in which
they won a decided victory over Stephen, constable of Aberteivi, and "allthe
Flemings, all the marchers, and all the French from Abernedd to Aberteivi."
[Sources 2 and 3; quotes from Source 3]

SOURCES:
1.  Burke, Sir Bernard,C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms.  _Landed Gentry_
(entry under Powell), page577.
2.  Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of the Morgan Family_.
3.  _Dictionaryof National Biography_.
~1081 - 1137 Gruffydd Ap Rhys 56 56 [De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Dictionary of National Biography; History of the Morgan Family;
Dakota.

Dakota: Griffith ap Lord Rhys ap Tudor Mawr, P/W.

Dictionary says he was brought up in Ireland after his father's death in
1093.But about 1113 he returned to Dyved, waged war, picked up some
territory andlaid claims to more. After a successful battle in 1136 he
regained many of thelands of his ancient inheritance.
He remarried and was slain in 1137 throughthe treachery of his new wife.
Dictionary doesn't give details. One and one-half pages on this man, Page 310.
********
Gruffydd (Griffith) ap Rhys, King ofWales, 1135.

"Returned from exile in Ireland to fight the Normans in 1113.Married
Gwenillian, daughter of Griffith ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd, in 1116.She was
killed leading her husband's army in an attack on the Norman castle at Kidwell
in 1136.  The spot where she fell is named Maes Gwenillian in her honor.
Griffith continued the rebellion against the Normans.  Their sons were
Meredith, Morgan, and Rhys." [Source 1]

He was brought up in Ireland after his father's death in 1093.  But about 1113,
he returned to Dyfed, waged war, picked up some territory and laid claims to
more.  After a successful battle in1136, he regained many of the lands of his
ancient inheritance.  He remarriedand was slain in 1137 through the treachery
of his new wife.  This source doesnot give details.  It devotes one and a half
pages to Gruffydd.  [Source 2]

SOURCES:
1.  Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of the Morgan Family_.
2.  _Dictionary of National Biography_; page 310.
~1041 - Bet. 1124 - 1129 Maredudd Ap Bleddyn Name Suffix:<NSFX> King of Powys
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1047
2  PLAC of, Montgomery, Wales
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1408; History of the Morgan Familyand Dictionary of
National Biography; Young.
Young: Mareddudd ap Bleddyn, died 1132. Prince of Powys.
K: Maredydd ap Bleddyn, King of Powys.

SOURCES:
1.  _Dictionary of National Biography_.
2.  Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of theMorgan Family_.
Maredudd ap Bleddyn, died 1132.
~1025 Haer Verch Cillin [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Haer verch Cynllyn.

Bartrumidentifies her as Haer f. Cillin (ap) y Blaidd Rhudd o'r Gest yn
Eifionydd.

SOURCES:
1.  Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, "Bleddynap
Cynfyn 1", page 28.
~0982 - DECEASED Angharad Verch Maredydd Also Known As:<_AKA> Queen of Powys
1  NAME Angharad Verch /Maredud/
2  SOURS033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT.982
2  PLAC of Rhuddlan, Wales, Wales
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1408, 1409; Coe; A. Roots 176; AF; Dictionary of National
Biography; Young; History ofthe Morgan Family; Royal Descents of 500
Immigrants, p465.
Roots: Angharad verch Maredudd ap Owain ap Hywel Dda.
K: Anghared verch Maredydd.       Name also spelled Angharat.
Young: Angharad II, Queen of Powys.
500: Angharad II, Queen of Powys.

SOURCES:
1.  Coe.
2.  Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of the Morgan Family_.
3.  _Dictionary of National Biography_.
4.  Weis, Frederick Lewis.  _Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists_.  6th Ed.
Baltimore, MD: GenealogicalPublishing Company, Inc., 1988.
5.  Ancestral File (AFN:9NR3-ZG).

Name also spelled Angharat.
~1203 Unknown D. 1023 Llewellyn Ap Seisyll ~1215 - 1258 John FitzGeoffrey 43 43  Justiciar of Ireland
John was a man of great wealth and position, who was appointed Justice of England, and at the coronation of King John, June 26, 1199, was girt with the sword, as Earl of Essex, and then served atthe King's table). John Fitz-Goeffrey, on the death of his half-brother Williamin 1227, paid a fine to the King of 300 marks for those lands which were his father's and did by inheritance rightly belong to him, and whereof this last Earl William died seized. In the 18th of Henry III, this John was constituted Sheriff of Yorkshire, and in the same reign was admitted one of the Privy Council,and the same year was one of those sent to the Pope to prohibit his attemptinganything therein prejudicial to the interests of the King and kingdom. In eightyears afterwards John Fitz-Goeffrey was one of the commissioners sent from King Henry III, with Roger Bigod and others, to the Council at Lyons, in order tocomplain of the great exactions made upon the realm by the Holy See; the next year he was constituted Justice of Ireland, where for his services he received agrant from the crown of the Isles of Thomond.
~1222 - 1239 Isabel Bigod 17 17  Thetford, Norfolk, England ~1172 - ~1225 Eveline Aveline deClare 53 53 0840 - 0907 Arpad Prince Of Hungary 67 67 Arpad was leader of the next band of Turanian Invaders called theMagyars, or Hungarians, another branch of the Hunnic race, who in 895 ledhis savage hordes through the Vereczka Pass into the region now calledHungary, there establishing their kingdom. These people, in markedcontrast to almost every other tribe of Turanian origin, adopted themanners, customs and religion of the people about them, became, in aword, thoroughly Europeanized, and for a long time were the main defenseof Christian Europe against the Turkish tribes of the same race thatfollowed closely in their footsteps. Thus they took their religion andcivilization along with it from Germany. Alfonso II, Prince of Aragon 1132 - 1193 Maud (Matilda) de Saint Hillary 61 61 1  NAME Maud (Matilda) De /Saint Hilary/
1  NAME Maud De /Saint Hilary/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1132
1490 - 1552 John Merwin 62 62 Source: "The English Ancestry of th Merwin and Tinker Families in New England" published  NEHGR in 1995. ~1070 - ~1136 Lucia deTaillebois 66 66 ~1050 - 1089 Ranulf deMeschines 39 39 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Chester Issabell Foliamb The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 146.  1 wiffe [first wife of Sir Hugh
Willoughby].
~1025 - 1066 Richard D'Avranches 41 41 ~1023 Emma de Conteville ~1062 - 1144 Geoffrey deManDeville 82 82 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Essex ~1109 - >1166 Rohese deVere 57 57 0865 - 0850 Arpad Princess Of Hungary 15 15 ~1260 - 1306 Brian FitzAlan 46 46 1196 - <1263 Alice deNewburg 67 67 ~1140 - <1204 Waleran deNewburg 64 64  Earl of Warwick ~1181 - >1212 Alice deHarcourt 31 31 ~1103 - 22 Feb 1124/1125 Judith of Bavaria Bet. 1034 - 1035 - 1088 William deWarenne Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Surrey
1  NAME William /De Warren/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1055
2  PLAC Bellencombe, Seine Inferieure, France
~1063 - 1085 Gundred England 22 22 ~0963 Jean deConteville  Vicomte De Comyn, Fought at Hastings 1318 John de Botetourt ~0980 Doda Source: RC89, 160; Kraentzler 1264, 1265. RC calls her a concubine. 0820 - 0895 Almos Prince of Hungary 75 75 0999 - 1035 Robert III Normandy 36 36 The Magnificent, The Devil,  Duke of Normandy from 1027 to 1035.

Robert I, by name ROBERT The MAGNIFICENT, or The DEVIL, French ROBERT le MAGNIFIQUE, or le DIABLE (d. July 1035, Nicaea), duke of Normandy (1027-35), the younger son of Richard II of Normandy and the father, by his mistress Arlette, of William the Conqueror of England. On the death of his father (1026/27), Robert contested the duchy with his elder brother Richard III, legally the heir, until the latter's opportune death a few years later. A strong ruler, Robert succeeded in exacting the obedience of his vassals. On the death of Robert II the Pious, king of France (1031), a crisis arose over the succession to the French throne.The Duke gave his support to Henry I against the party favouring his younger brother; in reward for his services he demanded and received the Vexin Français, a territory not far north of Paris. A patron of the monastic reform movement, he died while returning from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]
~1045 - ~1119 Henri deBeaumont 74 74 ~1067 - >1156 Margaret dePerche 89 89 ~1042 - 1100 Geofrey II Comte dePerche 58 58 ~1051 Beatrice deMontdidier 0998 - 1069 Hildouin IV Comte deMontdidier 71 71 1  NAME Hildouin IV Count of /Montdidier/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1021
2  PLACMontdidier, Somme, France
~1024 - 1069 Alice (Adela) de Roucy 45 45 1  NAME Alice /de Roucy/ 1108 - 1185 Hugh deMortimer 77 77 0796 - 0835 Ogyek Prince Of Hungary 39 39 Attila, the leader of the non-Aryan Huns, defeated the armies of theEastern Emperor, and exacted tribute from the court of Constantinople. Heinvaded Western Europe and was driven back with the loss of from 100,000to 200,000 and retreated across the Rhine and led his warriers beyond theAlps. Shortly after he had crossed the Danube he died suddenly in hiscamp. These Turanian people were pagan. He was followed by Chabla. Edus,Vergerus, Elendus, two whose names were unknown, Avarius and Almus.Attila was King of Hungary in 453 and Ogyek is a direct descendent. Bet. 1126 - 1144 - >1190 Maud (Matilda) deMeschines ~1100 - ~1132 William deMeschines 32 32 ~1100 - ~1153 Cecily deRumilly 53 53 1082 Ralph deMortimer 1086 Milisent deFerrers ~1173 - 1235 Walter deBeauchamp 62 62 ~1282 - >1345 John Assheton 63 63 ~1130 - Bet. 1211 - 1212 William deBeauchamp ~1154 Joane Waleries 1246 - 1324 Gervase deGlapton de Clifton 78 78 0800 - 0850 Emese Princess Of Hungary 50 50 ~1110 - ~1129 Nicholas deBeauchamp 19 19 ~1076 Emmeline deAbitot ~1045 - ~1118 Urso D'Arbitot 73 73 ~1118 Thomas Waleries Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir Bet. 1119 - 1120 - 1180 Louis VII Capet France ~1140 - 1206 Adaele (Alix) Comtesse deChampagne 66 66 1  NAME Adaele (Alix) Comtesse /de Champagne/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1140
~1201 - 1266 Beatrice deSavoie 65 65 ~1160 - 1218 Alice deCourtenay 58 58 Bet. 1126 - 1128 - 1183 Pierre France 1  NAME Pierre of /France/, Count of Courtenay Henry III (Duke) of Brabant 0822 - 0900 Princess Almos Of Hungary 78 78 1222 - 1262 Richard deClare 39 39 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Gloucester ~1223 - BEF 10 Mar 1288/1289 Maud deLacy 1192 - 1240 John deLacy 48 48  Earl of Lincoln. Was a Surety for the Magna Carta ~1171 - 1211 Roger deLacy 40 40 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Lacy ~1180 - 1213 Maud (Matilda) deClare 33 33 1162 - 1218 Richard deClare 56 56 1160 - 1 Jan 1224/1225 Amice FitzRobert ~1116 - 1183 William FitzRobert 67 67 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Gloucester 1019 William deEvreux 1104 - 1168 Robert deBeaumont 64 64  Earl of Leicester 0955 - 0997 Adelajda 'The White' Princess Of Poland 42 42 ~1108 Amice deGael ~1090 - 1147 Robert deCaen 57 57 Earl of Gloucester ~1094 - 1157 Maud Mabel FitzHammon 63 63 ~1244 Alianora ~1104 - 1190 John FitzRichard deLacy 86 86 ~1134 - DECEASED Alice deManDeville ~1128 - 1157 Richard FitzEustace Clavering 29 29 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Halton ~1128 - >1193 Albreda (Aubrey) deLisoures 65 65 ~1097 Robert deLisoures D. 1057 Juttta Countess Of Luxembourg 0972 - 1056 Maria Helena Princess Of Hungary 84 84 1005 - UNKNOWN Gerberge Countess Of Burgundy ~1080 - 1157 Eustace FitzJohn Clavering 77 77 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Alnwick ~1112 - 1166 Matilda Agnes FitzNigel 54 54 Joan de Huntingfield ~1330 Alice Milford 1147 - 1181 Hugh deKevelioc De Meschines 34 34 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Chester
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1147
2  PLAC Keveliock,Merionethshire, Wales
1155 - 1189 Bertrade De Montfort 34 34 1124 - 1189 Maud FitzRobert 65 65 1099 - 1153 Ranulph deMeschines 54 54 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Chester Bet. 1117 - 1121 - 13 Mar 1180/1181 Simon II deMontfort Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte D'Evreux 1104 - 1166 Waleran IV deBeaumont 62 62 Comte De Meulan 0991 - 1060 Frowilla Princess Of Orseolo 69 69 ~1070 - 1137 Amaury III deMontfort 67 67 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte D'Evreux ~1095 - 1181 Agnes deGarlende 86 86 ~1248 - Feb 1287/1288 Thomas deClare ~1249 - >1309 Julian FitzMaurice 60 60 ~1250 - 1286 Gerald Maurice FitzMaurice 36 36 1250 - 1291 Emmeline deLongespee 41 41 ~1216 - 1260 Stephen deLongespee 44 44 ~1223 - 1276 Emmeline deRiDelisford 53 53 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Countess of Ulster ~0905 Edulph of Mercia Thomas de Grey D. 1055 Adalbert 'The Valient' Margrave Of Austria ~1125 - 1196 Adam II Brus 71 71 ~1145 Joanna deMeschines Jorden Umfreville Ann ~1076 Agnes Paynel pg 80, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1051 - Bet. 1080 - 1098 Adam (Adelm) Brus pg 80, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1062 - ~1094 Emma Ramsey 32 32 ~1036 - Bet. 1080 - 1098 Robert de Brusse Robert de Brus married Emma, daughter of Alan of Brittany. They had twosons. William and Robert. This Robert de Brus was the first of thefamily, a noble Knight of Normandy, who accompanied Duke William intoEngland, and was rewarded by him after the Battle of Hastings with noless than ninety-four lordships in the County of York, of which the Manorof Skelton was the capital of his barony. He died about the year 1100,according to some, and to other historians 1094. His successor was hisson, Robert. ~1034 - ~1094 Emma de Bretagne 60 60 ~1000 - 1040 Alan III deBretagne 40 40 0931 - 0994 Leopold The Illustrious Margrave of Austria 63 63 1011 - 1046 Ragnald II Brusesson 35 35 Earl of Orkney ~1015 Arlogia Vladimirovna ~1074 - 25 Jan 1139/1140 Godfrey "La Barbe" Duke of Lorraine ~1078 - Bet. 1117 - 1122 Ida deChiney De Namur 1021 - >1077 Henri Comte deLorraine 56 56 ~1057 - >1086 Adele de Beteau 29 29 ~0957 - 1044 Gonzelon I Duke of Lorraine 87 87 ~0974 Urracca Princess of Italy ~0952 - 1015 Lambert II 63 63 ~0977 - Bet. 1015 - 1018 Gerberge deLorraine 0960 - 1020 Richeza Sualafeld 60 60 ~0953 Bonne Adelaide D'Ardennes  Comtesse D'Ardennes ~0929 - 0961 Adelaide Dagsbourg 32 32 ~1048 - 1094 Gilbert deGand 46 46 Participated in the Battle of Hastings ~1020 - 1066 Hugh deMontfort 46 46 Companion of Wm the Conq., called Earl Hugh the Constable; was rewarded with 113 manors in Essex, Suffolk, Norf. & Kent, with a large portion of Romney Marsh.Was entrusted, along with others, with the gov. of England while William visited Normandy in 1067. Date of death unknown. ~1040 - 1115 Alice deBeauffou 75 75 Irene of Byzantium ~1005 Gisele of Luxembourg ~1004 - 1032 Adalbert deGand 28 28 ~1005 - Bet. 1027 - 1099 Ermengarde De Flanders ~0995 - 1068 Agnes deMacon Countess of Burgundy 73 73 1024 - 1075 Ernst 'The Valient' Margrave Of Austria 51 51 Bet. 940 - 1013 - Bet. 976 - 1089 Rollo deBec ~0941 - 0987 Arnolph II of Flanders 46 46  Arnulf II "the Young" of Flanders
Sources: RC 141, 184, 332; K and Q of Britain, Coe, A. Roots, AF, Smallwood, Kraentzler 1157, 1218, 1244, 1258; Pfafman. Count of Flanders. Arnulf Arnold. K: Arnoul II, le Jeune, Count de Flandre et de Boulogne.
1043 Gerberge deBigore ~0984 - ~1003 Arnoul deGand 19 19 ~0987 - Bet. 1009 - 1081 Lietgarde De Cleves ~1135 - ~1183 Maldred FitzDolphin 48 48 ~1110 Dolphin Fitz Uchtred ~1115 Alice\ Adilicia of Northumbria ~1075 - 1128 Uchtred FitzMaldred 53 53 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Raby Heribert Von Maine 1041 - 1071 Adelheid Princess Of The Ostmark 30 30 ~0980 - 1049 Hugh IV d'Alsace 69 69 Count of Lower Alsace 1009 - 1045 Maldred Fitz Crinan 36 36 1st Earl Of Dunbar 1016 - Bet. 1044 - 1100 Ealdgyth deNorthumbria ~1250 - <1283 Patrick deChaworth 33 33 William Blount Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 16 Jan 1244/1245 - 1296 Edmund Plantagenet England  Earl Of Leicester
Edmund Plantegenet by name Crouchback (b.Jan. 16, 1245, London, England - d. c.\June 5, 1296, Bayonne, France), fourth(but second surviving) son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence, who founded the house of Lancaster. At the age 10, Edmund was invested by Pope Innocent IV with the kingdom of Sicily (April 1255) , as an expression of his conflict with the Holy Roman emperor, who held Sicily; but Edmund was nevermore than an absentee titular king, and Pope Alexander IV canceled the grant (December 1258). In 1265 Edmund received the earldom of Leicester, and two years later was created Earl of Lancaster. He joined the crusade of his elder brother, the Lord Edward (1271-1272); and Edward on his accession as King Edward I,found in Edmund a loyal supporter. In 1275, two years after the death of his first wife, Edmund married Blanche of Artois, the widow of Henry III of Navarre and Champagne, and assumed the title Count Palatine of Champagne and Brie. Whenthe court of King Philip IV of France pronounced that the king of England had forfeited Gascony, Edmund renounced his homage to Philip and withdrew with his wife to England. He was appointed lieutenant of Gascony in 1296but died in the same year, leaving his Son Thomas to succeed him in his English possession. Edmund's nickname "Crouchback" (meaning "Crossback," or crusader) was misinterpreted, probably intentionally, by his direct descendant. King Henry IV, who, in claiming the throne (1399), asserted that Edmund had really been Henry III's eldest son but had been disinherited as a hunchback.
1248 - 1302 Blanche D'Artois 54 54 1216 - 8 Feb 1249/1250 Robert I D'Artois ~1224 - 1288 Mahaut deBrabant 64 64 <1529> Alice 1057 - 1096 Leopold II Margrave Of Austria 39 39 1165 - 1223 Phillipe Auguste II King of France 57 57 1170 - 15 Mar 1189/1190 Isabelle deHainault ~1140 - 1194 Marguerite deLorraine 54 54 1  NAME Margaret of /Lorraine/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1140
2  PLAC Alsace, France
1275 - 1322 Bartholomew de Badlesmere 47 47 His wife was imprisoned for denying Queen Isabella entry to Leeds Castle. He was later hanged. ~1200 - 1240 Nicole D'Aubigny 40 40 ~1173 - 1233 Mabel deMeschines 60 60 1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1173
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1173
~1140 - 1193 William IV D'Aubigny 53 53 Earl of Arundel ~1110 - 1176 William III D'Aubigny 66 66  Earl of Arundel ~1109 - 1151 Adelicia deBrabant 42 42 1064 - 1139 William II D'Aubigny 75 75 1060 - 1105 Ida Countess Of Chan 45 45 ~1083 Maud Le Bigod 1290 - 3 Feb 1342/1343 William deRos Name Suffix:<NSFX> 3rd Lord Ros of Helmsley 1306 - <1363 Margery deBadlesmere 57 57 ~1198 - 1232 John deBraose 34 34 ~1210 - Bet. 1263 - 1264 Margred Verch Llewelyn ~1050 Lucia Mercia ~1212 Loretta ~1175 - 1211 William deBraose 36 36 D. ~1085 Bertha deChartres 1282 - 1345 Henry Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster 63 63 1  NAME Henry Duke of /Lancaster/
1  DEAT
2  DATE 22 SEP 1345
2  PLAC Monastery of Canons, England


Henry was Earl of Lancaster and Earl of Leicester1324. He was one of the leaders of the great confederacy which overturned the power of the Spencers and deposed King Edward 2nd. He was appointed guardian ofthe new King Edward 3rd. he was appointed captain-general of all the King's forces in the Marches of Scotland. Lord of Beaumont and Nogent 1336. AKA "Tortcol"or Wryneck.
D. UNKNOWN Didi Ostmark ~1282 - AFT 19 Feb 1316/1317 Maud deChaworth 1165 - 1221 William V D'Aubigny 56 56 Earl of Arundel ~1162 - 1213 Geoffrey FitzPiers deManDeville 51 51 Sir John deGrey ~1130 - 1191 Erard Comte deBrienne 61 61 ~1149 Agnes deMontfaucon 1143 - 1214 William I Scotland 71 71 Richard Warham ~0980 - >1055 Englebert IV deBrienne 75 75 Still living in 1055; he gave in marriage N, Countess of Joigny, his sister to a knight named Etienne, Seigneur de Vaux, near the Abbey of Saint Urban in Champagne, who had built the Chateau of Joinville under the reign of Henry I of France. Bet. 1064 - 1103 - Bet. 1097 - 1181 Adele de Rameru D. UNKNOWN Oda Lausatia 0890 - 0939 Gilbert Duke Of Lorraine 49 49 1114 - 1152 Henry Canmore deHuntington 38 38  Prince &  Earl of Huntington 1134 - 1187 William IV deTaillefer 53 53 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Angouleme ~1154 - DECEASED Emma deLimoges 1093 - 8 Jan 1151/1152 Theobald III Comte deChampagne Also Known As:<_AKA> Comte /De Blois/, Comte De Chartres ~1097 - AFT 8 Jan 1151/1152 MathildeVon Sponheim Princess of Carinthia Unknown Muriel ~1039 - 1119 Robert II deMontgomery 80 80 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte D'Alencon ~1066 - Bet. 1084 - 1162 Agnes Comtesse dePonthieu ~1084 - 1116 Mary Canmore Scotland 32 32 Princess of Scotland ~1059 - 1125 Eustace III deBoulogne 66 66 1084 - 1136 Leopold III 'The Saint' Margrave Of Austria 52 52 1105 - 1151 Matilda deBoulogne 46 46 1097 - 1154 Stephen deBlois 57 57 1193 - 1264 Helen deGalloway 71 71 Aka: Mac Donald ~1186 - 1234 Alan deGalloway 48 48  Lord of Galloway

Named In The Magna Charta.Descendant of Alfred the Great and the Kings ofScotland
D. 1168 Patrick 1st Earl of Salisbury 1151 - 1223 Thurstan Basset 72 72 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Wallingford D. 52 Henry III Sir Walter de Grey 1239 - 1274 Henri I "The Fat" King of Navarre 35 35 ~1151 - 1211 Ralph deSomery 60 60 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Dudley
TITLE: Lord of Camden
1090 - 1143 Agnes Princess Of The Holy Roman Empire 53 53 ~1147 - ~1242 Margaret Marshall 95 95 1152 - 1196 Alphonso II Aragon 43 43 ~1088 - ~1124 Gervaise de Rethel 36 36 1152 - Bet. 1202 - 1206 Robert deHarcourt ~1130 - <1167 Ivo deHarcourt 37 37 ~1152 - >1208 Isabel deCamville 56 56 ~1127 - 1176 Richard deCamville 49 49 ~1118 - <1155 Milicent Stanton de Rethel 37 37 ~1160 - 1235 Henri I deBrabant 75 75 ~1163 - ~1211 Maude De Boulogne 48 48 1017 - 1065 Heinrich III Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 48 48 1140 - 1173 Matthew Von Lothringen 33 33  Count of Boulougne 1131 - 1182 Marie Comtesse deMortaigne 51 51 1128 - 1217 William deVernon Reviers 89 89 ~1162 - >1204 Mabel deBeaumont 42 42 1  NAME Maud /De Beaumont/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1162
2  PLAC Leicester, Leicestershire, England
~1180 - <1244 Walter deRiDelisford 64 64 Annora ~1164 - 1200 Roland deGalloway 36 36 Count of Scotland 1153 - 1217 Elena deMorville 64 64 Gilbert Umfreville ~1095 - ~1140 Maude De Senlis 45 45 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

pg 62 & 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1018, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 160,447 & 469, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol   pg 501 Burkes Landed Gentry
1020 - 1077 Agnes Princess of Aquitane 57 57 Agnes FitzRandolph ~1134 - 1212 Petronille deGrentemesnil 78 78 1100 - 1174 Uchtred deGalloway 74 74 BIOGRAPHY:  Murdered by Malcolm of Galloway.   Massacred William the Lions garrisons in southeast Scotland ~1134 Gunhild of Dunbar 1143 - 1189 Richard deMorville 46 46 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Constable of Scotland 1155 - 1 Jan 1190/1191 Avicia deLancaster 1201 - 1235 Maria Hohenstauffen 34 34 1120 Isabel deSenlis ~1104 - 1174 Isaac Comnenus 70 70 Irene Diplosynadene 1140 - 1168 Jutte Princess Of Austria 28 28 ~1177 - 1208 Phillip II Hohenstauffen 31 31 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Holy Roman Emperor
Heir to the Hohenstauffen house of Swabia. Marriage arranged to dtr of Isaac II Angelus Emperor of the Byzantine Empire. Philip is a brother to Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI, who arranged the marriage. Philip II of Swabia, youngest son of Frederick I the Barbarossa, of the houseof Hohenstaufen, had been educated for the church, but resigned his "see" in 1192. Phillip of Swabia, of the house of Hohenstaufen, son of Frederick I the Barbarossa, succeeded his brother Henry VI as Emperor of Germany in 1197. He ruled until 1208, and was succeeded by Otto IV of Saxony, his son-in-law.
1184 - 1208 Irene Maria Angelica 24 24 ~1122 - 1190 Frederick I "Barbarossa" Holy Roman Emperor 68 68 ~1133 - 1184 Beatrix deMacon 51 51 ~1155 - <1185 Irene Comnenus 30 30 ~1150 - 1204 Isaac II Angelus Emperor of Byzantium 54 54 1122 - >1185 Andronicus Angelos 63 63  Andronicus "l'Ange" King of Byzantium, Grand Prince in the Court of Manuel ANGELUS 1125 - 1195 Euphrosyne Castamonita 70 70 1110 - 1185 Andronicus I Comnenus 75 75 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Byzantine Emperor 1144 Theodora Comnenus 1132 - 1191 Guillaume VII Marquis deMontferrat 59 59 1174 - Feb 1208/1209 Alphonso II Count of Provence ~1180 - ~1224 Gersinde De Sabran 44 44 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Countess of Castlerad 1060 - 1139 Gerard deCamville 79 79 ~1060 Athelaise deVere 1142 - 1190 Godfrey III Lothier Duc deLorraine 48 48 1135 - 1172 Margaret deLimbourg 37 37 ~1105 - ~1154 James deSaint Hillary 49 49 1099 Aveline deHesding 1111 - 1167 Henri II Duc deLimbourg 56 56 1113 - 1145 Maud Von Saffenberg 32 32 1097 - UNKNOWN Rainer deMontferrat 1150 - 1195 Baldwin VIII Count of Flanders & V of Hainault 45 45 1  NAME Baudouin V Count of Flanders & /Hainault/ ~1099 - 17 Jan 1167/1168 Dietrich Thierry d'Alsace Count of Flanders ~1105 - 1163 Sibyl D'Anjou 58 58 Gersende de Sabran ~1069 - <1127 Milo deCourtenay 58 58 ~1073 - >1127 Ermengarde De Nevers 54 54 ~1113 Hawise deDonjon 1085 Frederic de Donjon 1090 - 1153 Simon deSenlis 63 63 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Huntington ~1125 - 1174 Petronilla Ramirez deAragon 49 49 1160 - 1202 Alice Adelheid de Montferrat 42 42 1125 - 1195 John deSomery 70 70 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Dudley
1124 - 1197 Hawise Paynel deBeaumont 73 73 1  NAME Hawise /De Beaumont/ ~1088 - 1120 Baldwin III Count of Hainault 32 32 ~1089 Yolande de Guelders De Wassenberg 1078 - 1126 Ralph IV de Toeni 48 48 Lord of Flamstead, Hertfordshire. In 1103 he supported the claim of Rainald deGrancei to the Barony of Breteuil. He crossed to England to obtain his father'slands, and returned to Normandy in 1104 as an ardent supporter of Henry. He took part in the battle of Tinchebrai on 28 Sep. 1106. When rebellion broke out in Normandy against Henry in 1119, he remained faithful. In 1120 he was with Henry at Rouen.Complete Peerage by Cokayne ~1076 - >1126 Alice de Huntington 50 50 20 Mar 1175/1176 - 20 Jan 1232/1233 Thomas I deMaurienne Comte De Savoie 1  NAME Thomas I /De Savoie/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1177
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1233
1180 - 1257 Beatrix Margaret deGeneva 77 77 1130 - 1195 Gulliaume I deGeneva 65 65 1138 - 1180 Agnes deMaurienne De Savoie 42 42 1157 - 1218 Manfred II Marquis deSaluzzo 61 61 1190 - 1257 Maurice FitzGerald 67 67 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir Alienor deSaint- Valery Alexander McGhie ~1065 - 1117 Gertrude De Flanders 52 52 Bet. 1141 - 1154 - 1196 William D'Evereau FitzPatrick Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Salisbury ~1158 - 1232 Eleanor deVitre 74 74 ~1105 - 1162 Roger Hugh deMorville 57 57 ~1128 Beatrice deBeauchamp ~1148 - <1188 Simon D'Evreux III deMontfort 40 40 1060 - 1115 Simon de Senlis 55 55  Earl of Huntington 1183 - 1212 Bonifacio deSaluzzo 29 29 0956 - 0985 Gilbert de Roucy 29 29 ~1072 - 1131 Maud Mathilda deHuntingdon 59 59 ~1046 - 1076 Waltheof II 30 30 1113 - 1162 Raymond V Berenger 49 49 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Barcelona Hannah Porter 1133 - 1160 Constance Princess of Castile 27 27 1137 - 1188 Ferdinand II King of Castile & Leon 51 51 1145 - 1188 Urracca Alphonsez Princess of Portugal 43 43 1110 - 1185 Alphonso I Henriquez King of Portugal 75 75 ~1125 - 1157 Maude De Maurienne 32 32 1154 - 1208 Sancha Alphonsez Princess of Castile 54 54 1  NAME Sanchia Princess of /Castile/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 21 SEP 1154
2  PLAC Castile Spain
1  DEAT
2  DATE NOV 1208
2  PLAC Aragon, Spain
D. UNKNOWN Manfred Saluzzo ~1090 Elizabeth de Namur <1081 - ~1118 Hugh Comte de Rethel 37 37 ~1047 Melisande de Montlheri ~1090 - 1166 Fergus deGalloway 76 76 ~1095 - Bet. 1132 - 1194 Elizabeth England Some sources show this person as Joan de England. ~1062 - 1138 Waldeof of Dunbar 76 76 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Allerdale & Sigred ~1107 - 1142 Godfrey II deBrabant 35 35 1109 - 1162 LuitgardeVon Moha & Sultzbach 53 53 ~1080 - 1125 Berenger II Sultzbach 45 45 ~1084 - 1126 Adelheid Von Wolfratshausen 42 42 D. UNKNOWN Eleanor deArborea Bet. 1025 - 1076 - <1154 Andre deRoucy Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Rameru ~1092 - 1148 Amadeo III de Maurienne Comte De Savoie 56 56 ~1116 - Jan 1144/1145 Mathilda deVienne d'Albon ~1068 - 1133 Guiges VIII d'Albon 65 65 ~1070 - ~1143 Mathilde England 73 73 ~1062 - 1103 Humbert II deMaurienne Comte De Savoie 41 41 1  NAME Humbert II Count of Maurienne & /Savoy/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1062
2PLAC Savoie, France
1080 - 1133 Gisela Countess of Burgundy-Ivrea 53 53 Also Known As:<_AKA> /Gille/
1  NAME Gisela /De Bourgogne/
1  BIRT
2  DATEABT. 1060
2  PLAC Bourgogne, France
~1078 Ralph deGael Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Norfolk
TITLE: Seigneur De Montford de Gael in Brittany
~1115 - 1170 William I deLancaster 55 55 5th Baron Of Kendal

Custom Field:<_FA#> 5th Baron de KENDAL
Bet. 1057 - 1070 - 1112 Henry I deBurgundy Name Suffix:<NSFX> Duke of Portugal 1180 - 1264 Maria detorres 84 84 1056 - 1130 Teresa deCastile 74 74 Bet. 1094 - 1110 - >1165 Edith D'Oilly ~1050 - 1105 Frederick I Von Hohenstaufen 55 55  Duke of Swabia 1074 - 1143 Agnes Von Franconia 69 69 1082 - 1131 Raymond IV Berenger 48 48 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Barcelona ~1090 - ~1129 Dulce Milhaud 39 39 D. DECEASED Reynaud III deMacon Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Burgundy 1119 - 1147 Agatha Princess deLorraine 28 28 1063 - 1131 Gerhard deWassenberg 68 68 1  NAME Gerhard (Gueldres) /De Wasseburg/ 1136 - 4 Mar 1188/1189 Humbert III deMaurienne Comte De Savoie 1  NAME Humbert III 'Le Saint' /De Savoie/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1136
1  DEAT
2DATE 1189
1214 - 1266 Beatrice deSavoy 52 52 Beatrice and her husband were celebrated for their learning and literarytaste. 1138 - 1184 Beatrix deMacon 46 46 1  NAME Beatrice /De Vienne/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1160
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1230
1112 - 1180 Girard Comte deVienne 68 68 1  NAME Gerard Comte /De Macon/ 1114 - Bet. 1142 - 1208 Guigonne Maurette deSalins 1  NAME Maurette /De Salins/ ~1150 - BEF 15 Jan 1203/1204 Gerald FitzMaurice Catherine deValognes 17 Feb 1660/1661 - 1735 Josiah Loomis Joshua Wills Sr. Aka: Welles Elizabeth Skinner ~1120 - DECEASED Marguerite deTurenne Raymond deTurenne 1210 - 1244 Manfredo III Marquis deSaluzzo 34 34 ~1105 - 1143 Matilda Maud dePerche 38 38 Unknown Maud ~1112 - 1157 Peganus deBeauchamp 45 45 ~1054 - >1086 Judith de Lens 32 32  Countess of Boulogne ~1073 - Bet. 1099 - 1167 ? deMontlhery 1065 Utha Von Putten ~1062 - >1105 Robert FitzHammon 43 43  Lord of Crueli, Baron Thori ~1066 Sibyl deMontgomery 1057 Gerberge Comtesse deProvence 1 Mar 1102/1103 - 1157 Alphonso Raimundez VII King of Castile 1240 - 1291 Luisa deCeva 51 51 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1116 - 3 Feb 1147/1148 Berenguela Raimundo of Barcelona ~1107 - 1185 Ryksa Silesia 78 78 1041 - 1043 Wladislaw II "The Exile" King of Poland 2 2 1043 Sophia Germany 1036 - 1094 Ivo deRoumare De Taillebois 58 58 Comte D'Anjou 1087 - 1143 John II Comnenus Emperor of Byzantium 55 55 1088 - 1134 Irene Priska Princess of Hungary 46 46 1048 - 1118 Alexius I Comnenus Emperor of Byzantium 70 70 1  NAME Alexios I Emperor of /Byzantium/ 1074 - 1126 Henry III 52 52 1075 - 1126 Ulfhideof Saxony 51 51 1180 - 1260 Maria deSaluzzo 80 80 1035 - 1101 Guelph IV Duke of Bavaria 66 66 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Altdorf 1037 - 4 Mar 1093/1094 Judith of Flanders Name Suffix:<NSFX> Countess of Northumberland Gautier III Sire deSalins 1  NAME Gauthier III Sire /De Salins/ >1090 - 1155 William IV 65 65 1  NAME Guilliaume Comte /De Macon/ ~1090 - Bet. 1111 - 1190 Poncette deTraves 1  NAME Poncette /De Trave/ ~1050 - 1091 Boso I deTurenne 41 41 ~1055 - DECEASED Gerberge deTerrasson 1056 - >1098 Baldwin II Count of Hainault 42 42 1065 - 1130 Ida (Alix) deLorraine 65 65 1030 - 1070 Baldwin VI Count of Flanders 40 40 1180 - 1219 Guglielmo deCeva 39 39 1027 - 15 Mar 1085/1086 Richilde Von Egisheim Countess of Hainault ~1070 - Bet. 1094 - 1164 Sybil de Chateau- Porcien ~1048 - 1102 Adalbert III Comte deNamur 54 54 1046 - 1102 Ida Billung Von Sachsen 56 56 1058 - 1102 Stephen Henry II Comte deChartres & De Blois 44 44 ~1067 - 8 Mar 1136/1137 Adele Beauclerc deNormandy ~1075 - Bet. 1140 - 1171 Sigrid ~1019 - 1089 TheobaldeII De Blois 70 70 Bet. 1005 - 1028 - Bet. 1044 - 1130 Garsinde Von Maine Bet. 1031 - 1079 - Bet. 1064 - 1161 Alice D. UNKNOWN Guglielmo deCeva ~1148 Miss ~1047 - 1089 Renaud II Comte D'Auxerre & deNevers 42 42 ~1055 - 1085 Ida-Raimond Hardwide De Forez 30 30 1060 - 23 Mar 1102/1103 Eudes I Capet Borel "The Red" Duke of Burgundy 1065 - 23 Mar 1102/1103 Sybille of Normandy ~0965 Herlouin deHugleville Bet. 1046 - 1082 - ~1129 Llwarch Prince North Wales ~1056 - Bet. 1099 - 1148 Gilbert Marshall <1040 - 1109 Alphonso VI King of Castile & Leon 69 69 1210 - 1268 Giorgio deCeva 58 58 Benedict Cornouaille deBrittany ~1380 - Bef. 27 1449 Jun Laurence Hamerton 1046 - 1092 Constance Capet 46 46 ~1080 - 1107 Raymond deBurgundy 27 27 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Galicia 1081 - 8 Mar 1125/1126 Urracca Alphonsez Queen of Castile & Leon 1013 - 1065 Ferdinand I King of Castile 52 52 ~1046 - ABT Jan 1092/1093 Donna Constance Princess of Burgundy ~1103 - AFT Mar 1129/1130 Eleanor deChastellerault 1075 - 1136 Aimery I deChastellerault 61 61 Dangerose deBouchard Bet. 1077 - 1096 ? deVenuz Geoffrey deVenuz 1210 - 1300 Elisa deEste 90 90 1015 - 1094 Frederick Von Buren 79 79 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Hohenstauffen 1017 - 1095 Hildegarde Von Hohenlohe 78 78 1050 - 1106 Henry IV Holy Roman Emperor 55 55 1051 - 1087 Bertha Comtesse deMaurienne 36 36 0989 - 1067 Nunnia Queen of Castile 78 78 0987 - 1035 Sancho Garces III King of Navarre 48 48 1  NAME Sancho III King of /Aragon/
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1035
~1075 - 1157 Ramiro Sanchez II Aragon 82 82 1095 - 1147 Agnes Maud 52 52 1067 - 1094 Sancho Ramirez V Aragon 27 27 1069 - 1086 Felicitas deMontdidier 17 17 1050 - 1106 Heinrich IV Emperor Holy Roman Empire 56 56 ~1100 - 1177 Maurice FitzWalter FitzGerald 77 77 1100 - Bet. 1152 - 1195 Alice deMontgomery 1042 - 1095 Guigues VII d'Albon 53 53 1064 Theobald deTraves ~1022 - 1066 Harold II England 44 44 Godwineson 1040 - 1093 William IV Comte deToulouse 53 53 0990 - 1060 Pontius Comte deToulouse 70 70 ~0972 - 1057 Ermesinde De Carcassonne 85 85 Bet. 1099 - 1108 - 1140 Wulgrim II deTaillefer Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Angouleme Bet. 1091 - 1109 - Bet. 1138 - 1203 Ponce deLa Marche 1145 - 1183 Adelheid Princess of Lothringen 38 38 0947 - 1037 William III deTaillefer 90 90 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Angouleme 1086 Vitapoy deBenauges ~1022 - ~1054 Lambert II deBoulogne 32 32 1026 - <1090 Adeliza de Normandy 64 64 0997 - 1055 Siward Biornsson 58 58 The Bull's head crest commemorates the Bulmers. Robert Fitz-Maldred married Isabel Nevill, daughter of Geoffrey Nevill and his wife Emma, daughter of Bertram de Bulmer. Isabel inherited from her mother the Bulmer Lordship of Brancepeth near Durham, and henceforth Brancepeth Castle became the other seat of the house, and Geoffrey, son of Isabel Nevill andRobert Fitz-Maldred, adopted the surname Neville or the Norman Neuville. This noble, ancient and illustrious family "which was to medieval England what the Douglass was to Scotland" for antiquity, great and numerous honors, flourishing branches and mighty power, scarcely any family can vie with the splendour possessed in former ages by the Nevills. Of course, the lines connect with Royalty, but they in themselves are great enough to be proud to claim descent through.

Siward, Earl of Northumbria, was a Dane by birth and probably came to Englandwith Canute. In 1054 he invaded Scotland in the interests of Malcolm Canmore and he completely routed Macbeth in battle. Shakespeare introduces him and his son into "Macbeth." Siward, a man of unusual strength and size, is said to have arisen from his bed at the approach of death and to have died dressed in all hisarmor.
~0997 - Bet. 1045 - 1110 Aefflaed de Bernicia ~0994 - ~1045 Ealdred de Bernicia 51 51 ~0960 - Bet. 967 - 1075 Papia of Normandy ~1037 - Bet. 1076 - 1132 Guy II deMontlhery Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Rochefort ~1053 - 1082 Raymond III Berenger 29 29 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count of Barcelona
1  NAME Raymond /Berenger/II, Count of Barcelona
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1055
2  PLAC Barcelona, Spain
1  DEAT
2  DATE 5 DEC 1082
2  PLAC Murdered
0918 - 0955 Conrad Duke of Lorraine 37 37 ~0998 Ralf deWarenne Agnes Clifton Bet. 1032 - 1045 - 26 Jan 1079/1080 Amadeus II Comte de Savoie ~1040 - ~1095 Joan deGeneva 55 55 1019 - 1067 Louis II Comte deMontbeliard 48 48 ~1018 - 21 Jan 1092/1093 Sophia Bar-Le- Duc Bet. 952 - 1002 - 1033 Frederick II Duke of Lorraine Bet. 983 - 1006 - Bet. 1018 - 1090 Matilda Maud Swabia Bet. 938 - 983 - >1019 Richwin Count of Scarpone ~0990 - >1019 Hildegarde Von Egisheim 29 29 0888 - 0917 Werner Count of Carintha 29 29 1040 - 1095 Saint Ladislas I King of Hungary 55 55 ~1067 - 1090 Adelaide 23 23 1050 - 1106 Magnus Billung Duke of Saxony 56 56 ~1033 - 1095 Sophia Princess of Hungary 62 62 1000 - 1093 Eustace II deBoulogne 93 93 1022 - 1113 Ida (Maud) deLorraine 91 91 1031 Eberhard deBeteau ~0995 - 1037 Albert II Comte deNamur 42 42 1002 - 1059 Bernard II Duke of Saxony 57 57 ~0952 Gerberge Von Henneburg 0864 Eberhard deWorms 1031 - 1093 Robert , Count of Flanders Le Frisson 62 62 ~1028 - 1113 Gertrudeof Saxony 85 85 1  NAME Gertrud Princess of /Saxony/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1028
1  DEAT
2  DATE1113
~1045 - 2 Jan 1104/1105 Thierry II deMontbelliard Comte De Bar-Le-Duc 1055 - 1102 Stephen deMacon De Vienne 47 47 1045 - Bet. 1094 - 1143 Beatrice of Upper Lorraine 1035 - 1066 Henry deBurgundy 31 31  Duke of Renault ~1320 Sibyl* deHonford 1040 - ~1074 Gospatric of Northumbria 34 34 ~1042 Aethelreda England ~0972 - 1046 Heilwig Dagsburg 74 74 0840 - 0887 Rudolph Count of Franconia 47 47 ~1196 - ~1240 Maud d'Aubigny 44 44 0999 - 14 Feb 1042/1043 Gisele Swabia 1015 - 1067 Sanchia Queen of Leon 52 52 ~0980 - >1037 Hildouin III Comte deMontdidier 57 57 ~0980 - DECEASED Lessine deHarcourt ~1003 - 1085 Artaud III deForez 82 82 Unknown Ida- Raimunde ~1036 - >1126 Edward Atheling England 90 90 ~1036 - ~1126 Margaret deNorthumbria 90 90 D. 1049 Biorn Ulfsson England 1154 - 1208 Sancha Infanta of Castile 54 54 ~1030 - 1100 William I D'Auxerre 70 70 ~0980 - 1039 RenaudeComte De Tonnerre 59 59 1006 - DECEASED Helvise deNoyen ~1032 - 1080 Adele Hildebrante de Valois 48 48 ~1026 - 1086 William VI deAquitaine 60 60 ~1050 - ~1104 Hildegardeof Burgundy 54 54 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I Capet  "The Old" Duke of Burgundy 1016 - 1109 ErmengardeComtesse De Semur 93 93 Papia de Envermeu Bet. 1056 - 1103 - Bet. 1089 - 1185 Dyddgu of Builth 1666 - 1725 John II Archer 59 59 2nd lord of Fordham Manor
John Archer born in Westchester County about 1660, the son of John Archer & Catherina Carle. He was apprenticed to Hartman Wessels, a surgeon, on February 1, 1677. He married first, Margarita Steenwick. They had no children. She must have died about 1686, because in December of that year, he married Sarah Odell, daughter of William Odell. They had seven children. Sarah must have died before 1715, because in that year, John married Mary Fowler, daughter of Henry Fowler the 3rd. They had one daughter. John died before 1718, when his widow married Samuel Drake.  Source:  "McKenzie Papers at the Westchester County Historical Society"
0991 - 1052 Elvira Valdez 61 61 ~1100 - >1162 Amadeus I Comte de Geneva 62 62 ~1050 - DECEASED Pons deCuiseaux 1050 - 1125 Aimon II deGeneva 75 75 1086 - Bet. 1102 - 1166 Itha deFaucigny 0950 - 1017 Henry Count of Schweinfurt 67 67 1  DEAT
2  DATE 8 SEP 1017
1004 - >1055 Elika Von Schweinfurt 51 51 1  NAME /Elika/ Albreda dePreaux 1004 - 1101 Guy I Comte dePonthieu 97 97 1006 - Mar 1065/1066 Ada Of Amiens 1095 - 1154 James St. Hilary Du Harcourt 59 59 0825 - 0869 Hermentrude France 44 44 1041 - 1082 Maud deMontgomery 41 41 Yolande de Dreux Nathaniel Lawrence ~1054 - ~1123 Roger deMontgomery 69 69 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Lancaster ~1067 - Bet. 1112 - 1178 Ademonde De La Marche Alberic deLa Marche Unknown Ponce ~1060 - Bet. 1104 - 1165 Arnulph deMontgomery Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Pembroke Bet. 1076 - 1080 - Bet. 1104 - 1170 Lafracoth O'Brien BIOGRAPHY: The O'Brien and the MacCarthy families had been warring with each other in southwestern Ireland for many years prior to the Norman invasion of Ireland. Iafracoth or Lafeacott was apparently a persuasive woman. When her son-in-law, Maurice fitzGerald, invaded Ireland in 1171, he took by conquest part of the MacCarthy territory. Initially at least, Maurice did not seize any O'Brien territory.

BIOGRAPHY: Most people named O'Brien are descended from Brian macCennéidigh, the Ard-Righ (High King) of Ireland usually known as Brian Bóru. Since Lafeacott O'Brien was born only about 150 years after the army of Brian Bóru defeated the Vikings at Clontarf in A.D. 1014, she was undoubtedly aware of her famous ancestor and careful about the spelling of her name. In later generations, the families of (O) Byrne, O'Broin, and Bryan sometimes changed the spelling of their name to O'Brien.
D. 1119 Muircetrach O'Brien Name Suffix:<NSFX> King of Munster 1090 - 1189 Joscelyn de Louvain 99 99 The birth and ancestry of Josceline was as splendid as his estates wereslender. He was a younger son by a 2nd wife of Godfrey, Count of Brabantand Louvain, and was descended through Louis IV, King of France, 936, andhis wife Gerberga, daughter of the King of Germany; son of Charles III,King of France, and Edgina, daughter of Edward, the Elder, King ofEngland; son of Lewis II, King of France; son of Charles II, King ofFrance; son of Lewis I, son of Charlemagne. Joselyn wedded Agnes uponcondition that he should be called Jocelyn Percy, or else, that he shouldbear the arms of Lord Percy. He took counsel of his sister, the Queen,and chose to be called Jocelyn Percy rather than forsake his own arms,for so he should have no right of title to his father's inheritance. Thedate of this marriage is not certain, but it was probably about 1150,when Agnes Percy was in her 17th year. Queen Adeliza conferred on herbrother, by way of a wedding present, five and a half knights' fees inYorkshire, and the honour of Petworth in Sussex. He lived for theremainder of his life in great splendour; and is chiefly remembered forthe many rich gifts which he made to abbeys and religious houses. ~1052 - DECEASED Dubichobhiegh Of Ossory ~1025 - Bet. 1049 - 1152 Sichelgaita Princess of Salerno Guimar IV of Salerno Porpora Tabellaria ~1000 - 1048 Adalbert III deLongway 48 48 1016 - 1035 Clemencia deCarcassonne 19 19 ~1017 - Bet. 1053 - 1108 Ranulf deBayeux ~1021 - Bet. 1053 - 1115 Alice of Normandy 1018 - ~1052 Rycheza of Poland 34 34 0990 - 1034 Mieszko II Lambert of Poland 44 44 1274 - 1314 Robert deClifford I Lord Clifford 40 40 0994 - 1063 Richeza Countess of Lorraine 69 69 ~1068 Hawise ~0980 - ~1047 Eustace I deBoulogne 67 67 ~0980 - >1040 Maud de Louvain 60 60 ~0960 Baldwin II deBoulogne ~0960 - 1052 Adele de Holland 92 92 Bet. 996 - 1015 - >1064 Regilindeof Lorraine ~1010 - 6 Mar 1069/1070 Gerhard III d'Alsace Duc De Lorraine ~1012 - 1076 Hedwig deNamur 64 64 1024 - 6 Mar 1069/1070 Gerard IV Duc deLorraine 1276 - 1 Feb 1326/1327 Maud deClare ~0984 - 1046 Gisela d'Alsace 62 62  Comtesse De Metz ~1005 - Bet. 1048 - 1115 Agatha Friesland 0978 - 1045 Crinan Thane 67 67  Killed in Battle against Macbeth, who 1040 slew his son Duncan. ~0990 - 1037 Eudes II de Blois 47 47 ~0990 - 10 Mar 1039/1040 Emelia D'Auvergne Thierry Duke of Lorraine Unknown Richilde 1017 - 1056 Henry III Holy Roman Emperor 38 38 1024 - 1077 Agnes dePoitou 53 53 1245 - <1302 Maud FitzHugh deLongchamps 57 57 Solveig Halfdansdottir 1010 - 1064 Raoul III deValois 54 54 the Great 1015 - 1043 Adele de Bar-Sur- Aube 28 28 Bet. 979 - 1008 - 1040 Renaud I Comte deNevers 1  NAME Renaud Comte /De Nevers/ 1003 - 1063 AdelaideHavoise D'Auxerre 60 60  Ervoise De France D. <1044 Matilda Germany 1012 - 1067 Baldwin V Count of Flanders 55 55 Nickname:<NICK> The Pious
1  NAME Baldwin V "the Debonnair" /de Lille/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1013
2  PLAC Lille, Nord, France
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 73, 140, 141, 205;Coe; Guziot's "France";  K&Q of
Britain; Kraentzler 1073, 1157, 1218, 1221, 1241, 1258, 1265, 1342, 1350, 1371;
Ancestral File; Ancestry and Progeny of Capt. James Blount--Immigrant by Robert
Frederick Pfafman; A. Roots 162-22, 163-22, 164-22; Royal Descents; AIS; Davis.
RC: Baldwin V de Lille, Count of Flanders.
Descents: Baldwin V, Count of Flanders.
K: Baudouin V, "le Lille et le Debonnaire." Count de Hainault and Flanders.
Regent in France.
AIS: Baldwin V, Count of Flandre, born Flandre, Belgium; died 1 Sept. 1067.
Married 1026.
Davis: Baldwin V, Count of Flanders; married Adela, daughter of Robert of
France.
1009 - 8 Jan 1078/1079 Adela Alix Capet France Comtesse D'Auxerres ~0950 - 0992 Hildouin II Comte deMontdidier 42 42 Bet. 945 - 1012 - Bet. 969 - 1088 Fulk D'Aunou Bet. 976 - 1042 - Bet. 1013 - 1119 Godsfrid deBec Ingjald "Evilheart" Braut Onundsson ~1087 - <1141 Hugh deBeauchamp 54 54 ~1090 Adeliza de Taillebois ~1240 Miss 1018 - DECEASED Caradoc Ap Cynfyn Name Suffix:<NSFX> Prince Of Powys 0992 - 31 Jan 1029/1030 William III deAquitaine The Great 1000 - 1048 Guillaume II deTalvas 48 48 Seigneur of Belleme Hildberg deBeaumont Emma 1086 - DECEASED Pons Seigneur deCuiseaux Laura deSenecy ~1409 - 11 Feb 1458/1459 Jane Goushill Joan or Joanna Goushill married Thomas Stanley,  1407 . The name Joan is called Joanna in Latin. In the 32nd year of Queen Elizabeth, 1590, it  was agreed that names Joan and Jane were to be all one name in the Court of the King's Bench. As a result, her name appears in records as Joan,Joanna and Jane. ~1030 - 1060 Louis Seigneur deFaucigny 30 30 1009 - 1097 Azo II Marquis D'Este 88 88 ~1286 Isabel deLatham ~0990 - 1041 Tancred Seigneur deHauteville 51 51 ~0995 - Bet. 1036 - 1134 Frescenda of Normandy ~0969 Ancitel deBayeux ~0997 - 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy 30 30 ~1100 - Bet. 1125 - 1194 Unknown Concubine 0965 - ~1000 Albert I Comte deNamur 35 35 ~0975 - 1013 Ermengarde De Lorraine 38 38 1386 - 11 Feb 1458/1459 Thomas de Stanley Thomas Stanley became, as was his grandfather,  Lord Lieutenant ofIreland, a post he held for six years. He was a warrior as well as anegotiator, and having served the offices of Comptroller of the Householdand Chamberlain to King Henry VI, was chosen Knight of the  Shire and hadthe Garter conferred upon him, and eventually, January 20, 1456, emergedfrom among the County Gentry, and was summoned to the House of Peers, asBaron Stanley, a dignity that he did not, however, long enjoy, his deathoccurring three years later, in 1459. Following the example of others ofhis kin, he sought out an heiress for  a mate and found a fitting wife inthe person of Joan Goushill, whose mother, Elizabeth, was daughter andco-heiress of Richard Fitz-Alan, Earl of Arundel, and consequently arepresentative in her person, not only of the family of d'Albini, as wellas that of the Earls of Warren, but of the blood royal of England, andbrought another quartering to the Stanley shield, that of Warren.
Sources:  Harleian Society Publications, Vol. 18, pp. 54/5/6, 52/53,72/3, 84/5.
     Croston's Co. Fam., Lancaster and Cheshire.
     Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, pp. 116, 200-1.
     Ormerod's History of County Chester, Vol. 1, pp. 426-430, 475; Vol.3,  pp. 306, 393-395.
     Burke's Royal Families of England, Scotland and Wales. Pedigrees:CLXIII, CVIII, XXXI.
     Burke's Landed Gentry (1939), American Families, Vol. 3, pp.2759-2760.

Isabella is heirness of Lathom,  Weiss Ancestry Roots lines 57 and 36 he was Lord Stanley of Latham and Knowseley, Lord lieutenant of Ireland

Cockagnes Complete Peerage "Stanley"  page 250/1 adds that the was constable of chester castle and controller of the household, chamberlain of north wales, and forester of macclesfield In 1445 he is referred to as the Kings Chamberlain. Sir Thomas Stanley, Lord-lieutenant of Ireland, Knight of the Garter, Ist Baron

Sir Thomas was lord-lieutenant of Ireland in 1432, comptroller of the household and chamberlain to Henry VI., Knight of the Garter in 1456, etc. He married Joan Goushill, daughter of Sir Robert Goushill, by whom he had three daughters and four sons.

As a Knight of the Shire Sir Thomas was summoned as Baron Stanley, 20 January, 1456 ( 34th Henry VI ). Joan or Jean's father was Sir Robert Goushill, Knight of Hoveringham, Notts by Elizabeth his wife ( widow of Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk ) and daughter and co-heir of Richard Fitzalim, Earl of Arundel. She was the daughter of Wilham Bohun, Earl of Northampton, Son of Hamphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, by his wife the Princess Elizabeth Plantagenet, daughter of King Edward I.

Sir Thomas's son, Sir William of Holt, was beheaded as a participator in the conspiracy for placing Perkin Warbeck upon the throne. Sir William was the richest subject in the kingdom, having no less than 40,000 marks in ready money; to which circumstances considering the rapacious disposition of Henry VII may be attributed to his destruction more than his political principles.

Another son, Sir John Stanley, married Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Sir Thomas Weever, Knight of Weever, County Chester, and by her acquired that estate. From this Sir Stanley descended Lord Stanley of Alderley.

Contemporaries represent Thomas as inheriting all the admirable qualities of his father and grandfather, being brave in the field of war, wise in the senate, just to his Prince, and an honour to his country.
~0932 - 0980 Robert I Comte deLomme 48 48 ~0971 - 1035/1038 Bernard Roger deCarcassone Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Foix
TITLE: Comte de Conserans, De Bigorre & de Foix
<0973 - 1038 GarsindeOf Bigorre 65 65 ~0995 - Bet. 1027 - 1089 Emma- Parvie dePoitou ~0950 - Bet. 1014 - 1049 Regnier IV Comte deHainault ~0965 - 1013 Hedwig France 48 48 1610 - 1645 Joan Dabinott 35 35 Jane Dabinott,  Alt Death date: 23 Apr 1655 Norwalk, Fairfield, CT
Jane was noted to be aboard the 'Recovery' which sailed from Weymouth, Dorset, England
Also see:  "Charles the Bald", p. 307 By: Janet Nelson
Source: Burton Spear,  Mary & John 1630, v 17, 1992, p 110
"Jane Dabinot, daughter of John --- Bpt. 12 June 1611, Chardstock, Dorset.  She was possibly the second wife of Thomas Newberry and also the second wife of Rev. John Warham.  If so she married him in 1637 and died 23 Apr. 1655, Windsor, CT."

Source:Ernest Flagg, Genealogical Notes on the Founding of New England, Hartford CT, 1926, p 268-269
  Jane Dabinott?, second wife of Rev. John Warham.  b. ---- perhaps dau. of John and Johane Dabinott of Chardstock, Dorset, Eng. m. about 1637.  d. April 23, 1655 at Norwalk, Conn., at the house of her daughter, Hannah Newberry.  (P) Their children:  1. Abigail, bap. May 27, 1638; m. Thomas Allyn [see under their names].  2. Hepzibah, bap. Aug. 9, 1640; d. y.  3. Sarah, Aug. 28, 1652; d. Dec. 26, 1678; m. May 11, 1664, Return Strong.  He m. (2), May 23, 1689, Margaret, dau. of Benjamin Newberry; son of Thomas Newberry and granddau. of Matthew Allyn.  4. Esther, bap. Dec. 8, 1644; d. Feby. 10, 1736, in her 92nd year; m. Sept. 29, 1659, Rev. Eleazer Mather of Northampton, Mass; m. (2) Mar. 8, 1670, Rev. Solomon Stoddard, his successor.  Their dau. Esther, m. Rev. Timothy Edwards, first pastor of East Windsor and became the mother of the Rev. Jonathan Edwards. (N. E. Reg., p. 20 of vol. 6.)  (P) Mrs Warham had been the widow of Thomas Newberry .
~0958 - 1003 Herman II Swabia 45 45 ~1215 Simon deDriby ~1012 - 1084 Gerald II deGeneva 72 72 ~1242 - 1299 Ralph 1st Baron Basset 57 57 ~1020 - Bet. 1044 - 1114 Gisela ~1030 - 1060 Thietburga deFaucigny 30 30 ~0993 - 1027 Ulf Thorgilsson Jarl of denmark 34 34 ~0997 Estrid Svendsdatter Princess of denmark ~0936 - Bet. 1012 - 1033 Thorgils Styrbjornsson  Sprakalegg Sigrid ~0979 - ~1033 Adalbert II Comte deLorraine 54 54 ~0950 - Bet. 1002 - 1045 Judith of Ohningen 1  NAME Judith /D'Oehningen/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 960
1  DEAT
2  DATE AFT. 980
~0942 - ~0980 Ludwig Von Dagsburg 38 38 1  NAME Louis /De Dagsbourg/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 950
1  DEAT
2  DATE UNKNOWN
Bet. 967 - 994 - 1014 Ragneda of Ohningen 0840 - UNKNOWN Hedwige of Friuli 0910 - 0986 Harald deCrepon 76 76 Sources: Antiquities of Shropshire, Vol. 4; Norr; RC 166; Kraentzler 1156, 1194, 1443, 1486. Herbastus de Crepon, Forester of Arques. K: Herbastus "The Dane." Antiquities:Quidame genere Dansorum. 1.  Stuart, Roderick W.  _Royalty for Commoners_.  2nd Edition. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1992; line 166-33.  He was the Forester of Arques. Harald refused to accept the crown until he had first performed his father's obsequies with all the magnificence becoming his high rank. One of his earliest was the conquest of Norway, which became a province of Denmark. Styrbear, King of Sweden, solicited the aid of King Harold in one of his wars, and to enforce his request he brought along with him Gyntha, his sister, a lady of admirable beauty. The stratagem had the intended effect; Harold Bluetooth became enamored and married her. The progress of Christianity gained some headway during his reign, and the King received baptism, and erected a splendid church. His daughter Gunilda married Richard I, Duke of Normandy. 1006 - Bet. 1036 - 1097 Aimon I Comte deVienne 1008 - Bet. 1036 - 1102 Bertha Countess of Flanders Alversa Malet Bet. 930 - 965 - Bet. 962 - 1053 Crispin deBec 0967 - 1015 Godfrey Comte deBrionne et D'Eu 48 48 1  NAME Godfrey Count D'Eu & /Brionne/
1  NAME Godfrey Comte /D'Eu-Brionne/
1BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 953
2  PLAC Brionne, Normandie
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 969
2  PLAC Brionne, France
1  DEAT
2  DATE ABT. 1015
1  DEAT
2  DATE BET. 1015 - 1040
~0937 - 3 Feb 0994/0995 William II - IV dePoitou 0939 - >1003 Emma deBlois 64 64  Comtesse De Champagne 0919 - 1000 Gynrithe Olafsdatter 81 81 Bet. 941 - 961 - Bet. 966 - 1045 Agnes deVermandois 0837 Oda of Bavaria 0800 - 0844 Harold Klak 44 44 D. <1136 Gillemichael 3rd Earl of Fife Ete ~1205 - 1270 Alan La Zouche 65 65 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron of Ashby
~1230 - 1296 Elena deQuincy 66 66 1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1230
2  PLAC Winchester, England
1  DEAT
2  DATE BEF. 1296
1110 - <1137 Matilde De Cuiseaux 27 27 ~1182 - <1238 Roger La Zouche 56 56 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Sheriff Of Devonshire ~1179 - AFT 28 Jan 1231/1232 Maragaret deBiseth Walter Marshall 5th Earl of Pembroke D. ~0613 Iago ap Beli of Gwynedd ~1135 - >1186 Adeliza de Dunstanville 51 51 1109 - UNKNOWN Otto Prince Of Austria ~1159 Aline deGai ~1123 - DECEASED Margaret Verch Caradog ~1073 Nesta Verch Rhys Princess of Wales
Princess Nesta was a very remarkable woman. She is sometimes referred to as the "mother of the Irish invasion" since her sons, by various fathers, and her grandsons were the leaders of theinvasion. She had, in the course of her eventful life, two lovers, two husbands, and many sons and daughters. Her father is quoted as saying that she had 10children as a result of her matrimonial escapades, eight sons and two daughters, among them William fitzGerald de Windsor. One of her lovers was King Henry Iof England. Some years before she married Gerald, her father, the fierce old Prince of South Wales, was fighting the English under Henry, (then the Prince andlater King). Henry succeeded in taking the lovely Nesta as hostage. By this royal lover, she had two sons; Meyler fitzHenry and the celebrated Robert of Gloucester. It would seem that Gerald, busily engaged in military business, could have had no peace about his wife, since she was clever as well as beautiful, andevery warrior seems to have fallen in love with her. In 1095, Gerald led an expedition against the Welsh on the borders of what is now Pembrokeshire. In 1100, he went to Ireland to secure for his lord, Arnulf Montgomery, the hand of thedaughter of King Murrough in marriage. He was the first of the Geraldines to set foot in Ireland, where they were later to rule like kings. Later, Arnulf joined in a rebellion against the King, was deprived of his estates and exiled in1102. Then the King granted custody of Pembroke Castle to Gerald. Later, he wasappointed president of the County of Pembrokeshire.

But it was Nesta that occupied the center of their stage during their marriage. Her beauty continued to excite wonder and desire throughout Wales. At Christmas in 1108,Cadwgan, Prince of Cardigan, invited the native chieftains to a feast at Dyvet(St. David's). Nesta's beauty was a subject of conversation. She excited the curiosity of Owen, the son of Prince Cadwgan, who resolved to see her. She was his cousin, so that the pretense of a friendly visit was easy. He successfully obtained admission with his attendants into Pembroke Castle. Her beauty -- it waseven greater than he expected -- excited his lust. He determined to carry heroff! In the middle of the night, he set fire to the castle, and his followers surrounded the room where Gerald and Nesta were sleeping. Gerald was awakened bythe noise and about to discover the cause, but Nesta, suspecting some /treason, persuaded him to make his escape. She pulled up a board and let her husband escape down a drain by a rope. Then Owen broke open the door, seized Nesta and two of her sons, and carried them off to Powys, leaving the castle in flames. Owen had his way with Nesta, (historians say that one of her ten children was his), though whether she yielded from desire or force was uncertain. But at her request, Owen hastened to send back the two sons to Gerald. When King Henry heardof Nesta's abduction, he was furious. He regarded it as an injury almost personal, since Gerald was not only his steward, but his particular friend. The abduction of Nesta led to a war, which resulted in her return to her husband, and Owen fled to Ireland. Gerald took a conspicuous role in the fighting. In 1116, Henry ordered Owen, who had returned to Wales, to apprehend Gruffuyd, son of Rhys ap Tewdyr. As he passed through a wood on his march to join up with the royalforces, Owen seized some cattle. The owners of the cattle, as they fled, met Gerald, Constable of Pembroke. Gerald was also on his way to join the royal forces. When the cattle owners requested his assistance, he was only too delightedto have the opportunity for revenge for the insult to his honor done by Owen'sabduction of Nesta. He lost no time in pursuing Owen, found him, and a skirmishfollowed. Owen was slain, an arrow piercing his heart, and Gerald's honor was avenged.
Gerald died about 1135.

Nest (who also [in addition to Gerald fitz Walter] had by Stephen,Constable of Cardigan, a son (Robert fitz Stephen) and by Henry I anotherson (Henry, killed 1158, father of Meiler fitz Henry), daughter of Rhysap Tudor Mawr, Prince of South Wales.  [Burke's Peerage, p. 1679]
~1108 - 1190 Walter Ap Richard FitzPons de Clifford 82 82 Matilda ~1096 - DECEASED Tirell deManiers ~1015 - 1060 Hugh V "Le debonair" de Lusignan 45 45 ~0986 - <1047 Bernard deLa Marche 61 61 1005 - 1035 Raymond I Berenger 30 30 Count of Barcelona ~0995 - 1026 Sancha Sanchez of Castile 31 31 0845 - 0939 Judith of Friuli 94 94 0970 - 1032 Dalmace I deSemur 62 62 <1595> Abigail Searle 1020 - 1059 Frederick Graf Von Formbach 39 39 Ralphe de Rockley ~1211 Loretta La Zouche ~1157 - 1190 Alan La Zouche 33 33 ~1160 Alice deBelmeis ~1110 Phillip deBelmeis 1135 Geoffrey La Zouche ~1130 Hawise Fergant 1080 Gilbert Seigneur deL'Aigle ~1111 Constance Princess deBretagne 1096 - 1147 Conan III Duc deBretagne 51 51 Unknown Concubine ~1283 - 1328 Robert deHoland 45 45 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
Name Suffix:<NSFX> 1st Baron Holand
1  NAME Robert /DeHoland/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1270
2  PLAC Upholland, Lancashire, England
1  DEAT
2  DATE 15 OCT 1328
Bet. 1284 - 1290 - Bet. 31 May 1341 - 1349 Maud La Zouche 1267 - 1313 Alan La Zouche 46 46 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 1st Baron Zouche 1267 - 1314 Eleanor deSeagraves 47 47 1242 - 1285 Roger La Zouche 43 43 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Zouche ~1250 - <1276 Ela deLongespee 26 26 ~0964 - 1037 Robert of Evreux 73 73 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1085 - UNKNOWN Julienne Du Perche 0953 - 0993 Cadell Ap Einion 40 40 0977 - 0994 Tewdwr Mawr Ap Cadell 17 17 Sources:
Young; Kraentzler 1446; History of Morgan Family. Twdwr, Tewdwr-Mawr, Tudor, Tewdor, Theodore.
Young: Tewdr Mawr, prince of Deheubarth.
History:
"Twdwr-Mawr gave his name to the Twdwr (Tudor) family of Wales from which the name Henry Tudor, who established the Tudor line of English monarchs when he ascended the throneas King Henry VII after the Battle of Bosworth Field. The dynasty also included King Henry VII and Queen Elizabeth I. One of Twdwr-Mawr's sons was Rhys."Died 994. K: Tudor ap Cadwell. Slain at Pen Rhys in 1089. Lotsa difference redeath. His name is variously given as Twdwr, Tewdwr-Mawr, Tudor, Tewdor, Theodore. Bartrum, Peter C.  Welsh Genealogies, AD 300-1400.  University of Wales Press, 1978; "Tewdwr Mawr". Morgan, Dennis.  A History of the Morgan Family.
1020 - 1093 Rhys Ap Tewdwr Mawr 73 73 Anst. Roots: Princeof South Wales. Roots also gives name as Rhys ap Tudor Mawr.
(See J.E. LLoyd's History of Wales for his ancestry).
King of Deheubarth, 1078.
Bartrum, Peter C.  Welsh Genealogies,AD 300-1400_.  University of
Wales Press, 1978; "Rhys ap Tewdwr 1", page 776.
Dictionary of National Biography.  Killed in battle with forces led by
Bernard de Neufmarche in 1093.
Weis, Frederick Lewis.  Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists.  6th Ed.
Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1988.  Name given
as Rhys ap Tudor Mawr, Prince of South Wales.
Weis,Frederick Lewis.  Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists.
Seventh Edition.  Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc.,
1992; Line 178-1: Rhys ap Tudor Mawr, Prince of South Wales, d. 1093; md
Gwladus, dau of Rhiwallon ap Cynfyn of Powys.
CP X 11; DWB, pp 837, 840.  See J.E. Lloyd's History of Wales II 767 for his ancestry.
~1041 Gwladys Verch Rhiwallon Sources: A. Roots 178; Young; Kraentzler 1151a, 1447; History of Morgan Family.
Also spelled Gualadis. K: Gwaladus (Gladys) verch Rhiwallon..
Young: Gwladus of Powys.
Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of the Morgan Family_.
Bartrum, Peter C.  _Welsh Genealogies, AD 300-1400_.  University of
Wales Press, 1978; "Rhys ap Tewdwr 1", pages776 and 47 (Powys).

Her marriage to Walter Fitz Other is indicated in many sources.However it is not backed by Burke's Peerage.  Additionally her daughter Nesta is documented to be the wife of Walter's son Gerald Fitz Walter which would not have been likely if Gerald's mother were Gwladus.  She may have been mother of some of Walter's children, instead of Beatrice.
~1140 - >1226 Walter deRiDelisford 86 86 ~1140 Amabilis FitzHenry 1202 - <1254 Gilbert deSeagrave 52 52 1  BIRT
2  DATE 1202
~1180 Julian ~1176 - 1241 Steven deSeagrave 65 65 ~1182 Rohese Le despencer 1065 - 1116 Ramiro Sanchez Lord of Moncon 51 51 ~1160 - 1201 Gilbert deSeagrave 41 41 ~1122 Philip FitzRobert deGai ~1138 deBerkeley ~1104 - 1156 Alan de Dunstanville 52 52 ~1074 - >1114 Adelaide de Lisle 40 40 ~1114 - ~1166 Hereward III "The Wake" Of Mercia 52 52 Name Suffix:<NSFX> De Seagrave 1060 - DECEASED Hereward II Earl Of Mercia William deMoton Alice deChatham 1114 - 1162 Beatrice deMortaigne 48 48 1078 - UNKNOWN Christina deVivar Lineage Sources:
     Allstrom's Genealogical Dict., Vol. 2, pp. 612-3-4-5.
     Williams' Historians' Hist. of the World, Vol. 10, p. 58
~1090 Isabel FitzRichard 1062 - 1107 Richard Fitz Richard de Clare 45 45  Abbot of Ely 1202 Joan deVernon Redvers 1086 - ~1113 William deBriwere 27 27 1060 - ~1085 Broyo deBriwere 25 25 1036 Radulph deBriwere ~1014 Ansculf ~1040 Lesceline ~1020 - ~1087 William Paynel 67 67 1026 - 1099 Rodrigo Diaz "El Cid Campeador" deVivar 73 73 The Cid of history, though falling short of the poetical ideal which thepatriotism of his countrymen has so long cherished, is still the foremostman of the heroical period of Spain--the greatest warrior produced out ofa long struggle between Christian and Moslem, and the perfect type of theCastilian of the 12th Century. Rodrigo Diaz, called de Bivar, from theplace of his birth, better known by the title given him by the Arabs asthe Cid (El Seid, the lord) and El Campeador, the Champion par excellencewas of noble family. He is the most famous warrior in Spanish history andthe history of Mediaeval Spain without the Cid would be something morebarren than the Iliad without Achilles. Shortly after his marriage, theCid was sent to collect tribute from the King of Seville, whom he foundengaged in war with Abdullah, the King of Granada. His subsequent actionsserved to kindle against him the rancour of his enemies and the jealousyof the King of Castile, and the king took advantage of his absence tobanish him from Castile. Henceforth Rodrigo Diaz began to live the lifeof the soldier of fortune which has made him famous, sometimes fightingunder the Christian banner, sometimes under Moorish, but always for hisown hand. Among the enterprises of the Cid the most famous was againstValencia, then the richest and most flourishing city of the peninsula,and an object of cupidity to both Christian and Moslem. He took Valenciaafter a siege of nine months on June 5, 1094, and ruled for four yearswith vigor and justice. At length he suffered a crushing defeat and theblow was fatal to the aged Campeador, who died of anger and defeat inJuly, 1099. His widow maintained Valencia four years against the Moors,but was at last compelled to evacuate the city, taking with her the bodyof the Cid to be buried in the monastery of San Pedro at Cardena, in theneighborhood of Burges. The bones have since been removed to the townhall of Burges. Philip II tried to get him canonized, but Rome objectedand not without reason. His true place in history is that of the greatestof Guerrilles, the perfect type of that sort of warrior, of which thesoil of Spain has been most productive. The Cid of Romance, the Cid of aThousand battles, legends and dramas, the Cid as apotheosized inliterature, the Cid invoked by good Spaniards in every national crisis,whose name is ever inspiration to Spanish patriotism is a very differentcharacter from the historical Rodrigo Diaz--the freebooter, the rebel,the consorter of infidels and enemies of Spain. His wife outlived him 5years and was buried near him in Burges. He had two daughters, oneChristina married the infante Ramire of Navarre, the other, Maria Elvira,married Raymond IV (Raymond Berenger III) of Barcelona. Through her theCid became the ancestor of the later royal dynasty of Spain. D. <1194 Gervase dePaganel William Ramsey 1090 - ~1154 William de Arches 64 64  Lord Of Thorp Arches ~1094 Ivetta ~1059 - ~1115 Osbern deArches 56 56  Domesday Tenant of Yorkshire & Lincolnshire 1215 - 1239 Gilbert Thakel 24 24 ~1205 - ~1230 Nicholas deRotherfield 25 25 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1015 - ~1079 Manfredo Margrave deSavona 64 64 ~1045 - >1084 Maldred Of Carlisle 39 39 ~1035 - ~1064 Teto Di Savona 29 29 1056 - 1104 Jimena deOviedo 48 48 Jimena or Ximene was the daughter of the Count of Oviedo, andgranddaughter on the mother's side of Alphonse V. King of Oveido andLeon. The original deed of the marriage-contract is extant. ~1005 Marie deMeulan 0990 Estafania of Barcelona 1010 - 1079 Godeheut Borrell de Barcelona 69 69 ~1180 - ~1205 William deLisle 25 25 1015 - 1038 Roger D'Espagne de Toeni 23 23 ~1139 - ~1180 Hugh Bardolf 41 41 1st Lord Bardolf Of Waddington

Hugh Bardolf the elder, d. c 1176, lord of Waddington, Riseholm, andScothern, co. Lincoln, brother and heir of Hamelin Bardolf, living 1162,lord of Bungay, Suffolk.  The parentage of Hugh and Hamelin Bardolf isunknown, but they were closely related to Thomas Bardolf, ancestor of theLords Bardolf of Wormegay.  [Ancestral Roots, Line 132d-28

_____________________

Hugh Bardolf, d. c 1176, of Waddington, co. Lincoln, & Isabel de Condet.[Ancestral Roots, Line 184a-10]
1156 Isobel de Condet ~0970 - 1056 Manasses II Comte deRethel 86 86 ~0990 - ~1050 Manasses III Comte deRethel 60 60 ~0940 - >0990 Manasses I Comte deRethel 50 50 1118 - 1147 Guy deMontgomery Count of Ponthieu 29 29 Guy died during the lifetime of his father. He undertook a crusade withLouis the Young to the Holy Land, but on the way there he died at Ephesusin 1147. He was illustrious for his valor, experience and other virtues.By his wife, Ida de Saint Pol, who was living in 1180, he had John, Guyand Agnes. ~0988 - ~1056 Judith deRoucy 68 68 ~0975 Guillaume de Gommets ~0993 Thibault Seigneur deMonthlery D. DECEASED Elizabeth deCrecy ~0970 - 1020 Bouchard II deMonthlery Seigneur De Montmorency 50 50 ~0956 - ~0985 Gisilbert Comte deRoucy 29 29 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Vicomte De Rheims
1  NAME Gilbert /De Roucy/
1  BIRT
2DATE ABT. 965
2  PLAC Reims, Marne, France
1  DEAT
2  DATE ABT. 985
2  PLAC Reims, Marne, France
0992 - >1035 Beatrix deHainault 43 43 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comtesse De Hainault
1  NAME Beatrice Von Hennegau Comtesse/De Hainault/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 992
2  PLAC Duchy of Lower Hainault, Holland
1059 Henri I deLorraine ~1026 - 1 Mar 1103/1104 Botho Von Bottenstein 0938 Eleanor Verch Gwerystan 1  NAME Ellinor Verch /Gwenston/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 911
2  PLAC of Powys
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1446; History of Morgan Family.
K: Eleanor of Powys.

SOURCES:
1.  Morgan, Dennis.  _A History of the Morgan Family_.
1040 - 1073 Sancho Garces 33 33 0775 - 0810 Halfdan Haithabu 35 35 Elinor Verch Gwerystan 1000 Gwenlyian Verch Gwen ~1069 Catrin (Gwladys) Verch Iestyn D. 1086 Toirrdelbach O'Brien Name Suffix:<NSFX> King of Munster & Ireland
1  NAME Toirrdelbach O'Brien Kingof Munster & /Ireland/
D. 1023 Teige (Terrence) O'Brien 1  NAME Teige /O'Brien/ 1060 - 1087 Hermengarde De Bourbon 27 27 ~1072 - 1146 Ermengarde D'Anjou 74 74 ~1040 Agnes deBeaugency ~1025 - 1081 Lancelin I deBeaugency 56 56 Aldeberga D. UNKNOWN Costanza deMaranon 0954 Judith ~1208 - ~1288 Henry deTrafford 80 80 1044 - 1105 Owain Ap Edwin 61 61 Sources: A. Roots 239; Kraentzler 1406, 1409; History of Morgan Family and Dictionary of National Biography;Young.Anst. Roots: Owain ap Edwin. Young: Owain the Traitor ap Edwin, lord of Tegaingl. Died 1104.  Owen ap Eadwine, Prince of Aberffraw, Lord of Snowden. ~0950 - ~1010 Elystan Glodrydd Ap Cuhelyn 60 60 [De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Young; Cutter's Mass., P. 61; Kraentzler 1407.
K:Elystan ap Cuhelyn. End of line for Butter and Kraentzler.
Young: Elystan Glodrudd, died about 1010.

SOURCES:

1.  Bartrum, Peter C.  _Welsh Genealogies AD 300-1400.  University of Wales
Press, 1978; pages 42 and 46, and "ElystanGlodrydd 1", page 354.
Elystgan Glodyr ap Cuhelyn.
2.  _Cutter's Massachusetts_, page 61.
~1024 - ~1099 Unknown Gytha 75 75 [De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: A. Roots 250; Kraentzler 1370; Ayers, p324, 852.
Roots: Gytha.
K: Gytha, born about 1024, Hereford, England.
Ayers: Getha.
~1291 - 1347 Roger Pilkington 56 56 ~0974 - 9 Feb 1010/1011 Bernard I Duke of Saxony 0978 - 1011 Hildegarde Von Stade 33 33 ~1033 - 1057 Ralph deSudley 24 24 Earl of Hereford
Sources: A. Roots 235-21, 250-21; Rice; Kraentzler 1370; Ayers, p324, 852. Roots calls him Earl of Hereford in one place and "of Sudeley and Toddingham, Gloucestershire, and Chilvers Coton, Warwickshire.  Descendants in Roots Line 235: Son Harold de Sudeley, grandson John de
Sudeley.
~0944 Adele de Senlis Sources: A. Roots, 250-19; Kraentzler 1370. Roots: Adele : Adalais de Vermandois. D. UNKNOWN Sancho deMaranon D. 1579 Elizabeth Cogging ~1085 Miss 1015/1016 - 1091 Adelaide De Suza 1012/1016 - DECEASED Otto Comte deMaurienne Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Savoy ~0950 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosela Susanna of Italy  Rosele Princess of  Italy
Sources: RC 141, 184, 332; Coe; A. Roots 101, 146; Kraentzler 1157, 1218, 1244, 1258; AF; Pfafman. Princess of Italy. Heiress of Montreuil-sur-Mer. Roots: Rosela or Susanna, married Robert before 988 as her second husband.
Repudiated 992. K: Rozalie-Susanna d'Ivree. Also Suzanne-Rosalie d'Italie. Also Rozala- Susanna de Italie-Ivrea.
Two death dates listed by RC in 1003: 13 Dec. and 26 Jan. (not 1002 and 1003 or 1003 and 1004).  Pfafman says died 1 Jan. 1003. Will settle for Jan. 1003. Called Susanna, Suzanne, Rosala, Roselle.
1005 Rixinde De Narbonne ~0964 Ermentrude Von Gleiberg 1  NAME Ermentrude /Von Gleiberg/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 964
2  PLAC Luxembourg


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 3, 351, 353; A. Roots; Kraentzler 1157, 1218, 1244, 1253; AF.
Also of Carolingian descent. Name Ermentrude (or Ermentraude) not fully
established, says Roots. RC 3 calls her N.N. but 58 and 353 call her Ermentrude
von Gleiberg, heiress of Gleiberg.
K: Ermentrude/Irmengard vonGleiburg.
K-1222 calls her N.N. von der Wetterau.
K-1244 calls her Gerberge de Boulogne.
1015 - 1091 Adelais Di Suza 76 76 Teresa Alfonsez of Portugal Elizabeth Austin Richard AUSTIN of Lunenburg Co, VA, signed his will on March 31, 1759. The will was recorded Dec 4, 1759. Heirs listed in the will are: his Wife (no name given), two youngest children Thomas and Euziah, Elizabeth VERNON, Sarah JOICE, Samuel DAVID, Thomas JOHN, Peron ALDAY, also David RICE of Hanover County. Some of the land bequeathed was on Terry's Run and on Sandy Creek. Executors of the will were Capt. Charles ANDERSON and James ANDERSON of Cumberland County and Joseph MORTON. Witnesses were Nathan AUSTIN, George CALDWELL and Major M. WEATHERFORD. 1135 - UNKNOWN Beatrice de Saint Pol 1040 Isabel deMontlhery 1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1040
~1032 Paula du Maine 0924 Lambert D'Autun 1085 - 1139 Walram III deLorraine 54 54 John Warham 1033 - 1095 Stephanie de Provence 62 62 ~1197 Thomas deLondres Katherine Soper John Miller See:  Visitation Pedigrees ~0920 Hildegarde De Westerburg Sources: RC 104, 141, 312; A. Roots; Kraentzler 1172, 1219. : Hildegarde de Westerbourg.

PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. UNKNOWN Anselme Count of St. Pol 1017 - 1061 Floris Count of Holland 44 44 ~1180 William Wodehouse 1002 - 1060 Eudes de Savoie 58 58 D. DECEASED Philip dePrenDergast 1078 - 1129 William III deForcalquier 51 51 1106 Josserane deLa Flotte ~0985 William II deProvence 1104 - 1150 Bertrand deForcalquier 46 46 1130 - 1208 William IV deForcalquier 78 78 1110 - 1182 Ida de Saint Pol 72 72 1156 Garsinde De Forcalquier 1154 - 1224 Raimond deSabran 70 70 ~1524 - 1612 Rawlin 88 88 ~0990 - 1035 Dreux Drogo deVexin 45 45 ~0990 - 21 Feb 1029/1030 Ogive (or Otgiva) of Luxemburg 1  NAME Otgive /De Luxembourg/
1  NAME Octviga Cunigunde D'Ardennes of /Luxembourg/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 966
2  PLAC Flandres, France
1  BIRT
2  DATE986
2  PLAC Luxembourg
1  DEAT
2  DATE 21 FEB 1029/30
2  PLAC Flandres, France


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 141, 353; Coe; Kraentzler 1157, 1218,1244, 1258, 1265; AIS; AF;
Pfafman.
AIS: Ogive, daughter of Friedrich.
K: Ogive/Otgiva or Cunegonde de Luxembourg.
She was the first wife of Baldwin IV.
1041 - 1063 Ramirez Aragon 22 22 1054 - 1129 Adelaid de Forcalquier 75 75 1052 - 1092 Armengol Ermengaud IV Urgel 40 40 ~1050 Miss (Research):DEADEND: ~0905 - 0973 Hermann Billung 68 68 Sources: RC 141, 312; Kraentzler 1171, 1219, 1258; A. Roots; AF. RC: Duke of Saxony and Margrave of Billungermark. Built Luneburg. Herman Billung, Duke de Saxe. And "duc Militaire de la Saxe" (Military
Leader ofthe Saxons).

Burke says he was Conrad I, le Pacifique, Roi de Bourgogne Transjurane.

PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; DUKE OF SAXONY.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0958 - 1004 Garcia Sanchez II The Tremulous King of Pamlona 46 46 ~0987 Gerberge deBourgogne 1003 - 1051 Richard II deRoDes 48 48 ~0922 - 0998 Siegfried (or Siegfroi I) Duke of Luxemburg 76 76 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count, Luxemburg
[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 3, 202, 316, 353; Kraentzler 1157, 1172, 1174, 1180, 1195; 1211,
1212, 1460; Pfafman; AF; A. Roots.
Count and/or Seigneur de Luxemburg. Pfafman says First Count of Luxemburg.
AF record says married about 964.
RC 316: Siegfried, Count in the Moselgau and of Luxemburg. Lay Abbot of
Echternach.
K: Siegfroi I, Count de Moselle (Moselgau), Seigneur de Luxembourg.
Canute England D. 1134 Alphonso I Aragon Rywallon ap Conwyn ~1066 Anna England ~1004 - 1049 Goda England 45 45 ~0965 - 1019 Frederick I Duke of Luxemburg 54 54 [De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 3, 58, 29, 353; Kraentzler 1157, 1218, 1222, 1244, 1253, 1258;
A. Roots and Pfafman.
Roots says Count of Salm and Luxemburg.And Pfafman says he was the second
Count of Luxemburg and Count of Mosell.
RC: Count in the Moselgau and of Luxemburg, Seigneur of Gleiberg.
K: Friedrich/Frederic von Luxemburg, Count de Luxembourg and Moselgau
(Moselle). In K-1258,there is error, with this man married to his mother.
~1031 - 1120 Ragnaillt (or Ragnhildr) Ingen Olaf 89 89 1  NAME Rhanullt /O'Olaf/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1031
2  PLAC Dublin, Ireland


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Young; Kraentzler 1406, 1409; AF; A. Roots 239; History of Morgan
Family.
Roots: Ragnaillt, married Cynan ap Iago, Princeof North Wales, exiled in
Dublin.
Young: Ragnallt.
K: Ranhult (Raignall).
0970 - 1035 Jimena Fernandez 65 65 ~0994 - 1034 Olaf (or Auloed) MacSihtric 40 40 Name Suffix:<NSFX> King of Dublin
1  NAME Olaf /Sihticson/
1  BIRT
2  DATE994
2  PLAC Dublin, Ireland
1  DEAT
2  DATE Deceased


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Krantzler 1406, 1409; A. Roots 239; Dictionary of National
Biography; Young; Simpson.
Roots: Olaf of Dublin. Probably the Olaf slain by the "Saxons" while en route
to Rome on a pilgrimage in 1034.
Dictionary: Welsh biographer of Gruffydd ap Cynan says Auloed was the King of
Dublin and a fifth of Ireland and of Man and many other islands. He was a
descendant of Harald Haarfagr. Auloed's wife was the daughter of King Brian, so
Gruffydd sprang from the noblest royal lines of Wales, Norway and Ireland.
Simpson calls him Anlaf (Olaf) MacSihtric and says also known as Sihtricsson.
She also gives vital stats.
Young: Olaf, King of Dublin.
K: Anlaf (Olaf) MacSihtric (Sihtricsson), King ofDublin. Died 1034 on a
pilgrimage to Rome.
1093 Bran Ap Dinewal ~0970 - DECEASED Gwerystan Ap Gwaithfoed [De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1408; Dakota; Clark.
K: Gwerstan ap Gwaethfoed.
Dakota: Gwerystan ap Gwaethvoeo Vawr (Mawr?).
Clark: Gwerystan ap Gwaithfoed.
1072 - 1139 Simon I Duc deLorraine 67 67 1074 - 1160 Adelheid de Louvain 86 86 1020 - 1101 Anna Dalassene 81 81 1050 - 1088 Hedwig Countess of Formbach 38 38 1030 - 21 Feb 1115/1116 Gertrud Von Haldensleben Elizabeth Bernake 0949 - >1063 Emma Venaissin 114 114 0935 - 0994 Sancho Abarca II King of Pamlona 59 59 1036 - 1077 Andronicos Dukas 41 41 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Protovestiarios ~1099 - DECEASED Theodoros Kastamonites 1041 - 1081 Manolis Angelos 40 40 ~1058 - 1120 Otto III Von Wolfratshausen 62 62 ~1195 Miss deAshton 1096 Theodora Comnenus 1000 Robert Seigneur deChateau-sur- Loire 1016 - 1063 Guigues VI d'Albon 47 47 1110 - 1185 Constantinos Angelus 75 75 TITLE: Constantinus (Andronicus) of Byzantium, Military Leader against the Normans Miss Erenburg 0940 - UNKNOWN Urraca deCastile ~1060 Ailward 1200 - 1270 Roger dePilkington 70 70 Irmtrude von Avalgau [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1157, 1253, 1461.
K: Irmtrude von Avalgau and Irmtrude von  Gueldre.
1066 - 1136 Irini Dukaina 70 70 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Augusta
1  NAME Irene /Ducas/
~0970 Nest Verch Cadell [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408.

SOURCES:
1.  Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, page 47 (Powys).
Nest verch Cadell ap Brochwel.
~0993 - DECEASED Cynllyn Ap Blaidd ~1063 - DECEASED Hunydd Verch Einudd [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Hunydd verch Eunydd.
~1035 Einudd Gwerngey Ap Morein [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Eunydd ap Gwernwy.
~1015 - DECEASED Morien Morgan Gwerngwy [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Gwernwy a[ Gwergeneu.
~1012 - DECEASED Gwenllian Verch Rhys [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Gwellian verch Rhys.
0912 - 0970 Garcia Sanchez I King of Pamlona 58 58 0974 - UNKNOWN Emmeline deChartres ~1035 Eva Verch Llewelyn [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Eva verch Llewelyn.
Llewelyn Ap Dolphyn [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1408. K: Llewelyn ap Dolphyn.
1566 Agnes Hooper Gwenllian Verch Einion [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1407. K: Gwenllian verch Einion.

SOURCES:
1.  Bartrum, Peter C.  _Welsh Genealogies AD 300-1400_.  University of Wales
Press, 1978; page 42.
1044 - 23 Jan 1114/1115 Thierry Duc D' Alsace et Lorraine 1015 - 1067 Ioannis (Isaak) Comnenus 52 52 1042 Jean deLa Fleche 1087 - 1152 Adolph Von Saffenberg 65 65 1039 - 1090 Baldwin FitzGilbert 51 51 Note: Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert, of Brionis or Moels, 2nd son, a follower of the Conqueror, called Vicecomes, and Baldwin of Exetor. He was Seigneur de Meules anddu Sap, in Normandy. After the death of his father, who was murdered by the sonof Giroie, he and his brother Richard, who was ancestor of the de Clares, tookrefuge at the court of the Duke of Flanders. Duke William afterwards restoredto Baldwin his estates of Meules and Sap, and to Richard FitzGilbert his estates of Bienfaite and Orbec, portions of their father's lands. Baldwin received from the Conqueror some 150 lordships in Devonshire, Hemington and Parlock and Apley in Somerset, and Iwerne in Dorset. Okehampton was the capital seat of his barony. He was Sheriff of Dorset 1080-1086 probably until his death. (After theConquest the sheriffs were still the King's representatives in the county. As the King was nearly absolute, the sheriff was very powerful. The sheriff had important duties: 1. Finance. He farmed the shire at a fixed sum a year. 2. Justice. He was the King's representative in the shire court, and he sat there as president, or as a royal judge. 3. War. It was the duty of the sheriff to summon the forces of the county. The great lords led their own retainers, but the sheriff led all the rest of the troops.--Montague's Elements of English Constitutional History. E. E. W. Very different from modern sheriffs. This was from a textbook at Washington University.) In Domesday Book he is called Baldwin of Exeter,or Baldwin, the Sheriff. He married Emma or Albreda, niece of the Conqueror. He died 1090. They had Robert, Richard and William. Maelcorcre Ingen Dunlaing O'Muiredag of Leinster 1  NAME Maelcorcre of /Leinster/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Roots 239; Young; Dictionary of National Biography.
Roots: Maelcorcre, daughter of Dunlang, King of Leinster.
Young: Maelcorcre of Leinster, daughter of Dunlang, King of Leinster.
Dictionary: Maelcorcre, a daughter of King Brian.
Kraentzler 1406 & 1409 and Simpson call her Failcoxere of Leinster, born
about 1000.
0916 - UNKNOWN Andregoto Galindez Countess of Aragon 0952 Heinrich I Von Stade Magdalen D. DECEASED Constance 'Wen' Verch Cadwgon Edwin Ap Gronwy [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Young.   Young: Edwin of Tegaingl.
*******
SOURCES:
1.  Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, page 47 (Powys).
~1180 - >1200 Henry deTrafford 20 20 Of Trafford, Lancashire England.  His name appears on deeds during the reigns of Henry II and Richard I. ~1096 - ~1130 Henry FitzRobert deTrafford 34 34 Nickname:<NICK> Filice Roberti
He with his father received king's peace & protection from Hugh de Massey,
baron of Dunham-Massey.  Of age by 1066.
~1068 - DECEASED Robert FitzRandolph deTrafford Nickname:<NICK> Filius Radulphi
About 1080 he and his father received the king's peace and protection from Hugh de Massy, Baron of Dunham Massy.
~1040 - DECEASED Randolph FitzRandolph deTrafford Nickname:<NICK> Filius Radulphi 1064 - 1136 Robert Fitz Richard de Clare 72 72 Baron Baynard

pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1018, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1110 - 1198 Walter Fitz Robert de Clare 88 88  Lord Baynard Walter FitzRobert, 2nd Lord of Dunmow Castle, who in the controversy between the Earl of Moreton, brother of Richard I, and the Bishop of Ely, Walter adhered to the Bishop, and was given custody of the Castle of Eye in Suffolk. He married 1st Maud, died 1140, daughter ofRichard Lucie, and with her had the lordship of Disce in Norfolk. Married 2nd Margaret de Bohun and dying in 1198 was succeeded by his eldest son, Robert. 0895 - UNKNOWN Toror Urraca Anzarez ~1136 - ~1243 Maude De Lucy 107 107 ~1212 Margaret de Thornton ~1210 - ~1289 William de Molyneux 79 79 ~1610 - 1 Mar 1675/1676 Margaret Cole ~1574 - >1634 Martha 60 60 ~1006 Ingelric England ~1100 - DECEASED Theobald deValoines Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Parham 1031 Adyle deCarlat 1087 Jutta deWasseburg 1078 - 1176 Gregorios Kamateros 98 98 0842 - 0888 Inigo Aristo King of Navarre 46 46 Navarre, formerly a kingdom which included part of France, is now aninland province of northern Spain. The kingdom was formed out of a partof the territory occupied by the Bascones, i. e., the Basques andGascons, who occupied the southern slope of the western Pyrenees and partof the shore of the Bay of Biscay. Its early history is more thanobscure. In recent times attempts have been made to trace the descent ofthe first historic king of Navarre from one Semen Pupus, Duke ofAquitiane, in the 6th century. But we do know that in 884 Alfonso III ofSpain succeeded his father, Ramiro I, as King of Spain. It was throughhis schemes to end the rebellions of Navarre that he eventually lostNavarre to Spain. The name Navarre is derived by Etymologists from Nava,a flat valley surrounded by hills and erri, a region or country. Indigowas elected king in 884 when it became independent from Spain.
King of Navarre through Edward III King of England Sources :
    Allstrom's Dict. of Royal Lineage, Vol. 2, pp. 612-615.
    Williams' Historians History of the World, Vol. 10, pp. 42, 47, 53,etc.
    Koch's Genealogiques Tabellen No. 13, 29, 38, 40.
    Betham's Gen. Tables 254/5/6.
    Harrison's Hist. of Yorkshire (tables in front of book).
    Britannica Enc., Vol. 19, pp. 281/2; Vol. 25, p. 543.
0907 - 0981 Hildouin dePonthieu 74 74 Unknown Hersende Frederick Van Buren 0987 Otto II Swabia 1040 Guillaume D'Arques Amelie deRouen William Malet ~0958 - Bet. 962 - 1048 Haloise deGuines 1  NAME Heloise /De Guines/ 1080 - 1161 Akaris FitzBardolph Of Ravensworth 81 81 1084 - 1119 Alan Fergant 35 35 D. 0895 Aznar Galindo II Count of Aragon 1098 - 1147 Ermengarde D'Anjou 49 49 1130 Wilburga ~1170 Suzanne deWarenne ~1096 - 5 Feb 1169/1170 Robert FitzHardinge ~1100 - ~1170 Roger III deBerkeley 70 70 He had completed the building of the Castle of Berkeley. He suffered a great deal at the hand of Walter, son of Miles, Earl of Hereford, in the wars between Stephen and the Empress Maud. Roger was deprived of the Manor of Berkeley and other lands about 1152, apparently for refusing to recognize the authority of either side, but was soon restored to the Honour of Dursley. D. DECEASED Landri deMontceaux Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count Of Nevers & Auxerre 0978 - 1005 MatildeMahaut De Bourgogne 27 27 ~1239 - 1304 Matilda deLucy 65 65 1155 Hugh deMorville ~1168 Helawise deStuteville D. UNKNOWN Oneca of Pamlona ~1170 - 1231 Richard deLucy 61 61 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Coupland
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1213
D. DECEASED Amabilis FitzWilliam D. DECEASED William "The Noble" FitzDuncan 1137 - ABT 11 Jan 1198/1199 Reynold deLucy Unknown Cecilia ~1126 William deLucy 1238 - <1295 Nicholas deSeagrave 57 57 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1238
2  PLAC Northamptonshire,England
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1295
~1175 - 1254 Robert deChacombe 79 79 1  NAME Stephen (or Robert) /De Chaucombe/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1175
2  PLAC Chacomb, Northamptonshire, England
1149 - ~1200 Hugh deChacombe 51 51 ~1305 - <1331 Alivia deBraose 26 26 0969 - UNKNOWN William "The Great" Duke of Aquitaine ~1297 - <1328 Elizabeth Sully 31 31 1271 Raymond deSully ~1280 - <1326 William deBraose 46 46 1255 - 6 Jan 1289/1290 William deBraose ~1255 Aline (Aliva) Multon 1230 - 1293 Maud deVaux 63 63 1286 - 23 Mar 1321/1322 John deMowbray Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 1135 Anchitel deGrey Bet. 1095 - 1110 Richard deGrey 1088 Anchitel deGrey 0914 - 0984 Gerberge Princess of Germany 70 70 ~1060 Anchitel deGrey 1037 Adeliza FitzOsbern 1024 Adeliza\ Alice de Toeni 1033 John Croi de Grai Note: John, Lord Grey of Groy, married Adela, daughter and co-heir of William FitzOsbert, son of Robert Crispin, Earl of Hereford, whose arms were: Gules a bend argent, over all a fesse or. Robert Crispin's wife was Aldreda, daughter ofRalph de Yvery, whose arms were: Or, three chevronels gules. In Howard's latelypublished "Life of L. J. Grey," the descent of this family is from Rollo to Sir Henry Grey of Turroc. ~1008 - DECEASED Reynald deFalaise Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Croy 1225 - 1294 Thomas III deMulton 69 69 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Lucy 1210 Maud deBurgh 1180 - 1275 John deBurgh 95 95 ~1266 Unknown Miss* 1169 Alice 0774 - 0830 Hunfried Count Of Istria 56 56 1145 - 1205 Ranulph deVaux 60 60 1115 Grecia 1105 - 1165 Hubert deVaux 60 60 1075 Nn. deMunchesney 1065 Robert deVaux 1035 Robert deVaux 1142 John deStuteville John deMontfort 1150 - 1201 Thomas deMulton 51 51 1143 Nn. deBriwere D. UNKNOWN Rudolf II King of Italy 1118 Robert deBriwere 1240 - 1271 Isabelle deClare 31 31 1139 Llywarch 'Goch' Ap Iowerth 1114 Iowerth Ap Cynan 1143 Tangwystyl Verch Llywarch 1115 Rymer (Rhael) Verch Goronwy 1177 Genilles Verch Hoedlyw 1073 - 1124 Goronwy Ap Owain 51 51 1111 Llywarch Ap Bran 1070 Dinewal Ap Tudwal 0916 St. Adelaide Italy 0858 - 0912 Otto Duke Of Saxony 54 54 1031 Tudwal Ap Einudd 1252 - ~1316 Rohese deClare 64 64 The third daughter, Rohese, born in 1252, was married in 1270 toa member of thelesser baronage, Roger de Mowbray, lord of theYorkshire barony of Thirsk (d. 1297). Again, the marriage wasarranged by her mother, the dowager Countess Maud,and herbrother Bogo. 1254 - <1297 Roger deMowbray 43 43 ~1222 - >1267 Ida de Longespee 45 45 ~1236 - 1273 Matilda deBeauchamp 37 37 ~1218 - 1266 Roger deMowbray 48 48 ~1172 - 1266 William deMowbray 94 94 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Lord 1174 - BEF Mar 1223/1224 Avice Agnes D'Aubigny ~1146 - 1190 Nele deMowbray 44 44 ~1148 - ~1203 Mabel FitzPatrick 55 55 0931 - 0971 Dubravka Princess Of Bohemia 40 40 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1122 - DECEASED William FitzPatrick ~1126 Eleanor deManiers ~1119 - 1188 Roger deMowbray 69 69 Margaret de Odyngsells ~1092 - 1139 Walter deGaunt 47 47 ~1092 Matilda deBrittany ~1050 - 21 Apr 1135/1136 Stephen Comte deBretagne Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Penthievre ~1066 - >1135 Hawise Comtesse deGuincamp 69 69 ~1066 - 1129 Nele D'Aubigny 63 63 Scutifer Conquestoris ~1097 - 1154 Gundred deGournay 57 57 0946 - UNKNOWN Gunhilda of Poland 1037 - 1096 Gerard deGournay 59 59 ~1084 Edith deWarren ~0950 - DECEASED William deWarenne Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Warren Nn. deTorta ~1044 - 1100 Amicia deMowbray 56 56 Sources: Falaise Roll, page 6; Kraentzler 1353; Castle Rising Castle booklet.
K: Amicia de Mowbray.
Booklet: Amice. She may have been the aunt of Robert de Mowbray, whose lands
and honours in Normany the Albinis were later to acquire.
Roll: Amicia, sister of Geoffry, bishop of Coutances and of Roger de
Montbray (i.e Mowbray). Mother of William, Richard, Nigel, Humphrey and Ralph.
1024 Adelicia Belvoir de Plessis Sources: Kraentzler 1353, 1412,1594; Castle Rising booklet.
K: Adeliza de Plessis.
KRAENTZLER NOTE: She married twice. Which one first????
Booklet: ________, a sister of Grimald du Plessis.
~1010 - >1056 William D'Aubigny 46 46 Vicomte De Contentin ~0980 - 1045 Niel III Vicomte de Saint Sauveur 65 65 1  NAME Neil Vicomte De /Saint Sauveur/
1  NAME Niel II De /Saint Sauveur/
1BIRT
2  DATE 966
2  PLAC St. Sauveur, Seine-Maritime, France
1  BIRT
2DATE ABT. 970
2  PLAC Aubigny, Brittany, France


Source: Kraentzler 1594.
K: Niel III de St. Saveur, Viscount de Contentin, Seigneur (Lord) of the
Isles, La Marche.
Falaise Roll says a Neel Vicomte de Saint-Sauveur was at Senlac and fought
in the battle of Val-des-Dunes in 1047.
~0985 - DECEASED Adele D'Eu 0900 - 0967 Boleslav I The Cruel Duke of Bohemia 67 67 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1018 Agnes of Cornwall Melisende Du Maine Judicael deNantes 0990 - 1058 Alan Canhiart Comte deCornouaille 68 68 0960 - 1026 Benedict Or Budic Comte deCornouaille 66 66 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Éveque De Quimper 0970 Guinodeon Comtesse de Porhoët 0999 - 7 Jan 1077/1078 Eudes de Bretagne Comte De Penthievre ~0980 - 21 Feb 1033/1034 Hedwig deNormandy 1  NAME /Hedwige/ ~0980 - 1008 Godfrey Geoffrey deBretagne 28 28 ~1000 Osbern Steward of Normandy 1185 - UNKNOWN William deMauduit V Lord Mauduit 1291 - 1343 Roger Pilkington 52 52 ~1295 - 1347 Alice deBury 52 52 ~1126 - 1174 Albert Baron deGresley 48 48 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~0968 - DECEASED Blaidd deGest "Rhudd" Lord Of Gest ~1265 Amery deBarton ~1292 Margaret ~1151 - >1194 Lucy Agnes deAlbrincis 43 43 1170 - <1221 Robert deVere 51 51 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 3rd Earl of Oxford 1175 - 3 Feb 1244/1245 Isabella deBolebec 1160 Margaret deMontfichet 1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1173
2  PLAC Stanstead, Montfichet, Essex, England
D. UNKNOWN Isabel deUrgel ~1147 Milicent 1  DEAT
2  DATE UNKNOWN
~1140 - 1204 Richard deMontfichet 64 64 1119 - Bet. 1186 - 1187 Gilbert deMontfichet 1123 Aveline deLucy 1087 - 1156 William deMontfichet 69 69 1093 Margaret deClare 1151 - 1194 Hugh Baron deBolebec 43 43 ~1090 - ~1164 Walter deBolebec 74 74 1130 Walter II deBolebec Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1055 - 1102 Walter II Giffard 47 47 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Buckingham 1190 - 1263 Alice deNewburgh 73 73 Bet. 1099 - 1106 - 1163 Henry deAlbrincis ~1093 Gunnor Le Bigod 1101 Cecily of Rayleigh 1085/1090 Robert Fitz Suein D. >1086 Suain Essex 1007 - 1071 Robert Essex 64 64 Hawise Basset Isabel Annesley The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 146.  Daughter of Sir Hugh Annesley of Annesley
Knight.
1070 - 1142 Robert deOilly 72 72 ~1226 Nichole deGrey 1190 - 1236 Walcheline deBeauchamp 46 46 ~1005 Foulques D'Aulney 1050 - 1120 Ralph Basset 70 70 BIOGRAPHY: Few families in the early annals of England can boast of a more eminent progenitor than the Bassets, and the descendants of few of the Anglo-Normannobles attained a higher degree of power than those of Ralph Basset (son of Thurstan, the Norman), who was justice of England under King Henry I. We find hisson Ralph, in the reign of Stephen, "abounding in wealth and erecting a strongcastle upon some part of his inheritance in Normandy." Ralph Basset, the justice of England, required none of the artificial aids of ancestry to attain distinction; he had within himself powers sufficient at any period to reach the goalof honour, but particularly to the rude age in which he lived. To his wisdom we are said to be indebted for many salutary laws, and among others for that offrank pledge. Like all the great men of his day, he was a most liberal benefactor to the church. He d. in 1120, leaving issue, Thurstine, Thomas, Richard, Nicholas, and Gilbert. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 26, Basset, Barons Basset, of Welden] 1030 - >1086 Thurstan Basset 56 56 D. 1217 William III de Lanvallel William de Lanvallel Gunnora de Saint Clare Hubert de Saint Clare Walter de Stratton Eugene A. Stratton  Some Stratton Notes English Origins of New England Families" series 2, vol. 3, pp. 378-379
A  Book of Strattons by Harriet Russell Stratton New York: The Grafton Press, 1908
Shotley Parish Records, Suffolk Green Books, Bury St. Edmonds, 1912.
Meredith B. Colket Jr.'s [article] Stratton-Lutterell marriage  TAG 15[1939]:129.


NOTES:
[1] ____ de Stratton: married Isabel (de) Loudham, daughter and heiress
of Sir William (de) Loudham.

?[2] Walter de Stratton: died about 1392; inherited manor of Kirkton alias
Shotley, Suffolk, from Sir William (de) Loudham; married ____.
Alice Walter deBurgh 1194 - 1268 Joan Isabel deMortimer 74 74 Miss England 1157 - 1198 William FitzAldhelm deBurgh 41 41 Aldhelm deMortaigne De Burgo <1084 - 1140 William deBurgo Comte De Mortaigne 56 56 1  NAME William /De Mortaigne/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1060
Rohese deMonmouth 1085 - 1170 Baderon de Monmouth 85 85 Agnes 1025 William Talbot ~1082 Emma deLacy 1114 - 1191 Mor Ingen Muirchertaig O'Toole 77 77 1170 - 1235 Walter deBeauchamp 65 65 1082 - ~1129 Cacht ingen Loigsig of Leix Morda 47 47 D. 1152 Gormflaith ingen Finn O'Caellaide ~1035 Finn O'Caellaide Name Suffix:<NSFX> King of Osraige D. 1098 Dirborgaill deOssory D. 1149 Loigsech O'MordeKing of Loigsi Gormflaith O'Neill O'Neill D. 1097 Amargen O'Morda King of Loigsi Maelind ingen Meic Dairgin D. 1069 Faelen O'Morda King of Loigsi 1148 - 1240 Bertha deBraose 92 92 0855 - 0903 Hedwige 48 48 1089 - 1164 Mouirchertach O'Toole King of Ui Muirdaig 75 75 Sadb ingen Mael Morda O'Domnail D. 1090 Mael Morda O'Domnail 1030 Doncuan O'Toole 1005 - Bet. 1056 - 1059 Gilla Coemgin O'Toole 1060 Orlaith ingen O'Braenain Gilla Michil (Cinaed) O'Braenain Ugdelb ingen Cearnachain O'Gairbita ~1050 - 1090 Donnchad MacMurchada King of Leinster 40 40 Sadb ingen MacBricc 1140 - 1205 William deBeauchamp Baron of Bedford 65 65 0974 - 7 Feb 1070/1071 Diarmait MacMail Na Mbo King of Leinster & Ireland ~1104 John deLutegareshale Marie dePrenDergast ~1187 - 1251 Gerard dePrenDergast 64 64 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Enniscorthy
Maud Le Boteler 1160 - >1206 Theobald Le Boteler 46 46 1183 Fulk III FitzWarrin Held The Castle Of Adderbury 1158 - 1234 Robert Le Vavasour 76 76 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir Matilda deValoines Hervey II Walter 0886 Beatrice de Savoy Hervey Walter Nn. Becket ~1169 John deCogan Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir D. 1238 Richard deCogan Basilie deRiddlesford ~1014 Renaud deCuiseaux Marguerite deFaucigny D. 1133 Humbert III Sire deSalins D. 1084 Gauthier II Sire deSalins Unknown Beatrice 1131 - UNKNOWN Gwenlian verch Madoc ~0992 Tesselin Vicomte deRouen deBolebec ~1026 Emme deBretagne ~1026 Ivo deCotentin ~1253 - ~1304 Robert deHoland 51 51 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 1256 Elizabeth deSalmesbury ~1010 Verch Gwerystan 1150 - 11 Feb 1232/1233 Ermengarde De Beaumont ~1130 - >1194 Richard I deBeaumont 64 64 Vicomte D. >1226 Margaret Princess Scotland 1254 - 1310 Joan FitzBernard 56 56 ~1110 - DECEASED Walter deRiDelisford 1169 - 1216 Eustace deVesci 47 47 ~1265 - ~1292 Dionysia Rotherfield 27 27 ~1235 Peter deRotherfield ~1265 - 1295 William Wentworth 30 30 ~1240 Beatrice Thakel ~1240 - ~1308 William Wentworth 68 68 ~1210 Emma Wodehouse ~1210 - >1275 Robert (William) Wentworth 65 65 0984 - 1045 Alberie Nevia deLa Haye 61 61 1079 - 1163 Nest verch Osborn 84 84 ~0908 - 1044 Humphrey deVielles 136 136 ~1036 - >1085 Geoffrey deManDeville 49 49 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Essex Agatha of Bretagne Adelaide De Beaumont 1  NAME Alice\Adeliza /De Beaumont/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1034
2  PLAC Beaumont, Sur-Risle, France
1  DEAT
2  DATE 11 JUL 1091
2  PLAC Rouen, Seine-Inferieure, France
~0950 Judith ~0945 - ~1036 Yves II Bellemontesis 91 91 ~1035 - 1091 Adeliza de Beaumont 56 56 D. ~0981 Ivo I deHam D. DECEASED Fouchard Seigneur deHam ~1030 - 22 Feb 1093/1094 Hugh deGrentemesnil 1027 Ada de Hugleville Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~0990 - 1039 Robert deGrentemesnil 49 49 ~0960 Gervase Le Breton ~1000 Hawise D'Echauffour ~0978 Gisela Bertrand deBastenburg ~0943 - DECEASED Juliane Murdac ~0968 - 1020 Geroy Le Montreuil D'Echauffour 52 52 D. >1030 Picot deSay Matilda of Boulogne (of Flanders) 1130 - >1170 Hugh Bockland 40 40 ~1044 Beatrice Malet 1024 - 1128 Eldgyth Queen of England 104 104 ~1010 Godfroi deBolbec D'Arques ~1080 - DECEASED Thomas deMulton In the time of King Henry I, Thomas de Multon, so called from his residence atMulton, in Lincolnshire, bestowed at the funeral of his father, in the ChapterHouse at Spalding (his mother, brothers, sisters,and friends being present), the church of Weston upon the monks of that abbey. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 388, Multon, BaronsMulton, of Egremont] ~1130 Agnes deBraose ~1102 - >1153 Agnes D'Amboise 51 51 ~1075 Hugh D'Amboise ~1075 Sybelle deChateaurenault ~1050 - ~1093 Eleanor deThouars 43 43 ~1022 Aurengarde De Meuleon ~1020 - ~1093 Aimery Vicomte deThouars 73 73 ~0985 - 1043 Geoffrey Vicomte deThouars 58 58 1000 - 1063 Gruffydd LLewellyn Wales 63 63 Gruffudd ap Llywelyn, (1007-63) was King of all Wales from 1055 to 1063,and he was the only Welsh ruler to unite the ancient kingdoms of thewhole of Wales. Gwynfor Evans points out that though for five centuriesthe people of Wales had shared a common language, culture, history,religion and for the most part a common law, it was only under Gruffuddap Llywelyn that it had a single sovereign, and thus a measure ofpolitical unity. Unknown Eleanor ~1165 - DECEASED Ursula deWorkesley ~1145 Agnes ~1140 - DECEASED Geoffrey deWorkesley ~1036 - ~1092 Bosco deChateaurenault 56 56 ~1012 - ~1058 Gerberge deRochefoucauld 46 46 ~1010 - ~1075 Hugh deChateaurenault 65 65 ~0988 - ~1014 Bosco deChateaurenault 26 26 Amelie ~1100 - ~1141 Guillaume deHarcourt 41 41 Tangwystil Llywarch ~1039 Colette D'Argouges Main D'Aubigny  de St. Aubin ~1130 William I D'Aubigny  Baron Of Belvoir D. 1588 John Gorham ~1110 - DECEASED Adeliza de Bohun 1175 - 1240 Thomas II deMulton 65 65 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Egremont D. >1026 Gersinda <1019 - >1037 FoucaldeSire De La Roche 18 18 ~1244 - 1301 Guncelin deBadlesmere 57 57 Rebel against Henry III. 1139 Julian deMulton 0950 Leofwine Hwiccas Ealdorman ~1151 - 1211 Ralph deSomery 60 60 pg 64, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 81, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. ~1125 Geoffrey deClinton 1108 Agnes deBeaumont 1  NAME Agnes Newburgh /De Beaumont/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1108
2  PLAC Warwick, Warwickshire, England
1240 - 1287 William deFerrers 47 47 1062 - DECEASED Bertrum deVerdon ~1234 - ~1310 Joan FitzBarnard 76 76 Bet. 1177 - 1223 - 1247 Giles deBadlesmere William deBadlesmere Prisoner, fighting side of Barons, freed 1221/22 Joan deCromwell Adele Ponthieu Mar 0942/0943 - DECEASED Elizabeth Corbeil 1017 - 1098 Agatha of England 81 81 D. <1326 Mary deRos 1332 Elizabeth Stawel 1190 Henry deTracy 1198 Maud deBraose ~1186 - Bet. 1263 - 1264 Walter deClifford Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1109 - 1185 Margaret de Toeni 76 76 Bet. 1025 - 1030 - 24 Mar 1101/1102 Ralph III deToeni He was banner-bearer of the Normans, and in 1050 was at the Duke's court. In 1054 he participated in the victory over the French at Mortemer, and was sentby William to alarm the King of France with the news. About 1060 he, Hugh de Grandmesnil and Ernald d'Echauffour were deprived of their inheritances and banished. In revenge he and Ernald burned the town of St. Evroul, but in 1063 theywere recalled and their lands restored. He was summoned to a council upon the death of Edward the Confessor and the coronation of Harold as King of England, and he fought at the Battle of Hastings.
He established his residence at Flamsted, Hertfordshire, but was given estates in many counties. About 1078 he supported Robert Curthose against the King, and in 1080 he went on pilgrimage to Spain, returning to give gifts to the abbey of St. Evroul. In 1081 he was with theKing at Winchester; after William's death in 1087 he was one of the Norman nobles who expelled royal garrisons from their castles. In 1088 he served in the war against Maine. When his wife angered her sister-in-law, the Count of Evreuxlaid seige against Conches; this was broken with the help of adherents of William Rufus. After the death of Rufus he and the Count of Evreux invaded the Countof Meulan's barony of Beaumont in August 1100, in retaliation for intrigues with the king against them. Complete Peerage  by Cokayne
~1050 - >1120 Isabel de Montfort 70 70 As a widow she took the veil at the priory of Haute-Bruyere. "Complete Peerage" by Cokayne. ~1026 - <1055 Isabel Bardoul 29 29 ~1081 Maud Fitz Walter de Pitres 0922 - UNKNOWN Aelfwyn of Mercia Lady of Mercia Bet. 1075 - 1079 - 1129 Richard Fitz Pons Clifford ~0997 Papia de Envermeu ~1025 Guilliaume D'Arques ~1045 - DECEASED Beatrix dePonthieu 1033 - DECEASED Walter deEvreux Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Rosemare 1055 Alice deBuci ~1160 - DECEASED Oliver deTracy ~1137 - DECEASED Hawise deBorne ~1120 - 1224 William deTracy 104 104 John deSudley Source: Burkes Peerage. 0972 - 1057 Leofric III Mercia 85 85 ~1090 Henry deTracy Some records found show William as father of Grace. 1068 Gieva deTracy ~1265 - DECEASED Margery Radcliffe ~1260 - DECEASED Henry Lord deBury  Edward Baines in his History of Lancashire claims that this (Bury Castle near Manchester) was one of the twelve ancient baronial castles of the County. Following the Norman Conquest Bury had become partof the Montbegon barony and the manor was held by Adam de Bury for 'one knight's fee'. Early in the 14th. century his descendant Alice de Bury married Sir Roger de Pilkington and their son Roger inherited the manors of both Bury and Pilkington. 1255 - 1322 Roger dePilkington 67 67 Alice deChetham 1225 - 1291 Alexander de Pilkington 66 66 1230 Miss deKellet 1227 - DECEASED Avina deNotton 1227 William deSalmesbury 0938 - UNKNOWN Romanus II Emperor of Byzantine Margaret FitzWalter Walter FitzOsbert Miss Osbert ~1172 Roger deSalmesbury ~1142 Cospatrick deSalmesbury ~1112 Swain deSalmesbury Leofwin Lord of Hindley 1066 - <1136 Gerald FitzWalter deWindsor 70 70 ~1115 Amabilia de Lindsay ~1195 - DECEASED Henry deChetham 0885 - 0959 Constantine Porphyrogen VII Emperor of Byzantine 74 74 D. DECEASED William deNotton ~1195 Cecily deBarton ~0975 - 1037 Hugh I " Barbatus" deMontfort 62 62 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Montfort-sur-Rislet ~1035 - <1086 Roger deMortimer 51 51 A General under William, Duke of Normandy. Mother was niece of Gunnora, gr. grandmother to William.
Principle commander under William at Battle of Hastings,1066 Granted estates in Wales. Seated at Wigmore.  Captured Robert Curthose forHenry I.
D. >1096 Eudes Comte de Champagne Count of Champagne & Aumale; Earl of Holderness; lost titles to uncle TheoboldIII. Imprisoned in 1096 ~0943 - ~1012 Bouchard 'Le Vieux" Comte deVendome 69 69 ~1097 - DECEASED Albreda deLacy Dau. and heir of Robert de Lisours & 1/2 sister of Robert de Lacy & heir to him. Marr (2) Wm. de Clairfait, (3) Wm. Fitz Godric. ~1074 - DECEASED Maud dePerche 0998 - 1070 Walram II Count Of Limburg 72 72 ~1110 - ~1177 Richard FitzEustace 67 67 Baron of Halton, constable of Chester. 0920 - 0961 Helen Lecapenus Empress of Byzantium 41 41 ~1012 - ~1050 Randulphus deTrafford 38 38 ~1190 - >1248 Adam deRadclyffe 58 58 Member of jury at, Lancashire assizes, 1248 ~1165 - DECEASED Cecilia deMontebegone ~1160 - 1220 William deRadclyffe 60 60 Sheriff Of Lancaster ~1140 - DECEASED Henry deRadclyffe ~1122 - DECEASED Nicholas deRadclyffe Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
1  NAME Nicholas Fitzgilbert /De Tailbois/


A knight in retinue of Baron de Marsey, in the army of the Conqueror; given the manorof Radclive & assumed that name.
~1479 - DECEASED Jane Mirfield ~1454 - <1488 Isabel Savile 34 34 ~1452 - DECEASED Oliver Mirfield 1478 - 1548 Thomas Wentworth 70 70 0940 - UNKNOWN Theophano Of Byzantium ~1454 - DECEASED Elizabeth Claverley Agnes Tempest D. >1459 John Tempest Grant, 1517, March 26. 8 Henry VIII. 1 item : parchment ; 19.5 x 39 cm.
SUMMARY: Indenture (tripartite) of a grant by Thurston, esquire, and Elizabeth his wife, to Richard Tempest, knight, John Portyngton, esquire, Nicholas Tempest, esquire and Peter Banks of Allerton, of half the manor of Dalton, in the county York, and half of all the lands, messuages, etcetera in Dalton, late of William Flemmyng, father of Elizabeth, for the performance of the covenants, etcetera, contained in certain indentures dated 14 July, 2 Henry VII, made between Roger Vombewell, esquire, of the one part, and Thurston and Elizabeth of the other part, rendering yearly 8 marks to the grantors for their lives and the life of the survivor, distraint (clause) if the rent be in arrear, and right of re-entry reserved if if be a quarter in arrear. Dated on the 26 March, 8 Henry VIII. Indenture, with 2 seals of brown wax, pendant on tags: (1) (1.5 cm.), oval, bearing a device: an acorn and oak leaves; (2) (1.5 cm.), oval, bearing the initials "E.H."
NAMES: I. Hall, Thurston. II. Hall, Elizabeth. III. Tempest, Richard. IV. Portington, John. V. Tempest, Nicholas. VI. Banks, Peter. VII. Flemming, William. VIII. Vombewell, Roger.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Yorkshire. 2. Deeds--England--Dalton (Yorkshire) 3. Yorkshire (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Dalton (Yorkshire, England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 5. Allerton (Yorkshire, England)
HOLLIS number: -AQC5206
Alice Sherburne D. 1440 Robert Sherburne ~1418 - 1488 William Claverley 70 70 D. DECEASED Elizabeth Markenfield ~1385 - 1466 Walter Claverley 81 81 ~1360 - DECEASED William deClaverley ~1430 - DECEASED Thomas Wentworth 0866 - 0912 Leo VI The Wise Emperor of Byzantine 46 46 ~1375 - 1461 John Wentworth 86 86 ~1415 - DECEASED Joan Elizabeth Beaumont ~1401 Richard Beaumont ~1050 - >1086 Brictive Thegn of Lincoln 36 36 1215 - DECEASED Eve deTracy 1215 - 1307 Guy Comte deBrienne 92 92 D C McMurtry and Michael L Kallam, SIR FRANCIS BRYAN AND COMPANY,
1994, p 19.!NOTE: With this Guy the corrected line of Bryan family begins, p 19 above book; named in deeds/titles of Monstier-Ramey Abbey
~1100 - 1156 Gauthier Comte deBrienne 56 56 : Still living in year 1080 according to Chronicle of Alberic; made several donations in 1068 to Abbey of Monstier-Ramey with consent of his wife. ~0955 - <1035 Englebert III Comte deBrienne 80 80 Count de Brienne; named in charter of Monstier-Ramey dated 993. ~1007 - >1070 Sancha of Aybar 63 63 ~0980 - DECEASED Hugh deTallebot 0812 - 0886 Basil I of Macedonia Emperor of Byzantine 74 74 BASIL THE MACEDONIAN  Byzantine emperor (867-886), who founded theMacedonian dynasty and formulated the Greek legal code that later becameknown as the Basilica. Basil came of a peasant family that had settled inMacedonia, perhaps of Armenian origin. He was a handsome and physicallypowerful man who gained employment in influential official circles inConstantinople and was fortunate enough to attract the imperial eye ofthe reigning emperor, Michael III. After rapid promotion he became chiefequerry, then chamberlain, and finally, in 866, co-emperor with Michael.Quick to sense opposition, he forestalled the Emperor's uncle, thepowerful Caesar Bardas, by murdering him (866) and followed this bykilling his own patron, Michael, who had begun to show signs ofwithdrawing his favour (867). 1023 - 1065 Berta Manfredo 42 42 1015 - 1071 Almode De La Haute- Marche 56 56 1  NAME Almodis /De La Marche/
1  NAME Almodis /Marche/
1  DEAT
2  DATE 17NOV 1075
~0934 - 0998 Hedwige D'Alsace Von Nordgau 64 64 1  NAME Hedwig /von Nordgau/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 937
2  PLAC of, Luxembourg
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  DEAT
2  DATE 13 DEC992
2  PLAC St. Mxmin, Trier, Germany
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Dateof Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 3, 202, 316, 353;Pfafman, AF, A. Roots; Kraentzler 1157, 1172,
1174, 1195, 1211, 1212.
Rootssays only perhaps the daughter of Count Eberhard, Count in the Nordgau.
RC says she was a Saxon, daughter of Eberhard IV and Luitgarde of Tries.
Died in 1053.
0955 Ostrida Von Gothland 0952 - 1031 Brusse 79 79 Miss Ermengarde ~1039 - >1087 Roger deChateau- Porcien 48 48 ~1010 Adela de Rethel 1204 - 1272 Adam deKellet 68 68 ~1231 - 1291 Thomas deFurnival 60 60 0690 - 0735 Harald Hildetand King Of denmark & Sweden 45 45 Harold Hildetand or Golden Teeth, raised Denmark to an unprecedentedheight of power. He conquered many of the neighboring states and hisnaval resources were very great. 0879 - ~0934 Ludmilla Ragnhildis 55 55 Princess of Middle Friesland. ~1161 - ~1196 Maud FitzWalter 35 35 D. >1267 Unknown Bertha D. ~1238 Thomas deFurnivall ~1178 - 1250 Maud deLuvetot 72 72 D. 1181 William deLuvetot 1166 - 1219 Gerard deFurnivall 53 53 Andel 1126 Gerard deFurnivall Walceher Bishop of Durham Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Northumberland D. DECEASED Nn. deStuteville 0840 - UNKNOWN Renaud Seigneur Roucy Count Of Rheims 1118 John deStuteville Philicia deDamoys ~1115 - 1169 Gilbert deNeville 54 54 Gilbert deNeville ~1034 - DECEASED Gilbert deNeville Name Prefix:<NPFX> Admiral Sir ~1004 Richard deNeuville Bet. 930 - 978 - Bet. 963 - 1056 Balderic de Bacqueville ~1342 John Assheton Nn. deBrienne Joan 0900 - UNKNOWN Ingeborg Thrandsson 1142 Eva deRedvers 1  NAME Eve /De Redvers/
1  NAME Matilda /De Redvers/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT.1120
~1118 Lucia Adeliza de Baalun 1113 - 1166 Baldwin deRedvers 53 53 Note: Baldwin de Redvers was founder of Bremer Abbey, County Wilts, and Quarr Abbey, County Hants. In April, 1136, there were rumors of the death of King Stephen, and on hearing this he was one of the first to break out in revolt. Seizing the royal castle of Exeter, he sustained a long siege by the King, and was ultimately allowed to withdraw his forces on giving up the castle. The King thenproceeded to the Isle of Wight, took possession of the island, and drove him, with his wife and children, into exile. Baldwin then took refuge at the court ofthe Count of Anjou, and soon afterwards conducted a successful raid into Normandy. About Lent, 1138, he was taken prisoner in Normandy by Enguerrard de Say,a partisan of King Stephen. He returned to England in the autumn of 1139, shortly before the arrival of the Empress Maud, and landing at Warham, seized the castle of Corfe. This he defended successfully against the King, forcing him to eventually raise the siege. By the Empress Maud. (daughter of Henry I and motherof Henry II) he was created Earl of Devonshire in the year 1141. He married 1st Adeliza, 2nd Lucia. His daughter Eve married Anchitel Grey. Ralph II Gorham 1512 William Wilson ~1615 - 30 Jan 1662/1663 Mary [Johnson] 1059 Emma Aldreda D'Ivry 1  NAME Emma of /Ivry/ ~1025 Ralph D'Ivry 1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 978
2  PLAC Ivry, France
1  BIRT
2  DATE 978
2  PLAC Ivry, France
~1218 Euphemia deLisle 1045 - 1120 Bardolph FitzThorfin Of Ravensworth 75 75 0942 - 1002 Gunhild Haraldsdottir 60 60 ~1080 - 1153 Olaf II Godredson King of Man and the Isles 73 73 D. 1095 Godfrey King of Man, Dublin & the Isles Harold the Black of Islay ~1005 - 1062 Finn Arnesson 57 57 Jarl Of Halland 0972 Thora Thorsteinsdatter ~0977 - 1024 Arne Arnmods 47 47 0989 - 1064 Thorfin II Sigurdsson 75 75 The Black Earl of Orkney ~0986 Donada MacKenneth 1  NAME /Donada/ ~0962 Edith of Ossery 0828 Audna\ Ethna\Edna Kjarvalssdatter D. UNKNOWN Jarl Palig Ealdorman in devon 0924 - 0959 Hlodver\ Lodver Thorfinsson 35 35 ~1150 William Wodehouse ~1110 Robert Wodehouse ~1185 William Wentworth ~1160 - 1200 Hugh Wentworth 40 40 ~1135 Henry Wentworth ~1110 Michael Wentworth ~1085 - DECEASED Richard Wentworth ~1060 - DECEASED Henry Wentworth 1083 Erneburga FitzBaldric Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lady of Skipwith 1033 - 1066 Harold II King of England 33 33 Harold II (ca. 1022-1066), King of the English, the second son of EarlGodwine, was born about 1022. He is claimed by some to have been eldestson; at any rate he was the handsomest, the most accomplished, and inevery respect the best of all the sons of Godwin. He succeeded to hisfather's territories and command, and to even more than Godwin'sauthority in the nation. While he was still very young (before 1045) hewas appointed to the Earldom of the East-Angles. At the beginning of theyear 1066 King Edward, called the Confessor, died, with his last breathrecommending Harold as his successor. Harold was accordingly elected atonce and crowned. William of Normandy challenged the crown, alleging botha bequest of King Edward in his favour and a personal engagement whichHarold had contracted towards him in 1064, when Harold went to Normandyto obtain the release of two hostages, his brother Wulfnoth and hisnephew Hakin. While there William, Duke of Normandy, made him promise tomarry his daughter Adela and to assist him (William) in obtaining thekingdom of England after King Edward's death. William had made him takethis oath over a tub which was covered with a cloth of gold and, when itwas over, removed the cloth and revealed that the tub was filled to thebrim with dead men's bones. So when Harold was crowned King in 1066,William prepared for the invasion of England to hold Harold to his oath.On the 25th of Sept., 1066, Harold defeated the invaders from Norway, whohad been engaged by Harold's brother Tostig. Two days later William, Dukeof Normandy, landed at Pevensey, and Harold marched south as fast aspossible. He gathered his army in London from all southern and easternEngland. The King then marched into Sussex and engaged the Normans on thehill of Senlac. After a fight which lasted from morning until evening,the Normans had the victory, and Harold and his two brothers lay dead onthe field (14th Oct., 1066). Harold and his brothers stood on the spotwhere he fell. Harold was on foot, for every King of England was bound tofight on foot, to show that when he fought there was no retreat, andaround him stood his thanes and nobles. Here with the English standardsthey all laid down their lives in its defense. Harold himself, when theNorman arrow pierced his eye, still kept his feet as best he could, tillfour Norman Knights, Eustace of Boulogne, Walter Gifford, Simon dePonthieu and Simon de Montfort, rushed upon him and dispatched him withtheir swords. On this spot Duke William, now soon to be William I, theConqueror, knelt down and returned thanks to God. He ordered that thespot be carefully marked out in order that the high altar of the greatchurch he had planned to erect might stand exactly upon it. And so thehigh altar was set up on the spot where Harold had been killed. It wasnamed the "Abbey of St. Martin of the Place of Battle." The Conquerorpresented to the church his sword and his coronation robe. No site inEngland is better attested to than this spot where the Battle of Hastingswas fought. Battle Abbey in Hastings, Sussex, the scene of the Battle ofHastings, is one of the great show places of England. Harold had severalsons and two daughters, Gunhild and Githa. He married Agatha, daughter ofAlgar, Earl of Mercia, and granddaughter of Lady Godiva. 1025 - >1107 Robert "Fronteboeuf" II deStuteville 82 82 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Of Cottingham ~1228 - ~1257 Pain deChaworth 29 29 William de Duston Nn. deMortaigne ~1075 William FitzRichard Roger FitzCorbet 1141 - 1207 Robert II deBeaumont 66 66 Bet. 1122 - 1123 - 1181 Agnes (Elizabeth) deMontfort ~1140 Maud FitzRoy ~1608 - 1650 Susanna 42 42 D. UNKNOWN II Berenger ~1060 - 1107 Richard deReviers 47 47 ~1008 - DECEASED Emma Alberade D'Ivry ~0978 Ralph Comte D'Ivry 1  NAME Ralph Comte /D'Ivrea/ 0983 Erneburge deCaux 1599 - 1682 Thomas Coleman 83 83 Was one of the original purchasers of Nantucket Island. Came to Boston on the ship  "James"  and settled in Newbury Mass.

James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England
THOMAS, Newbury, from Marlborough, in Wilts, arr. at Boston 3 June 1635 in the James from Southampton, came out under contr. with Sir RichardSaltonstall and others, to keep their cattle, in wh. he was neglig. andunfaithf. as the Ct. rul. yet was adm. freem. 17 May 1637, by w. Susanna,wh. d. 17 Nov. 1650, had Tobias, b. 1638; Benjamin, 1 May 1640; Joseph, 2Dec. 1642; John, 1644; Isaac, 20 Feb. 1647, bef. ment.; and Joanna; rem.to Hampton, m. 11 July 1651, Mary, wid. of Edmund Johnson, wh. d. 30 Jan.1663; and he took for third w. Margery, d. of Philip Fowler (wid. of Thomas Rowell of Andover, wh. had been wid. of first Christopher Osgoodof A.) He rem. to Nantucket bef. 1663, there d. 1682, aged 83. PerhapsSusanna, wh. d. 2 Jan. 1643, was his d. Coffin says he spell. his name"Coultman," but in my opin. it was Coaleman, or Coulman, as in old writ.e is freq. tak. for t, and u for a is common co. error in mod.


Noted in letter # 8 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902.
~1135 - 1216 Gundred Paganel 81 81 ~1135 - <1213 Matthew deLa Ferte 78 78 Beatrix deMacOn 1136 - 1189 Humbert III, Count of Savoy deMaurienne 52 52 ~1098 - 1155 Wilburga deMundabliel 57 57 D. UNKNOWN Adelheid Diessen ~1093 - <1155 Patrick deChaworth 62 62 ~1074 Matilda Hesdin ~1040 - DECEASED Emmeline Normandy ~1038 Ernulf Seigneur deHesdin D. <1065 Warin deHesdin 1553 - 1637 John Dabinott 84 84 Source: Burton Spear,  Mary & John 1630, v 17, 1992, p 109
"John Dabinot -- bpt. 29 Jan. 1553/4.  Buried 1624, Chardstock, Dorset. His will dated 1 Nov. 1624, proved 5 Mar. 1624/5.  Yeoman of Chardstock. ... He married Joan -----, who survived him.  He was a churchwarden in Chardstock in 1615.  She may have been the widow Joan Dabinot who m. (2) Humphrey Warren alias Pullen, 13 Jan. 1628/9, Chardstock, who was church warden there in 1630.  (P) Children of John Dabinot & Joan --- (Bpt. Chardstock)  i. Rawlina Dabonit -- Bpt. 3 Oct. 1602.  She married George Fry, 21 Aug. 1621, Chardstock. ... ii. Joan Davinot -- Bpt. 25 Apr. 1605. She married Edward Smith, 26 June 1625, Yarcombe, Devon. ... iii. Thomas Dabinot -- Bpt. 19 Aug. 1607. iv. Jane Dabinot -- Bpt. 12 June 1611 .  v. John Dabinot -- Bpt. 22 Mar. 1615/16."
1564 - >1624 Johanna Collins 60 60 ~1160 - DECEASED William deLondres ~1178 - 1206 William deLondres 28 28 ~1139 - 1173 Mabel deCantilupe 34 34 1138 - 1172 Margaret of Limbourg 34 34 ~1139 - 1173 Maurice deLondres 34 34 ~1120 - >1200 William deLondres 80 80 ~1063 - 1098 Unknown Sybilla 35 35 ~1080 - DECEASED Simon deLondres ~1055 - 1128 Maurice deLondres 73 73 1166 Juliane deRos 1  NAME Juliane /Ross/ 1139 Thomas deRos ~1009 Ranulph deWrenroc ~0492 - 0586 Rhun Hir ap Maelgwn of Gwynedd 94 94 Raymond Berenger  IV 1110 - 1167 Henry II Count of Limbourg 57 57 ~1022 - DECEASED William deWaterville 0969 Matilda Ganelon 0966 - 1028 William deBelleme 62 62 0944 Gordeschilda de Ponthieu 1  NAME Godchilde /De Ponthieu/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 975
1  DEAT
2  DATEAFT. 1005
0940 - >1005 Ives deCrail 65 65 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Belleme
1  NAME Yves /De Creil/
1  BIRT
2  DATEABT. 942
2  PLAC Creil, Oise, France
1635 - 1696 Thomas Allyn 61 61 ~1090 - ~1185 Galfridus de Limesay 95 95 ~1058 Alan de Limesy Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1026 - >1086 Ralph de Limesay 60 60 Montlhery 1122 - 2 Jan 1144/1145 Matilda Saffenberg 0880 - 0947 Arnulf de Bavaria 67 67 Unknown Mabilia ~0992 Robert FitzPicot deSay 1123 Richard deWorkesley 1090 Elias deWorkesley 1054 Elizeus deWorkesley 1154 - >1222 Gilbert deNotton 68 68 Juliana D. <1212 Augustine deBreightmet ~1185 - 1220 Edith deBarton 35 35 ~1150 Matthew deBarton D. UNKNOWN Ernst IVCount of Sulafeld ~1120 Leysing II deBarton ~1090 Leysing deBarton 1061 - ~1107 Zaida Of denia 46 46 Zaida became a widow when her first husband, Fath al-Ma'mum, son of the
Emirof Seville, died in 1091, trying to leave his Córdoba which was
being beseiged by a group of radical islamists led by Yusuf ibn Tasufin.
Zaida had been sent on before to the castle at Almodóvar del Río for
safety, and thus escaped.It's not clear why she went to the court of
King Alfonso VI in Toledo, but King Alfonso had veen was an ally of her
husband's father and family, and shewas accepted into his court. When
Zaida arrived at the court, King Alfonso VIwas already "mature" (age
51), married to a queen who was ill, and still lacking a male heir.
Given the customs of the times, an affair with Zaida or with any other
woman would not have been of enough historical interest to merit
attention except for the fact that Zaida bore him his only son, Sancho
Alfónsez.
Note:
Saiz Ordoño speculates that the fact that King Alfonso VI recognized his
illegitimate son Sancho as his direct descendant with rights to govern
Castille, León, Galicia/Portugal, etc. made the chroniclers hasten to
include Zaida among his legitimate married wives. However, he concludes
there is no proof that they were ever married. The arab historian
González Palencia(born in Cuenca, Spain) has described (in his Historia
de la España Musulmana) the court of Alfonso VI in Toledo as a muslim
court, in terms of dress andcustoms. Regarding the reported Catholic
baptism of Zaida and her baptismal name of Isabel, Saiz Ordoño cautions:
"not to be confused with the French Elizabeth", but doesn't discuss the
matter further.
Note:
Zaida's date of death is not known exactly, but Saiz Ordono says it was
well before the 1106 datewhen Alfonso VI formally repudiated his fourth
wife, as well as before the 1108 date when Alfonso VI married his 5th
wife. Zaida died in childbirth. SaizOrdoño believes it was at the
birth of Sancho (although others say it may have been a later child). The
inscription on her tombstone (erected several hundred years later) is
inexact as to the year of death, as well as inaccurate as to her
parentage. Alternate dates of death proposed by other historians:
Lévi-Provencal: 1093; Menéndez Pidal 1099; Fita 1101.
~1020 Alberade De Bayeux Alix Burgundy ~0975 - ~1066 Raoul deBeauffou 91 91 ~1000 Adeline de Beaumont ~0925 - ~0992 Heribert Graf Von Gleiberg 67 67 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Count
1  NAME Heribert /von Gleiberg/
2  SOUR S033320
3DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 3, 351; Kraentzler 1157, 1253, 1461; A. Roots.
Roots: Count of Gleiberg. RC:Count in the Wetterau.
K: Count in Kinziggau and von Gleiburg.
~0960 Osmond deCentville Name Suffix:<NSFX> Vicomte De Vernon ~0915 Norman deCentville 1245 - UNKNOWN Eudes La Zouche D. 1285 Raoul VI deBeaumont  Vicomte De Maine ~1135 Cecily deBrito 1130 - 1171 Richard deLuvetot 41 41 <1124 Elizabeth deRethel <1133 - ~1181 Robert III de Marmion 48 48 ~1093 - 1143 Robert II de Marmion 50 50 ~1065 - Bet. 1129 - 1130 Robert Roger de Marmion Lord Scrivelsby de Abitot ~1222 - 1275 Thurstan deHoland 53 53 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 1201 Cecily deColumbers 1250 Milicent de Cantelou 1181 Cecily deWaleton 1177 Alan deColumbers 1151 William deColumbers Juliana de Walton 1155 - 1199 Henry deWaleton 44 44 Gilbert deWalton Waldeve de Walton 1197 - >1241 Robert deHoland 44 44 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 1171 - Bet. 1212 - 1224 Matthew deHoland ~1157 - ~1204 Siward deLongworth 47 47 1245 - 1321 Thomas "The Wise" Baron Berkeley 76 76 ~1117 Ragnhild of Man ~1097 Ingebiorg of Orkney 1070 - 1126 Hakon Paulsson 56 56 Earl of Orkney 1035 Ragnhild Hakondottir Paul I Thorfinnson Earl of Orkney 1021 - <1069 Ingebiorg Finnsdottir 48 48  Of Orkney ~1010 Bergliot (Thorborg) Halfdansdottir 1  NAME Thorbiorg /(Berliot)/ 0995 Halfdan Sigurdsson 1  NAME /Halfdan/ ~1113 - 1164 Somerled II MacGillebride 51 51 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of The Isles D. 1164 Giolla GillebrideBrighid Argyll GiollaGillebride Brighid Prince of Argyll 1238 - 19 Mar 1309/1310 Margaret Joan deFerrers Sigurdsdottir Argyll Giolla Adhamnan Solomund of Dublin ~1005 Edred England D. <1186 Philip deColumbieres ~1146 - >1213 Maud deCandos 67 67 Isabel deEpaigne Alvred de Epaigne ~1126 - DECEASED Walter deCandos ~1010 - 1067 Godiva 57 57     1  NAME Godgifu "Godiva" //
    2  GIVN Godgifu "Godiva"
    2  SURN
    2  NSFX Lady


Her name in Saxon is "Godgifu", meaning " God`s Gift". She was the owner of the city of Coventry, and its Patroness.

Asked husband to reduce heavy taxes he imposed as Lord of Coventry. He agreed if she would ride naked through the town. She asked all townspeople to remain indoors and rode a horse through the streets naked. Legend says that a tailor named Tom peeped through a shutter and was struck blind. This is the origin of the phrase "peeping tom". Until the late 1800's a procession was held at intervals to celebrate Lady Godiva's courage.
~1102 - ~1193 Robert deCandos 91 91 1102 Walter deCantelou Hawise (de Port) Joshua Wills Jr. ~1020 Baldric ~1078 - 1131 Clemence Of Burgundy 53 53 1001 Jeanne deTallebot 1010 - ~1090 Robert I "Frontboeuf" deStouteville 80 80 1142 Agnes ~1091 Godith deTaillebois 1218 - 1281 Maurice "The Resolute" Lord Berkeley 63 63 ~1089 Gilbert deLancaster 4th Baron Kendal 1073 Christiana 1057 - DECEASED Eldgitha of Northumberland 1  NAME /Adgitha/
1  DEAT
2  DATE Deceased
~1037 - <1110 Roger deRomara 73 73 Robert Umfreville ~1189 - 1230 Peter deFauconberg 41 41 1095 Agnes deArches 1005 Geoffrey deBolebec ~1100 Robert deFauconberg ~1134 Hamo deValoines 1223 - 1276 Isabella FitzRichard deChilham 53 53 ~1045 Albreda deRie ~1020 - 1053 Enguerrand II dePonthieu 33 33 ~0994 Bertha D'Aumale 0966 Guerinfroi Eudes deAumale 1005 - 1052 Hugh II de Ponthieu 47 47 0970 - 1046 Enguerrand I dePonthieu 76 76 1005 - 1052 Aleida of Holland 47 47 1035 - >1107 Hubert deMontchensney 72 72 1010 Humbert deMonte Caniso ~1000 - DECEASED Elizabeth Dame deSours ~1050 Ralph de Mechines Lord of Cumberland and Earl of Chester abt 1129 D. 1253 Rhys Gryg ap Rhys Name Suffix:<NSFX> Prince of Deheubarth ~1070 - 1120 Hugh deTalbot 50 50 1  DEAT
2  DATE 1120


was made Castellan (Governor) of Plesses, in Normandy, by his cousin, Hugh de Gournay, in 1119. He was a benefactor of the monastery of Beaubec, in Normandy, and in the decline of life, assumed the cowl there.He married Beatrice, daughter of William de Mandeville, who was divorced fromhim and married William de Say, and Hugh became a monk.
1045 Richard deTalbot 1050 Aimee deAlbini 1120 - 1168 Roger de Flamville 48 48 Otterus Di Gerrardini Name Prefix:<NPFX> Lord
BIOGRAPHY: Otterus was "an Italian Baron of the Gherardini of Florence, Lord inTuscany, went from Florence into Normandy and then toEngland and Wales about 1000. He was son of Cosmus, the great Duke of Florence." -Carr P. Collins, Jr., "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons"(Dallas, 1959), p. 103.

BIOGRAPHY: Some records say that Otho went to Normandy in the caravan of King Canute of England who had passed through Florence on his way home from a pilgrimage to Rome. It is said that he came into England later with Edward the Confessor when he was called back from exile to be King of England. Thereis an old lyric quote in English records which says "the Earldom which to Othobrave, the Saxon sainted Edward gave". His son, Otho Fitz-Othoer appears in 1058 in the Domesday Book as a baron of England.
~1040 - DECEASED Beatrice Gladys Verch Rhiwallon 1032 - >1100 Walter FitzOtho 68 68 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Castellan Of Windsor
BIOGRAPHY: Domesday Tenant in Buckingham, Hampshire, Middlesex & Surrey
~1012 - 1057 Dominus Otho Geraldino Baron deWindsor 45 45 BIOGRAPHY: of the family of Gerardini, Tuscanny. Came to England & Wales at time of Edward the Confessor.

BIOGRAPHY: Gerald was the ancestor of the Fitzgeralds, Fitzmaurices, Carews, Redmonds and Keatings of Ireland, among others. Otho was so powerful that his favor with the King was greatly resented by the native Norman nobles. He possessed three lordships in Surrey, three in Buckinghamshire, two in Berkshire, four in Middlesex, nine in Wiltshire, two in Hampshire,three in Dorset, and one in Somerset. With him, the family name was changed toGeraldini. Otho's son, Walter fitz-Otho Geraldini, was treated as a fellow countryman by the Normans after the conquest of England in 1066. He succeeded to all of Otho's estates and his name is shown in the Domesday Book of 1087 that listed all the landholders of England. Windsor Castle, a great gray pile overlooking the Thames, had just been built amid the forests of Berkshire, and Walter was appointed its first castellan, as well as warden of the forests. He was, it is clear, one of the most Norman of the Normans -- a race renowned for its adaptability, no less than for its valor and ferocity.

BIOGRAPHY: Windsor Castlecontinued as a baronage for Otho's descendants for centuries, until it passedout of existence due to lack of male heirs in the direct line. An interesting footnote is the story of how the current English royal family, the House of Windsor, took their name from this vacated baronage. During the First World War, there was enormous anti-German sentiment in England, and the king wanted to distance himself from the German House of Hanover, their name at the time. Since theGherardini family can be traced as the founders of the House of Hanover, it was very convenient that Gerald de Windsor, baron of England, was related both tothe English royal family and the Florentine Gheradinis, and hence the House ofHanover (see above). This provided justification (after much research) for theGerman House of Hanover to become the more politically-correct English House of Windsor, which they remain to this day.
D. ~1213 Imaine deLooz 1170 - 1243 Thomas "The Observer" Lord Berkeley 73 73 0922 - 0965 Hedwig 43 43 Princess of the Germans. Agatha deLorraine 1003 - 1059 Giselbert deSalm I Count of Luxembourg 56 56 1000 Lesire Talbot ~1344 Margaret deLegh Joyce de Botetourt 1003 Herleve D'Evreux 1  NAME Herleva /De Evereux/

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks



Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1072 - ~1131 Michael Hanslape 59 59 1038 - >1086 William I Mauduit 48 48 ~1196 - <1258 Walter FitzRobert 62 62 ~0970 Unknown Odilie 1195 - 1276 Joan deSomery 81 81 ~1231 Thomas deClinton ~1366 - 1422 William IX Gascoigne 56 56 1370 Joan Jane Wyman ~1098 Agnes Stigand Odon Stigand ~1087 - ~1140 Renebault deTancarville 53 53 1073 Maud D'Arques ~1064 - 1129 William Sire deTancarville 65 65 1154 Agnes Stigand ~1040 Raoul deTancarville 1120 - 1190 Maurice Fitzharding Lord Berkeley 70 70 Unknown Helesinde 1018 Gerold deTancarville ~1083 Maud deFerrers 1030 - 1069 Godfrey de Verdun 39 39 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Duc De Lorraine 1592 - 1670 John Warham 78 78 1291 - 1349 Alice Comyn 58 58 ~1270 - >1340 Joan Le Latimer 70 70 1270 - 1305 Alexander Comyn 35 35 1220 - 1282 Elizabeth deQuincy 62 62 1217 - 1245 Alexander Comyn 28 28 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Buchan 1135 - 1192 Alice Berkeley 57 57 1185 - 1244 Margaret Colhan Countess of Buchan 59 59 1170 - 1199 Fergus Colhan Earl of Buchan 29 29 1100 Eva MorMaer Name Suffix:<NSFX> Of Buchan <1100 Colban Earl of Buchan 1140 - 1179 Roger Colhan Earl of Buchan 39 39 1163 - 1233 William Comyn 70 70 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Buchan 1122 Hextilda FitzHuchtred 1100 Bethoc of Scotland 1096 Uchtred Fitz Waldeve de Tynedale 1115 - 1145 Richard Comyn 30 30 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Tyndale 1100 - UNKNOWN Roger deBerkeley III Lord Of Dursley 1088 Maude Basset 1084 - 1114 William Comyn 30 30 1053 John Comyn 1022 - 28 Jan 1068/1069 Robert Comyn 0991 - ~1021 John Comyn 30 30 1285 - 10 Mar 1338/1339 Henry deBeaumont  Earl of Buchan 1270 Agnes deBeaumont ~1235 - >1297 Louis D'Acre deBrienne 62 62 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Beaumont 1152 - 1204 William deMunchesney 52 52 1130 - 1198 Malcolm II deAtholl 68 68 1095 - 5 Feb 1169/1170 Robert "The devout" Fitzharding Lord Berkeley ~1158 Aubrey FitzRichard ~1070 Robert deLacy Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Pontefract
Expelled from realm by Henry I for supporting Robert Curthose.
Unknown Hawise ~1045 - ~1093 Ilbert deLacy 48 48 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron of Pontefract
Came with the Conqueror. Possessed 150lordships in York, 10 in Nottinghamshire, & 4 in Lincolnshire.
~1020 - DECEASED Ilbert deLacy Unknown Emma ~1072 - ~1096 Fulk deLisours 24 24 ~1038 Fulk deLisours Albreda ~1160 - ~1225 Henry deBiseth 65 65 Lord Biseth 1099 - 12 Mar 1169/1170 Eve Fitz Estmond ~1135 Alice deCany Name Suffix:<NSFX> Heiress Of Cany
BIOGRAPHY: Inherited from brother Gilbert de Falaise, Sire de Cany
~1112 - DECEASED Unknown Hawise ~1105 William deBiseth ~1182 Margaret de Say ~1163 Mable de Marmion D. ~1192 Osmund de Stuteville ~1159 Hugh II de Say ~1107 Eustache de Say ~1080 Hugh Fitz Osborn Robert deMortimer 1060 - 1125 Fitz Harding 65 65 1194 - 1268 Joane Isabelle deMortimer 74 74 1  NAME Joane (Isabel) /De Mortimer/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1194
2  PLAC Elmley, Worcestershire, England
1  DEAT
2  DATE 1268
~1240 - ~1275 Gilbert deBarton 35 35 1112 Alice deMeschines 1088 Adelaide De Chesney 1060 William de Chesney  Lord Caenby Agnes Lucia deSanta Maria ~1120 - >1165 Randolph deMoray 45 45 Agnes Du Maine 1050 Robert deGernon 1043 - 1066 Eadnoth "The Staller" Harding 23 23 1104 Unknown Helawise ~1030 Alberade Buonalbergo 1061 - 1106 Adelheid of Bavaria 45 45 1037 - 1104 Jutte Swabia 67 67 0924 - 1008 Otto II Tullfeld 84 84 ~0997 Adele 0995 Guermond dePicquigny ~1096 - DECEASED Emma deLa Guerche ~1344 - 1398 Margaret deVere 54 54 ABT 12 Mar 1311/1312 - Jan 1359/1360 John de Vere 1290 - UNKNOWN Eudes La Zouche ~1267 Jane Foliot William deStuteville D. >1202 Isabel deGressenhall ~1110 Helwise Murdac Geoffrey Murdac 1207 - 1236 Richard Jordan III Foliot 29 29 Name Suffix:<NSFX> III ~1176 Beatrice Bardolf Richard Jordan II Foliot Name Suffix:<NSFX> II D. 1170 Jordon Foliot Name Suffix:<NSFX> I D. 1145 William Foliot 0965 - 1056 Hugh de Meulan 91 91 1025 John deByzantium ~1266 - ~1329 Alphonsus de Vere 63 63 ~1340 - 1369 Henry deBeaumont 29 29  3rd Lord Beaumont Edmond Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Sir Edmond Willoughby Knight [alive in the
fourth year of the reign of Henry IV, i.e. 1403].

B. Burke 1888, The Complete Peerage, p. 1118.
Sir Edmond Willoughby (living 4 Henry IV); ancestor of Willoughby of
Wollaton, son of Sir Richard Willoughby, Knight of Wollaton.
~1242 - BEF 8 Mar 1315/1316 Alice deLeDet ~1198 Ermentrude De Lisle ~1210 - ~1257 Walter deLeDet 47 47 ~1164 Wischard deLeDet 1202 - DECEASED Gerard deFurnival ~1195 Christian deLeDet ~1118 - >1124 Robert Foliot 6 6 0974 - 1064 Alix deVexin 90 90 ~1121 Margaret deReinbuecurt ~1242 - 1305 William III Le Latimer 63 63 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 1st Baron of Corby ~1220 - 1268 William Le Latimer 48 48 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Danby Manor ~1174 - 1212 Helen Ragnhild deLisle 38 38 ~1148 - 1207 Reginald Rognvald Mac Sorley 59 59 King of the Isles, Scotland. ~1145 Fornia Moray ~1124 Bethoc deGalloway ~1098 - >1165 Ranulph deMoray 67 67 ~1067 Dunegal Dougal deMoray ~1035 Duncan Mormaer deMoray D. UNKNOWN Adele Senlis Constance Matilda Plantagenet England D. >1145 Roscelin deBeaumont Vicomte Du Maine ~1058 Agathe deVendome ~1024 - 1078 Petronille deChateau- Renard 54 54 1007 Beatrice deCraon ~0970 Renaud I deChateau- Gontier 0990 Adele D'Anjou 0974 - 1046 Hildegardeof Lorraine 72 72 ~1020 - 1066 Fulk deVendome 46 46 D. 1005 Maud of Burgundy D. UNKNOWN II Gauthier D. 1023 Eudes de Nevers 0975 - 1028 Landry III deNevers 53 53 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte D'Auxerre 0950 - 1015 Badoc Bodon Seigneur deMaers 65 65 ~1056 - 1145 Raoul V deBeaumont 89 89  Vicomte De Maine ~1070 Adenor de Laval ~1070 - 1110 Ralph IV deBeaumont 40 40 Vicomte De Maine Ermendgard deNevers ~1037 Hubert deBeaumont Vicomte De Maine D. 1058 Emma deMontrevault Stephen deMontrevault 1010 - 1044 Humphrey deVielles 34 34 Humphrey added to his paternal fief, by gift from his brother, that ofBellomont or Beaumont, from which his descendants take their name. ThisManor of Bellomont was in the Department of Eure in Normandy. ~1000 Ralph III deBeaumont Vicomte De Maine ~0965 - DECEASED Eremburga deMontreveau ~0965 - >1014 Ralph Roscelin II deBeaumont 49 49  Vicomte De Maine ~1110 Agnes deMontbelliard ~1080 - 1112 Thierry III deMontbelliard 32 32 ~1108 - 1150 Richard II Comte deMontfaucon 42 42 ~1070 - 1110 Amadeus de Montfaucon 40 40 ~1045 - 1080 Richard I deMontfaucon 35 35 ~1020 Conan deMontfaucon ~1100 Ella deCamera 1010 - 1045 Aubreye de La Haye 35 35 ~1090 Richard deReinbuecurt ~1040 Guy deReinbuecurt ~1095 - >1129 Richard Foliot 34 34 <1063 Sampson Foliot Name Suffix:<NSFX> Seigneur De Montfarville
Gave two houses in Barfleur to Quarr Abbey.
~1190 - 1234 Henry deBraybrook 44 44 1168 - 1210 Robert deBraybrook 42 42 ~1146 - ~1167 Ingebald deBraybrook 21 21 ~1150 Aubrey deBraybrook ~1125 Ivo deBraybrook ~1180 Gilbert FitzMaldred Hansard 0920 - UNKNOWN Louis IV "D'Outremer" King of France 1200 - 1270 William I Le Latimer 70 70 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
Name Suffix:<NSFX> Sheriff Of Yorkshire
~0996 - >1058 Hugh Bardoul 62 62 Gartnach Moermaer of Buchan D. ~1097 Donald III Bane Scotland ~1057 Nn. Giffard 1680 - 1719 Thomas Merritt 38 38 ~1018 Ranulf deSt. Liz ~1035 - <1106 Robert deMarmion 71 71 ~1078 - <1129 Constantine 51 51 This person is not mentioned in Burke's Peerage, which has Gillemichael a son of "Edelrad, apparently Earl of Fife, who flourished in the early 12th century and was also Abbot of Dunkeld; possibly the same person as Eth who fathered Gillemichael". ~1032 Unknown Kenneth\Cainncach\ Canneach 0844 - 0905 Adelbert "The Illustrious" Count Thurgau 61 61 1070 - DECEASED Helga Mandannsdottir ~1040 - DECEASED Mandann or Moddan Earl of Caithness 1035 Hawise 0980 Emmaline deNormandie 0975 - DECEASED Gozelin Vicomte deRouen ~0970 Henry deBeaumont ~1332 - 1404 Walter deCalverley 72 72 ~1334 - DECEASED Margery deDineley ~1039 Guillaume deGarlende 1060 Hamelin deBaalun 0865 - 0911 Burkhard I Count of Baar 46 46 D. DECEASED Christina Verch Goronwy ~1130 - DECEASED William FitzRobert deGressinghall 0920 Helpuin D'Arcis- sur-Aube ~1025 - DECEASED Adeline de Domfront ~1023 - 1074 Routrou I Vicomte de De Chateaudun 51 51 ~1172 - DECEASED Maud deQuincy ~1170 - 1226 Phillip dePrenDergast 56 56 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Enniscorthy ~1145 - 1205 Maurice dePrenDergast 60 60 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1158 - ~1203 Basilia de Clare 45 45 D. <1257 Robert Umfreville D. UNKNOWN Mathilde Arenburg 1073 - 1136 Luitpold Von Babenburg 63 63 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Margrave Of Austria 1039 - 1070 Adelaide Von Wettin 31 31 D. 1109 Hidda Wohenwarth 1064 Raynier deMontferrat 1044 - 1078 Pietro deMaurienne 34 34 ~0949 - 1010 Duncan Dunkeld 61 61  Moermaer Of Athol , Commanded the Scottish left wing at the battle of Luncarty 990 where the Danes were so defeated that their raids on that part of what subsequently became Perthshire, hitherto periodic and devastating, were terminated. [Burke's Peerage] ~1065 - 1120 William III Taillefer D'Angouleme 55 55 <1050 - DECEASED Condoha Vegena D'Eu ~1030 - 1087 Fulk I D'Angouleme 57 57 ~1010 - >1048 Petronilla Archiac 38 38 0980 - 1039 Dietrich III 59 59 0826 Liudolf deSaxony Saxon Lineage Sources:
    Browning's Americans of Royal Descent, pp. 482/3.
    Betham's Genealogical Tables CCCCI, CCCCIII.
    Allstrom's Genealogical Dictionary of Royal Families of Europe, Vol.2, p. 329.
    David Starr Jordan's "Your Family Tree," pp. 68/9, 70/1/2/3/4, 87/9,
    91, 145/6, 307, 317/18.
    Cokayne's Complete Peerage of England, Vol. 5, pp. 305 to 320, 715,
    Vol. 6, p. 362.
    Britannica Encyclopaedia.
    Williams Historians History of the World.
~1000 - 1048 Geoffrey I D'Angouleme 48 48 ~1179 Alice deJarpenville ~1155 - DECEASED William deJarpenville Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1159 - DECEASED Aubrey deRumenel ~1129 - DECEASED David deRumenel Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Ashton Mullens ~1150 - DECEASED Thomas FitzBarnard 1153 - DECEASED Eugenia Picot 1594/1595 - 1675 Margaret Wyatt ~1058 Robert FitzPicot deSay D. DECEASED Margaret deHarcourt D. UNKNOWN Herman Palantine Juliana Eva D. DECEASED Robert Unknown ~1060 Amanjeu deBenauges 1086 Mathilda England 1069 - 1144 Routrou dePerche 75 75 ~1020 - DECEASED William deTurenne ~0980 Beatrix deNormandy ~0990 - DECEASED Ebal II deVentadour ~0985 - >1040 Roger deMontgomery 55 55 Vicomte D'Hiemois 1068 - UNKNOWN Alice Adelaideof Namur 0980 Taidg MacGilla Patraic Of Ossory 1369 John deBeaumont The Visitations call this person: Henry. Burkes states this persons name as John. D. DECEASED Cecilia Merfield ~1350 - DECEASED Agnes Dronsfield ~1345 - 1413 John II Wentworth 68 68 ~1313 - DECEASED Loan (Joan?) Le Tyas ~1310 - DECEASED John Wentworth D. DECEASED Isabel Pollington D. DECEASED William Wentworth ~1013 - >1066 Reginald Wentworth 53 53 1055 - 20 Mar 1124/1125 Otto II Count of Chiny ~1047 Adeliza Aumary D'Arbitot Ralph D'Aubigny deBrito ~1195 - DECEASED Eleanor deColurcelles ~1185 - <1238 Ralph FitzBarnard 53 53 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1163 - DECEASED Thomas FitzBarnard 1168 - DECEASED Mary Margaret (Margery) Foliot Name Suffix:<NSFX> Of Warden 1143 - DECEASED Richard Foliot Name Suffix:<NSFX> Of Warden 1143 - DECEASED Miss Hastings 1105 - 1178 William deLuvetot 73 73 1033 - 1071 Ulfhild Of Norway 38 38 <1036 - 1085 Ermendgard deTonnerre 49 49 Wymarche Essex Grace ~1130 - 1200 Thomas FitzGospatic deFurnys 70 70 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 2nd Lord Of Workington Gunnilda Of Northumbria ~1114 Egeline Engaine ~1070 - DECEASED Ranulf D'Engaine D. 1179 Gospatric deWorkington  Earl Of Dunbar Orm Of Kendal ~1070 - ~1150 Ketel deTaillebois 80 80 3rd Baron Kendal ~1046 Ralph Pincerna (Research):DEADEND: 1056 Eldred deTaillebois 2nd Baron Of Kendal Eleanor Plantagenet, Princess of England ~1100 - >1170 Huck (Hucca) deSingleton 70 70 ~1078 Laigle deAquila D. DECEASED Sibilla deValoynes ~0992 - >1031 Ancitel deSt. Liz 39 39 D. DECEASED Poppa deSenlis Berengal ~1040 - >1107 Peter Seigneur deValoines 67 67 ~1095 Agnes 1081 - 1187 Louis VI King of France 106 106 ~1080 - DECEASED Robert deValoines D. 1187 Alice deRumilly Athelreda Dunbar ~1060 - 1094 Duncan II King Of Scotland 34 34 ~1092 - >1154 Ralph Murdach 62 62 ~1067 - DECEASED Ralph Meurdach ~1110 - ~1170 Beatrice deChesney 60 60 ~1073 - DECEASED Alice deLangetot ~1073 - 1109 Roger deChesney 36 36 ~0980 Hermengarde D'Auvergne D. UNKNOWN Marguerite Schwartzenburg Gisela Lucia Jane Cockeram ~0980 Sunifredo II Of Lluca D. 1312 Mabel deSomery 1215 - 1285 Walter deSully 70 70 1172 - 1242 Raymond deSully 70 70 D. DECEASED Walter deSully ~1154 - DECEASED Mabel deTorrington 1134 - >1170 William II Baron deTorrington 36 36 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1109 - DECEASED William I Baron deTorrington Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 1085 - 1139 Valeran III Count of Limbourg 54 54 ~1086 - DECEASED Robert Baron deTorrington Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1067 - DECEASED Roger deTorrington ~1090 - DECEASED John "Monoculus" FitzNigell ~1065 Nigell ~1062 - 1153 William FitzNigel 91 91  Baron Of Halton & Widnor

Lord de Halton
1080 - DECEASED Amice deMontfort 1062 - DECEASED Avise FitzOsbern 1035 Ralph deMontfort  1st Earl Of Norfolk, Suffolk & Cambridge ~1318 Robert deLegh ~1080 Agnes deBraine Heiress Of Braine 1090 - 1151 Jutta of Geldern 61 61 ~1069 - 1142 Andre de Baudemont 73 73 ~1020 - 1066 Aelis deTroyes 46 46 ~0954 - 1042/1047 Adelaide de Soissons ~0948 - >0989 Guy deVermandois 41 41 ~0940 - ~0971 Nocher I deLa Ferte 31 31 ~1014 - 1074 Hodierne deGometz- La-Ferte 60 60 ~0973 - 26 Jan 1057/1058 Alice Lesseliine deHarcourt ~0951 - DECEASED Turchetil deHarcourt ~0953 - DECEASED Adeline de Montfort ~0943 - 1023 Thurstan deMontfort De Bastembourg 80 80 1  NAME Turstan /De Bastenberg/
1  NAME Toussaint De Bertrand /De Bastenburg/
1  DEAT
2  DATE Deceased
Elisabeth of Chalons 0810 Oda deSaxony ~0955 - BEF 4 Jan 1038/1039 William Comte D'Eu D. DECEASED Mathilde De Ponthieu 1067 - 1119 Alain VI Fergent deBretagne 52 52 >1027 - 1071 Havoise deBretagne 44 44 1643 - 1710 Henry Wolcott 67 67 Henry was elected a member of the House of Deputies in 1686 and subsequently served for many years as the Town Clerk of Windsor.
Real estate in his possesion--left in England by the first Henry Wolcott and given by his will to the eldest surviving son, the second Henry Wolcott, and then to his eldest son the third Henry Wolcott--was sold by Henry Allen,Esq, for 850 Pounds sterling. As the 3rd Henry Wolcott died without surviving male issue, his estate reverted to the heirs of his daughters. Their claim was contested by the heirs of the male line. The suit involving the question of recognition of the English law of primogeniture and entail, was watched with interest from the colony. The claim of the Wolcotts was disallowed. The decision caused some unpleasentness in the family.
1] Griffen & Alegre,  Wolcott Family in America, Publication: Society of Descendants of Henry Wolcott, pg 427.
2] The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, The New England Historical and Genealogical Society
Page: vol 1: 252, July 1847,  "The Wolcott Family"
3] The Connecticut Nutmegger, Connecticut Society of Genealogists.
4] The New England Historical and Genealogical Register  (The New England Historical and Genealogical Society).
~1025 - 1084 Hoel V deCornouailles 59 59 ~0960 - DECEASED Windesmode De Saliins ~0940 - ~0959 Unknown 19 19 ~0940 - DECEASED Adele de Saliins ~0927 - DECEASED Engelbert II Comte deBrienne 1060 - 1139 Clemence of Poitou 79 79 Eva ~0983 - DECEASED Gisele deMontfort ~0981 - DECEASED Giroie D'Eschauffon ~1010 - 1099 Adelaide De Gournay 89 89 ~0966 - DECEASED Hugh deGournay <1022 - DECEASED Bouchard III deMontmorency Ranulf deLa Haye ~1084 - 1156 Adelise Peverell 72 72 ~1066 - DECEASED Richard deQuincy William Umfreville Rector of Ovingham 1055 - 1109 Adelheid of Botenstein 54 54 ~1107 Ness de Leuchars  Earl Of Mar ~1036 William de Leuchars ~1055 William FitzWilliam FitzOsbern ~1090 Robert deVitre ~1020 Roger deMontbrai ~1354 - 16 Feb 1420/1421 John Pilkington ~1355 - ~1383 Hugh deBradshagh 28 28 ~1351 Margaret deVerdon ~1300 - ~1346 John deVerdon 46 46 1168 Hawise deTracy 1053 - 1119 Henry I Count of Limbourg 66 66 ~1040 - >1093 Iestyn Ap Gwrgan 53 53 ~1002 - 1023 Cynfyn Ap Gwerystan 21 21 Name Suffix:<NSFX> King Of Powys
1  NAME Cynfyn Ap /Gwerstan/
1  NAME CynfynAp /Gwerystan/
2  SOUR S033320
3  DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 979
2  PLAC of, Powysland, Wales
2  SOUR S033320
3DATA
4  TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1002
2  PLAC Powys, Wales


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Young; Kraentzler 1408, 1409; Dictionary of National Biography;
Dakota; Royal Descents.
Descents: Cynfyn,Prince of Powys, married Angharad II, Queen of Powys, page
465.
Dakota: Cynfyn.
Young: Cynfyn ap Gwerstan.
K: Cynvyn ap Gwerstan, Prince of Cadwgan and Powis.
Are sons Caradawg and Cadwgan the same person? Came from different sources.
******
He was known as Cynfyn ap Gwerystan of Powys.

SOURCES:
1.  _Dictionary of National Biography_.
1222 - >1281 Annabilia deChaucombe 59 59 1  NAME Anabil /De Chaucombe/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1220
2  PLAC Staffordshire, England
1  DEAT
2  DATE AFT. 1282
2  PLAC Chaucombe Priory
1151 Hodierne 1220 - 1273 Roger deSomery 53 53 ~1240 Richard* deTankersley ~1141 - >1195 Lucy de Clifford 54 54 ~1136 - 1190 Hugh de Say 54 54 ~1074 Theodore de Say 1154 - 1208 Sanchia Castile, Queen of Aragon 54 54 1037 - 1104 Judith of Schweinfurt 67 67 1007 - 1071 Robert deEssex 64 64 ~0977 Wymarche ~1040 - 1076/1090 Hamon Seigneur deLaval ~1010 - ~1065 Guy Seigneur deLaval 55 55 ~1020 - DECEASED Beatrice deToDeni ~1000 - ~1037 Roger deToDeni 37 37 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Guerny ~1005 - 1083 Ivo IV deBeaumont 78 78 Comte 1525 - 1612 Thomas Warham 87 87 ~1003 - DECEASED Hubert deRie 1026 - 1117 Boto Graf of Botenstein 91 91 Hawyse 1035 - 1162 William Paynel 127 127 ~1105 Juliana Brampton ~1075 - ~1136 Robert Brampton 61 61 ~1045 - <1107 Walter deDouai 62 62 ~1128 - ~1205 Fulk II Paynel 77 77 ~1130 Aude Abrincis 1128 Alanor Eleanor de Dommart D. 1434 Grace Hebden D. UNKNOWN Hartwig II of Botenstein ~1378 - 1417 Piers Tempest 39 39 1356 - 1428 Richard Tempest 72 72 ~1336 - >1390 Maria Talbot 54 54 ~1334 - 1386 Richard Tempest 52 52 1283 - 1359 John Tempest 76 76 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1319 - DECEASED Matilda deHoland D. DECEASED Dorothy Rye D. DECEASED Nicholas Rye D. DECEASED Nicholas Hebden D. DECEASED John Leygard D. UNKNOWN Frideruna of Bavaria ~1307 - <1366 Thomas Talbot 59 59 D. DECEASED John Tempest Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1322 - >1364 Katherine Sherburne 42 42 1277 Robert Sherburne Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 1270 John deBlackburn 1009 - DECEASED Nobilia Lodeve <1132 - ~1176 Manasser Biset 44 44 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Kidderminster ~1109 - DECEASED Gwladys Verch Gruffydd ~1076 - DECEASED Caradog Ap Iestyn D. DECEASED Adelaide De Maurienne 1011 - 1057 Otto III Markgraf of Schweinfurt 46 46 ~1043 - 1080 Nigel deCotentin 37 37  Constable Of Chester ~1003 - DECEASED Neil IV Vicomte de Saint Sauveur ~0953 - 1045 Niel II Vicomte de Saint Sauveur 92 92 ~0738 - ~0825 Gwriad ap Elidir of Gwynedd 87 87 ~1100 - DECEASED Emma deGresley ~1050 - ~1100 Albert deGreslet 50 50  Lord Of Manchester ~0970 deBayeux ~1145 - >1201 Orm FitzRoger deAshton 56 56 ~1117 Roger deAshton De Kirkby ~1090 Orm Fitz Ailward deAshton 1000 - 1075 Ermengarde Turin 75 75 ~1111 - 1182 Walkelin Maminot 71 71 ~1410 - 1482 John Saville 72 72 ~1415 - >1482 Alice Gascoigne 67 67 1346 - 1436 Agnes deBarden 90 90 1344 - <1444 Henry Wyman 100 100 1340 - 1391 Elizabeth Mowbray 51 51 1316 - DECEASED Elizabeth Musters 1314 - DECEASED Alexander Mowbray ~1335 - 1419 William VII Gascoigne 84 84  Lord Chief Justice Of England ~1293 - 1383 William VII Gascoigne 90 90 D. UNKNOWN Udalrico Manfredo ~1239 - 1294 Alianore Wade 55 55 ~1312 - <1412 Agnes Franke 100 100 ~1288 - DECEASED Katherine Ellis ~1286 - DECEASED Nicholas Franke ~1270 - DECEASED Elizabeth Bolton ~1250 - ~1330 William VI Gascoigne 80 80 ~1222 - DECEASED Elizabeth deBoulton 1196 William deBoulton ~1218 - 1270 William V Gascoigne 52 52 ~1182 - 1222 William IV Gascoigne 40 40 ~1151 - DECEASED William III Gascoigne D. UNKNOWN Bertha Este ~1120 - DECEASED William II Gascoigne ~1089 - DECEASED William I Gascoigne 1381 - DECEASED Thomas Saville ~1357 - <1437 Elizabeth Thornhill 80 80 ~1331 - DECEASED Simon Thornhill ~1305 - DECEASED Brian Thornhill ~1355 - DECEASED Henry Saville ~1331 - DECEASED Isabel Eland ~1329 John Saville ~1305 - DECEASED Thomas Saville 1166 William III deMontgomerie  Count of Ponthieu Gisela Concubine 1048 - DECEASED Morfydd verch Ednywain Bendew [De La Pole.FTW]

Source: Kraentzler 1406, 1409.
K: Morfydd verch Goronwy.
Dot Clark, no source listed, calls this woman Ednywain Bendew verch Morwyl.
She RIN 13918 in the database.
D. >1079 Ednywain Bendew Ap Neiniad ~1020 - 1070 Ulfhild Olafsdatter 50 50 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Princess Of Norway ~1020 - 1072 Ordulph (Otto) Duke Of Saxony 52 52 1016 - 1058 Kazimierz I Karol King Of Poland 42 42 ~1011 - 1087 Dobronegra Mariya Vladimirovna Princess Of Kiev 76 76 ~1310 Henry de Rishworth ~1130 - DECEASED Adelaide De Beziers D. UNKNOWN Pedro Duke of Contabria ~1075 - DECEASED Arnaud deLa Flotte ~1098 - 1160 Gersende d'Albon 62 62 ~1025 - <1070 Adelais de Turin 45 45 0995 - DECEASED Artaud Sire D'Annonay 1000 - 1070 Petronel deGrenoble 70 70 ~1135 - 1206 Rosine deUzes 71 71 Beatrice ~1115 - DECEASED Raynier Seigneur deUzes D. DECEASED Bremond Seigneur deUzes deUzes 1180 - 1239 Simon Dammartin II Count Of Aumale 59 59 D. 1138 Raimond Of Avignon ~1133 - 16 Feb 1207/1208 Rostaing deSabran ~1115 - ~1199 William deSabran 84 84 Constance Amic Ayelmna D. 1113 Giraud Amic ~1090 - 1184 Rostaing deSabran 94 94 D. DECEASED William deSabran ~1100 - >1134 Margaret Von Schwarzenburg 34 34 Mechtild 1090 - 1145 Uta Von Passau 55 55 D. 1109 Adalbert V Von Saffenberg Gepa Von Werl D. >1091 Hermann IV Von Saffenberg 1015 - ~1058 Ermensinde De Longwy 43 43 1023 - 1092 Dietrich Flamens 69 69 ~1060 Justizia Austria 1027 - 1075 Ernst Von Babenburg 48 48 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Margrave Of Austria ~1015 - ~1060 Berthold II Of Diessen 45 45 ~0958 - DECEASED Nn. Of Lorraine ~1020 - 1100 Irmgarde Von Rott 80 80 1201 - 1252 Fernando III "The Saint" King Of Castile & Leon 51 51 0996 - 1086 Uta Von deissen 90 90 0992 - ~1086 Kuno II Von Rott 94 94 1025 - 1080 Gerhard II Sultzbach 55 55 ~1015 - 1038 Hermann IV Swabia 23 23 ~0983 - 1015 Ernst I Von Babenburg 32 32 ~1195 - DECEASED Miss deCurwen ~1175 - DECEASED Alan Culwen deCurwen ~1158 - ~1212 Patrick deCulwen 54 54 ~1086 - DECEASED Ibria D'Estriviers ~1065 Robert D'Estriviers D. 0687 Ervik Westgoth ~1069 Matilda deMeschines ~1184 Christina ~1152 - DECEASED Richard deTrafford ~1124 - >1200 Henry deTrafford 76 76 ~1140 - DECEASED Adam Baron deMontebegone Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1145 - DECEASED Maud FitzSwaine ~1125 - DECEASED Beatrice FitzWalter ~1120 - DECEASED Richard Adam FitzSwaine ~1099 - DECEASED Nn. deVesci ~1975 - DECEASED Harvey deVesci D. UNKNOWN Gorka ~1095 - <1130 Swaine FitzAlaric 35 35 ~1070 Alaric ~1212 - DECEASED Loretta ~1184 Aldonza Martinez deSilva D. 1161 William deTaillebois ~0997 - 1040 Alain III of Bretagne 43 43 pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1189 - <1263 Hugh deVere 74 74 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 4th Earl Of Oxford Margaret (Margery) Corbet ~1315 - DECEASED John deDineley ~1304 - DECEASED JoAnna Warde D. 0895 Borivoj I Duke of Bohemia Clarice <1287 - >1300 Simon Warde 13 13 D. DECEASED Margaret deNeville D. DECEASED Maude De Beauchamp ~1187 - 1246 Jollan deNeville 59 59 D. DECEASED Amfelisia deRolleston Olive D. DECEASED Alan deRolleston Garsiena D. DECEASED Roald Son Of Harscod D. UNKNOWN Urgusia Of Fortrinn 0784 Aeda deSaxony Harscod 1140 - 1209 Jollan deNeville 69 69 D. DECEASED Miss FitzRichard 1084 - DECEASED Richard FitzLosoard 1100 - DECEASED Jollan deNeville D. DECEASED William Warde D. DECEASED Constance deVescy <1190 - DECEASED Simon Warde ~1160 - <1217 William Warde 57 57 Maude 0764 - 0843 Merfyn Frych King of Powys 79 79 D. DECEASED Simon Warde ~1300 - >1324 John deCalverley 24 24 <1279 - DECEASED Margaret Warde ~1275 - DECEASED John deCalverley ~1253 - DECEASED Emma Mabel Stapleton ~1200 - <1294 Diana Beaulieu 94 94 ~1170 - <1261 John Beaulieu 91 91 ~1249 - DECEASED William Scot deCalverley Jursella ~1223 - DECEASED Roger Scot deCalverley D. 0988 Idwal ~1201 - DECEASED Joan Swillington <1180 - DECEASED John or Robert Swillington ~1191 - DECEASED William Or Walter Scot deCalverley ~1154 - DECEASED Miss Luttrell ~1130 - DECEASED John Luttrell <1136 - DECEASED John Scot deCalverley ~1090 - DECEASED John Le Scot ~1094 - DECEASED Larderina Gospatrick ~1070 - DECEASED Alphonsus Gospatrick ~1170 - <1264 Loderina de Bruce 94 94 0742 - 0836 Nest Verch Cadell 94 94 ~1200 - DECEASED Nicholas Stapeton ~1170 Barbara Darell ~1150 John Darell <1268 - DECEASED Miles Stapyton ~1245 - DECEASED Catherine Hansard ~1215 - DECEASED Robert Hansard ~1245 - DECEASED John Stapyton ~1210 - DECEASED Miss FitzHenry ~1180 - DECEASED Henry FitzHenry ~1210 - DECEASED Brian Stapyton Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir 0799 - 0864 Esyllt Verrch Cynan 65 65 ~1180 - DECEASED Ann Nevill ~1150 - DECEASED Robert Nevill <1170 - DECEASED Alan Stapyton Pendoros ~1150 - DECEASED Miles Stapyton Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir ~1120 - DECEASED Johanna Mallory ~1120 - DECEASED John Stapyton ~1075 - DECEASED Miss Tanfield <1080 - DECEASED Alan ~1090 Irene D. UNKNOWN King of Powys AFT 16 Jan 1092/1093 - >1152 Isaac Comnenus Name Suffix:<NSFX> Sebastocrator D. DECEASED Cynan Ap LLwarch ~1067 - <1130 Richard Hasculf deSaint Hillary 63 63 ~1060 - DECEASED Gilbert deTonebridge 1077 - 1111 Robert deBeauchamp 34 34 Mathilde De Taillebois Azeline ~1029 Rolf deTaillebois 1014 Raoul deTaillebois ~1020 Robert deBeauchamp 0520 - 0603 Brunhild Princess of the Visgoths 83 83 ~1140 - DECEASED Ada D'Engaine Ebria Trivers D. DECEASED Ralph D'Engaine ~1104 - 1167 Simon deMorville 63 63 Eustacie D. DECEASED Hugh deMorville ~1022 - 1085 Beatrice deFalaise 63 63 ~1019 - 1086 Konrad I Comte deLuxembourg 67 67 ~0920 Rolais Unknown ~0996 Anchicitil deBessin D. UNKNOWN Agrippina ~1080 - DECEASED Walter deBelmeis ~1048 - DECEASED Richard deBelmeis ~1022 Robert deBelmeis <1041 - DECEASED Amalvina deBezaume <1038 Guillen Amanieu deBenauges D. 1018 Godizo Van de Betuwe D. >1026 Unruoch 1200 - DECEASED Lambert deMulton Name Suffix:<NSFX> Baron Lucy 1200 - 1276 Amabel deLucy 76 76 1259 - >1324 Margaret deHoland 65 65 D. UNKNOWN II Childeric 1235 - DECEASED Adam deBlackburn ~1205 - DECEASED John deBlackburn ~1175 - DECEASED Adam deBlackburn D. DECEASED Eva deCarlton D. DECEASED Walter deCarlton ~1251 - DECEASED John deSherburne 1223 - DECEASED Matilda deCatford D. DECEASED Adam deCatford Swan ~1205 - 1261 Robert deSherburne 56 56 2 Feb 1285/1286 - 1356 Joan deGeneville ~1175 - DECEASED Richard deSherburne ~1180 - DECEASED Miss Le Arbalastier D. ~1220 Geoffrey Le Arbalastier Margaret 1053 Gerberge 1049 - >1097 Barthelmy deBouchard 48 48 1023 - DECEASED Agnes Dame deL'Isle Bouchard 1019 - 1083 Archimbaud Borel 64 64 ~0993 - >1030 Hugues deBouchard 37 37 ~1335 Maud 1060 - UNKNOWN Dyddgu Verch Iorwerth 0828 - ~0905 Reginhart 77 77 Count of Ringleheim. 1276 - 1346 Thomas deVerdon 70 70 1280 - DECEASED Margaret Knoville 1252 - DECEASED Bewes Knoville 1260 - DECEASED Joan Waleran 1232 William Waleran 1256 - DECEASED John deVerdon 1258 - DECEASED Eleanor deFurnival ~1080 Gerald deFurnivall ~1060 Gerald deFurnivall ~1060 Margaret Cave 1048 - UNKNOWN Morwyl Verch Ednywain 1225 - DECEASED Isabel FitzSimon 1217 John deVerdon 1185 - DECEASED William deVerdon 1159 - DECEASED Norman deVerdun 1130 - DECEASED Nicholas deVerdun ~1030 Hugues deBraine ~1060 - DECEASED Ade De Soissons 1042 - 1079 Adelaide De Soissons 37 37 0987 - 1057 Renaud I deVermandois 70 70 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Soissons Baldwin deFreville 1027 Iorwerth Ap Cadwgon 1050 - DECEASED Eustachie deTonnerre 1035 - 1089 Gauthier deBrienne 54 54 D. >1164 Cicely Bigod ~1214 - 1249 Hawise deLanvallel 35 35 ~1240 - DECEASED Margaret deTrafford ~1225 - DECEASED Richard deRadcliffe ~1070 Margaret ~1220 - ~1275 Adam Lord deBury 55 55 ~1195 - DECEASED Edward Lord deBury ~1200 - DECEASED Alice deMontbegon 1031 - 1120 Ranult (Ragnhildir) Olaf of Dublin ingen 89 89 Hawise Hadeguisa ~1107 Emma ~1074 - DECEASED Walter deCantelou 1160 - 1232 Alexander de Pilkington 72 72 ~1145 - DECEASED Leonard dePilkington 1110 - DECEASED Leonard dePilkington ~1107 Adam de Molyneux 1012 - 1095 Pedro Ansurez deValladolid 83 83 ~1058 - DECEASED Luciana deRasez 1102 Gontrode De Asturias 0616 - 0656 Sigebert II King of Austrasia 40 40 ~0990 - DECEASED Urraca Garces de Navarre D. DECEASED William Cogan D. 1182 Milo Cogan D. DECEASED Christiana Pagnel D. DECEASED Lescelina Gripon ~1050 - DECEASED Fulk Pagnel D. DECEASED William Pagnel ~0970 - DECEASED Miss deMacon ~1057 Osbert de Conde ~1030 Pierre de Conde D. UNKNOWN Immachilde ~1030 - DECEASED Emma Crispin ~0985 - DECEASED Beatrice Le Goz ~1005 - DECEASED Aelis deRoucy ~1040 - DECEASED Thietburge Of Savoy ~1000 - ~1051 Amadeus I de Savoie 51 51 ~1015 Adelaide d'Albon ~0990 Aalgut ~1000 - 1030 Emerard I Sire deFaucigny 30 30 ~1376 - DECEASED Margaret Pilkington ~1390 - 1436 Nicholas I Griffin 46 46 D. 0758 Sigebert III Comte deRazes ~0915 - DECEASED Ermengarde De Lorraine Ekaterina Of Bulgaria 12 Mar 1368/1369 - 1408 John de Arderne Willian de Odingsells ~1075 - ~1127 Aimery VI deThouars 52 52 D. 12 Mar 1288/1289 Guy deChatillon Amice de Guader ~1070 Anchetil deHarcourt Ademar IV de Limoges Agnes deLegh 0546 - 0579 Fredegund 33 33 D. 1075 Gerard deSupplinbourg 20 Mar 1223/1224 - 1275 Sophie deThuringia 1189 - 1248 Henri II deBrabant 59 59 1105 - 1161 Melisende De Rethel 56 56 1160 - >1204 Sarah FitzHugh 44 44 ~1210 - DECEASED Ermentrude De Ferrers 1190 - DECEASED Joan Bocland 1170 - 1227 Robert deFerrers 57 57 1210 - DECEASED Henry FitzGerald 1111 - >1157 Agnes Austria 46 46 0564 - 0628 Clothar II King of Austrasias & Neustria 64 64 ~1075 - DECEASED Adelais de Comps ~1050 - DECEASED Henri deLa Flotte ~1062 - >1092 Ida deForez 30 30 Azubah Lamson D. DECEASED Miss FitzGerald Sarah Van Wert 1700 - 1753 John Merritt 53 53 1698 - 1791 Edward Merritt 93 93 0975 Alberada 0966 Renaud deGournay 0565 - 0630 Altrude 65 65 1105 - 1191 Alice deBeaumont 86 86 1092 - DECEASED Hugh deGrentemesnil Eudes III (Duke) of Burgundy Ada Beatrix Alvia ~1100 - DECEASED Roger FitzWilliam deGressinghall ~1075 - DECEASED William FitzRoger deGressinghall ~1079 Aelina ~1050 - >1135 Roger FitzWimer deGressinghall 85 85 0585 - 0670 Dagobert I King of Austrasia & Neustria 85 85 ~1210 - >1281 Amabilia deChaucombe 71 71 pg 81, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1025 - >1090 Wimer 65 65 ~1077 Miss deBraose ~1050 Miss Alselyn 1032 - 1068 Hildegarde De Chateau- Landon 36 36 1208 - DECEASED Matilda deSingleton ~1174 - DECEASED Orm (Osbert) deKellet 0978 - 1005 Mathilde De Nevers 27 27 ~1000 Manasses deGhisnes ~1005 Emma D'Arques D. DECEASED Gerbrudis deCleremont 0587 - 0665 Nanthild 78 78 D. DECEASED Gallus Guillaume deVere Name Suffix:<NSFX> Comte De Guisnes ~1135 - DECEASED Nn. FitzLeofwin ~1110 Leofwin ~1090 Aviet ~1130 - DECEASED Reginald deNotton ~1109 Margaret ~1105 - DECEASED Assulf deNotton ~1020 - DECEASED Arnoul dePicquigny ~1174 John deSanford 0965 - 0994 Konrad III Von Ortenau 29 29 0610 - 0681 Clovis II King of Neustria 71 71 ~1139 - 1246 Ednyfed Fychan Ap Cynwrig 107 107 ~1310 - >1366 Elizabeth Bellair 56 56 ~1280 - DECEASED James Bellair ~1290 - >1347 Joan (Jane) deHoland 57 57 ~1274 - DECEASED Edmund Talbot ~1259 - <1275 Thomas Talbot 16 16 ~1259 Mathea deYorkshire ~1235 Matilda deYorkshire ~1229 - DECEASED Robert Talbot ~1178 - DECEASED Robert Talbot 0609 - 0685 Bathild 76 76 ~1134 - >1178 William Talbot 44 44 ~1177 Mabel deYorkshire ~1154 - 1196 Ralph II Murdac 42 42 ~1037 - >1081 Richard FitzMeurdach 44 44 ~1007 Meurdach ~1043 - DECEASED Ralph deLangetot Miss Stanley 1452 Miss Pillond William Pillond Margaret Beaumont 0628 - 0705 Theuderic III King of the Franks 77 77 ~1560 - ~1651 Richard Allyn 91 91 Source: Burton Spear, Mary & John 1630, v 17, 1992, p 9
Savage says Matthew is "perhaps" son of Samuel ALLYN of Chelmsford, Essex (and so does Stiles in The History of Ancient Windsor), but Waters believes otherwise.   Added 9 Oct 1994:  "Until an article was printed in the New England Register, April 1897 (NER 51:212-214), there was speculation that brothers, Matthew and Thomas Allyn came from Chelmsford, Essex, and were sons of Samuel Allen. However, when a search of the parish records in Braunton, Devon (5 miles E. of Barnstable) was made by the Braunton vicar, he reported all of the entries found were spelled Allen or Allin, not Allyn.  The entries began in 1538.  The first Allen entry was Thomas, bpt. 1545, son of Symon Allen and the first marriage was a Niholas Allen to Margret Taylor in 1554.  The other Allen entries found began in 1581.  However, Douglas Richardson wrote an article in TAG 57:115-119 (1981) after he restudied the Braunton records and found that the 1897 study missed some entries, and he published all of the records he found.  He published all Allen-Wyatt entries; baptisms (1538-1666), marriages (1538-1652) and burials (1538-1662)."   p 9-10:  "Richard Allen -- Pos. the Richard Allen bpt. 15 Mar. 1563/4, Braunton.  Will dated 29 Nov. 1647, proved 10 May 1652 (PCC, Bowyer--108) (Waters-1212).  Butied 5 Aug. 1651, Braunton.  He m. Margaret Wyatt, 24 Sept. 1583, Braunton, Devon.  She was bpt. 19 May 1557 and buried 10 May 1642, Braunton, daughter of Walter Wyatt, and Joan Pilford."
WILL of: RICHARD ALLEN the elder of Branton in Devon 29 November 1647, proved 10 May 1652. To my son Thomas Allinge five pounds. To my son Matthew Allinge five pounds. To Mary Allinge daughter of son Thomas twenty shillings. I give and bequeath unto my son Mathew's three children, to John the sum of twenty shillings, to Thomas, his son, twenty shillings and to Mary, his daughter, twenty shillings. To my grandchild Mary Tamling five pounds, to my grandchild Elianor Tamling four pounds, to my grandchild Obedience Garland twenty shillings and to my grandchild Elizabeth Tamling twenty shillings. To my daughter in law Elizabeth, wife of my son Richard, twenty shillings in gold to buy her a ring. To my grandchild John Alling, son of my son Richard, three pounds. To my grandchild Margaret, daughter of my son Richard, three pounds. To John Rice of Barnstaple twenty shillings. To the poor of Branton three pounds, to be distributed to their houses within ten days after my decease. To Walter Cutt five shillings. To every servant in my house at the time of my death two shillings sixpence apiece. Son Richard Alling to be executor and residuary legatee. Bowyer, 108

Will of: "RICHARD ALLYN of Branton in the County of Devon, yeoman, 12 May 1662, proved 17 June 1662. To my son John tenement in Bushton in the Parish of West Buckland. Daughter Margaret. To my wife my messuages, lands &c. in Bowde within the said parish of Branton. Son Richard to have part of my grounds in Frithelstock at age of twenty-one. To said Richard the tenement in Branton town within the manor of Branton Deane. To son Thomas messuages &c. in Barnstaple. To son Matthew messuages &c. in Northam. My daughter Elizabeth. Daughter Mary, at twenty one. Wife Elizabeth to be sole executrix and good friends and kinsmen Philip Dennys of Ilfarcombe (Infracome), Thomas Denys of Barnstaple, John Symons the elder of Branton and Richard Tamlyn of Marwood to be aiding and assisting unto my said executrix, whom I make overseers."
~1555 - 1675 Margaret Wyatt 120 120 Sources place the spelling as Wyatt or Wyott. D. Feb 1564/1565 Matthew Allyn  Matthew Allen -- In the Braunton records he is the only person to have son, Richard, between 1538 and 1680.  He might be  Matthew Allen buied Braunton 7 Feb. 1564/5.  His widow was Katherine Allen who married John Wheake, 29 July 1565, Braunton. Source:   --- Burton Spear,  ... Mary & John 1630, v 17, 1992, p 11. There's another John Wheake in this family, husband of Wilmot Allyn, daughter of Richard Allyn. Katherine 1500 - 1588 Philip Wyatt 88 88 D. 1564 John Wyatt D. 1588 Jone Paty Jeffrie Paty D. ~1000 Godfrey deBrion D. 1034 Gilbert deBrionne  Murdered; Count of Eu and Brion in Normandy, Lord of Bec, Count d'Eu and Captain of Tellieres 0630 - 0714 St. Amalaberga 84 84 D. 1137 Baldwin deBrionne Albreda d' Auveranches Kinswoman to William 'The Conqueror' Richard- Goz d' Auveranches Emme D. 1107 Richard de Redvers Burke's Peerage states Richard and his brother Walter de Vernon , both accompanied William 'The Conqueror' at the Battle of Hastings. D. 1155 Baldwin deRedvers Lucia de Balm 1155 - 1217 William deVernon 62 62  5th Earl of Devon Maud deBeaumont D. 1207 Robert deBeaumont D. UNKNOWN Wandregisi Mary deVernon Peter deProuz William Prouz ~1191 Walter Prouz ~1195 Miss Dinham ~1169 Giles Dinham Baron of Eastervale ~1222 William Prouz ~1226 Miss deGidley ~1200 Giles de Gidley D. ~1314 William Prouz Held Gidley, Stodbury, Cumesheved, Haccehe and Colton manors. Walter Sheppard, in the 7th Edition of Weis Ancestral Roots, stop's here stating: 'The earlier generations of Prouz are not clear.' Note the Visitations state otherwise. D. UNKNOWN Farahild ~1257 Alice deFerrers ~1245 - <1316 William Prouz 71 71 The castle was erected over the ruins of an earlier castle. The remains of Gidley Castle still exist in the privately owned lot next to the church. William  was initially buried in Holbeton, but in keeping with the
terms of his will, was taken up and re-buried at the Church of St. John the Baptise in Lustleigh, Devonshire, England, under Bishop Grandisson's mandate of 19 October 1329. An effigy of William as an crusader is preserved in the wall of the nave.

Source: Frederick Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th edition, 1992, p 55-56
Sir William Le Prouz, s. and h. by (1) [i.e. 1st wife of his father], b. ca. 1245 (ae.25 in 1270), d. shortly bef. 26 Apr. 1316 when Inq.p.m. writ, bur. first at Holbeton, co. Devon, but under Bishop Grandisson's mandate of 19 Oct. 1329, his bones rebur. at Lustleigh, co. Devon, in accordance with his will, held manors of Aveton Gifford, Gidleigh, Holbeton and Lustleigh, co. Devon, Conservator of Peace, co. Devon, 1308, Commissioner re Statute of Winchester, 1310; m. by 1275 Alice de Reigny, lviving 1318, dau. and eventual coh. of John de Reigny, adult by 1222, d. 1246, lord of Aisholt, Aley and Doniford, Somerset, Brixton Reigney in Brixton, co. Devon, and Newton Reigny, Cumberland.  With her three sisters, Alice [his wife] was coh. in 1275 to her nephew Sir William de Reigny."
Source: Devon, by S. Baring Gould, 7th Edition, 1924 Widworthy: Over the West doorway of the tower is a carving in a panel, but too much corroded to distinguish what was its purport.  In the church is the monumental effigy of Sir Hugh Prouz, in Edward III's reign [1327-77]. Widworthy passed from the Prouz family to Chichester, and then to Marwood.
Source: Visitations of Devon of 1531, 1564 and 1620, p. 172 [by Lr. Col. J. L. Vivian].  1. William le Prouse, Lord of Orton.  2. Alice Prouse -- Daughter and heir.  She m. Roger Moels.  3. Johanna Moels -- Daughter and heir.  She m. John Wotton of Widworthy, Devon.  4. John Wotton -- He m. Engaret, daughter and heir of Walter Dymock.  5. Alice Wotton -- Daughter and co-heir. She m. Sir John Chichester.
~1285 - ~1335 Alice Prouz 50 50 Source: Frederick Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th edition, 1992, p 56
Alice PROUZ, b. ca. 1285/86, d. shortly bef. 15 Nov. 1335, held the manors of Aveton Gifford, Widworthy, Lustleigh, Holbeton, Gidleigh and Clist Widworthy; writ to partition her estates between her daus. 12 Mar. 1336; m. (1) ca. 1300, Sir Roger de Moels, Knt., died 1324, almost certainly son of Sir Roger Moels, Knt., died 1295, Keeper of Isle of Wight 1267 and Keeper of Forest of Braden 1292, by an unknown wife, and, if so, yr. bro. of Sir John de Moels, 1st Lord Moels, died 1310.  During her widowhood Alice held mills at Diptford and Glas, co. Decon, which mills were to revert on Alice's death to John de Moeles (apparently 4th Lord Moels), and to Margaret, widow of Nicholas Moeles (2nd Lord Moels), and to Reginald de Moels.  Alice m. (2) ca. 1329 William de Moels by whom she had no issue."
Emma deMules ~1375 John deWotton ~1390 Alice Wotton The link between Alice Wotton and William de Prouz unclear. The earlier accounts in Browning's study claims the link is with her father, John Wotton, as does Weis in the 7th edition of Ancestral Roots.The later account given in Browning , stated to be the corrected version, claims that the link is by her great grandmother Alice de Moelis de Prouze, supporting the account given in Charlemagne Pedigrees and the one in the History of the Chichester Family. 1386 - 1437 John deChichester 51 51 Source: Ancestral Roots, 7th ed. Source: Burton W Spear, Mary & John 1630, v 19, 1993, p 27
Sir John Chichester -- Son and heir, age 17 at his mother's death (1402).  He served at the battle of Agincourt in the retinue of Lord de Harrington and died 14 Dec. 1437.  Inquest, p.m. 16 Henry VI, No. 55.  He m. Alice Wooton, daughter and co-heir of John Wotton of Widworthy, Devon, named in the inquest taken on the death of her husband as deceased.  Children.  1. Richard Chichester 2. John Chichester = Elizabeth Dymock, daughter and heir of Richard Dymock.  Source: Devon Visitations.
1365 John deChichester  Lord of Raleigh, Devon; of Treverbin, Cornwall; Boggershewish and Donwer, Somersetshire. Knighted at Calais 1424 - 1498 Richard deChichester 74 74 Source: Burton W Spear,  Mary & John 1630, v 19, 1993, p 27-28
Source: Ancertral Roots, 7th ed. p.57/8
Children:
John Chichester
Nicholas Chichester
Hugh Chichester
Elizabeth Chichester
Margaret Chichester
Philip Chichester
Richard Chichester
Joan Chichester
~1426 Margaret Keynes 0648 - 0745 Chrotlind 97 97 Nicholas Keynes 1452 - <1496 Nicholas de Chichester 44 44 Source: Burton W Spear, Mary & John 1630, v 19, 1993, p 28: cholas Chichester -- Heir to his brother John and aged 30 at his death, named in the inquest taken on the death of his father as deceased.  He m. Christian [or Christina?], daughter of Sir Nicholas Pawlett of Sampford Peverel, widow of Henry Hull of Larkbear, named in the inquest taken on the death of this father-in-law,  She m. (3) Sir William Martin and (4) James Cudleigh of Asheton.  (P) Children.  a. Elias Chichester - Ob. s.p. b. Tristram Chichester - Ob. s.p.  c. Henry Chichester - Ob. s.p.  d. Jane Chichester - She m. Thomas Bretton.  e. Philip [Philippa?] Chichester - She m. John Cole.  f. Elizabeth Chichester - She m. John Berry.  g. Richard Chichester - Ob. s.p.  h. William Chichester - Rector of Shewill and Arlington, presented by his grandfather's second wife, resigned on a pension of 4 marks per annum in 1510.  i. Peter Chichester.  j. John Chichester, Source: Gary Boyd Roberts.
Children:
Elizabeth Chichester
John Chichester
Peter Chichester
William Chichester
Philippa Chichester
Richard Chichester
Elias Chichester
Tristram Chichester
Jane Or Joan Chichester
Henry Chichester
~1445 Christina Pawlet 1419 William Pawlet ~1475 - 1537 John Chichester 62 62 Children:
Mary Chichester
John Chichester
William Chichester
Amyas (Amias) Chichester

Children:
Mary Chichester
John Chichester
William Chichester
Amyas (Amias) Chichester
1472 Johanna Brett Visitation of Devon states this person is: Joan Bright

Visitation of Devon states this person is: Joan Bright
~1448 - 1540 Robert Brett 92 92 Escheator of Devon, Esq.. The Visitation of Devon states this persons surname as: Bright. 1512 - 1577 Amyas Chichester 65 65 Amias Chichester -- Born about 1527.  Died 4 July 1577 of Arlington, Devon (5 miles N. of Barnstable).  He married by 1545, Jane Giffard, dau. of Sir Roger Giffard and Margaret Cobleigh of Brightleigh, Chittlehampton, Devon.  Her will probated 16 Apr. 1596.  Source:  My Southern Families, by Hiram K. Douglas, 1967." Source: Burton Spear,  Mary & John 1630, v 17, Source: Ancestral Roots, Weise, p. 56. Source: Ancestral Roots, 7th Ed. Weis.
Children:
Robert Chichester
John Chichester
Gifford Chichester
Henry Chichester
Richard Chichester
Hugh Chichester
Mary Chichester
Severus Chichester
Elizabeth Chichester
Frances (Franny) Chichester
Bartholemew Chichester
Philip Chichester
Honor Chichester
Edward Chichester
Silvester Chichester
Paul Chichester [Captain]
Gregory Chichester
Francis Chichester
Roger Chichester
D. ~1596 Joan Giffard Aka:Jane; Will Probated 1596
Source: Roberts, The Royal Descents , 1993, p 396  "JANE GIFFARD, d. 1596, will pro. 16 Apr. 1596; m. Amyas CHICHESTER ..., b. 1527, d. 4 July 1577."    --- Frederick Weis, *Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists*, 7th edition, 1992, p 28
~1490 - 1547 Roger Giffard 57 57 A monument honoring him was erected in 1625 in what is now the Giffard Chapel of St. Hieritha's Church, Chittlehampton, Somerset, England. 0652 - 0711 Childebert III King of Austrasia & Neustria 59 59 ~1559 - 1626 Frances Chichester 67 67 Source:  History of the Chichester Family. Sir Alex P. B. Chichester. Source:Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents, 1993, p 396,.   Frances Chichester -- Buried 5 Apr. 1626, Braunton, Devon.  She m. John Wyatt, gent., by 19 Oct. 1584.  He was bpt. 11 Nov. 1557 and bu. 27 Nov. 1598, Braunton, son of Philip Wyatt and Joan Paty of Braunton."   Source:  Burton W. Spear, "Search for the Passengers of the Mary & John 1630", vol. 17, 1992, p 12.
Children:
Anne Wyatt
Agnes Wyatt
Joane Wyatt
Phillip Wyatt
Anne Wyatt
Agnis Wyatt
Hugh Wyatt (Wiatt)
Anne Wyatt
Margaret Wyatt
~1502 - 1547 Margaret Cobleigh 45 45 1421 Elizabeth denebaud 1365 - 1402 Thomasine deRaleigh 37 37 D. 1370 Roger deChichester Source: David Knowles, Religious Life and Organization  in Medieval England ed. Austin Lane Poole, Oxford, v 2, 1958, p 391-2.  Source: Burton W Spear, Mary & John 1630  v 19, 1993, p 27. Roger deCichester Roger was in the French and Scottish wars with Edward I and also in the army with Edward II at the battle of Bannockburn, where the army defeated the Scots. Roger deCichester With the King to Gascony in the expedition to Wales. Richard deCichester D. ~1266 Robert deCichester Richard deCichester Richard was in the Holy Land on the Third Crusade, with Richard Coeur de Lion. 0650 - 0741 Lambert II Count of Neustria 91 91 0820 - 0879 Gottfried Ragnhildis 59 59 King of Haithabu. ~1461 - 1513 Thomas Giffard 52 52 Anne Coryton Sources show this persons surname as: Toryton ~1479 - 1540 John Cobleigh 61 61 Source: Frederick Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th edition, 1992, p 28
"John COBLEIGH, b. ca. 1479 (age 13 in 1492); m (1) by 1502, Jane FORTESCUE ..., dau. of William Fortescue of Pruteston or Preston in Ermington, co. Devon, d. 1 Feb. 1519/20, & wife Elizabeth, dau. & coh. Richard Champernoun of Inworthy, Cornwall  Jane died by 12 May 1527, and he m. (2) Elizabeth Owpye, wid.  He d. 24 Oct. 1540, Elizabeth surv., Inq.p.m. 33 Hen. VIII (1546) shows he held manors of Brightley, Stowford, Snape, Bremridge, Stowford Carder, & Nymet St. George." John held the manors of Brightley, Stowford, Snape, Bremridge, Stowford Carder and Nymet St. George.
Source: Thomas Fortescue, History of the Family of Fortescue 1886 pp. 1-9.
~1485 - 1527 Jane Fortescue 42 42 Sir John Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice and Lord Chancellor of  England and author of the celebrated treatise 'De Laudibus Legum Anglicae' was Jane's great uncle. He was the third son of Sir John Fortescue, Captain of Meaux, who was the brother of Jane's great grandfather.
Source: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents, 1993, p 396,
Source: Weis & Sheppard, Ancestral Roots  7th Edition, 1992, p 217 "JANE FORTESCUE, b. say 1485, dead 12 May 1527, m. ca. 1501, as (1) wife, JOHN COBLEIGH ... b. ca. 1479, d. 24 Oct. 1540, Inq.p.m. 4 Oct. 1541, lord of Brightley, Stowford Carder, Bremridge, Wollacombe Tracy, Snape, Stowford, & Nymet St. George, co. Devon, s. John Cobleigh by wife, Alice, dau. John Cockworthy of Yarnswcombe, co. Devon, escheator of Co. Devon in 1430 and 1440."
Sir John Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice and Lord Chancellor of  England and author of the celebrated treatise 'De Laudibus Legum Anglicae' was Jane's great uncle. He was the third son of Sir John Fortescue, Captain of Meaux, who was the brother of Jane's great grandfather.
~1445 - 1492 John Cobleigh 47 47 Alice Cocksworthy D. 1468 Richard deChampernowne Thomas de Champernowne Roger deRohart D. 1376 John deRaleigh 0620 - 0680 Chrobertus Robert II of Neustrasia 60 60 Swen of denmark Margaret Beaumont John Courtenay John Coryton D. 1519 William Fortescue Source: Weis & Sheppard, Ancestral Roots  7th Edition, 1992, p 217
This William of Pruteston or Preston married Elizabeth Champernoun, daughter and co-heir of Richard Champernoun, of Inworthy in Cornwall, by whom he obtained property in the parish of Harecomb in Devon, as well as a third of the manors of Inneswicke, Tregemare, and Alett, and other lands in Cornwall.  He died in 1520." Thomas (Fortescue) Lord Clermont, A History of the Family of Fortescue in All Its Branches, 2nd edition, 1880, p 9 See Also: "WILLIAM FORTESCUE, 2nd s. & h. to part of mother's lands, b. say 1460, d. 1 Feb. 1519.20, Inq.p.m. 21 Apr. 1520, of Preston in psh. of Ermington, co. Devon, m. Elizabeth, b. ca. 1465, d. bef. 1518, dau. & coh. of Richard Champernowne of Inworthy, Cornwall, by wife, Mary, dau. & coh. Sir John Hamley."
1465 Elizabeth deChampernowne Source: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents  1993, p 396 D. 1546 Elizabeth Owpye Mary Hamley John Hamley Richard de Champernowne Source: Gary Boyd Roberts,The Royal Descents  1993, p 396 0598 - UNKNOWN Lambert I of Neustrasia Katherine Daubeny Giles Daubeny Eleanor deRohart Richard de Champernowne Source: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants , 1993, p 396. Joane deValletort Hugh deValletort Richard deChampernowne Source: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents  1993, p 396 Richard deChampernowne ~1225 Henry deChampernowne Dionysia English 0690 - 0715 Dagobert III King of Austrasia & Neustria 25 25 Gilbert English Joan Okeston Richard Okeston Joan deValletort Source: CP. Joan is believed to have been a concubine of Richard, Earl of Cornwall and King of the Romans. John Cocksworthy D. 1402 Thomasine Chichester  In the Church of St. James, Arlington, Devon an effigy from her tomb is preserved. John Cobleigh Source: Monumental Brasses: Found in the parish church an effigy can be seen: ""John Coblegh with Isabell (d. 1 October 1446) and Johanna (d. 1 September 1469) his wives, along with Henricus(d. 1470), a daughter by wife Johanna"" D. 1446 Isabel deBrightley  Walter Sheppard,  in the 7th edition of the Weis volume, states the Isabel de Brightley who was the daughter of Sir John Fitz Warin died without issue and posed the possibility that the Isabel who was John's mother was a second Isabel de Brightley. D. 1469 Joanna William Fitz Warin deBrightley D. UNKNOWN Magdalene >1325 Joan Stowford D. 1359 John Stowford 1280/1285 Isabella deTracy D. ~1306 Simon de Roges Herbert de Marisco Edmond Botiler Henry deTracy ~1170 Oliver deTracy Oliver was the overlord of Henry de Champernowne. Gervase deCourtenay Miss deTracy 0596 - 0660 Clodoule Bishop Of Metz 64 64 Englesia Dymoke William deWotton Gundred Wyger Thomas Wyger Christian Richard deWotton Julian deProuz William deProuz Some sources use: Le not De. Edward Courtenay D. 1242 Robert de Courtenay Baron of Okehampton 0513 - 0600 Princess Blithilda 87 87 Maud Fitz Roy D. 1175 Reginald Fitz Roy D. 1162 Mabel Fitz Richard William Fitz Richard  Lord de Cardinand Miss deMortain D. 1094 Robert de Montgomery Source: CP. Earl of Shrewsbury, Viscount of the Miesmois, Seigneur of Montogommeri in Normandy Mabel Talvas Sybil Corbet William Talbot Adelise 0582 - 0640 Saint Arnoul Bishop of Metz 58 58 St. Arnolph, the First Major Domus of Clothary II, was the commonpatriarch of the Carlovinian and Capetian Kings. He married Dodo, a Saxonlady. John Giffard Joan Dabernon John Dabernon Isabella Moels D. 1337 John Moyls ~1133 William le Boteler ~1163 Edith le Botiller John Giffard Joan Duclive Richard Duclive Llywarch Iorwerth Walter Giffard Isabell John Giffard Sybel Baldwin Giffard Joan Bartholomew Giffard Joan deHalsbury Peter deHalsbury William Giffard 0949 - 1035 Prawst Verch Elsie 86 86 Roger Giffard Source: CP. Roger held the manors of Clovelly, Awlescombe and Milford in Hartland. Anne Brewer William Brewer Gervaise Giffard Robert deTellieres 1768 - 1826 Mary Merritt 58 58 Ralph deTellieres Gilbert Tellieres Lord of Tellieres Gunora Alan Fulk Alan 0938 - 1030 Seisyll Ap Ednnywain 92 92 0800 - 0890 Wolpert Von Ringleheim 90 90 1736 - 1788 Annie Merritt 52 52 ~1237 Roger de Molyneux ~1185 - ~1247 Adam de Molyneux 62 62 Gerard Flaitel Walter Giffard Walter Giffard Walter created Lord of Longueville by Richard, Duke of Normandy. Osbert deBolebec Avelina of denmark D. <1250 Alice Widworthy Emma 0861 - 0955 Meryn 94 94 ~1135 William deTracy On December 29, 1170, Sir William de Tracy along with three other knights--Sir Reginald Fitz Urse, Sir Hugh de Morville and Sir Richard de Brito--acting on what they understood to be an order of William's cousin, King Henry II,  murdered Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, in his Cathedral. (See: King
Henry II of England for further details.) The following Easter, Pope Alexander III excommunicated the four knights. To expiate his sin, William granted his manor in Devon to the Cathedral Chapter in Canterbury and went on a pilgrimage in 1173, but  died on the way to Jerusalem.
Source:  Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descent of 500 Immigrants, Baltimore 1993, p 396
"Henry de Chambernon = Rose de Tracy, daughter of Sir William de Tracy, one of four murderers of Thomas a Becket, Archbishop of Canterbuty (by probably --- de Pomeroy), son of William de Tracy  and ?, also an illegimate son, by an unknown mistress, of Henry I, King of England. William was called: Sir. Knight.
William deWidworthy D. <1501 John Fortescue Source: Thomas Fortescue Lord Clermont, A History of the Family of Fortescue in All Its Branches, 2nd edition, London, 1880, p 6-7:  William Fortescue was succeeded by his son John who appears to have returned to Parliament as a burgess for the borough of Tavistock in the 2nd of Henry VI., and again in the following year, and in the 4th of Henry VI. he sat for Totness in the Parliament held at Leicester, and for Plymton in that held by the same king at Westminster in the eighth year of his reign.  He married, before the year 1450, Joan, daughter and heir to John Prutston, Pruteston, or Preston, of Pruteston, in the parish of Newton Ferrers, a few miles south of Plymton.  He was the sixth in descent from William de Prteston, who was seated there in the time of Edward I. (P) John Fortescue, of Wimston, was living in the year 1461, in which year we find him witness to a deed.  He died before his wife.  At the death of the latter on the 23rd of May, 1501, an inquisition post mortem was held at Ermyngton, from which it appears that at her death Joan (de Pruteston) was seized of lands in Ermyngton, Wethele, Burraton, and Hefford, to which her eldest son John Fortescue of Wimstone, aged, at his mother's death, more than fifty years, was heir; and that her second son William was then alive.  This second son inherited the Pruteston estate.  (P) There was a third son of John Fortescue by Joan de Pruteston, named, like his elder brother, John, according to a practice not uncommon at that period, but which must have been most inconvenient.  He inherited an estate at Spridleton, or Spirlton, in the parish of Brixton in South Sevon, which remained with his posterity until the beginning of the present century."
Source: Weis & Sheppard, Ancestral Roots, 7th Edition, 1992, p 215  JOHN FORTESCUE, s. & h., b. say 1420, d. 11 Mar. 1480/1, Inq.p.m. 4 Nov. 1481, lord of Whympston, co. Devon; n. by 1450, Joan, dau. & h. John Prutteston of Prutteston (or Preston) in the psh. of Ermington, co. Devon.  Joan mentioned Inq.p.m. on her father's lands dtd. 1468. She d. 23 May 1501, Inq.p.m. 26 Oct. 1501.  ... not to be confused with his 1st cousin, Sir John Fortesue, lawyer who became Lord Chief Justice in England."
D. 1501 Jane Preston William Fortescue Source: Thomas Fortescue Lord Clermont, A History of the Family of Fortescue in All Its Branches, 2nd edition, London, 1880, p 6; William Fortescue, the eldest son of his father William by Elizabeth Beauchamp, was married, about the year 1394, to Mabel daughter and heir of John Falwell, or Fowell
Source: Weis & Sheppard, Ancestral Roots  7th Edition, 1992, p 215; WILLIAM FORTESCUE, s. & h., b. say 1385; m. by 1410, Matilda, alias Mabilla, dau. and h. of John Falwall or Fawell; both were mentioned in the license for an oratory granted in 1410 by Bishop Stafford to William's as shown above.
Isabel Falwell 1345 - 1410 William Fortescue 65 65 William Fortescue Alice Strechleigh Walter Strechleigh 0885 - 0959 Elsie Ap Anarawd 74 74 Adam Fortescue Anna dela Port William dela Port Adam Fortescue Adam Fortescue Source: Visitation of Essex.
Source: The Visitations of Sussex.
Richard Fortescue Source: The Visitations of Sussex.
Source: Visitation of Essex.
John Fortescue William Fortescue Richard Fortescue Ralph Fortescue 0738 - 0829 Gwriad Ap Elidir King Isle of Man 91 91 Adam Fortescue Richard le Fort John de Champernowne Margaret Spriggy D. <1232 Oliver deChampernowne Source: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents , 1993, p 396 Eva deCardignan D. ~1210 Henry deChampernowne Vivian's Devonshire Visitation is very unclear on this family. Weis Ancestral Roots is Source. Mibira deCaen Jordon de Champernowne Champernoune was with William 'The Conqueror' at the Battle of Hastings and that the family of Champernoune, originally Campo Arnulphi, was, at a period approximating very closely to the time of William of Normandy, seated at Clist Chambernon in Devon. Henry Hall 1126 - UNKNOWN Alice deMontgomerie Alice was the daughter of Arnulph de Montgomery. Arnulph was the fourthson of Roger de Montgomery, who led the center of the Norman army at theBattle of Hastings. William Martin James Cudleigh Elizabeth Sapcott Johanna deDinham Robert deDinham D. >1379 Joan Pettit William Raleigh John Raleigh Joan de Tracy D. 1066 Walter deRalegh Walter was slain at the Battle of Hastings. 0918 - 1002 Anghard Verch Llewelyn 84 84 Beatrix Elizabeth Petronilla Matthew de Cichester Henry de Cichester was successor to the lands in the manor of Cicestr Engeler Henry Pettit Beatrix Shandos Robert Shandos Margaret Botreaux 0933 - 0987 Owain Ap Hywell 54 54 Henry deTracy ~1220 Thomas Raleigh Lora Peverell Hugh Peverell ~1080 Walter deRalegh <1066 Walter deRalegh William de Ralegh Joan Stockhay John Stockhay Peter de Ralegh 0887 - 0950 Hywel Ap Cadell 63 63 Margaret Daubeny Phillip Daubeny William deRalegh Richard deRalegh Richard de Valletort D. ~1203 Henry deChampernowne Mabel deSoligny John Spriggy Rose de Tracy Source; Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents 1993, p 396; "Henry de Chambernon = Rose de Tracy, daughter of Sir William de Tracy, etc. " Miss dePomeroy 0893 - 0980 Elen Verch Llywarch 87 87 Henry de Pomeroy Rohese de Fitz Herbert Herbert Fitz Herbert Elizabeth John Dabarnon Thamsine Cade Robert Cade Miss Donsland John deDonsland Isabel 0910 - UNKNOWN Angharad Verch Hywel Adeliz John denebaud John denebaud Thomas denebaud William denebaud Philip denebaud William denebaud Philip denebaud Philip denebaud Alice Giffard 0943 - 0999 Maredudd Ap Owain 56 56 0800 - 0890 Alburgis Von Ringelheim 90 90 D. 14 Jan 1137/1138 Simon I deLorraine John Giffard Miss Powtrell Roger Powtrell Thomas Pawlet Margaret Bouton Henry Bouton Alice deBosco John Pawlet Elizabeth Creedy William Creedy 0865 - 0959 Rheingar 94 94 John Pawlet Elizabeth Reyney Thomas Reyney Walter Pawlet 1031 - 1095 Robert deMortaign 64 64 Earl of Cornwall, half brother of William tha Bastard Aka: 'The Conqueror' and companion at the Battle of Hastings. Maud deMontgomery John Chichester John Falwell Joane Phillip Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. 0933 - 0984 Einion Ap Owain 51 51 ~1090 - 1147 Robert deCaen 57 57 Source & Notes: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents , 1993, p 396;  "Earl of Gloucester, 1121-2."  (1st Earl of Gloucester.)  Spouse: "Mabel, heiress of Gloucester. [married] 1119"
Source: Chris Given-Wilson and Alice Cuteis, The Royal Bastards of Medieval England, London (Routledge & Kegan Paul) 1984, p 74-75, 91-92;  It has been said that his mother was Sybil Courbet, the probable mother of another five of the king's [Henry I Beauclerc's] bastards, but this is almost certainly wrong.  In fact he was probably born to an unnamed woman of Caen, in Normandy, in about 1090.  Acknowledged by Henry from infancy, he was brought up in the royal household after his father became king, received a good education there under Henry's direct supervision, and by his early twenties had established himself as one of his father's chief military captains and most trusted councillors.  From 1113 onwards he was a regular winess to royal charters, as 'Robert the king's son'  .....  In 1107 the king provided handsomely for his favourite bastard's future by marrying him to Mabel, heiress to the valuable lands on the Norman side of the Channel.  Then in 1121-2 Robert's power and prestige were further augmented when Henry made him earl of Gloucester.  .....  The grant of this title to Robert was the only earldom which Henry created during his entire thirty-five-year reign.  .....  One of Robert's last acts was to found a Cistercian abbey at Margam in Glamorgan, in the summer of 1147. Throughout his life he had been a benefactor of the church .....  His death came quite suddenly.  In the autumn of 1147 ... news came that Robert had contracted a fever.  He had led a tremendously active life, and was still robust enough to lead an army on horseback, but he had now reached the age of fifty-seven, old by medieval standards.  The fever was a virulent one, and could not be checked. The end came quicly.  He died on 31 October 1147, at Bristol castle, with his wife Mabel by his bedside, and was laid to rest beneath a tomb of green jasper stone in the priory which he had founded.  (P) Robert's character is elusive.  The qualities for which he was praised by contemporaries were thoroughly conventional ones, and in many ways he comes across as a thoroughly conventional sort of man.  It may be that the quality of greatness which some men saw in him stemmed not so much from any especially distinguishing characteristics or talents as from an ability to do the basic things in life well.  The English political stage during King Stephen's reign was dominated by figures of proven mediocrity.  Against such a background, Robert stood for traditional virtues and traditional values.  From the time when he first began to hold military commands under his father, he stands out as a consistently successful military leader; during the civil war of Stephen's reign, he was the best general in England.  As a statesman he was more limited, lacking both the decisiveness to exploit an opening and the clear-sightedness to formulate successful policies. He was, however, regarded as an upholder of justice and honour, a man of integrity and trustworthiness, and these were uncommon virtues in Stephen's England.  He was an upright and pious man, a patron and respecter of the church and of scholars, 'a man of great cleverness and learning', according to the contemporary chronicler Walter Map, and even something of a scholar in his own right: it is said that he translated at least one book from Latin into French.  He used to 'regulate his day so wisely that he did not neglect his knightly duties for letters, nor letters for knightly duties', according to another contemporary.  Such an interest in learning, nurtured no doubt by his father, Henry I, was rare among even the greatest laymen at this time."


Source: Gesta Stephani, a monk of Saint-Bertin (c middle of 12th century), edited  & translated by K. R. Potter, along with introduction and notes by R H C Davis, Oxford (Clarendon) 1976, p 13, 15.
//And when at last these things were known [about Stephen becoming king of England] and spread over England freely by word of mouth almost all the chief men of the kingdom accepted him gladly and respectfully, and having received very many gifts from him and likewise enlargement of their lands they devoted themselves wholly to his service by a voluntary oath, after paying homage.  Among others came Robert, Earl of Gloucester, son of King Henry, but a bastard, a man of proved talent and admirable wisdom.  When he was advised, as the story went, to claim the throne on his father's death, deterred by sounder advice he by no means assented, saying it was fairer to yield it to his sister's son [the future Henry II], than presumptuously to arrogate it to himself.  So, when after being many times summoned to the king's presence by messages and letters he at length appeared, he was received with favour and distinction and obtained all he demanded in accordance with his wish, on paying homage to the king; and when peace finally had been made with him, almost the whole kingdom of England had gone over to the king's side.//  p 169:  "Also the sons of Robert Earl of Gloucester, men whose youth made them active and full of enterprise, and who were skilled by constant practice in the art of war, disturbed the southern part of the kingdom; inspired by their father's valour and resolution they built castles in some places which they saw to be suitable, in others stole them from their neighbors; sometimes boldly attacked their enemies in pitched battles, sometimes laid their lands waste far and wide with the sword and with plundering."
Mabel Fitz Hamon  Heiress of Gloucester Lady D. 1107 Robert Fitz Hamon Sybil de Montgomery D. 1094 Roger deMontgomery Earl of Shrewsbury Mabel deTalvas William II deTalvas Lady 25th ggm of Gordon Fisher Viscount of Exmes Hugh of Montgomery 0982 - 1077 Angharad Verch Maredudd 95 95 Joceline of Normandy D. BEF 1 Jan 1335/1336 John deWotton ~1306 Joan deMoels ~1282 - 1323/1324 Roger deMoels  Baron of North Cadbury ~1254 - 1295 Roger deMoels 41 41  Keeper of Isle of Wight and of the Forest of Braden Alice deReigny ~1226 John deMolis Source: The Complete Peerage See:  Roger (1) de Molis.
Source: Ancestral Roots, 7th Ed.
Source: The Magna Charta Surties, 1215.
D. 1246 John deReigny ~1200 Robert deMolis ~1140 Juhel Joellus deMolis Source: The Complete Peerage, v. ix, 1936, p 1; In 1166 Joel de Moles held 4 knights' fees in Devon under Robert the King's son, Source:  Red Book of Excheque, p. 252, and in the same year William de Moles held 1 knight's fee in Yorkshire under Roger be Mowbray, and in 1172 1/4 or 1/3 fee in Normandy in the bailiqick of Ranulf de Rollancurt." 0980 - 1021 Llewelyn Ap Seisyll 41 41 ~1110 Nicholas deMolis ~1080 Roger deMolis Roger deMolis Source: The Complete Peerage, v. ix, 1936, In 1086 Roger de Moles held Lew Trenchard, Teigin in Ashton, Waddlescot and Pennycot, of Baldwin the shiriff [Domesday Book], which lands, with others held by Roger were held by John de Molis in 1242 of John de Curtenay of the manor of Okehampton. John Brocke Phillip Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Agnes Davies See Visitation Pedigrees. Robert Davies John Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Anna Galfridus Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. 2nd son. 1187 - 1246 Ralph deMortimer 59 59 Ralph de Mortimer, in 12th year of Henry III, had livery cf all his landsin Gloucester, Southampton, Berks, Salop and Hereford. He erected severalstrong castles, by which he was enabled to extend his possession againstthe Welsh; so that Prince Llewelin, seeing that he could not successfullycope with him, gave him his daughter Gladuse Duy, widow of Reginald deBraose, in marriage. Jefforey Jocelin Source: Visitation Pedigrees. Catherin Le Braye See Visitation Pedigrees. First wife. Johanna Radulfus Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Margareta dePatmere See Visitation Pedigrees. AKA: Palmer. Thomas Le Braye Source: Visitation Pedigrees. John dePatmere John dePatmere Sara Phillip dePatmere See Visitation Pedigrees. 1053 - UNKNOWN Ralph deMortimer Ralph accompanied William the Conqueror to England, and who was generalof his forces sent by Henry I into Normandy, where he totally routed theforces of Robert of Normandy, and brought the "Curthose" prisoner back toEngland. Miss Baudede Somerby See Visitation Pedigrees. John Baudede Somerby See Visitation Pedigrees. Galfridus Jocelin Margareta Rockell Robert Rockell See Visitation Pedigrees. Radulfus Jocelin ob. ao. 5 Edward 2.
See Visitation Pedigrees.
Matildis Sutton al's Dudley John Sutton al's Dudley See Visitation Pedigrees. Anna Sandes Thomas Jocelin 1689/1690 - 1779 George Caldwell It would seem that George lived to the ripe old age of 90.

George bought 405 acres of land in the Beverly Patent for 11.1 pounds, on 24 July 1740. A James Caldwell bought 600 acres for 18 pounds.  source: Tinkling Spring, Headwater of Freedom, p. 418.

A book on Virginia Colonial Militia indicates that Company #4 of the Augusta County Militia was headed by John Christian, capt. and Wm Christian, Lt. In that company were listed Geo Caldwell, Wm Caldwell, Jas Caldwell. In company #5 there was a Robert Caldwell. source: Virginia Colonial Militia 1651 -1776 ed. W.A. Crozier, pub. The Genealogical Association, NY 1905.

Court Records of Augusta County 1745-1800:
August 20, 1746 - William Thompson to be overseer from Court Ho. to Tinkling Spring, already viewed, with these tithables John Lynn and his three sons, John Henderson, John Ramsey, John Preston, Wm. Palmer, David Stuart, James Coile, Joseph McClelhill, Alexr. Thompson, John Mitchell, John Hutchison, Andrew Russell, Geo. Caldwell and his two sons. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 1, Page 73

September 16, 1747 - Road from the Cross Road below Hays on No. Side So. River to the ridge be cleared, and Thos. Stuart and Wm. Christian be overseers. George Caldwell and his son to be added to the tithables. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 1, Page 288

October 25, 1755 - Propositions and grievances: John Hunter for services, wagoning; James Alexander, for patrolling; Wm. Wilson, Wm. Cunningham, Domnick Barrel, Mathew Thompson, John Atkins, Saml. Black, patrolling; John Brown for victualling men patrolling under Cap. David Lewis; Wm. Thompson for patrolling and going on an express; George Caldwell, for patrolling; Robert Poage, for waggoning; Israel Christian, patrolling; Israel Christian, claim of David Moore for provisions provided Cap. David Lewis's Co. of Rangers which provisions were received by Christian. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 4, Page 490

February 18, 1763 - Andrew Russell, with two tithables, William Palmer, William Martin, Alexr. McDonald, Wm. Thompson, Alexr. Thompson, John Thompson, George Caldwell and his two sons. Wm. Henderson and John Wallace, to work the road from Christian's Creek to Rockfeil Gap. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 7, Page 477

George Caldwell, William Caldwell, and James Caldwell were members of Company #4 of the Augusta County Militia.
"Caldwell" compiled by Mrs. John Q. Anderson, dated December, 1959, p. 25 states "George Caldwell, b. 1689 m. Jane Phillips and came to America."
Alice Lyston William Lyston Source: Visitation Pedigrees. Thomas Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Matildis Hyde Coheir of her father. See Visitation Pedigrees. John Hyde Source: Visitation Pedigrees.  Knight. John Hyde Elizabeth deSudley See Visitation Pedigrees. "Elizabetha filia Joh'is Baronis de Sudley in Gloc.," D. 1340 John deSudley Source: Visitation Pedigrees.
Source: Burkes Dormant and Extinct Peerages.pg.520 Death: Stated: 14th Edward III.
John Jocelin Catherina Battell 1172 - 1241 Walter deLacy Lord Palantine Of Meath 69 69 Walter de Lacie, elder son, paid in the 10th of Richard I, 1199, 2000marks for the king's favour and to have livery of his lands, but thisbeing the last year of that monarch's reign, his brother and successor,King John, exacted no less than 1000 pounds for similar favour of livery.In the 9th of the latter king's reign, Walter de Lacie obtained aconfirmation of his lands and dominion of Meath in Ireland, to be held byhim and his heirs for the service of 50 knights' fees; as also his feesin Fingall, in the valley of Dublin, to be held by the service of sevenknights' fees. But in three years afterwards, King John passing intoIreland with his army, Lacie was forced to deliver himself up and all hispossessions on that kingdom, and to abjure the realm. He was subsequentlybanished from England, but in the 16th of the same reign, he seems tohave made his peace, for he was allowed to repossess his Castle ofLudlow; and the next year he recovered all of his lands, except thecastle and lands of Drogheda, by paying a fine of 4000 marks to thecrown. After this we find him Sheriff of Herefordshire, in the 18th ofKing John, and 2nd of Henry III, and in the 14th of the latter king,joined with Geoffrey de Marisco, then Justice of Ireland, and Richard deBurgh, in subduing the King of Connaught, who had taken up arms to expelthe English from his territories. So much for the secular acts of thisbaron. Of his works of Piety, it is recorded that he confirmed to thecanons of Lathony all those lands and churches in Ireland, granted tothem by his father, Hugh de Lacie; and of his own bounty, gave them thechurch of Our Lady of Drogheda, with other valuable gifts. To the monksat Creswil, in Hereford, he was a special benefactor, having conferred onthem 200 acres of land and wood called Ham; also 600 acres, with thewoods thereto belonging, and common pasture for their cattle in NewForest, and in divers pasturages. Moreover, the ninth sheaf of wheat andother corn, except oats, throughout all his lordships in England andWales. Likewise the tithe of all the hides of those cattle which wereyearly sold at the larder of his Castle at Ewyas. In Ireland he foundedthe Abbey of Beaubee, in Normandy, which was a first cell to the greatAbbey of Bec in Normandy, and afterwards at Furness, in Lancaster. Hemarried Margaret, daughter of William de Braose, of Brecknock, and in1241, being then infirm and blind, departed this life, leaving his greatinheritance to be divided among females, viz., the daughters of his sons. Thomas Battell Source: Visitation Pedigrees.
Knight
Radulfus Jocelin Beatrix Mawde OR Beatrix ? See Visitation Pedigrees. Elizabeth de Enfeild See Visitation Pedigrees. Richard de Enfeild Miss Nortoft John Nortoft John de Enfeild See Visitation Pedigrees. Isabell Bigott Hugonis Bigott See Visitation Pedigrees. 1120 - 1186 Hugh deLacy 66 66 Hugh was employed in the conquest of Ireland, and for his services thereobtained from Henry II the whole county of Meath. He was subsequentlyconstituted Governor of Dublin, and Justice of Ireland. But incurring thedispleasure of his royal master by marrying, without license, thedaughter of the King of Connaught, he was divested, in 1181, of thecustody of the metropolis of Dublin. In four years he was murdered by oneMalvo Miadaich, in revenge for the severity with which he had treated theworkmen employed by him in erecting the Castle of Lurhedy. He left issueWalter, his successor, Hugh, Constable of Ireland, and a daughter, Elayne.

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Meath
Henry de Enfeild See Visitation Pedigrees. Johanna Bretton Robert Bretton See Visitation Pedigrees. Bartholomeus de Enfeild Ursula deWaldegrave John deWaldegrave Richard de Enfeild See Visitation Pedigrees. Emma Tirrell Walter Tirrell Roger de Enfeild See Visitation Pedigrees. 1195 - 1288 Petronilla deLacy 93 93 0952 - 1042 Lambert I deLouvain 90 90 Count of Barbant & Louvain. John Battell See Visitation Pedigrees. Miss deRochford Thomae deRochford Galfridus Battell Christiana deTorrell John deTorrell Edward Battell Joanna deBasingborne John deBasingborne Robert Battell 7 Jan 1639/1640 - 7 Jan 1639/1640 John Hill Miss deHo? Edmound deHo? Richard Battell Aliceia Thomas Battell Henry Jocelin Jane Chastelin William Chastelin Johanna deSulliard John deSulliard 1577 William Caldwell Decendant of William Caldwell, Prebendary of Glasgow and Lord Chancellor of Scotland. circa 1349, Sons Joseph, David and John appeared early in the parish of Ennis Killen, Fermaugh. Source:  The Belfast Times (circa 1858), "History of Ireland" by RM Sibert Robert Chastelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Johanna Fetiplace Thomas Fetiplace Richard deChastelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Beatrix deBamfeild Edmond deBamfeild See Visitation Pedigrees. Robert deChastelin Isabell Fitz-Archer deGrove John Fitz-Archer deGrove See Visitation Pedigrees. Gervasius deChastelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Robert Caldwell Jacob Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Josselyn No. 1, states this peron is named: James. Johanna Throckingholden Henry Throckingholden Robert Jocelin Miss Fleming John Fleming William Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Oswalda Goushull Robert Goushull See Visitation Pedigrees. Galfidus Jocelin 1239 - 1303 Roger V deToeni Lord Flamstead 64 64 Miss deBisset John deBisset See Visitation Pedigrees. Gilbertus Jocelin See Visitation Pedigrees. Thomas Jocelin Mawde de Branktree William deBranktree Eleanor Scales Robert Scales Bartholomew deSudley Maud deMontfort 1189 - 1239 Ralph VI deToeni 50 50 D. 1336 John deSudley Miss deSaye William deSaye D. 1274 Bartholomew deSudley Joane deBeauchamp William deBeauchamp Ralph deSudley Isabel deCorbet Roger deCorbet D. 1195 Otwell deSudley 1162 - UNKNOWN Constance deBeaumont Ralph deSudley Emme deBeauchamp William deBeauchamp ~1110 - DECEASED Grace deTraci Some records found show William de Traci as father of Grace. Harold deSudley Source: Burkes Peerage. Robert Cockeram Source: Visitations. 1081 - 1147 Elizabeth Isabel Capet de Crepi 66 66 Isabel was twice married; first to Robert de Bellomont, Earl ofLiecester, and then to William, 2nd Earl Warren as shown above. 1080 - 1118 Matilda Princess of Scotland 38 38 0982 Aelfgifu of Northumbria 0930 - 0987 Geoffrey I deAnjou 57 57 Geoffrey surnamed Grisegonelle, who received, in requittal of hisservices against the Emperor Otho, a grant from King Robert of thedignified office of Seneschal of France. He married Adelais ofVermandois, daughter of Robert, Count of Troyes and Vermandois. He diedJuly 21, 987. 1156 - 1239 Roger IV deToeni Lord Flamstead 83 83 1027 - 1054 Adelaide de Ponthieu 27 27 1166 - 1213 Geoffrey IV Fitz Piers 47 47 IV Earl of Essex 0970 - 1040 Fulk II deAnjou 70 70 ~1250 - 1329 Joan de Tattershall 79 79 1056 - 1098 Baldwin II Count of Hainault 42 42 At the time of his succession he was a minor, and Robert, the Frisian,Duke of Flanders, seized Hainault, but Emperor Henry IV finally forcedRobert to return Hainault to the legitimate heir. Baldwin II embarked onthe pilgrimage of the Crusade in 1096, and at the Siege of Antioch, 1098,he was sent with Hugh Magnus to announce the news to Emperor AlexisCommenens, and to invite him to aid the crusaders in taking Jerusalem. Onthe road near Nicea, however, the party fell into the hands of the Turks.Hugh Magnus, leader of the First Crusade, escaped, but Baldwin wascaptured and never heard of again. Baldwin II married 1084 Ida or Alex,daughter of Henry II, Count of Louvain. In 1099 she went to Rome to tryto obtain news of her husband; the Pope, who could tell her nothing,tried to console her, and sent her back to Hainault, where she died 1139.
Children: Baldwin III, Arnould, Ida, Richilde and Alix.
1032 - 1098 Baldwin VI deArtois 66 66 Count of Flanders &Artois 0972 - 1060 Robert II France 88 88 1681 Mary Odell ~1258 Maud Woodthorpe D. UNKNOWN Cadell II deyrruylig King of Powys John deLegh D. UNKNOWN Helindis 0950 - 1021 Rabel II Tancred 71 71 0930 - 1001 Baron Gerard Tencred 71 71 Avice Marmion 1245 - 1285 Philip III The Bold, King of France 40 40 1150 - 1218 Richard de Clare 68 68 Sir Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hereford and 6th Earl of Clare, Suretyfor the Magna Charta, died Dec. 30, 1218; married Amicia, 2nd daughter ofWilliam Count of Meullent by Mabel de Bellomont (of Royal Descent), sonof Robert the Consul, created in 1109 Earl of Gloucester, natural son ofHenry I by Elizabeth de Bellomont, great granddaughter of Henry I, Kingof France.
Source:  Browning's Magna Charta Barons and Their Descendants, pp. 94-96,122-3, 305.

Sir Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hereford and 6th Earl of Clare, Suretyfor the Magna Charta, died Dec. 30, 1218; married Amicia, 2nd daughter ofWilliam Count of Meullent by Mabel de Bellomont (of Royal Descent), sonof Robert the Consul, created in 1109 Earl of Gloucester, natural son ofHenry I by Elizabeth de Bellomont, great granddaughter of Henry I, Kingof France.  Source:  Browning's Magna Charta Barons and Their Descendants, pp. 94-96,122-3, 305.
1025 - 1092 Dietrich Flamens 67 67 1329 - ~1370 John Booth 41 41 1100 - 1155 William deMohun 55 55 William de Mohun was a knight of great valour. He improved the buildings of his father at Dunster, and was a benefactor to the priory there, as well as to that at Taunton, which was founded by William Giffard, Bishop of Winchester. William sided with the Empress Maud in the fight against King Stephen, and in 1138 Dunster Castle was be seiged by Stephen, who, however, found it too strong to take. He married Agnes,daughter of Walter de Gaunt or Gant, who was grandson of Baldin, 6th Count of Flanders, who married Matilda, sister of William the Conqueror, thus making Walter de Gant 1st cousin to Kings William Rufus and Henry I. 0716 - 0801 Elidir Ap Sandde 85 85 Amicia FitzRobert Amicia (sister of King John's first wife) and 2nd daughter and coheiressof William, Count of Meullant, 2nd Earl of Gloucester o. s. p. m. 1183,and his wife Mabel, daughter of Robert de Bellomont; son of Robert theConsul, Earl of Gloucester; son of Henry I, King of England, by Elizabethde Bellomont; daughter of Robert de Bellomont and Isabel; daughter ofHugh Magnus 12th, the Crusader; son of Henry I, King of France.

Amicia (sister of King John's first wife) and 2nd daughter and coheiressof William, Count of Meullant, 2nd Earl of Gloucester o. s. p. m. 1183,and his wife Mabel, daughter of Robert de Bellomont; son of Robert theConsul, Earl of Gloucester; son of Henry I, King of England, by Elizabethde Bellomont; daughter of Robert de Bellomont and Isabel; daughter of Hugh Magnus 12th, the Crusader; son of Henry I, King of France.
Miss? 1662 - 1754 Joseph Merritt 91 91 1683 Thomas III Merritt William Corbet 1052 - UNKNOWN Sibyl deMontgomery 1022 - 1079 Mabel Talvas 57 57 Mabel was murdered by Hugh Bunel.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1675 - 1707 Isaac Odell 32 32 Margery Ince 0688 - UNKNOWN SanddeAp Alcwn 0968 - UNKNOWN Bertha Ivrea 1017 - 1098 Aelfgifu England 81 81 1053 - 1138 Gerard I Flaminus Count of Guelders and Wassenbu 85 85 1060 - 1139 Clemence dePoitou 79 79 Eva 1070 - 1154 Nesta Ferch Rhys 84 84 Nesta was firstly mistress to Henry I; secondly she married Stephen,Constable of Cardigan; thirdly she married Gerald of Windsor. Gerald andNesta had four children:
1. William fitzGerald.
2. Maurice fitzGerald.
3. David fitzGerald.
4. Angarat, a daughter.
Known as the most beautiful woman in Wales. She had many lovers.
In Christmas 1108 Owain ap Cadwgan of Cardigan came to visit Gerald andNesta. He so lusted after her that he, that night, attacked the castleand carried
her off and had his way with her. This upset Henry I so much that theincident
started a war.
1048 - 1133 Rhys Ap Tewdr Mawr 85 85 1051 - 1139 Gwladys Ferch Rhiwallon 88 88 D. UNKNOWN Rhywallon Prince of Powys 1239 - 1307 King of England Edward I, Longshanks Plantagenet 68 68 1030 - 1109 Gwenlian deAnglesea 79 79 0634 - 0711 Tegid Ap Gwair 77 77 Maud de Grey 1059 - 1131 Gilbert deGant 72 72 Gilbert accompanied his uncle, William the Conqueror, into England andparticipated in the triumph at Hastings, obtained a grant of the lands ofthe Danish proprietor, named Tour, with numerous lordships. Gilberthappened to be at York anno 1069 and had a narrow escape when the Danes,in great force, on behalf of Edgar the Aetheling (Prince of the Saxonsand brother of Margaret, wife of Malcolm, King of Scotland), entered themouth of the Humber, and marching on that city committed lamentabledestruction by fire and sword, there being more than 3,000 Normans slain.He married Alice de Montfort, daughter of Hugh de Montfort. 1677 Stephen Odell 1090 - UNKNOWN YolandeJolante of Guelders ~1201 - 1266 Beatrice deSavoie 65 65 1054 Judith deBoulogne D. UNKNOWN Elizabeth deBroyes 1795 - 1855 Maria Van Wert 60 60 1118 - UNKNOWN Rohese deVere D. UNKNOWN Henry Castellan deGand 0605 - 0681 Gwair Ap Dwywg 76 76 D. UNKNOWN Sibilla Manasses ~1295 - 1370 Henry de Trafford 75 75 1180 - 1246 Isabella of Aquitaine deTailefer 66 66 1290 - 1337 John deBeauchamp 47 47 D. UNKNOWN Anne deStafford Katherine Fitz Alan 1608 - 1664 Thomas I Merritt 56 56 Thomas apparently came from Kent, England where he decended from a long line of Henry's. 1057 - 1106 Maurgurite deRoucy 49 49 Rohese 0576 - 0651 Dwywyg Ap Llywarch 75 75 ~1216 Anastasia dePercy Maud 1082 - 1162 Judith Alice of Huntingdon 80 80 D. UNKNOWN Uchtred Earl of Northumbria 1025 - UNKNOWN Waltheof II Earl of Northumbria ~1250 Gilbert de Notton 1060 Adeliza Matilda Taillebois Lawrence Freeman The Visitation of London, 1633-5, page 295. Hugh Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 146.  Sir Hugh Willoughby of Willoughby Knight.

B. Burke 1888, The Complete Peerage, p. 1118.
Sir Hugh Willoughby, Knight of Willoughby (era of Henry VI, i.e. 1422-
1471)
  a)  Richard of Willoughby, died without children 1471
  b)  Robert of Wollaton
  c)  Baldwin of Grendon, Northamptonshire
Robert deIreland 0546 - 0620 Llywarch Hen Ap Elidir 74 74 1021 - UNKNOWN Alix of Normandy ~1301 - 1370 Thomas Latham 69 69 ~1220 Miss Philip Hohenstaufen of Swabia He was murdered by Otto Wittelsbach at Bramburg. He became the Baron ofWurzburgin 1191, the Duke of Spoleto in 1195, and the Duke of Swabia (aformer duchy which encompassed parts of present day southwest Germany andnorthern Switzeland)in 1196, before becoming Holy Roman Emperor. William de Odyngsells 0975 - 1056 Hugh deMontgomery 81 81 Hugh de Montgomerie, Count of Montgomery, married Josseline, the daughterof Tourode and his wife, Neva Duceline de Crepon. Josseline was theyoungest sister of Humphros de Velutes, and he was the father of Roger deBeaumont or Bellomont, father of Robert de Bellomont, who married Isabelde Vermandois, daughter of Hugh Magnus, crusader. 0986 - UNKNOWN Josceline of Pont- Audemer 1090 William deBraose ~1248 Maud de Wardly ~1203 Hamon Pecche 0516 - 0590 Elidir Ap Meirchion 74 74 ~1264 Margaret Euxton 1675 - 1754 Jonathan Odell 79 79 1007 RanulfII le Meschines Count de Bayeux Ralph deAnnesley Ranulph ~1255 Hugh Bernake Alan FitzAlan 1206 - 20 Jan 1256/1257 Reginald deMohun II Lord Mohun 1210 - 1243 Hawise FitzGeoffrey 33 33 Agnes deBaliol Gervase deGlapton de Clifton 0486 - 0559 Meirchion Gul Ap Gwirst 73 73 1679 - 1711 Michael Odell 32 32 1185 - 1219 Reginald deMohun 34 34 Lord Mohun 1670 - 1720 Samuel Odell 50 50 ~1240 William de Booth 1005 - 1094 Roger deMontgomery 89 89 ~1349 - 1387 Baldwin de Freville 38 38 ~0980 - 1008 Geoffroi I of Bretagne 28 28 vol 1, pg 744, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"
pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1290 Amabilla deBaumville 1701 Anthony Odell Archer 1703 Samuel Archer 0456 - 0529 Gwirst Ap Ceneu 73 73 1081 Adeliza 1164 Lucy 1250 - 1320 Humphrey deBeauchamp 70 70 1255 - UNKNOWN Sybil Oliver Henry dePierrepoint 1120 - UNKNOWN Maud deBraose 0999 - 7 Jan 1078/1079 Eudes Penthievre ~1228 Miss 1349 - 1410 Elizabeth deBeauchamp 61 61 Source:Weis & Sheppard, Ancestral Roots 7th Edition, 1992, p 215 ELIZABETH BEAUCHAMP, dau. & event. coh., b. by 1349, liv. 1410, Whympston in psh. of Modbury, co. Devon; m. (1) Richard, s. Adam de Branscombe; m. (2) by 1394, prob. much earlier, William Fortescue, lord of Whympston, co. Devon, b. say 1345, liv. 1410, s. William Fortescue, lord of Whympston, co. Devon, by Alice, dau. Walter de Strechlegh.  In 1401, William and Elizabeth sued her sister Joan's husband, Sir Robert Challons, re. tenements in Oulescombe and Buckerell, co. Devon, which had been possessed by Elizabeth's brother, Sir Thomas Beauchamp.  In 1410, license for an oratory was granted by Bishop Stafford to William Fortescue, senior, and Elizabeth, his wife, and also to William Fortescue, junior, and Matilda, alias Mabilla, his wife, for the mansion of the said William (senior) at Whympston." 1315 - 1349 John deBeauchamp 34 34 0425 - 0498 Ceneu 73 73 1320 - 1412 Margaret Whalesburgh 92 92 Source:Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants, Author: Gary Boyd Roberts, Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1993, Page: 444
Source:  Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists,  Frederick Lewis Weis,  Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1988, Sixth Ed. Page: 208, line 246E, no. 32
1292 - 1344 Alice deNonant 52 52 ~1558 - <1617 Robert White 59 59 Source:"Ancestry of John Barber White and His Descendants", published by John Barber White of Kansas City, MO., 1913.
Source:  English Origins of New England Families, Series 2, Volume 3, The Children of Robert White of Messing, Co. Essex, England, Who Settled in Hartford and Windsor,.
~1550 - <1600 Robert White 50 50 Source:  "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920. ~1557 - 1596 Alice Wright 39 39 ~1519 - BET. 4 - 6 MAR 1578 Richard White Source: "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920. ~1523 - >1586 Helen Kirton 63 63 ~1500 Stephen Kirton ~1500 Margaret Offley ~1470 William Offley 0804 Bertha deTours ~1471 Elizabeth Dillorne ~1468 John Kirton ~1470 Margaret White ~1485 - ~1549 Thomas White 64 64 Source: "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920. ~1495 - ~1549 Agnes Richards 54 54 ~1475 Robert White Source: "Ancestry of John Barber White and His Descendants", published by John Barber White of Kansas City, MO., 1913.
Source: "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920.
1478 Elizabeth Englefield Source:  "Ancestry of John Barber White and His Descendants", published by John Barber White of Kansas City, MO., 1913.
Source:   "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920.
1451 - ~1548 Thomas Englefield 97 97 ~1456 Robert White ~1460 Margaret Gaynsford ~1162 - 1247 William deFerrers VI Earl of Derby 85 85 He received many liberal marks of royal favour, which he felt sogratefully, that in all the subsequent struggles between the kings andthe refractory barons his lordship never once swerved from hisallegiance, but remained true to the monarch, and after King John'sdecease he adhered with the same unshaken loyalty to the interests of hisson, King Henry III. He died of the gout Oct. 28, 1247, and his wifeSept. 22, 1247, after a union of, according to some authorities of 75 andothers 55 years. 0870 - 0980 Willa deBurgundy 110 110 John Gaynsford ~1422 - ~1462 John White 40 40 ~1370 Robert White  Source: "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920. 1373 Alice Source:  "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920. ~1449 - ~1510 Margery Danvers 61 61 John Englefield ~1428 - 1488 Richard Danvers 60 60 Source:  "Ancestry of John Barber White and His Descendants", published by John Barber White of Kansas City, MO., 1913. ~1432 - 1482 Elizabeth Langston 50 50 Source: "Ancestry of John Barber White and His Descendants", published by John Barber White of Kansas City, MO., 1913.
See: Pedigrees Part 2 of this book.
~1406 John Langston 1408 Elizabeth Mellen ~1400 - ~1448 John Danvers 48 48 ~1390 - <1429 Alice Verney 39 39 First wife to John D'Anvers.

The Visitation of the County of Oxford, 1566,1574 and 1634. Together
with The Gatherings of Oxfordshire, 1574. ; ; From Harl. MS. No. 1412, p.
28
~1370 - >1409 Richard Danvers 39 39 ~1374 Agnes deBrancestre ~1348 John deBrancestre ~1345 John Danvers ~1349 Isabel deLa Lee ~1323 William deLa Lee ~1325 Isabel deLa Lee ~1344 William Verney 1194 - 1240 John deLacy Earl of Lincoln 46 46 Surety for the Magna Charta. Elizabeth ~1290 - ~1360 William Verney 70 70 ~1300 - ~1369 Alice Langley 69 69 John Langley ~1256 Simon deVerney ~1221 Richard deVerney  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. ~1188 Harvey deVerney  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. ~1170 Simon deVerney  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. Agnes Bagot William Bagot 1220 - 10 Mar 1287/1288 Maud deLacy Countess De Lincoln ~1140 Roger deVerney  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. ~1109 Roger deVernai  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. ~1067 William deVernai  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. ~1045 William deVernai  1.  GENDEX on-line, file of Mark L. Tunnell:  endoftunnell@p3.net. Website is www.my-ged.com/db/page/tunnell/16164. Sidney ~1446 Alice Eleanor Hungerford Source: "Genesis of the White Family and the Scotts of Scot's Hall", compiled by Emma Siggins White, Kansas City, MO, 1920. 1404 - 1464 Robert Hungerford 60 60 On May 18 1464, he was beheaded in Newcastle, Northumberland, England. 1426 - 1476 Eleanor deMoleynes 50 50 1378 - 1449 Walter Hungerford 71 71 ~1394 - >1426 Katherine Peverel 32 32 1130 - 1215 Robert II Baron Ewyas Lord Herefordshire 85 85 1340 - 1422 Thomas Peverel 82 82 ~1342 - 1422 Margaret deCourtenay 80 80 1322 - ~1356 Thomas deCourtenay 34 34 1322 - 1363 Muriel deMoels 41 41 1273 - 1340 Hugh deCourtenay 67 67 ~1279 - 1345 Agnes deSt John 66 66 1250 - 3 Mar 1290/1291 Hugh deCourtenay 1245 - 1328 Alianore le despenser 83 83 1223 - 1265 Hugh le despenser 42 42 After the battle of Lewes he was nominated under the baronial power ofthe 44th of Henry III (1259), Justiciary of England.He was one of thoseto whom the custody of the captive monarch was committed, and he was thenentrusted with the castles of Orford, in Suffolk, of Devises, in Wilts,and Barnard Castle, in the bishopric of Durham. Hugh was summoned toparliament of Dec 14, 1264 as "Hugh le Despencer, Justic' Angliae" andlost his life under the baronial banner at the battle of Evesham. 1211 - 1271 Phillip Bassett 60 60 Source: Weis [1992]  Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, 1992  line 72-31, p. 73 1238 - 1271 Isabel deClare 33 33 Hawise deLovaine ~1380 - 1459 Robert Hungerford 79 79 1422 - 7 Feb 1477/1478 Margaret Botreaux 1293 - 1337 John de Moels 44 44 1297 - 1337 Joan Lovel 40 40 20 Feb 1387/1388 - 1462 William III Botreaux 1389 - 1488 Elizabeth Beaumont 99 99 1367 - 1395 William II Botreaux 28 28 ~1364 Elizabeth Saint Lo 1361 - 1396 John Beaumont 35 35 1282 - 1330 Roger deMortimer II Baron Mortimer 48 48 Roger Mortimer, 2nd Baron Mortimer, was summoned to Parliament 1306-1326.This nobleman, notorious in our histories as the paramour of Isabel,Queen Consort of Edward II, was in his sixteenth year at the death of hisfather. He married Jaone, daughter of Peter de Genville, Lord of Trim, inIreland. In 34th of Edward I, about 1306, he received the honour ofKnighthood. He aided in the Scottish wars, and in 3rd of Edward II, 1310,he was made Governor of the Castle of Buelt, and later was LordLieutenant of Ireland. During the latter part of Edward II's reign heattached himself to the Queen, and at length fled with her and PrinceEdward to France. He later returned and was made Earl of March soon afterthe accession of Edward III. He hereupon became proud beyond measure (sothat his son Geoffrey called him the King of Folly) and assumed royalauthority. His career was not however of long continuance, for KingEdward III, becoming sensible of his folly and vices, had him seized inthe Castle of Queen Isabel in Nottingham and was convicted under variouscharges, the first was complicity in the murder of Edward II, andreceiving sentence of death was hanged in 1330. He left by Joan deGeneville 4 sons and 7 daughters. ~1365 Katherine Everingham Complete Peerage 2 (1912): 61 (sub Beaumont) states that Katherine Everingham, widow of Sir John Beaumont, Lord Beaumont, "died 1426." No source is given for the death date.
Calendar of Fine Rolls, 15 (1935): 137 indicates that a writ of diem clausit extremum for "Katherine late the wife of John de Bello Monte, 'chivaler'" was issued 1 February 1426/7. As such, it would appear that Katherine (Everingham) Beaumont died shortly before 1 February 1426/7.
1340 - 1368 Henry Beaumont 28 28 Joan Le Despencer D. 1342 John deBeaumont 1318 - 1372 Alinor;Eleanor Plantagenet 54 54 D. 1340 Henry deBeaumont Alice Comyn Alexander Cumyn 1281 - 1345 Henry Plantagenet 64 64 16 Jan 1244/1245 - 1296 Edmund;Crouchback H. Plantagenet D. UNKNOWN Beatrice deTurnham ~1245 - 1302 Blanche Princess D'artois 57 57 ~1223 - 1291 Eleanor Queen of England 68 68 The mother of Edmund;Crouchback may have been Eleanor of Provence B. 1217D. 25 Jan 1290/91
In that case, Edmund's father would have been Henry (III) PLANTAGENET.
Patrick deChaworth Isabel deBeauchamp Geoffrey Maude Fitz Piers 1207 - 1272 Henry Plantagenet 64 64 1217 - 25 Jan 1290/1291 Eleanor of Provence ~1330 - 1397 Thomas Hungerford 67 67 pg 1909, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition

pg 2551 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition

pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Joan Hussey ~1280 - >1308 Walter Hungerford 28 28 10 Mar 1262/1263 - 1338 Isabella deClare ~1300 Hugh Peverel 1302 Margaret Cobham Roger Bigod 1224 - 1274 John deCourtenay 49 49 ~1228 Isabel deVere ~1322 - ~1386 Thomas Assheton 64 64 John (2nd Lord) Clinton 1170 - 1242 Robert deCourtenay 72 72 ~1196 Mary deReviers ~1125 - 1194 Renaud;Reginald Seigneur deCourtenay 69 69 1222 - UNKNOWN Yolande De Dreux ~1135 Hawise deCurcy 1202 Mrs. Mary Alexander Margaret Spencer Mathew II Armstrong 8 Jan 1649/1650 - 1701 Henry II Trent Source:  Colonial Wills of Henrico County, VA, Part One 1654-1737, Page 54: "Will of Henry Trent, Sr. Of Varina Parish. To son Alexander Trent, 109 acres in Varina Parish, To son Henry Trent, 109 acres in Varina Parish, items and a cow at Richard Cox's, To son John Trent, 109 acres in Varina Parish, To son William Trent, 109 acres in Varina Parish and he to have first choice when land divided. To daughter Mary Cox, 1 gold ring, To daughter Rebecca Trent, 2000 lbs. tobacco. To daughter Susanna Trent, 2000 lbs. tobacco, To wife Elizabeth, my three servants: William Tonyson, Eliz. Blosom, Indian Nicklas Cuttell, and wife to be executor. Dated 8 Jan 1700. Recorded 1 April 1701."
Henry Trent born in 1642 in Inverness, Scotland and immigrating to Philidelphia in 1682.

Children:
Alexander Willam Trent
Henry Trent
John Trent
William Trent
Mary Trent
Rebecca Trent
Susanna Trent
Peter Trent
1657 - 1732 Elizabeth Sherman 75 75 1631 - 1688 Rebecca Newberry 57 57 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> G76M-PS 1637 - 1695 Henry Sherman 58 58 Henry Sherman's will is dated Oct. 1, 1695, Henrico Co., VA  LDS Film #6019060. Names da. Elizabeth.
The will of William Littlebury, Page 1123 of Gen. Glean. in England, [GGE] sites Henry Sherman the elder and Henry Sherman the younger with Edmond Sherman his brother.
The will of John Sherman of Denham. p. 1162 GGE, Notes his brother Robert and Edmond a Preacher. Witness, Henry Sherman the younger.
Will of John Wood, p. 1163 GGE, notes " my cousin Henry Sherman the younger of Denham...".
Will of Henry Sherman the Elder, page 1164 GGe, names " Henry my son... and his children, Henry, Samuel,Daniel,John,Ezechiell,Phebe, Nathaniel and Anne..... son Edmond and his son...children of Edmond, Richard, Bezaliell and Anne.... names his wife as Margerye... names his son Robert....names his da. Judith....."
1647 - 1648 Samuel Wolcott 7m 7m 1230 - UNKNOWN William deBraose VI Mar de Montferrat 0950 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosele Susanna Italy Rosele's second husband was Robert II King of France. 1610 - 1680 Henry Wolcott 69 69 1620 - 1684 Sarah Newberry 64 64 1645 - 1712 John Wolcott 66 66 1649 - 1698 Sarah Wolcott 48 48 1651 - 1683 Mary Wolcott 31 31 1653 - 1683 Hannah Wolcott 30 30 1658 - 1729 Josiah Wolcott 70 70 1578 - 1655 Henry Wolcott 76 76 1584 - 1655 Elizabeth Saunders 70 70 Mary Nicholls D. UNKNOWN Peter Mauclerk Count of Brittany 1592 - 1992 Susan Paine 400 400 1607 - 1655 John Wolcott 48 48 1612 - 1662 George Wolcott 50 50 1615 - 1662 Christopher Wolcott 47 47 William de Windsor Stated to have been in the holy orders. A monk. 1620/1621 - 1704 Anna Wolcott 1622 - 1689 Mary Wolcott 67 67 1624 - 1687 Simon Wolcott 63 63 1545 - 1655 John Wolcott 110 110 1550 - 1637 Joan 87 87 Catherine de Mowbray ~1560 - 1752 John Wolcott 192 192 Stephen Haward 1576 - 1639 Christopher Wolcott 63 63 1166 - 1216 King of England John I , Lackland, Plantagenet 49 49 John was born on Christmas Eve 1167. His parents drifted apart after hisbirth;his youth was divided between his eldest brother Henry's house,where he learnedthe art of knighthood, and the house of his father'sjusticiar, Ranulf Glanvil,where he learned the business of government.As the fourth child, inherited lands were not available to him, givingrise to his nickname, Lackland. His first marriage lasted but ten yearsand was fruitless, but his second wife, Isabella ofAngouleme, bore himtwo sons and three daughters. He also had an illegitimate daughter, Joan,who married Llywelyn the Great, Ruler of All Wales, from which the Tudorline of monarchs was descended. The survival of the English governmentduring John's reign is a testament to the reforms of his father, as Johntaxed thesystem socially, economically, and judicially.
The Angevin family feuds profoundly marked John. He and Richard clashedin 1184 following Richard's refusal tohonor his father's wishessurrender Aquitane to John. The following year HenryII sent John to ruleIreland, but John alienated both the native Irish and the transplantedAnglo-Normans who emigrated to carve out new lordships for themselves;the experiment was a total failure and John returned home within sixmonths. After Richard gained the throne in 1189, he gave John vastestates in an unsuccessful attempt to appease his younger brother. Johnfailed to overthrow Richard'sadministrators during the German captivityand conspired with Philip II in another failed coup attempt. UponRichard's release from captivity in 1194, John wasforced to sue forpardon and he spent the next five years in his brother's shadow.
John's reign was troubled in many respects. A quarrel with the Churchresulted in England being placed under an interdict in 1207, with Johnactually excommunicated two years later. The dispute centered on John'sstubborn refusal to install the papal candidate, Stephen Langdon, asArchbishop of Canterbury; the issue was not resolved until Johnsurrendered to the wishes of Pope Innocent III andpaid tribute forEngland as the Pope's vassal.
John proved extremely unpopularwith his subjects. In addition to theIrish debacle, he inflamed his French vassals by orchestrating the murderof his popular nephew, Arthur of Brittany. By spring 1205, he lost thelast of his French possessions and returned to England.The final tenyears of his reign were occupied with failed attempts to regain theseterritories. After levying a number of new taxes upon the barons to payfor his dismal campaigns, the discontented barons revolted, capturingLondon in May 1215. At Runnymeade in the following June, John succumbedto pressure from the barons, the Church, and the English people at-large,and signed the Magna Carta. The document, a declaration of feudal rights,stressed three points. First, the Church was free to make ecclesiasticappointments. Second, larger-than-normal amounts of money could only becollected with the consent of the king's feudal tenants. Third, nofreeman was to be punished except within the context of common law. MagnaCarta, although a testament to John's complete failure as monarch, wasthe forerunner of modern constitutions. John only signed the document asa meansof buying time and his hesitance to implement its principlescompelled the nobility to seek French assistance. The barons offered thethrone to Philip II's son,Louis. John died in the midst of invasion fromthe French in the South and rebellion from his barons in the North.
John was remembered in elegant fashion bySir Richard Baker in AChronicle of the Kings of England: ". . .his works of piety were verymany . . . as for his actions, he neither came to the crown by justice,nor held it with any honour, nor left it peace."
MAGNA CARTA The Great Charter of English liberty granted (underconsiderable duress) by King John at Runnymede on June 15, 1215 John, bythe grace of God King of England, Lord of Ireland, Duke of Normandy andAquitaine, and Count of An
1789 William Warner 1850 Davidson Co., NC Census, HH/756 WARNER, William 61, Elizabeth 56, John 25, William 19, Nancy 16 3 1559 - 1609 Thomas Saunders 50 50 1561 Ann Blake 1615 - 1645 Jane Dabinott 30 30 1620 - 1686 Joseph Newberry 66 66 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BC-TC 1624 - 1689 Benjamin Newbury 65 65 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 9N1K-JV

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> PVJ0-NL
Maud de Grey 1626 - 1688 Mary Newberry 61 61 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> D0LS-FS 1628 - 1647 John Newberry 19 19 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BC-XV 1632 - 1644 Thomas Newberry 12 12 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> PVJ0-MF 1633 - 1663 Hannah Newberry 30 30 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> G76M-Q0 ~1635 Unknown Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> KQDB-7W ~1635 Daughter Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> G76M-R5 1642 - 1678 Sarah Warham 36 36 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> G3RD-4D 1557/1558 - 1620 Richard Newbury 1558 - 1632 Grace Matthew 74 74 1582 John Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-1C 1228 Maude De Beauchamp 1584 William Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> N9T4-DH

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-2J
1586 Alice Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-3P 1589 Fidos Newborough Ancestral File Number:<AFN> MZ4X-28

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-4V
1589 Fides Newberye Ancestral File Number:<AFN> NZ6M-VD 1592 - 1596 Robert Newberry 4 4 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-52 1597 - 1609 Dorothy Newberry 11 11 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-67 1600 - 1687 Robert Newberry 87 87 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-7D 1603 Henry Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-8K 1686 Alice Newberye Ancestral File Number:<AFN> NZ6N-17 1517 - 1568 Richard Newborough 51 51 1070 - UNKNOWN Emma deLacy 1530 Elizabeth Horsey ~1553 Elizabeth Newborough ~1555 - Feb 1598/1599 Walter Newborough 1575 - 1643 Ralph I Gorham 68 68  Mayflower Descendants V 4 pg 153-8, 217-20;  Virkus V 4 & 7;  Farmer's  pg 342;  Cleveland  pg 540; Hist & Gen of Mayflower Planters pg 164; Reg V3 pg 86; Reg V 10 pg 293; Reg  V 52 pg 358;  Records of Town of Swansea;  Gen Notes of Barnstable Families., V 1 pg 413 etc;
Savage, V 2 pg 281; Marriage records before 1699. Ralph Gorham came to America before Oct. 2, 1637, when he was granted land in Plymouth Colony. His name appeared in Court Records June 4, 1639. Probably settled in Duxbury in 1637. Bishop's Transcripts at Petersborough. Ralph Gorham was granted land in Plymouth 2 Oct 1637 for a house and garden. On 5 March 1637/8, he complained against Frances Strague. A year later, 'Ralph Gorham the older' was presented for breaking the peace. On 1 Sept 1640 he complained against Ralph Smith and on 2 March 1640/1 Smith complained against Ralph Gorham. On 5 April 1640 he sued Tristram Clark and John Crab for debt.
~1559 Katherine Newborough ~1561 - 1632 William Newborough 71 71 Winnifred ~1528 John Matthew ~1538 Miss John Heriz 1210 - 1260 Gilbert deLacy Lord Meath 50 50 ~1524 - 1612 Mrs. Rawlin 88 88 1545 Joane Dabinot Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 137V-264

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> LSQ1-XH
Sir Roger Mortein The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Sir Roger Mortein Knight Lord of Dunesley.


From the &quot;selvage1&quot; database at WorldConnect.  Please contact PetersonC@missouri.edu with corrections and additions.
1548 - >1607 Thomas Dabinot 59 59 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 137V-27B

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> LSMS-7Q
Michael Manvers 1557 Rawlin Dabinot Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 137V-29Q

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> LSQ2-0S
Thomas deAnnesley 1560 Bridget Dabinot Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 137V-2BX

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> LSMS-93
~1225 - 1301 Alexander Pilkington 76 76 1563 - 1637 Christopher Dabinott 74 74 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0BD-9Q

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 137V-2C5
1005 - UNKNOWN Alexander Catchman Lord of Troy & Bigsweir ~1226 Joan Thies Joan*,Tyas) /Thies /(Tyes/ ~1500 William Horsey ~1500 Dorothy Ludlowe ~1500 Miss. Chardstock 1516 - 1572 John Wolcott 55 55 ~1527 - 1637 Agnes 110 110 1593 - 1594 Jane Paine 1 1 ~1551 Alice Wolcott ~1553 Mary Wolcott 1206 - 1272 King of England Henry III Plantagenet 66 66 D. 1220 Lucy of Hereford 1510 - >1534 John Saunders 24 24 John Sanders has been found in:  Dinton, co.  Bucks.




The following list is taken from Series II, "Register of Maryland's
Heraldic Families," by Alice Norris Parran, 1938, [the passenger
list through the research of Mrs. G. W. Hodges].  This book has
been advertised lately, possibly a reprinting, but hopefully indexed.
p. 73-74:

"Ark" and "Dove"   Nov. 22nd, 1633  Record Mar. 25th 1634
...The twenty Gentlemen with Gov. Leonard CALVERT, and his
brother, George CALVERT,  Commissioners --
Sir Thomas CORNWALLEYS,
Jerome HAWLEY Esq.
Richard GERRARD - Knight Baronet, s/o Sir Thomas GERRARD,
Lord Baron of Byrne. 
Lady WINTOUR'S two sons: Edward and Frederick WINTOUR
Sir Thomas WISEMAN'S son, Henry WISEMAN, Esq.
Nicholas FAIRFAX (d. enroute)
Thomas BECKWITH, Esq.
Dr. John BRISCOE- Surgeon, and Henry BRISCOE
Father Andrew WHITE, a priest whose Journal of the Vayage and
Colonization is very remarkable.
Mrs. Ann COX-(wid. evid sister of Richard GERRARD, K. B. She later m.
Thomas GREEN. Had issue).

***Mr. John SAUNDERS, partner of Sir Thomas CORNWALLEYS, who was
to supervise his 12 servants.  But he died enroute (his wife and ch. are
found in MD, 1644.***

Mr. Henry GREEN, Gent.
Priest-ANTHAM or ALTON
Mr. John BAXTER, Gent.
Mr. Wm. ANDREWS-wife, Anne.
Mr. Richard COLE
Mr. Richard DUKE

Many of the passengers were sons of relations who were indentured for their
passage.  They are found in lists following.


Matthew BURROWES            Edward CRANFIELD            Wm. ASHMORE
Thos. ALLEN                 John ASHMORE                Wm. ANDREWS
Jas.BAREFOOT(d.enroute)        Wm. EDWIN                   John BOWLTER
Richard BRADLEY             John BRYANT                 Ralph BEAN
Henry BISHOP                Henry BRISCOE               Wm. BROWNE
Thomas BECKWITH             Anem BENDIN                 Christopher CARNOT
Mrs.Ann COX(nee Gerard)     Thomas CHARINGTON           Thomas COOPER
John CURKE                  John CARLE                  Edward CRANFIELD
Richard COLE                Richard DUKE                Thomas DARNALL
Peter DRAPER                Henry GREEN                 Thomas GRINSTON(GRIGSON)
Thomas HEATH                John HALFHEAD               Nicholas HARVEY
Thomas HODGES               John HOLLIS/HOLLOWES           Benjamine HODGES               
James HOCKLEY               Richard HILLS               John HILLIERD
Thomas HARRINGTON           John HILL                   William WHITEHEAD
Richard EDWARDS             John ELKIN                  Robert EDWARDS
Cuthbert FENWICK            Lewis FREEMAN               William FITTER
Thos. GERVAIS, priest       Father ALTHAM               Stephen GORE
John GAINES                 Richard GILBERT             John HOLDEN
Mary JENNINGS               Josias JENNINGS             Henry JAMES
Richard KENTON              Samuel LAWSON               Rich. LOWE(master of Ark)
Richard LUSTHEAD            Roger MORGAN                John MARLBOROUGH       
Thomas MINUS                Charles MIDDLETON           John MEDCALF
Fra MALCHET                 John NELVILL                Joan PORTER
Richard NEVILL              Richard ORCHARD             John PRICE
Michael PERRILL             Henry DARREL                John SAUNDERS
Thomas PRICE                Nicholas PERRIE             Robert PIKE
Lodwick PRICE               John PRICE                  Mr. ROGERS(?)
Francis ROGERS              Francis RABNETT             John ROBINSON
John WARD                   Evans WATKINS               Roger WALTER
James THORBTON              Richard THOMPSON            Mathias TOUSA
Father Andrew WHITE         Capt. Robert WINTOUR        Robert SMITHSON
John THOMSON                John SAUNDERS               Wm. SMITH
A. SMITH                    Thomas SMITH (had wife, Jane, daus: Jane & Gertrude)
Wm. SAIRE                   Mathias SOUSA               Samuel SOUSA
Robert SIMPSON              Thomas STRATHAM             Robert SHIRLEY
Stephen SAMNAN              Mr. Robert SMITHSON         John THOMPSON
James THORNTON              Rich. THOMPSON              Matthais TOUSA (mulatto)
Capt. Robt. WINTOR, Master of Ark (with Capt. Rich. LOWE)
Henry WISEMAN,of Thos.      Roger WALTER                Evans WATKINS
John WARD(wife Dameris)     Matthais ZAUSE
1521 - 1576 John Blake 55 55 1521 - 1595 Joan Jane 74 74 1559 - 1642 William Blake 83 83 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> FZ1X-RC 1600 - 1600 Frances Paine 23d 23d 1601 Robert Paine Martha Pitkin Joan Joane Splatt Ancestral File Number:<AFN> H0DQ-6S Thomas Newberry Ancestral File Number:<AFN> NKNV-J8 1170 - UNKNOWN Alice FitzRoger John Warham Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 97J0-3X Mr. Woodshaw Rawlyn Unknown Jane Jane Rawson Jane Jane ~1544 Agnas Uralon of Vergy pg. 201, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Judith of Fonvens 1064 - 1121 Robert Corbet 57 57 Burgess of Caen 1308 Ralph Basset Lord of Cheadle D. ~0990 Gerard I of Fonvens ~0903 of Arles D. 1016 Guillaume IV of Auvergne pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0990 Umberga ~0949 - ~0985 Alberic II of Macon 36 36 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0925 - 0971 Lietaud of Macon 46 46 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0930 Ermengardeof Chalons ~0871 - >0943 Alberic I of Narbonne 72 72 pg  6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Etollane of Macon pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0851 - 0911 Mayeul of Narbonne 60 60 pg 6 & 52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1105 - <1155 Herbert FitzHerbert 50 50 Herbert Fitz-Herbert, called Herbert of Winchester, Chamberlain andTreasurer to King Henry I, and the first of his family to born inEngland. He m. Adela or Lucy,† daughter and co-heir of Sir Robert Corbet,Kt., Lord of Alcester in the county of Warwick, and had issue, Herbert,his heir, Stephen Fitz-Herbert, and William Fitz-Herbert, called Williamof York.

This Herbert in the 5th of King Stephen, anno 1140, in conjunction withhis eldest son, gave £333 in silver for livery of his father's lands inHampshire, and Thomas Archbishop of York conferred upon him and his saidson the lordships of Launsborough, Collerthorpe, Wyderthorpe,Holperthorpe, and the two Lottum, besides one carucate of land inTurgisleby, three carucates in Schyneburne, three in Bridstall, five inMiddlethorpe, five in Urkilthorpe, &c., and all to be holden by theservice of three knights' fees. He was s. by his son aforesaid.

† She had been concubine to King Henry the I and was mother by thatprince of Reginald, Earl of Cornwall. [John Burke, History of theCommoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley, London,1834, p. 728, Jones, of Llanarth]

----------

In the 5th year of King Stephen [1140], Herbert Fitz-Herbert, then lordchamberlain to that monarch, gave £333 in silver for livery of hisfather's lands. This Herbert m. 1st, --- the dau. and co-heiress ofRobert Corbet, Lord of Alcester, co. Warwick, who had been some timeconcubine to King Henry I. He m. 2ndly, Lucy, 3rd dau. and co-heir ofMilo, Earl of Hereford, and by her had three sons, Reginald, who d. s.p.; Peter, his successor; and Matthew, sheriff of Sussex, 12th John[1211]. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 206, Fitz-Herbert,Baron Fitz-Herbert]

NOTE: The second marriage mentioned above by Burke was the marriage ofhis son, Herbert FitzHerbert the 2nd.
~0851 - <0911 Raimodis 60 60 pg 6 & 52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Geoffroi I of Gatinais ~0844 Garnier of Loches pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0920 Raculf of Macon pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0841 - 0886 Bernard II of Auvergne 45 45 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0843 Ermengardeof Chalons pg. 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0799 - >0879 Thierry I of Autunois 80 80 Avane D. ~0880 Thierri II of Chalons ~0975 Aimon of Chateau du Loire pg  6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1282 - 1362 Mary deRos 80 80 ~0980 Hildeburge of Belesme pg 6, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 0820 - 0866 Ranulf I of Aquitaine 46 46 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0841 Gerhard of Auvergne pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Geila of Friuli ~0495 Teodon III of Bayern pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0511 Teodon I of Bayern of the Burgunds ~0540 - 0611 Gisulfo II of Friuli 71 71 Romilda of Bayern pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0518 - ~0589 Grasulfo 71 71 0968 - 1015 Hugo III Count du Maine 47 47 ~0495 of Lombards ~0475 - 0561 Audoin of Lombards 86 86 ~0474 Rodelinde ~0445 Fitzias ~0449 Menia ~0895 - 0923 Raimond II of Toulouse 28 28 ~0897 Guidenildeof Carcassone 0923 - <1015 Rotbold Venaissin 92 92 ~0925 Ermengardeof Provence pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 <0775 - 0865 Luitfried III of Alsace 90 90 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1160 - UNKNOWN Herbert Fitzpiers ~0832 - ~0919 Eudes of Toulouse 87 87 ~0827 Gersindeof Albi ~0797 - <0878 Ermengaud of Albi 81 81 ~0810 - ~0863 Raimond I of Toulouse 53 53 pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0845 Bertha of Rheims Fredelon Remigus of Rheims Arsindeof Ponthieu pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 <0935 Hugues II of Lusignan pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0962 - ~1015 Joscelin of Courtenay 53 53 pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1210 Margaret deBurgh ~1036 - 1092 Boson II of Chastellerault 56 56 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1055 - 1093 Eleanor of Thouars 38 38 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1014 - ~1069 Hugues I of Chastellerault 55 55 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1016 Gerberge of Roche pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
D. 1012 Boson I of Chastellerault Amelie ~0982 - >1037 Fouchaud of Roche & Courtenay 55 55 Yogi Berra's Colorful Quotes:
" It ain't over 'til it's over "  "Never answer an anonymous letter" " I usually take a two hour nap from one to four" " It's deja vu all over again" " When you come to a fork in the road....Take it " " I didn't really say everything I said " " You can observe a lot by watching " When asked what time is was......" you mean now?" At Yogi Berra Day in St. Louis 1947 " I want to thank you for making this day necessary" " If the world were perfect, it wouldn't be " Yogi on the 1969 NY Mets....." overwhelming underdogs " " If the people don't want to come out to the ballpark, nobody's going to stop them " On why NY lost the 1960 series to Pittsburgh " We made too many wrong mistakes"  " The future ain't what it used to be " " It gets late early out here"  Phil Rizzuto - "Hey Yogi I think we're lost." Yogi Berra - "Ya, but we're making great time!"  pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0994 Gersindeof Chastellerault Yogi Berra's Colorful Quotes:
" It ain't over 'til it's over "  "Never answer an anonymous letter" " I usually take a two hour nap from one to four" " It's deja vu all over again" " When you come to a fork in the road....Take it " " I didn't really say everything I said " " You can observe a lot by watching " When asked what time is was......" you mean now?" At Yogi Berra Day in St. Louis 1947 " I want to thank you for making this day necessary" " If the world were perfect, it wouldn't be " Yogi on the 1969 NY Mets....." overwhelming underdogs " " If the people don't want to come out to the ballpark, nobody's going to stop them " On why NY lost the 1960 series to Pittsburgh " We made too many wrong mistakes"  " The future ain't what it used to be " " It gets late early out here"  Phil Rizzuto - "Hey Yogi I think we're lost." Yogi Berra - "Ya, but we're making great time!"
Gersindeof Mortimer ~0835 - 0886 Vulgrim I of Angouleme 51 51 Margaret ~0842 Roselindeof Agenois pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 ~0795 - 0844 Bernard of Toulose 49 49 pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 ~0807 Duodene of France pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 D. 0844 Guillaume of Septimania ~0786 Guibour of Hornbach ~0713 - ~0782 Thierry IV of Autun 69 69 Audeof Austrasia D. 0997 Adalbert I La Marche pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0956 - 1007/1011 Almodeof Limoges pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0905 - >0975 Boso I of La Marche 70 70 pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1241 - 1281 Aliva Basset 40 40 ~0910 Emme of Perigord pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Sulpice of La Marche pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. >0890 Geoffroi pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0864 - ~0918 Guilaume II of Perigord 54 54 ~0865 - 0925 Sancho I Garciez of Pamplona 60 60 ~0885 - >0970 Toda Aznarez of Larron 85 85 D. ~0885 Garcio II Inegez of Pamplona Urraca Sanchez of Gascogne D. 0842 Inigo Ximenez of Navarre Iniga Ximenez 1204 - 1264 Roger deQuincy 60 60 D. 0816 Ximeno Adelricez of Gascogne Munia Sancho II Sanchez of Gascogne Aznar Sanchez of Larron D. ~0872 Sancho I of Gascogne pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0920 - ~0973 Regnier III of Hainault 53 53 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0933 - 0961 Adele or Alix of Dagsbourg 28 28 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0932 Regnier II of Hainault pg 132 & 198 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~0894 Adelaideof Bourgogne pg 132 & 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~0850 - BEF 19 Jan 0915/0916 Regnier I of Hainault pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1364 - 1414 Isabel deLathom 50 50 ~0870 Albreda of Mons pg. 19, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 Richildeof Bourges ~0830 Ermengardeof Lorraine pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
<0864 - 0921 Richard of Bourgogne 57 57 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0870 Adelaideof Bourgogne pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0910 Ermengardeof Bourgogne ~0815 - 0864 Odacre of Bouillon 49 49 pg 19, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0780 - >0851 Enguerrand of Bouillon 71 71 pg 19, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0772 - 0814 Charles of Aachen 42 42 ~0938 - 0988 Dirk II of W Friesland 50 50 0979 - 1060 Afandreg Verch Gwair 81 81 1  NAME Afandreg Verch /Gwair/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 974
2  PLAC Aberffro, Malltraeth, Anglesey, Wales


[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Kraentzler 1406, 1409; Simpson.
K: Afandreg verch Gweir.
0871 - 8 Mar 0924/0925 Bertha deLorraine ~0958 - 0990 Hildegardeof Ghent 32 32 ~0900 - 0939 Dietrich I of W Friesland 39 39 0903 Geva of Friesland Evesna of Sachsen D. >0839 Gerulf II of W Friesland ~0845 - ~0916 Gerolf I of M Friesland 71 71 D. 0994 Bruno I of Brunswick Hildesindeof Croatia pg 20, "The Ancestry Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 Egbert of Croatia ~0872 - 8 Feb 0916/0917 Dietrich of Ringleheim pg 23, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1185 - 1225 Alice FitzRobert 40 40 pg 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 233, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0816 - 0864 Liudolf I of Sachsen 48 48 pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0806 - 0836 Oda of Thuringen 30 30 ~0788 - 0843 Bruno of E. Sachsen 55 55 Billung I of Thuringen ~0776 - ~0830 Guelph III of Bayern 54 54 ~0783 - >0833 Hedwig (Edith) of Sachsen 50 50 0800 - 0863 Konrad I of Argengau 63 63 ~0800 Teodon of Bayern ~0833 Matilda ~0810 - 0856 Walpert of Ringelheim 46 46 1048 - 1133 Rhys Ap Tewdr Mawr 85 85 ~0812 Altburgis of Ringleheim pg 23, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0712 Aripert II of Lombards Reginpert of Turin D. 0662 Godepert of Lombards D. 0661 Aripert I of Lombards D. 0612 Gundwald of Asti D. <0592 Garibald of Bayern Walerada of Lombards ~0555 - 0584 Teodebert of Bayern 29 29 pg. 27, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0525 - 0565 Teodon IV of Bayern 40 40 pg. 27, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1197 - 1232 John deBraose 35 35 Nicknamed "Tadody" by the Welsh when he was hidden in Gower as a childafter King John had his father and grandmother killed.   He was later inthe custody of Engelard de Cigogny (castellan of Windsor) along with hisbrother Giles.  Cigogny was ordered to give the two boys up to William deHarcourt in 1214.  At this time John became separated from his brother.He was present at the signing of the Magna Charta in 1215.

John disputed his uncle Reginald's claim to the Braose lands, sometimesresorting to arms.  Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, helped him to secure Gower(1219).  In 1221, with the advice and permission of Llewelyn, he repairedhis castle of Abertawy (Swansea).  He purchased the Rape of Bramber fromReginald and his son William in 1226.  In that year John confirmed thefamily gifts to Sele Priory, near Bramber, and to the Abbey of StFLorent, Saumur, and added others.  After the death of Reginald (1228) hebecame Lord of Skenfrith, Grosmont, and Whitecastle, the three Marchercastles, by charter from the king but he lost these in 1230 to Hugh deBurgh at the same time as Gower became a subtenancy of de Burgh's Honourof Carmarthen and Cardigan.

See Castle of Abertawy, Swansea


Joan de Braose, surnamed Tadody, had been privately nursed by a Welshwoman at Gower. This John had grants of lands from King Henry III and wasalso possessed of the Barony of Brembye, in Sussex, where he died in1231, by a fall from his horse, his foot sticking in the stirrup. Hemarried, it is stated, Margaret, dau. of Llewellyn, Prince of Wales, bywhom (who m. afterwards Walter de Clifford) he had a son, his successor,William de Braose. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 72,Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]

Nicknamed "Tadody" by the Welsh when he was hidden in Gower as a child/after King John had his father and grandmother killed.   He was later in the custody of Engelard de Cigogny (castellan of Windsor) along with his brother Giles.  Cigogny was ordered to give the two boys up to William de Harcourt in 1214.  At this time John became separated from his brother. He was present at the signing of the Magna Charta in 1215.

John disputed his uncle Reginald's claim to the Braose lands, sometimes resorting to arms.  Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, helped him to secure Gower(1219).  In 1221, with the advice and permission of Llewelyn, he repaired his castle of Abertawy (Swansea).  He purchased the Rape of Bramber from Reginald and his son William in 1226.  In that year John confirmed the family gifts to Sele Priory, near Bramber, and to the Abbey of StFLorent, Saumur, and added others.  After the death of Reginald (1228) he became Lord of Skenfrith, Grosmont, and Whitecastle, the three Marcher castles, by charter from the king but he lost these in 1230 to Hugh de Burgh at the same time as Gower became a subtenancy of de Burgh's Honourof Carmarthen and Cardigan.

John de Braose, Lord of Gower, born c1197, died 18 July 1232 at Bamber, co Sussex from a fall from a horse; married 1219 Margaret, died 1263, daughter of Llewellyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of Wales.  [Magna Charta Sureties]



Nicknamed "Tadody" by the Welsh when he was hidden in Gower as a child after King John had his father and grandmother killed.   He was later in the custody of Engelard de Cigogny (castellan of Windsor) along with his brother Giles.  Cigogny was ordered to give the two boys up to William de Harcourt in 1214.  At this time John became separated from his brother. He was present at the signing of the Magna Charta in 1215.

John disputed his uncle Reginald's claim to the Braose lands, sometimes resorting to arms.  Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, helped him to secure Gower (1219).  In 1221, with the advice and permission of Llewelyn, he repaired his castle of Abertawy (Swansea).  He purchased the Rape of Bramber from Reginald and his son William in 1226.  In that year John confirmed the family gifts to Sele Priory, near Bramber, and to the Abbey of St FLorent, Saumur, and added others.  After the death of Reginald (1228) he became Lord of Skenfrith, Grosmont, and Whitecastle, the three Marcher castles, by charter from the king but he lost these in 1230 to Hugh de Burgh at the same time as Gower became a subtenancy of de Burgh's Honour of Carmarthen and Cardigan.

-----------------------------------

Joan de Braose, surnamed Tadody, had been privately nursed by a Welsh woman at Gower. This John had grants of lands from King Henry III and was also possessed of the Barony of Brembye, in Sussex, where he died in 1231, by a fall from his horse, his foot sticking in the stirrup. He married, it is stated, Margaret, dau. of Llewellyn, Prince of Wales, by whom (who m. afterwards Walter de Clifford) he had a son, his successor, William de Braose. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]
Wacho of Lombards Ostragotha of Gepidae Elemund of Gepidae D. >0523 Sigismund ~0830 - >0861 Sieghard in Kraichgau 31 31 D. 0889 Arnoul of Bayern ~0860 - 0907 Luitpold in Nordgau 47 47 ~0864 Kunigundeof Schwaben ~0842 - 0910 Berthold III of Schwaben 68 68 of Breisgau D. UNKNOWN Rhywallon Prince of Powys Erchange of Breisgau ~0820 - 0875 Chadaloh II 55 55 0795 - 0826 Berthold II 31 31 ~0770 - 0819 Chadaloh I of Friuli 49 49 0747 - 0802 Berthold I 55 55 ~0690 - BEF 16 Jan 0761/0762 Richbaud in Breisgau ~0900 - 0973 Eberhard IV in Nordgau 73 73 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0940 - >0980 Ludwig of Dagsbourg 40 40 0497 - 0531 Clothilda of Franks 34 34 pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0531 Amalaric II of Visigoths pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1022 - 1103 Tudor Mawr 81 81 Theodora of Goths pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0455 - 0526 Theodoric of Ostrogoths 71 71 pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0413 - 0475 Theudemir of Ostrogoths 62 62 Erchiva of Visigoths D. 0459 Wandalar of Ostrogoths pg 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0400 Winithar of Ostrogoths pg 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0918 Konrad I Hre ~0900 - 0967 Billung in Sachsen 67 67 ~0922 Hildegardis of Westerburg pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Glismode 1030 - 1109 Gwenlian of Anglesea 79 79 ~0840 - ~0899 Arnoul of Bayern 59 59 ~0932 - 11 Dec 0968/0991 Gerberge ~1155 Elana de Clare ~0920 Willa of Tuscagne pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <0910 - 0966 Berenger II of Italy 56 56 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

Bob Furtaw  <bob@furtaw.com>
~1168 - <1225 Aveline de Clare 57 57 He [William de Munchensy] married, before 1186, Aveline, daughter ofRoger (de Clare), Earl of Hertford, by Maud, daughter and heir of Jamesde St Hilaire, of Dalling, & c., Norfolk, & c. He died before 7 May1204.  His widow married, before 29 May 1205, Geoffrey (FitzPeters), Earlof Essex.  She died before 4 June 1225. [Complete Peerage IX:420,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] D. 0910 Gisele of Friuli pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0840 - 0891 Anchier of Orchert 51 51 Gisele of Volsca pg. 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 0850 - 0924 Berenger I Hre 74 74 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Colwyn Lord of Anglesea ~0875 - 0915 Bertilda of Spoleto 40 40 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0882/0888 Suppo of Spoleto pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0800 - 0862 Eberhard of Friuli 62 62 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0820 - >0874 Gisele of Hre 54 54 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0900 - Jan 0962/0963 Charles Constantine of Vienne pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Teutberge pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0883 - 0928 Louis Hre 45 45 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 0887 Boso II of Provence pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition >0855 - <0897 Ermengardeof Germany 42 42 pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~0890 - 0956 Giselbert of Chalons 66 66 0995 - 1053 Cadell 58 58 ~0835 of Limoges D. >0991 Geraud of Limoges pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0936 Rothildeof Brosse <0870 - 0897 Guilfre of Barcelona 27 27 ~0865 Gunhilda of Flandres ~0878 - 0954 Sunifred II of Barcelona 76 76 ~1675 - Unknown Deliverance Conklin ~0353 - ~0413 Gebicca of Burgunds 60 60 ~0385 - 0436 Gundahar of Burgunds 51 51 ~0958 - 1010 Guillaume of Provence 52 52 0966 - 1043 Eneon South Wales 77 77 Caratene Basin of Thuringen of Bourges ~0523 - 0584 Chilperic I of Neustria 61 61 ~0543 - ~0597 Fredegundeof Ardennes 54 54 0554 - 0628 Clothaire II of Austrasia 74 74 D. 0632 Charibert of Franks Amaud of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Gisele of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0688 Baggis of Toulouse 0969 - 1050 Eleanor of Powys 81 81 0836 - 0875 Waldrade De Lorraine 39 39 Odeof Franks D. 0725 Odeon (Eudes) of Aquitaine Walchiges of Verdun Valtrude Valtrudeof Verdun D. 0774 Hunold of Aquitaine D. 0763 Waifre of Aquitaine Humold of Aquitaine D. 0774 Loupo I of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1250 - >1274 Alionore de Langley 24 24 D. UNKNOWN Gueristan of Powys D. 0778 Loupo II of Gascogne D. 0812 Adelrico of Gascogne D. 0812 Cantulo of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0755 - 0819 Llop Centull of Gascogne 64 64 pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Sancha Lopez of Gascogne ~0780 - >0821 Bello or Raoul of Carcassone 41 41 ~0810 - 0850 Sunifred of Urgal 40 40 Duptory of Ireland Elmentrude ~0804 Louis Elganius of Carcassone 1088 - 1157 Henry FitzHenry 69 69 ~0830 - 0879 Oliba II of Carcassone 49 49 ~0872 - ~0900 Asnarius of Comminges 28 28 ~0785 - 0820 Donato Lopez of Bigorre 35 35 ~0887 - ~0940 Dato II Lopez of Bigorre 53 53 ~0900 - >0956 Raimond I of Bigorre 56 56 D. ABT 0930/0940 Arnaud I of Auvergne pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Bertilde ~1275 - BEF 17 Mar 1336/1337 Margaret Basset ~0825 - 0876 Conrad II of Auxerre 51 51 of Metz 1069 Gerald FitzWalter deWindsor Gerald fitzWalter (or Gerald of Windsor), the second son of WalterfitzOther, was appointed by Henry I to be Constable of Pembroke Castleand Pres. of Pembroke County. Gerald of Windsor married Nesta, daughterof Rhys ap Tudor Mawr (Prince of South Wales). William and Nesta had fourchildren:
1. William fitzGerald, whom Giraldus Cambrensis expressly calls"Williamus primaevus". William succeeded to Carew Castle, and wasancestor of the family of Carew.  William, the father of Raymond le Gros,died in A.D. 1173.
2. Maurice fitzGerald, Lord of Maynooth and Baron of Naas, who died in1176.
3. David fitzGerald, Bishop of St. David's in A.D. 1147, who died in A.D.1176.
4. Angharat (a daughter) who married William de Barri, to whom she boreGiraldus Cambrensis, the historian, and Philip de Barri, Lord of Manobier.
~0860 - 0920 Manasses of Chalons 60 60 ~0860 - 0935 Ermengardeof Bourgogne 75 75 pg 80 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Oda ~0710 Rolande ~0830 Ermentrudeof Alsace >0900 - <1000 Hugues I of Lusignan 100 100 pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0925 - 0988 Herbert I of Thouars 63 63 pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0929 Alderdeof Aulnay ~0400 - 0474 Ercc of Dalriada 74 74 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0474 Misi (Mist) 1100 - 1176 Maurice FitzGerald Baron of Naas 76 76 In A.D. 1168, Dermot MacMorrogh, King of Leinster, driven from histerritory by Roderick O'Conor, High King if Ireland, sought assistancefrom the Norman-Welsh and succeeded in enlisting in his cause Richard deClare, Earl of Pembroke (called Strongbow). Having reached St. David's,on his way back to Ireland, Dermot was hospitably received by DavidfitzGerald (son of Gerald of Windsor), Bishop of the diocese. Accordingto Burke's Peerage, the Bishop persuaded his brother, Maurice fitzGerald,and his half-brother, Robert fitzStephen to assist MacMorrough with theirforces.
Sometime after achieving success in that campaign, Strongbow granted toMaurice fitzGerald, known as "The Invader of Ireland",  the middlecantred of Offelan, in which Naas was situated. Offelan was a districtquite distinct from Offaly.
Maurice married Alice de Montgomery and had six sons:
1. William fitzMaurice, Baron of Naas. Confirmed in his lands in Offelanin 1185.
2. Gerald fitzMaurice, 1st Baron of Offaly, ancestor of the Dukes ofLeinster.
3. Thomas fitzMaurice, Lord of Connello, Co. Limerick. d. A.D. 1213.Ancestor of the FitzGeralds, the Earls of Desmond, the White Knight, theKnight of Glin, the Knight of Kerry, the FitzMaurice Lords of Kerry, etc.
4. Maurice fitzMaurice of Kiltrany (now Burntchurch), Co. Kilkenny.Ancestor of the Barons of Burntchurch.
5. Alexander fitzMaurice, d.s.p.
6. Robert fitzMaurice.
Burke's Peerage  (1970)
Angus D. 0502 Duach Teangumha of Connaught pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Maine Congearvin of Connaught Congal Fiachradh of Bearcuil pg 87, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Cabel of Bearcuil pg 87, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0977 Gervaise Grentmesnil ~0738 - 0798 Imma (Emma) of Allemania 60 60 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0867 - 0911 Adalbert III in Zurichgau 44 44 1661 - 1740 Jane McGhie 79 79 Other researchers state: Joseph was born Jan. 9, 1657 in Donegalshire, Ireland. Joseph was in the protest of 1688 with William of Orange in the defense of Derryshire. He died Sept. 8, 1692 in Lifford Parish, Ballygoogan, Donegalshire, Ireland. His parent's were John Caldwell, Jr.and Mary Holmes. Jane McGhie died in 1740 in Ireland and her parent's were Alexander McGhie and Jane Milliken. Joseph and Jane had 9 children. 0890 Eberhard II in Zurichgau D. 0971 Eberhard III in Thurgau D. 0990 Robert I of Meulan pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0965 - 0997 Robert II of Meulan 32 32 pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Alix or Adele of Vexin pg 108, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0909 Abo le Breton ~0936 Arnulf (Arnold) Asperlin of Vaudreuil pg 100, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0864 - >0919 Wigeric of Aachen 55 55 ~0890 - >0923 Kunigundeof France 33 33 1158 Henry deNeaubourg De Beaumont ~0912 - 0994 Friedrich I of Lothringen 82 82 Guillermo I of Astarac ~0890 - 0939 Giselbert of Lorraine 49 49 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0933 - 0955 Valeran of Vexin 22 22 pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0949 - 0975 Hildegardeof Flandres 26 26 D. ~0995 Gauthier I of Amiens & Valois Landry of Dreux Adele (Eve) Dreux ~0905 Anslech Turstain BARON OF BRIQUEBEC IN 943.  HIS GRANDSON, WILLIAM, BARON OF BRIQUEBEC, WAS THE
FIRST TO TAKE THE NAME OF BERTRAND, FROM WHOM DESCENDED THE RUSSELL FAMILY OF
ENGLAND, DUKES OF BEDFORD.  ANSLECH LIVED TO WITNESS THE ACCESSION OF DUKE
RICHARD II.
~0930 - ~0955 Ertemberge Briquebec 25 25 1160 - 24 Mar 1216/1217 Beatrice deVaux ~0419 Brychan ap Annlach of Manau pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Gwawr verch Brychan Gwined verch Brychan ~0435 Elidir Lydanwyn of deheubarth D. >0646 Llywarch Hen of deheubarth Elidyr ap Sandde ~0510 Dwywg of deheubarth ~0550 Gwyar of deheubarth Uithyr (Pendragon) Anna Mawgawse 1092 - UNKNOWN William dePercy III Baron De Percy Tegid of deheubarth Alewn ap Tegidof deheubarth Sanddeap Alewn of Deheubarth Cainebald D. ~0593 Crmda of Mercia D. 0606 Peda (Wibba) of Mercia Helen verch Pybba of Mercia Ceredig D. 0544 Uffa of Cardigan Seirwell of Cardigan 1114 - 1150 Adeliza de Clare 36 36 Brothan of Cardigan Arnothen of Cardigan Artholes of Cardigan Clydawe of Cardigan D. ~0730 Seisyll of Cardigan ~0730 - 0807 Arthen ap Seisyll 77 77 ~0755 Dyfnwallon ap Arthen ~0780 - ~0830 Meurig ap Dyfniwallon 50 50 ~0404 - ~0470 Catigern ap Votigern of Powys 66 66 ~0435 - >0470 Cadell ap Catigern of Powys 35 35 1069 - 1120 Alan dePercy II Baron De Percy 51 51 Alan de Percy, 2nd Baron Percy, was born circa 1069. He married Emma,daughter of Gilbert de Gaunt, Baron of Folkingham, and granddaughter ofBaldwin, Count of Flanders. History tells us little of this 2nd Baron,save that he was called Magnus Alanus, or Great Alan; that he kept intactthe wide possessions of his father; his marriage with Emma de Ghent was apowerful and illustrious alliance, for Emma was also a grandniece ofQueen Matilda. Alan de Percy died 1120, and was buried beside the heartif his father in Whitby Abbey. 0805 - 0855 Lothaire I 50 50 Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire. Gwyngwen Brychan ap Gwyngwen Tudglid verch Brychan ~0470 Cygen ap Cadell of Powys Pablo Post D. ~0550 Carnwydal Ardern ~0510 Arddyn of Pennines ~0502 Brochwel ap Cygen of Powys ~0545 - ~0610 Cynan ap Brochwel of Powys 65 65 1075 - 1135 Emma deGant 60 60 ~1605 - 1657 Ananias Conkling 52 52 Settled At East Hampton, Suffolk, Long Island, New York ~1614 - ~1658 Dorothy Rose 44 44 Seisyll ap Ednywain Cadwgon Trydelig of Dyfed D. >0710 Rhain ap Cadwgon of Trydelig Tewdws ap Rhain of Brycheiniog D. ~0796 Maredudd ap Tewdws of Dyfed D. 0811 Owain ap Maredudd of Dyfed ~0794 Tangwystl verch Owen of Dyfed Bledri 1134 - 1204 Agnes dePercy 70 70 Agnes de Percy, sister and co-heir, became sole inheritor of the linewhich for five generations had lorded it over the North Riding ofYorkshire. Last of the original family planted in Yorkshire by William,called Algernons, she passed on the great name and heritange to the sonswhom she had borne to husband Josceline de Louvain. With her burial atWhitby Abbey began the story of the second and more splendid dynasty ofPercy. While the Lady Agnes de Percy, eventual heiress of her race, wasin her 16th year and as yet unwedded it occurred to the shrewd QueenAdeliza, 2nd wife of King Henry I, that no fitter match than this couldbe found for her own half-brother Josceline de Louvain. Accordingly shehastily summoned young Josceline from Brabant, and established him atcourt, where Agnes de Percy was a maid of honour. D. 0892/0893 Hyfaidd ap Bledri of Dyfed ~0850 - ~0904 Llywarch ap Hyfaidd of Dyfed 54 54 ~0938 - 0999 Maredudd ap Owain of deheubarth 61 61 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1073 Livida D. ~0858 Gui I of Spoleto ~0690 - >0747 Canbert or Claribert of Laon 57 57 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 171, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~1666 Nicholas Conklin 0667 - 0727 Houching of Alamannia 60 60 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0697 - >0724 Hnabi (Nebi) of Alamannia 27 27 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0795 - 0834 Odo (Eudes) of Orleans 39 39 D. UNKNOWN Sibyl deValognes ~0805 Engeltrudeof Orleans pg 171, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0895 - ~0939 Megingoz in the Avalgau 44 44 Hugobert Plectrude D. 0708 Drogo of Champagne pg. 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Vareton Anaflede Anstrude ~0999 - ~1048 Adelbert III of Longwy 49 49 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Regnier of Saunois 1155 - 1200 Henry de Percy 45 45 Henry Percy, eldest son, died in his mother's lifetime. He marriedIsabel, daughter of Adam de Brus of Skelton, and she brought the manor ofLevingston and sundry other lands. 0938 - 0987 Beatrix of France 49 49 ~0865 - 0910 Gerhard of Lorraine 45 45 Ita of Sachsen pg. 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 ~0880 - ~0943 Cunigundeof Vermandois 63 63 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~0880 - 0949 Udo in Wettergau 69 69 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0910 - 0997 Konrad of Schwaben 87 87 ~0645 - 20 Feb 0719/0720 Eticho I (Adalricus) of Alsace pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0654 Berswindeof Austrasia pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1090 - 1136 Richard FitzGilbert de Clare 46 46 Richard FitzGilbert (de Clare), son and heir , Lord of Clare, Suffolk,slain by Welsh near Abergavenny 15 Apr 1136, buried Gloucester; m. Adeliz(or Alice), daughter of Ranulph le Meschin, Earl of Chester, by Lucy,widow (1) of Ivo Taillebois and (2) Roger FitzGerold.  She m (2) Robertde Condet (or Cundy), d. c 1141, lord of Thorngate Castle, Lincoln, etc.,son of Osbert de Condet. [Ancestral Roots, Line 246b-25]

__________________

Richard de Clare first bore the title of Earl of Hertford and being oneof those who, by power of the sword, entered Wales, there planted himselfand became lord of vast territories as also of divers castles in thoseparts, but requiring other matters of moment from the king, in which hewas unsuccessful, he reared the standard of revolt and soon after feel inan engagement with the Welsh.  His lordship in 1124 removed the monks outof his castle at Clare into the church of St. Augustine at Stoke, andbestowed upon them a little wood, called Stoke-Ho, with a doe every yearout of his part at Hunedene.  He m. Alice, sister of Ranulph, 2nd Earl ofChester, and had issue, Gilbert, his successor, with two other sons, anda dau. Alice who m. Cadwalader ap Griffith, Prince of North Wales.  Hislordhipw d. 1139 and was s. by his eldest son, Gilbert de Clare, 2nd Earlof Hetford. [Sir Bernard Burke, "Dormant and Extinct Peerages", Burk'sPeerage, London, 1883, p 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford,Earls of Gloucester]

__________________________

RICHARD FITZGILBERT, styled also DE CLARE, Lord of Clare, &c., son andheir. He is often supposed to have been created EARL OF HERTFORD by KingStephen, if not by Henry I. There appears, however, to be no ground forthis belief. In 1130, he is styled on the Pipe Roll (not "Earl," eitheras Earl of Hertford or Earl Richard, but simply) Ric.' fil.' Gisl as ishe also when his death is recorded. He married Adeliz, sister of Ranulph"des Gernons," EARLOF CHESTER. He was founder of the priory of Tonbridge.He died, beitig surprised and slain by the Welsh, near Abergavenny 15April 1136, and was buried at Gloucester. His widow was rescued from theWelsh by Miles of Gloucester. [Complete Peerage III:243]

_______________________

Richard de Clare (d 1136?), was son and heir of Gilbert FitzRichard, andwas probably the first of his family who adopted the surname of Clare.He is generally believed to have been also the first earl of Hertford,and to have been so created by Stephen, if not by Henry I.  It may bedoubtful, however, whether there is ground for this belief.  It is asRichard FitzGilbert that he figures in 1130, when the Pipe Roll revealshim in debt to the Jews, and under the same that he appears whensurprised and killed by the Welsh near Abergavenny on his way toGardigan, either in 1135 or more probably 1136, on 15 April.  His deathwas the signal for a general rising, and his castles were besieged by therebels.  His widow was rescued by Miles of Gloucester, gut his brotherBaldwin, whom Stephen despatched to suppress the rising and avenge hisdeath, failed discreditably.  Richard, who was buried at Gloucester, wasfounder of Tunbridge Priory, and about 1124 removed the religious housewhich his father had founded at Clare to the adjucent hill of Stoke.  Hemarried a sister of Randulf, earl of Chester, whose name is said byBrooke to have been Alice.  By her he left, with other issue, Gilbert,earl of Hertford (d 1152), and Roger, fifth earl. [Dictionary of NationalBiography IV:389-90]
~0679 GerlindeEticonides 1160 - UNKNOWN Richard dePercy V Baron Percy ~0707 - 0767 Luitfried I of Alsace 60 60 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0779 Ava of Upper Alsace pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0757 - 0827 Hunfried I of Istrien 70 70 0780 - >0850 Adalbert I of Helgau 70 70 D. ~0850 Ulric Iog Thurgovie ~1115 - >1148 Alice (Adeliza) de Clare 33 33 ~0842 - >0902 Judith of Friuli 60 60 ~0865 - 0911 Burchard I of Rhaetia 46 46 ~0885 - 0926 Burkhard II of Schwaben 41 41 pg. 181,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0887 Regulindeof Nellenburg pg. 181,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 1176 - UNKNOWN Agnes deNeville ~0582 - ~0618 Berthetrudeof Bourgogne 36 36 ~0602 - 19 Jan 0637/0638 Dagobert I of Austrasia ~0832 Svasse (Finnen) <0843 - >0881 Eberhard II in Nordgau 38 38 0835 - >0898 Eberhard III in Nordgau 63 63 D. <0843 Meginhard I of Hamalant ~0880 - 0940 Hugo III in Nordgau 60 60 ~0876 Hildegard Ferrette D. ~0910 Gerhard I in Metzgau Oda of Sachsen pg. 182, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Margaret Walsh 0894 - ~0944 Adelbert III in Metzgau 50 50 ~0600 Odin 0894 - ~0966 Luitgardeof Luxembourg 72 72 D. 0677 Guerin Warinus of Poiters pg 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0615 Bodilon of Austrasia ~0665 - 0713 Leutwinus of Trier 48 48 D. ~0722 Wido (Gui) of Hornbach D. >0783 Lambert of Hornbach pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0814 Gui of Hornbach D. 0836 Lambert I of Nantes 1059 - 1131 Gilbert deGant 72 72 Gilbert accompanied his uncle, William the Conqueror, into England andparticipated in the triumph at Hastings, obtained a grant of the lands ofthe Danish proprietor, named Tour, with numerous lordships. Gilberthappened to be at York anno 1069 and had a narrow escape when the Danes,in great force, on behalf of Edgar the Aetheling (Prince of the Saxonsand brother of Margaret, wife of Malcolm, King of Scotland), entered themouth of the Humber, and marching on that city committed lamentabledestruction by fire and sword, there being more than 3,000 Normans slain.He married Alice de Montfort, daughter of Hugh de Montfort. ~0934 - >0970 Hersindeof Rameru 36 36 ~0930 - >0970 Helpuin of Arcis-Sur- Aube 40 40 D. 0936 Savory I of Thouars pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0955 Aimeri II of Thouars pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Eleanor ~0850 - ABT 0949/0950 Cadelon I of Aulnay D. 0937 Cadelon II of Aulnay D. ~0989 Arsendis (Ersendis) ~0730 - ~0777 Eberhard I in Nordgau 47 47 Erispoe pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1170 - UNKNOWN Alice deHarcourt HARCOURT-MAUDIT-BEAUCHAMP-PLANTAGENET Sources:
    Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, pp. 261, 431.
    Turton's Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 117.
    Burke's Royal Families of England, Scotland and Wales, pp. XXIV toXXIX.
    Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 3, p. 280.
D. 7 Mar 0850/0851 Nominoe of Bretagne pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Argantael D. 0857 Erispoe of Bretagne pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of Bretagne pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0876/0877 Gurwant of Rennes pg 188, 'The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. >0890 Berenger of Rennes Gerberge D. 0907 Alain I of Bretagne Oreguen ~1098 - >1142 Adeliza Alice le Meschin 44 44 Adeliz (or Alice), m. (1) Richard Fitz Gilbert (also styled de Clare),lord of Clare, Suffolk, d 1136; m (2)Robert de Condet (or Cundy), d. c1141, lord of Thorngate Castle in the city of Lincoln, and ofWickhambreux, Kent, Grimston, co. Nottingham, and South Carlton, Thurlby,Eagle and Skellingthorpe, co. Lincoln, son of Osbert de Condet (orCundy), s. by 1130, lord of Wickhambrwux, Kent, Grimston, co. Nottingham,and South Carlton, Eagle and Skellingthorpe, co. Lincoln, by Adelaide,daughter and heir of William de Chesney, lord of Caenby and Glentham, co.Lincoln. [Magna Charta Sureties]

_____________________

Adeliz (or Alice), daughter of Ranulph le Meschin, Earl of Chester, byLucy, widow (1) of Ivo Taillebois and (2) Roger Fitz Gerold.  She m. (2)Robert de Condet (or Cundy), d. c 1141, lord of Thorngate Castle,Lincoln, etc. son of Osbert de Condet. [Ancestral Roots, Line 246b-25]
1112 Aveline de St. Hillary 1270 - 1331 Ada Sanford 61 61 ~0969 - ~1032 Jutta of Luxembourg 63 63 ~0525 Betton of Orleans Manasses I Ermengarde Manasses II Rudolf Ithier I of Mercouer pg 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~0895 Ithier II of Mercouer pg 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Arsinde Beraud of Mercouer pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1152 - 1192 Millicent Isabel deCamville 40 40 Gerberge Adelgardeor Hildegarde of Mercouer pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0940 Robert I of Auvergne D. <0989 Robert II of Auvergne pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ingelberge of Beaumont pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0950 - ~0998 Milon II of Tonnerre 48 48 Adelheid ~0817 Bilichildeof Anjou ~0887 - 0972 Garsindeof Gascogne 85 85 ~0930 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Alberadeof Lorraine pg 131, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1130 - 1179 Richard deCamville 49 49 ~0915 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Renaud of Roucy D. >0869 Guido of Langres D. 0928 Rotbold I of Arles D. 0948 Rotbaud II of Arles or Gatinais pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1043 Guillaume I Garlende 0865 - 0896 Raoul of Cambrai 31 31 ~0967 Mauger of Normandy Isaa of Cambrai of Cambrai Osmond the Dane 1033 - UNKNOWN Hilduin deMontdidier Count Montdidier & Roucy D. ~0960 Hamon of Corbeil Albert of Corbeil ~0970 Germaine of Corbeil ~1005 - ~1060 Guillaume of Normandy 55 55 ~1069 - ~1108 Anselm of Rochefort Garlende 39 39 ~1028 - ~1095 Bouchard II of Corbeil 67 67 1030 Adelaideof Crecy D. >1003 Almaric of Montfort Simon Montfort ~1000 - 1053 Almaric II Montfort 53 53 1044 - 1096 William dePercy Baron De Percy 52 52 William settled in the North of England, Count of Caux and Poicters, thenchief of his name, held the Chateau of Percy, near Villediue in what isnow the Arrondessement of St. Lo, Department of La Manches together withother great estates in both Lower and Upper Normandy. He was a man ofobstinate, domineering character, not untinged by superstitution, yetenlightened and charitable beyond his time. He was nicknamed"Alsgernons."  He obtained 32 lordships in Lincolnshire, 86 in Yorkshireexclusive of Whitby, where he founded a Benedictine Abbey. William diedin sight of Jerusalem, 1096, while on the First Crusade. He was buried atAntioch, but his heart was sent to England and buried at Whitby. ~1001 - ~1053 BertradeGometz 52 52 D. 0988 Gui of Vermandois pg. 231, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 <0960 Giselbert of Soissons pg 231, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 <0975 - ~1047 Adelaideof Soissons 72 72 pg. 231 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Ralph of Campden Somery ABT 0020 BC Baran ap Ceri of Siluria ABT 0040 BC Ceri Hir Lyngwyn ap Caid of Esyllwg ABT 0080 BC Caid ap Arch of Siluria ABT 0120 BC Arch ap Meirion of Siluria ABT 0160 BC Meirion ap Ceraint D. UNKNOWN Emma dePort ABT 0200 BC Ceraint ap Greidiol of Siluria ABT 0240 BC Greidiol ap Dingad of Siluria ABT 0280 BC Dingad ap Annum of Siluria ABT 0320 BC Annun ap Alafon of Siluria ABT 0360 BC Alafon ap Brywlais of Siluria ABT 0400 BC Brywalais ap Ceraint of Siluria ABT 0440 BC Ceraint Feddw ap Berwyn of Siluria ABT 0480 BC Berwyn ap Morgan of Siluria ABT 0520 BC Morgan ap Bleddyn of Siluria ABT 0560 BC Bleddyn ap Rhun of Siluria 1020 - UNKNOWN Gefforey dePercy Geoffrey III, Comte of Caux and de Poicters, Sieur de Percie. ABT 0600 BC Rhun ap Idwal of Siluria ABT 0640 BC Idwal ap Llywarch ABT 0680 BC Llywarch ap Calchwynydd ABT 0720 BC Calchwynydd ap Enir Fardd ABT 0760 BC Enir Fardd ap Itel ABT 0800 BC Ithal ap Llarian ABT 0840 BC Llarian ap Teuged Teuged ap L Llyfeinydd Peredur 0996 - UNKNOWN William dePercy William II, Comte de Caux and de Poicters, Sieur de Percie, reputedfather of Serla de Percie, Abbot of Whitby. Gweyrydd Ithon Cymryw Brwt Selys Hen Annyn Tro ABT 1020 BC Brydain ABT 1300 BC Aedd Mawr D. ~0366 Eochu Mugmedon of Tara pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0356 Muireadach Tireach of Ireland D. UNKNOWN Margaret dePercy D. ~0285 Fiacha Srabhteine of Connaught Aiofe Sigehelm of Kent pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Bertha of Autun Flachadh Muirion Vingener Moda Maji Sceaf (Seskef) 0969 - UNKNOWN Geofrey dePercie Geoffrey II, Count de Caux, Sieur de Percie. ~0149 - 0181 Cadwalladr ap Leuver Mawr 32 32 Wihtlaeg of Asgard D. 1183 BC Priam of Troy Helenus II of Troy Genger Franco Esdron Gelio Basabiliano Plaserio 1185 - 1245 William dePercy IV Lord Percy VII Baron Percy 60 60 William de Percy was only 15 when his father died, and now became byright Baron de Percy, but his uncle, Richard de Percy, found nodifficulty in usurping not only the administering of the entire estatesof the family, but even the baronial title as well. He married Eleana,daughter of Inglegram de Baliol, and her relatives gradually inducedWilliam to assert himself. Richard defied every effort to dislodge him,and when the King himself was appealed to, a compromise was effected bywhich Richard was left in undisputed possession of the barony and estatesuntil his death, after which William was to inherit both, to theexclusion of the usurper's sons, who died sine prole. When William, 7thBaron Percy, at length came into his own, he was in his 52nd year, anddied in 1245. 0840 - 0907 Gisela deLorraine 67 67 1100 - 1130 Judith deBavaria 30 30 Plesron Plaserius II Eliacor Gaberiano Helenus II Antenor I Priam II Plesron II Basabelian II Getmalor 1200 - UNKNOWN Eleanor deBaliol D. 0677 BC Alexander Priam III Helenus III Almadion Diluglio Plaserio Diluglio II Marcomir Priam IV Helenus IV 1060 - UNKNOWN Beatrice FitzWilliam Agrippine Berthilde ~0625 - ~0670 Chimnechild 45 45 ~0950 Jutta of Ohningen D. ~0501 Godegisel of Burgunds ~0572 Adils Ottarsson ~0594 Eystein Adilsson 2122 BC - 1917 BC Terah of Agade Leah bint Laban Ketura 1160 - 1230 Isabel de Brus 70 70 Abraham Ostrogotha of Ostrogoths Athal of Ostrogoths ~0935 Arsendis Tandreg verch Cynan of Powys Hunuil of Ostrogoths Walaravans of Ostrogoths ~0665 - 0713 Leutwinus of Treves 48 48 Saint and Bishop

pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
Brian MacEochaidh of Connaught pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Cairenn Chasdubh pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition 1333 - UNKNOWN Roger deClifford V Lord Clifford D. 0248 Carbre Lifeachair of Ireland D. 0266 Cormac Ulfada of Ireland Eithne Ollamhdha Dunluing Eana Madh D. 0195 Art Eanfhear of Ireland Eachtach D. 0157 Con Ceadcathach of Ireland Eithus Lughaidh 1305 - 1339 Robert deClifford III Lord Clifford 34 34 Daire D. 0119 Felim Rachtmar of Ireland D. 0106 Tuthal Teachtmar of Ireland Baine of England Fiacha Fionn Ola of Ireland Eithne of Scotland Feredach Fionn Feachtnach of Ireland Crimthann Naidh Nar of Ireland 14 Feb 1313/1314 - 1369 Thomas deBeauchamp Xi Earl of Warwick Thomas was one of the Original Knights of the Garter. When four years oldthe king, Edward II, soliciting a dispensation from the Pope to enablehim to marry his cousin Catherine, daughter of Roger Mortimer of Wigmore,under whose guardianship the young Earl had been placed. An allianceeventually formed when his lordship had completed his 15th year. In twoyears afterwards the Earl, by special license from the Crown, was allowedto do homage and to assume his hereditary office of Sheriff ofWorcestershire and Chamberlain of the Exchequer. This nobleman sustainedin the brilliant reign of Edward III the high military renown of hisillustrious progenitor, and became distinguished in arms almost fromboyhood. He was at Cressy in France, with Edward, the Black Prince, andafter their heroic achievements in France he arrayed himself under thebanner of the cross and reaped fresh laurels on the fields of Palestine.
This nobleman almost rebuilt Warwick Castle, which had been demolished inthe time of the de Maudits, adding strong gateways with fortified gatesand embattled towers, and rebuilt the walls. He likewise founded thechoir of the collegiate church of St. Mary, built a booth hall marketplace and made the Town of Warwick toll free. His lordship had 7 sons and9 daughters. He died November 13, 1369, of the plague at Calais, where hewas employed in a military capacity, and had just achieved a victory overthe French.
Mar Tath Chabob Loach Daire Lughaid Sriabhn dearg of Ireland Fineamhas of Ireland Eochaidh Feidhlioch of Ireland Cloth Fionn Eochadh Uchticathan Fionn Benta D. UNKNOWN Robert Welles Creombthan Fionnlough ~1097 - <1155 Herbert fitz Herbert of Winchester 58 58 pg 196 & 232,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1095 - <1166 Elizabeth of England 71 71 vol 4, pg 136, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0865 - <0959 Hersent of Franks 94 94 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Theidlindis of Blois pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Aubri II of Blois pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Aubri I of Blois pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1246 - 1278 Nicholas de Stafford 32 32 Nicholas; married probably daughter of Geoffrey de Langley, and died c 1Aug 1287. [Burke's Peerage]

-------------------------------

This feudal lord, Nicholas de Stafford, who was actively engaged againstthe Welsh in the reign of King Edward I, was killed before DroselanCastle, about 1293, and was s. by his son, Edmund de Stafford. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 499, Stafford, Barons Stafford, Earls ofStafford, &c.]
Eadburh of Mercia D. UNKNOWN Walter Marshal VIII Earl of Pembroke ~0843 - 0871 Aethelred I of Wessex 28 28 pg 6, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0859 - ~0898 Athelhelm of Wiltshire 39 39 pg 6, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1080 Dau of Ranulph de Mechines 0866 - 0923 Robert I of France 57 57 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0820 - 0866 Rutpert IV in Wormsgau 46 46 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0789 - ~0834 Rutpert III in Wormsgau 45 45 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0795 - >0834 Wialdruth (Walrada) 39 39 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <0770 - 0807 Rutpert II in Wormsgau 37 37 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0770 - ~0789 Theodorata (Tiedrada) of Worms 19 19 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0745 - 0770 Turincbertus 25 25 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1186 - 1233 Alan MacDonald deGalloway Lord Of Galloway 47 47 Alan was the fourth Lord of Galloway and Constable of Scotland. Hefounded the Abbey of Tungland and gave vast donations to the religious.He died 1233 and was buried at Dundrennan. Guillaume of Toulouse? pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition daughter of Duke Bernard pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0650 of Adelheim pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0765 - 0812 Guillaume I of Narbonne 47 47 ~0775 Berthe of Toulouse ~0630 - 0677 Warinus 47 47 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0645 Kunza of Metz pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1021 - ~1066 Ingibiorg Finnsdottir 45 45 pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0897 Trungardeof France D. 0923 Ricoin or Richwin of Verdun pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1186 - UNKNOWN Helen deLisle 0778 - 0840 Louis I 62 62 Louis I, Le Debonnaire or Gentle, Roman Emperor, 814-840, was born 778,and was son of Charlemagne by his wife Hildegarde. He married LadyJudith, the Fair Maid of Bavaria, and by her had a son who succeded him,Charles II, King of France. He had succeeded his father in 814, but in817 he yielded to the wishes of his sons and gave each of them a share ofhis dominions, and thus complications arose from which resulted thedissolution of the Empire. He died 840. By his first wife, Irmingardis,daughter of Ingram, Count of Hasbania in Saxony, he had a daughter Alpaidia.
Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire.
Adelaideof France pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0954 Adelheid pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1015 - ~1096 Eudes of Champagne 81 81 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 0888 - ~0914 Anna of Byzantium 26 26 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Hildegardeof France pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0740 - >0775 Wittikind of Westfalia 35 35 Hugues I of Douai D'Oisy The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164 D. 0910/0914 Richildis (Richaut) of Metz ~0870 - ~0928 Rothaut of Germany 58 58 pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0862 - 0892 Hugues of Bourges 30 30 pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1228 - UNKNOWN Elena deQuincy <0825 - 0864/0869 Budwine of Metz 1631 - >1653 Mary Conkling 22 22 D. 0754 Carloman of Austrasia Mayor of the Palace

pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
Rotrou of Austrasia pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0708 - <0743 Girard of Paris 35 35 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0776 - 0816 Begue (Bego) of Paris 40 40 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0852 Alpais (Adaltrude) pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0775 Engeltrudeof Paris pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0785 - >0853 Hunroch of Friuli 68 68 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition William Glanville 1202 - 1245 Sibyl Marshall 43 43 ~1010 - >1079 Guisle of Ampurias 69 69 Gwawl verch Coel Lleian verch Brychan pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0780 - 0830 Halfdan Haraldson of Frisia 50 50 D. <0777 Bertswindana Haudre pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1183 BC Memnon of Ethiopia Helmul of Ostrogoths Amal of Ostrogoths ~0850 Efenda (Edvina) of Urman ~0853 Theodoric I of Ringleheim 1164 - 1200 Roland MacDonald Lord Of Galloway 36 36 D. >0856 Eudes II of Chartres 0828 Reginhart I of Ringleheim Godfroi ~0740 - ~0775 Luitfried II of Alsace & Tours 35 35 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Hiltrudeof Upper Alsace pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0765 - ~0839 Hugues III of Tours 74 74 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0917 - 0995 Gerberge of Lotharingen 78 78 ~0805 - >0835 Udo in the Nieder- Lahngau 30 30 <0824 - >0879 Gebhard in the Nieder- Lahngau 55 55 D. ~0885 Eudes of Franconia 1163 - 1217 Helena deMorville 54 54 ~0795 Susanna Montfort Irmgarde ~0760 Beringer of E Franks ~0428 Skjalf Frostisdotter ~0310 Frosti Karisson of Kvenland Drott Danpsdtr ~0343 Danp Forconda orToscanda Immed I of Ringleheim ~0555 - >0636 Charibert in Neustria 81 81 1136 Richard deMorville ~0558 Wulfgrud of Paris D. >0630 Chrodobertus I in Neustria ~0715 - ~0803 Warnechin of Engern 88 88 ~0755 Geva Eyesteinsdottir of Westfold ~0799 - 0825/0843 Wigebart of Sachsen Odrud Gerold of Mayenne ~0710 - ~0788 Gerold I of Swaben 78 78 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0760 - 0822 Hadrian in Wormsgau 62 62 ~0790 - >0834 Waldrada of Orleans 44 44 1127 - 1174 Uctred MacDonald Lord of Galloway 47 47 Uctred succeeded his father. He was a true patriot but his brotherGilbert, being more in the English interest, got assistance from them,made Uchtred prisoner and at last put him to death and took possession ofhis whole estate. Gilbert died in 1185. Uchtred's son Roland recoveredpossession of his inheritance and was third Lord of Galloway. He was infavor with King William. He married Eva (by other authorities calledEllen or Helena) daughter and at last sole heiress of Richard Morville,Constable of Scotland, whereby he acquired a great estate and the dignityof Constable of Scotland was transferred to his family. He founded theAbbey of Glenluce in Galloway in 1190.
Source:   De Carpentier Allied Ancestry ,  E. J. Sellers, Call Number:CS71.C311x
~0540 - ~0605 Gertrudis of Moselle 65 65 D. >0750 Boso I of Turin D. >0826 Boso II of Turin D. ~0855 Boso III of Turin ~0737 Hildi Ericsdatter of Westfold ~0605 Gauthild Algautsdatter ~0570 Algaut Gautreksson Halfdan Guldand ~0675 Eric Agnarsson of Westfold ~0640 Agnar Sigtrysson 1130 - UNKNOWN Gunnild Of Dunbar ~0247 Nanna Gewarsdatter of Norway ~0918 Mal of Lubech ~0695 Bertrada ~0859 of Peronne ~0660 - >0721 Bertrada of Austrasia 61 61 ~0630 - 0691 Thierry III of Austrasia 61 61 Clodoreius Dampi Maolda Ainftech of Picts 1075 - UNKNOWN Fergus MacDonald Lord of Galloway Fergus flourished in the end of the reign of King Malcolm Canmore andlived until near the end of that of King Malcolm IV who died 1165. He wasrich and powerful and had been engaged with the English against his owncountry but at last submitted and delivered his eldest son Uchtred to theKing as an hostage for his good behavior. He founded the monastery ofDundrennan in 1142, also the Priory of Whitehorn and made severaldonations to the monastery of Holyrood-house, etc. He at last became areligieuse, retired to the last named monastery in 1160 and died soonafter.
Source:   De Carpentier Allied Ancestry ,  E. J. Sellers, Call Number:CS71.C311x
~0194 Beltsa of Asgard ~0487 Spondana of Picts ~0565 Yrsa Helgisdtr ~0237 Skjold of the Danes ~0241 Gefion ~0217 Gewar of Norway of Strathclyde <0594 - 0641 Beli of Strathclyde 47 47 of Picts of Picts 1109 - UNKNOWN Elizabeth Princess of England D. ~0693 Bruidhe III of Picts Peither of Foith Cenwalh of Mercia of Foith D. ~0612 Nechtan II Mawr mac Erb Maeldaf Cynlop of Damnonii D. ~0459 Ceretic Wledig of Strathclyde Wigmund of Mercia 1042 - UNKNOWN Walter FitzOtho Lord Otho inherited all the estates of his father and was listed in theDomesday Book of A.D. 1087.212 It seems that the father and son werebarons of England both before and after the Norman Conquest. Contemporaryvariations of the name "Otho" or "Other" were "Oitir" (Old Irish), "Ottar(Old Norse), and "Ohtere" (Anglo Saxon). Walter fitz Other (or Walter deWindsor), the son of Lord Other, was tenant in chief of lands inBerkshire, counties Buckingham, Middlesex, Surrey, and Hampshire at thetime of the Domesday Survey in A.D. 1086, and was Castelan of Windsor andKeeper of the Forest before A.D. 1100. Walter married Gladys, daughter ofRyall ap Conyn (Prince of North Wales). Walter and Gladys had threechildren:
1. William, Castelan of Windsor, ancestor of the Lords Windsor.
2. Gerald fitzWalter (or Gerald of Windsor).
3. Robert de Windsor, Baron of Eston, Essex.
0785 - 0818 Ermengarde De Hesbaye 33 33 Drust Erb mac Drust ~1140 Isabel de Condet [JaneMorgan.FTW]

Isabel de Condet (or Cundy), living 1166, had land in South Carlton, co.Lincoln and apparently also in Grimston, co. Nottingham as maritagium; m.Hugh Bardolf the elder, d. c 1176, lord of Waddington, Riseholm, andScothern, co. Lincoln, brother and heir of Hamelin Bardolf, living 1162,lord of Bungay, Suffolk.  The parentage of Hugh and Hamelin Bardolf isunkown, but they were closely related to Thomas Bardolf, ancestor of theLords Bardolf of Wormegay.  Note: Isabel's identity is proved by hermaritagium in South Carlton, co. Loncoln, which land was part of hermother's known holding in that locality, temp. King Stephen. [MagnaCharta Sureties]
Cundwalh of Mercia Centwine of Mercia Waelgush D. >0381 Afranius of Syagrius 0596 - ~0690 Clodoule of Metz 94 94 D. 0772 Guerin in Thurgau Adilindis 1048 - UNKNOWN Gladys Conyn Bouchard of Corsica Ansaud Bodilon Sigrada Ansaud D. of Leutharius Erchenaud Leutharius Gerberge of Bourgogne ~0555 - ~0607 Ricomer of Bourgogne 52 52 0997 - 1041 Eleanor Verch Gwerystan 44 44 Gisele D. >0883 Dir of Kiev ~0840 - ~0882 Askold of Sweden 42 42 Rurik of Lethra Heluna (Bleja) D. 0770 Harald Hilditonn of Lethra ~0882 - 0954 Richildeof Toulouse 72 72 ~0630 - >0656 Siegbert III of Austrasia 26 26 ~0896 - >0925 Ragnvald 29 29 ~0700 - 1757 Rutpert I in Wormsgau 1057 1057 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1190 - 1257 Maurice FitzGerald Lord Offaly Justicular 67 67 D. 0764 Williswint pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. <0741 Lantbertus (Lambert I) of Hesbaye pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0219 Frigg verch Cadwaladr ~0914 - 1005 Luitgardeof Luxembourg 91 91 Methusaleh ~0878 - ~0912 Oleg (Helgi II) of denmark 34 34 ~0796 Refil Bjornsson of Uppsala Joiadah ben Eliashib Shallum ben Azariah Hilkiah ben Shallum 0880 - UNKNOWN Llwelyn Ap Merfyn Jehozadak ben Seraiah Seraiah ben Azariah Azariah ben Hilkiah ~0660 - ~0697 Eochaid II of Dalriada 37 37 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Icel D. 0436 Eochaid Muinremur of Dalriada pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Erca Laorn Eru ~0655 Solveig Halfdansdatter 1150 - 1226 Eve deBermingham 76 76 ~0540 Gautrek Gautsson ~0810 - ~0840 Asa Haraldsdatter 30 30 ~0740 Harald of Agder Sigris of denmark Braose Bava ~0795 Garcio Iniquez of Pamplona Urraca Musa ibn Fortun Musa ibn Musa 1200 Gilbert deStanford ~0810 - ~0880 Garcio Iniguez of Pamplona 70 70 ~0810 Urraca Fortunez of Aragon ~0790 - 0851 Inigo Iniguez of Pamplona 61 61 Oneca ~0847 Oneca Fortunez of Pamplona ~0865 - 0925 Sancho Garciez of Pamplona 60 60 Leodegundia of Asturias Ordono of Asturias ~0829 - ~0905 Fortuno Garciez of Pamplona 76 76 ~0824 Aurea bint Musa 1223 - 1286 Maurice FitzMaurice FitzGerald Lord Offaly 63 63 of Corbie Waldegar of Corbie D. 0810 Nordolah of M Friesland D. <0786 Alfbad of Mid Friesland ~0740 of France D. >0734 Poppo of Mid Friesland Rodbar of Friesland Hermann I of Werl Cacilie ~0988 - 1035 Gerhard I of Wassenberg 47 47 1223 Emmeline deRiddlesford Folmar of Worms Richilde Folmar of Worms D. ABT 0995/0996 Folmar I in the Bliesgau Berta ~0712 Carloman of Franks ~0698 - ~0735 Alberic in Nordgau 37 37 Guy Laval ~0775 Aubri of Fezensac ~0800 Bouchard of Fezensac 1216 - 1260 Stephen Longespee 44 44 ~0825 Geoffroi of Orleans ~0850 - >0886 Aubri of Orleans 36 36 ~0875 - >0942 Geoffroi of Orleans 67 67 ~0900 - >0966 Aubri of Gatinais 66 66 ~0925 - >0987 Geoffroi of Gatinais 62 62 ~0950 - >0990 Aubri of Gatinais 40 40 D. 0829 Borel of Ansonia D. 0856 Thierri I of Chalons ~0894 Jhutte of Sulichgau ~1018 Judith of Bretagne pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0955 - 0994 Hadwig of Bavaria 39 39 0712 Landree deHesbaye D. ABT 0992/0994 Joceran of Brionnais D. >0892 Froilan of Semur D. >0864 Guillaume of Semur ~0855 - 0915 Adalbert II of Tuscagne 60 60 pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1003 - >1037 Alix or Adelaideof Normandy 34 34 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition Wilfred D. <0921 Berta Maurin D. >0782 Milo of Narbonne of Narbonne 1120 Ralph V de Toeni of Narbonne D. >0878 Lievin of Narbonne Maria or Amthelo D. <0862 Hardouin in Neustria Regenald of Roucy D. ~0950 Archard of Roucy of Bar-Sur- Aube D. ~1003 Nocher I of Bar-Sur- Abe D. 1020/1040 Nocher II of Bar-Sur- Aube pg 112, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0960 of Torta 1008 - UNKNOWN Richard St. Valery ~0935 Rodolph (Ralph) of Torta ~0925 Walter (Gautier) of St Martin ~0988 of Crepon Palatina of Treves Bormard of Senlis D. 0936 Raoul of Ostrevant & Amiens pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0965 Eldegardeof Valois Ermenfroi of Amiens D. <1019 Aelis or Adelaide ~0620 - 0680 Lendisius 60 60 D. UNKNOWN Richard deBeaumont ~0590 - 0661 Erchembaldus 71 71 ~0881 - >0919 Wigeric of Luxembourg 38 38 ~0755 Mancio of Bigorre D. ~0975 Rotgaire (Roger) of Ponthieu ~1036 of Northumbria ~0914 Jutta of Bayern Evesna of Sachsen ~0914 - 0960 Matfried III of Metz 46 46 D. 0825 Robert of Amiens D. ABT 0864/0869 Bouin of Italy & Metz 1019 Adelica Belvoir dePlessis Wulfrith D. >0997 Renaud of Bar-Sur- Seine pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0981 Raoul of Bar-Sur- Seine D. >0941 Lisiar of Sceaux D. <0954 Ansaud of Auxerre D. <0954 Raingardeof Dijon Ansaud II of Paris Reitrude ~0970 - 1031 Thibaud of Montlhery 61 61 of Montlhery 1015 - 1071 Robert Bigod 56 56 ~0983 Thibault of Montlhery & Montmorency Gui of Boulogne 0869 - ~0960 Odo of Toulouse 91 91 0854 - 0937 Armengol of Toulouse 83 83 D. 0866 Raoul of Ponthieu Raoul of Laesoie of Laesoie D. >0984 Renaud of Bar-Sur- Seine of Bar-Sur- Seine of Bar-Sur- Seine 0990 William D'Aubigny Viscount de Côntentin Adaltrude Lambert of Louvaine ~0913 of Bethune D. >0897 Ricfrid (Dode) of Bethune Harsinde Ferderunda of Brosse ~0864 - >0937 of Limoges 73 73 ~0882 - >0960 Arnoldo of Astarac 78 78 ~0904 Garsenda of Astarac 1150 - 1214 Hugh de Gournay 64 64 ~0887 Lupa Sanchez of Navarre ~0670 - 0711 Childebert II of France? 41 41 D. 0924/0925 Mainguad of Aulnay ~0879 Gisele of Melle of Rennes <0895 Paskwitan II of Rennes Ridoredh of Nantes of Chartres D. >0939 Thibaud I of Chartres D. 0887 Boson II of L Bourgogne 1035 Ralph deGael Isembard in Thurgau D. >0853 Hugues IV of Tours D. 0864 Etienne of Bourges daughter of Rainard Rainard D. >0844 Guiquin of Slosnois ~0820 - >0870 Eudes of Troyes 50 50 Wandilmode ~0840 Raoul of Dijon ~0890 - 0964 Arnulph I of Flandres 74 74 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1040 Emma FitzOsbern ~0920 - 0983 Wickmann II of Ghent 63 63 D. 0884 Meginhard II of Hamalant ~0860 - >0900 Rotger of Maine 40 40 D. 0931/0939 Hugues I of Maine ~1080 - 1153 David I of Scots 73 73 ! crowned King of Scotland

pg 89 & 146, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883
Aethelgyth of Mercia 1072 (18 in 1090) - 23 Apr 1130/1131 Maud of Huntigdon & Northumbria pg 89, 128 & 146 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 469, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Aethelwulf of Mercia Olaf of Sweden Magnus 1128 - UNKNOWN Patrick deCarducis 0825 - 0875 Louis II 50 50 Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire D. >0562 Gallus of Treves Regintrudeof Austrasia ~0615 - ~0716 Teodon II of Bayern 101 101 ~0962 Milolika of Bulgaria 1031 - 1093 Malcolm III of Scots 62 62 ! crowned King of Scotland 1057/8

vol 3, pg 240, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pgs 135,145 & 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Bertha ~0652 - 0675 Bilihildeof Alsace 23 23 ~0960 - ~1049 Hugo VI of Egisheim 89 89 <0975 - ~1046 Heilwig of Dagsbourg 71 71 ~0941 - 0964 Liutgardeof Flandres 23 23 D. UNKNOWN Dominus Other Gherardini A Norman who came to England with King Edward. His Father was aFlorentine. The son of Otho Gherardini was Otho fitz Otho (aka LordOther, Other Dominus, Otho fitz Othoer, Other fitz Othoer, etc.). ThisOtho changed the family name from Gherardini to Geraldini.  The extendedfamily became known in Ireland as "the Geraldines". 1045 - 1093 Margaret of England 48 48 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0685 - >0751 Childebrand of Perracy 66 66 ~0740 - 0768 Nivelon of Perracy 28 28 ~0760 - ~0831 Childebrand II of Perracy 71 71 ~0775 Dunne of Autun Ganzelin of Neustria ~0680 - >0712 Hmyayeak Mamikonian 32 32 ~0720 - ~0778 Artavazd Mamikonian 58 58 ~1001 - 1040 Duncan I of Scots 39 39 vol 3, pg 240, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 109 & 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Donat I of Malun 1302 - 1385 Thomas deMusgrave 83 83 Laundree Giraud of Porthois ~1014 - 1040 Sybil of Northumbria 26 26 ~0834 Wandelgardeof Septimania Aleran of Septimania of Ent ~0746 - 0804 Thierry V of Autun 58 58 ~0785 Faquila of Bigorre ~0815 - >0910 Lope I Donatez of Bigorre 95 95 of Toulouse 1335 - UNKNOWN Maud deBeauchamp Senegonde ~0780 - >0837 Fulgaud of Rouergue 57 57 Sigesbert of Rouergue ~0975 - 1045 Crinan of Dunkeld 70 70 vol 3, pg 239, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

pg. 606, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
~0984 - >1000 Bethoc (Beatrix) of Scone 16 16 vol 3, pg 240, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0954 - 1034 Mael- Coluim II of Scots 80 80 0932 - 0995 Cinead II of Scots 63 63 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0897 - 0954 Mael- Coluim l of Scots 57 57 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0862 - ~0900 Domnall II of Alba 38 38 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Penarddun 1248 - 1282 Roger III de Clifford 34 34 pg 82, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 122, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0905 Gyrithe Olafsdottir ~0820 - 0877 Constantine I of Alba 57 57 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0810 - 6 Feb 0858/0859 Cinaed I macAlpin of Picts pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2027, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition
~1016 - ~1057 Edward of England 41 41 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1025 - >1066 Agatha 41 41 ~0770 Esylt verch Cynan ~0989 - 1016 Edmund II of England 27 27 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1053 Gerberge ~0995 - >1086 Ealdgyth of Mercia 91 91 ~0968 - 1016 Aethelred II of England 48 48 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
1254 - 1291 Isabel de Vipont 37 37 <0960 - 1002 Ealflead of Durham 42 42 0943 - 0975 Edgar of England 32 32 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0945 - 1000 Elfrida 55 55 Rioghean Ruadh Asaman Eamhna Enna Aigneach of Ireland Aongus Tuirrmeach of Ireland Eochaidh Altleathan of Ireland Olioll Casfiachlach of Ireland Conla Caomh of Ireland 1221 - 1285 Roger deClifford II lord Clifford 64 64 Iaram Gleofathach of Ireland Melg Molbhthach of Ireland Cobhthach of Ireland 0920 - 0946 Edmund I of England 26 26 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Ugaine Mor Eochaidh Buadhach of Ireland D. 0944 Elgifu pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0875 - 0924 Edward I of England 49 49 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0901 - 0961 Eadgifu (Edgina) 60 60 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0849 - 0899 Alfred of England 50 50 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1225 - 1301 Hawise Botterell 76 76 ~0852 - 0905 Ealhswith (Alswitha) of Mercia 53 53 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Theobold Russell pg 237, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 222 Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
Thomas de Grey Visitation of the North, Surtees Vol. 144, Page 53 - 56. Ann 5 Mar 1132/1133 - 1189 Henry II of England pg 3,103 & 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition
1123 - 1204 Eleanor of Aquitaine 81 81 pg 99 & 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 4 & 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1113 - 1151 Geffroi V of Anjou Plantagenet 38 38 pg 83,107 & 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
Eomer D. ~0593 Creoda of Mercia Laban ibn Bethuel 1195 - 1236 Sybilla deTrezog 41 41 ~0755 Harald Klack 1101 - 1167 Mathilda of England 66 66 pg 3 & 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition
Elfleda of Mercia D. ~0823 Ceolwulf of Mercia Cuthbert of Mercia Bassa of Mercia Cynreow of Mercia Cnebba Cynewald D. ~0606 Pybba of Mercia 1190 - UNKNOWN Roger deClifford 1068 - 1135 Henry I of England 67 67 pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1079 - 1118 Matilda (Eadgith) of Scotland 39 39 pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 3 & 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1024 - 1087 William I of England 62 62 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1032 - 1083 Mathildeof Flandres 51 51 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1001 - 1035 Robert I of Normandy 34 34 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1070 Felia Gaunt ~1064 - 1118 Ivo Grentmesnil 54 54 Adele 'Ur iben Kesed Arevagni of Visigoths D. UNKNOWN Hawise deNeufmarche 0996 - 1037 Albert (Alberic) II deMacon 41 41 Achiulf of Ostrogoths Vultwulf of Ostrogoths D. ~1046 Adela of Cambrai D. 1041 Walter II of Cambrai The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164 Ermentrudeof Ostrevant The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164 D. ~0979 Walter of Lens & Cambrai The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164 ~1205 John Heytesbury Troana of Troy Hecuba of Phrygia D. ABT 1874 BC Shelah of Babylon 1228 - 1264 Robert deVipont 36 36 Sibil of Troy Thor of Thrace Loridi (Hloritha) Aelis pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Gwallwen verch Afallach of Wales ~0725 - 0778 Aedh Find of Dalriada 53 53 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Gerswinda of Sachsen 0775/0780 - 0810 Halfdan of Haithabu D. ~0750 Harold of Haithabu Einridi 0970 - 1032 Tourde de Harcourt 62 62 D. 0935 Ermengarde daughter of Chrodobertus Hisarna of Ostrogoths Agatha Bile of Fortrinn ~0715 - <0776 Ruthardus of Friuli 61 61 ~0745 - 0823 Guelf of Bayern 78 78 Midian ibn Abraham D. 0020 BC Gaius Octavius IV ~0930 - ~0937 Sigurd Haraldsson of Trondheim 7 7 0948 - 1003 Ertemberge deBrioquibec 55 55 Regilinde daughter of Alard Blasco Fortunez of Pamplona 1399 - 1462 John Stourton 63 63 pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1373 - 1413 William Stourton 40 40 Speaker of House of Commons, pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1290 - >1325 William Stourton 35 35 pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1251 - ~1303 Ralph Stourton 52 52 pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1220 John (Eudes) Stourton pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1185 Michael Stourton pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1150 - >1185 William Stourton 35 35 pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition 0904 - 0955 Bernard deHarcourt 51 51 Bernard, a nobleman of Saxony, was the first of the ancient and knightlyfamily which made so considerable a figure in England. They seem to havebeen originally seated at Poorstock, and it was still the head of theirbarony in the reign of King John till they exchanged it for otherlands.Bernard, Lord of Harcourt, Carleville and Beaufidel in Normandy,was a nobleman of royal blood of Saxony. He acquired, when Rollo the Danemade himself master of Normandy, the above lordships in thatprincipality. It is from him that this ancient and eminent family tracedits pedigree, and acquired the name of Harcourt.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1110 - >1177 Robert Stourton 67 67 pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1114 Agnes pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1195 Mary Mauduit pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition John Mauduit pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1379 Gracia Hungerford pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1332 Joan Vernon pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1272 Richard Vernon pg 1909, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition ~1379 Elizabeth Moyne pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1347 John Moyne pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1403 Margery Margaret de Wadham pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition 0914 - 0993 Sprote Bourgoyne 79 79 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1377 - 1412 John de Wadham 35 35 ~1381 - >1412 Joan Wrothesley 31 31 Sige ~1287 Eleanor Ferrers ~1105 - 1091 Alice Beaumont 14 14 ~0820 Godefrid of Haithabu ~0820 Matilda ~0503 Branulphe of Ardennes ? Haudre pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0955 Estrid Margaret 1104 - 1157 Roger III deToeni Lord of Flamstead 53 53 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~0923 - ~1009 Hildouin III of Ponthieu 86 86 <1160 Everard Hungerford ~0890 Kunigunde pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Henry Ferrers pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~0975 Guillaume Gometz of Bure Adelina ~1182 - 1234 Alan of Galloway 52 52 Constable of Scotland

vol 4, pg 139, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 45 & 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"
~1194 - >1233 Margaret of Huntingdon 39 39 vol 1, pg 43, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883
~1302 Margaret Holand 1049 Barthelemy of Bouchard 1090 Yolande Jolante ~0295 - ~0360 Flavius Julius Constans 65 65 Emina ~1019 - <1084 Archembaud 65 65 ~1023 Agnes of Bouchard ~0957 - 1020 Bouchard of Montmorency 63 63 ~1240 Joan ~0890 Hugh of Cavalcamp ~0932 - ~0972 Nigel of St. Sauveur 40 40 of Port Eugeran of Port 1060 - 1126 Ralph IV deToeni Seigneur De Conches 66 66 Kunigunde Duach Ladhrach of Ireland Fiacha Tolgrach of Ireland Muireadach Bolgach of Ireland Simeon Breac Aedan Glas of Ireland Nuadhas Fionnfail of Ireland Gialchadh of Ireland Olioll Alocheoin of Ireland Siorna 1054 - UNKNOWN Judith deLens Countess of Boulogne Rotheachtach of Ireland Maoin of Ireland Aongus Olmucach of Ireland Fiacha Labhrainn of Ireland Smiomghall Eanbrotha Tigernmas of Ireland Follain Eithriall of Ireland Irial Faidh of Ireland 1028 Ralph III de Toeni de Conches 0740 - 0802 Luitfrid II deAlsace 62 62 Heremon of Ireland Tea Luighaidh Ith ~0960 Elfeda ~1258 Alice Berkeley pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition D. ~0883 Richildeof Arles ~0719 Edith ~0837 - 0870 Helisindeof Rameru 33 33 ~0612 - ~0660 Ivar Halfdansson of denmark & Sweden 48 48 1034 Isabel De Montfort ~1168 Alix Porhoet Egarl of Flint ~0750 - 0844 Merfyn Frych ap Gwiard 94 94 Vingethor ~0955 - >1016 Hugues III of Maine 61 61 ~0650 Cathen ap Gwlyddien of Dyfed ~1320 Edmund Hussey pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~0382 Ceneu of N Britain ~0350 - ~0420 Coel Hen Godebog of N Britain 70 70 Guoyepauc Elizabeth de Broyes ~0360 Ystrafael verch Cadfan of Dumnonia ~0325 Cadfan ap Cynan of Dumnonia ~0315 Eudaf Hen ap Einydd of Britain Anllach Cormac Eubre Gwydel Brusc Briscethach Marchell of Garthmadryn Tewdrig of Garthmadryn 1015 - 1070 Roger de Toeni 55 55 Also known as the "Standard Bearer of Normandy." Mendog of Strathclyde ~0400 - >0464 Vortigern of the Britons 64 64 Celeinon verch Tudwal of Man Tudwal ap Anarawd of Man Anarawd Gwalchcrwn ap Merfyn D. ~0682 Merfyn Fawr ap Annllech of Man Anllech ap Tudwal of Man Tudwal ap Rhun Rhun ap Neithon Neithon ap Senyllt Hael of Man 0955 - 0975 Ralph I de Toeni 20 20 Senylit Hael ap Dingad of Man Dingad ap Tudwal Tudwal ap Ednyfed of Man Ednyfed ap Anwn of Dyfed & Man ~0355 Anwn Dynod ap Macsen of Dyfed & Man ~0340 - 0388 Maxen Wledig of Britain 48 48 ~0364 Edern ap Padern ~0339 Padarn ap Tegid Arthwys of Pennines Mar of N Britain 1118 - 1185 Margaret de Beaumont 67 67 Gwynwenwen of Dalriada dein Mileseus of Spain ~1050 Eunice of Baalun ~1030 Dru Ballon 1 wife Cadelon IV of Aulnay Robert Braose Tora of denmark Ingui of Bernicia 1185 - UNKNOWN Hawise deQuincy Esa of Bernicia D. 0559 Eoppa of Bernicia Angenwit of Bernicia Aloc of Bernicia Bernic Brandrsson of Norway Mong Fionn Duncan of Dule ~0650 - ~0693 Artavazd Mamikonian 43 43 ~0610 - ~0658 Hamazasp II Mamikonian 48 48 ~0580 Dawith Mamikonian 1155 - 1219 Saier deQuincy 64 64 ~0555 - ~0600 Vahan II Mamikonian 45 45 ~0530 - ~0593 Mousegh I Mamikonian 63 63 ~0490 - ~0555 Hmyeak II Mamikonian 65 65 ~0450 - ~0509 Vard Patrick Mamikonian 59 59 ~0410 - 0451 Hmayeak of Mamikonds 41 41 ~0375 - <0432 Hamazasp I of Mamikonids 57 57 ~0385 Sahakanoysh of Armenia 0351 - 0438 Isaac I of Armenia 87 87 ~0335 - ~0373 Narses I of Armenia 38 38 ~0310 - ~0348 Soshandukht of Armenia 38 38 1154 - 1234 Margaret deBeaumont 80 80 ~0280 - ~0330 Tiradates IV of Armenia 50 50 ~0236 - ~0297 Khusraw II of Armenia 61 61 ~0195 - ~0252 Tiridates II of Armenia 57 57 ~0175 - ~0216 Khusraw I of Armenia 41 41 ~0145 - ~0208 Vologaeses V of Parthia 63 63 ~0115 - ~0192 Volgaeses IV of Parthia 77 77 ~0080 - ~0148 Vologaeses III of Parthia 68 68 ~0055 - ~0090 Vologaeses II of Parthia 35 35 ~0025 - ~0078 Vologaeses I of Parthia 53 53 ~0155 of Iberia 1104 - 1168 Robert II deBeaumont 64 64 Robert de Bellomont, 2nd son, 2nd Earl of Leicester, Lord of Breteuil andPoci, in France, was born in 1104. This nobleman stoutly adhered to HenryI upon all occasions, was with him at his decease in 1135, and heafterwards as staunchly supported the interests of Henry's grandson,Henry II, upon whose accession to the throne his lordship was constitutedJustice of England. He married Amicia, daughter and heir of Robert deWaer, Earl of Norfolk, by whom he had a son Robert and two daughters. TheEarl, who was a munificent benefactor of the church, and founder ofseveral religious houses, died in 1167, after having lived for fifteenyears a canon regular in the Abbey of Leicester. He was succeeded by hisson, Robert. ~0115 - ~0185 Pharasmenes III of Iberia 70 70 ~0095 - ~0135 Rhadamistus I of Iberia 40 40 ~0070 - ~0132 Pharasmenes II of Iberia 62 62 ~0045 - ~0106 Amazaspus I of Iberia 61 61 ~0020 - ~0106 Mithradates I of Iberia 86 86 ABT 0035 BC - ~0058 Pharasmenes I of Iberia D. ABT 0033 BC K'art'am of Koudjid of Iberia 0326 BC - 0234 Pharnabazus I of Iberia Arteces I of Iberia 1136 - 1190 Alan La Zouche Earl of Brittany 54 54 0825 Geoffrey deGastinois Artaxias I of Iberia Artavasdes I of Armenia ABT 0140 BC - ABT 0055 BC Tigranes I of Armenia D. AFT 0159 BC Artaxias I of Armenia Zariadres of Sophene Xerses I of Armenia Arsames I of Armenia Samos I of Armenia D. ABT 0260 BC Aroandes III of Armenia D. BEF 0317 BC Mithradates I of Armenia 1108 - UNKNOWN Loretta deQuincy D. AFT 0331 BC Aroandes II of Armenia D. ABT 0334 BC Orontes I of Armenia Rodogune of Persia ABT 0452 BC - ABT 0359 BC Artaxerxes II of Persia ABT 0475 BC - ABT 0404 BC Darius II of Persia ABT 0500 BC - ABT 0424 BC Artaxerxes I of Persia ABT 0521 BC - ABT 0465 BC Xerxes I of Persia ABT 0550 BC - ABT 0486 BC Darius I of Persia ABT 0588 BC - ABT 0517 BC Vishtaspa of Parthia Atossa of Persia 1105 - 1198 Robert deQuincy 93 93 ABT 0600 BC - ABT 0529 BC Cyrus II of Persia D. ABT 0559 BC Cambyses I of Persia Cyrus I of Persia Mandane of Media Astyages of Media Neithiyti of Egypt ABT 0595 BC - ABT 0570 BC Wahibre Haaibre of Egypt ABT 0625 BC - ABT 0589 BC Psamtek II of Egypt ABT 0660 BC - ABT 0595 BC Necho II of Egypt ABT 0684 BC - ABT 0610 BC Psamtek I of Egypt 1131 - UNKNOWN Orabella deLeuchars ABT 0710 BC - ABT 0664 BC Necho I of Egypt ABT 0519 BC Esther ABT 0549 BC Abihail ABT 0579 BC Shimei ABT 0609 BC Kish ABT 0639 BC Abiel Zeror ABT 0699 BC Bechorath ABT 0729 BC Aphia Andia of Babylon 1070 - 1109 Saher deQuincy 39 39 D. 0519 BC Nebuchadnezzar IV of Babylon D. ABT 0519 BC Nebuchadnezzar III of Babylon D. ABT 0539 BC Nabonidus I of Babylon D. 0605 BC Nabopolassar of Chaldeans Nitokkris of Babylon Parysatis of Babylon Antiochus IV of Syria ABT 0242 BC - ABT 0187 BC Antiochus III of Syria ~0934 - >0986 Gerhard (Richard) of Metz 52 52 D. >1337 Reginald Huse 1078 - UNKNOWN William "Brito" deToeni ~0910 Thibault of Blois ~0913 - 0978 Ledgardeof Normandy 65 65 Alberic ~1002 - >1077 Godeheut Borrell 75 75 Guy Laval Hugh Laval Apius Claudius Nero of Rome D. 0037 Tiberius Claudius Nero of Rome Marcus Livius Drusus (younger) Gwlyddien of Dyfed 1046 - 1111 Simon deSt. Liz I Earl of Northhampton 65 65 Nowy of Dyfed Arthur of Dyfed Pedr of Dyfed Cyngar of Dyfed D. ~0580 Vortipor of Britain Aergul Lawhir of Dyfed Tryffn Farfog of Dyfed Aed Brosc Corath Eochaid Allmuir 0990 - 1047 Judith Princess of Normandy 57 57 Art Corp MacCairbre Cairbre Rigronn Fiacha Suidhe Fiodhach MacOlioll Olioll Flann-beag of Munster Fiacha Maolleathan of Munster Owen Mor <0177 Olliol Ollum of Munster Sabina MacConn Dyfnwal Hen of Strathclyde 1189 - 1263 Hugh deVere IV Earl of Oxford 74 74 Cynwyd of Strathclyde ~0525 Domelch verch Maelgwn ~0452 Meddyf verch Maeldaf Cinhil of the Damnoni Cluim of Rome Cursalem Fer Con Fer Adinah 1160 - 1221 Robert deVere III Earl of Oxford 61 61 Surety for the Magna Charta. Selbach of Loarn ~1357 John deWadham ~0651 - ~0691 Thierry III of Bourgogne 40 40 ~0634 - ~0657 Clovis II of Franks 23 23 Sandregisisle of Bobigny Bathilde ~0610 - ~0642 Nantechild of Neustria 32 32 Fortuno Garciez of Aragon ~0790 - <0852 Inigo Jimeniz of Pamplona 62 62 Jimino Sanchez of Navarre 1220 - 1296 Robert deVere V Earl of Oxford 76 76 0807 - 0866 Adelaide de Tours 59 59 ~1040 - 1093 Roger Berkeley 53 53 pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1050 Estmond of Mercia ~1645 - 1672 Elisha Conkling 27 27 ~0864 - ~0928 Gerlon of Blois 64 64 ~0866 Richilde ~0880 Urraca Aznarez of Aragon ~0725 Aisha bint Abdul of Egypt D. 0952 Hugues of Bourgogne ~0849 - 0921 Adelaideof Auxerre 72 72 Blichildeof Maine 1231 - 1317 Alicia deStanford 86 86 Adelaideof Angers of Kent D. 0762 Aethelbert II of Kent D. 0725 Wihtred of Kent Cynegth D. 0673 Egbert I of Kent D. 0664 Earconbert of Kent Sexburga of E Anglia Anna of E Anglia Saewara 1264 - 1293 Joan deVere 29 29 Sources:  Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Desc., by M. R. D. vonRedlich.
     Foreword by Prof. Arthur Adams, Phd., pp. 120-1.

     Browning,  M. E. B., pp. 127, 227, 257.

     J. B. Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages,
     pp. 549 and 569.
Eni of E Anglia D. 0593 Tytila of E Anglia D. ~0578 Wuffa of E Anglia Wehha Wilhelm Hryp Hrothmund Trygils Tytmon Casere 1141 - UNKNOWN Agnes deEssex The Complete Peerage vol.X, Appendix J, p.115, note i. The CompletePeerage vol.X,p.206. Dymas of Phrygia D. 0840 Wiglaf of Mercia D. 0640 Eadbald of Kent Emma of Austrasia Bertha D. 0616 Aethelbert I of Kent D. ~0560 Eormenric of Kent D. ~0540 Octa of Kent D. ~0512 Oisc (Aesc) of Kent D. 0488 Hengest of Kent 1062 - 1141 Aubery II deVere 79 79 Earl of Oxford Wihgils of Kent Witta Wecta Creoda of Wessex ~0944 Halfdan Sigurdsson ~1010 Ivo Beaumont Hersinda ~1075 William or Roger Berkeley pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1183 Hawise ~1053 Hawise 1096 - 1163 Adeliza Alice de Clare 67 67 Also Known As:<_AKA> /Alice/ <0843 - >0881 Eberhard II 38 38 Meginhard of Friesland Hedwig ~0371 Hildur Gudraudsfatter ~1012 Clemence of Foix pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0882 - >0934 Acfrid or Alfred of Rasez & Carcassone 52 52 ~0827 - <0880 Oliba II of Carcassone 53 53 ~0797 - >0835 Oliba I of Carcassone 38 38 Hermenlindis Ermentrude 1100 - UNKNOWN Julianne deVere Osburga ~0862 Snaefrid Svvassesdatter ~0784 Heluna (Bleja) of England ~0800 Aslaug Sigurdsdatter ~1120 Walton Adelheid ~0955 Ralph (Rodulf) Toni <0970 - >1015 Ralph (Rodulf) Toni 45 45 Hervey Glanville ? Salt-les- Dames 1118 - UNKNOWN Rohese deVere Roger of Felsted Salt-les-Dames ~0736 - ~0780 Eystein I Halfdanson of Westfold 44 44 ~0455 Almveigu Eymundsdatter ~0430 Eymund of Holmgard, ~0414 Vifilsdatter ~0371 Hildur Gudraudsdatter ~0450 Cormac of Leinster 0660 - 0680 Martin of Laon 20 20 dau of Teodon II of Bayern ~0625 Sigar Odinsson 1040 Beatrice Gand ~0655 Rer Sigarsson ~0680 Volsung Rersson ~0705 Sigmund Volsungsson ~0735 Brynhild Budlasdatter ~0685 Ljod Hrimnirsdatter ~0710 Hjordis Eylimasdatter ~0688 Eylimi Hjalmthersson ~0638 Hjalmther Egdirsson ~0598 Egdir Skulisson ~0548 Skuli Lofdisson Henry Castellan deGand ~0498 Lofdi Halfdansson ~0450 Halfdan Hringsson of Ringerik ~0406 Hring Raumsson ~0370 Raum Norsson ~0345 Norr Thorrisson of Alfheim Thorri Snaersson of Kvenland ~0375 Snaer Jokulsson of Kvenland ~0340 Jokull Frostasson ~0285 Kari Fornjotsson of Kvenland ~0260 Fornjotur of Kvenland D. UNKNOWN Sibilla Manasses 0748 - 0779 Luitfrid I deAlsace 31 31 ~1030 Ranulph Peverel ~1032 Ingelrica (Maud) of England ~1026 - 1079 Mabel Talvas 53 53 Egwina ~1068 Gieva Tracy ~1075 - >1087 Botolph (Bartolomew) Stourton 12 12 Oda of Sueva pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988 Hersinde ~0900 - ~0967 Cadelon III of Aulnay 67 67 ~0259 Fridleif Skjoldsson of denmark 1000 Alphonso deVere ~0302 Driva Snaersdotter ~0275 Snaer Jokulson in Finland ~0240 Jokull Frostasson in Finland ~0210 Frosti Karasson in Kvenland ~0185 Kari Fornjotsson in Kvenland ~0160 Fornjotur in Kvenland ~0570 Alof Olafsdatter ~0528 Helgi Halfdansson Gudarud Budlas 0962 - UNKNOWN Audna Kjarvalssdatter Vifil <0905 - 0968 Edgiva of Kent 63 63 ~0708 Asa Eyesteinsdatter ~0675 - ~0740 Halfdan Olafsson of Romerike 65 65 ~1002 - 1059 Alfgar III of Mercia 57 57 William Malet vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" D. >1141 Robert Ferrers ~0270 Einydd ap Gwrddwfn ~0215 Gwrddwfn ap Cwrrig ~0180 Cwrrig Mawr ap Merchion 0977 - UNKNOWN Thora Princess of Scotland ~0140 Meirchion Fawdfilwr ap Owain ~0090 Owain ap Cyllin D. 0109 BC Marcus Livius Drusus (elder) 0582 - 0641 Arnulf of Metz 59 59 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988 ~0562 - 0589 Bodegeisel II 27 27 Mayor of the Palace

pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
~0586 - ~0611 Clothilda of Sachsen 25 25 ~0857 - 0920 Garcio Sanchez of Gascogne 63 63 ~0860 Aimerudis of Auvergne ~0758 Ella of England ~0551 Ottar Egilsson in Sweden 1027 - UNKNOWN William Ramsey Duke of Brittany ~0530 Egil Aunsson in Sweden ~0509 Aun Jorundsson in Upsala ~0487 Jorund Ynggvasson in Upsala ~0466 Yngvi Alreksson in Sweden ~0445 Alrek Agnasson in Sweden ~0424 Agni Dagsson in Sweden ~0403 Dag Dyggvasson ~0382 Dyggvi Domarsson in Sweden ~0361 Domar Domaldsson ~0340 Domaldi Visbursson 1470 - 15 Dec 1515/1516 Roger Bunker ~0319 Visbur Vanlandasson ~0298 Vanlandi Svegdasson ~0277 Svegdi Fjolnarsson ~0256 Fjolnir Yngvi- Freysson 0825 - 0866 Konrad II of Bourgogne 41 41 ~1186 Walter Hungerford Folchaide ~1000 Paule of Maine ~0871 - ~0928 Rothildeof Kahlen 57 57 Theodoric of Sachsen Agnes Sigismund of Sachsen Berthold of Sachsen Budic of Sachsen Childeric of Sachsen Hattwigate of Sachsen Hartwaker of Sachsen Hebgest of Sachsen ~0305 - ~0367 Conan Meriadog of Dumnonia & Brittany 62 62 >0305 Ursula verch Dynod ~0280 Dynod of Dumnonia ~1158 - <1217 Richard de Clare 59 59 Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford, who in the 7th Richard I gave£1,000 to the king for livery of the lands of his mother's inheritancewith his proportion of those sometime belonging to Giffard, Earl ofBuckingham. His lordship m. Amicia, 2nd dau. and co-heiress (with hersisters Mabell, wife of the Earl of Evereux, in Normandy, and Isabel, thedivorced wife of King John) of William, Earl of Gloucester, by whom hehad issue, Gilbert, his successor, and Joan, m. to Rhys-Grig, Prince ofSouth Wales. This earl, who was one of the twenty-five barons appointedto enforce Magna Carta, d. in 1218, and was s. by his son, Gilbert deClare, 5th Earl of Hertford. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare,Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

Richard de Clare, Magna Charta Surety 1215, d. bet. 30 Oct & 28 Nov 1217, Earl of Hertford, son of Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford, and Maud, daughter of James de St. Hilary; m. Amice, Countess of Gloucester, d. 1 Jan 1224/5, daughter & heir of William fitz Robert, Earl of Gloucester, and Hawise de Beaumont.  [Magna Charta Sureties]



Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford, who in the 7th Richard I gave £1,000 to the king for livery of the lands of his mother's inheritance with his proportion of those sometime belonging to Giffard, Earl of Buckingham. His lordship m. Amicia, 2nd dau. and co-heiress (with her sisters Mabell, wife of the Earl of Evereux, in Normandy, and Isabel, the divorced wife of King John) of William, Earl of Gloucester, by whom he had issue, Gilbert, his successor, and Joan, m. to Rhys-Grig, Prince of South Wales. This earl, who was one of the twenty-five barons appointed to enforce Magna Carta, d. in 1218, and was s. by his son, Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]
~0841 - ~0866 Bernard II of Auvergne 25 25 Boso II of Italy Boso I of Italy ABT 0730 BC - ABT 0672 BC Nekauba Irib Re' of Sais ABT 0750 BC - ABT 0712 BC Bakenranef Wah Ka Re' of Egypt ABT 0770 BC - 0718 BC Tefnakhte I Shepses Re' of Egypt ABT 0800 BC - ABT 0715 BC Osorkon IV of Ma ABT 0830 BC - 0773 BC Pimay of Ma ABT 0855 BC - 0773 BC Shoshenk III of Ma Es ankh Djed Bast 0500 - UNKNOWN Lluan D. ABT 0810 BC Takelot of Ptah D. 0851 BC Shoshenk of Ptah ABT 0905 BC - 0850 BC Osorkon II of Egypt ABT 0935 BC - 0874 BC Takelot I of Egypt ABT 0965 BC - 0889 BC Osorkon I of Egypt ABT 0990 BC - 0924 BC Shoshenk I of Egypt Nimlot of Ma Shoshenk of Ma Paihut of Ma Nabneshi of Ma 0450 - UNKNOWN Brychan Prince of Manau Gododdin Mawasen of Ma Buyuwana of Ma Mehtenwskhet Tentsepeh of Ma Kar'oma of Egypt ~0955 Maat Ka Re of Egypt ABT 0900 BC - ABT 0940 BC Psusennes II of Thebes ABT 1025 BC - 0969 BC Pinudjem II of Thebes D. 0992 BC Menkheperre of Amun Pinudjem I of Egypt 1066 - UNKNOWN Millicent of Mers ~1190 John Sanford 0775 - 0840 Halfdan 65 65 Piankh of Amun Herihor of Amun Nodjmet Hrere of Egypt Hanttwy of Egypt Smendes of Egypt Tentamun Nebseny Esemkhebe of Egypt D. 0991 BC Psusennes I of Egypt 0480 - UNKNOWN Ingenach Henuttawy of Egypt D. 1069 BC Ramesse Xi of Egypt D. 1097 BC Ramesse X of Egypt D. 1107 BC Ramesse IX of Egypt ABT 1185 BC - 1136 BC Rameses VI of Egypt ABT 1217 BC - 1151 BC Ramses III of Egypt D. 1184 BC Setnakht of Egypt D. 1204 BC Merenptah of Egypt ABT 1314 BC - Jul 1224 BC Ramesse II of Egypt ABT 1327 BC - 1270 BC Sety I of Egypt D. UNKNOWN Ribrawst Ramesse I of Egypt Sety of Egypt Sitre Meryamun Twosret Setepenmut of Egypt Akhenaton of Egypt D. ABT 1336 BC Akhenaton of Egypt D. 1349 BC Amenhotep III of Egypt D. ABT 1392 BC Tuthmosis IV of Egypt ABT 1487 BC - ABT 1425 BC Thutmose III of Egypt ABT 1510 BC - ABT 1479 BC Thutmose II of Egypt D. 1492 BC Thutmose I of Egypt D. 0464 Vortigern of Powys D. 1504 BC Amenhotep I of Egypt ABT 1555 BC - ABT 1514 BC Ahmose I of Egypt ABT 1580 BC - ABT 1553 BC Sekenenre Tao II of Thebes Sekenenre I of Thebes ABT 1630 BC - ABT 1580 BC Inyotef VII of Thebes ABT 1635 BC Sobkemsaf of Egypt ABT 1660 BC - ABT 1620 BC Nebiryerawet I of Egypt ABT 1685 BC - ABT 1622 BC Sobekemsaf II of Egypt Nubkha- es D. ABT 1545 BC Tetysheri of Thebes D. UNKNOWN Sereva Baktwernal Istnofret of Egypt D. ABT 1515 BC Ahhotep I of Egypt Nefretiri of Thebes Kamose of Thebes 'Amhose of Egypt Mutnofret of Egypt D. ABT 1483 BC Hatshepsut of Egypt Meryetre Hatshepsut II of Egypt Mutemwiya of Mitanni D. UNKNOWN Elen Artatama of Mitanni Tiye Yuya of Min Yey of Min Tey Nefertiti Tuya Yaya ABT 1325 BC - ABT 1257 BC Tuya of Thebes Raia of Thebes D. UNKNOWN Llyr Llediath Ruia of Thebes Isitnofret of Egypt Tiye- Mereniset of Egypt Tyti of Egypt Kapes Takhuat of Athribis Chedebnitjerbone Mehetenweskhet of Heliopolis Istemabat D. 0825 BC Takelot II of Egypt D. UNKNOWN Bran D. ~0870 Karoma Mertmout II of Thebes Nimlot of Thebes ABT 0897 BC Karomama of Egypt ABT 0900 BC - ~0860 Harsiese of Egypt D. ABT 0890 BC Sheshonq II of Egypt Nesitanebtashru Djedmutudj D. 0562 BC Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon Nitokkris of Egypt D. ~0900 Engelberge of Alsace pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Gratiana Guletic D. AFT 0425 BC Artasyras of Hyrcania Orontes I of Persia ABT 0480 BC - 0428 BC Hydranes II of Persia D. AFT 0521 BC Hydranes I of Armenia D. AFT 0580 BC Bagabigna of Orontid Arshama of Persia Ariyarmna of Persia Tiespes of Persia D. ABT 0700 BC Achaemenes of Persia Rhodogune D. UNKNOWN Eudes Cyaxares I of Media Phraotes of Media deioces of Media Kosmartydene Dzouk ~0336 Sandukht of Mamikonia Antiochus IV of Commagene of Commagene D. 0017 Antiochus III of Commagene ABT 0150 BC - 0063 BC Mithradates VI of Pontus Caradawc of Archenfield 0675 - 0741 Adalbert deAlsace 66 66 D. AFT 0266 BC Mithradates I of Pontus ABT 0120 BC Cleopatra of Pontus Tigranes II of Armenia of Armenia D. ABT 0250 BC Ariobarzanes I of Pontus ~0069 Ghadana of Armenia ~0100 - 0140 Vologaeses I of Armenia 40 40 ~0077 - 0116 Sanatruces I of Armenia 39 39 Meherdates of Parthia 0060 BC - 0034 BC Artavasdes of Atropatene 0360 - 0421 Constantia III Emperor Gratianus Roman Empire 61 61 Ariobarzanes I of Media Atropatene D. 0055 BC Mithradates I of Media Atropatene D. 0057 BC Phraates III of Parthia D. 0070 BC Sanatruces of Parthia D. 0138 BC Mithrades I of Parthia D. 1191 BC Artabanus I of Parthia D. 0211 BC Tiridates I of Parthia Riinnu Isbubarza of Parthia D. 0123 BC Artabanus II of Parthia D. UNKNOWN Helen D. 0190 BC Mithradates III of Pontus D. 0169 BC Parnaces I of Pontus D. AFT 0121 BC Mithradates V of Pontus D. AFT 0337 BC Ariobarzanes of Cios D. 0363 BC Mithradates I of Cios Orontobades Laodice Nysa of Syria ABT 0218 BC - 0187 BC Antiochus IV of Syria Laodice IV of Syria D. 0388 Magnus Maximus Guletic ABT 0265 BC - 0226 BC Seleucas II of Syria 0286 BC - 0246 BC Antiochus II of Syria 0323 BC - 2 Jun 0261 BC Antiochus I of Syria 0345 BC - 0280 BC Seleucus I of Syria Antiochus of Syria Seleucas of Syria Laodice ABT 0340 BC - AFT 0298 BC Apama of Baktria ABT 0360 BC of Bithynia D. 0287 BC Phila I of Macedonia D. UNKNOWN Parar D. 0283 BC demetrius I Poliocertes of Macedonia Startonice I of Macedonia ABT 0286 BC Laodice I of Syria ABT 0320 BC Archaeus I of Syria ABT 0265 BC Laodice II of Syria ABT 0285 BC Andromachus of Syria of Macedonia Laodice & the Perdiccid ABT 0356 BC - ABT 0323 BC Alexander III of Macedonia D. 0336 BC Phillip II of Macedonia ABT 0420 BC - 0370 BC Amyntas III of Macedonia D. UNKNOWN Keriber ABT 0450 BC Arrhidaeus of Macedonia ABT 0480 BC - ABT 0411 BC Amyntas Trmenid of Macedonia ABT 0515 BC - ABT 0450 BC Alexander I of Macedonia ABT 0550 BC - 0489 BC Amyntas I of Macedonia D. ABT 0365 BC Eurydice of Lyncestae Sirras of Lyncestae of Lyncestae Arrhabaeus I of Lyncestae ABT 0375 BC - 0316 BC Olympius of Epirus Neoptolemus I of Epirus 0244 - 0328 Helen Of The Cross 84 84 Alcetas I of Epirus ABT 0240 BC Laodice III of Pontus D. 0150 Mithradates IV of Pontus Laodice of Syria Laodice of Persia Antiochus IV of Persia Laodice Naabubalatsuiqbi of Harran ABT 0651 BC - ABT 0547 BC Addaguppi Boso of Bourgogne D. UNKNOWN Neithon ~0841 Theodoric of Autun <0814 - >0877 Beuve of Autun 63 63 Childebrandeof Autun Dyname ~0687 - 19 Jan 0715/0716 Dagobert III of France ~0928 - 0968 Boson II of Provence 40 40 ~0907 - ~0950 Rotbold of Provence 43 43 0863 - <0895 Theobald of Arles 32 32 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Ansaud Dau of Leutharis 0242 - 0306 Constantious I Emperor of Rome 64 64 He was the governor of Dalmatia, appointed Caesar to rule Gaul andBritain March 1, 293. He was the son of Eutropious, a Dardanian noblemandescended from the Gordiani, and his wife, Claudia, daughter of ClaudiusII. (Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius Gothicus), a virtuous and worthyRoman Emperor (268-270), who was a soldier, statesman, and adistinguished officer. Born in Illyria 214, he was trained in the hardschool of warfare on the Danube frontier, and died of the Plague in 270,aged 55, whereupon his brother Marcus Aurelius Claudius Quintillus becameEmperor. Constantius I became Emperor of Rome in May 305, and in right ofhis wife, King of England. He was born in 242 and died at Eboracum(present day York, England) on July 25, 306. He married (2) Theodora,daughter of Maximinus, Roman Emperor. The son of Helen and Constantius Iwas Constantine the Great. Aldetrude ~0238 - 0272 Bartherus of Franks 34 34 <0212 - 0253 Childeric (Hilderic) of Franks 41 41 Francus of Franks ~0268 of E. Franks ~0820 - 0864 Hubert of Transjuranien 44 44 ~0790 - ~0855 Boso III of Turin 65 65 <0473 - >0516 Gundobad 43 43 <0437 - >0473 Grandioc 36 36 grand daughter of Walia 0265 - 0337 Constantine The Great Emperor of Rome 72 72 Of British birth, he is known as the first Christian Emperor. With aBritish army he set out to put down the persecution of Christiansforever. The greatest of all the Roman Emperors, he annexed Britain tothe Roman Empire and founded Constantinople. In 325 he assembled theCouncil, which he attended in person, at Nicea in Bithynia, Asia Minor,which formulated the Nicene Creed. The following edict of Constantineclearly sets forth the standards of his life" "We call God to witness,the Savior of all men, that in assuming the government we are influencedsolely by these two considerations, the uniting of the empire in onefaith, and the restoration of peace to a world rent in pieces by theinsanity of religious persecution". He had three sons, Constantine II,Constantious II and Constans I. His eldest son, Constantine II, was thefather of Uther Pendragon, who became King of Britain in 498. Thelatter's son, King Arthur, one of nine worthies, succeeded his father inthe year 516 at the age of 15, repulsed the invading Saxons and died 21May 542.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 163
daughter of Walia D. >0419 Walia ~0804 Rorican II of Maine ~0960 - 1000 Elizabeth of Vendome 40 40 ~0538 Goswinda of Visigoths Augis of Ostrogoths Tithonus of Troy D. 1235 BC Laomedan of Troy D. ABT 1279 BC Ilus of Troy D. 1328 BC Tros of Troy 0317 - 0361 Flavius Julius Constantius II Emperor of Rome 44 44 D. UNKNOWN Ansaud D. ABT 1384 BC Erichthonius of Acadia D. ABT 1414 BC Dara of Acadia ABT 1751 BC Zerah ben Judah Eos (Auroa) of Troy Placia (Strymo) of Troy Eurydice of Troy Callirrhoe Scmandrus Astyoche of Acadia Simios of Acadia 0220 - UNKNOWN Cadwan of Cumbria Batea of Teucri Teucer of Teucri Scamander Idea 2342 BC - 1904 BC Arphaxad of Arrapachtis Rasu' eja Lamech Noah ~0725 - ~0800 Mainier of Sens 75 75 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0530 AustregildeAiga of Orleans D. UNKNOWN Anlach of Galloway ~0725 Gainfroi of Sens pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0858 Thordis Thorgrimsdottir Evrard II of Ham Evrard I of Ham Gersonde Mortimer ~0820 of Flandres Adelia (Blanca) of Anjou ~1197 - 1315 William Huse 118 118 ~1290 Reginald Hussey ~0775 Julianna of Aachen D. UNKNOWN Marchell ~0750 Rowland of Aachen of Carcassonne ~0880 Elen verch Llywarch ~1062 - >1138 Waldeve or Waltheof of Alendale 76 76 vol 3, pg 243, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 45 & 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. >1136 Sigrid or Sigarith pg 244, vol 3, Paul's "Scot's Peerage"

pg 45, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Thorgrim ~0972 Thora Thorsteinsdattir ~0955 Galgi Thorstein ~0800 of Hesbaye pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1120 - >1165 Ranulph of Moray 45 45 vol 6, pg 287, Paul's "Scots Peerage" D. UNKNOWN Tewdrig of Garth Madrun Bethoc vol 6, pg 288, Paul's "Scots Peerage" D. >1124 Dunegal of Stranith vol 6, pg 286, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0940 - 0987 Geoffroi (Gausfred) of Anjou 47 47 ~0910 - 19 or 29 Aug 0967 Robert of Meux & Troyes ~1265 William Huse Nesta of Powys Roger Corbeau ~0885 - ~0983 Yves of Creil 98 98 ~0890 Greil Louis II of France pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0450 Saint Brychan of Breichniog Mabel of Alencon pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0965 - <1013 Boson I of Chastellerault 48 48 ~0935 - ~0969 Airauld III of Chastellerault 34 34 ~0900 - 0959 Airauld II of Chastellerault 59 59 ~0870 - 0909 Airauld I of Chastellerault 39 39 ~0970 Amelia Roger of Montgomery pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 7th Edward I, 1367 William de Windsor ~0967 - ~1047 Hamon of Creully 80 80 Godfroi in the Bidgau D. UNKNOWN Dyfnwal Hen ~0942 - 1008 Mathilda of Sachsen 66 66 Sigurdsdottir D. ~0995 Ranald of Waterford ~0705 Hersuinde ~0968 - ~1031 Guillaume I of Belleme Talvas 63 63 Theodelinde ABT 0961/0965 Constance pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1133 - 1181 Orabile Leuchars 48 48 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0995 - 1035 Canute II 40 40 Odinell III Umfreville D. UNKNOWN Cinuit Berthe of Ponthieu Ragnar of Upsala Halfdanson Halfdan Sigurdsson ~1078 - 1161 Fergus of Galloway 83 83 vol 4, pg 135, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 0885 Garcio Jimeniz of Navarre ~1125 Adles (Alice) de Clare Lambert of Ham ~1298 Adam Bannistre Thora Sigurdsdotter D. ~0873 Sigurd II Ragnarsson D. UNKNOWN Ceretic Guletic of Strathclyde Silvius D. ABT 1137 BC Iulus Ascanius of Alba Longa Creusa of Troy D. ABT 1175 BC Aeneas of Latium Electra Roxanne of Sogdia Pleione ABT 0365 BC - ABT 0325 BC Spitamana of Baktria Oxyartes of Sogdia Smendis II of Thebes D. UNKNOWN Cynloyp ABT 0410 BC Apama I of Persia Hatheburg of Merseburg ~0653 - 0692 Chlotildeof Franks 39 39 Chrotlindeof Franks ~0475 Agilulf ~0465 - ~0508 Ragnomer of Franks 43 43 ~0500 Pastor of Orleans Tzautzes of Macedonia ~0520 Teodebald of Bayern ~0500 Agivald D. UNKNOWN Cinhil 0645 - 20 Feb 0719/0720 Eticho I deAlsace ~0305 Vardan I of Mamikona ~0505 Ragnoara of Franks ~0560 - ~0649 Garitrudeof Hamage 89 89 ~0784 Aeda or Attala of Franks of Burgunds ~0850 - 0899 Stylianos Tzautzes 49 49 Ermengarde Martha Ann Howard D. ~0844 Bernard of Narbonne Dhoude(Liegarde) D. UNKNOWN Cluim ~0970 Tesselin of Rouen ~1567 - >1610 Ruth Hedges 43 43 ~0873 Kunigundeof Provence ~0450 Bisin of Thuringen Parovius of Rheims daughter of Baderic Berlinda of Ortenburg ~0860 Sigebert of Verdun ~0480 - ~0529 Baderic of Thuringen 49 49 Pretextat of Rheims D. UNKNOWN Cursalen Erchanger of Alsace Mechtilde ~0455 Menia Gyrita of Jutland ~1676 - Unknown Samuel Conklin ~0508 Crotechildeof Ostrogoths ~1193 - 24 Mar 1253/1254 William of derby Ferrers 5th Earl of Derby
pg 67, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 69, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 226, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 229, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1165 Ralph Huse ~1247 - 19 Mar 1309/1310 Joane Ferrers pg 69, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 197, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 44, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
<1340 - 1375 John of Whiton Whitton 35 35 pg 515, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841 D. UNKNOWN Fer ~1174 - 1247 Agnes of Chester 73 73 vol 1, pg 27, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 113 & 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 197, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 365, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0985 - >1030 Hugues IV of Bouchard 45 45 ~0990 - ~1055 Guillaume II of Alencon Talvas 65 65 Ataknines of Armenia ~0280 - ~0338 Khusraw III of Armenia 58 58 of Iberia of Armenia ~0094 Zenobia Greek concubine D. ~0051 Mithrates I of Armenia D. UNKNOWN Confer of Strathclyde K'Art'Am of Kaudjide Theuderic of Franks ~1130 Henry Huse ~1090 - >1217 Godfrie Huse 127 127 ~1025 - ~1066 Hubert Huse 41 41 ~1349 - 21 Mar 1411/1412 Joan Hussey pg 1909, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition

pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Juddah ben Johanan Johanan ben Joiadah ~1300 Alianore D'Aubigny ~1055 - 1111 Simon of Northampton St. Liz 56 56 pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1018, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 501, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 160 & 467, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. UNKNOWN Cunedd 1677 Steven Merritt Eliashib ben Joiakim Joiakim ben Jeshua Zadok ha- Kohen Ahitub ben Azariah Azariah ben Johanon Azariah ben Ahimaaz Ahitub ben Amariah Meraioth ben Zerahiah Azariah ben Zadok D. UNKNOWN Eubre Gwydel of Ayr Meraioth ha- Kohen Amariah ben Azariah Johanon ben Azariah Zadok ben Ahitub Ahimaaz ben Zadok Amariah ben Meraioth Papia Simon ben Simon Simon ben Onias Onias ben Judah D. UNKNOWN Cormac of Man ~0865 Adelaideof Toulouse Raimond of Auvergne Concubine D. ~1000 Ivar II of Waterford D. ~0950 Ivar of Waterford D. ~0921 Ragnall of Waterford D. ~0890 Guthorm Ivarsson Kesed Eneid ap Cerwydr of Britons Elmadam ha- David D. UNKNOWN Tudwall of Galloway Jesus ben Eliazer Menna ha- David Enoch Jared Er ben Jesus Eliazer ben Jorim Mattatha ha- David Edna Raashujal Anna bint Joseph 0222 - UNKNOWN Gladys Claudius the Illyrian Joseph ben Matthat of Arimthea ~1174 - <1219 Juliana Bardolf 45 45 [JaneMorgan.FTW]

Julian Bardolf, d. by 1219, daughter and in her issue coheir; m. as (1)wife, Nicholas Poyntz, b. by 1173, d. by 2 Nov 1223, lord of Tockingtonand Swell, co. Gloucester, steward of Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester1217-30, keeper of Gloucester Castle, keeper of the Honour of Dunster.[Ancestral Roots]
Olaf II of Jutland & Westfold pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Manogan ap Eneid of Britons Amram ha- Levi Ansgarde pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Levi ben Jacob ABT 1976 BC Haran D. ABT 0772 BC Cunedda in Britain D. UNKNOWN Modha Lawha 0650 - 0744 Berswinde De Alsace 94 94 Gwrwst in Britain Antonius of Cornwall Prydain of Cornwall Cerwydr of Cornwall D. ABT 1091 BC Brutus in Britain Henwyn of Cambria & Cornwall D. ABT 0750 BC Rhiwallon in Britain D. ABT 0721 BC Seisyll in Britain Aedd Mawr of Cornwall Dyfnarch of Cornwall 0240 - UNKNOWN Strada The Fair D. 1269 Geoffrey IV Mandeville John II Mandeville Roberga Maltrevers Perdiccas I of Macedonia Argaeus of Macedonia Philip I of Macedonia Aeropus I of Macedonia Alcetus I of Macedonia Admetus ABT 0387 BC - ABT 0325 BC Artabazus II of Bithynia D. UNKNOWN King Marius of Siluria Tabent- Thuty Istnofret of Egypt Ptolemy of Commagene ABT 0430 BC - ABT 0385 BC Tharypus of the Molossians ABT 0415 BC - ABT 0365 BC Pharnabaszus of Daskyleon Hydranes III of Armenia Nodjmet of Egypt Wiay Takhat Baktwernal of Egypt D. UNKNOWN Avigagun King of Siluria Arviragus reigned from 44 AD to 74 AD and married Genuissa in 45 AD. "TheForgotten Monarchy of Scotland" HRH Prince Michael of Albany Merybast of Egypt Ramessenakht of Egypt Hrere of Egypt Ahmenhotep of Egypt ABT 1150 BC - ABT 1070 BC Hrior of Egypt ABT 1272 BC Kha'emweset of Egypt Isias Philostorgos Samus I of Commagene ABT 0400 BC - 0319 BC Antipator of Macedonia Amyitis D. UNKNOWN Genuissa Genuissa was also known as Venissa Julia. She was the daughter ofTiberius Claudius Caesar, Emperor of Rome, who was the grandson of MarkAnthony. Berta pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Stateira of Armenia Bleidudd of Cornwall & Cambria Dyfnwal Hen of Cambria & Cornwall ~0982 Angharad verch Maredudd pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Azrail ~0060 Enygeus of Arimathea ~0060 Bran Fendigaid ap Llyr of Siluria Baraka Betenos (Ashmua) D. UNKNOWN Emperor Claudius Emzara (Naamah Coba) Neskhonsu of Thebes Robert III Mandeville Clementia Helewisia Athelaise ~1046 - >1086 Geoffrey II Mandeville 40 40 Robert I Mandeville Mary Robert II Mandeville D. UNKNOWN Cymbeline King Of Britain He was educated in Rome by Augustus Caesar, and later, forestalled theinvasion of the island. His eleventh son Avigagun was King of Britain. Agnes Geoffrey III Mandeville D. 1276 John I Mandeville Ebar ibn Shelah of Babylon Joanan ben Resa Zorobabel ha- David Neri ha- David 1116 - 1173 Roger de Clare 57 57 Roger de Clare, fifth Earl of Clare and third Earl of Hertford (d 1173),was the younger son of Richard de Clare (d 1126?), and succeeded to hisbrother Gilbert's titles and estates in 1152.  In 1153 he appears withhis cousin, Richard Strongbow, earl of Pembroke, as one of thesignatories to the treaty at Westminster, in which Stephen recognisesPrince Henry as his successor.  He is found siging charters at Canterburyand Dover in 1156. Next year, according to Powell, he received from HenryII a grant of whatever lands he could conquer in South Wales.  This isprobably only an expansion of the statement of the Welsh chronicles thatin this year (about 1 Jun) he entered Cartigan and 'stored' the castlesof Humfrey, Aberdovey, Dineir, and Rhystud.  Rhys ap Bruffudd, the princeof South Wales, appears to have complained to Henry II of theseencroachments; but being unable to obtain redress from the king ofEngland sent his nephew Einion to attack Humfrey and the other Normanfortresses.  The 'Annales Cambriae seem to assign these events to theyear 1159; and the 'Brut' adds that Prince Rhys burnt all the Frenchcastles in Cardigan.  In 1158 or 1160 Clare advanced with an army to therelief of Carmarthen Castle, then besieged by Rhys, and pitched his campat Dinweilir.  Not daring to attack the Welsh prince, the English armyoffered peace and retired home.  In 1163 Rhys again invaded the conquestsof Clare, who, we learn incidentaly, had at some earlier period causedEinion, the capturer of Humfrey Castle, to be murdered by domestictreachery.  A second time all Cardigan was wrested from the Norman hands;and things no were so threatening as aspect that Henry II led an armyinto Wales in 1165, although, according to one Welsh account, Rhys hadmade his peace with the king in 1164, and had even visited him inEngland.  The causes assigned by the Welsh chronicle for this freshoutbreak of hostility are that Henry failed to keep his promise -presumably of restitution - and secondly that 'Roger, earl of Clare, washonourably receiving Walter, the murderer of Rhys's nephew Einion.  Forthe third time we now read that Cardigan was overrun and the Normancastles burnt; but it is possible that the events assigned by the'Annales Cambriae' to the year 1165 are the same as those assigned by the'Brut y Tywysogion' to 1163.

In the intervening years Clare had been abroad, and is found signingcharters at Le Mans, probably about Christmas 1160, and again at Rouen in1161.  In July 1163 he was summoned by Becket to do homage in hiscapacity of steward to the archbishops of Canterbury for the castle ofTunbridge.  In his refusal, which he based on the grounds that he heldthe castle of the king and not of the archbishop, he was supported byHenry II.  Next year he was one of the 'recognisers' of the constitutionsof Clarendon.  Early in 1170 he was appointed one of a band ofcommissioners for Kent, Surrey, and other parts of southern England.  Hislast known signature seems to belong to June or July 1171, and is datedabroad from Chevaille.  He appears to have died in 1173, and certainlybefore July or August 1174, when we find Richard, earl of Clare, his son,coming to the king at Northampton.

Clare marred Matilda, daughter of James de St Hilary, as we learn form aninspeximus (sated 1328) of one of this lady's charters to Godstow.  Hewas suceeded by his son Richard, who died as it is said, in 1217.Another son James, was a very sickly child, and was twice presentedbefore the tomb of Thomas a Becket by his mother.  On both occasions acure is reproted to have been affected. [Dictionary of National BiographyIV:396-7]

_________________________

Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford, is likewise said to have born thetitle of Earl of Clare.  In the 3rd Henry II, this nobleman obtainingfrom the king all the lands in Wales which he could win, marched intoCardigan with a great army and fortified divers castles thereabouts.  Inthe 9th of the same reign, we find him summoned by the celebratedThomas-a-Becket, archbishop of Caterbury, to Westminster, in order to dohomage to the prelate for his castle of Tonebruge; which at the commandof the king he refused, alleging that holding it by military service itbelonged rather to the crown than to the church.  His lordship m. Maude (who m. after his decease William d'Aubigny, Earl of Arundel), dau. ofJames de St Hillary, by whom he had a son, Richard, his successor.  Thisearl who, from his munificence to the church and his numerous acts ofpiety, was called Good, d. in 1173, and was s. by his son, Richard deClare, 4th Earl of Hertford. [Sir Bernard Burke, "Dormant and ExtinctPeerages", Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare,Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

______________________________

ROGER (DE CLARE), EARL OF HERTFORD, but generally styled EARL OF CLARE,brother and heir, appears to have been at once allowed the Earldom byHenry lI, and was certainly an Earl in or before January 1155/6, when asRoger, Earl of Clare, he witnessed the charter of Henry II to Geoffrey deMandeville, the younger. In 1157 and in the following years he wasengaged against Rhys ap Gruffyd in Wales. In 1163 ,he disputed with theArchbishop of Canterbury the latter's claim for fealty in respect ofTonbridge Castle, which was held by the serjeanty of being High Steward.In this he was supported by the King, but the fealty was eventmacllyrecovered by Archbishop Hubert. In 1164 he took part in the Constitutionsof Clarendon . In 1166 he certified his fees as 149, and in 1170 was acommissioner to enquire into the proceedings of the sheriffs in Kent,Surrey, Middlesex, Berks, Oxon and Beds. He married Maud, daughter andheir of James DE ST. HILARY, by his wife Aveline. He died in 1173. Hiswidow for the soul of her husband, Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford, andfor the souls of her ancestors, confirmed to the monks of Eynsham thegifts of Henry and of Roger FitzGerold. She married, 2ndly, William(D'AUBIGNY), EARL OF ARUNDEL, who died 24 December 1193. [CompletePeerage VI:499-501]

Roger, 3rd Earl of Hertford, also bore the title of Earl of Clare, butHornby observes that this meant only Earl at Clare, for his Earldom wascertainly at Hertford. In 3rd of Henry II this nobleman, having obtainedpermission from the King to own all the lands in Wales that he could win,marched into Caerdigan and captured and fortified the castles there. ThisEarl, who, from his munificence to the church and his numerous acts ofpiety, was called the "Good Earl of Hertford."

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[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Hertford
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1116
Cainain Shem D. UNKNOWN Tenantius King in South East Britain 'Azurad bint Nebrod Resa ha- David Salathial ha- David Melchi ha- David Cosam ha- David ~0480 Rigenew ap Rhein of Bryvheinog Judah ben Joanan Pelag of Babylon Melchi ben Janna ~0450 Maud verch Efan D. UNKNOWN Llud King of the Britons King Llud ruled for ten years from 72 BC to 62 BC.  "The ForgottenMonarchy of Scotland" HRH Prince Michael of Albany Matthat ben Levi of Arimathea Efan Levi ben Melchi Joseph ben Judah Nathan ha- David ABT 1032 BC - ABT 0973 BC David of Judah & Isreal Jesse ben Obed Aram ben Hezron of Isreal Aminadab ben Aram Nahshon ben Aminadab D. UNKNOWN Penardim Salma ben Nashon Boaz ben Salma Obed ben Boaz Phares ben Judah Reu of Lagash Hezron ben Phares Cainan Seth ~0520 Llywarch ap Rigenew of Brycheinog ~0560 Idwallon ap Llywarh D. UNKNOWN Beli Mawr Sovereign Lord of the Celtic Britons Beli Mawr ruled from 132 BC to 72 BC.  "The Forgotten Monarchy ofScotland" HRH Prince Michael of Albany 0697 Eberhard deAlsace Ceindrech verch Rhiwallon Enygeus (Anna) verch Eleazor Eleazar ~0442 Rhain Dremrydd ap Brychan of Brycheiniog Eutropia ~0371 Tudwal ap Anwn of Garth Madryn ~0387 Tewdrig ap Tudwal ~0403 Marchell verch Tewdrig Mattathias ben Semel Naggs ben Maath D. UNKNOWN King Llyr Esli ben Nagga Naum ben Esli Amos ben Naum Mattathias ben Amos Joseph ben Mattathias of Arimathea Janna ben Joseph Semel ben Joseph Maath ben Mattathias ha-David ABT 1805 BC - ABT 1676 BC Judah ben Jacob Serug of Ur & Agade D. UNKNOWN Casswallan Nahor of Ur & Agade Sarai bint Haran Sigtrygg ~1892 - ABT 1745 BC Jacob ben Isaac of Goshen Iago ap Genedog of Britain Atton of Melle 0846 - 0879 Louis II of Franks 32 32 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0840 Mucel Esne ~1132 - 1193 Maud de St Hilary 61 61 pg 129 & 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. UNKNOWN Arch Druid Bran the Blessed of Siluria Chevereuse ~0455 - ~0528 Wambertus of Moselle 73 73 ~0505 - 0570 Andbertus of Moselle 65 65 ~0986 - 1057 Renaud I of Bourgogne 71 71 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition Genedog ap Cain of Britain D. ABT 0929 BC Lleon (Lliwelydd) of the Britons Llyr of the Britons Afallach ap Beli of Britain Dwywg ap Brychwain of Britain Dwfn ap Gwrddwfn D. UNKNOWN Anna ~0130 Amwerydd ap Onwed of Britain Gwrddoli ap Dwfn of Britain Doli ap Gwrddoli of Britain Cain ap Gwrgan of Britain Caurdar ap Garwynwyn Gwyddno verch Caudar D. ABT 0890 BC Rhun Baladr-Bras of the Britons Bleidudd ABT 0860 BC Regan verch Llyr Owain ap Afallach of Britain D. UNKNOWN Joseph Helisson Brychwain ap Owain of Britain Onwedd ap Dwywg of Britain ~0165 Gwrddwfn ap Amwerydd of Britain ~0235 Gwrgan ap Doli of Britain Garwynwyn Gerinion Tiberius Claudius Nero of Rome Apius Claudius Nero of Rome 0063 BC - 0033 BC Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero of Rome Ferchar Fota of Loarn ~0390 deithlyn of the Picts D. UNKNOWN Penardun ~0420 Prawst verch deithlyn of the Picts of the Picts Girom ~0500 ingen Girom Erp ap Ceretic of Strathclyde Geila ?? Dietrich of Hamaland D. 10 Feb 0916/0917 Frederuna of Hamalant ~0908 Ermentrudeof France 0974 - UNKNOWN Judith of Hungary ~1533 - >1610 William Conkling 77 77 D. >0879 Ansgardeof Bourgogne D. >0721 Gui of Treves <0761 - >0782 Lambert of Hornbach 21 21 D. ABT 0954 BC Efrog Gadern of he Britons Brutus Darianlas of the Britons Childebrand Remi of Marcillac Ignoge of Greece Corineus the Trojan 0951 - 0995 Henry II Duke of Bavaria 44 44 D. ABT 1026 BC Madog of the Britons D. ABT 1006 BC Myambyr of the Britons D. ABT 1081 BC Locrinus of the Britons Odulgarde ~0904 - ~0922 Senegondeof Marcillac 18 18 Gwendolen the Trojan D. >0736 Feredach Wrold Mualeth Enosh Adam 0985 - UNKNOWN Hedwig Of Dagsburg 2nd wife Dinah Mahalalel Betheul ibn Nahor Azura Melka Noam Lomna bint Sina'ar Eve Melka bint Madai 1018 - 1052 Richenza Princess of Poland 34 34 0620 Lendisius deAlsace Barakiel Sina'ar Daniel daughter of Jehoiachin daughter of Simon ha-Kohen Jehoiachin Tamar bint Epher Nestag of the Chaldees 'Ijaska of the Chaldees Epher (Atlas) D. UNKNOWN Raintrude Maachah of Geshur Rahab Talmai of Geshur Ruth of Moab Kaber ibn Ebar Eyestein Isaac ben Abraham ~0820 Tyrne Haraldsdatter Jeshua ben Jehozadak Rebekah bint Betheul D. UNKNOWN Blanche Flora of Hungary Madai ben Japheth Nebrod Rake'el Adataneses Japheth ~1232 - 1321 Thomas Berkeley 89 89 pg 31 & 69, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1909, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition

pg 44, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1218 - 1281 Maurice Berkeley 63 63 pg 44, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 D. 1276 Isabel fitz Richard of Chilham pg 31, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1159 - 1243 Thomas Berkeley 84 84 pg 44, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1191 - 1276 Joan Somery 85 85 pg 44, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 0730 - 0793 Theuderic 63 63 Also called the  "IV Lord of Septimania." ~1120 - 1190 Maurice fitz Robert of Berkeley 70 70 pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1135 - >1190 Alice Berkeley 55 55 pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Sedeqetelebab Eliakim ~0870 - ~0930 Matfried in Metzgau 60 60 ~0872 Lantzind of Pons Eleazar ben Aaron Jochebed ha- Levi Tecmant 0647 - UNKNOWN Natronai Ben Nehemiah Teuhant Zerahiah ben Uzzi Uzzi ben Bukki Abishua ben Phinehas Phines ben Eleazar Bukki ben Abishua ~0284 Geraint ap Einudd Coellyn ap Caradog ~0071 daughter of St. Cyllin Hrothildus of Westgoten D. 1041 Ernicule II Count of Boulogne <0437 - ~0473 Gundioc of Burgunds 36 36 ~0540 Olaf Arnorald of Chaumontois Arnoul II of Chaumontois ~0820 Arnoul III of Chaumontois ~0837 Mahaut of Crequy ~0859 - 0965 Maud of St. Pol & Therounne 106 106 0891 - 0933 Adalolf of Therounne 42 42 Melea ha- David Eliakim ha- David D. UNKNOWN Angilibert dePonthieu Jonam ha- David Joseph ben Jonan Judah ben Joseph Simeon ben Judah Levi ben Simeon ha-David Jorim ha- David Matthat ben Levi Fortun of Spain Cassius of Spain Fortunatus of Spain 0800 - UNKNOWN Nithard dePonthieu Eberhard in Bonngau Telpuil Koath ha- Levi Elisheba Emerita verch Coilus 1642 - 1716 Lewis Conkling 74 74 Cyngen of Cambria & Cornwall Asser of Cambria & Cornwall Camber of Cambria & Cornwall Wermund of Angel 0830 - UNKNOWN Helguad dePonthieu ~0810 Guillaume of Toulouse Moyne D. <1324 Roger IV Mandeville D. <1345 John III Mandeville ~1323 Katherine Bannistre Joan Mandeville D. 1349 Robert IV Mandeville Hildeburge ~0980 MathildeGanelon Arnulf 1023 - UNKNOWN Eustache II Count of Boulogne ~0979 Guillaume of Belleme John Belvale Dameta Beatrix or Bertha of Morvois pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Eve Helgaud III of Ponthieu Nithand Martel Hieronumous Martel Rothailde Mu'ak D. UNKNOWN Ida Saint D'Ardennes 0673 Eticho II deAlsace Elam D. 0886 Fulk of Limoges of Auvergne Rhiwallon ap Idwallon of Brycheiniog Kesed ~1209 - 1245 Sybil Marshal 36 36 pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 226, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
ABT 0040 BC - ABT 0065 BC Darius Arshakumi of Media Atropatene ABT 0010 BC - ~0051 Vonones II Arshakuni of Parthia of Arshakuni ~0261 Asxen of Alania 0950 - UNKNOWN Godfrey II Duke of Upper Lorraine Ashkhadur of Alania ~1035 - ~1109 Ettienette or Stephanie of Longwy 74 74 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Suanhildeof Bayern pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988 ~0857 - 0916 Anarawd ap Rhodri 59 59 ~0978 - ~1023 Cynfyn ap Gwerystan of Powys 45 45 ~1218 - <1284 Margaret Quincy 66 66 pg 67 & 69, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 447, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1625 William Paine Died without issue. 1635 Daniel Paine Died without Issue. ~1174 - 1264 Roger of Winchester Quincy 90 90 pg 62,106 & 181, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 447, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"
~1208 - >1245 Elena or Helen of Galloway 37 37 vol 4, pg 142, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

vol 1, pg 43, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

vol 2, pg 254, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 54, 62 & 181, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 447, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"
D. UNKNOWN Doda ~1182 Fulbert of Dover pg 178, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1286 Adam of Cherill Fitzjohn pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Leutaud of Paris ~1312 Elizabeth Fitzjohn pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Alard ~1230 - >1308 Walter Hungerford 78 78 pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1235 Maud Heytesbury pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1040 - 1087 Guillaume II of Bourgogne 47 47 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1032 - >1081 Hugues Corbeau 49 49 pg 641, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 132, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies

vol 3, pg 189, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1140 Robert de Ferrers pg 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
0903 - UNKNOWN Gozelo I Duke of Lower Lorraine D. living 5 Feb 1227/1228 Sybil Braose pg 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0990 - 1038 Roger deToDeni 48 48 pg 498, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

Roger de Toeni, also called Roger de Conches; fought Muslims in Spain;married 1st? Stephanie (m. 2nd Garsias, King of Spain) sister of RaymondBerenger, Count of Barcelona; married 2nd? Godeheut (m. 2nd Richard, 3rdCount of Evereux), and died 1038 or 1039 in battle against a neighboringnoble whose territory he had overrun in a revolt against the successionof William I the Conqueror to his father's Norman possessions on thegrounds that William was illegitimate.  [Burke's Peerage]

Note:  According to Burke's, Roger married two different women as 1sthusband, both married later husbands.  There is no explanation given.Did the first marriage end in divorce?  Or was one of the marriages,perhaps the 1st one, a "handshake" marriage not officially recorded?

Standard bearer of Normandy. [Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd, London, 1883, p. 498, Stafford, BaronsStafford]
~1065 - Jan 1128/1129 Ranulf III of Chester pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1070 - 1148 Lucia Taillebois 78 78 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 113 & 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 365 & 457, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Alice or Hia 0990 - 1039 Konrad II Hre 49 49 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1152 Alice Fitzgeoffrey D. ~1114 Ivo Taillebois Lucia Malet ~0992 daughter of Dietrich I D. UNKNOWN Sigebert of Verdun D. 1181 Simon II of Evereux Montfort pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1320 - 1385 Adam Wyatt 65 65 ~1040 - 1118 Robert I of Leicester Beaumont 78 78 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 72, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 175, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1155 - 1219 Sahir IV de Quincy 64 64 pg 62,65 & 70, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"

pg 1239, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 447, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 262, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 42, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

One of the 25 sureties of the Magna Charta.  Saire De Quincey, theSurety, a Baron Present at Lincoln whenWilliam The Lion, of Scotland didhomage to the English monarchin Oct. 1200. He received large land grantfrom King John andwas created Earl of Winchester, 03/02/1207, havingbeen, in1203, Governor of the Castle ofRuil, in Normandy. He iscreditedwith the re-writing of the Magna Charta from theCharter of King Henry Iand the Saxon Code. Opposing the King'sconcession, hewas bitterly hatedby King John. He was one ofthe Barons to whom the city and the Tower ofLondon wereresigned, and was excommunicated with the other baronsthefollowing year. He was sent with Robert FitzWalter to invitetheDauphin of Franceto Assume the crown of England, and, evenafter thedeath of King John, he kepta strong garrison inMountsorrell Castle, inbehalf of Prince Louis. When the Barons,being greatly outnumbered, weredefeated by King Henry III, hewas taken prisoner and his estatesforfeited. But in the fallhis immense estates were restoredupon hissubmission. In 1218he went to the Holy Land, and in 1219 to assist attheseige ofDamietta and in Nov of the same year he died on his wastoPalestine.


Earl of Winchester
Saher De Quincey, the Surety, born before 1154, a Baron present at Lincoln when William the Lion of Scotland, did homage to the English monarch in October 1200. He obtained large grants and immunities from King John, and was created Earl Of Winchester on March 2, 1207, havingbeen, in 1203, governor of the castle of Ruil, in Normandy. To him is creditedthe re-writing of Magna Charta from the Charter of King Henry I and the Saxon code. Opposing the King's concession to the Pope's legate, he was bitterly hated by King John. He was one of the Barons to whom the city and Tower of London were resigned, and was excommunicated with the other Barons the following year. he was sent, with Robert FitzWalter, the Surety, by the other Barons, to invite the Dauphin of France to assume the crown of England, and, even after the death of King John, he kept a strong garrison in Mountsorell Castle, in behalf of Prince Louis. When the Barons, being greatly out numbered, were defeated by the troops of King Henry III, Saire de Quincey with many others was made prisoner and his estates forfeited. In October his immense estates were restored upon his submission. In 1218, the Earl of Winchester went with the Earls of Chester and Arundel to the holy Land, assisted at the siege of Damietta, 1219, and died November 3, 1219 on the way to Jerusalem.  Margaret Saher's wife was daughter of Robert de Bellomont and his wife Petronella Grentesmesnil was descended from Emperor Charlemagne.[Burkes Peerage]
Agnes Umfreville ~1044 Paule of Maine ~1052 - ~1082 Robert Corbet 30 30 pg 641, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 233, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 3, pg 189, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 509, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841

pg 132, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
~1064 - 1139 William Brito de Albini 75 75 pg 501, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 160, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
~1042 - 1076 Waltheof II of Northumbria 34 34 pg 96,114 & 128 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 2, pg 9  Burkes History of the Commoners

pg 469, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1054 - >1086 Judith of Lens 32 32 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0875 - UNKNOWN Kunigund ~1143 - 1189 Richard Morville 46 46 pg 45, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1129/1130 - 1202 Hamelin of Surrey Plantagenet pg 83 & 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1136 - 1199 Isabel of Surrey Warren 63 63 pg 83 & 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1110 - 1148 William of Surrey Warren 38 38 pg 83 & 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1054 Andre of Vitre pg. 135, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1054 Agnes Mortaigne Adele of Senlis pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0944 - ~1027 Walter II of Amiens 83 83 pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition
Adele of Anjou ~0925 - ~0995 Walter I of Valois 70 70 pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575, Burkes Peerage
0847 - 0887 Boso II Burgundy 40 40 ~1266 - <1341 John Maltravers 75 75 pg 69, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1309 Eleanor Gorges pg 69, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 222, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
~1208 - BEF 28 Feb 1296/1297 John Maltravers ~1240 Joan ~1284 - 1324 Ralph Gorges 40 40 pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 222, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
~1238 John Maltravers ~1270 Ralph Gorges pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 222, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
~1272 Elena Morville pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Walter Maltravers Roger Fitzgeoffrey 0998 Hildegarde ~1244 Ivo of Tamworth Gorges pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 221, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
Richard Wrokeshall pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 0933 - 0996 Richard I of Normandy 63 63 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0941 - 1031 Gunnora of Crepon 90 90 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0893 - 0942 Guillaume I of Normandy 49 49 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Sporta (Adela) of Senlis pg. 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~0864 - 0932 Rollo of Normandy 68 68 pg 6 & 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0876 Poppa pg 6 &7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0820 - 0894 Rognwald I Eyesteinsson of More & Romsdal 74 74 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0848 RagnhildeHrolfsdatter pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1155 - 1210 Maudede St. Valery 55 55 pg 75 & 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Killed by starvation, walled up in Corfe Castle ordered by King John.
~0788 - >0845 Eystein Ivarsson of Maer 57 57 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0804 Aseda Rognvaldsdatter of Jutland pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0770 Ivar Halfdansson of the Uplands pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0785 Eysteinsdatter of Throndheim pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0768 - ~0802 Halfdan Eysteinsson of Westfold 34 34 ~0738 Eystein Hognasson of Throndheim pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0700 Hogne Eyesteinsson of Throndheim pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0668 - 0710 Eystein Throndsson of Hedmark 42 42 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0625 Thrond pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0816 - 0850 Rognwald Olafsson of Jutland 34 34 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0870 - 0942 Fulk I The Red Count of Anjou 72 72 ~0823 Hrolf (Nefio) pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Berenger of Bayeaux pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0927 - 0992 Conan I Rennes of Bretagne 65 65 pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0952 - 0992 Ermengardeof Anjou 40 40 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0958 - 0987 Geoffroi I of Anjou 28 28 pg 107 & 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
0950 - AFT 16 Mar 0974/0975 Adelais (Adelaide) of Vermandois pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0967 - <1040 Foulques III of Anjou 73 73 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1092 - 1143 Foulques V of Jerusalam 51 51 pg 107 & 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1096 - 1126 Erembourge of Maine 30 30 pg 107 & 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1043 - 1109 Foulques IV of Anjou 66 66 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
0880 - UNKNOWN Roscilla of Loches 0590 Erchembaldus deAlsace ~1059 - 1117 Bertrada Montfort 58 58 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1004 - 1046 Geoffroi II of Gatinais 42 42 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg  6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
1018 - 1076 Ermengardeof Anjou 58 58 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0990 - 1040 Hildegarde 50 50 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0909 - 0958 Foulques II of Anjou 49 49 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0920 - 0952 Gerverge of Arles or Gatinais 32 32 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0888 - 0942 Foulques I of Anjou 54 54 pg 2575, Burkes Peerage

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0880 Roscille of Loches pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0845 - ~0893 Ingelar I of Anjou 48 48 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0844 Adelaideof Gatinais pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0845 - 0900 Ingeler Anjou Count Anjou 55 55 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0821 Tertullus of Anjou pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0825 Petronilla of Auxerre pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0794 - 0844 Hugo Hre 50 50 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0747 - 28 Jan 0813/0814 Charlemagne Hre pg 55, 126 & 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0770 Regine pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0778 - 0840 Louis I Hre 62 62 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0757 - 0783 Hildegardeof Schwaben 26 26 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0954 - 0986 Charles of Lower Lorraine 32 32 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0921 - 0954 Louis IV of Franks 33 33 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0913/0914 - 0984 Gerberge of Sachsen pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0879 - 0929 Charles III of Franks 50 50 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0902 - 0951 Eadgifu (Edgina) of England 49 49 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0880 - 0920 Aelflaeda of Wiltshire 40 40 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0846 - 0879 Louis II Hre 32 32 pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0852 - >0901 Ansgardeof Bourgogne 49 49 0823 - 0877 Karl II Hre 54 54 pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0830 - 0869 Ermentrudeof Orleans 38 38 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0808 - 0843 Jutta of Bayern 35 35 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0714 - 0768 Pepin III of Franks 54 54 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
~0720 - 0783 Bertrade(Bertha) of Laon 63 63 pg 55 & 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988 0821 Tortulf of Rennesh Count of Anjou 0676 - 0741 Charles Martel of Franks 65 65 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0694 - 0724 Rotrou or Chrotudeof Alammania 30 30 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0635 - 0714 Pepin of Heristal 79 79 Mayor of the Palace

pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0654 - 0705 Aupais 51 51 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0602 - 0685 Ansgise of Austrasia 83 83 Mayor of the Palace

pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
D. 0694 Begga of Landen pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0582 - 0640 Arnulf of Metz 58 58 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0582 - >0612 Doda (Clothilde) of Sachsen 30 30 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988 ~0562 - ~0588 Bodegeisel II of Cologne 26 26 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0570 Ansbertus of Austrasia 0973 - 1015 Hugues des Plantard 42 42 ~0865 Rheingar ~1005 Osgood Clapa ~1096 - 5 Feb 1170/1171 Robert fitz Harding pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1100 - 12 Mar 1170/1171 Eva fitz Estmond ~1094 - 1165 Roger III of Dursley Berkeley 71 71 pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1060 - >1125 Harding of denmark 65 65 ~1073 - <1132 Roger II Berkeley 59 59 pg 43, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1030 - 1068 Eadnoth 38 38 ~0884 of Dammartin 1071/1077 - 1138 William of Surrey Warren pg 56,83,89 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
0978 - UNKNOWN Agnes deJumieges 1081 - 1131 Isabel of Vermandois 50 50 pg 56, 62, 72, 89, 120, 121 & 175, Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1055 - 1088 William of Surrey Warren 33 33 pg 568, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 D. 1085 Gundred of England pg 568, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1057 - 1102 Hugues of France 45 45 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1061 - 28 Sep 1120/1124 Adelaideof Vermandois & Valois pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
10 May 1006/1007 - 1060 Henri I of France pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1036 - 1075 Anna (Agnesa) of Kiev 39 39 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1119/1120 - 1180 Louis VII of France pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 99, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0978 - 20 Feb 1053/1054 Jaroslav I of Kiev pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1001 - 1050 Ingegerda Olafsdottir of Sweden 49 49 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0940 - UNKNOWN I Jean 0972 - 1031 Robert II of France 59 59 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0984 - 1032 Constance of Toulouse 48 48 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0941 - 0996 Hugues of France 55 55 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0950 - 1006 Adelaideof Poitou 56 56 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0895 - 0956 Hugues of France 61 61 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0922 - 10 Mar 0964/0965 Hedwig of Sachsen pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1090 - ~1157 Saher de Quincy 67 67 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 447, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Bradenham
TITLE: In the reign of King Henry II, Saier de Quincy had a grant from the crown of the manor of Bushby, co. Northampton, formerly the property of Anselme de Conchis. He m. Maud de St. Liz, and had two sons, Robert and Saier de Quincy. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 447, Quincy, Earls of Winchester]
0880 - >0931 Beatrix of Vermandois 51 51 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0840 - 0900 Herbert I of Vermandois 60 60 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1032 - 1080 Herbert IV of Vermandois 48 48 pg 56 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
0954 - UNKNOWN Isabel ~1300 - 1366 Catherine de Stafford 66 66 ~0998 - 1045 Otho or Eudes of Vermandois 47 47 pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~1012 Parvie or Pavia of Hamm pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~0955 - ~1002 Herbert III of Vermandois 47 47 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~0960 - >1035 Ermengardeof Bar-Sur- Seine 75 75 pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 112, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~0915 - Sep 0987/0988 Adelbert I of Vermandois pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0935 Gerberge of Lorraine pg 55, 120 & 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
0880 - 0943 Herbert II of Vermandois & Troyes 63 63 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0890 - >0978 Hildebrante or Liegarde 88 88 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
0773 - 0810 Pepin of Italy 37 37 0916 - 0971 I Hugues 55 55 0817/0818 - >0840 Pepin II of Peronne pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0818 Bernhard of Italy pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0835 Cunigunde pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0960 - 1015 Vladimir I of Kiev 55 55 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0962 - 1002 Rogneideof Polotzk 40 40 0868 - 0956 Bjorn III Ericsson of Uppsala 88 88 0942 - 0974 Svyatoslav I of Kiev 32 32 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0944 - 1002 Maloucha of Lubech 58 58 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0877 - 0945 Igor of Kiev 68 68 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0881 - 0968 Olga (Helga) 87 87 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0922 - UNKNOWN Anna ~0830 - 0879 Ryurik of Novgorad 49 49 prob a Danish Viking
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0965 - 1022 Olaf II Eriksson of Sweden 57 57 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0979 Astrid of Obotrites ~1088 - <1139 William Ferrers 51 51 ~1118 Margaret Peverel ~1062 - 1139 Robert of derby Ferrers 77 77 pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1069 Hawise of Vitre ~1060 - 1110 Helias of Maine 50 50 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1055 - >1099 Mathildeof Chateau du Loire 44 44 ~1025 - 1087 Simon Montfort 62 62 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0894 - 0980 VI Sigebert 86 86 0564 Gerberga deFranconia ~1030 Agnes of Evreux pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1030/1042 - 1097 Jean of Fleche pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1030 Gervase of Chateau du Loire ~1030 Erenburg ~1000 Robert of Chateau du Loire pg  6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1000 - 1060/1070 Lancelin I of Beaugency pg 6 & 175, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Ricarda of Astarac ~0970 - >1000 Geoffroi I of Gatinais 30 30 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg  6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~0974 Beatrix of Macon pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1099 - 1137 Guillaume X of Aquitaine 38 38 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0870 - UNKNOWN VI Bera ~1103 - <1137 Eleanor of Rochefoucauld 34 34 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1071 - 10 Feb 1126/1127 Guillaume IX of Aquitaine pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1073 - 1117 Maud of Toulouse 44 44 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1040 - 1093 Guillaume IV of Toulouse 53 53 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1058 - >1080 Emma of Mortaigne 22 22 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1031 - 1095 Robert of Cornwall & Mortaigne 64 64 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1039 - 1082 Matilda (Maud) of Montgomery 43 43 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1001 - ~1066 Herlouin of Conteville 65 65 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1003 - ~1050 Herleve (Arlette) of Falaise 47 47 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0959 Jean of Toneburgh & Conteville D. UNKNOWN III Guilhelm ~0978 Fulbert of Falaise ~0980 Doda ~1085 - 1171 Guillaume III of Alencon & Talvas 86 86 pg 102 & 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1080 - 1142 Heli (Ela) of Bourgogne 62 62 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1022 - 1054 Lambert II of Lens 32 32 pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1273 - <1308 Edmund de Stafford 35 35 Edmund de Stafford, 1st Lord (Baron) Stafford, so created by writ ofsummons 6 Feb 1298/9 to Parliament; born 15 July 1273; married by 1298Margaret, sister and ultimate coheir of Ralph Basset, (1st?) Lord (Baron)Basset (of Drayton), and died by 12 Aug 1308. [Burke's Peerage]

--------------------------------------

Edmund de Stafford, who, having distinguished himself in the Scottishwars, was summoned to parliament as a Baron, by King Edward I, from 6February, 1299, to 26 August, 1308, the year of his decease. He m.Margaret, dau., and at length heir of Ralph, Lord Basset, of Drayton, andhad issue, Ralph, his successor; Richard, m. Maud, dau. and heir ofRichard de Camville, of Clifton, and was styled "Sir Richard Stafford, ofClifton, Knt." His lordship d. in 1308, and was s. by his elder son,Ralph de Stafford. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 499, Stafford,Barons Stafford, Earls of Stafford, &c.]
~1041 Isabel of Bruay ~0978 - 1055 Sigurd of Northumbria 77 77 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0982 Elflaed of Northumbria pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0994 - 1038 Aldred of Bernicia 44 44 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0862 - UNKNOWN II Guilhelm ~0971 - 1018 Uhtred of Northumbria 47 47 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition
Ecgfrida of Durham <0960 - >1018 Ealdhun of Durham 58 58 ~0960 - >1006 Waltheof of Bernicia 46 46 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0965 Oswulf of Northumbria D. >0926 Aldred Edulfing of Bamborough D. ~0918 Eadwulf of Bamborough ~0975 Bjorn Beresun of denmark ~0933 Ulsius of denmark Spratlingus D. UNKNOWN Idoine Ursus ~0806 - 0858 Aethelwulf of Eng. 52 52 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0810 - >0876 Osburh of Isle of Wight 66 66 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Oslac of Isle of Wight 0775 - 0839 Egbert of Wessex 64 64 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0788 Raedburh pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0758 - 0786 Eahlmund of Kent 28 28 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0732 Eafa of Wessex pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0706 Eoppa of Wessex pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0680 - 0718 Ingild of Wessex 38 38 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0885 Sigebert V Comte deRazes ~0644 - >0694 Cenred of Wessex 50 50 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0688 Ceolwald of Wessex pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0584 Cutha (Cuthwulf) of Wessex pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0564 - 0584 Cuthwine of Wessex 20 20 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0547 - 0593 Ceawlin of Wessex 46 46 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0525 - 0560 Cynric of Wessex 35 35 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Aethelred Mucill of Mercia ~0467 - 0534 Cerdic of Wessex 67 67 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0778 - 0841 Alpin of Kintyre 63 63 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0747 - ~0819 Eachaid IV of Dalriada 72 72 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0867 Hilderic I Comte deRazes ~0695 - >0733 Eochaid III of Dalriada 38 38 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Fergusa of Dalriada ~0630 - 0673 Domangart II 43 43 ~0727 - ~0781 Fergus of Dalriada 54 54 ~0730 daughter of Feredach Wrold Geraint ap Erb D. ~0634 Eanfrith of Northumbria of Picts pg 21, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0617 Aethelfrith of Northumbria Bebba D. 0860 V Bera D. 0572 Aethelric of Bernicia D. 0559 Ida of Bernicia Bearnoch D. 0588 Ella deira Yffi ~0595 - 0643 Domnall Brecc of Dalriada 48 48 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0565 - 0630 Eochaid Buid of Dalriada 65 65 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0532 - 0608 Aedhan mac Gabran of Dalriada 76 76 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0500 - 0560 Gabhran of Dalriada 60 60 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0465 - 0505 Domangart of Dalriada 40 40 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0836 Argila Comte deRazes Feldelm Foltchain of Ireland pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0501 Fergus Mor of Dalriada pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Thored of Northumbria D. >0979 Gunnor ~0949 Duncan of Atholl 0911 - 0986 Harald II Gormsson of denmark 75 75 Gunhilda Olafsdatter ~1636 - 1668 Cornelius Conkling 32 32 D. ~0935 Thyra Klacksdottir of Jutland Jimena Blascez of Pamplona D. UNKNOWN Reverge ~0765 - 0845 Ragnar Sigurdsson of Uppsala 80 80 ~0755 Aslaug (Asberg) Sigurdsdatter ~0730 - 0812 Sigurd I Randversson of Sweden 82 82 ~0735 Alfhild Gandolfsdottir ~0670 Randver Radbartsson ~0638 Radbard of Garderidge Auda Ivarsdatter ~0695 Gandalf Alfgeirsson of Alfheim Alfgeir of Alfheim Sigurd Sigmundsson D. 0813 IV Bera 0560 Ega deAlsace ~1388 Isabel Tempest D. >0940 Klack- Harald of Jutland ~0795 - 0837 Hemming of Frisia 42 42 ~0770 - 0831 Halfdan (Sigfrid) of Frisia 61 61 ~0710 - 0770 Harald Hraericsson of denmark & Sweden 60 60 D. ~0700 Hraeric Ivarsson of denmark & Sweden ~0503 - >0597 Halfdan Frodesson of denmark 94 94 WC 163 ~0479 - 0548 Frodi VII Fridleifsson of denmark 69 69 WMC163 ~0612 - 0647 Ivar Halfdansson in Sweden 35 35 ~0590 - ~0650 Halfdan Haraldsson in Sweden 60 60 ~0547 Valldar Hroarsson of Roeskilde D. UNKNOWN Romille Edla of Mecklenburg pg 27,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938 0935 - 0994/0995 Erik VI Bjornsson of Sweden pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0950 - <1013 Sigrid Starade 63 63 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0925 Skogul Tosti pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0849 - ~0906 Eric V Eymundsson of Uppsala 57 57 ~0830 Eymund Ericsson of Uppsala ~0814 Eric III Refilsson of Uppsala ~0777 - >0859 Bjorn I Ragnarsson of Uppsala 82 82 ~0850 - ~0933 Harald Halfdansson Of Norway 83 83 0919 - 0999 Mieceslas III of Obotrites 80 80 D. 0795 Guilhelm I Comte deRazes ~0959 Sofia ~0893 - 0985 Mitsui II of Obotrites 92 92 D. 0985 Mieceslas II of Obotrites of Puffow Eric of Puffow D. 0869 Mitsui I of Obotrites D. 0840 Rodigastus of Obotrites D. 0811 Mieceslas I of Obotrites Antonia D. 0798 Billung II of Obotrites D. 0770 Bera III Comte deRazes Jutta Billung I of Obotrites Hildegarde D. 0724 Aribert I of Obotrites Mandana D. 0700 Vislas I of Obotrites Petrusa of Lombards ~1056 - 1103 Agnes of Pothieu 47 47 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1052 - 1113 Robert IIof Montgomery 61 61 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Robert de Ferrers pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 D. UNKNOWN Alba ~1010 - 1074 Raoul III of Valois & Vexin 64 64 pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg. 76, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928
~1020 - ~1053 Adele of Bar-Sur- Aube 33 33 pg 76, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928

pg 112, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~1100 - 1192/1193 William Braose pg 150 & 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
ABT 1123/1130 Bertha fitz Miles pg 150 & 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1005 - 1045 Maldred of Allendale 40 40 pg 240, vol 3, Paul's "Scot's Peerage"

pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2192, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

pg. 606, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
~1073 - ~1154 Nesta verch Rhys 81 81 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 1, pg 89, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1090 - 1147 Robert Caen of Gloucester 57 57 pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1094 - 1157 Maud of Creully 63 63 pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1102 - 1168 Robert II of Leicester Beaumont 66 66 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1104 - 1168 Amicia (Uta) Gael 64 64 pg 62 & 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 42, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 0769 Sigebert IV Comte deRazes ~1145 - 1226 William Briwere 81 81 pg 124, 150 & 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, 111 & 563, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

William Briwere, Sheriff of Bucks, Berks, Derbys, Devon, Nottingham and Oxon.  [Burke's Peerage



Founded Dunkeswell Abbey.

------------------------------

The following information was contained in a post-em by Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com:

Sir William DE BRIWERRE. Lord of Horsley (DRB) Born circa 1145. Married  Beatrice DE VAUX / DE VALLE.  Sheriff of Devon for 10 years, until his death in 1227 in the reign of Henry III.  After 1189 Itinerant Justice for King Richard. Seat: Bridgwater, Somersetshire.  Circa 1192 "Richard employed his exceptional talents by making him an Itinerant Justice and an ambassador to the French court where he was instrumental in drawing up the terms for Richard's release from captivity, and on that king's second absence abroad Brewer was one of the 4 Justiciars appointed to guard the realm."  (*Gladwin, Sheriff).  Held the honour of Plympton as a Redvers tenant. Died in 1226 (Burke's Landed Gentry) (Weis, AR.). Died in 1227 (*Gladwin, Sheriff). *Irene Gladwin, The Sheriff:  The Man and his Office.  London: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1974 [Ref: Pat Patterson <patpnyc@nyc.rr.com> message to soc.genealogy.medieval 23 Feb 2001]

baron and judge, and a justice itinerant, 1187; bought land at Ileshal, Devon; was one of the four justices to whom Richard I, on leaving England, entrusted the charge of the kingdom; went to Worms to assist Richard I, then in captivity, at his interview with the Emperor, Henry VI, 1193; founded the Abbeys of Torr and Dunkeswell, and the Nunnery of Polslo, in Devon, and the Abbey on Mottisfont in Southants; became lord of Somborne near Southampton, and Sheriff of Devon, co. Oxford, co. Buchingham, Berks., Northants, and co. Derby; supported John against the Barons; assisted at the coronation of Henry III 1216; was one of the Barons of the Exchequer 1221; received a grant of the manor of Bridgewater, where he founded the Hospital of St. John Baptist [Ref: Watney p156]

In 1190 the Manor of King's Somborne was granted to William Briwere, a loyal servant of the Plantaganet kings, who made him one of the most powerful men in the realm, and rewarded him handsomely. Among other offices he was at various times sheriff of Hampshire and of other counties, (including Nottingham while Richard Coeur-de Lion was on a Crusade: this makes him Robin Hood's notorious adversary). He also signed Magna Carta. Though much disliked and an extortioner, his family married well: one of his descendants married Henry of Lancaster: their daughter, Blanche, who inherited the Manor in 1362, married John of Gaunt; the Manor then passed to their son, Henry Bolingbroke, who in 1399 became King Henry IV. The Manor remained a royal possession till the time of Charles I.

In 1200 William Brewer received from King John a licence to fortify a castle at Ashley: Ashley church had stood for over half a century already, so William's bailey was built around it. Subsequently the King stayed there to hunt in the Forest of Bere. In 1201 Brewer (sic) founded a Priory of Augustinian Canons at Mottisfont; his son gave them the church of King's Somborne: from 1207 till the dissolution of the Monastery the Priory appointed the vicars of King's Somborne, and no doubt the priests to serve at the altars and chantry. His brother John presented Little Somborne to the Priory, and there is unreliable evidence that a third brother, Peter de Rivaulx, was a monk there of some sanctity, known as 'the Monk in the Wall'. [Ref: HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF ST PETER & ST PAUL, KINGS SOMBORNE http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~villages/somchurc.htm]

Regards,
Curt

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Horsley
~1149 - 24 Mar 1216/1217 Beatrice Vallibus de Vaux pg 124, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

The following information was contained in a post-em by Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com:



The evidence for this is slim but compelling.  Beatrice had property in Devonshire as her maritagium.  The early history of this property is shrouded.

However, Hubert de Vaux is known to have owned property in Devonshire, and probably lived there during part of his life.   Beatrice de Valle had a daughter Grace Briwerre who I presume was named for her mother, Grace de Vaux.  Grace was rather rare as a woman's name in that period.  I have proven that William Briwerre acquired property from one of Beatrice's Vaux brothers and I have proven that William Briwerre was involved in a suit with the widow of another brother.   If nothing else, this proves that the two families knew each other well.

I should also note that Beatrice de Valle was almost certainly the mother of Henry Fitz Count, bastard son of Reginald, Earl of Cornwall.   This is indicated by two successive charters which unfortunately I don't have in hand.  In these two charters, Henry Fitz Count makes a gift to some religious house and in the next charter, Beatrice's Briwerre son refers back to his "brother" without naming him, as if the parties understood who he meant.  This would only make sense if the two charters were recorded at the same time and if Henry Fitz Count was the "brother" named by Beatrice's Briwerre son.   The charters are published in Monasticon Exoniensis.

The name Vaux, by the way,  was usually  written in Latin as Vallibus but I have seen it on rare occasions as Valle.  Beatrice's maiden name is given as Valle in one charter I have seen. [Ref: Douglas Richardson 25 Jan 1999 message to soc.genealogy.medieval]

Research note: numerous listings on Rootsweb Worldconnect show the above Reginald (de Dunstanville), Earl of Cornwall (bastard son of Henry I by Sybil Corbet) as Beatrice de Valle/Vaux's father & Beatrice Mortaigne/Mortain or Beatrice fitzRichard as her mother, but sources are lacking... Curt

Regards,
Curt
~1184 - <1233 Isabel Briwere 49 49 pg 563, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1184 - 1224 Baldwin Wake 40 40 pg 563, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~0986 - 1052 Aelgifu (Emme) of Normandy 66 66 ~1674 John Conklin ~1109 - 1160 Melesindeof Jerusalem 51 51 pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1070 - 1137 Almaric III Montfort 67 67 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1095 - 1181 Agnes Garlende 86 86 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1026 - 1086 Guillaume VI of Aquitaine 60 60 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
0844 - UNKNOWN RotildePrincess of France ~1053 - >1104 Aldegardeor Hildegarde of Bourgogne 51 51 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0969 - 1030 Guillaume V of Aquitaine 61 61 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0987 - 1068 Agnes of Bourgogne 81 81 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0937 - 0995 Guillaume IV of Aquitaine 58 58 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0950 - >1003 Emme of Blois 53 53 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0958 - 1026 Otto Guillaume of Lombards 68 68 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0963 - BEF 5 Mar 1004/1005 Ermentrudeof Roucy pg 6, 7  & 218, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I of Bourgogne pg 102 & 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1031 - 1109 Helie of Semur 78 78 pg 102 & 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0917 - 0963 Guillaume III of Aquitaine 46 46 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1417 Margaret Stanley Lady of Mobberley and Cheshire ~0919 - 0962 Gerlotte or Adele of Normandy 43 43 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
ABT 0910/0915 - 16 Jan 0974/0975 Thibaud II of Blois pg 54 & 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7 & 15, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
D. 0943 Liutgardeof Vermandois pg 54 & 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7 & 15, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0875 - >0932 Ebles Mancer of Aquitaine 57 57 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
Emilane pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0855 - 0890 Ranulf II of Aquitaine 35 35 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Adelaideof France 0866 - 0912 Leo VI of Byzantium 45 45 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0866 Zoe Carbonopsina Zautzina pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0812 - 0886 Basileos I of Byzantium 74 74 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1107 - UNKNOWN MelisendeQueen of Jerusalem ~0846 - 0882/0883 Eudocia Ingerina pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0786 - ~0828 Konstantinos 42 42 ~0755 - ~0797 Hmayeak of Adrianople Mamikonian 42 42 ~0909 - 26 Jan 0946/0947 Eadgyth (Edith) of England pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
'Ora bint 'Ur Nahor ~0660 Ingjald Braut- Onundsson ~0638 Braut- Onund Ingvarsson ~0616 Ingvar Eysteinsson ~0640 Olaf I of Westfold ~0990 Roger of St. Sauveur pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0970 Niel of St. Sauveur pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0893 - ~0933 Richard I of Contentin & St. Sauveur 40 40 pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0845 - >0912 Malahule Eysteinsson of Maer 67 67 pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0928 - >1023 Thurstan of Bastenburgh 95 95 pg 377, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~0975 - ~1037 Hugh I Montfort 62 62 Raoul of Bayeux pg 100, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Erneburge of Caux pg 100, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0880 Llywelyn ap Merfyn dePow ~0859 - 0904 Mervyn ap Rhodri 45 45 D. UNKNOWN Ermengarde Du Maine 0594 - 0688 Leudefindis 94 94 ~0998 - >1084 Richard Goz of Avranches 86 86 vol 1, pg 12 & 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1029 Emme of Conteville vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0989 Turstain Goz of Exmes vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg. 18, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0994 Judith of Montanolier vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg. 118, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0963 Ansfred II Goz of Hiesmer vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg. 18, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0937 Ansfred I ~0862 - ~0925 Hrolf Turstan 63 63 Gerlotte of Blois Thibaud of Blois & Tours ~0846 - ~0931 Hrollager Rognwaldsson 85 85 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V Plantagenent Count of Anjou 38 38 Geoffrey "The Fair" . He was one of the most powerful Prince's of Franceand after his marriage to Matilda, daughter of Henry I King of England,became head of the plantagent line of English Kings. The namePlantagenet, according to Rapin, came from when Fulk the Great beingstung from remorse for some wicked action, in order to atone for it, wenta pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and was scourged before the Holy Sepulchrewith broom twigs. Earlier authorities say it was because Geoffrey bore abranch of yellow broom (Planta-genistae) in his helmet. Duke of Normandy1144-1150. Emina ~1121 - 1190 Robert III of Leicester Beaumont 69 69 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 42, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1134 - 1212 Petronille Grentmesnil 78 78 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 42, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1022 - 1094 Roger of Pont Audemer Beaumont 72 72 pg 56 & 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1022 - ~1081 Adeline of Meulan 59 59 pg 56 & 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~0980 - 1044 Humphrey of PontAudemer Harcourt 64 64 Alberie Hay Joan de Windsor William de Windsor ~0926 - >1010 Torf de Harcourt 84 84 vol   pg 883 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 261, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1030 Guithenoc dePorhoet ~0860 - 0955 Bernard 95 95 vol   pg 883 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 261, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0908 Sprota of Bourgogne D. 1143 Ralph II of Norfolk Gael pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1087 Avise Fitzosborne D. >1074 Ralph I of Norfolk Gael pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1059 - >1095 Emma fitz William 36 36 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1092 - 10 Feb 1097/1098 Hugh I of Hinckley Grentmesnil pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1026 - 1057 Ralph of Hereford Sudeley 31 31 pg 195 & 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition

pg 520, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Gytha pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition
~0995 - 1030 Olaf Haraldsson of Norway 35 35 0885 - UNKNOWN Roget dePonthieu ~1011 - >1028 Estrid Olafsdatter of Sweden 17 17 ~1351 Joan Belvale Ragnhilde pg 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0775 - 0810 Gudrod Halfdansson of Westfold 35 35 ~0823 - ~0863 Halfdan III Gudrodsson of Westfold 40 40 0830 Regnhild Sigurdsdatter ~1145 Fonia of Moray vol 5, pg 31, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1174 - ~1212 Helen of the Isles 38 38 vol 5, pg 32, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1148 - 1207 Rognvald or Reginald of the Isles 59 59 vol 5, pg 31, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1113 - 1164 Somerled II macGillebrideof the Isles 51 51 vol 5, pg 28, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
0855 - UNKNOWN Herlouin dePonthieu ~1117 RagnhildeOlafsdottir of Man vol 5, pg 30, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1080 - 1170 Gillebrideof Argyll 90 90 vol 5, pg 28, Paul's "Scots Peerage" Giolla Adhamnan ~1030 - 1083 Solomon of Dublin 53 53 D. ~1065 Echmarcach of Dublin D. ~1035 Ranald II of Waterford ~0924 - <0988 Hlodver Thorfinnsson of Orkney 64 64 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" Audna Kiarvalsdatter vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0960 - 1014 Sigurd II Hlodvarsson of Orkney 54 54 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1106 Ingebjorg Haakonsdottir of Orkney pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0912 William Comte dePonthieu  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Guienne, Count of Auvergne, Count of Poitou, 951-963, by hiswife,
Heloys.  AKA: Guillaume III (I) Duke of Aquitaine.

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Guienne, Count of Auvergne, Count of Poitou, 951-963, by hiswife, Heloys.  AKA: Guill aume III (I) Duke of Aquitaine.
~1070 - 1122 Haakon of Orkney 52 52 vol 2, pg 315, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~1040 - 1103 Paal I of Orkney 63 63 vol 2, pg 315, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 493, Burke's Extinct Peerage
~1015 RagnhildeHaakonsdatter of Sweden pg 103, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0999 - 1064 Thorfinn II Sigurdson of Orkney 65 65 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1021 - ~1066 Ingebjorge Finnsdatter 45 45 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0988 - 1034 Anleta of Scotland 46 46 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0890 - >0977 Thorfinn Einarsson of Orkney 87 87 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0900 Grelaud Duncansdottir of Caithness vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0852 - 0910 Einar Rognvaldsson of Orkney 58 58 ~1005 - ~1062 Finn Arnesson 57 57 vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" D. UNKNOWN Ness ~1007 Bergliot Halfdansdottir ~0977 - 1024 Arni Arnmodsson 47 47 ~0945 - ~0986 Arnmod Arnvidarsson 41 41 ~0913 Arnvid Thorarinsson ~0881 Thorarin "Bullifak" Finnvidsson ~0857 Fundne Finnvid ABT 0987/0995 - <1047 Halfdan Sigurdsson ~0970 - ~1018 Sigurd Halfdansson of Ringerik 48 48 ~0972 Astrid Gudbrandsdatter of Uplands ~0900 Kiarval (Carrol) of Ireland vol 2, pg 314, Paul's "Scots Peerage" D. UNKNOWN Athildis ~0848 - 0900 Duncan of Caithness 52 52 vol 2, pg 313, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 447, Burkes Peerage
~0873 Groa Thorsteinsdatter vol 2, pg 313, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~0858 - 0888 Thorstein Olafsson of Dublin 30 30 vol 2, pg 313, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 147, Burkes Peerage

pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
Thurid pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0840 - 0871 Olaf Ingjaldsson of Dublin 31 31 vol 2, pg 313, Paul's "Scots Peerage" Auda of Hebrides pg. 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~0820 Ingjald Helgasson of Ireland ~0802 Helgi Olafsson Eyrind Eastman pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Raverta of Ireland 0120 - 0170 Coel I King of Britain 50 50 This is the king made famous in the children's nursery rhyme OLD KINGCOLE was a "merry old soul"....  He was educated in Rome, builtColchester (Coel-Castra) and died in 170 AD. Bjorn of Gothland pg. 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Hlif Rolf Ingiald Ketel Flatness of Hebrides pg. 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 Inguild Bjorn Bundeof Sogne pg. 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Belang Ketel Wether of Romerike Rolf of Gothland pg. 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0347 - 0395 Theodosius I the Great Roman Emperor 48 48 Skaansvyarstelmi D. ~0800 Vedrar Grim of Sogne pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Herware of Sogne Thorgerdeof Sogne Eylung of Sogne Hjald of Rogaland pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Vatnar of Rogaland pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Eivar of Rogaland pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Harold of Rogaland pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0990 - 1079 Haakon I Ivarsson of Sweden 89 89 0165 - UNKNOWN Prince Coel 0538 Richemeres deFranconia ~1041 RagnhildeMagnussdatter of Norway pg 103, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Ivar Hviti of Uplands Haakonsdatter of Norway D. 0995 Hakon II Sigurdsson of Norway Thora Skaga Sigurd Hakonsson of Hlade Bergliot of Moere pg 103, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Alofso Haraldsson of Norway Torf of Moere pg 103, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0548 Hilderic Alfhild D. ~0900 Hakon of Hlade Grjorgard Gerlangsson of Romsdal Herlang of Romsdal ~1024 - 1047 Magnus I Olafsson of Norway 23 23 ~1010 Astrid Olafsdatter of Sweden ~0952 - 0995/0998 Harald Gudrodsson ~0932 - 0963 Gudrod Bjornsson of Westfold 31 31 pg. 103, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0900 - ~0927 Bjorn Haraldsson of Norway 27 27 ~0841 SvanhildeEysteinsdatter D. UNKNOWN Venissa Julia ~0730 Hlif Dagsdatter Dag of Westmare ~0815 Sigurd Helgesson of Sogne ~0796 Helgi Fridleifsson ~0923 Gudbrand Olafsson of Uplands ~0927 Ulfhild (Gunhild) ~0880 Thora Audunsdatter ~0854 Audun Bjornsson ~0820 Bjorn Hundarsson ~0778 Hundar Steinar D. UNKNOWN Tiberius Claudius Caesar Emperor Of Rome Tiberius was the grandson of Mark Anthony. ~0792 Alof Ragnarsdottir ~0820 - 0887 Giselbert of Darnau 67 67 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0800 - ~0842 Giselbert in the Maasgau 42 42 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Affrica of Galloway vol 4, pg 136, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1045 Aethelfreda of England ~0939 - 0989 Olaf Ragnvaldsson of Man 50 50 pg 86, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~1005 Ragnvald Sigtrysson of Man D. 0896 Sigtry Ivarsson of Dublin ~0787 - 0873 Ivar Ragnarsson of Dublin 86 86 D. 0862 Mael Secneail of Ireland 0520 - UNKNOWN Hunneric D. 0886 Flanna D. 0843 Mael Ruanaid of Meath Arog of Bearcuil pg 87, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0797 Donnchad I mac Dombnail of Ireland pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0758 Donal of Ireland D. 0716 Murcertac of Meath Alpin D. 0689 dermot of Meath Airmeadhac of Meath D. 0634 Conal of Meath 0868 - UNKNOWN Rognvald Eysteinsson Earl More D. 0600 Suibne of Meath pg 87,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938 D. 0581 Colman of Meath D. 0554 dermot of Ireland Mungan of Connaught D. ~0500 Fergus of Meath Corbhach ~0500 - 0481 Cairbre of Leinster 19 19 ~1055 - Mar 1106/1107 Robert fitz Hamon of Creully pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1066 Sybil Montgomery pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition <1045 - ~1129 Ranulf II of Bayeux 84 84 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 0580 Hilda Maud (Margaret) of Avranches pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
~1017 Ranulf I of Bayeux pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~0991 - >1031 Ancitel of Bayeux 40 40 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1002 - >1062 Aelfgar III of E Anglia 60 60 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~1022 Alversa or Aelgifu Malet vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1039 - ~1086 Aldgyth of Mercia 47 47 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1100 - 1153 Ranulf of Chester 53 53 vol 1, pg 25 & 49 Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1124 - 1189 Matilda (Maud) fitz Robert 65 65 vol 1, pg 25 & 49 Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1036 - >1085 Geoffrey Magnavil 49 49 ~1040 Athelaise or Adeliza Balts 0760 - UNKNOWN Aslaug Sigurdsdottir ~0930 Balso of Bayeux pg 95, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0895 Ranulf of Bayeux pg 95, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0950 Herfast of Crepon ~1032 Hamon fitz Hamon of Creully ~0940 - >1005 Ivres I of Creil & Bellesme 65 65 pg 13, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. >1005 Godchildeof Ponthieu Thiudigotho Fulk of Corbonais Roalis ~0987 - ~1045 Aleida of Holland 58 58 0920 - 0969 St. Olga Regent of Kiev 49 49 D. 0965 Guillaume of Ponthieu pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0855 - ~0965 Guillaume I of Ponthieu 110 110 ~0880 - 0945 Herlouin II of Ponthieu 65 65 ~0857 - 0925 Helgaud II of Ponthieu & Montreuil 68 68 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0835 - ~0878 Herlouin I of Ponthieu 43 43 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0812 - 0866 Helgaud I of Ponthieu 54 54 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0790 - 0853 Nithard of Ponthieu 63 63 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0776 - 0814 Angilbert of Ponthieu 38 38 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0775 - 0826 Bertha Hre 51 51 ~0936 - 0963 Rognwald of Polotzk 27 27 pg 26, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0203 - UNKNOWN Gladys D. >0850 Itana ~1021 Alix of Normandy pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg. 42,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928
ABT 1010/1015 Ealdgyth or Algitha of Northumbria vol 3, pg 241, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pgs 39 & 148 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2192. Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition

pg. 606, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
Elfgifu of England pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1164 - 1200 Roland of Galloway 36 36 vol 4, pg 138, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 45, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 74, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1172 - 1217 Elena Morville 45 45 vol 4, pg 139, Paul's "Scots Peerage"


pg 45, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1100 - 1174 Uchtred of Galloway 74 74 vol 4, pg 136, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 245, vol 3, Paul's "Scot's Peerage"

pg 45 & 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1120 Gunhild Dunbar vol 3, pg 245, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

vol 4, pg 137, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 45 & 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1155 - 1 Jan 1190/1191 Avicia of Lancaster ~0980 - 1014 Malfrida of Ohningen 34 34 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0190 - UNKNOWN King Lleuver Mawr Lleuver Mawr, "Lucius The Great", King of Siluria the Great grandson ofCaradoc. He was baptized at Winchester by his father's first cousin, St.Timothy, who suffered martyrdom at age 90 on 22 August 139. When in 170Lucius succeeded to the throne of Britain he became the first ChristianKing of the World. He founded the first church in Llandaff and changedthe established religion of Britain from Druidism to Christianity. He d.in 181.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, pages 160, &162
0540 - 0658 Gertrudis deFranconia 118 118 Gudbjorg Olafsson of Uplands Ulfhild Olaf Ivar Beitil ~0998 - ~1074 Raoul or Rudolf of Warren 76 76 D. <1059 Beatrix of Vascoeuil pg 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0950 William of Warren D. 1174 Ala (Adela) of Talvace pg 83 & 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
of Leinster 0912 - 0973 Otto I Hre 60 60 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Coel II of Colchester ~1097 - 1143 Miles fitz Walter of Hereford 46 46 pg 150,161 & 196,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1096 - >1143 Sibyl Neufmarche 47 47 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1065 - <1129 Walter fitzRoger of Gloucester 64 64 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1065 Berta (Emma) Ballon D. 1081 Trahearn ap Caradoc of N Wales ~1057 Nesta verch Gruffudd pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1011 - 1063 Gruffudd ap Llywelyn of Gwynedd 52 52 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0975 - 1057 Leofric III of Mercia 82 82 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~1654 - 1717 Hester Conkling 63 63 ~0946 - <1032 Leofwine of Mercia 86 86 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
0130 - UNKNOWN St. Cyllin King Of Siluria The King of Siluria, he was sainted by the early church of Britain. He,first of the Cymry, gave infants names, for before names were not givenexcept to adults, and then from something characteristic in their bodies,minds or manners. His brother Linus the Martyr, his sister Claudia andher husband Rufus Pudens aided the Apostle Paul in the Christian Churchin Rome, as recorded in II Timothy 4:21 and Romans 16:13).
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 160
~0946 Alwara of E Angles vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Athelstan of E Angles Manne ~0922 Ordgar of devon & Cornwall Leofric II of Leicester pg. 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0870 Alfgar II of Leicester pg. 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0830 Alfgar of Leicester pg. 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Leofric I of Leicester pg. 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1034 - 1137 William fitz Osbern of Nottingham 103 103 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1032 - 19 Jan 1119/1120 Adeliza Toni 0106 - UNKNOWN Caradoc King Of Siluria Caradoc, "Caractacus", King of Siluria b. at Trevan, Llanilid, now CountyGlamorganshire, England, was King of Siluria, (County Monmouthshire,England) where he died. His valiant services to his country have beentold in connection with the attempted invasions of the island. The Bardsrecord his wise saying: "Oppression persisted in brings on death."
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 160
~1004 Adelaideof Barcelona ~1034 Hugh or Robert Grentmesnil pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~0990 - 1061 Pons of Toulouse 71 71 pg 213, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1077 - 1151 Aimeri I of Chatellerhaut & Rochefoucauld 74 74 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1079 - 1151 Dangereuse of Bouchard 72 72 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1299 - 1372 Ralph de Stafford 72 72 Sir Ralph de Stafford, KG, b. 24 Sep 1301, d. 31 Aug 1372, KG 23 Apr1349, Earl of Stafford. By his 1st wife, Katharine de Hastang, he hadMargaret Stafford, who married her cousin John de Stafford, Knight, ofBramshall, co. Stafford. [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: Ralph's 1301 birth date does not agree with Ancestral Roots, norline 136 in MCS. They have 1299.

-------------------------------------------

Ralph de Stafford, 2nd Lord (Baron) Stafford and 1st Earl of Stafford, socreated 5 March 1350/1, KG (1348), KB (Jan 1326/7), JP (Staffs March1331/2); campaigned against Scots 1336, 1337 and 1343 and French atBattles of Sluys 1340 and Crecy 1346 and Siege of Calais 1346-7, also1355-60; Steward of the Household Feb 1340/1, Seneschal of Aquitaine orGascony Feb 1344/5-March 1345/6 and Aquitaine Oct 1346-March 1346/7;married 1st probably c1326-27 Katharine, daughter of Sir John Hastang, ofChebsey, Staffs; married 2nd by 6 July 1336 Margaret, Baroness Audley inher own right, daughter of Hugh Audley, 1st and last Earl of Gloucesterof the 1337 creation and 1st Lord (Baron) Audley of the 1317 creation,and died 31 Aug 1372. [Burke's Peerage]

--------------------------------------------

Ralph de Stafford, 2nd baron, summoned to parliament from 14 January,1337, to 25 November, 1350. This nobleman attaining majority in the 17thEdward II [1324], and then doing his homage, had livery of his father'slands, and the next ensuing year, being made a knight by bathing andother sacred ceremonies, had robes, &c., as a banneret, allowed him outof the king's wardrobe for the solemnity; after which he soon became apersonage of celebrity in the wars of King Edward III. His lordship wasfirst engaged in Scotland for some years, and he then embarked forBrittany, where he was made prisoner at the siege of Nantes. In the 19thEdward III [1346], he was sent into Gascony with Henry of Lancaster, Earlof Derby, and while that nobleman assaulted Bergerath by land, LordStafford commanded the force which attacked it by sea. the next year hewas constituted seneschal of Aquitaine, when John, son and heir ofPhilip, King of France, coming to besiege Aguillon, where his lordshipthen resided, he stoutly defended that place against the whole power ofthe French, until King Edward came to his relief, and forced the enemy toraise the siege. After this, joining his troops with the army of KingEdward, he had a principal command in the van of the English at theglorious battle of Cressy. On the termination of this great conflict, hislordship being sent with Sir Reginald Cobham and three heralds to viewthe slain, reported the number to be 11 great princes, 80 banneret, 1,200knights, and more than 30,000 common soldiers. He was afterwards, whenCalais surrendered, appointed, together with Sir Walter Manny, and theEarl of Warwick, to take possession of that place for the king; andsubsequently his lordship was one of the ambassadors deputed to thecardinals of Naples and Claremont, to treat of peace between King Edwardand Philip de Valois, then assuming the title of King of France. The nextyear he had license to make castles of his manor houses at Stafford andNadeley; as also a grant from the king of £573, for his expenses inforeign service. About this time his lordship was elected a knight of theGarter, being one of the original members of that noble order. In the24th Edward III [1351], he was in commission with the bishop of Durham,and the Lords Percy and Nevill, to treat with the nobles of Scotland, atYork, for a firm and final peace between the two realms; for all whicheminent services he was created, 5 March, 1351, Earl of Stafford, andconstituted lieutenant and captain-general of the Duchy of Aquitaine. Hislordship m. Margaret, only dau. and heiress of Hugh de Audley, BaronAudley, and in right of his wife, Earl of Gloucester, by which alliancehe acquired a considerable inheritance, and the Barony of Audeley ispresumed to have merged in that of Stafford. He had issue, Ralph, who m.Maud, dau. of Henry, Earl of Derby, Duke of Lancaster, but d.v.p., s.p.;Hugh, his successor; Beatrice, m. 1st, Maurice, son and heir of Maurice,Earl of Desmond, 2ndly, Thomas, Lord Ros, of Hamlake, and 3rdly, SirRichard Burley, Knt.; Joane, m. to John, son and heir of John Cherlton,Lord Powis; Elizabeth, m. to Fulke le Strange; and Margaret, m. to SirJohn Stafford, Knt. His lordship d. 31 August, 1372, was buried atTunbridge, and was s. by his only surviving son, Hugh de Stafford. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 499, Stafford, Barons Stafford, Earls ofStafford, &c.]

Weis, Ancestral Roots, 7th ed., line 55-34.

1st Earl of Stafford.  He was a founder Knight of the Garter, April 23, 1349.  He was summoned to Parliament from November 29, 1336, to November 25, 1350, as "Radulpho Baroni de Stafford."  In 1336 and 1337 he served in Scotland.  On June 23, 1340, he was at the battle of Sluys.  By February 10, 1340/41, he had become steward of the King's household.  In  1342 he sailed to Brittany and took part in the siege of Vannes, where he was captures.  In 1343 he was sent with others to Scotland to raise the siege of Lochmaben castle.  On February 23, 1344/45, he was appointed seneschal of Aquitaine or Gascony, holding office until March 15, 1345/46. 

On July 6, 1336, a commission was appointed to inquire into a complaint by Hugh de Audley, lord Audley, that Ralph de Stafford and others (mostly relatives) had broken in to his close at Thaxted, Essex, carried away his goods, abducted Margaret, his daughter and heiress, and married her against her will.  Margaret was then about twelve years old. 

King Edward III intervened to protect Ralph, and, after making his peace, Ralph and Margaret received the reversion to a large part of the Gloucester inheritance.  He was created earl of Stafford on March 5, 1350/51.  In October, 1355, he was among the leaders of the King's new expedition to France.  In October, 1360, he was in the vanguard of the army under the duke of Lancaster, and was joint marshal with the earl of Warwick.

http://84.1911encyclopedia.org/S/ST/STAFFORD_FAMILY_.htm
STAFFORD (FAMILY). This famous English house was founded in England by Robert, a younger brother of Raif de Tosny (Toeni), of a noble Norman house, who was standardbearer of the duchy. Robert received, like his elder brother, at the Conquest a great fief which extended into seven Counties and became known as Robert de Stafford from his residence at Stafford Castle. The military service due from the fief was no less than sixty knights, as is proved by his grandson Roberts return in 1166. With this Roberts son the male line became extinct, and his sisters husband, Hervey Bagot, one of his knightly tenants, succeeded to the fief in her right (1194): their descendant Edmund de Stafford (that surname having been assumed) was summoned as a baron in 1299. His son, Ralph, a warrior like his father, attained fame in the French wars. He conducted the brilliant defence of Aiguillon against the host of France, fought at Crecy and in the siege of Calais. Chosen. a Knight of the Garter at the foundation of the order, he was further created earl of Stafford in 1351.
His son Hugh, who succeeded as 2nd earl in 1372, served in the French wars. From 1376 he became prominent in politics, probably through his marriage to a daughter of the earl of Warwick, being one of the four lords on the committee in the Good Parliament, and also serving on the committee that controlled Richard II., 1378-1380. He was friendly, however, with that king, and was with him on his Scottish expedition in 1385. He died next year on pilgrimage at Rhodes. The marriage of his son, Thomas, the 3rd earl, in 1392 to the daughter and eventual heiress of Thomas, duke of Buckingham (son of Edward III.), by a coheiress of the great house of Bohun, proved a decisive turning-point in the history of the Staffords; for, although he died childless, this great lady, styled countess of Stafford, Buckingham, Hereford and Northampton in her will, married in 1398 his brother Edmund, the 5th earl, who obtained, in addition to her great possessions, her ancestors office of lord high constable in 1403, but was slain the same year at Shrewsbury, commanding the van of the kings host. Their son, Humphrey (1402-1460), the first Stafford duke of Buckingham, was placed by his descent and his possessions in the front rank of the English nobility.
~0890 - 0937 Rodolph II of Bourgogne 47 47 pg 117 & 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 0907 - 0966 Berchta of Schwaben 59 59 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0924 - 0993 Conrad I of Bourgogne 69 69 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0876 - 0936 Heinrich I Hre 60 60 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Bran King of Siluria Bran, King of Siluria, and commander of the British Fleet. In the year CE36 he resigned the crown to his son Caradoc and became Arch-Druid of thecollege of Siluria, where he remained some years until called upon to bea hostage for his son. During his seven years in Rome he became the first"Royal" convert to Christianity, and was baptized by the Apostle Paul, aswas his son Caradoc and the latter's two sons, Cyllinus and Cynon.Henceforth he is known as Bran the Blessed Sovereign. He was the first tobring the faith of Christ to the Cymry. His recorded proverb is: "Thereis no good apart from God". He also introduced the use of vellum in toBritain.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 160
~0890 - 14 Mar 0967/0968 Mechtildeof Ringleheim pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0943 - ABT 26 Jan 0981/0982 Mathildeof France pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0973 - 1016/1017 Gerberge of Bourgogne pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0836 - 0912 Otto I of Sachsen 76 76 pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0856 - 0903 Hedwig of Sachsen 47 47 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0841 - 0899 Arnulf Hre 58 58 ~0840 Oda of Bayern ~0828 - 0880 Carloman of Bayern 52 52 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0824 Litwindeof Carinthia 0806 - 0876 Ludwig II of E Franks 70 70 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Llyr (King Lear) "King Lear", was educated in Rome by Augustus Caesar. Among the "wisesayings" recorded by the Welsh Bards we find this attributed to Llyr, "Nofolly but ends in misery".
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 160
~0810 - 0876 Emma of Bayern 66 66 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0980 - 1036 Baudouin IV of Flandres 56 56 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0995 - 1030 Otgiva of Luxembourg 35 35 0961 - 30 Mar 0987/0988 Arnulph II of Flandres pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0960 - 1003 Rosela of Italy 43 43 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Douglas ~1598 - 1694 John Conkling 96 96 ~0863 - 0918 Baudouin II of Flandres 55 55 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0868 - 0929 Elfrida (Alfthryth) of England 61 61 pg 49, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0846 - >0870 Judith of Aquitaine 24 24 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Baran Baran "Caswallon", was King at the time of the Roman invasion. Theantagonist of Caesar, he successfully repulsed the armies of the ablestgeneral of antiquity, the conquerors of Europe, Asia and Africa. Hecontinued to reign after the invasion for seven years.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 159
~0836 - 2 Jan 0878/0879 Baudouin I of Flandres pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0778 - 0818 Ermengardeof Hasbaigne 40 40 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0795 - 0855 Lothair I Hre 60 60 pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1080 - >1155 William of Nottingham Peverel 75 75 ~1088 - >1149 Avice Lancaster 61 61 ~1062 - 1113 William Peverel 51 51 ~1054 - 19 Jan 1119/1120 Adeline (Adeliza) ~1078 Maud Peverel ~1058 - ~1123 Roger of Arundel & Shrewsbury Montgomery 65 65 ~1070 - 1116 Aumodis of La Marche 46 46 D. UNKNOWN Ceri ~1000 - 1035 Drogo (Dreux) of Vexin 35 35 pg 195, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition
~1135 - 7 Apr 1167/1168 Patrick of Salisbury devereux pg 1314, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition Roger or Robert of Bolingbroke Romare vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 457, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Offa of Angel Angeltheow Hagar the Egyptian ~1150 - <1200 John of Wellcomb Maltravers 50 50 ~0360 Gwrwst Ledlwm of deheubarth ~0400 Meirchion Gul of deheubarth D. 0978 Bouchard of Montmorency D. UNKNOWN Caid ~0961 Elizabeth of Crecy ~1050 - >1093 Bernard of Brecknock Neufmarche 43 43 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 1079/1085 Nesta or Agnes pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Edulph Aelfwyn of England vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" ~1120 - 1198 Robert de Quincy 78 78 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0990 - 1036 Osberne of Crepon 46 46 pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Alberadeof Bayeux pg 100, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0439 Elesa of Sachsen ~0438 Elsa of Sachsen D. UNKNOWN Arch ~0383 Gewis of Sachsen ~0355 Wig of Sachsen Frewine of Sachsen ~0327 Frithogar of Sachsen ~0271 Brandr of Scandinavia ~0243 Baeldaeg of Scandinavia ~0215 Odin of Asgard ~0190 Frithuwald ~0160 Freothalaf ~0130 Finn D. UNKNOWN Meiroin 1013 - 1040 Duncan I Scotland 27 27 Malcolm violated the established system of succession whereby thekingship alternated between two branches of the royal family. UponMalcolm's death, Duncan succeeded peacefully, but he soon faced therivalry of Macbeth, Mormaor (subking) of Moray, who probably had a betterclaim to the throne. Duncan besieged Durham unsuccessfully in 1039 and inthe following year was murdered by Macbeth near Elgin, Moray. Duncan'selder son later killed Macbeth and ruled as King Malcolm III Canmore. ~0100 Flocwald ~1641 - 1716 Hester Conkling 75 75 Geata (Jat) Taetwa Beaw (Bjaf) Sceldwa (Skjold) Heremod (Scaef) Itermon Hathra Hwala D. UNKNOWN Ceraint Bedwig >0725 Landradeof Austrasia Sigramine of Hasbaigne pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 D. 0778 Gunderland Xii of Hasbaigne pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~0753 Ingeramun of Hasbaign pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~0800 - 20 Mar 0850/0851 Ermengardeof Tours pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0827 - 0869 Lothar II of Lorraine 42 42 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0836 - 0868 Waldrada 32 32 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0871 - 0925 Bertha of Lorraine 54 54 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Sigrada D. UNKNOWN Greidiol 0885 - 0936 Boso of Tuscagne 51 51 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0906 Willa of Bourgogne pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
Leotald of Macon ~0921 - 0960 Raimond III of Toulouse 39 39 0847 - 0912 Rodolph I of Bourgogne 65 65 ~0860 - 0929 Willa of Bourgogne 69 69 Grimaldo II of Bayern Valtrude D. 0717 Teodon V of Bayern pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0650 - 0695 Grimaldo I of Bayern 45 45 pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Capoir D. <0630 Tassilo of Bayern D. 0630 Teodon III of Bayern Barbara Bannon <bannonb@accucom.net> Regintrudeof France Barbara Bannon <bannonb@accucom.net> 0586 - 0612 Theudebert II of Austrasia 26 26 ~0536 - ~0609 Bellichildis of Austrasia 73 73 0570 - 0596 Childebert II of Franks 26 26 D. 0596 Faileube ~0523 - 0575 Sigebert I of Austrasia 52 52 D. ~0614 Brunhilda of Visigoths pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0497 - 0561 Clothaire I of Austrasia 64 64 0780 - UNKNOWN Halfdan King of Frondheim ~0490 - 0589 Gunsindeof Thuringen 99 99 pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0520 - 0567 Athanagild of Visigoths 47 47 pg. 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0530 - ~0572 Hildis of Vandals 42 42 ~0456 Fridleif Frodasson of denmark ~0433 Frodi Dansson of denmark ~0412 Dan Olafsson of denmark ~0391 Olaf Vermundsson of denmark ~0369 Wermund Frodasson of denmark ~0347 Frodi Havarsson of denmark ~0325 Havar Fridleifsson of denmark 0670 - UNKNOWN Audur Diuphraudza Queen of Holmgard ~0303 Fridlief Frodasson of denmark ~0479 - 0530 Hilderic of Vandals in Africa 51 51 ~0496 Amfleda the younger ~0449 - 0480 Huneric of Vandals 31 31 ~0438 Eudoxia the younger D. 0496 Thrasamund of Vandals in Africa Amfleda of Ostrogoths ~0415 - 0477 Genseric of Vandals in Spain 62 62 ~1603 - 1667 Cornelius Conkling 64 64 Elisa of Granada 0663 - 0700 Roric Slingeband King Of denmark & Sweden 37 37 1638 - 1709 Benjamin Conkling 71 71 0419 - 16 Mar 0454/0455 Valentian III of Rome ~0425 - ~0462 Licinia Eudoxia 37 37 ~0325 - 0421 Constantius III of Rome 96 96 ~0390 - ~0450 Aelin Galla Placidia 60 60 Feb 0316/0317 - 0360 Flavius Constantius II of Rome Faustina 11 Jan 0346/0347 - 0395 Theodosius I of Rome Aelia Flavia Flacilla ~0377 - 0408 Arcadius of Byzantium 31 31 0560 - UNKNOWN Eudoxia of Rome Aelia Eudoxia of Franks 0401 - 0450 Theodosius II of Byzantium 49 49 D. 0454 Athenais Eudocia Galla 27 Feb 0272/0273 - 0337 Constantine of Rome ~0288 - ~0326 Flavia Maxima Fausta 38 38 0242 - 0306 Flavius Valerius Constantius I of Rome 64 64 0248 - 0328 Helena Augusta 80 80 ~0249 - ~0310 Maximianus Herculeus of Rome 61 61 0326 - 0375 Vallentinian I of Rome 49 49 0960 Sigrid Justina Gratian of Rome ~0340 Elen Lwyddog verch Eudaf Sevira verch Maxen D. 0530 Pabo Post Prydain of Pennines Gwladys verch Lleuvre <0139 - 0181 Lleuver Mawr ap Coel ofSiluria 42 42 ~0150 Gwladys verch Eurgen ~0120 Coel ap Cyllin of Siluria ~0100 Cyllin ap Caradoc of Siluria 1120 - 1182 Odinel deUmfreville Lord of Prudhoe 62 62 ~0080 Caradoc ap Bran of Siluria pg 160, Wurtz Magna Carta Eurgen of Britons D. ~0125 Meric of Britons 0060 - ~0125 Coilus of Britons 65 65 <0100 Venus Julia of Iceni ~0200 Eutropious of Dardana ~0205 Claudia Crispina 0214 - 0270 Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius of Rome 56 56 ~0320 - <0376 Flavius Theodosius 56 56 ~0320 Thermantia of Constantinople 0866 - UNKNOWN Elgiva Ordgar deDevon Gelimer of Vandals Eurica of Goths D. 0411 Adulfus of Goths of Savoy Oda of Savoy pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 0601/0611 - 0640 Arnold of Metz Blithildeof France Tontantius of Gaul deuteria ~0437 - 0481 Childeric I of Franks 44 44 0986 - 1067 Richard Count of Evereux 81 81 D. >0511 Tontantius Ferreolus of Gaul 0465 - 0511 Clovis I of Franks 46 46 0475/0478 - 0545 Clothildeof Bourgogne ~0438 - >0470 Basina of Thuringen 32 32 ~0411 - >0458 Meroveus of Franks 47 47 ~0370 - 0430 Pharamond of Franks 60 60 ~0376 Argotta of Franks ~0262 - 0358 Genbald of E. Franks 96 96 ~0347 - 0404 Marcomir I of E Franks 57 57 ~0324 - 0389 Clodius I of E Franks 65 65 1030 - UNKNOWN Agnes D'Evereux 0300/0305 - 0379 Dagobert of E Franks <0654 - 0680 Dagobert II of Austrasia 26 26 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Dagobert I of Franks <0268 - 0306 Walter of Franks 38 38 <0264 - 0298 Clodius II of Franks 34 34 ~0137 - 0213 Sunno of Franks 76 76 0122 - 0186 Farabert of Franks 64 64 ~0129 - ~0166 Clodomir IV of Franks 37 37 <0128 - ~0149 Marcomir IV of Franks 21 21 ~0405 - <0449 Clodius of Westphalia 44 44 1279 - 1332 Richard de Whitfield 53 53 Richard Whitfield had sons Gilbert and Robert de Whitfield, Lord of Whitfield, whose second son John Whitfield became Lord of Whitfield after the death of his older brother. <0398 Basina of Thuringen Weldelphus of Thuringen <0453 Ferreolus of Moselle Papinilla of Syagrius <0114 - ~0128 OdomIr of Franks 14 14 <0114 Hasilda of Rugij of Rugij <0090 - ~0114 Richemer I of Franks 24 24 0087 Athildis of Britain D. 0741 Unknown Adelbertus D. 0061 Pratsutagus of Iceni ~0026 - 0062 Boudicca of Iceni 36 36 D. 0074 Arviragus of Britain D. ~0050 Venissa Julia BEF 0030 BC - 0027 Cymbeline of Siluria ABT 0059 BC - 0026 BC Tenuantius of Britons ABT 0079 BC - 0018 BC Lud of Britons BEF 0162 BC - 0072 BC Beli Mawr of Britain Mynogan ap Capoir of Wales BEF 0220 BC Capoir of Druids 0876 - 0936 Heinrich I "The Fowler" King Of The Germans 60 60 Also the Empereror of the Holy Roman Empire. Por Sawyl (Benisel) Rhydderch Rhodawr Eidal Arthvael Sitsylt of Britain Owain of Britain Caffo of Britain Bleiddyd of Britain 1182 - UNKNOWN Hawise Basset Merion 1634 - 1713 Jeremiah Conkling 78 78 0038 BC - 0009 BC Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus Antonia the younger ABT 0060 BC - 0033 BC Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero ABT 0058 BC - 0029 BC Livia Drusilla Julia Augusta 0083 BC - Aug 0030 BC Marcus Antonius III ABT 0064 BC - 0011 BC Octavia the elder 0103 BC - 0071 BC Marcus Antonius II Creticus ABT 0103 BC - 0071 BC Julia Caesaria 1152 Joane Waleries 0143 BC - 0087 BC Marcus Antonius I ABT 0170 BC Gaius Antonius ABT 0123 BC - AFT 0088 BC Lucius Julius Caesar III ABT 0090 BC - 0043 BC Atia Balbus Caius Octavius III Marcus Atius Balbus D. 0052 BC Julia ABT 0143 BC Lucius Julius Caesar II ABT 0165 BC Sextus Julius Caesar II ABT 0185 BC Sextus Julius Caesar 1222 - 1269 Idonea deLongespée 47 47 ABT 0215 BC Lucius Julius Caesar ABT 0250 BC Numerius Julius Caesar BEF 0250 BC Caius Octavius II Caius Octavius I D. AFT 0330 BC Enius Octavius Rufus D. 0084 BC Caius Julius II Caesar Aurelia ABT 0163 BC Caius Julius I Caesar Marcia Quintas Marcius Rex D. UNKNOWN William deLanvallel Surety for the Magna Charta.  References: Browning's Magna Charta, pp.111, 181, 753. Burke's Dor., pp. 181, 88-90. Genealogist New Series, Vol.18, p. 189. ~0270 Tegid of Britain <0069 - ~0090 Rathaerius of Franks 21 21 D. ~0069 Atenor IV of Franks ~0045 - ~0090 Ratherius of Franks 45 45 ~0003 - 0063 Clodomir III of Franks 60 60 D. 0020 Marcomir III of Franks D. ~0020 Clodius II of Franks D. 0037 BC Antharius of Sicambri D. 0074 BC Cassander of Sicambri of Cambrai 1187 - UNKNOWN Joan deBriwere 0984 Bethoc Scotland D. 0095 BC Merodacus of Sicambri D. 0123 BC Clodomir II of Sicambri D. 0143 BC Antenor III of Sicambri D. 0159 BC Clodius I of Sicambri D. 0170 BC Marcomir II of Sicambri D. 0198 BC Nicanor of Sicambri D. 0232 BC Clodomir I of Sicambri D. 0250 BC Bassanus Magnus of Sicambri D. 0300 BC Diocles of Sicambri D. 0339 BC Helenus V of Sicambri 1090 - 1115 William de Briwere 25 25 D. 0358 BC Priamus of Sicambri D. 0384 BC Antenor II of Sicambri D. ABT 0412 BC Marcomir I of Sicambri D. ABT 0443 BC Antenor I of Commerians ~1123 - >1175 Rohese de Clare 52 52 ~1030 Poncia ~0976 - 1047 Bernard I of La Marche 71 71 ~0990 - ~1072 Amelie of Aulnay 82 82 ~0925 Kuno of Ohningen pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0952 - 0999 Richildeof Germany 47 47 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Loretta La Zouche ~1058 - 23 Mar 1102/1103 Eudes of Bourgogne pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1065 - 1102 Maud of Bourgogne 37 37 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0983/0990 - 1037 Eudes II of Blois pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
vol 3, pg 198 Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"
~0989 - 10 Mar 1041/1042 Ermengardeof Auvergne pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition D. ~1030 Raoul II de Crepi 0980 Adele Breteuil D. ~0904 Thibaud of Troyes pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0892 Richildeof Bourges pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0950 - 12 Mar 0995/0996 Eudes I of Blois pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0962 - ~1016 Berthe of Bourgogne 54 54 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1197 - 23 Feb 1237/1238 Hugh Le despenser D. 1032 Robert of Auvergne pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~0975 Ermengardeof Toulouse pg 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0972 - 25 Feb 1018/1019 Ramon Borrell I of Barcelona pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 55, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~0978 - 1 Mar 1057/1058 Ermensindeof Carcassone ~1002 - 1038 Liudolf of Sachsen 36 36 ~1018 - 1077 Gertrudeof Egisheim 59 59 0961 - 0993 Arnulf I of W Friesland 32 32 ~0963 - >0995 Liutgardeof Luxembourg 32 32 ~0960 - ABT 1003/1006 Bruno II of Sachsen pg. 20, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0995 - 14 Feb 1042/1043 Gisele of Schwaben pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 20, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928
1144 - 14 Jan 1202/1203 Gerald FitzMaurice FitzGerald Baron of Offlay ~0950 - 1003 Hermann II of Schwaben 53 53 pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0918 - 0955 Heinrich I of Bayern 37 37 ~0925 - 0978 Jutta of Bayern 53 53 ~0886 - 0937 Arnulf I of Bayern 51 51 Gerberge of Wurzburg Kunigundeof France ~0826 - 0879 Gebhard in Lahngau 53 53 ~0715 Kunhildeof Rugen Edna ~0922 - 0973 Hermann Billung of Sachsen 51 51 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN John deCogan ~0800 - 0844 Harold of Haithabu 44 44 ~1035 - 27 Jan 1070/1074 Henri of Bourgogne pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1035 - 1074 Sibylle of Barcelona 39 39 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. ~1095 Pedro Ansurez of Valladolid pg. 46, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0898 - <0957 Arnaud I of Comminges 59 59 ~0912 - >0969 Arsindeof Carcassone 57 57 ~0935 - >1011 Roger I of Carcassone 76 76 ~0925 - 0992 Borrel II of Barcelona 67 67 pg 55, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Leutgardeof Toulouse ~1023 - 1076 Ramon I of Barcelona 53 53 pg 55, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Marie dePrenDergast ~1010 - 1071 Adelmodeof La Marche 61 61 pg 213, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ABT 1003/1005 - 1035 Ramon Berenger of Barcelona pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 55, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~1006 - 1026 Sancha Sanchez of Castile 20 20 pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0970 - 1038 Bernard Roger of Foix 68 68 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1000 GersindeArnaudez of Bigorre ~0947 - <1000 Arnoud I of Bigorre 53 53 ~0949 - >1011 Adelais of Rouergue & Carcassone 62 62 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 56, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~1009 - <1095 Gui I of Corbeil & Montlhery 86 86 pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Payne Roet Guienne King of Arms
The Roet arms elsewhere occur at the tomb of Sir Pain's daughter, Katherine(de Roet) Swynford, at Lincoln Cathedral, as well as at the tombs of his other daughter, Philippe's son, Thomas Chaucer, Esq., and Thomas' daughter, Alice Chaucer, Duchess of Suffolk, at Ewelme, Oxfordshire (see H.A. Napier Hist. Notices of the Parishes of Swyncombe & Ewelme (1858): 44–45, 102–103; E.A.G. Lamborn Armorial Glass of the Oxford Diocese 1250-1850 (1949): 125–127). Included in the published 1683 Visitation of Warwick (H.S.P. 62) (1911): 154–155, I find a patent of arms and crest granted to Thomas Andrewe and his brothers dated 1334 by "Sir Payne Roet, Guyan [Guienne] King of Arms." Sir Pain's name doesn't appear in the body of the actual document. However, the seal attached to the document clearly bears Sir Pain de Roet's arms: Gules three Catharine Wheels Or, 2 and 1.
~0789 - 0878 Rhodri Mawr ap Merfyn 89 89 1165 - 1226 Sibyl deEwyas 61 61 Irmina ~0825 Angharad verch Meurig Witberga ~1070 Arnoul Picquigny ~1054 - <1145 Picquigny 91 91 ~1084 Aenor Toteneis pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1049 - 1087/1090 William Braose pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1054 Agnes of St Clare ~1049 - >1193 Johel Toteneis 144 144 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1015 Alured Toteneis 1250 - 1291 Emmeline deLongespee 41 41 Geoffrey Neufmarche pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1030 Ada of Hugelville pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1055 - >1100 Osberne fitz Richard 45 45 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1030 - ~1067 Richard fitz Scrob 37 37 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Essex Scrob Thurcytel pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >1053 Richard of Hugelville pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0977 - >1011 Gilbert of St. Valery 34 34 Papia of Normandy pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 178,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928
1202 Sibyl de Ferrers ~0960 - 1019 Geoffroi II of Semur 59 59 pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0951 - <1019 Mathildeof Chalons 68 68 ~0945 - >1015 Geoffroi I of Semur 70 70 <0928 - 22 Feb 0978/0979 Lambert of Chalons pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0920 - 0968 Robert of Troyes 48 48 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0950 - 0975 Adelaideor Adela of Bourgogne 25 25 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0898 - >0959 Robert of Autun 61 61 D. >0958 Ingeltrude D. 1060 Hugues V of Lusignan pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1015 - 1093 Aimeri IV of Thouars 78 78 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
1234 - 1296 Tommaso deSaluzzo I Mar de Saluzzo 62 62 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1200 Richard Foliot ~1017 Auremgarde Moulcon pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <0931 - ~0970 Juhel Berenger of Rennes 39 39 pg 188, 'The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0960 - 1015 Lambert I of Louvaine 55 55 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0973 - >1017 Gerberge of L Lorraine 44 44 pg 127 & 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~0496 Pewyr verch Rhun of Wales ~0990 - 1069 Waleran of Meulan 79 79 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0994 Oda of Conteville ~1002 - ~1038 Robert Grentmesnil 36 36 ~1007 Hawise Eschauffen ~0968 - ~1020 Giroie of Escalfoy Eschauffen 52 52 0535 - 0601 Arnoldus Bishop of Metz 66 66 ~0978 Gisele Montfort ~0985 - 1015 Ernst I of Swaben 30 30 pg. 104, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Maud ~1004 - 1049 Eustace I of Boulogne 45 45 pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1006 - ~1049 Mahaut (Maud) of Louvaine 43 43 pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1613 - 1639 Mary Lavender 26 26 ~0976 Ernicule II of Boulogne Hildegard Blois D. 0972 Ernicule of Boulogne ~1114 Henry Briwere 1249 - 1300 Edmund of Cornwall Plantagenet Earl of Cornwall 50 50 ~1086 William Briwere Brogo Briwere ~1070 - 1147 Hervey Glanville 77 77 Matilda ~0944 - ~1027 Gauthier II de Valois 83 83 Adela of Senlis pg. 89 & 112,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Bernard of Senlis pg. 111,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~0921 Pepin II of Senlis pg. 111,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~0893 Pepin I of Senlis pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 D. ~1070 Winemarde Hanslope 1286 - 1333 Margaret deClare 47 47 ~1018 - 1080 Ranulph St. Liz 62 62 pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Ermengarde D. 1050 Foulques of Chantilly D. ~0995 Rotholdeof St Liz pg. 117 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1061 - ~1086 Ranulph Glanville 25 25 ~1061 Flandrina ~1043 - >1070 Rainauld of Glanville 27 27 ~1025 Richard of Belfoi & Glanville pg 123, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1007 - 1045 Hamon of St. Sauveur 38 38 pg 123, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Godchild 1259 - 1353 Julianne FitzMaurice FitzGerald 94 94 Ruivallon of Vitre pg. 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Genergan of Vicaire pg. 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0980 - 1023 Llewellyn ap Seisyll of Gwynedd 43 43 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition daughter of Simon ha-Kohen D. <1156 Robert of Curry Malet Malet D. >1086 Helewise ~0965 - 1032 Dietrich I of Lothringen 67 67 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0977 - 1029 Richildeof Luneville 52 52 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0945 - 1019 Friedrich I of Luxembourg 74 74 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0964 Irmtrudeof Gleiberg pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1224 Ela deLongespee ~0918 - 0998 Siegfried of Luxembourg 80 80 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0992 Hedwig in Nordgau pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0925 - 0992 Heribert I in Kinziggau 67 67 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0940 Irmintrudeof Avalgau pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928
Mathilda (Maud) of Normandy ~0870 Ermentrudeof Franks ~0916 - 0960 Alix of Vermandois 44 44 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 1085 Eustace Picquigny Guermond Picquigny Adele 1216 - UNKNOWN Hawise deLouvain D. ~1000 Landry of Beaugency pg 175, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0989 - 1036 Herbert of Maine 47 47 pg 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. >1015 Hugues III of Maine D. ~0992 Hugues II of Maine ~0970 - 1060 Hildouin of Breteuil 90 90 ~0974 Emmeline of Chartres pg. 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0948 Fouche of Chartres pg. 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0950 Garcio Arnoldez of Bigorre ~0947 Bernard I of St. Valery ~0950 Emma of St. Valery 1236 - 1306 Isabel deBeauchamp 70 70 Lineage Sources:
    Hutchin's History of Dorset, Vol. 1, p. 366.
    Lewis' Manuscripts, pp. 54, 56, 22, 88, 161, 186, 223
    Welles and Allied Families (Am. Hist. Soc. Pub. 1937), pp. 143, 157,142, 160.
    Dugdale's Baronage of England, Vol. 1, p. 68/9.
    Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, pp. 111, 261, 399.
~0919 Renaud I of St. Valery Papia Bouchard IV of Vendome pg. 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Elizabeth ~0560 Ega ~0594 Leudefindis ~0538 Richemeres of Franconia ~0564 Gerberge of Franconia ~0928 - <0986 Hugo V in Nordgau 58 58 ~0998 - >1035 Beatrix of Hainault 37 37 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Hawise devereux 1013 - 1052 Guaimar V of Salerno 39 39 pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0960 - >1037 Hildouin II of Roucy & Montdidier 77 77 Lesseline Dammartin D. 1027 Guaimar IV of Salerno pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928

pg. 211, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
Gatelgrima of Capua pg 184, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928

pg. 211, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
James Train ~1045 - >1121 Godfroi of Guise 76 76 pg 186, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1050 - >1121 Adela of Roucy 71 71 pg 186, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Aenor of Lusignan pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1169 William de Hastings D. 1139 Guillaume V of Thouars pg. 187,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 1127 Aimeri V of Thouars pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ameline ~1018 Agnes of Cornouaille pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1044 - 1119 Alan IV of Bretagne 75 75 pg 46, 108 & 116"Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 1076 Ermengardeof Anjou pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1084 Hoel of Bretagne pg 46 & 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1140 - 1222 Maud deBannaster 82 82 0929 - 0980 Ferguard Thane 51 51 ~1028 - 1072 Hawise of Bretagne 44 44 pg 46 & 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 1058 Alan of Cornouaille pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1064 Judith of Nantes pg 188, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1026 Benedict of Cornouaille Guinodeon of Porhoet Robert Castell Judicael of Nantes pg 188, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of Maine pg 188, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0971 - 1031 Guichard I of Beaujeu 60 60 ~0971 Adelaide ~1128 - 1207 Ingelram I of Martock Fiennes 79 79 pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1132 Sybil of Boulogne pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1100 - >1187 John or Alan Fiennes 87 87 Hannah Paine Died leaving a daughter. ~1105 Anne Dreux <1109 - ABT 1183/1184 Faramus of Boulogne pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1104 Conan Fiennes Alice of Bournonville ~1081 Eustace I Fiennes ~1085 Adele Furnes D. ~1126 Louis of Bournonville D. 1126 Silvie ~1059 Erard Furnes ~1063 Adela Selverse 1627 Hannah Paine Hannah died leaving 3 children. Her husband Samuel remarried a lady by the name of Mary Oliver. D. 1084 Gerard of Bournonville Eleburg of Seclis D. 1071 Guillaume of Bournonville of Bournonville Gerard of Bournonville Ernicule of Boulogne pg 190, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Edith of Bourbourg of Bourbourg D. 1230 Nicholas of Conde pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1120 - >1200 Roger of Conde 80 80 pg 191, "The Ancestry Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 1131 - 1190 William deHastings Lord Hastings 59 59 ~1140 Alix of Mons pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Arnoul II of Moreaumes ~0964 Gossuin of Mons pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1125 Beatrix of Rumigny pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1091 - >1140 Isaac of Mons 49 49 pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1106 Ida D. 1156 Nicholas I of Rumigny pg 199, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1125 - ~1161 Arnoul of Moreaumes 36 36 Eustace III of Roeux ~1189 of Mortaigne pg. 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1235 Henry II de Hastings Eustace II of Roeux Bertha of Gavre D. 1192 Eustace I of Roeux Marie of Molanwelz D. 1150 Bertrand of Gavre D. ~1126 Ida of Chievres Arnulph of Hainault pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Beatrix of Roeux Jean of Mons pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Rasse III of Gavre 1238/1240 Joan de Cantelou Ida of Roeux Gui of Chievres pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Gauthier of Roeux ~1050 of Mons pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1004 - ~1096 Gossuin II of Mons 92 92 pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1020 - ~1096 Jeanne (Irmengarde) 76 76 Jean of Gavre Isabel of Alost D. 1056 Rasse II of Gavre Catherine of Cysoing pg 191, "The Ancestry Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 1216 William III de Cantelou D. ~1030 Rasse I of Gavre pg 191, "The Ancestry Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 D. ~1000 Louis of Gavre pg 191, "The Ancestry Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 Estrudeof Aquitaine Maud of Bethune D. 1141 Simon I of Bruay ~1085 - 1114 Agnes of Baudemont 29 29 ~1105 - ~1161 Gauthier II of Brienne 56 56 ~1085 Lithuise of Blois D. ~1056 Manasses III of Rethel pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 197, 'The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
Yevette of Roucy pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 197, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1238 - 1298 William IV deBeauchamp 60 60 William de Beauchamp, who inherited not only the feudal barony of Elmlyfrom his father, but had previously derived from his mother the Earldomof Warwick and the barony of Hameslape from the de Maudits. He marriedMaud, one of the daughters and co-heirs of Richard FitzJohn, son of JohnFitzGeoffrey, Chief Justice of Ireland, and had Guy and five daughters:Isabel, Maud, Margaret, Anne and Amy. He died 1298 and was first Earl ofWarwick of the Beauchamp family, having previous to his mother's deathused the style and title of Earl of Warwick. D. ~0990 Manasses I of Rethel ~0869 - 0908 Gisele of Lorraine 39 39 1605 - 10 Feb 1685/1686 John Dugdale D. ~1077 Renard of Toul pg 197, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1052 Huges I of Bruay pg 197, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~1038 Isembert of Bruay Renart of Bruay Heloise of Blois ~1054 - >1080 Eudo Rie 26 26 Etain ingen Mongan 1198 - UNKNOWN John deMontalt Bauto of Franks Robert Lacy pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1245 - 1301 Maud FitzJohn 56 56 ~1220 - 1283 Adam deNovo Mercato De Newmarch 63 63 1256 Robert de Hastings Ralph de Ardenne ~1022 - >1058 Raoul of Alost 36 36 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >1058 Gisele of Luxembourg pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1077 - 1124 Gervaise of Rethel 47 47 pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
vol 1,  pg 671 Burkes Landed Gentry
~1090 - >1144 Elizabeth or Isabel of Namur 54 54 pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1070 - ~1110 Sybil of Porcien 40 40 pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 199, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
D. ~1096 Roger of Porcien pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1220 - UNKNOWN Maud deVaux Hescelin of Grandpre pg. 199, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Aelis ~1020 - 1059 Friedrich of Formbach 39 39 D. 21 Feb 1115/1116 Gertrudeof Haldensleben ~1001 - 1046/1047 Gerhard III of Metz ~1002 Gisele of Alsace D. <1056 Konrad of Haldensleben D. ABT 1044/1045 Bernhard II of Haldensleben D. 1018 Bernard I in Nordgau D. ~1055 Dalmace I of Semur pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Albert deEste ~1000 - 1060 Aremburge of Vergy 60 60 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Gerard of Vergy pg. 201, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Elisabeth of Chalons Uralon of Vergy pg. 201, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Judith of Fonvens D. ~0990 Gerard I of Fonvens ~1052 Isabel Monthlery D. 1002 Aesinde(Adelaide) of Anjou pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0903 of Arles ~1052 - <1110 Thibaud II of Dampierre 58 58 D. UNKNOWN Anne deStafford ~1025 - 1100 Guillaume I of Nevers 75 75 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1030 - ~1085 Ermengardeof Tonnerre 55 55 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Etienne of Gevaudan D. 0937 Ermengaud of Rouergue Adelaide 1231 - 1305 John deWarenne 7th Earl of Warren & Surrey 74 74 ~0871 - 0924 Francon of Narbonne 53 53 pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1223 - 9 Feb 1254/1255 Alice Le Brun D. ~0511 Teodon I of Bayern D. UNKNOWN John deStanford of the Burgunds ~1227 - 1312 Mabel de Somery 85 85 William Hill William de Dunstan 1166 - UNKNOWN Roger La Zouche Roger la Zouche in Cambridgeshire had, for his fidelity to King John, agrant from that monarch for the manors of Petersfield and Maple Durham,part of the lands of Geoffrey de Mandeville, one of the rebellious baronsthen in arms. In the reign of Henry III he was Sheriff of Devonshire andhad further grants from the crown. Joan ~0845 Bertha of Rheims Aminiana Fredelon 1109 - UNKNOWN Hugh deLacy 1045 - 1087 Roger deChateau- Porcien 42 42 1150 - 1199 Alice Capet France 49 49 Remigus of Rheims Arsindeof Ponthieu pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0967 Hugues III of Lusignan pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Arsende <0935 Hugues II of Lusignan pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0962 - ~1015 Joscelin of Courtenay 53 53 pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1036 - 1092 Boson II of Chastellerault 56 56 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1055 - 1093 Eleanor of Thouars 38 38 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1014 - ~1069 Hugues I of Chastellerault 55 55 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1016 Gerberge of Roche pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1130 - >1198 Piers deLutegareshale 68 68 D. 1012 Boson I of Chastellerault Amelie ~0982 - >1037 Fouchaud of Roche & Courtenay 55 55 Yogi Berra's Colorful Quotes:
" It ain't over 'til it's over "  "Never answer an anonymous letter" " I usually take a two hour nap from one to four" " It's deja vu all over again" " When you come to a fork in the road....Take it " " I didn't really say everything I said " " You can observe a lot by watching " When asked what time is was......" you mean now?" At Yogi Berra Day in St. Louis 1947 " I want to thank you for making this day necessary" " If the world were perfect, it wouldn't be " Yogi on the 1969 NY Mets....." overwhelming underdogs " " If the people don't want to come out to the ballpark, nobody's going to stop them " On why NY lost the 1960 series to Pittsburgh " We made too many wrong mistakes"  " The future ain't what it used to be " " It gets late early out here"  Phil Rizzuto - "Hey Yogi I think we're lost." Yogi Berra - "Ya, but we're making great time!"  pg 9, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0994 Gersindeof Chastellerault Yogi Berra's Colorful Quotes:
" It ain't over 'til it's over "  "Never answer an anonymous letter" " I usually take a two hour nap from one to four" " It's deja vu all over again" " When you come to a fork in the road....Take it " " I didn't really say everything I said " " You can observe a lot by watching " When asked what time is was......" you mean now?" At Yogi Berra Day in St. Louis 1947 " I want to thank you for making this day necessary" " If the world were perfect, it wouldn't be " Yogi on the 1969 NY Mets....." overwhelming underdogs " " If the people don't want to come out to the ballpark, nobody's going to stop them " On why NY lost the 1960 series to Pittsburgh " We made too many wrong mistakes"  " The future ain't what it used to be " " It gets late early out here"  Phil Rizzuto - "Hey Yogi I think we're lost." Yogi Berra - "Ya, but we're making great time!"
Gersindeof Mortimer ~0895 - 0962 Guillaume I of Angouleme 67 67 ~0862 - 17 Mar 0915/0916 Aldouin I of Angouleme pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 ~0835 - 0886 Vulgrim I of Angouleme 51 51 ~0842 Roselindeof Agenois pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 ~0795 - 0844 Bernard of Toulose 49 49 pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 D. UNKNOWN Joane deQuincy ~0807 Duodene of France pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 D. 0844 Guillaume of Septimania ~0786 Guibour of Hornbach ~0713 - ~0782 Thierry IV of Autun 69 69 Audeof Austrasia D. 0997 Adalbert I La Marche pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0956 - 1007/1011 Almodeof Limoges pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0905 - >0975 Boso I of La Marche 70 70 pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0910 Emme of Perigord pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Sulpice of La Marche pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1064 - 8 Mar 1134/1135 Adela Princess of England D. >0890 Geoffroi pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0864 - ~0918 Guilaume II of Perigord 54 54 1190 - 1257 John of M Monmouth 67 67 D. ~1240 Alured Lincoln Stuteville pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition
John of Long Lawford Stuteville pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition Robert Stuteville ~1147 - <1211 Adam Alditheley 64 64 vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Fulk Paganel pg 80, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 >0935 - 0994 Sancho II Garciez of Pamplona 59 59 pg. 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 1254 - 1322 William deBraose VII Lord Braose of Gower 68 68 D. >1007 Urraca Clara Fortunez of Navarre pg. 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0919 - ~0970 Garcio I Sanchez of Pamplona 51 51 D. 0972 Teresa Ramirez of Leon pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0865 - 0925 Sancho I Garciez of Pamplona 60 60 ~0885 - >0970 Toda Aznarez of Larron 85 85 D. ~0885 Garcio II Inegez of Pamplona Urraca Sanchez of Gascogne D. 0842 Inigo Ximenez of Navarre Iniga Ximenez D. 0816 Ximeno Adelricez of Gascogne 1210 - UNKNOWN Isabel deConDe Munia Sancho II Sanchez of Gascogne Aznar Sanchez of Larron ~0846 - 0931 Oneca of Pamplona 85 85 D. ~0872 Sancho I of Gascogne pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Fortuno Ximenez of Navarre pg. 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 Ximeno Garcia of Navarre pg. 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 Laino Fernandez Fernando Lainez Ximena Nunez 1194 - UNKNOWN Jacques deCondé Balleul Nuno Fernandez Lain Calvo Teresa Elvira Nunez of Amaya D. ~0954 Nuno Nunez of Amaya Sulla Diaz of Castile pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Diego Rodriguez of Castile pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Asura Fernandez ~0910 - ~0970 Fernando Gonzales of Lara 60 60 Sancha Sanchez of Pamplona D. ~0932 Gonsalo Fernandez of Burgos pg 17, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Nicholas deCondé Chodoswintha ~0785 - ~0873 Rodrigo Ramirez of Castile 88 88 pg 17, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0780 - 1 Feb 0849/0850 Ramiro I Vermundez of Asturias pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0722 - ~0765 Fruelo Perez of Cantabria 43 43 D. 0762 Gonsalo Fruiz of Lara ~0730 - 0797 Vermundo I Fruiz of Asturias 67 67 pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Fernando Ansurez Nuna ~0910 - 0970 Fernando Gonzalez of Lara 60 60 pg 17, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0903 - 0959 Sancha Sanchez of Pamplona 56 56 pg 17, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Isabel deMoreaumes D. 0932 Gonsalo Fernandez of Lara pg 17, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Tello Telez of Galicia Aragonta Gonsalez of Lara Tello of Galicia ~0920 - ~0973 Regnier III of Hainault 53 53 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Daughter deRouex Louis of Dasbourg ~0772 - 0814 Charles of Aachen 42 42 D. UNKNOWN Eustace deRouex 1017 Mathilde de Verdun Evesna of Sachsen ~0929 - 1020 Hermann I of Rhine 91 91 D. UNKNOWN Marie deMortaigne ~0931 Heilwig of Dillengen 0966 - 0990 Otto I of Zutphen 24 24 pg. 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of Pont pg 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1018 Gerlach of Zutphen pg. 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Werner of Zutphen pg. 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Bertha of Alsace ~0952 - 1024 Eberhard V in Nordgau 72 72 D. 0986 Luitgarde(Bertha) of Metz D. 0955 Theobald I of Dillingen D. 0910 Hupald I of Dillingen 1162 - UNKNOWN Agnes deMendoza D. 0966 Eberhard II in Niederlahngau D. 0902 Eberhard I of Niederlahngau Amalrada (Wildrat) Luitgardeof Chiny Mathilda D. 0963 Wichard II of Pont pg 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0948 Godfroi of Pont pg 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Adela D. 0927 Gerlach of Pont pg 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0900 Wichard of Pont pg 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Tereza dePortugal D. ~0850 Otto of Pont pg 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1654 Joseph Foster 1143 - 1219 Raoul I deLusignan Count D'Eu 76 76 ~0810 - 0856 Walpert of Ringelheim 46 46 ~0812 Altburgis of Ringleheim pg 23, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0712 Aripert II of Lombards Reginpert of Turin D. 0662 Godepert of Lombards D. 0661 Aripert I of Lombards D. 0612 Gundwald of Asti D. <0592 Garibald of Bayern Walerada of Lombards ~0555 - 0584 Teodebert of Bayern 29 29 pg. 27, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1168 - UNKNOWN Roger 'Helle' deLacy Lord Pontefract ~0525 - 0565 Teodon IV of Bayern 40 40 pg. 27, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Wacho of Lombards Ostragotha of Gepidae Elemund of Gepidae D. >0523 Sigismund ~0830 - >0861 Sieghard in Kraichgau 31 31 ~0834 Rabold in Ambergau D. 0889 Arnoul of Bayern ~0855 - 0908 Sieghard I of Bayern 53 53 ~0859 - 0908 Kotini of Ebersburg 49 49 1180 William IV deBraose D. 0919 Rabold of Ebersburg Engemunt <0928 - ~0969 Adalbert I of Ebersberg 41 41 pg 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0969 Luitgardeof Preising Ernst V of Sualafeld pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 >0930 - 1000 Markwart III of Carinthia 70 70 D. 0963 Wilhelm of Thuringen pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0945 Poppo III of Thuringen pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Poppo II of Thuringen pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Poppo I of Thuringen 1135 - 1204 Petronilla Scudamore 69 69 ~0925 - 0991 Lothar II of Stade 66 66 pg. 30,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0880 Suanhilde ~0860 - 0907 Luitpold in Nordgau 47 47 ~0864 Kunigundeof Schwaben ~0842 - 0910 Berthold III of Schwaben 68 68 of Breisgau Erchange of Breisgau ~0820 - 0875 Chadaloh II 55 55 0795 - 0826 Berthold II 31 31 ~0770 - 0819 Chadaloh I of Friuli 49 49 1120 - UNKNOWN William deTregoz 0747 - 0802 Berthold I 55 55 ~0690 - BEF 16 Jan 0761/0762 Richbaud in Breisgau D. <0976 Dietrich I of Wettin pg. 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~0925 Jutta of Merseburg D. 0957 dedi of Hesse pg. 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 D. ~0919 Burkhard III of Wettin Dion of Merseburg pg 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0985 Dietrich I of Haldensleben D. 0954 Eckard II of Thuringen pg 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0982 Gunther of Merseburg pg 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1124 - UNKNOWN Agnes deLucy D. 0871 Eckard I of Sachsen ~0692 Pedro Diaz of Cantabria D. 0687 Ervik of Visigoths Liubigotona of Visigoths Ardabast of Visigoths Goda ~0583 Athanagild of Visigoths Flavia Juliana ~0563 - 0586 Herminegild II of Visigoths 23 23 <0565 - 0585 Ingunda of Austrasia 20 20 1026 Alexander de Scudamore Matilda deVienne Pedro Paulez of Arabisso Paulo of Arabisso Joan D. 0633 Swinthila of Visigoths ~0585 Teodora of Visigoths ~0559 - 0601 Reccared of Visigoths 42 42 Clodeswindeof France >0526 - 0586 Leodegild of Westgoten 60 60 pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Theodosia of Cartegena pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0560 - 0621 Sigebut of Visigoths 61 61 1030 - UNKNOWN Robert deClifford Mendo Mendez Hermensenda Agatonez of Bierzo pg 38, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0856 Agatano Ermangildez of Bierzo pg 38, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Egilona D. ~0825 Ermengild of Coimbra D. ~0760 Theudo of Coimbra Atulfo of Coimbra D. ~0714 Sisibuto of Coimbra D. 0710 Witika of Galicia ~0965 Menendo Gonsalez of Valdez 1030 - UNKNOWN Jane Catchman Amalaric II Cixillo Gonsalo Garciez of Galicia D. ~0930 Garcio Diaz of Valdez pg. 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0900 Diego Faralandez of Valdez pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Faralando Rolandez Flora of Valdez pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0797 Roland of Angleria D. 0800 Milon of Angleria Bertha of Franks 1150 Julia de Dammartin Valdo Diaz of Valdez pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Diego Mendez Munia Pelayez of Valdez pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 John Dugdale ~1689 George Dudley Capt. Theodora of Ostrogoths pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1182 William II de Cantelou Severino of Cartagena pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0917 Werner in Wormsgau pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Kunigundeof Germany D. 0905 Konrad of Oberlahngau pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0924 Glismodeof Gravensburg pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1100 - UNKNOWN Annabil deGresley D. 0881 Konrad of Lahngau pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of Gravensburg pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0900 - 0967 Billung in Sachsen 67 67 ~0922 Hildegardis of Westerburg pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0840 - ~0899 Arnoul of Bayern 59 59 ~1000 - 1057 Imagi of Luxembourg 57 57 ~0965 - 10 Mar 1029/1030 Guelph III of Altdorf ~0927 - 10 Apr 0985/0990 Rudolf II of Bayern ~0953 - >1000 Itha of Ohningen 47 47 1096 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deTregoz ABT 0905/0910 - >1050 Rudolf I of Altdorf Siburgis ~0883 - >0934 Heinrich in Ammergau 51 51 D. >0975 Beata Atha of Hohenwart ~0850 - ~0910 Eticho II in Breisgau 60 60 Adelinda (Egila) D. <0876 Guelf II in Argengau & Linz ~0805 - 0870 Ethico I of Bayern 65 65 pg. 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0850 Judith of Wessex pg. 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0914 Guilla of Spoleto pg. 41, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 1158 - UNKNOWN Robert le Vavasour High Sheriff Sir Robert le Vavasour, High Sheriff of Nottingham, 21st of Henry III,1236, and of Derby from 1247 to 1254. King John in the 5th of his reign,1204, granted him free warren in Werverdale, and that he might there makea park if he pleased; he had likewise the custody of the Honour ofPeverel. In the 9th of King John he paid a fine of 1200 marks and twopalfreys that his daughter Maud, then widow of Theobald Walter, might bemarried to Fulke FitzWarine, No. 3 above in FitzWarine line. Robert leVavasour died 38th of Henry III, 1254. (It seems that King John madeRobert le Vavasour and Fulke FitzWarine both pay him 1200 marks and twopalfreys for the marriage of Maud and Fulke.) Robert le Vavasour marriedJuliana, daughter of Thomas de Ros of Steeton, County York. ~0880 - 0947 Hugues of Italy 67 67 Vandalmode ~0900 - 0928 Bonifacio of Spoleto 28 28 pg. 41, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 Ubaldo D. ~0999 Riprando of Como 0912 - <0975 Oberto I of Este 63 63 pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0884 Adalbert I of Tuscagne pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. >0884 Rotlda of Spoleto pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. <0846 Bonifacio II of Tuscagne pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0884 Bertha 1166 - UNKNOWN Juliane deRos ~0750 - <0823 Bonifacio I of Tuscagne 73 73 pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0894 Guido I of Italy Judith of Friuli D. 0879 Lambert I of Spoleto pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 ~0932 - 11 Dec 0968/0991 Gerberge ~0936 - 0968 Adalbert of Ivrea 32 32 ~0920 Willa of Tuscagne pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <0910 - 0966 Berenger II of Italy 56 56 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

Bob Furtaw  <bob@furtaw.com>
~0880 - ~0932 Adalbert of Ivrea 52 52 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0910 Gisele of Friuli pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1185 - 1246 Henry deAldithley 61 61 ~0840 - 0891 Anchier of Orchert 51 51 Gisele of Volsca pg. 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 ~0875 - 0915 Bertilda of Spoleto 40 40 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0882/0888 Suppo of Spoleto pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0800 - 0862 Eberhard of Friuli 62 62 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0820 - >0874 Gisele of Hre 54 54 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
of Friuli ~0900 - Jan 0962/0963 Charles Constantine of Vienne pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Teutberge pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1038 Humbert Rie 1194 - 1244 Bertrada deManwaring 50 50 1214 - 1272 Richard Plantagenet deCornwall 58 58 Created Earl of Poictiers in 1225, Elected King of the Romans and ofAlmaine
1256. Some say married 13 Mar 1231. Weir says died Berkhampstead Castleand buried Hayles Abbey.

Richard was very wealthy and used it to be elected Holy Roman Emperor. His reign was not of any substance-pretty much symbolic.  Late in life he gave up hope of ever actually ruling.



Richard, Count of Poitou by 18 Aug 1225 (renounced c Dec 1243), 1st Earl of Cornwall, so styled from 21 Aug 1227 and King of the Romans (ie. heir presumptive to the Holy Roman Empire), so elected at Frankfurt 13 Jan 1256/7 and crowned at Aachen 17 May 1257 but soon ejected and returned to England, three of the Electors apparently having thrown him over because his monetary inducements to them were too small, PC (1253); Constable of Wallingford Castle 1216; knighted Feb 1224/5 and granted by his brother Henry III 13 Feb 1224/5 the County of Cornwall during the King's pleasure, following which he was presumably invested as Earl of that county; Lt of Guienne 1226-7; Ambassador to Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II 1237 and Popes Innocent IV and Alexander IV 1250 and 1259 respectively; went on Crusade 1240-41; Co- or sole Regent during his brother Henry III's campaigns in Gascony 1253-54, fought with his brother Henry III against Simon de Montfort's barons at Battle of Lewes 1264, where he was captured; married 1st 30 March 1230/1 Isabel, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and widow of Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester, and had three sons (all died young or sp); married 2nd 22 Nov 1243 Sancha, sister of his brother Henry III's wife Eleanor and 3rd daughter and coheir of Raymond Berengar V, Count of Provence, and by her had two or three sons (also died young or sp, including the 2nd and last Earl of Cornwall); married 3rd 16 June 1269 Beatrice, 2nd daughter of Walram de Fauquemont (or Valkenberg, near Mastricht), Seigneur de Montjoie and brother of Engelbert Archbishop of Cologne, and died 2 April 1272, leaving by Jeanne de Valletort, an illegitimate son.  [Burke's Peerage]
D. 0887 Boso II of Provence pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition >0855 - <0897 Ermengardeof Germany 42 42 pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~0850 - >0874 Oda of Sachsen 24 24 ~0840 - 1 Jan 0879/0880 Lothar of Stade Ortiga of Gava Zava D. ~0948 Hugues I of Quercy 1187 - 1263 Walter deClifford III Baron Clifford 76 76 Guidinilde Hugues II of Cambour <0950 - 0992 Archembaud II of Cambour 42 42 ~0950 - >0975 Sulpice of Turenne 25 25 pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0980 Bernard I of Turenne pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. >0984 deda Robert of Turenne pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ermensinde D. 0897 Ranulf of Turenne pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Elizabeth 1195 Marared Drwyndon Verch Llywelyn Fawr Geoffroi of Turenne pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Gerberge D. ~0824 Ranulf of Turenne pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Aygua Cygua ~0825 - 0866 Ordono I Ramirez of Asturias 41 41 pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Nuna Ximenez of Gascogne pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0782 Paterna of Castile pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0880 Nuno Ordonez of Leon pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of Castile pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0881 - 1009 Bruno of Arneburg 128 128 D. UNKNOWN Simon deGeneville De Geneville & Champaigne Frederina of Ringleheim UrsindeNunilona of Coimbra pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0636 Favilo of Cantabria D. 0915 Suniaire II of Roussillon pg. 52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Ersindeof Roussillon pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0900 - 0933 Odon of Narbonne 33 33 pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0900 - 0962 Richildeof Barcelona 62 62 D. ~0970 Matfried of Narbonne pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Hugues of Rodez pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1216 - UNKNOWN Beatrice deAuxonneDe Burgundy D. 0728 Miro II of Barcelona pg 52, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Ava Olibo of Besalu pg 52, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Gibica of Burgunds ~0325 Godomar of Burgunds ~1702 Joseph Scott Maj. &  2nd liet in 1775, became Major under Muhlenburg D. 1219 Hugh IX deLusignan Seigneur De Lusignan of Bourges ~0523 - 0584 Chilperic I of Neustria 61 61 0554 - 0628 Clothaire II of Austrasia 74 74 D. 0632 Charibert of Franks Amaud of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Gisele of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0688 Baggis of Toulouse 1221 - 1250 Hugh Lusignan Xi Count of Marche & Angouleme 29 29 Odeof Franks D. 0725 Odeon (Eudes) of Aquitaine Walchiges of Verdun Valtrude Valtrudeof Verdun D. 0774 Hunold of Aquitaine D. 0763 Waifre of Aquitaine Humold of Aquitaine D. 0774 Loupo I of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0774 Adela Lopez of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1242 - UNKNOWN Jeanne deFougères D. 0778 Loupo II of Gascogne D. 0812 Adelrico of Gascogne D. 0812 Cantulo of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0755 - 0819 Llop Centull of Gascogne 64 64 pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Sancha Lopez of Gascogne D. 0920 Garcio Sanchez of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Munia Sancho III of Gascogne pg. 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1041 Urraca Garciez of Pamplona pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0977 Guillaume of Gascogne pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Raoul deFougères Sn De Fougères ~0780 - >0821 Bello or Raoul of Carcassone 41 41 ~0810 - 0850 Sunifred of Urgal 40 40 Duptory of Ireland Elmentrude ~0804 Louis Elganius of Carcassone ~0830 - 0879 Oliba II of Carcassone 49 49 ~0860 - ~0934 Alfred of Carcassone 74 74 ~0867 Adelaideof Auvergne ~0872 - ~0900 Asnarius of Comminges 28 28 ~0785 - 0820 Donato Lopez of Bigorre 35 35 D. UNKNOWN Isabel deCraon Garcio Sanchez ~0887 - ~0940 Dato II Lopez of Bigorre 53 53 ~0900 - >0956 Raimond I of Bigorre 56 56 ~0892 - <0964 Ziemomysl (Ziemonislaw) of Poland 72 72 0922 - 0992 Mieczislaw (Mieszko) I of Poland 70 70 ~0820 - 0870 Gostivit of Bohemia 50 50 ~0942 Dobromir of Silicia pg. 57 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0968 - 1016 Emnildeof Silicia 48 48 0967 - 1025 Boleslaw I of Poland 58 58 ~0870 - ~0890 Guillaume I of Forez 20 20 D. UNKNOWN Bernard deEzy D. 1189 Amadeus II de Savoy <0890 - 0920 Guillaume II of Forez 30 30 ~0925 - 0960 Artaud I of Forez 35 35 ~0929 Tareasie ~0957 - 0990 Giraud I of Forez 33 33 Giaberge Garnier of Sens pg. 59 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 0951 Fromond I of Sens D. 0996 Renaud I of Sens pg 59, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Odo in Neustria D. >0910 Roger of Aubiate 1262 - 7 Feb 1333/1334 Margaret deFiennes D. 0964/0965 Ardoino of Torino pg 60, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 13 Feb 0987/0988 Otto II of Canorsa Hildegarde ~0972 - 1050 Humbert I of Savoy 78 78 ~0974 Ancelie of Lenzburg Emerard I of Faucigny Algert D. 1030 Emerard II of Faucigny ~0970 Lambert of Semur pg. 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 0957/0958 Humbert I of Salins pg. 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Blanche deBrienne Dame De Loupelande. 0940 - 0963 Romanus II of Byzantium 23 23 D. ABT 0930/0940 Arnaud I of Auvergne pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Bertilde D. 0947 Matfroi of Auvergne pg. 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0955 Etienne I of Thiers pg. 80,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Ermengarde ~0819 - ~0866 Adelaide(Aelis) of Tours 47 47 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0825 - 0876 Conrad II of Auxerre 51 51 of Metz ~0860 - 0920 Manasses of Chalons 60 60 1120 - 1205 Herbert FitzHerbert 85 85 ~0860 - 0935 Ermengardeof Bourgogne 75 75 pg 80 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Oda ~0710 Rolande ~0830 Ermentrudeof Alsace >0900 - <1000 Hugues I of Lusignan 100 100 pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0925 - 0988 Herbert I of Thouars 63 63 pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0929 Alderdeof Aulnay D. 0830 Baudoin of Cleves D. 0835 Eberhard of Cleves Bertha D. 1051 Hugo IV von Maine Count deMaine D. 0881 Luitgard of Cleves Bertha D. 0917 Baudoin of Cleves Maud Yolandeof Cleves Ignodeof Harlebec pg. 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0897 Arnoul I of Crequy Odoqere of Crequy D. 0937 Raoul II of Crequy Valpurge of Aquitaine 1093 - 1140 Maud deSenilis St. Liz 47 47 Raoul III of Crequy Adele of Arnel D. ~0986 Ramin II of Crequy Alix of Oisy D. ~0941 Andre of Craon Agnes of Anjou Lisois of Craon D. 0378 Niall Noigillach of Ireland pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Ine pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0465 Eogan of Ailech pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition 1178 - UNKNOWN Cicely deAlbini Indorb Finn pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition ~0400 - 0474 Ercc of Dalriada 74 74 pg 144, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0474 Misi (Mist) D. 0566 Domnal Ilcealgah of Ireland pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Angus Duaibhsech of Connaught pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Carthan Orca Erica 1174 - 1260 Aylmer deMontalt 86 86 Aylmer / Andomar founded the Yorkshire and only surviving branch ofthe family. In 1174, accompanying the expedition against William the Lion, Andomar had the good fortune to make the Scottish monarch prisoner, by surprise; and conveying the royal captive to Henry II.   He was deemed one of the most potent feudal lords in the time of Henry III. and accompanied Prince Edward to the Holy Land. Being constantly employed against the Welsh, his lands at Montalt were wrested from him by David, Prince of Wales, but restored in 1240. He m. Cecilia, second sister and one of the co-heirs of Hugh de Albini, Earl of Arundel, by whom he acquired the manor of Castle Rising, in Norfolk, with other extensive estates. To equip himself for Palestine this great baron conveyed, for a sum of money, a large portion of the woods and revenues which he possessed at Coventry, in right of Cecilia, his wife, to the monks of that place. He died in 1260, and was s. by his elder son, John the 4th Baron by tenure. D. 0534 Muircheartach of Ireland pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0615 Maelcobha of Tir Connail pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Cacht of Tir Connail pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0612 Aedh Uairidhnach of Ireland pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. ~0628 Maelfithrig of Ailech pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0681 Maelduin of Ailech pg 2026, Burkes Peerage D. 0464 Conal Culban of Tirconnel D. ~0500 Fergus Cennfada of Tirconnel pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Setna of Tirconnel pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Cabthaigson of Oiliolla pg 86, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1196 - 1241 John deVipont Lord Vipont 45 45 pg 197, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Conor Cian of Connaught pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. UNKNOWN Francis deBohun D. 0990 Robert I of Meulan pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0965 - 0997 Robert II of Meulan 32 32 pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Alix or Adele of Vexin pg 108, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0909 Abo le Breton ~0936 Arnulf (Arnold) Asperlin of Vaudreuil pg 100, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~0870 Rapoto I of Norithal pg. 104,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0956 Rapoto II of Norithal pg. 104,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0864 - >0919 Wigeric of Aachen 55 55 1090 - UNKNOWN Adeliza heiress of Shropshire 0714 - 0768 Pepin III de Neustria 54 54 Pepin III (Pepen "The Short") was the first Carolingian king of theFranks from 751-768. He expanded the borders of the Frankish domain andformed an alliance with the popes in Rome that shaped the future of boththe Frankish kingdom and the Papacy. "The Encyclopedia of the MiddleAges" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. ~0890 - >0923 Kunigundeof France 33 33 ~0911 - 0943 Gonzelo in Bidgau 32 32 ~0912 - 0994 Friedrich I of Lothringen 82 82 ~0915 - >0963 Uda of Metz 48 48 D. ~0998 Adalbert of Tuscagne pg 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1014 Adalbert III of Tuscagne pg 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. <0960 Aleramo I of Montferrat pg. 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 Helena of Verona pg. 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0865 - 0940 Hildegaire of Limoges 75 75 Aliverto 1116 - UNKNOWN Hawise Fergant Guillaume Alice Gerberge of Italy pg. 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 ~0890 - 0939 Giselbert of Lorraine 49 49 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0933 - 0955 Valeran of Vexin 22 22 pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0949 - 0975 Hildegardeof Flandres 26 26 1114 Adelhyde De Gaunt D. ~1074 Turstain Haldub Emma ~1055 Agnes pg 165, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
<aongusmclean@msn.com>
1175 Matilda deClare 1106 Hugh deGrentmesnil II Lord Grentmesnil Philip de Belmeis 0930 - 0960 Hugh Bishop of Coustances deMortimer 30 30 Tryffin ap Merfyn of Powys Isabel verch Tryffin Seferus of Builth Ifor apSeferus of Builth Cynelin ap Ifor of Builth ~0855 - 0941 Elise ap Anarawd 86 86 0940/0960 Prawst verch Elise 1190 - 1223 Alice deBriwere 33 33 D. >0710 Rhain ap Cadwgon of Trydelig Tewdws ap Rhain of Brycheiniog D. ~0796 Maredudd ap Tewdws of Dyfed D. 0811 Owain ap Maredudd of Dyfed ~0794 Tangwystl verch Owen of Dyfed Bledri D. 0892/0893 Hyfaidd ap Bledri of Dyfed ~0850 - ~0904 Llywarch ap Hyfaidd of Dyfed 54 54 1200 - 1245 Walter deRiddlesford II Lord Bray 45 45 ~0850 Lles Llawddeog ap Ceidio ~0880 Gwynnog Farfsych ap Lles ~0903 Gwynnan ap Gwynnog ~0933 Gwaethfoed ap Gwynnan ~0938 - 0999 Maredudd ap Owain of deheubarth 61 61 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0968 Blaidd ~1073 Livida Cairthann Finn of Munster Eochaid of Munster Conal of Munster D. UNKNOWN Walter deRiddlesford Lord Moulenford D. 0601 Aodh of Munster D. 0620 Cathal of Munster of Munster 0641 Turloch of Munster 0683 Maithan of Munster Anluan of Munster Core of Munster Lachna of Munster D. 0942 Lorean of Munster D. 0951 Kennedy of Munster 1182 - UNKNOWN Amabilis FitzHenry 1060 - 1128 Llywarch ap Trahaern dePembroke 68 68 D. 0681 Confaolo of Connaught Awly of Connaught Flan Roba Fingal Flathnia Maonach D. 0891 Murrough D. 0944 Areadh of W Connaught pg. 144, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Babhion of W Connaught pg. 144, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Oilliol Fionn 1206 - UNKNOWN Annora Cearbhall Eachraid Giolla Bridget of Fearceal D. ~1057 Otho pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~0530 - 0575 Colam Mor of Leinster 45 45 D. 0605 Seanlan of Ossary Ronan of Ossary D. 0656 Grundmaol of Ossary ~0570 - 0660 Faolan of Leinster 90 90 D. 0713 Cucerea of Ossary 1660 Ephhraim Merritt D. 0760 Ammeadh of Ossary D. 0802 Fearghal of Ossory D. 0842 Dunghal of Ossory dermot of Ossory D. 0888 Cearbhall of Ireland Maelfebhall O'Neil D. 0907 Ceallagh of Ossory Sabh D. 0907 Murcertac of Ossory D. 0996 Giollapatrick of Ossory 1134 - UNKNOWN Walter deBurgh D. 1021 Maclmuir of Dublin ~0886 - ~0946 Berenger of Namur 60 60 ~0888 Simphoriane of Hainault pg. 171, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~0637 - 0709 Godofried of Alamannia 72 72 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1154 - UNKNOWN Aline deGai Also called "Aline de Gai." ~1000 Siher of Gramines pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1037 Jean of Coucy pg. 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ivres II of Belesme Renaud I of Gontier Beatrix of Perche pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Judicarl of Nantes pg 180, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 of Maine pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0872 Meen of Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ruellan of Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1190 - UNKNOWN Ragnhild of Isles Auvert Melesindeof Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Geslin D. ~0922 Aubert D. 0980 Geoffroi I of Mayenne of Bretagne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0980 Juhel I of Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Etiennette of Dol ~1003 - 1063 Adele of France 60 60 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0999 Adelaide(Adele) Eschauffen D. UNKNOWN Gunnora deLanvaley ~0996 Saloman I of Sable pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 of Sable pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 Raoul of Mans pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of Beaumont pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1000 Hubert I of Mans pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0965 Bouchard Brioli ~1010 Ingelger Brioule 1173 Rohese Anstrude ~0999 - ~1048 Adelbert III of Longwy 49 49 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Regnier of Saunois 0938 - 0987 Beatrix of France 49 49 ~0865 - 0910 Gerhard of Lorraine 45 45 Ita of Sachsen pg. 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 ~0880 - ~0943 Cunigundeof Vermandois 63 63 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~0880 - 0949 Udo in Wettergau 69 69 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Roger Le Bigod Earl of Norfolk ~0910 - 0997 Konrad of Schwaben 87 87 ~0645 - 20 Feb 0719/0720 Eticho I (Adalricus) of Alsace pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0654 Berswindeof Austrasia pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0675 - 0741 Adalbert of Alsace 66 66 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0679 GerlindeEticonides ~0707 - 0767 Luitfried I of Alsace 60 60 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0779 Ava of Upper Alsace pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0757 - 0827 Hunfried I of Istrien 70 70 0780 - >0850 Adalbert I in Helgau 70 70 D. ~0850 Ulric Iog Thurgovie 1085 - 1138 Frederic Le Donjon 53 53 ABT 0835/0840 - 0905 Adalbert II in Thurgau ~0842 - >0902 Judith of Friuli 60 60 ~0865 - 0911 Burchard I of Rhaetia 46 46 ~0885 - 0926 Burkhard II of Schwaben 41 41 pg. 181,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0887 Regulindeof Nellenburg pg. 181,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0582 - ~0618 Berthetrudeof Bourgogne 36 36 ~0602 - 19 Jan 0637/0638 Dagobert I of Austrasia ~0832 Svasse (Finnen) <0843 - >0881 Eberhard II in Nordgau 38 38 0835 - >0898 Eberhard III in Nordgau 63 63 1110 - 1174 William de Vernon De Reviers 64 64 0676 - 0741 Charles deMartel 65 65 Charles was the illegitamite son of Pepin II of Heristal, and mayor ofthe palace of the easternportion of the Merovingian realm (Austria).  Hisfather died in 714 and by 718 he suceeded in gaining his fathers wealthand office. In 737 the Merovingian king Theuderic died and from thenuntil his death he ruled alone as chief (princeps) of the Franks, withouta king. He was elevated to status of king in the 1260's.  "TheEncyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. D. <0843 Meginhard I of Hamalant ~0880 - 0940 Hugo III in Nordgau 60 60 D. 0841 Adalbert I of Metz pg 182, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0882 Adalbert II of Metz pg 182, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~0910 Gerhard I in Metzgau Oda of Sachsen pg. 182, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 0894 - ~0944 Adelbert III in Metzgau 50 50 ~0600 Odin 0894 - ~0966 Luitgardeof Luxembourg 72 72 D. 0677 Guerin Warinus of Poiters pg 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1120 Mabel de Beaumont ~0615 Bodilon of Austrasia ~0665 - 0713 Leutwinus of Trier 48 48 D. ~0722 Wido (Gui) of Hornbach D. >0783 Lambert of Hornbach pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0814 Gui of Hornbach D. 0836 Lambert I of Nantes D. ~0850 Radelchis I of Beneventun Haretrude Adelchis of Beneventun Engelberta 1087 Alan La Zouche D. ~0921 Ageltrudeof Beneventun D. 0894 Guido of Italy pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 Yota of Italy pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 D. 0923 Guaimar II of Salerno pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 D. 0910 Atenolfo I of Capua pg 229, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Sichelgaita of Gaeta pg 229, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0943 Atenolfo II of Capua pg 184, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Gatelgrima of Capua pg 184, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~0986 Guaimar III of Salerno pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 Alcardi 1074 - UNKNOWN Robert deGresley D. 1014 Pandulfo III of Capua pg 184, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~0989 Arsendis (Ersendis) Ralph Hare Wrote letter # 24 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. 1116 - 1164 Godfrey deScudamore 48 48 ~0560 Alain I of Bretagne ~0580 - ~0612 Hoel III of Bretagne 32 32 ~0602 Judicael ap Hoel of Bretagne Moronoe ~0632 Gradlon Flam of Cornouaille ~0580 Fratelle verch Osoche of Bretagne ~0660 Concar Cheronnog of Cornouaille ~0710 Judon ap Concar of Cornouaille ~0750 Constantin ap Judon of Cornouaille pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Sarilie pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1070 - UNKNOWN William deTregoz William flourished in the reign of Henry I, and of whom the Great PipeRoll of 31 of Henry I, 1130/1, makes much mention. This Pipe Roll provesWilliam Tregoze to have been a man of great consequence, and to have beenconcerned in Norfolk, Essex, Berks and Lincolnshire; and moreover that hethen had the lands of William Peberell of London. William Tregoze marriedand had issue and very probably Agnes Tregoze, who we find living in 9thof Richard I, as concerned in Norfolk and Essex was his widow. His issuewas apparently three sons and a daughter: Geoffrey, his heir, Sir Robertand John and Albreda, wife of Richard de Besville. D. ~0790 Argant of Bretagne pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0790 Justin ap Constantine of Cornouaille ~0830 Alfrond ap Justin of Cornouaille ~0870 - ~0952 Ulfret of Cornouaille Alesrudon 82 82 ~0890 Diles of Cornouaille Heiguer Ehebre Judeal of Cornouaille Louvenam of Cornouaille Alava of Cornouaille D. ~0980 Budic I of Cornouaille Budic II of Cornouaille 1154 - UNKNOWN Maud deWarenne Plantagenet Thomas Wodehouse Wrote letter # 36 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Joseph King Alice Noel 1218 - 1257 Patrick deChaworth 39 39 Patrick de Carducis or Chaworth, who in the 23rd of Henry III, being thenunder age, compounded with the King for his own wardship and marriage,paying œ500 for the same. In the 29th of the same reign he received aprecept from the crown, whereby he was commanded to use all his power anddiligence to annoy the Welsh then in hostility. He married Hawise,daughter of Thomas de Pounders, who was summoned to Parliament by name ofThomas, Baron of Ogmore and Kidwelley, temp of King John. They had 3daughters, Emme, Eve who married Robert Tibetot, Anne or Agnes, and 3sons, Pain, Patrick and Henry, all of whom in 54th of Henry III, joiningin the Crusade, attended Prince Edward (afterwards Edward I) to the HolyLand. This feudal Lord died 1257 and was succeeded by his eldest son,Pain, who d. s. p. 1287, who was a gallant soldier, and who in the 5th ofEdward I was constituted General of the King's Army in West Wales. Thisolder brother was succeeded by the only surviving son, Patrick deCarducis or Chaworth, Lord of Ogmore and Kidwelly.

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
of Bretagne pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Malhuedoe D. 0962 Alain II of Bretagne pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Judith Hocl I of Nantes pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0911 - ~0965 Berard I of Beaujeu 54 54 ~0942 - 1016 Humbert I of Beaujeu 74 74 ~0945 - 0997 Hermelt 52 52 Waifre of Aquitaine ~0930 - ~0956 Rudolf of Mons 26 26 pg 191 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1223 - UNKNOWN Hawise deLondres ~0934 Adele of Vienne pg 191, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0964 - ~0997 Gossuin I of Mons 33 33 ~0970 Benoite Ezard of Haldensleben Dietrich of Haldensleben Bernhard of Haldensleben Benno of Haldensleben D. ABT 1023/1033 Adalbert II of Metz ~0969 - ~1032 Jutta of Luxembourg 63 63 D. UNKNOWN Thomas deLondres Lord Kidwillyin Manasses I Ermengarde Manasses II Rudolf Ithier I of Mercouer pg 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~0895 Ithier II of Mercouer pg 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Arsinde Beraud of Mercouer pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Gerberge Adelgardeor Hildegarde of Mercouer pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Eva deTracy 0635 - 0714 Pepin II deAustrasia 79 79 Pepin of Heristal, who gained control and founded the monarchy, which wasenlarged by Charlemagne, and was the founder of the Carlovingian line ofKings. He was Duke of Brabant in 685 and Duke of the Austrasian Franks in680. D. 0940 Robert I of Auvergne D. <0989 Robert II of Auvergne pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ingelberge of Beaumont pg. 202, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1055 - >0977 Rapoto I in the Traungau 78 78 Dave Anthes  <dkanthes@juno.com> D. >1013 Rapoto II in the Traungau of Ammerthal D. >1060 Diepold I of Angst D. >1140 Uta of Passau pg 204, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Agnes of Beaugency pg 204, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. >0940 Albuin of Jaun 1175 - 1226 Pain deChaworth 51 51 Pain, one of the Barons Marches, became surety for Isabel de Mortimerthat she should come to the king's exchequer on the octave of St. Michaelto satisfy for such debts as she owed to the late King John. Pain marriedGundred, daughter and heiress of William deila Ferte, heir to Margaret,2nd daughter of William de Brewere, a great feudal lord, who died in1226. With her he had Bridgewater in Somersetshire, and had a son,Patrick. Mathildeof Bourgogne ~0848 Marija Ripsimija ~0960 - ~1014 Samuel of Bulgaria 54 54 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0987 Milon I of Tonnerre Ingeltrudeof Montreuil ~0920 - 0992/0993 Gui II of Tonnerre ~0980 - 1039 Renaud of Tonnerre 59 59 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1010 Hervise 1198 - UNKNOWN Gundred deLa Ferte D. ~1039 Eberhard of Sponheim pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1065 Siegfried of Sponheim pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1064 Richgardeof Lavant pg. 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 0912 Anastaso of Byzantium ~1010 Bernhard of Flinsbach Fredeburge of Frommen pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0907 Ernst III of Sualafeld pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0934 - ~0914 Ernst IV of Sualafeld 20 20 pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Hadamut of Ebersberg pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1062 - UNKNOWN Avise FitzOsborn D. 1039 Adalbert of Carinthia >1000 Beatrice of Schwaben Hadamut of Friuli Itha D. 1154 Sofia of Austria pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1076 Markwart III of Carinthia pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1066 - 1127 Heinrich II of Carinthia 61 61 pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1025 - 1151 Milon III of Bar-Sur- Seine 126 126 pg 206, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1034 Andre of Rameru ~0969 - ~0990 Engelbert I of Brienne 21 21 pg 206, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Balderic Of Thuringia Windesmodeof Salins pg. 206, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1055 Engelbert II of Brienne pg 206, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of Bar-Sur- Seine pg 206, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Azeka of Bar-Sur- Seine pg 206, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1110 - >1153 Dreux III of Mouchy 43 43 Mariella ~0817 Bilichildeof Anjou ~0940 - 0993 Guillaume of Beziers 53 53 pg 213, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. >0897 Arsinde D. UNKNOWN Basin Of Thuringia ~0898 Rainard II of Beziers ~0930 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Alberadeof Lorraine pg 131, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0915 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Renaud of Roucy D. ~0910 Richard I of Milhaud D. ~0937 Bernard I of Carlat Adelaide Berenger I of Milhaud D. >1020 Gilbert I of Carlat D. >0869 Guido of Langres D. 0928 Rotbold I of Arles D. UNKNOWN Menia Of Thuringia D. 0948 Rotbaud II of Arles or Gatinais pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Agnes of Mels ~1000 - <1071 Gilbert II of Carlat 71 71 Antigarius of Lodeve Gariberge D. 0983 Hildin of Lodeve Archimberte D. >1048 Odon of Lodeve Chimberge ~1002 Nobilia of Lodeve D. UNKNOWN Industrie ~0963 Senegondeof Beziers pg 218, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0961 - ~1002 Richard I of Milhaud 41 41 ~0982 - ~1050 Richard II of Milhaud 68 68 Rixendeof Lodeve ~1030 - >1080 Berenger II of Gievaudun 50 50 ~1032 Adele of Carlat ~1023 - Feb 1061/1062 Geoffroi I of Provence pg 218, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1054 - 1100 Etienette (Douce) 46 46 Osohe of Bretagne D. 0842 Landulfo I of Capua 0385 - UNKNOWN Consul Tonantius Ferreolus ~0820 - >0870 Landulfo II of Capua 50 50 D. UNKNOWN Papianille ~0965 - 1058 Guillaume I of Eu Hiesmes 93 93 ~0989 - 26 Jan 1057/1058 Alice (Lesceline) Harcourt 1014 - 1088 Robert deToeni Lord of Belvoir 74 74 0837 - 0896 Engleberge of Alsace 59 59 1172 - 1270 Alphonse Brienne 98 98 ~1124 Robert of Offaly Bermingham pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Emma Herbert ~1037 of Conteville ~1158 - ~1209 William Greystoke 51 51 pg 254, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1052 Emma of Baalun Nicholas Beauchamp Beauchamp D. UNKNOWN Bernard St. Valery Ormele Gulden Ronain Craich ~1136 John Brampton ABT 0020 BC Baran ap Ceri of Siluria ABT 0040 BC Ceri Hir Lyngwyn ap Caid of Esyllwg ABT 0080 BC Caid ap Arch of Siluria ABT 0120 BC Arch ap Meirion of Siluria ABT 0160 BC Meirion ap Ceraint ABT 0200 BC Ceraint ap Greidiol of Siluria ABT 0240 BC Greidiol ap Dingad of Siluria D. UNKNOWN Alanora 0697 - UNKNOWN Hersuinda 0630 - 0677 Guerin Count dePoitiers 47 47 D. 0650 DodeClothilde De Heristal Cormaic ~1360 - DECEASED Jane Basset Source: Page 135, Pedigree 5, Descendants of Magna Charta Barons.  This is a unproven family link. Jane is shown  as daughter of Ralph of Drayton by Joan de Beauchamp, but he dvp, as indicated by his will. Emma Langetot ~1140 Richard Avenal Adele ~0453 Papianille of Rome ~1036 - ~1098 Robert Brusse 62 62 pg 80, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1283 - 1345 Maud deChaworth 62 62 D. >0879 Gebhard I of Niederlahngau ~1203 John Clifford ~1050 - ~1083 Everard Donjon 33 33 1110 - UNKNOWN Isaac Comnenus Emperor of the Byzantine Empire Isaac Comnenus was oldest of two sons left by Manual and was crowned inhis father's place and served long and faithfully, and after the declineof his health and vigor he urged his brother Johannes to take his place.This John refused to do and his action must be censured as a criminaldesertion of duty and a rare offender against his family and country. Thepurple he refused was accepted by Constantine Ducas IX, a friend of theComnenian line. He married Eudocia. She was regent on his death andmarried Romanus Diogenes, who was next Emperor. Helenus II of Troy Genger Franco Esdron Gelio Basabiliano Plaserio Plesron Plaserius II 1070 - UNKNOWN Irene Princess of Hungary Eliacor Gaberiano Helenus II Antenor I Priam II Plesron II Basabelian II Richard Noel ~1687 Mary Dudley 1134 - UNKNOWN Theodora of Byzantium Agrippine Berthilde 1045 - UNKNOWN Ladislas I King of Hungary 1101 - 1169 Matilda Aethelic England 68 68 After Geoffrey Plantagenet's death, Matilda was married to Henry VEmperor of the Holy Roman Empire.

Empress of Germany, Queen of England, Princess Royal of England,  married at 12 years old: He nry V, German Roman Emperor, who died soon after.

MATILDA (1102-1167), empress, was the daughter of Henry I of England byhis first marriage. She was betrothed in 1109 and married in 1114 to theGerman emperor Henry V. When her husband died (1125) leaving herchildless, her father, whose only surviving legitimate child she thenwas, persuaded his reluctant barons to accept her, on oath, as hissuccessor (Jan. 1, 1127). The novel prospect of a female ruler was itselfunwelcome; Matilda's 17-year absence in Germany (where she was notunpopular) and her apparent arrogrance estranged her from her father'ssubjects. Difficulties also might result from her remarriage to providefor the succession. Her marriage in 1128 to Geoffrey Plantagenet, heir toAnjou and Maine (designed by Henry I, like her first marriage, forpolitical ends), whose father, CountFulk, departed immediately after theceremony to become the consort of Melisende of Jerusalem, flouted thebarons' stipulation that she should not marry outside England withouttheir consent, and was unpopular in Normandy and England. On Henry I'sdeath, his nephew Stephen by prompt action secured England and wasrecognized by Pope Innocent II. Matilda and Geoffrey, however, made someheadway in Normandy. Matilda's subsequent challenge to Stephen's positionin England mainly depended on the support of her half-brother Earl Robertof Gloucester. After the defeat and capture of Stephen at Lincoln (Feb.1141), Matilda was elected "lady of the English" and would have beenqueen could she have proceeded to coronation, but active support for hercause still came mainly from the western counties. Her chance ofconsolidating her precarious victory was swiftly destroyed by a reactioninitated by her tactless handling of London. After her defeat atWinchester in Sept. 1141, her supporters, slowly reduced by death anddefection, maintained a stubborn defense until Earl Robert died (1147)and Matilda retired (1148) to Normandy, of which her husband had gainedpossession. She continued to interest herself in the government of theterritories of her eldest son, the future Henry II of England. Her careerwas not entirely unsuccessful: all the subsequent monarchs of Englandhave been her descendants, not Stephen's. She died in Normandy on Sept.10, 1167.
0906 Roger II deMontgomerie Count of Montgomery ~0625 - ~0670 Chimnechild 45 45 ~0950 Jutta of Ohningen D. ~0501 Godegisel of Burgunds ~0971 Guillaume of Arques ~0572 Adils Ottarsson ~0594 Eystein Adilsson Elizabeth ~0998 Gauthier of Renard pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1000 Petronille Gwyn 1125 - 1185 Andronicus 60 60 ~0950 - ~0984 Einion ap Owen 34 34 Leah bint Laban ~0963 Nesta verch Cadell D. 0483 Crimthann mac Endae of Leinster Gilbert Gant pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1106 - UNKNOWN Saire deQuincy Surety observor for the Magna Charta. ~0931 - 0977 Dubrawka of Bohemia 46 46 ~0935 Arsendis Tandreg verch Cynan of Powys Hunuil of Ostrogoths Walaravans of Ostrogoths 1113 - 1167 William deAlbini-Meschines Lord of Belvoir 54 54 William de Albini, called Brito, succeeded as the feudal lord of BelvoirCastle. For some reason unknown now he assumed the surname of Albini ord'Aubigny, and to distinguish him from a contemporary of the same name,who was ancestor of the Earls of Arundel, namely, William d'Albini,pincerna or rotal butler. William became known as Brito, having been bornin England. This William le Brito was at the time of his successionformally confirmed in the chapter house of St. Albans all the liberalgrants of his parents to the Church of Our Lady at Belvoir, desiring thathe might be admitted in the fraternity as those his parents had been.William d'Albini, Brito, died about 1155, leaving two sons, William, hisheir, and Ralph d'Albini, 2nd son, founder of the House of Daubeny, anddied at Acre in the Holy Land 1190. ~1031 Tudwal ap Einudd 0997 Alefbed of Bernica James Fortrey Elizabeth Joan Noel ~1111 Rhael verch Gronwy Katherine Wilde She was her father's coheiress. ~1685 Joseph Dudley Anthony Sweetenham Cloth Fionn Eochadh Uchticathan Fionn Benta 1055 Henry II Count of Lorraine Creombthan Fionnlough ~1097 - <1155 Herbert fitz Herbert of Winchester 58 58 pg 196 & 232,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1095 - <1166 Elizabeth of England 71 71 vol 4, pg 136, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 1039 Wilhelm III of Weimar ~0932 of Kumans www.dcs..hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal ~0865 - <0959 Hersent of Franks 94 94 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Theidlindis of Blois pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Aubri II of Blois pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Aubri I of Blois pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1020 Lambert II Count of Brabant & Lorraine Adela of Austrasia pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Eadburh of Mercia ~0843 - 0871 Aethelred I of Wessex 28 28 pg 6, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0859 - ~0898 Athelhelm of Wiltshire 39 39 pg 6, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1188 - 1264 Rohese of Dover 76 76 pg 178, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1186 - 1270 Richard fitz Roy of Chilham 84 84 pg 178, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition, Baron of Chilham. ~1140 Amabilis fitz Henry pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1105 - 1157 Henry fitz Henry 52 52 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0920 - 0953 Heinrich of Bayern 33 33 0866 - 0923 Robert I of France 57 57 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
0875 - 0959 Poppa deValois 84 84 ~0820 - 0866 Rutpert IV in Wormsgau 46 46 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0789 - ~0834 Rutpert III in Wormsgau 45 45 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0795 - >0834 Wialdruth (Walrada) 39 39 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <0770 - 0807 Rutpert II in Wormsgau 37 37 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0770 - ~0789 Theodorata (Tiedrada) of Worms 19 19 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0650 of Adelheim pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1062 - UNKNOWN Bernard de St. Valery ~1085 - ~1159 Guillaume of Boulogne 74 74 pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Eire pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition ~1170 - <1226 Eve Bermingham 56 56 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1682 William Stinnett ~1106 Robert of Lazenby Stuteville pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Helwise Murdac pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0897 Trungardeof France D. 0923 Ricoin or Richwin of Verdun pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1035 Walter de St. Valery 0938 - 0996 Hugh Capet France 58 58 Hugh Capet is the founder of the line of kings that ruled the Franks(French) for much of the middle ages. Although more able as a Duke thanKing, he succeeded in gaining the throne of France, cementing an alliancewith the churches of the kingdom, and passing the crown to his son andheir. His piety, diplomatic skills, and political acumen were well known."The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. D. 1632 Margaret Grazebrook Will dated 7 May 1628 and proved 13 June 1632
Genealogical Gleanings page. 1415
~0954 Adelheid pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1001 - 1027 Richard III of Normandy 26 26 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition William of Skipton Meschine pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1104 Cecily Romilly CPIX 270=272; XII, pt II 930-931
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
Robert Romilly pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition Adela pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1015 - ~1096 Eudes of Champagne 81 81 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1070 - 1127 Stephen of Holderness & Aumale 57 57 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 0888 - ~0914 Anna of Byzantium 26 26 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1005 - 1066 Bernard St. Valery 61 61 Hildegardeof France pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0905 - 0959 Konstantinos VII Porphyrogenitus of Byzantium 54 54 ~0920 - 0961 Eleni Lecapenus 41 41 1068 - 1124 Adelaideof Namur 56 56 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1064 - 1125 Otto II of Chiny 61 61 D. 1106 Arnold II of Warcq Cynthia Smithdeal  < cysmithd@worldnet.att.net>

"Royalty For Commoners"  by Roderick W. Stuart, pub 2002
Alix of Rameru ~1085 - 1144 Routrou II of Perche 59 59 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0740 - >0775 Wittikind of Westfalia 35 35 ~1161 - ~1196 Simon Wahull 35 35 The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164

pg 562, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
0988 - UNKNOWN Papia of Normandy Sybil ~1130 - ~1176 Walter Wahull 46 46 The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164

pg 562, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Orlaith pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Sadb pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition MacBricc pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1064 Donnchad of Munster pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 1080 Darbforgaill pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0974 - 1072 Diarmuid MacMael of Leinster 98 98 pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 1040/1048 - ~1115 Nigell of Hook Norton D'Oyly pg 165, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
<aongusmclean@msn.com>
1187 William deBeauchamp 1577 Henry Tiffany Guy Le Strange Thomas Noel ~1683 Phyllis Dudley ~1175 - ~1220 Robert Fitzpayn 45 45 pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1197 - <1237 Roger Fitzpayn 40 40 pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1201 - >1264 Margaret Lincoln 63 63 pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1229 - <1281 Robert Fitzpayn 52 52 pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1249 - 1315 Robert Fitzpayn 66 66 pg 57, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1238 - 1315 Isabella Clifford 77 77 pg 57, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. UNKNOWN Bernard of Septamania D. >0599 Gondolfus of Tongres pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0495 - ~0532 Munderic of Vitry 37 37 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0509 Cloderic of Cologne pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0470 - 0509 Sigebert of Cologne 39 39 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0450 Childebert of Cologne pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0399 - ~0450 Ildegondeof Franks 51 51 D. 0754 Carloman of Austrasia Mayor of the Palace

pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
~1086 Millicent Ferrers pg 382, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 Rotrou of Austrasia pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0708 - <0743 Girard of Paris 35 35 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Roselindeof Septamania ~0776 - 0816 Begue (Bego) of Paris 40 40 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0852 Alpais (Adaltrude) pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0775 Engeltrudeof Paris pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0785 - >0853 Hunroch of Friuli 68 68 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0879 Gebhard of Logenahe pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0879 Eudes in Lahngau pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition of Bourgogne pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0865 - 0906 Konrad of Logenahe 41 41 D. 0924 Glismodeof Worms Walahon in Wormsgau pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN William Count of Angouleme Uta Meingaud in Wormsgau pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1160 William Lumley ~1140 Uchtred Lumley Lulelph Aldgyth of Northumbria ~1200 William Lumley pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1064 - ~1115 Osberne of Arques 51 51 Dicoll Danae mac Ronain Craich D. UNKNOWN Emma of Perigord ~0835 - <0914 Hildebert of Limoges 79 79 Salvador Perez of Castile ~1010 - >1079 Guisle of Ampurias 69 69 Blathmacc mac Eogain ~1279 Joan pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Lucy Tankerville ~1143 - 1183 Alice deincourt 40 40 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Buci Dubtach pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition 0954 - UNKNOWN Rothilde De Brosse Moindach of Ulster pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. ~0506 Muiredach of Ailech pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. ~1141 Robert of Thorngate Aquillon ~1175 Amicia of Chester vol 1, pg 28, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 333, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and  Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland" pub 1841
~1065 - >1119 Roger Mainwaring 54 54 vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 1260, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 323, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and  Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland" pub 1841
Johanna of Gent Beatrix Joscelin of Rouen & Arques 0947 - 0991 Geraud Vicomte Of Limoges 44 44 ~1076 Hermentrudeof Clermont vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" ~0960 Osmund of Vernon Centville ~1123 - 1180 Guillaume Hommet 57 57 Hommet D. >1025 Robert Hommet ~1005 Foulques I of Aulnay ~1105 Adele of Rameru ~1048 - ~1085 Maud Wateville 37 37 ~1044 - ~1086 Ralf of Quesnay 42 42 Fought in the battle of Hastings - 1066. Piers 1028 - UNKNOWN Alberic III Count of La Haute ~1081 Benedict le Garnett 1066 - UNKNOWN Ademonde De La Haute 1095 - 1149 Avice deLancaster 54 54 ~0782 Libuse Forconda orToscanda Susan Armyne Elizabeth 1222 - 1266 Roger deMowbray 44 44 ~0760 - 0822 Hadrian in Wormsgau 62 62 ~0790 - >0834 Waldrada of Orleans 44 44 ~0540 - ~0605 Gertrudis of Moselle 65 65 D. >0750 Boso I of Turin D. >0826 Boso II of Turin D. ~0855 Boso III of Turin 1200 Agnes deAubigny ~0737 Hildi Ericsdatter of Westfold ~0605 Gauthild Algautsdatter ~0570 Algaut Gautreksson Halfdan Guldand ~0675 Eric Agnarsson of Westfold ~0640 Agnar Sigtrysson ~0247 Nanna Gewarsdatter of Norway ~0918 Mal of Lubech Arthemia ~0695 Bertrada 0879 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey 1st "Ferreol" Count Of The Gastinois ~0859 of Peronne ~0660 - >0721 Bertrada of Austrasia 61 61 ~0630 - 0691 Thierry III of Austrasia 61 61 Nikephoros Phokas ~0964 of Macon of Benevento Rafrit of Benevento Clodoreius Dampi Maolda D. UNKNOWN Aubri Count of the Gastinois Ainftech of Picts ~0194 Beltsa of Asgard ~0487 Spondana of Picts ~0565 Yrsa Helgisdtr ~0237 Skjold of the Danes ~0241 Gefion ~0217 Gewar of Norway of Strathclyde <0594 - 0641 Beli of Strathclyde 47 47 of Picts 0958 - 1027 William 1st Pereginus King Of Lombard 69 69 of Picts D. ~0693 Bruidhe III of Picts Peither of Foith Cenwalh of Mercia of Foith D. ~0612 Nechtan II Mawr mac Erb Cynlop of Damnonii D. ~0459 Ceretic Wledig of Strathclyde 0860 - 0927 Hersent Duchess Of Lorraine 67 67 Wigmund of Mercia Drust Erb mac Drust ? verch Geraint Cundwalh of Mercia 1094 - UNKNOWN Constance of Brittany 0846 - 0916 Rainer I Hainaut Duke Of Lorraine 70 70 Rainer or Reginar I, surnamed "Longneck," Duke of Lorraine, was the firstdefinitely established Count of Hainault. He died in 916.  He firstappears in history in 875, when in alliance with Ratbod, Duke of Frisia,he attempted to dislodge the Norman chief Rollo from the Island ofWalcheren in Zeeland. The two allies were defeated by Rollo, who enteredHainault the following year and took Ranier prisoner. The count wasransomed by his wife, who exchanged for him 12 Norman leaders who were inher power, and all the gold and silver she possessed. Rainer I becameembroiled with Zwentibold. ruler of Lorraine, and being defeated he wasforced to withdraw into France. After the death of Zwentibold, Rainerrecovered both his land and his title, and added them to the duchy ofLorraine, which Charles the Simple, King of France, granted him in 911. 0940 Geoffrey I Count of Semur ~0875 - 0929 Lothar I of Stade& Walbeck 54 54 0822 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Count of Darnu & Brabant & Massagau Olnedobel ~0878 - ~0912 Oleg (Helgi II) of denmark 34 34 ~0796 Refil Bjornsson of Uppsala 0823 - 0877 Charles II Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 54 54 Joiadah ben Eliashib Shallum ben Azariah Hilkiah ben Shallum Seraiah ben Azariah Azariah ben Hilkiah 0992 - UNKNOWN Herman Viscount of Verdun Fernando Rodrigez Rodrigo Bermudez Bermudo Lainez D. 1022 Eloisa Elvira Menendez of Galicia Ximena Alfonsez of Leon The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 65, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
Margaret Le Strange 0996 - UNKNOWN Rainer V Count of Hainault Rainer or Reginar V succeeded his father and died 1036. He took the partof his uncle Lambert, Count of Lorraine, in the quarrel between thelatter and Godfrey, Duke of Lothair. They were defeated in the battle ofFlorences Sept. 12, 1015, but Rainer later became reconciled with Godfreythrough the mediation of the Bishops of Verdun and Cambrai. He marriedMathilde, daughter of Herman, Viscount of Verdun, and had an only child,a daughter, Richilde, Countess of Hainault, who succeeded her father in1036. 1535 Ursula Noventon Reinhild of Reichlingen D. 1015 Gero of Nordmark Adelaide D. 0978 Dietmar I of Nordmark D. ~0966 Christian of Nordmark D. 0969 Hidde Sigris of denmark ~0843 Theophylaktos Abstartus 0865 - 15 Mar 0947/0948 Romanus I of Byzantium 0868 - 0932 Regnier II Hainault Count of Hainault 64 64 Rainer or Reginar II, Count of Hainault, is not mentioned as living laterthan 928, but probably died about 932. During his reign he quarreledalmost continually with his brother Gislebert, Duke of Lorraine.Gislebert was imprisoned by Berenger, his brother-in-law, in 924, butalthough Rainer II obtained his release by offering his sons as hostages,Giselbert was no sooner at liberty than he began to ravage the lands ofBerenger and of Isaac, Count of Cambrai. Rainer retaliated, but thebrothers presumably became reconciled, since in 925 Giselbert made hispeace with the King of France. Rainer II married Alix daughter of RichardI, Duke of Burgundy. ~0930 Ardolph of Guisnes ~0996 Mahaut or Mathildeof Boulogne ~0905 - 0965 Sigfried of Guisnes 60 60 ~0932 Elstrudeof Flandres Braose D. ~1008 Menendo Gonsalez of Galicia D. ~1022 Tutadomna Ero Fernandez of Lugo Adosinda Gutierro Eriz of Lugo 0874 Adelaide de Burgundy Ilduara Eriz D. 0934 Froilo Gutierrez Sarracina Froilez Bava D. 0941 Adosinda Gutierrez Nunia Nunez Fernando Nunez of Castrosiero Gutina Diaz of Castile ~0815 - ~0860 Nuno Nunez of Brunosera 45 45 0972 - UNKNOWN Ermetrude De Roucy Argila of Brunosera ~0845 - 0900 Nuno Nunez of Castile 55 55 D. ~0960 Raimundo II Bernardez of Riborgaza Gersendeof Fezenzac D. >0950 Bernardo Ramiz of Ribagorza ~0885 - >0970 Toda Aznarez of Aragon 85 85 pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. >0920 Ramon of Pallars & Ribagorza Ginigerta Anzar Dato ~0795 Garcio Iniquez of Pamplona 0855 - UNKNOWN Carolman of Bavaria Urraca Guillaume Garciez of Fezenzac Musa ibn Fortun Musa ibn Musa D. 0839 Aznar I Sanchez of Aragon pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0845 - ~0893 Aznar II Galindez of Aragon 48 48 ~0820 - 0867 Galindo Aznarez of Aragon 47 47 ~0810 - ~0880 Garcio Iniguez of Pamplona 70 70 ~0810 Urraca Fortunez of Aragon ~0790 - 0851 Inigo Iniguez of Pamplona 61 61 1080 - 1139 Walter deGaunt 59 59 Walter was a person of great valour and piety, who at an advanced agecommanded a brave regiment of Flemings and Normans, in the celebratedconflicts with the Scots at North Allerton in Yorkshire, known in historyas the Battle of the Standard, "where" says Dugdale. "by his eloquentspeech and prudent conduct, the whole army received such encouragement asthat the Scots were utterly vanquished." He married Maud, daughter ofStephen, Earl of Brittany and Richmond, who brought him all of Swaledale.They had Gilbert, who had two daughters who died sine prole, Robert, andGeffrey.

Walter was a person of great valour and piety, who at an advanced age commanded a brave regiment of Flemings and Normans, in the celebrated conflicts with the Scots at North Allerton in Yorkshire, known in history as the Battle of the Standard, "where" says Dugdale. "by his eloquent speech and prudent conduct, the whole army received such encouragement as that the Scots were utterly vanquished." He married Maud, daughter of Stephen, Earl of Brittany and Richmond, who brought him all of Swaledale.They had Gilbert, who had two daughters who died sine prole, Robert, and Geffrey.
Oneca ~0650 Teon ap Gwineu ~0690 Tegonwy ap Teon 1100 Geoffrey deManDerville 0933 - 0996 Richard I de Normandy 63 63 3rd Duke of Normandy from 942 to 996.

Duke of Normandy from 942 to 996.
Meninhard I of Traungau ~0864 Bruno of Iverfort Hermann I of Werl 1076 Margaret deRie Adele of Coucy Aubri of Coucy Adele of Coucy Lietaud II of Marle Sofia of Lorraine ~0980 - >1005 Kunigundeof Ohningen 25 25 0960/0969 - >1027 Friedrich of Diessen Himiltrude D. UNKNOWN Ranulf "The Rich" St. Liz D. 1098/1101 Albrecht I of Dagsbourg Guy Laval ~0775 Aubri of Fezensac ~0800 Bouchard of Fezensac John Van Wart ~0825 Geoffroi of Orleans ~0850 - >0886 Aubri of Orleans 36 36 ~0875 - >0942 Geoffroi of Orleans 67 67 ~0900 - >0966 Aubri of Gatinais 66 66 ~0925 - >0987 Geoffroi of Gatinais 62 62 ~0950 - >0990 Aubri of Gatinais 40 40 D. 0829 Borel of Ansonia <0940 - 1000 Aribo I of Bayern 60 60 ~0959 - >1020 Adela of Bayern 61 61 of Schwarzenburg D. UNKNOWN Litwinde D. 0856 Thierri I of Chalons ~0894 Jhutte of Sulichgau daughter of Hermann Matilda or Maud pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1018 Judith of Bretagne pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Maelcorcre of Leinster pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1010 - >1048 Eudes Gui of Dampierre 38 38 ~0980 Melesindeof Limoges ~0980 - <1050 Hildouin of Dampierre 70 70 ~0950 Gui I of Limoges 0977 - UNKNOWN Charles of Lorraine Sybil of Boulogne ~1040 - ~1080 Thibaud of Dampierre 40 40 Sybila Petronel of Grenoble ~0950 - <0996 Guigues II of Grenoble 46 46 ~1040 Jeanne or Joan of Geneva Baldrick the Teuton D. <0785 Bonifacio ~0612 - 0653 Chinaswind of Westgoten 41 41 ~0612 Rekiberga 0990 - UNKNOWN Fulk D. ~0975 Ardoino III of Tours Guiditta D. ~1035 Otberto I of Liguria D. 1062 Otberto II of Savona Beatrice Guido of Torino D. 1026 Ardoino V of Tours of Mosezzo Maria or Amthelo D. UNKNOWN Oda von Bayern Manfredo of Mosezzo D. >1064 Olderico of Ramaznano of Herz Konrad of Thuringen 0980 - 1025 Albert I Count of Namur 45 45 Hedwig of Nellenburg Ceilia Hildegarde Hartwig in Isengau Wichburg <0990 - >1020 Friedrich I of Pusterthal 30 30 in Chiemgau ~1000 - >1039 Engelbert of Pusterthal 39 39 D. >1051 Luitgardeof Istria <0923 Sieghard II in Salzburggau 1205 - 1245 Eve Marshall 40 40 1115 Constance England of Salzburg ~0930 - 0994 Sieghard IV in Salzburggau 64 64 ~0934 Willa of Bayern <0960 - <1025 Engelbert III in Chiemgau 65 65 Engilrat D. 0935 Adelbert of Salzburg ~0909 - >0958 Bernhard of Bayern 49 49 D. 1037 Leon of Coucy Mathilda D. 1029 Ulrich I of Ebersburg 1057 - 1106 Maurgurite deRoucy 49 49 Papo of Preising D. 1013 Richgardeof Eppenstein D. 25 Nov 1064/1065 Wilibirg of Ebersburg D. <1040 Werigaud of Friuli D. >0916 Markwart I of Eppenstein <0927 - >0940 Markwart II of Eppenstein 13 13 ~0960 of Torta ~0935 Rodolph (Ralph) of Torta ~0925 Walter (Gautier) of St Martin ~0988 of Crepon 0733 - 0780 Eystein Halfdansson King in Raumarike 47 47 ~1000 Courtenay Manasses II of Rethel Doda Archembaud I of Cambour Palatina of Treves Bormard of Senlis D. 0936 Raoul of Ostrevant & Amiens pg 215, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0965 Eldegardeof Valois Ermenfroi of Amiens D. <1019 Aelis or Adelaide 0919 - 0999 Mistui II Prince of Obotrites 80 80 ~0620 - 0680 Lendisius 60 60 ~0590 - 0661 Erchembaldus 71 71 Windelmodeof Escuens Eogain mac Colmain of Dal Riata Mongan of Dal Riata ~0800 - >0844 Rostaing I of Vienneois 44 44 ~0838 - <0889 Rostaing II of Annonay 51 51 D. >0889 Berthilda ~0860 - >0889 Guigues I of Albon 29 29 0695 - UNKNOWN Olaf Ingjaldsson King of Vestfold & Jutland ~0900 - ~0947 Wandelmodeof Provence 47 47 ABT 0885/0895 - <0957 Guigues II of Albon ~0970 - <1009 Guigues II of Albon 39 39 Umberto Evesna of Sachsen ~0960 - ~1024 Gerhard of Alsace 64 64 0679 - UNKNOWN Ingjald Braut-Onundsson Evilheart King of Sweden ~0967 - >1040 Eva of Luxembourg 73 73 D. 0925 Gunther of Thuringen 0638 - UNKNOWN Braut- Onund Ingvarsson Henry Belasyse 1603 - 1638 Henry Tiffany 35 35 Robert Gosnold D. ~1075 Gerhard III of Egisheim ~1012 Petronilla of Verdun D. 0954 Herve Montague Fulbert of Montague 0616 Ingvar Eysteinsson D. 0963 Geoffroi I of Chateaudun Hermengarde D. <0989 Hugues I of Chateaudun D. >1008 Hildegardeof Blois D. <1005 Geoffroi II of Chateaudun Melesinde ~0930 Adela 0869 - ~0960 Odo of Toulouse 91 91 ~1000 Gui I of Bar-Sur- Seine 0594 Eystein Adilsson Adela of Salins Gui of Escuens D. 0866 Raoul of Ponthieu Raoul of Laesoie of Laesoie D. >0984 Renaud of Bar-Sur- Seine of Bar-Sur- Seine of Bar-Sur- Seine D. >0950 Gerhard of Carlat D. >0980 Bernard II of Carlat 0572 Adils Ottarsson ~0840 - >0874 Unruoch III of Friuli 34 34 ~0865 - >0888 Eberhard in Sulichgau 23 23 Gemma Gisulfo of Teano D. 1027 Pandulfo of Capua ~1112 Clementia of Barcelona pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition of Salerno pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 0861 Lando of Capua Alcara Landelaja of Capua 0551 Ottar Egilsson 1006 - 1077 Gertrud Countess In Nordgau 71 71 Guaimer of Salerno D. ~0901 Guaimar of Salerno Gui of Salerno Adaltrude ~0972 Gerberge of Schwaben pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0848 - 0907 Boris I of Bulgaria 59 59 ~0824 - ~0849 Presijan of Bulgaria 25 25 ~0807 - >0831 Sviniza of Bulgaria 24 24 ~0784 - >0831 Omortag of Bulgaria 47 47 Lambert of Louvaine 0530 Egil Vendikraka Aunsson ~0913 of Bethune D. >0897 Ricfrid (Dode) of Bethune Harsinde ~1005 - ~1059 Eilika of Schweinfurt 54 54 ~0976 - 1011 Hildegardeof Stade 35 35 Hildegarde Mathilda of Thuringen 0509 - UNKNOWN Aun The Aged Jorgundsson D. >0866 Burkhard I of Grabfeld D. >0908 Burkhard II of Grabfeld Auprondo of Venticilis Railonda of Venticilis Olderado 0302 - UNKNOWN Driva Snaersdottir Suomi ~1126 Gerald deWindsor 0403 Dag Dyggvasson 0364 - UNKNOWN Domar Domaldsdotter Sverige 1114 - 1152 Henry of Huntingdon 38 38 pg 89, 91, 92 & 146,"Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 21, 162 & 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1117 - 1178 Ada or Adelaide Warren 61 61 pg 89, 91, 92 & 146, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Aethelgyth of Mercia Aethelwulf of Mercia Olaf of Sweden Magnus ~1286 - 1360 William de Braose 74 74 D. >0562 Gallus of Treves Regintrudeof Austrasia ~0615 - ~0716 Teodon II of Bayern 101 101 ~0962 Milolika of Bulgaria of Kiev Bertha ~0652 - 0675 Bilihildeof Alsace 23 23 D. 0966 Eberhard III in Maingau ~0852 - 0885 Gottfried of denmark 33 33 0319 Visbur Vanlandsson ~0990 - >1028 Richwin of Scarpone 38 38 ~0960 - ~1049 Hugo VI of Egisheim 89 89 <0975 - ~1046 Heilwig of Dagsbourg 71 71 ~0995 Hildegardeof Egisheim ~0941 - 0964 Liutgardeof Flandres 23 23 ~0493 - ~0511 Tonantius II Ferreolus 18 18 pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0685 - >0751 Childebrand of Perracy 66 66 ~0740 - 0768 Nivelon of Perracy 28 28 ~0760 - ~0831 Childebrand II of Perracy 71 71 0298 - UNKNOWN Vanlandi Svegdasson ~0775 Dunne of Autun ~1001 - 1040 Duncan I of Scots 39 39 vol 3, pg 240, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 109 & 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Donat I of Malun Laundree Giraud of Porthois ~1014 - 1040 Sybil of Northumbria 26 26 ~0834 Wandelgardeof Septimania Aleran of Septimania of Ent 0277 - UNKNOWN Svegdi Fjolnarsson ~0746 - 0804 Thierry V of Autun 58 58 ~0785 Faquila of Bigorre ~0815 - >0910 Lope I Donatez of Bigorre 95 95 of Toulouse Senegonde ~0780 - >0837 Fulgaud of Rouergue 57 57 Sigesbert of Rouergue ~0975 - 1045 Crinan of Dunkeld 70 70 vol 3, pg 239, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

pg. 606, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
~0865 Teutberga of Bourges ~0984 - >1000 Bethoc (Beatrix) of Scone 16 16 vol 3, pg 240, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0256 - UNKNOWN Fjolner Vngvifreysson King of Swedes 0869 - 0924 Edward England 55 55 Edward was King of Wessex from 899-924.Reigned 899-924. He defeated theDanes (918), taking East Anglia, and also conquered Mercia (918) andNorthumbria (920). 0954 - 1034 Mael- Coluim II of Scots 80 80 0932 - 0995 Cinead II of Scots 63 63 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0897 - 0954 Mael- Coluim l of Scots 57 57 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0862 - ~0900 Domnall II of Alba 38 38 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0820 - 0877 Constantine I of Alba 57 57 pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0810 - 6 Feb 0858/0859 Cinaed I macAlpin of Picts pg 145, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2027, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition
~1016 - ~1057 Edward of England 41 41 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1107 - >1167 Berta Clifford 60 60 vol 3, pg 370 Burkes Landed Gentry 0235 - UNKNOWN Yngvi-Frey King of Njord Swedes ~1025 - >1066 Agatha 41 41 ~1150 Henry Furnellis (Furneaux) ~0770 Esylt verch Cynan ~0989 - 1016 Edmund II of England 27 27 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1053 Gerberge ~0995 - >1086 Ealdgyth of Mercia 91 91 ~0968 - 1016 Aethelred II of England 48 48 pg 3, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1094 - >1153 Nicholas II of Rumigny 59 59 <0960 - 1002 Ealflead of Durham 42 42 ~0425 - ~0480 Eire Geodnaid of Ireland 55 55 pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 1233 MathildeOf Angouleme 0943 - 0975 Edgar of England 32 32 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Eochaid Muin-remor of Loarn Breasal of Brega pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Maedhbh of Durias pg 2026, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition Inreachtach of Durias pg 2026, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition ~0987 - 1031 Brusi of Caithness 44 44 ~1078 Osceria 0945 - 1000 Elfrida 55 55 1150 - 1169 Hugh deLusignan Count De la Marche 19 19 0920 - 0946 Edmund I of England 26 26 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Orengarde D. 0944 Elgifu pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0875 - 0924 Edward I of England 49 49 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0901 - 0961 Eadgifu (Edgina) 60 60 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Payn fitz John pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 John ~1040 Muriel Chappelle 0849 - 0899 Alfred of England 50 50 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0852 - 0905 Ealhswith (Alswitha) of Mercia 53 53 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1410 Robert Ogle 1042 - <1069 Aurengarde De Mauleon 27 27 ~1095 William Mainwaring vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 1260, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 323, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and  Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland" pub 1841
~1125 - 1154 Roger Mainwaring 29 29 vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" 1188 - 1246 Isabella of Angouleme 58 58 pg 80, 106 & 132,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg lii, Burke's "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 4, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928

pg 545, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Alan de Heton Joan deHeton 3rd. da. and co-heir of her father. ~0755 Harald Klack 1101 - 1167 Mathilda of England 66 66 pg 3 & 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition
1024 - 1093 Aimery IV deThoaurs 69 69 1068 - 1135 Henry I England 67 67 pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1079 - 1118 Matilda (Eadgith) of Scotland 39 39 pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 3 & 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Sarassine 1024 - 1087 William I of England 62 62 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1032 - 1083 Mathildeof Flandres 51 51 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1001 - 1035 Robert I of Normandy 34 34 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1020 - 1070 Gerhard IV of Upper Lorraine 50 50 ~1018 ? D'Oglii pg 164, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
<aongusmclean@msn.com>
~1228 Walter Sully Adele ~1230 Audre pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1160 Judith Hesilden 1096 - 1169 Hugh VII de Lusignan 73 73 ~1028 Thurston Bostenburgh ~1074 - 1156 Reginald Dunstanville 82 82 <aongusmclean@msn.com> ~1026 - <1120 Emme of Bretagne 94 94 vol 1, pg 744, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire" ~0565 - 0601 Reccared I of Westgoten 36 36 Swinthila of Westgoten Hermesinda Pelayeze 1055 - 1102 Hugh VI El Diable deLusignan 47 47 Gutierro Oroiz 1075 - 1099 Hildegarde De Thouars 24 24 1130 Ralph de Beaumont ~0987 - 1047 Otto II of Schwaben 60 60 ~1052 of La Ferte Mace ~1027 Rohese Wahall Aelis pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1038 Ranulphus Praers ~1026 Guillaume of La Ferte Mace Orenge Gwallwen verch Afallach of Wales ~1130 - ~1190 Emma Darell 60 60 pg 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1080 Emberga fitz Baldric 1015 - 1060 Hugh V "le debonnaire" de Lusignan 45 45 ~1020 Ivo of Contentin pg 744, Ormerod ~1090 Eve Broc ~1060 William of Caenby Chesney Ildonca Menendez Liutfried Ava Gerswinda of Sachsen D. 0937 Giovanni I of Gaeta D. 1022 Frederic of Verdun & Upper Lorraine Cynthia Smithdeal  < cysmithd@worldnet.att.net>

"Royalty For Commoners"  by Roderick W. Stuart, pub 2002
1024 - 1071 Almodede la Haute Marche 47 47 Murdered by her step-son, Peter Raimond of Barcelona in 1071. Ermengardeof Namur D. ~1068 Sophia of Verdun & Bricy Cynthia Smithdeal  < cysmithd@worldnet.att.net>

"Royalty For Commoners"  by Roderick W. Stuart, pub 2002
D. ~0992 Mathildeof Chiny ~0942 - 1013 Otto I of Chiny 71 71 D. 1068 Louis II of Chiny ~0780 - 0851 Kresomysl of Bohemia 71 71 ~0758 - 0833 Unislav of Bohemia 75 75 ~0800 - 0873 Neklan of Bohemia 73 73 D. UNKNOWN Hugh IV "le Brun" deLusignan D. 1055 Adelbert of Austria pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1060 Drogo fitz Pons vol , pg 537, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Emma Langetot D. 1025 Louis I of Chiny D. 0982 Arnold I of Chiny Einridi D. 0935 Ermengarde daughter of Chrodobertus Agilofing Blood Agilofinginne D. UNKNOWN Aldearde De Thouars Hisarna of Ostrogoths 1106 - 1168/1169 Roger Flamville ~1170 Richard Heyford ~1200 Roger Heyford Elizabeth Alington D. 0020 BC Gaius Octavius IV D. UNKNOWN Hugh III "le Blanc" deLusignan ~1060 Gerald Camville ~0930 - ~0937 Sigurd Haraldsson of Trondheim 7 7 ~0936 Ralph of Hauteville ~1108 - 1148/1150 Hugh of Wigmore Mortimer pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1040 - <1091 Humphrey Insula 51 51 ~0522 - 0547 Hoel II Bretons 25 25 ~1030 Helena of Normandy daughter of Alard Roberge D. UNKNOWN Arsendis 1143 - 1214 William of Scots 71 71 pg 89 & 146, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883

NAME William I "The Lion" King Of /SCOTLAND/

TITL [EARL OF HUNTINGDON]/

BURI PLAC Abbey of Arbroath, Arbroath, Angusshire, Scotland
~1143 Matilda Ferrers Blasco Fortunez of Pamplona ~1044 - <1086 William Fitzansculf 42 42 ~1080 - <1153 Beatrice FitzWilliam 73 73 ~1432 - 18 Feb 1477/1478 William Stourton pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition, pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883. 2nd Lord Stourton. >1361 - 1364 John Stourton 3 3 pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
History is very unclear as to who the mother of John's children is. It could be  Jane or Catherine.
~1354 - 1435 Catherine Beaumont 81 81 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weis, Sixth edition, 1988 // pg 1909, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition D. UNKNOWN Hugh II "le Cher" deLusignan ~1423 - <1499 Margaret Chideock 76 76 pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1401 - 6 Mar 1449/1450 John Chideock also Burke's "Extinct Peerage" pg 337

pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1400 - 1461 Catherine Lumley 61 61 pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 1910, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
~1360 - 5 Jan 1399/1400 Ralph Lumley pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 1543, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg. 214 & 393, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1360 - >1441 Alianore Nevill 81 81 pg 1543, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 393, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1314 - 1365 Marmaduke Lumley 51 51 pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1272 Robert Lumley pg 2384, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition ~1236 - <1273 Roger Lumley 37 37 pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1248 - 1298 Sybil Morwick 50 50 pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1285 Lucia Thweng pg 2384, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition D. UNKNOWN Hugh I "le Veneur" deLusignan ~1192 Matilda Cheney Sige Ansuro Fernando Fernando Nuno Gerthidemac Dicolla Danae ~1265 1 wife pg 168, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0967 - 0997 Adelaideof Poland 30 30 ~0795 Ponislava 1230 - 1314 Geoffrey deGeneville Lord of Genville 84 84 ~0737 - 0820 Vojen of Bohemia 83 83 ~0718 - ~0804 Mnbata of Bohemia 86 86 ~0718 - 0783 Nezamysl of Bohemia 65 65 ~0694 - 0745 Premysl of Bohemia 51 51 ~0700 Libuse of Bohemia ~0667 Krok of Bohemia ~0642 Cech of Bohemia ~0720 Hruba ~0711 Strezislava ~0738 Blanka Thomas Appleton 0840 - 0901 Alfred England 61 61 Alfred was also known as the "Great King of the West Saxons."  He reigned871-899  and prevented the Danish conquest of England, defeating them
at Edington(878) after a campaign of guerrila warfare. After his victoryhe allowed the Danes to keep their conquests in Mercia and East Angliaprovided that Guthrum, their King, was converted to Christianity. Alfredbuilt a navy of Warships to defend the south coast against further Danishinvasions (885-86; 892-96) and protected Wessex with a chain offortifications. He took London and made it the capital (886), thusgaining control of all England except the Danish areas. He is consideredthe greatest English King and the founder of England's Civilization andNationality. He wrote the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle the first written historyin a modern language and founded Oxford University.
~0865 - 0921 Leszek IV (Lemzek) of Poland 56 56 ~0835 - 0892 Ziemowit of Poland 57 57 ~0813 - ~0861 Piast of Poland 48 48 ~0820 Matilda ~0970 - 1014 Katun of Bulgaria 44 44 ~1035 Adelaideof Savoy ? Haudre pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1072 - UNKNOWN Roger deBerkeley Lord Of Dursley ~1060 - <1183 Fulk Paynell 123 123 ~0923 - ~1009 Hildouin III of Ponthieu 86 86 ~1002 Weva of Crepon pg 1208 Burke's "Peerage and Baronetage", 1970 Edition ~1153 Emma fitz Orm ~1136 Alice Cheney William Audre pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1040 Basilia Flaitel ~1044 - 1130 Adeliza Taillebois 86 86 ~1010 Richard Taillebois ~1026 - 1094 Ivo of Anjou Taillebois 68 68 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" 1050 - UNKNOWN William deBerkeley Lord Of Dursley ~0890 Kunigunde pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0975 Guillaume Gometz of Bure ~1320 - <1390 John Chideock 70 70 pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1355 Maud Argentine pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1309 - ~1382 John Argentine 73 73 pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887

pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1265 - <1318 John Argentine 53 53 pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1228 - BEF 3 Mar 1307/1308 Reginald Argentine pg 11 & 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 D. 1283 Giles Argentine pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 D. 1246 Richard Argentine pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 1158 - UNKNOWN Isabel deMassey D. ~1223 Reginald Argentine Sheriff of Cambridge and Huntingdon

pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
D. <1139 Reginald Argentine pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 D. >1140 Maud pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 Margery Aguillon pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1110 - ~1192 Manasses II Aguillon 82 82 ~1250 - 1292 Lora Vere 42 42 pg 11 & 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1299 Agnes Bereford pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1250 William Bereford pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1325 Margaret Darcy pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1262 - ~1343 Robert Darcy 81 81 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143 Burkes Commoners
1285 - 1338 Alice deWarenne 53 53  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1049 Philippa ~1229 - <1285 Robert Ros 56 56 pg 89, 169 & 175, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 780, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1196 - >1246 William of Helmsley Ros 50 50 pg 89,146 & 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 780, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1209 - >1266 Lucy fitz Piers 57 57 pg 89,146 & 196,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 780, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Milicent pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1142 - 1169 Geoffroi II of Mayenne 27 27 Reinfrid 1220 - 1273 Nicholas Poyntz 53 53 ~0295 - ~0360 Flavius Julius Constans 65 65 Emina ~0970 - >1047 Renaud of Creil 77 77 ~1020 Constance of France ~1019 - <1084 Archembaud 65 65 ~1023 Agnes of Bouchard ~0990 - ~1060 Hugues of Creil 70 70 ~0957 - 1020 Bouchard of Montmorency 63 63 ~0680 Murchad mac Bran Muit of Linster 1122 - 1167 Philip FitzRobert deGai 45 45 Dorothy Alington Elizabeth 1763 - 1821 Caleb Merritt 58 58 ~0398 - ~0448 Clovis of Cologne 50 50 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Duach Ladhrach of Ireland Fiacha Tolgrach of Ireland 0921 Edulph Wessex Muireadach Bolgach of Ireland Simeon Breac Aedan Glas of Ireland Nuadhas Fionnfail of Ireland Gialchadh of Ireland Olioll Alocheoin of Ireland Siorna Rotheachtach of Ireland Maoin of Ireland Aongus Olmucach of Ireland 1130 - Feb 1181/1182 Thomas Basset Thomas, ancestor of the Bassets of Heddington, from whom diverged theWycombe Bassets. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 26, Basset,Barons Basset, of Welden]

<aongusmclean@msn.com>
Fiacha Labhrainn of Ireland Smiomghall Eanbrotha Tigernmas of Ireland Follain Eithriall of Ireland Irial Faidh of Ireland Heremon of Ireland Tea Luighaidh 1134 - 1186 Alice deDunstanville 52 52 Dunstanville Sources:
    Ecclesiastical History of England and Normandy, by Ordericus Vitale
      (translated with notes by Thomas Forester, 1854), Vol. 3, pp.251-254/5.
    Allstrom's Dictionary of Royal Lineage, Vol. 2, pp. 723/5.
    Betham's Tables of Royal Houses of Europe, CCLXXV.
Ith ~1254 Sybil Sully ~0960 Elfeda 0941 Theophana of Byzantium D. ~0883 Richildeof Arles ~1088 Adelaide Chesney John Ogle ~1185 - 1261 Ela D'Evereux 76 76 pg 35, 103 & 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0837 - 0870 Helisindeof Rameru 33 33 1090 - 1166 Gilbert Basset 76 76 1023 - 1078 William Peter V dePoitou 55 55 1135 Beatrix deBurgundy 1548 - 1593 Robert Peck 45 45 ~0967 Urraca of Italy ~0612 - ~0660 Ivar Halfdansson of denmark & Sweden 48 48 Gerard of Yarmouth Gournay pg 526, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1063 - >1138 Gerhart I of Wassenberg 75 75 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1065 - >1129 Clemence of Poitou & Aquitaine 64 64 D. 1011 Alfonso Ordonez of Asturias pg 65, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1182 Humphrey IV of Hereford Bohun pg 93 & 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 57, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Egarl of Flint ~0750 - 0844 Merfyn Frych ap Gwiard of Wales 94 94 ~0824 Miloslavia of Bohemia 1094 - UNKNOWN Edith D'Oyly Vingethor ~1106 - ~1154 James St. Hilary 48 48 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1105 Jane Bigod pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1117 - >1167 Richard Stokes 50 50 pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Hasculf St. Hilary Aveline pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1164 - <1221 Robert of Oxford Vere 57 57 pg 56 & 201 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 113, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928

pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~0955 - >1016 Hugues III of Maine 61 61 1195 - 1226 Richard Umfreville 31 31 pg 544, Burkes Extinct Peerage

vol 2, pg 191, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
1084 - 1152 Edith FitzForne 68 68 Edith was a mistress of Henry I King of England.Edith is buried at OseneyAbbey, Oxfordshire, England. ~1307 Agnes Grimston Roger Grimston Albreda Lisours pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1340 Margaret Holand Diarmaid D. >1030 Sigulf ~0998 - >1086 Forne Sigulfsson of Nunburholme 88 88 <aongusmclean@msn.com> ~0382 Ceneu of N Britain ~0350 - ~0420 Coel Hen Godebog of N Britain 70 70 Guoyepauc 1070 - 1142 Robert D'Oyly III Baron of Hook Norton 72 72 Robert II D'Oyly is buried in Eynsham, Oxford, England.Robert, the eldestson, was 3rd Baron of Hooknorton, and succeeded his father as HighConstable of England and in the said Barony. He married Editha, daughterof Fornius de Greystock of County Cumberland. She was concubine to HenryI, before their respective marriages ~0360 Ystrafael verch Cadfan of Dumnonia ~0325 Cadfan ap Cynan of Dumnonia ~0315 Eudaf Hen ap Einydd of Britain Anllach Cormac Eubre Gwydel Brusc Briscethach Marchell of Garthmadryn Tewdrig of Garthmadryn 1104 - 1156 Alan deDunstanville Lord of Burpham 52 52 Mendog of Strathclyde ~0400 - >0464 Vortigern of the Britons 64 64 Celeinon verch Tudwal of Man Catharine Russell ~1680 - Unknown Joseph Conklin 1116 Emma deLangetot ~1015 Waldron of St Clare ~1080 - 1156 Alan deDunstanville 76 76 BIOGRAPHY: Reginald de Dunstanville, 3rd of the fourteen illegitimate sons of King Henry I by the dau. of Robert Corbet, was made Earl of Cornwall by King Stephen, anno 1140. Notwithstanding which, he subsequently espoused the cause of the Empress Maud and was in rebellion until the fall of Stephen's power at the battle of Lincoln. From which period we find nothing remarkable of him until the10th Henry II [1164], when he appears to have been an unsuccessful mediator between that monarch and the haughty prelate, Thomas à Becket. His lordship was afterward in arms on the side of the king against Robert, Earl of Leicester (whohad reared the standard of revolt in favour of Prince Henry, the king's son),and joined Richard de Luci, justice of England, in the siege of Leicester; thetown of which they carried, but no the castle. His lordship m. Beatrice, dau. of William FitzRichard, a potent man of Cornwall, and d. in 1175 when, leaving no legitimate male issue, the Earldom of Cornwall reverted to the crown and wasretained by King Henry II for the use of John, his younger son, excepting a small proportion which devolved upon the deceased lord's daus., viz., Hawyse, m. to Richard de Redvers; Maud, m. to Robert, Earl of Mellent; Ursula, m. to Walterde Dunstanville; Sarah, m. to the Viscount of Limoges; and Reginald de Dunstanville, d. 1175. Besides his legitimate daus. above-mentioned, the earl left byBeatrice de Vaux, lady of Torre and Karswell, two bastard sons, Henry and William, whereof the elder, Henry, surnamed FitzCount, became a person of great celebrity. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 184, Dunstanvill, Earl of Cornwall]

BIOGRAPHY: ----------

BIOGRAPHY: Rainald is well known as the Earl of Cornwall, called also Rainald de Dunstanville, perhaps indicating the place of his birth. He helped to foment trouble against Stephen in Normandy, then headed a successful rising in the West Country in support of Matilda and was rewarded by herwith his earldom in 1141. Rainald had married a wealthy heiress, Beatrice, daughter of William FitzRichard, 'a man of large estates in Cornwall.' It was notHenry I's policy to establish his bastards on large estates belonging to the crown; rather he used his powers of wardship and marriage to marry them off well.Most of Robert of Gloucester's great domain came to him through his wife and,although Rainald did not marry until five years after Henry's death, he was following a pattern which was well established. Thanks to the conditions of the Anarchy and his support for Matilda and then Henry II, a precedent was set that Rainald had direct control of the country and did not account for it to the exchequer. Much as Henry II must have disliked the condition he no doubt felt it unwise to strip a firm ally of considerable powers, and it was not until Rainalddied in 1175, without a male heir, that the king again gained control of the revenues of the county, the earldom reverting to the crown. [The Royal Bastards of Medieval England, C. Given-Wilson and A. Curteis, Barnes and Noble Books, 1984]
~0942 Gerald of Geneva 1085 - UNKNOWN Adelina de Insula 1053 Reginald deDunstanville 1060 - UNKNOWN Adelaide De Lisle D. UNKNOWN Humphrey deLisle 0439 - 0530 Elesa of Saxony 91 91 1110 - UNKNOWN Millicent deRethel 1120 Joan Basset 1184 Philip Basset 1190 - >1230 Isabel Isabella d'Aubigny 40 40 Miss William Alington 1630 - 1685 Humphrey Tiffany 55 55 Gwenhyfar Apynyr D. 0605 BC Nabopolassar of Chaldeans 1120 Beatrice de Chesney Joan Aston Lee Elizabeth Swynfen 1714 Jane Scott ~1000 Alphonsus of Ghesnes Katherine of Flandres Arnulph IV of Flandres ~1005 Henri of Bourbourgh Gand ~1005 Sibilia of Ghisnes D. ~1039 Manasses of Ghisnes 0727 - 0772 Guerin Count Thurgau 45 45 Emme of Arques ~0918 Ermengardeof Lotharingen 1710 - 1721 Mercy Merritt 11 11 ~0888 - <0944 Otto of Lotharingen 56 56 ~0934 - >0986 Gerhard (Richard) of Metz 52 52 ~0870 Bathel ~0915 Norman ~1020 - ~1067 Alard I of Peteghem 47 47 ~0990 - ~1058 Ingelbert II of Peteghem 68 68 ~0940 Ingelbert I of Peteghem 0925 - 0993 Conrad III King of Burgundy 68 68 of Peteghem ~0990 Glismode D. ~1078 Francka ~0996 John Wahall ~1162 Maud Selby D. >1337 Reginald Huse ~1043 Eremburgis ~1116 - 1183 William of Gloucester Fitz Robert 67 67 pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1087 - 1191 Richard deCamville 104 104 Richard de Camville, who was founder, in temp King Stephen, of CombeAbbey, County Warwick, and was one of the witnesses, in the 12th year ofthe same reign, to the convention between that monarch and Henry, Duke ofNormandy, regarding the succession of the latter to the crown of England.(King Stephen was the son of Adela, daughter of William, the Conqueror,and this Henry was the great-grandson of William, being the son of Maud,called the Empress, daughter of Henry I, son of William. As this lastHenry was just a baby in, 1135, Stephen was finally made King, and in thewars over it all it was agreed that Henry should follow Stephen, which hedid in 1154 as Henry II.) This feudal lord appears to be a person ofgreat power during the whole reign of Henry II, and after the accessionof Richard I we find him one of the Admirals in the expedition made bythat monarch to the Holy Land. He was subsequently Governor of Cypress,whence he went without the King's permission to the Siege of Acre andthere died. His lordship left four sons and a daughter. ~1055 - ~1121 Rohese de Clare 66 66 1115 Ferrers ~1014 Ansculf ~1147 William Cheney ~0980 - 1025 Urraca Salvadorez 45 45 ~1060 - 1107 Richard Vernon 47 47 pg 2707, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 554, Burke's Extinct Peerage
~1080 Richard II of Montbeliard <1615 - >1650 Margaret Fowler 35 35 ~1082 - <1130 Osbert of Condet 48 48 1769 - 1826 Israel Merritt 57 57 ~1345 - 25 Jan 1405/1406 Stephen le Scrope 2nd Lord Scrope of Masham.  He served as an esquire in the army before Paris in April, 1360.  He joined the crusading army raised by Peter of Lusignan, King of Cyprus, and was  knighted by him on the taking of Alexandria, October, 1365.  He served under John of Gaunt in Guienne, 1373.  He was summoned to Parliament from November 23, 1392, to January 1, 1405/06. ~1030 - ~1052 William of V Vernon 22 22 ~1034 Emma fitz Osbern ~1000 Osberne ~1008 Emma of Ivrea ~0978 Ralph of Ivrea ~0975 Herfast Apius Claudius Nero of Rome D. 0037 Tiberius Claudius Nero of Rome 1095 Maud Le Meschimes Marcus Livius Drusus (younger) Edmond Davy Felim Fidruglas Cormac Gealtach ~1052 Alice St. Quintin Niadh Corb Cu Corb of Leinster Mogh Corb Conchobar Abhraidhruaidh of Ireland Fionn File 1115 - UNKNOWN John Comyn 0830 Athelred I Wessex Ros Fergus Fairge Nuadhat Neacht of Ireland Sedna Siothbach Lughaidh Loitfin Breasal Breac Fiacha Fiorbric Olioll Glas Fearach Foghlas Nuadh Falaid 1071 - 1141 Robert deBrus III Lord of Annandale 70 70 Robert de Brus married 1st Agnes Paganel, died 1141, and was buried atGysborn, his birthplace. He obtained the lordship of Annandale, inScotland, in marriage with Agnes Annand, heiress to that vast estate. Bythis lady, who was his 2nd wife, he had issue two sons and a daughter.The eldest son, William de Brus, was first Lord of Annandale, inScotland, which David, King of Scotland, had given to his father, alsogreat possessions in southeast Scotland, which descended to hisposterity, the Royal House of Bruce, of Scotland, when his great-grandsonbecame King of Scotland. The other son of Robert de Brus by his 1st wife,Agnes Paganel, was Adam de Brus.

pg 80, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Alloid Art Mogh Art Crimthann Coscratch of Ireland Felim Fortuin Fergus Fortamhail of Ireland Breasal Aongus Ollahm of Ireland Olioll Brachain Labhradh Longseach of Ireland 0934 - 0963 Thorfinn I Orkney Earl Orkney 29 29 Olioll Aine Leghaire Lorc of Ireland Gwlyddien of Dyfed Nowy of Dyfed Arthur of Dyfed Pedr of Dyfed Cyngar of Dyfed D. ~0580 Vortipor of Britain Aergul Lawhir of Dyfed Tryffn Farfog of Dyfed 1056 - UNKNOWN Fulk Paynel Aed Brosc Corath Eochaid Allmuir Art Corp MacCairbre Cairbre Rigronn Fiacha Suidhe Fiodhach MacOlioll Olioll Flann-beag of Munster Fiacha Maolleathan of Munster Owen Mor 1116 - 1148 Jueta deArches 32 32 <0177 Olliol Ollum of Munster Sabina MacConn Dyfnwal Hen of Strathclyde Cynwyd of Strathclyde ~0452 Meddyf verch Maeldaf Cinhil of the Damnoni Cluim of Rome Cursalem Fer Jane Turner ~1160 - 1 Jan 1224/1225 Amice Fitz William pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Sadb O'Domnail ~1090 Mael Morda O'Domnail D. 1089 Donnchad mac Domnail Remair of Leinster D. 1041 Domnall Remar mac Mael na mBo D. 1006 Donnchad Mael na mBo of Ui Cheinnselaig D. 0996 Diarmait of Ui Cheinnselaig D. 0974 Domnall of Ui Cheinnselaig Richard Godfrey Coat of Arms for Richard Godfrey:  Argent, a griffin segreant pass, Sable. impaling the arms of: Ellis: Gules on a fess between three crescents Or. as many escallops Azure.

See: Visitation of Kent, 1619 Page: 131/2.
D. 0947 Cellach of Ui Cheinnselaig D. 0935 Cinaed of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig of Ui Cheinnselaig Eogan Caech mac Nath of Ui Cheinnselaig 1014 - UNKNOWN Rognvald II Brusesson Nath mac Crimthann of Ui Cheinnselaig ~0510 Muireadach ~0380 Dunlong Macenda ~0360 Enna Niadh Adinah Gorka ~1108 Agnes ~1129 - 1197 Hawise Beaumont 68 68 pg 71 & 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0980 Rantlina ABT 1044/1054 - <1135 Robert Dunstanville <aongusmclean@msn.com> D. UNKNOWN Waldemar Duke of Russia 1192 - 1254 Norman of Nocton Darcy 62 62 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"
~1065 - 1153/1155 Walter of Helmsley Espec pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition Adeline Beauchamp William Espec Miles Varue deomedes Geoffrey Nevill pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 Selbach of Loarn ~1220 - >1302 Simon Raleigh 82 82 1015 - UNKNOWN Arlogia Countess of Orkney ~1220 - >1315 Joan Tort 95 95 ~1195 - <1287 Simon Raleigh 92 92 ~1200 - >1287 Ela Reigny 87 87 ~1176 - >1242 Warine Raleigh 66 66 Margaret Sandregisisle of Bobigny 0995 - UNKNOWN Ostrida Regenwaldsdatter 0800 - 13 Jan 0857/0858 Aethelwulf England Ronain ~1050 Fulk fitz Reinfred ~1134 - <1177 Richard Bertram 43 43 ~1138 Menebell Gisulph ~1112 Simon Gisulph Alan Fitz Flaad pg 1871, Burke's "Extant  Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Enrico 0997 - 1040 Alan III Count of Brittany 43 43 Adeline 1236 - BEF 6 Jan 1295/1296 Norman Darcy pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"
~1238 - <1281 Elizabeth De La Field 43 43 vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland" ~1211 John De La Field vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland" ~1213 - 1264 Philip Darcy 51 51 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"
~1217 - >1281 Isabel Bertram 64 64 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"
~1194 - ~1242 Roger Bertram 48 48 vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland" ~1191 Joan or Agnes pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1147 Robert Turberville D. UNKNOWN William Malbank ~1076 Godiva of Normandy ~1119 Helawise ~0864 - ~0928 Gerlon of Blois 64 64 ~0866 Richilde Salvador Perez of Castile ~0962 Pedro Fernandez of Castile ~0880 Urraca Aznarez of Aragon ~0725 Aisha bint Abdul of Egypt ~1051 Eudo (Robert) Lisours pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~0966 Murella of Normandy Robert de Arsic ~1130 Rohaise Meschines ~1135 Richard Grammaire 1535/1536 - 1611 Oliver Bunker Will dated Nov. 15, 1611 and Proved Oct. 9, 1616. ~1228 Agnes Heyford ~1000 - ~1046 Alain V of Bretagne Ramsay 46 46 Margaret of Blois ~1070 Aethelaise (Alice) Vere ~1306 - 6 May 0138/0147 John Chideock pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1280 - <1334 John Chideock 54 54 D. 1281 John II Gerveys 1583 - 1682 Frances Foote 99 99 John I Gervas Christine Lucy 1324 - <1374 Isabel FitzPayn 50 50 pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Pedro Fernandez of Castile D. 0956 Urraca of Pamplona Blichildeof Maine 1052 - ~1078 Agnes of Pointou 26 26 ~1100 Miss ABT 0303 BC Anthyrius of Heruli Isabel Bartlett 1274 - UNKNOWN Elizabeth La Zouche D. UNKNOWN Ceowulf King of Mercia ~1207 Marjory Herward ~1188 Hugh Clifford Margery ~1151 - 1213 Richard of Frampton Clifford 62 62 pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition ~1145 Letitia Berkeley 1285 - 1326 Edmund Fitzalan IX Earl of Arundel 41 41 Edmund FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel, was born in the Castle of MarlboroughMay 1, 1285. He was summoned to Parliament November 9, 1306, as Earl ofArundel and took part in the Scottish wars of that period. In 1323 he wasChief Justiciar of North and South Wales. He married 1305 Alice deWarren, only daughter of William de Warren, Earl of Warren and Surrey. Hewas beheaded without trial November 17, 1326, and his castle and honourgiven to Edmund, Earl of Kent. He was knighted with Edward, Knight of theBath, the King's son, with many others May 22, 1306. After the fall ofEdward II into the hands of his enemies, Lord Arundel, who was implacablyhated by the Queen and her paramour, Roger Mortimer, suffered death bydecapitation at Hereford in 1326. He married Alice Plantagenet de Warren,sister and sole heir of John, last Earl of Warren and Surrey, and wassucceeded by his son, Richard Fitz Alan, born 1306.

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Beheaded in Herefordshire

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Beheaded in Herefordshire

Beheaded in 1326
~0944 Halfdan Sigurdsson ~1000 Ernald Chaources Cassandra Lisle Agnes 1168 - 1206 Thomas of Nocton Darcy 38 38 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"
~1170 Johanna or Jean ~1143 - 1180 Thomas of Nocton Darcy 37 37 pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"
~1091 - 1163 Robert of Nocton Darcy 72 72 vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Grezt Britain and Ireland"

pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1062 - >1115 Norman of Nocton Darcy 53 53 vol 3, pg 143, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1031 Norman Darcy 1052 - UNKNOWN Titus deScudamore 0740 - 0788 Ealhmund Kent 48 48 >0970 - ~1030 Ebulus (Ebles) II of Turenne 60 60 pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1119 William Selby ~1136 Thomas Selby ~1116 Godfrey Scudamore ~1084 Walter Scudamore ~1052 Titus Scudamore ~1026 Alexander Scudamore ~1030 Jane Catchman ~1005 Alexander of Troy Catchman ~1062 Joyce Clifford 1127 - 1182 Walter deCantilou 55 55 ~1037 Robert Clifford ~1132 - 1227 Matilda Giffard 95 95 ~1068 - ~1135 Robert Fossard 67 67 ~1040 Nigel Fossard ~1126 Galfride(Geoffrey) Furneaux ~1100 Alan Furneaux ~1074 Eudes (Odo) Furneaux ~1158 Joan Fitzwilliam ~1132 Robert Fitzwilliam ~1266 Matilda Raleigh 1062 - UNKNOWN Joyce deClifford ~1200 Laurence Tort Miles Reigni Julian Alix of Crepi pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1033 - 1075 Heinrich of Wassenberg 42 42 1013 - 1082 Gerhard of Wassenberg 69 69 ~1015 Bertha of Alsace ~0980 Eberhard of Alsace ~1133 Elizabeth Lisle ~1073 Robert Lisle 1080 - UNKNOWN Walter deScudamore Lord of Scudamore ~1104 John Lisle ~1020 Robert Lisle Roger Clare vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry ~1120 Juliana Vere Complete Peerage vol X, pg 116

pg 53 & 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1095 - 6 Mar 1176/1177 Hugh of Norfolk Bigod pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Hersinda Johanna Clare vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry ~1295 - >1324 Ela Bryan 29 29 pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1275 - 1354 Robert Fitzpayn 79 79 pg 210, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 // 2nd Baron. ~1139 - 1246 Ednyfed Fychan ap Cynwrig 107 107 1088 Maud de Pîtres ~1095 Robert (Rollo) Harcourt ~1150 - 1185 Robert Fitzwilliam 35 35 Sybil Torrington "English Baronies", by Sander's, on pgs. 73, 48 & 49 present the barony for Great Torrington. Sibyl de Torrington inherited one-fifth of the barony. She married a Richard de Umfraville. "She was represented in 1227 by her son Gilbert... who died post 1242..." "The blazon of the Umfravilles of Devon, 'gules, cruislly a rose or,' suggests that they were related to the Umfravilles of Prudhoe, Northumberland, who bore either 'gules, cruislly a cinquefoil or' or 'or, a cinquefoil gules within a bordure azure with horseshoes gules'."
Sanders further  notes the following pedigree as to the Honour of Prudhoe, Northumberland. :  Generations NOT in order. See death dates.
1]Robert I of Redesdale, Northumberland at the time of Domesday
2]Robert II (d. 1145) granted Prudhoe by Henry I
3]Odinel I (date of death unkown)
4]Odinel II (d. 1182) m. Alice de Lucy
5]Robert III (d.s.p. 1190-1194)  and Richard (d. 1226)
6]Gilbert I (d. 1245) m. Maud, Countess of Angus
7]Gilbert II (d. 1307) (became Earl of Angus through his mother) m. Elizabeth Comyn
8]Robert IV (d. 1325) m. Lucy de Kyme
9]Gilbert III
10]Richard m. Sibyl de Torrington (heiress of one-fifth of Great Torrington)
12] Unknown heir, possibly Henry (d. 1272), whose brother John transferred the estates to Gilbert II (d. 1349), leaving William.
Also noted is a likely cadet branch as described in the Honour of Great Torrington, Devon.
~1227 - >1315 Ida Bertram 88 88 pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 Roger Mortimer ~1037 - >1086 Walter fitz Other 49 49 pg. 590, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883 1145 Richard Raleigh ~1100 Walter Raleigh ~1065 Walter Raleigh ~1039 - 1066 Walter Raleigh 27 27 1088 - 1129 Richard Fitzpons Lord Of Cantref Bychan 41 41 Beatrix ~1258 Henry Haddon ~1262 Amicia Maltravers ~1183 Hawise Theopharcia Baliol ~0888 Rihini of Hungary D. ~0950 Pilgrim of Fiero- Marle 1104 - 1167 Berta Fitz Richard deClifford 63 63 ~0371 Hildur Gudraudsfatter ~0988 - 1035 Gerhard of Wassenberg 47 47 ~1012 Clemence of Foix pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Alix 1090 - 1166 Elias II Giffard 76 76 vol 3, pg 370 Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 231, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Beatrice Mandeville ~1085 - 1141 Walter Cheney 56 56 Constance Stanes 1155 Ralph Mainwaring vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 1261, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 333, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and  Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland" pub 1841
Adelheid Montlhery 1062 - 1115 Harold deEwias De SuDeley I Lord Of Ewias 53 53 ~1025 Basita Flaitel ~1108 - >1195 Amadeus of Montbeliard 87 87 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1080 Gilbert of Ixworth Blount pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1070 Alicia Colekirke pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
Hervey Glanville ? Salt-les- Dames ~1073 Theobald Valoines D. <1043 Geoffroi of Joigny Alice Gant pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1100 - 1147 Robert FitzHarold deEwyas Baron Of Ewyas Harold 47 47 Sarra Bendevill D. >1195 William Aguillon ~0953 - ~1015 Godfroi of Eu & Brionne 62 62 pg 1048, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 118, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 139, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1118 Basilia ~1116 Ralph deincourt pg 155, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1011 - 1046 Ragnvald Brusesson 35 35 ~1015 Arlogia of Orkney ~0990 Ostrida Reginwaldsdatter of Gothland ~0972 Beatrix of Normandy pg. 10,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 1163 - UNKNOWN Mascelina deBracy 0720 - 0789 Eaba 69 69 ~0736 - ~0780 Eystein I Halfdanson of Westfold 44 44 ~0455 Almveigu Eymundsdatter Reginwald of Gothland ~1144 John Sandford 1120 - UNKNOWN Matilda Maud Giffard ~1110 Bran ap Dinawal Dinawal ap Tudwal ~1055 Albrida Lacy pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Jacques of Conde pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~0625 Sigar Odinsson ~0655 Rer Sigarsson ~0680 Volsung Rersson ~0705 Sigmund Volsungsson ~0735 Brynhild Budlasdatter ~0685 Ljod Hrimnirsdatter 1159 - 1239 William de Cantelou 80 80 King's High Steward ~0710 Hjordis Eylimasdatter ~0688 Eylimi Hjalmthersson ~0638 Hjalmther Egdirsson ~0598 Egdir Skulisson ~0548 Skuli Lofdisson ~0498 Lofdi Halfdansson ~0450 Halfdan Hringsson of Ringerik ~0406 Hring Raumsson ~0370 Raum Norsson ~0345 Norr Thorrisson of Alfheim D. UNKNOWN Adulf deBracy Thorri Snaersson of Kvenland ~0375 Snaer Jokulsson of Kvenland ~0340 Jokull Frostasson ~0285 Kari Fornjotsson of Kvenland ~0260 Fornjotur of Kvenland ~1032 Ingelrica (Maud) of England ~1154 Emma Turberville ~1028 Hugo Dunstanville ~1058 Adeliza (Alicia) Insula Maritie Van Wart Walerland ~1035 Rannulfus vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 323, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and  Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland" pub 1841
~1040 - 1188 Hugh Mortimer 148 148 ~1045 Gunnora ~1133 Ellen ~1088 William fitz Ranulf Stokes Baliol ~1005 - ~1093 Ilbert of Pontefract Lacy 88 88 pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1028 Emma 1049 - UNKNOWN Judeal de Totnais ~0952 Wigerius (Wigman) Hersinde ~1184 - <1237 Hugh Morwick 53 53 ~1150 - ~1187 Hugh Morwick 37 37 ~1154 Aline Bertram ~1085 Gilbert Nevill pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~0950 Rollo ~1100 - ~1151 of Bedfordshire 51 51 The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164

pg 562, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1104 Sibill The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164

pg 562, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1069 Walter of Wahull Flandrensis The American Genealogist vol 23, pg 164

pg 562, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1015 - UNKNOWN Alured deTotnais ~1134 Roesia ~0519 - ~0586 Leovigild of Visigoths 67 67 ~0900 - ~0967 Cadelon III of Aulnay 67 67 Cicily Avranches Reinfred ~0259 Fridleif Skjoldsson of denmark D. UNKNOWN Daughter dePecguigny ~0570 Alof Olafsdatter Ethne ingen Crundmael Failbe mac Domnail of Ui Bairrche D. 0656 Crundmael mac Ronain of Laigin Failend ingen Suibne Suibne D. 0715 Conchenn ingen Cellaig Cualain of Laigim 1205 - 1240 Hubert deVaux 35 35 D. 0715 Cellach Cualann mac Gerthideof Laigin Mugain ingen Failbi Gudarud Budlas Vifil <0905 - 0968 Edgiva of Kent 63 63 ~0884 - >0955 Edgyth of England 71 71 0940 - 0992 Hugh II Count du Maine 52 52 1062 - 1135 Adela of Normandy 73 73 pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1001 - >1034 Alix (Adelaide) of Beaujeu 33 33 ~0270 Einydd ap Gwrddwfn ~0215 Gwrddwfn ap Cwrrig ~0180 Cwrrig Mawr ap Merchion ~0140 Meirchion Fawdfilwr ap Owain 1153 - 1193 William deMohun 40 40 0700 - 0797 Eoppa 97 97 0582 - 0641 Arnulf of Metz 59 59 pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988 ~0562 - 0589 Bodegeisel II 27 27 Mayor of the Palace

pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frankliin Lewis Weis, 6th edition published 1988
~0857 - 0920 Garcio Sanchez of Gascogne 63 63 ~0756 - 0814 Krum of Bulgaria 58 58 ~0758 Ella of England ~0509 Aun Jorundsson in Upsala 1190 - UNKNOWN Hawise deLanvallel ~0487 Jorund Ynggvasson in Upsala ~0445 Alrek Agnasson in Sweden ~0319 Visbur Vanlandasson 1185 - UNKNOWN John deBurgh ~0901 of Bourgogne ~0860 - 0911 Rudolf I of Bourgogne 51 51 ~0800 - ~0863 Konrad I of Bourgogne 63 63 ~0770 - 0824 Guelf I of Alemania 54 54 ~0745 - <0800 Guelf of Altdorf 55 55 ~0715 - <0776 Ruthard of Altdorf 61 61 ~0772 - >0833 Helgilwich of Sachsen 61 61 0994 Judith deMontandlier ~0812 - ~0866 Adelaide Eticondes 54 54 ~0765 - 0836 Hugh II of Tours Eticondes 71 71 ~0750 - 0800 Luitfried II of Upper Alsace 50 50 ~0720 Luitfried I of Eticondes ~0690 Adalbert I of Eticondes ~0650 - 20 Feb 0689/0690 Eticho Athic I of Eticondes ~0610 - ~0680 Leudefedus II 70 70 ~0570 - 0661 Erchembaldus 91 91 Ansbertus Ferrolus of Schelde pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0500 Blithildeof Cologne 0963 Ansfred II Onfror Le Goz ~0570 Gerberge of Franconia ~0530 Richemir of Bourgogne & Franconia ~0530 Gertrudis ~0650 Berchinde D. ~1020 Kuno of Oehningen D. 0999 Rechildeof Germany ~0871 - ~0928 Rothildeof Kahlen 57 57 0937 - 0978 Ansfred I Rolloson 41 41 Sigismund of Sachsen Berthold of Sachsen Elizabeth Crane Childeric of Sachsen Hattwigate of Sachsen Hartwaker of Sachsen ~1544 - 1628 Henry Sewell 84 84 Maryland Genealogies, a Consolidation of Articles from the Maryland Historical Magazine.
Will of Henry Sewall, 25 apr 1664; MD Calendar of Wills, Vol. II, p. 246.
Living Descendants of Blood Royal, p. 326.
>0305 Ursula verch Dynod ~0280 Dynod of Dumnonia 0942 - UNKNOWN Helloe Countess of Beulac ABT 0305 BC Symbulla of Goths ~0867 Boson of Beziers ~0841 - ~0866 Bernard II of Auvergne 25 25 ~0871 Adelaideof Beziers ~0837 Reinold I of Beziers ~0837 Doda ~0590 Theodora of Westgoten Landulfo V of Capua 0921 - UNKNOWN Godfrey Count of Beulac 0923 - 0994 Leopold I of Austria 71 71 pg 1105, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ABT 0750 BC - ABT 0712 BC Bakenranef Wah Ka Re' of Egypt ABT 0770 BC - 0718 BC Tefnakhte I Shepses Re' of Egypt ABT 0830 BC - 0773 BC Pimay of Ma ABT 0855 BC - 0773 BC Shoshenk III of Ma Es ankh Djed Bast D. ABT 0810 BC Takelot of Ptah 0900 Rollo Thurstan Bigod ABT 0905 BC - 0850 BC Osorkon II of Egypt ABT 0990 BC - 0924 BC Shoshenk I of Egypt Paihut of Ma 0913 - UNKNOWN Gerlotte deBlois Mehtenwskhet Kar'oma of Egypt ABT 0900 BC - ABT 0940 BC Psusennes II of Thebes D. 0992 BC Menkheperre of Amun Pinudjem I of Egypt Piankh of Amun 1022 M. de Saint Sauveur 0680 - 0718 Ingeld deWessex 38 38 Hanttwy of Egypt Anthony Cage Wrote letter # 1 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Nebseny Esemkhebe of Egypt Henuttawy of Egypt D. 1069 BC Ramesse Xi of Egypt 1080 - UNKNOWN Nicholas Pichard D. 1107 BC Ramesse IX of Egypt ABT 1185 BC - 1136 BC Rameses VI of Egypt D. 1184 BC Setnakht of Egypt Ellena Wodcote ABT 1327 BC - 1270 BC Sety I of Egypt 0890 - UNKNOWN Thibault Count of Tours and Chartres Sitre Meryamun Twosret Setepenmut of Egypt D. ABT 1336 BC Akhenaton of Egypt Martha Cage Wrote letter # 6 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. D. 1492 BC Thutmose I of Egypt ABT 1555 BC - ABT 1514 BC Ahmose I of Egypt 0892 Richilda of Bourges ABT 1580 BC - ABT 1553 BC Sekenenre Tao II of Thebes John Wysham ABT 1630 BC - ABT 1580 BC Inyotef VII of Thebes Istnofret of Egypt 0850 - UNKNOWN Hilda Ragnhild Hrolfsdottir D. ABT 1515 BC Ahhotep I of Egypt 1312 - 1392 Henry le Scrope 79 79 1st Lord Scrope of Masham.  He served under the earl of Northampton in Scotland and was knighted at the battle of Berwick, May, 1333.  He fought at the battle of Halidon Hill, July 20, 1333, and took part in Edward III's invasion of Scotland in 1335, and the siege of Dunbar, January to August, 1336.  He was at the battle of Sluys, June 24, 1340, and the siege of Tournay, June, 1340.  He served in Brittany, fought at the battle of Neville's Cross, October 17, 1343, and took part in the siege of Calais, 1346 to 1347.  He was summoned to Parliament from November 25, 1350, to September 7, 1391, by writs directed Henrico le Scrop, whereby he is held to have become lord Scrope.  After the accession of Richard II he was appointed at the request of Parliament one of the nine resident councillors, October 15, 1377.

1st Baron Scrope of Masham.
'Amhose of Egypt Meryetre Hatshepsut II of Egypt Mutemwiya of Mitanni Artatama of Mitanni Tiye 0772 - UNKNOWN Lifa Vestfold Yuya of Min Yey of Min Tey 1368 - 1401 Baldwin de Freville 33 33 He is of Tamworth Castle, Tamworth, Staffordshire, England. Yaya ABT 1325 BC - ABT 1257 BC Tuya of Thebes Isitnofret of Egypt 0910 - UNKNOWN Duncan Caithness Earl Caithness Kapes Chedebnitjerbone Mehetenweskhet of Heliopolis Istemabat D. 0825 BC Takelot II of Egypt D. ~0870 Karoma Mertmout II of Thebes 0688 Solveig Halfdansdottir ABT 0897 BC Karomama of Egypt D. 0562 BC Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon Nitokkris of Egypt D. AFT 0425 BC Artasyras of Hyrcania Orontes I of Persia 0735 - UNKNOWN Hilda Ericsdotter Vestfold D. 1446 Roger Aston D. AFT 0580 BC Bagabigna of Orontid Ariyarmna of Persia Edmund Bacon Wrote letter # 29 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. D. ABT 0700 BC Achaemenes of Persia Cyaxares I of Media Phraotes of Media 0695 - UNKNOWN Eric Agnarsson Vestfold Kosmartydene Dzouk ABT 0150 BC - 0063 BC Mithradates VI of Pontus ABT 0120 BC Cleopatra of Pontus 0715 - UNKNOWN Asa Eysteinsdotter Throndheim 0644 - 0735 Cenred deWessex 91 91 Tigranes II of Armenia John Greesebroke D. ABT 0250 BC Ariobarzanes I of Pontus ~0069 Ghadana of Armenia Dorothy Jerningham Meherdates of Parthia Edmond Morton Ariobarzanes I of Media Atropatene D. 0055 BC Mithradates I of Media Atropatene D. UNKNOWN Angar Vestfold D. 0057 BC Phraates III of Parthia D. 0138 BC Mithrades I of Parthia D. 1191 BC Artabanus I of Parthia Thomas Wilde Robert Noel Arms: Or, fretty Gu. a chief Az. 0663 - UNKNOWN Haadraade Eystein D. AFT 0337 BC Ariobarzanes of Cios D. 0363 BC Mithradates I of Cios ~1681 Stephen Dudley ABT 0218 BC - 0187 BC Antiochus IV of Syria Laodice IV of Syria 0286 BC - 0246 BC Antiochus II of Syria 0698 - UNKNOWN Solveig Halfdansdotter 0323 BC - 2 Jun 0261 BC Antiochus I of Syria ~1196 - BET 1238 AND 1242 Maud d'Aubigny Seleucas of Syria Laodice ~1109 - 1175 Philip Valognes 66 66 ABT 0360 BC of Bithynia D. 0283 BC demetrius I Poliocertes of Macedonia 0635 - UNKNOWN Halfdan Guldand ABT 0320 BC Archaeus I of Syria ABT 0265 BC Laodice II of Syria John Tracy Wrote letter # 25 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. ABT 0450 BC Arrhidaeus of Macedonia 0664 Gauhild Algautsson ABT 0480 BC - ABT 0411 BC Amyntas Trmenid of Macedonia ABT 0515 BC - ABT 0450 BC Alexander I of Macedonia Sirras of Lyncestae ABT 0375 BC - 0316 BC Olympius of Epirus Neoptolemus I of Epirus Alcetas I of Epirus 0575 Yrsa Helgasdotter ABT 0240 BC Laodice III of Pontus Laodice of Persia Antiochus IV of Persia Laodice Naabubalatsuiqbi of Harran ~0841 Theodoric of Autun 0487 Jorund Yngvasson <0814 - >0877 Beuve of Autun 63 63 Childebrandeof Autun Dyname ~0687 - 19 Jan 0715/0716 Dagobert III of France ~0928 - 0968 Boson II of Provence 40 40 Erchenaud of Schelde 0466 Yngvi Alreksson <0212 - 0253 Childeric (Hilderic) of Franks 41 41 ~0268 of E. Franks <0473 - >0516 Gundobad 43 43 <0437 - >0473 Grandioc 36 36 0445 Alrek Agnasson daughter of Walia D. >0419 Walia ~0538 Goswinda of Visigoths Augis of Ostrogoths D. 1235 BC Laomedan of Troy D. ABT 1279 BC Ilus of Troy D. 1328 BC Tros of Troy 0424 Agni Dagsson 0622 - 0713 Ceowald deWessex 91 91 D. ABT 1384 BC Erichthonius of Acadia D. ABT 1414 BC Dara of Acadia Fedlimid Aislingthe of Dal Riata Senchormac of Dal Riada Finn Fiacc Achir Cirre Scal Moen of Britain Aengus Fert of Dal Riata Fedelmid Ruamnach of Dal Riada 0361 - UNKNOWN Drott Danpsson Cruithluithe ~1235 - 1264 Emma de Grey 29 29 0428 - UNKNOWN Skjalf Frostasdottir Scamander Lamech Noah Arevagni Jeanne of Geneva pg. 60,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1010 Godfrey Arques ~1010 Amelie 0400 - UNKNOWN Frosti ~0725 - ~0800 Mainier of Sens 75 75 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0930 Owain ap Howell of deheubarth ~0725 Gainfroi of Sens pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0858 Thordis Thorgrimsdottir Gerold II of Bayern Evrard II of Ham ~1073 - 1124 Gronwy ap Owain of Tegaingl 51 51 Matilda 0275 - UNKNOWN Snaer Suomi King Of Finland ~1077 Genilles verch Hoedlyw ~0876 - 0912 Liudolf of Sachsen 36 36 Hoedlyw Edryd Gersonde Mortimer Ithel ~1044 - 1105 Owain ap Edwin of Tegaingl 61 61 ~1135 Henry Biseth ~1148 Albreda Clavering ~0820 of Flandres 0278 Vana ~1007 of Egisheim Adelia (Blanca) of Anjou D. 1388 Maud de Ros ~1015 Geoffrey Bolebec 0239 - UNKNOWN Gerd Gymersdottir ~0955 Galgi Thorstein Geoffroi of Bolebec pg. 108,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1085 Wedric of Conde ~0940 - 0987 Geoffroi (Gausfred) of Anjou 47 47 0217 - UNKNOWN Gymer Cech of Bohemia ~1011 of Schweinfurt ~0990 - 1063 Osbern of Bromsfield Bolebec 73 73 ~0995 Avelina of denmark ~0945 - 1035 Osbern of Longueville Bolebec 90 90 Willa of Clerieu Silvion of Clerieu ~1057 Osbert of Conde ~1030 Pierre of Conde Emma Crispin 0218 - UNKNOWN Orboda ~1154 Willliam Torrington ~1125 - ~1182 Odinel II Umfreville 57 57 vol 2, pg 191 Burkes Commoners

pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0885 - ~0983 Yves of Creil 98 98 ~0890 Greil Louis II of France pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Mabel of Alencon pg 8, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0965 - <1013 Boson I of Chastellerault 48 48 ~1193 William de Stuteville ~0900 - 0959 Airauld II of Chastellerault 59 59 1718 Jesse Scott succeeded his father in the county offices ~1234 Mabel Somery D. 1203 John Torrington ~1184 Mabel Torrington ~1214 - 1242 Raymond Sully 28 28 ~1184 Walter Sully ~1124 Robert Torrington 0219 - UNKNOWN Dotter Svierge 0600 - 0679 Cutha deWessex 79 79 Teutberge ~1094 Roger Torrington Ranulph Wrenoc ~0967 - ~1047 Hamon of Creully 80 80 John Gresebroke ~0942 - 1008 Mathilda of Sachsen 66 66 D. ~0995 Ranald of Waterford Hiltrude ~0705 Hersuinde 0190 - UNKNOWN Son Svierge Theodelinde Agnes Wysham D. <1418 Joyce Freville D. <0895 Ilduara Pelayez of Galicia ~1182 - 1230 Gilbert of Hertford Clare 48 48 pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1200 - 17 Jan 1239/1240 Isabel Marshal pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 358, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1497/1498 - 13 Oct 1558/1559 William Bunker Will dated Sept. 30, 1558. 0787 - UNKNOWN Jutta ~1046 Robert Lisle ~0842 - 1912 Abd Allah of Cordoba 1070 1070 Son of Gerold II Witichin of Soissons pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition G daughter of Gerold II Lambert of Ham ~1040 Lucy of Mercia vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" Thora Sigurdsdotter 1102 - UNKNOWN Gunnor Bigod D. ABT 1137 BC Iulus Ascanius of Alba Longa D. ABT 1175 BC Aeneas of Latium Aengus Buaidnech of Dal Riata ~1080 Robert of Valognes Roxanne of Sogdia Beuza 1097 - UNKNOWN Robert deEssex Lord of Rayleigh Rothrer of Dal Riata Hawise Baschelvilla Nicholas Baschelvilla Eochaid Antoit Feredach of Dal Riata Forgo of Dal Riata Maine Mor of Dal Riata Arndail of Dal Riata 1124 - UNKNOWN Cicely Roger de Puleston D. >1198 Albreda Smendis II of Thebes ~0653 - 0692 Chlotildeof Franks 39 39 Chrotlindeof Franks ~0475 Agilulf ~0465 - ~0508 Ragnomer of Franks 43 43 1042 - 1118 Adelisa de Savona 76 76 ~0505 Ragnoara of Franks ~0929 - ~0980 Hartwich I of Bayern 51 51 of Burgunds ~0850 - 0899 Stylianos Tzautzes 49 49 1015 - 1079 Manfredo Magrave deSavona 64 64 Hartmann of Dillingen Baldrick ~0295 - ~0360 Malaric of Franks 65 65 ~0245 - ~0289 Genebaud of Franks 44 44 ~0375 Blesindeof Franks ~0220 - ~0281 Marcomir of Franks 61 61 Ermengarde 1540 Ellen Yardley Staffordshire? 1540 George Vernon ~0867 Adelaideof Carcassone 0970 - 1045 Ralph II de Toeni 75 75 D. ~0844 Bernard of Narbonne Dhoude(Liegarde) ~0970 Tesselin of Rouen ~1040 - 1072 Gospatric of Dunbar 32 32 vol 3, pg 241, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 606, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
Seighart I of Bayern ~0450 Bisin of Thuringen 1010 - 1079 Godeheut Borrell of Barcelona 69 69 ~0860 Sigebert of Verdun D. ~0865 Ernst I in Nordgau pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1683 - 1750 John Caldwell 67 67 Arrived in America 10 December 1727 at New Castle, Delaware, going then to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. About 1742 moved to Lunenburg County (now Charlotte), Virginia where they were joined by relatives, forming what is known as the "Caldwell Settlement" for many years.  John Caldwell was the first Justice of the Peace, commissioned by King George ll, for that sector. Founder and elder of First Presbyterian Church of Virginia at Cub Creek. Supposed to have come to Newcastle Delaware on 10 DEC 1727.

Born in Lifford Parish of Ballycogan, County Donegal in 1683. John and Margaret were married in County Derry, Ireland on 4 Jan 1704. In 1727, John, his wife, four sons and a daughter, emigrated to America along with three married sisters and their husbands (Elizabeth and James Moor, Jane and Alexander Ritchey and Catherine and John Dudgeon). They arrived at New Castle, Delware aboard the ship EAGLE'S WING. The family went first to Lancaster Co., PA. in an area known as Chestnut Level. In approx. 1738 they moved to Lunenbeerg (now Charlotte) County, VA. It was known as the Caldwell Settlement on the Cub Creek area of Virginia. Some genealogy gives the date for the family migration to Virginia as about 1749, but it is duly recorded that the Cub Creek Church, which celebrated its 250th anniversary in 1986 was founded by James Caldwell in 1738.  Captain John Caldwell died 6 Oct 1750 at Cub Creek, Virginia. At the time of his death, he owned a vast estate on Cub Creek and Lawes Creek of about 1080 acres. He is buried with his sons William, Thomas and David and most likely his wife who must have preceded him in death, not being mentioned in his will.

Elder in church of Rev. John Thompson. Very active in church affairs in the "back parts" of VA. (Wilson's "Tinkling Spring" p. 41-45). Rev. John Thompson settled Buffalo Community in 1744 in Amelia Co. VA (now Prince Edward), adjacent to Lunenberg.

Will dated 26 Nov 1748 gave 500 acres each to sons Thomas, David, and Robert on the east side of Cub Creek.

Records show that Capt John and Margaret brought their five oldest children, William with wife Rebecca, Thomas with wife Mary Jane, David perhaps with wife Mary, Margaret with husband James, and son John to America with them. Their two youngest children, Robert was born in PA, and James at Cub Creek.

Also immigrating with them were his sisters Elizabeth, Jane, Catherine, and brother Andrew (Andrew abt 1718).




In the reign of James I a branch of the family went to Ireland and settled in Country Anthrim. It was from this branch that John Caldwell was descended, his father being Sir David Caldwell, of the north of Ireland. The original Hugunal name was Colville, which in the lapse of time became Anglicized into Caldwell or Cauldwell. There were three political refugees of that name, one of whom was killed while attempting to escape from France while defending the cause; one escaped to England and one to the North of Ireland. From these brothers have sprung all the Caldwells of the British Isles and their numerous descendants in the United States.  John Caldwell and his brothers landed at New Castle, Delaware, December 10, 1727.
Adeliza Hesden 0990 - UNKNOWN Adela Estefania deBarcelona 0564 - 0635 Cuthwine Wessex 71 71 D. ~0460 Godigiselus of Vandals ~0508 Crotechildeof Ostrogoths Tietberga ~1060 William Huse D. 0475 Tonantius I Ferreolus of Rome pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1174 - 1247 Agnes of Chester 73 73 vol 1, pg 27, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 113 & 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 197, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 365, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0920 - ~0962 Richard of Viene 42 42 D. ~0959 Pelayo Gonzalez of Galicia ~0550 - <0611 Ansbertus of Schelde 61 61 ~0950 - >1012 Fredeburge of Viene 62 62 0890 - UNKNOWN Hugh deCalvacamp ~0920 - >0954 Guigues of Grenoble 34 34 Hermensenda Hermenegez of Portugal ~0985 - >1030 Hugues IV of Bouchard 45 45 ~1150 - >1198 John de Grey 48 48 of Gauls Aba or Bava ~1065 Warine Hesden ~1038 Ernulf Hesden Joan Mareis pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1083 Avelina Hesdin D. UNKNOWN Berta deTurin Matilda Valoines pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1130 Hervey II Walter pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition Picot Saye Robert fitz Picot of Aunay D. 1210 Theobald Valoines pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ? Becket pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition Hervey Walter Clare pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1160 - <1206 Theobold fitz Walter Boteler 46 46 pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~0280 - ~0338 Khusraw III of Armenia 58 58 D. UNKNOWN Teto deSavona of Armenia K'Art'Am of Kaudjide Theuderic of Franks Johanan ben Joiadah Gutiar 0972 - 25 Feb 1018/1019 Raymond Borrel I Count Of Barcelona Hermenegildo Gutiurez of Portugal Elvita HermesindeGatonez Mpnfredeof Joigny Montfredeof Joigny Renaud I of Joigny Garnier Castellan ~1129 Lucy Fromond I of Joigny 0955 - 1011 AdelaideAdelais De Saintonge 56 56 1151 Agatha Hommet Eliashib ben Joiakim Joiakim ben Jeshua D. 1759 Richard Austin Azariah ben Johanon Azariah ben Ahimaaz Ahitub ben Amariah Meraioth ben Zerahiah Azariah ben Zadok 0950 - 1019 Roger I de Comminges Seigneur of Comminges 69 69 Elizabeth Gosnold Amariah ben Azariah Johanon ben Azariah Zadok ben Ahitub Ahimaaz ben Zadok Amariah ben Meraioth Papia ~1210 - >1260 Cicely d'Aubigny 50 50 Onias ben Judah 0945 - 0996 Arsinde De Carcassone 51 51 Gaton of Viero Agricola of Rome ~0400 - ~0456 Marcus Maecilius Avitas of Rome 56 56 Toda of Galicia Concubine D. ~0950 Ivar of Waterford D. ~0921 Ragnall of Waterford 0900 - 0975 Arnold I Count of Conserans 75 75 ~0270 - ~0307 Ragaise of Franks 37 37 ~0345 Chlogio I of Franks ~0715 - >0757 Hermenlindis 42 42 Elmadam ha- David Jesus ben Eliazer Menna ha- David 0870 - 0924 Aefrid II Count deCarcassonne 54 54 Jared Er ben Jesus Eliazer ben Jorim Mattatha ha- David Anna bint Joseph Aaron ha- Levi 0890 - UNKNOWN Adelaide D'Auvergne Edmund Paine Stated to be alive  in 1540.
Edmund Payne, youngest son of Sir Thomas, alive in 32nd of Henry VIII., or A.D. 1540, married Elizabeth the daughter of Robert Walton, of Leicester County, and had several sons. His place of residence was undoubtedly that of his birth, at Bosworth. Among his sons was:
William Payne, the eldest of them all and his heir.
Olaf II of Jutland & Westfold pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Manogan ap Eneid of Britons Amram ha- Levi Levi ben Jacob Richard de Puleston D. ABT 0772 BC Cunedda in Britain Richard de Puleston Anne Armyne 0848 Oliba deRazès II Count de Carcassonne D. ABT 1091 BC Brutus in Britain Henwyn of Cambria & Cornwall D. ABT 0750 BC Rhiwallon in Britain Aedd Mawr of Cornwall D. 1269 Geoffrey IV Mandeville 0824 - 0856 Louis Eliganius Count de Carcassone 32 32 Philip I of Macedonia Aeropus I of Macedonia Alcetus I of Macedonia Admetus ABT 0387 BC - ABT 0325 BC Artabazus II of Bithynia Fiachra Cathmail Tabent- Thuty 1653 - 1692 Robert Dudley 39 39 Sheriff of Middlesex County ~1152 - <1204 Hugh Munchensi 52 52 pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 389, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
0825 - UNKNOWN Elmetrude Carcassone ABT 0430 BC - ABT 0385 BC Tharypus of the Molossians ABT 0415 BC - ABT 0365 BC Pharnabaszus of Daskyleon Morogh of Leinster Hydranes III of Armenia Eochaid Cairbre of Dal Riada D. 0165 Conaire II of Ireland Mogh Lamha of Dal Riata Maud D. <1199 Alured Lincoln D. ~1160 Robert Lincoln 0798 - 0825 Bellon Count of Carcassone 27 27 D. ~1140 Alured Lincoln Trer of Dal Riata Ro-Sin of Dal Riata Sin of Dal Riata dedad of Dal Riata Iar of Dal Riata Ailill Anglonnach of Dal Riata Eogan of Dal Tiata Daire Dornmor of Dal Riata Cairpre Crommchenn of Dal Riata 0800 - 0836 Oliba I Count de Carcassone 36 36 Lugaid Allathach Nodjmet of Egypt Takhat Ramessenakht of Egypt Hrere of Egypt Ahmenhotep of Egypt 0765 - 0812 Saint Guillaume deToulouse 47 47 ABT 1272 BC Kha'emweset of Egypt Samus I of Commagene ~1700 Edward Scott Amyitis Robert Thweng Roger Kilton Adelaideof Lower Alsace pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1040 Gundred Ferrers pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
0770 - UNKNOWN Cunigunda Bleidudd of Cornwall & Cambria Dyfnwal Hen of Cambria & Cornwall Ailill Erann of Dal Riata Fiachu Fer-mara of Dal Riata D. 0334 BC Aengus Teamrach of Tara Cairpre Finn Mor Conaire Mor of Dal Riata Eterscel of Dal Riata ~1203 Sybil Umfreville 0669 - UNKNOWN Habibai Natronai Hugh fitz Baldric Eleanor verch Gwerystan of Powys 1240 - 1296 Robert of Oxford Vere 56 56 pg 70 & 80, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1231 - 1312 Alice Sandford 81 81 pg 70 & 80, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
6 Feb 1300/1301 - 23 Feb 1351/1352 Henry Percy pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1301 - 1365 Idonea Clifford 64 64 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
William of Morpeth Merley pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 D. 1180 Robert Bulmer pg 88, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Ernst II in Nordgau pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0732 - UNKNOWN Aude Aldane D. 1172 Thomas Bulmer pg 88, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Mary Fitzmarmaduke pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition Robert Lumley pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition John Fitzmarmaduke pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition 1190 - 1257 Maurice fitz Gerald of Offaly 67 67 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1195 Juliana Cogan Azrail ~0060 Enygeus of Arimathea ~0060 Bran Fendigaid ap Llyr of Siluria ~0950 Emma of Segur 0652 - UNKNOWN Bat Hisdai David 0525 - 0560 Cynric Wessex 35 35 ~0880 Foucher of Segur ~0420 Thewer verch Brydw ~1146 - 1219 William of Pembroke Marshal 73 73 pg 64, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 72, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 73, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 78, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 80, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 226, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

Marshal of England
Protector of the Realm
Regent of the Kingdom



From this family came William Marshal, whose biography was written by his squire John of Earley so providing us with one of the deepest and most fascinating insights into the life of a great baron of the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries.

His father, John Marshal, whom the Gesta Stephani rather unkindly describes as 'a limb of hell and the root of all evil' was a man who loved warfare, and played the game of politics with great success. At first he supported Stephen but, when he began to realise the failings of the King and the potentialities of Matilda's party, he changed sides. Almost immediately he proved by a consummate act of bravery and hardihood, that he was worth having: escorting Matilda to safety in his castle at Ledgershall, John found that the party was going dangerously slowly because Matilda was riding side-saddle, so he persuaded her to ride astride, and stopped behind to delay the pursuers at Wherwell. His force was soon overpowered by the numbers of the enemy, and John took refuge with one of his knights in the Abbey. The opposing party promptly set fire to the church, and John and his knight had to take cover in the tower, John threatening to kill his knight if he made any move to surrender. As the lead of the roof began to melt and drop on the two soldiers, putting out one of John's eyes, the enemy moved off, convinced that they were dead. They escaped, in a terrible state, but triumphant, to John's castle.

He plainly expected his children to be as tough as himself, as an incident of the year 1152, when William was about six, will show. King Stephen went to besiege Newbury Castle, which Matilda had given John to defend; the castellan, realising that provisions and the garrison were both too low to stand a long siege, asked for a truce to inform his master. This was normal practice, for if the castellan were not at once relieved, he could then surrender without being held to have let his master down. Now John had not sufficient troops to relieve the castle, so he asked Stephen to extend the truce whilst he, in turn, informed his mistress, and agreed to give William as a hostage, promising not to provision and garrison the castle during the truce. This he promptly did, and when he received word from Stephen that the child would be hung if he did not at once surrender the castle, he cheerfully replied that he had hammer and anvils to forge a better child than William.

The child was taken out for execution, but at the last moment Stephen relented with that soft heart that was his undoing, and though his officers presented such enticing plans as catapulting William over the castle walls with a siege engine, he would not give in. Later on he grew attached to the child, and one day when William was playing an elementary form of conkers with the King, using plantains, the child saw a servant of his mother, the lady Sibile (sister of the Earl of Salisbury), peeping in to check up on his safety. William cried out a greeting and the servant had to run for his life. The child did not know what dangers he was running, but it was good and early training for his future career.

When he was thirteen William was sent to serve in the retinue of his father's cousin, the chamberlain of Normandy. This was his apprenticeship in knighthood, and was to last eight years. As a squire he would learn by experience all the skills of a knight, and the elaborate code of honour that went with it. After he had been knighted in 1167, he began to go round the tournaments to make his name, and earn a living by the spoils. He was eager for the fray, so eager in fact that in his earliest tournaments he concentrated too much on the fighting, and forgot to take the plunder. He had to be warned by elder and wiser knights of the dangerous folly of such quixotic behaviour---a good war-horse captured from an unseated opponent could fetch £40. Even so, his heart was really set upon fame, and he recalled in old age the pride he had experienced as a youngster when, having retired to the refuge (a hut regarded as neutral territory in a tournament) to fix his helmet, he overheard two knights outside commenting on how well he was fighting.

He was, however, only the second son of a middling baron, and he could not live off honour; so it must have been wonderful news for him when in 1170 he heard of his appointment as captain of the guard and military tutor to King Henry II's heir, the fifteen-year-old Henry, already crowned in his father's lifetime in, as it turned out, a fruitless attempt to ensure the succession. In 1173 it fell to his lot to make the young King a knight.

Henry seems to have had a good sense of humour, for in 1176 when the two were cantering back into town after a tournament, William managed to bag another knight, and led him reined behind, with the King following. A low-hanging water sprout swept the knight off his horse, but Henry kept what he had seen to himself, and the laugh was definitely on William when they got home to find he was leading a horse, but no knight to ransom.

Tournaments were so frequent at that time that a real enthusiast could attend one a fortnight, and William and the King must have attained a record number of attendances. This was the equivalent of hunting to a nineteenth century country gentleman, though much more rugged. In ten months William and a colleague captured one hundred and three knights, and risked death on each occasion: one memory William kept of those days was having to receive the prize of hero of the day kneeling with his head on an anvil whilst a smith tried to prize off his battered helm. Another memory he retained was arriving too early for a fight, and dancing with the ladies who had come to watch---in full armour!

Then came trouble---William's enemies began to spread rumours that he was the lover of Henry's wife, and seeing that the suspicion could not fail to mar their relationship, William cut out on his own. He was immediately inundated with tempting offers from great lords who wanted to engage his services---three times he was offered £500 a year or more, but he turned them down and went instead on pilgrimage to Cologne.

He was soon recalled to service with the young King in 1183, but it was only to see him die of a fever. At the last William promised that he would carry out Henry's vow to go on crusade, and having buried his master, he carried out his promise.

He came home in 1187 to take his place as an esteemed servant of the King, and to marry the second richest heiress in England who brought him the Earldom of Pembroke and extensive lands in England, Wales and Ireland. He served Henry II in his final bitter years and once, when he was covering the king's retreat, he put the fear of God into Prince Richard who was leading the pursuit. The Lionheart cried out, 'By the legs of God, Marshal, do not kill me,' and William killed his horse instead.

Such conduct was dangerous, but when Richard came to the throne he showed the Marshal that he respected him for it, and when he went on crusade he made William one of the four associate justiciars appointed to help William de Longchamp, who had the care of the kingdom. This was excellent training in administration and justice, which was to stand William in good stead later when he had to bear responsibilities far greater than those with which a simple soldier can deal.

It also gave him lessons in how to deal with the immensely difficult Prince John, who, fearing, with some justice, that Richard intended to leave the kingdom to his nephew Arthur of Brittany, had to consolidate his position whilst his brother was away. When he heard that Richard had been captured on his way home and was being held to an incredibly stiff ransom, John's ambitions became boundless, and the Marshal had, added to his normal duties, the double problem of keeping the prince in check and raising a vast sum of money.

Richard returned to find William a wise counsellor now as well as an incomparable soldier, and he used him well; but in 1199 he died, and William worked with skill and energy for the smooth accession of John. This King was to bring him worse problems than he had ever known.

For the next seven years William had to watch John losing Normandy to the Marshal's old friend Philip Augustus, knowing there was nothing to be done about it. Instead of knightly virtues, treachery was now the order of the day, and when he taxed the French King with using traitors, he had only this for reply: '. . . it is now a matter of business. They are like torches that one throws into the latrine when one is done with them.'

Attempting to rescue something out of the chaos of the loss of Normandy, William undertook the negotiations with France to make peace, and find a formula by which the English barons might retain their lands in France. What he found instead was the implacable suspicion of John who, fearing that William was going over to the French side, confiscated all his castles and official positions, and took his two eldest sons as hostages.

So William spent the next five years in Ireland, looking after his vast estates and interests there far away from John, but unfortunately, in an area in which John took an especial interest. Every move William made was countered by the royal officials, and active hostilities soon commenced. However, William had the better and more faithful knights and, despite the royal offensives, he tended to win, so in 1208 a truce was made.

Soon afterwards William received on his lands William de Briouse, whom John regarded as a bitter enemy, and so the quarrel flared up again. Finally the sixty-six-year-old knight had to come to court and offer to fight an ordeal by battle to prove his faith. No one dared to take up the challenge, though a winning contestant would have rocketed into favour with the King.

But by the year 1212 John was in serious trouble, and was to learn where his true friends lay. William swung the baronage of Ireland into support for the crown, helped to organize the vital rapprochement with the Pope, and prepared to gather the King's friends together and put his castles in order in readiness for the inevitable struggle. A great moderating force was Stephen Langton, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was to be associated with William throughout the struggle, persuading John to accede to those demands of the barons which he had helped to formulate.

In 1216 William was back in the saddle as commander-in-chief of the royal forces opposing the barons and their ally the Dauphin and his French troops. All was well between the Marshal and the King who had so badly misjudged him, and now John tried to make amends. But the years of suspicion and discord still told: when he gave William the castle of Dunamase, he was upset that his justiciar failed to hand it over---he had forgotten an arrangement he had made secretly with the justiciar that William was to have nothing, whatever documents he produced, without a secret handshake (holding each other's thumbs) being given.

Now as John lay dying in Newark Castle, with half his kingdom in enemy hands, and a nine-year old child as his successor, he realised the worth of the man he had hounded so long, and urged all present to commit the kingdom into the care of the Marshal after his death.

William was an old man, the treasury was empty, discord reigned, and the position seemed hopeless---he wept and begged to be excused; but John of Earley, his squire, pointed out what honour there was to be won, and changed his mind for him in a flash. 'It goes straight to my heart that if all should abandon the King except me do you know what I would do? I would carry him on my shoulders, now here, now there, from isle to isle, from land to land, and I would never fail him, even if I were forced to beg my bread.'

Filled with a sense of the glory of his task, the regent now raided the rich stores of jewels and clothing accumulated by the royal house 'against a rainy day' to pay the soldiers he so desperately needed. He sent out showers of letters of protection to the enemy barons, tempting them to change sides. Gradually he built up his powers for the decisive blow, at Lincoln in May 1217.

There William led the charge, with the wily Bishop of Winchester who found a way in, and fought up and down the streets of Lincoln with many a shout of 'Ca! Dieu aide au MarEchal!' Finally they reached the open space in front of the cathedral where William personally captured the French commander and received three massive blows which left dents in his helmet. The worthy Dame Nicola, who had kept the castle for so long for the King against enormous odds, was at last relieved, and the war was almost won.

The Marshal sped down to Dover to intercept the convoy of reinforcements coming from France, and then set about making peace. He was generous---perhaps over-generous---to French and English alike, there was no victimisation, and little recrimination. The speediest route back to peace was chosen, for England had suffered enormous damage from the civil war.

This was perhaps the worst time for William---the period of reconstruction. He knew well how to fight, but the sheer boredom and worry of administration of this kind must have borne heavily on the old man. Disputes and claims had to be settled so that both sides were satisfied, and no one would have a pretext for re-starting rebellion. Above all money was needed to oil the wheels and restore the losses of war, and the best way to make rebels is to overtax them. He even had to ban tournaments, which would obviously lead to dangerous positions being taken up once more. He must have wondered what he had come to---the greatest fighter in Europe, and the one who loved a fight better than anything. Instead he spent his time setting up judicial commissions and trying desperately to balance the budget.

He continued hard at work until the end of February, 1219, when he was taken ill and confined to his bed in the Tower. Doctors came and went but could do nothing, and quickly all his family and his knights and retainers gathered round him for the end. He asked to be taken up river to his manor of Caversham near Reading to die, and there, he and his household went, in mid-March, followed by the young King Henry III, the papal legate, and the the highest officers of state.

He urged the king 'to be a gentleman,' and told him that if he should follow the example of some evil ancestor, he hoped he would die young. He worried long and hard over who should be his successor, and found no-one who could unite all under his rule, so wisely chose the papal legate. He made his will, and worried for a moment at the lack of provision for his young son Anselm, but, remembering his own career, felt that he could make his own way. 'May God give him prowess and skill.' He remembered an unmarried daughter and made provision for her 'until God takes care of her.' He had always been a religious man, founder of monasteries, crusader, and honest knight. He called for silken cloths he had thoughtfully brought back from the Holy Land thirty years before, and gave instruction that he should be covered with them at his funeral.

He wanted to be buried as a Knight Templar, and when the master of the order came to clothe him, he said to his wife 'Belle amie, you are going to kiss me, but it will be for the last time.' Happy now that all the arrangements had been made, William could rest a little, and wait comfortably for death. He talked gently with his knights---one of them was worried that the clerks said no one could be saved who did not give back everything he had taken. William set his mind at rest---he had taken 500 knights in his lifetime, and could never restore the booty, so if he were damned there was nothing he could do about it. 'The clerks are too hard on us. They shave us too closely.' When his clerk suggested that all the rich robes could be sold to win his salvation, he said 'You have not the heart of a gentleman, and I have had too much of your advice. Pentecost is at hand, and my knights ought to have their new robes. This will be the last time I can supply them. . .' He was a religious man---true---but he could not abide nonsense and knew his own duty.

In his last days he was very gentle to his family. One day he said to John of Earley that he had an overwhelming desire to sing, and when John urged him to do so, as it might improve his appetite, he told him it would do no such thing, people would just assume he was delirious. So they called in his daughters to sing for him, and when one sang weakly, overcome with emotion, he showed her how she should project her voice and sing with grace.

On 14 May, William suddenly called to John of Earley to open all the doors and windows and call everyone in, for death was upon him. There was such a press that the abbots of Nutley and Reading, come to absolve the Marshal and give him plenary indulgence, were barely noticed, except by the dying man, who called them to him, made confession, prayed, and then died with his eyes fixed upon the cross.

The cortEge moved slowly up to London for the great state funeral, and there William's old friend Stephen Langton spoke his eulogy over the grave: 'Behold all that remains of the best knight that ever lived. You will all come to this. Each man dies on his day. We have here our mirror, you and I. Let each man say his paternoster that God may receive this Christian into His Glory and place him among His faithful vassals, as he so well deserves.' [Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York, 1995]

----------

William Marshal, of the great baronial family of Marischal, marshal to the king, is first noticed as receiving from Prince Henry, the rebellious son of Henry II, upon the prince's deathbed, as his most confidential friend, his cross to convey to Jerusalem. He m. the great heiress of the Clares in 1189, and with her acquired the Earldom of Pembroke -- in which rank he bore the royal sceptre of gold, surmounted by the cross, at the coronation of King Richard I, and he was soon afterwards, on the king's purposing a journey to the Holy Land, appointed one of the assistants to Hugh, bishop of Durham, and William, Earl of Albemarle, Chief Justice of England, in the government of the realm.

Upon the decease of his brother, John Mareschall, marshal of the king's house, in 1199, he became lord marshal, and on the day of the coronation of King John, he was invested with the sword of the Earldom of Pembroke, being then confirmed in the possession of the said inheritance. In the first year of this monarch's reign, his lordship was appointed sheriff of Gloucestershire and likewise of Sussex, wherein he was continued for several years. In the 5th he had a grant of Goderich Castle in co. Hereford, to hold by the service of two knights' fees; and in four years afterwards he obtained, by grant from the crown, the whole province of Leinster, in Ireland, to hold by the service of one hundred knights' fees.

Upon the breaking out of the baronial insurrection, the Earl of Pembroke was deputed by the king, with the archbishop of Canterbury, to ascertain the grievances and demands of those turbulent lords, and at the demise of King John, he was so powerful as to prevail upon the barons to appoint a day for the coronation of Henry III, to whom he was constituted guardian, by the rest of the nobility, who had remained firm in their allegiance. He subsequently took up arms in the royal cause and, after achieving a victory over the barons at Lincoln, proceeded directly to London, and investing that great city, both by land and water, reduced it to extremity for want of provisions. Peace, however, being soon concluded, it was relieved. His lordship, at this point, executed the office of sheriff for the cos. of Essex and Hertford.

This eminent nobleman was no less distinguished by his wisdom in the council and valour in the field, than by his piety and his attachment to the church, of which his numerous munificent endowments bear ample testimony. His lordship had, by the heiress of Clare, five sons, who s. each other in his lands and honours, and five daus., viz., Maud, Joan, Isabel, Sybil, and Eve. The earl d. in 1219, and was s. by his eldest son, William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 358, Marshal, Earls of Pembroke]

William Mareschal, now Marshall (Mareschal to the King), he became Earl of Pembroke, Lord of Leinster, and Lord Marshal of Ireland, 1207, having then a grant of the whole province of Leinster. He d. 16 March, 1219, having issue, five sons and five daus. His sons, William, Richard, Gilbert, Walter, and Anselme, all succeeded to the Earldom of Pembroke and Lordship of Leinster, the last of whom dying s. p. 21 December, 1245, the title of Pembroke became extinct and the Lordship of Leinster was divided amongst the five daus., viz., (1), Maud, who being m. to Hugh le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, had issue. Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 628, Baronage of Ireland]
1172/1173 - 1220 Isabel Clare pg 64, 71, 72, 73, 78, 80 & 114,"Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 120, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Baraka Betenos (Ashmua) Emzara (Naamah Coba) Clementia 0635 - UNKNOWN Hisdai Shahrijar David Athelaise Robert I Mandeville Mary Agnes Geoffrey III Mandeville D. 1276 John I Mandeville Joanan ben Resa 0610 - 0670 Bustanai Ben Hanini David 60 60 Zorobabel ha- David Neri ha- David Addi ben Cossam Cainain Shem 'Azurad bint Nebrod Salathial ha- David Melchi ha- David Cosam ha- David 0650 - UNKNOWN Viletrude Agilolfinges ~0480 Rigenew ap Rhein of Bryvheinog Pelag of Babylon Melchi ben Janna Matthat ben Levi of Arimathea Efan Joseph ben Judah 0629 - UNKNOWN Hanini Bar 'Adoi David Reu of Lagash 0610 - UNKNOWN Izdundad Sasanid Seth ~0560 Idwallon ap Llywarh Ceindrech verch Rhiwallon Enygeus (Anna) verch Eleazor Eleazar 0632 - 0672 Theodon Agilolfinges I Duke of Bavaria 40 40 ~0371 Tudwal ap Anwn of Garth Madryn Esli ben Nagga Samson Eure M.P. and Speaker of the House of Commons. Mattathias ben Amos 0633 - UNKNOWN Regintrude Meroving Janna ben Joseph Maath ben Mattathias ha-David Sarai bint Haran Sigtrygg ~1892 - ABT 1745 BC Jacob ben Isaac of Goshen Iago ap Genedog of Britain 0608 - 0625 Garibald Agilolfinges II Duke of Bavaria 17 17 Gotelena ~0405 Adalbertus of Moselle Chevereuse 0610 Geila de Friuli Genedog ap Cain of Britain D. ABT 0929 BC Lleon (Lliwelydd) of the Britons Dwywg ap Brychwain of Britain ~0130 Amwerydd ap Onwed of Britain Gwrddoli ap Dwfn of Britain Doli ap Gwrddoli of Britain 0570 - 0610 Tassilon deAgilofinges I Duke of Bavaria 40 40 0493 - 0584 Crioda deWessex 91 91 ~1675 Anne Dudley Bleidudd ABT 0860 BC Regan verch Llyr Brychwain ap Owain of Britain ~0165 Gwrddwfn ap Amwerydd of Britain 0475 - UNKNOWN Zucchilo of the Lombards Garwynwyn Gerinion Tiberius Claudius Nero of Rome 0063 BC - 0033 BC Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero of Rome ~0420 Prawst verch deithlyn of the Picts Girom ~0500 ingen Girom 0500 - 0554 Wacchon King Of Lombardy 54 54 Erp ap Ceretic of Strathclyde ~0422 Brydw ap Vortigern Geila Blithilde pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Dorothy Leventhorp Wrote letter # 33 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Dietrich of Hamaland ~0908 Ermentrudeof France ~0865 Gottfried of Lotharingen 0580 - 0625 Garibald deAgilofinges I Duke of Bavaria 45 45 D. >0721 Gui of Treves <0761 - >0782 Lambert of Hornbach 21 21 ~0354 - ~0413 Ascyla 59 59 ~0320 - ~0378 Mallobaudes of Franks 58 58 ~0350 - ~0384 Richomer of Franks 34 34 ~0374 Ildegondeof Lombards Wedelphe of Sachsen Theodelinde D. ABT 0954 BC Efrog Gadern of he Britons 0425 - UNKNOWN Gudeoc of the Lombards ~0334 Ascyllius ~0374 - 0414 Theodemer of Franks 40 40 ~0369 Marcomir of Franks ~0435 - ~0478 Clodoweg of Franks 43 43 Remi of Marcillac Ignoge of Greece Corineus the Trojan D. ABT 1026 BC Madog of the Britons D. ABT 1006 BC Myambyr of the Britons 0500 Austricuse Ostrogotha de Gepides D. ABT 1081 BC Locrinus of the Britons Odulgarde Pandrasus of Greece ~0904 - ~0922 Senegondeof Marcillac 18 18 Gwendolen the Trojan Adam 0480 - UNKNOWN King of the Gepidae Elemundo Mahalalel Betheul ibn Nahor Melka Lomna bint Sina'ar 1120 - UNKNOWN Henry deEssex >0998 Everydd ap Cynfyn of Powys ~1020 - 1073 Edwyn ap Gronwy of Tegaingl 53 53 Nestag of the Chaldees 1587 - 1639 Alice Seabrook 52 52 Epher (Atlas) Isaac ben Abraham ~0820 Tyrne Haraldsdatter Jeshua ben Jehozadak 1055 - 1102 Walter Giffard II Earl of Buckingham 47 47 Thomas Leventhorp Japheth 1238 - <1295 Nicholas Segrave 57 57 pg 36, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 484, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Einion pg 755, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition Hubert Munchensi pg. 389, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883


pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
Gilbert Umfreville vol 2, pg 191, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" 1709 - 1749 Thomas VI Merritt 40 40 Thomas  had three sons Thomas (fourth) b. 1729 d. 1821, Robert b. 1731 d. 1802 and Nathaniel b1733 d1746. Robert with wife Elizabeth Robinson and children left as United Empire Loyalists, moving to Hampstead, Queens Co. New Brunswick, Canada.

MERRITT - Major Thomas; Rye, Westchester Cp, NY; Major in Queen's Rangers; 1783 Parrtown, NS; 1796 Twelve Mile Creek, U.C.; Built & Operated a Mill.
0742 - 0818 Charlemagne 76 76 Charlemagne was King of the Franks 768-814 and Emperor of the Holy RomanEmpire from 800-814. His Empire included all of Christian Western Europe(Italy, France, Austria, Germany, Spain). 1287 - 1330 Roger of March Mortimer 43 43 pg 32 & 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
2 Feb 1285/1286 - 1356 Joan Geneville pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 228 & 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Louis of Frommen pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Adelheid pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 William fitz Ernest pg 170, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1528 John Horne 1291 - 1367 Ralph Nevill 76 76 pg 156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 394, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 11 Burke's Commoners

pg 381, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
1291 - 12 Jan 1373/1374 Alice Audley pg 156 & 168, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 254 & 394, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 381, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
1070 Agnes deRibemont of Pons ~1280 Anne Hogan Tecmant 1090 - 1164 Walter I deBolbec 74 74 Anne Baliol Coellyn ap Caradog Gunhilda 1299 - 1323 Ralph Greystoke 23 23 pg 254, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1130 - UNKNOWN Walter II deBolbec ~1022 Albreda of Avranches pg 140, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Miss pg 233, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~1056 Hermann of Castile <0437 - ~0473 Gundioc of Burgunds 36 36 ~0540 Olaf ~0920 Melesinde ~0920 Ademar of Segur ~0875 - ~0930 Foucher of Segur 55 55 ~0875 Christine 1132 Sibil deVesey Arnorald of Chaumontois Arnoul II of Chaumontois ~0570 Bywyr Lew ap Bywdeg ~0890 Melesinde ~0610 Gwineu deufreuddwyd ap Bywyr ~1065 - ~1120 Geoffroi II of Dinan 55 55 pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0530 Bywdeg ap Rhun ~0490 Rhun ap Llary ~0410 Casnar 1104 - UNKNOWN Helawise (de Bolbec) ~0450 Llary ap Casnar Radegonde ~0934 Nesta ~0810 Ceidio ap Corf ~0837 Mahaut of Crequy ~0859 - 0965 Maud of St. Pol & Therounne 106 106 Melea ha- David Eliakim ha- David Jonam ha- David 1270 - UNKNOWN Henry FitzHugh Joseph ben Jonan Judah ben Joseph Simeon ben Judah Levi ben Simeon ha-David Jorim ha- David Matthat ben Levi of Lutiez C Trier   <ct@connies-homes.com> Philip Valoines Cassius of Spain 1275 - UNKNOWN Eva deBulmer Fortunatus of Spain ~1115 - >1158 Hedwige Hawise Donjon 43 43 pg 102 & 119 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 791, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
Richenza pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1184 - <1263 Hugh Vere 79 79 pg 56 & 70, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 113, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928

pg 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

Grant, ca. 1230. 1 item : parchment ; 12 x 17.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by William le Megre to Hugh de Ver, earl of Oxford, for his service and 16s. which he has given in gersum, of 28d. yearly rent in the parish of Great Benetlegh which Margery de Glebregg was wont to pay to the grantor, with all the tenement which Margery held of him, for which the grantee is to pay yearly one pair of white gloves worth 1/2d. or 1/2 d. at Easter.
WITNESSES: Lord Henry de Bello Campo, then seneschal of the lord count, Lord Hugh le Gros, Lord Thomas de Lancham, William Godescal, Ralph de Stanton, William de Gerdel, William de Barenton, Geoffrey the carter, et al. With 1 seal (3.2 cm.) of white wax, bearing a device: floral pattern, with the legend: S' WILELMI MEGRE.
NAMES: I. Oxford, Hugh de Vere, Earl of, ca. 1210-1263. II. Le Megre, William. III. De Glebregg, Margery. IV. De Bello Campo, Henry, Lord. V. Le Gros, Hugh. VI. De Lancham, Thomas. VII. Godescal, William. VIII. De Stanton, Ralph. IX. De Gerdel, William. X. De Barenton, William. XI. Geoffrey, the cater.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Essex. 2. Deeds--England--Bentley, Great. 3. Essex (England)--Charters, grants, privileges 4. Bentley, Great (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -BHJ8699

Quitclaim, ca. 1250. 1 item : parchment ; 12 x 17 cm.
SUMMARY: Quitclaim by William le Megre to Hugh de Veer, earl of Oxford, of 2s. yearly rent to be received from Walter le Alemand which he was wont to pay to the grantor for 5 acres of land held by him of the grantor which is of the fee of the earl in Great Benetley.
WITNESSES: Lord Julian de Baya, Lord Richard de Cadama, Ralph de St. Osith, Gilbert de Hulcote, Thomas the tailor, John, son of William de Frating, Philip the falconer, Master William the cook, William de Lammers, clerk, et al. With 1 seal (3.2 cm.) of white wax, pendant on a tag, bearing a device: same seal as Deeds 190.
NAMES: I. Oxford, Hugh de Vere, Earl of, ca. 1210-1263. II. Le Megre, William. III. Le Alemand, Walter. IV. De Baya, Julian, Lord. V. De Cadama, Richard, Lord. VI. De St. Osyth, Ralph. VII. De Hulcote, Gilbert. VIII. De Frating, William. IX. De Frating, John. X. De Lamarsh, William. XI. Thomas, the tailor. XII. Philip, the falconer. XIII. William, Master, the cook.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Essex. 2. Deeds--England--Bentley, Great. 3. Essex (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Bentley, Great (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -BHJ8739
~1200 - 11 Feb 1222/1223 Hawise Quincy pg 56 & 70, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1085 - 1179 Richard deLucy 94 94 Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1089
1  PROP
2  PLAC ThorneyGreen, Suffolk, England


Excerpted from Les Seigneurs de Bohon by Jean Le Melletier, Coutances:

II, Richard I together with Humphrey de Behun III invaded Scotland in anattack against King William who supported Prince Henry and thedestruction of the bishop's palace at Durham. They went to Berwick and penetrated deeply into Scotland. But when they learned of the landing of Beaumont (earlof Leicester and friend of Prince Henry) in Suffolk (29 September 11??) , a truce with William the Lion and marched against Beaumont.

Domfront in westernNormandy and probably entered royal service under Henry I. He is recorded as asupporter of S about the year 1140, succeeding Geoffrey de Mandeville as Justiciar and sheriff of Essex 1143.

justiciars in 1155. and after Leicester's death in 1168 Lucy held the office alone. As one of the king's councilors he mustbe given part of the credit for the important legislation of the period, and during which with Becket he was singled out by the king's enemies as a principalauthor of the Con Clarendon (1164).

of 1173-1174 w 1179 he resigned his office and entered the religious life at Lesnes Abbey, Erith, Kent, himself in 1178in penance for his part in the events leading to Becket's death. He had been excommunicated by Becket in 1166 and again in 1169, and the archbishop's murderh part provoked by his refusal to life the sentences he had passed upon his enemies. Richard Lucy died at Lesnes on July 14, 1179.(Encyclopedia Brittanica).
Gorbonian of Cabria & Cornwall Asser of Cambria & Cornwall Camber of Cambria & Cornwall Oro de Clare Wermund of Angel ~1040 Beatrix of Ghisnes pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~0960 Konrad III of Ortenau 1050 Adrian de Lucy Hildeburge Arnulf ~0435 - ~0478 Amalaberge of Franks 43 43 Colmain Dameta Beatrix or Bertha of Morvois pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1810 Leah Van Wert 1574 - 1656 Richard Odell 82 82 0816 Hildegard ~1298 Alianore Furneaux ~1211 - <1293 Matthew Furneaux 82 82 ~1089 - 1179 Richard Lucy 90 90 pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1018, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition
~1090 Rohais Foliot ~1187 - 1218 Wilhelm III of Julich 31 31 ~1350 - 1415 John Chideock 65 65 pg 1019, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1377 - 1433 Alianore Fitzwarine 56 56 pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1158 Humphrey Fitzpearce Mary Lacy 1010 - 1063 Hildouin IV deRoucy 53 53 Nithand Martel 1357 - 1414 John Ivo FitzWarine 57 57 pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 11, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
~1300 - 1361 William Fitzwarine 61 61 pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1330 Amicia Haddon pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1289 Henry Haddon pg 214, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1251 - 1315 Fulke Fitzwarine 64 64 pg 213, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1118 - 1162 Eudes II of Bourgogne 44 44 ~1261 - 1304 Edmund of Wigmore Mortimer 43 43 pg 32 & 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1018 - 1065 Adelaide De Roucy 47 47 ~1270 - 7 Feb 1333/1334 Margaret Fiennes pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. 0886 Fulk of Limoges ~0835 - <0877 Geraud of Bourges 42 42 ~0835 Adeltrude Rhys Rhiwallon ap Idwallon of Brycheiniog Hwrgeneu 0995 - 1063 Hildouin III deMontdidier 68 68 ~0805 Boso of Parthois ~0920 Rothildeof Brosse ~0890 Ademar of Brosse ~0904 Llewellyn ap Dolphin ~1024 Eva verch Llewelyn ~0990 Gwernwy ap Hwrgeneu ~0994 Gwenllian verch Rhys ~1020 Eunydd ap Gwermwy pg 113, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Domnaill mac Cormaic of Ui Bairrche 0980 - UNKNOWN Hildouin deMontdidier II Count of Montdidier of Arshakuni Ashkhadur of Alania ~0967 Gozelo de Ardennes Godfrey de Ardennes Andrew  <andrewwaite@hotmail.com> 1328 - 1388 John Nevill 60 60 pg 168, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1543, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 392, Burkes Extinct Peerage
~1345 - BEF 18 Feb 1377/1378 Maud Percy pg 168, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1192 - <1248 William de Albini 56 56 pg 89, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0950 - 0992 Hildouin deMontdidier I Count of Montdidier 42 42 1222 - 1262 Richard of Gloucester Clare 39 39 pg 63 & 72, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Sir Richard de Clare, b. 4 Aug 1222, d. Ashenfield 15 July 1262, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford; m. (2) on or bef. 25 Jan 1237/8, Maud de Lacy. [Magna Charta Sureties]



Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester, then in minority at the decease of his father in 1229. The wardship of this young nobleman was granted to the famous Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, Justiciary of England, whose dau., Margaret, to the great displeasure of the king (Henry III), he afterwards (1243) clandestinely married but from whom he was probably divorced, for we find the king marrying him the next year to Maude, dau. of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, in consideration whereof the said John paid to the crown 5,000 marks and remitted a debt of 2,000 more. His lordship, who appears to have been a very distinguished personage in the reign of Henry III, was one of the chief nobles present in Westminster Hall (40th Henry III) [1256], when Boniface, archbishop of Canterbury, with divers other prelates, pronounced that solemn curse, with candles lighted, against all those who should thenceforth violate Magna Carta. In two years afterwards, an attempt was made by Walter de Scotenay, his chief counsellor, to poison the earl and his brother William, which proved effective as to the latter, while his lordship narrowly escaped with the loss of his hair and nails. In the next year the earl was commissioned, with others of the nobility by the appointment of the king and the whole baronage of England, to the parliament of France to convey King Henry III's resignation of Normandy and to adjust all differences between the two crowns; and upon the return of the mission, his lordship reported proceedings to the king, in parliament. About this period he had license to fortify the isle of Portland and to embattle it as a fortress. It is reported of this nobleman that, being at Tewkesbury in the 45th Henry III [1261], a Jew, who had fallen into a jakes upon the Saturday, refusing to be pulled out in reverence of the Jewish sabbath, his lordship prohibited any help to be afforded him on the next day, the Christian sabbath, and thus suffered the unfortunate Israelite to perish. He d. himself in the July of the next year (1262), having been poisoned at the table of Peter de Savoy, the queen's uncle, along with Baldwin, Earl of Devon, and other persons of note. His lordship left issue, Gilbert, his successor, Thomas, Rose, and Margaret. The earl was s. by his elder son, Gilbert de Clare. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

-----------------------------

Richard de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester, 8TH EARL OF CLARE, 6TH EARL OF HERTFORD (b. Aug. 4, 1222--d. July 15, 1262, Eschemerfield, near Canterbury, Kent, Eng.), the most powerful English noble of his time. He held estates in more than 20 English counties, including the lordship of Tewkesbury, wealthy manors in Gloucester, and the great marcher lordship of Glamorgan. He himself acquired the Kilkenny estates in Ireland and the lordship of Usk and Caerleon in south Wales, making him the greatest lord in south Wales; in Glamorgan especially he was almost an independent prince.

Son of Gilbert de Clare (the 6th Earl), Richard succeeded to the earldoms in October 1230. He refused to help King Henry III on the French expedition of 1253 but was with him afterward at Paris. Thereafter he went on a diplomatic errand to Scotland and was sent to Germany to work among the princes for the election of his stepfather, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, as king of the Romans. About 1258 Gloucester became a leader of the barons in their resistance to the king, and he was prominent during the proceedings that followed the Mad Parliament at Oxford in 1258. In 1259, however, he quarreled with Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester; the dispute, begun in England, was renewed in France, and he was again in the confidence of the king. This attitude, too, was only temporary, and in 1261 Gloucester and Montfort were again working in concord. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD, 1996, GLOUCESTER, RICHARD DE CLARE, 7TH EARL OF]
~1222 - BEF 10 Mar 1288/1289 Maud Lacy pg 72, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 311, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1150 - <1221 Roger of Norfolk Bigod 71 71 pg 73 & 91, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 53 & 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1040 of St. Sauveur Robert Ryvell <1116 - 1173 Roger of Hertford Clare 57 57 pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1084 - 1136 Richard fitzGilbert of Hertford 52 52 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
0920 - UNKNOWN Helpuin ~1100 - >1130 Adeliza Alice Meschines 30 30 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 365, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1060 - 1145 Robert II Umfreville 85 85 vol 2, pg 191, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland""  Robert appears in a pipe roll of 1130 when he was pardoned 40 shillings for danegeld by brief of the King. He appears to have regularly been at the court of King David of Scotland (1124- 1153) Robert had issue 3 sons:  Robert (c. 1092- c. 1145), Odinell (c. 1094 - c. 1162) and Gilbert the Constable (c. 1096-c. 1150). ~1129 Alice Lucy ~1030 - ~1085 Robert I Umfreville 55 55 vol 2, pg 191, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 544, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Judith Appleton Matilda pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <1061 - 1100 Godfroi of L Lorraine 39 39 pg 136, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1086 - ~1189 Hawise Mortimer 103 103 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1090 Maud fitz Walter Pitres 0930 - 0970 Hersinde De Rameru 40 40 ~1182 Fulbert of Dover pg 178, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1066 Avelina Goth ~1289 - 1349 Guyon of Walwyn Bryan 60 60 pg 82, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1254 - >1271 Guy of Haverford Bryan 17 17 pg 82, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1064 Adrian Lucy ~1020 - >1079 Ednywain ap Neiniad 59 59 ~1048 Morwyl verch Ednywain D. ~1160 Lidulph Alditheley vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Mable Stanley Henry Stanley 0975 - 1033 Ebalus deRoucy 58 58 Susan Alington Wrote letter # 22 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. D. 1303 Edmund of Wigmore Mortimer pg 33,72 & 168 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1265 - <1338 Isolde Mortimer 73 73 pg 168, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 16, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
~1110 Bourgogne of Rancon pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0910 - 0991 Geraud of Limoges 81 81 ~1060 - <1130 Herbert fitz Henry of Winchester 70 70 pg 232, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1096 - ~1169 William of Ixworth Blount 73 73 pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1097 Sarah Munchensi pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1029 - ~1066 Robert of Ixworth Blount 37 37 pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
0950 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deRoucy ~0980 - 1036 Rodolph III of Guisnes 56 56 pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1007 Roselle of St. Pol pg 54, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 3, pg 164, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1172 - 1226 William of Axholme Mowbray 54 54 pg. 386, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1147 Agnes Albini pg. 387, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1305 - >1355 Walter Hungerford 50 50 pg 291, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1335 Edmund Hussey ~1108 Dionysia Alard ~1259 - 1323 Marmaduke Thweng 64 64 pg 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1256 - ~1309 Isabel Ros 53 53 pg 169, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 459 & 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
0986 - UNKNOWN Beatrix of Hainault 0758 - 0783 Hildegard de Alemannien 25 25 Mendo ~1079 - 1129 Richard fitz Pons 50 50 vol 3, pg 370 Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

vol 3 , pg 537, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1040 - 1087 Guillaume II of Bourgogne 47 47 pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1026 - ABT 1075/1080 Hedwig of Namur William Vernon pg 2707, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1310 - ~1350 Robert de Whitfield 40 40 Commoners of great britain and Ireland states on page 282 of Vol. II., Pedigree of Mitford of Mitford Castle, "Alice Mitford married John, son of Matthew Whitfield of Whitfield". ~0933 - 0984 Eineon ap Owain of S Wales 51 51 ~0959 Gronwy ap Einion of Tegaingl pg 755, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition ~1071 - >1156 Adeliza of Hereford 85 85 D. 1137 Richard of devon Redvers pg 140, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1042 - 1086 Suain deEssex 44 44 ~1094 - 1182 Odonel I Umfreville 88 88 vol 2, pg 191, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"  Baron Odinell witnesses Scottish charters between 1144 and 1153 which  indicate Scottish holdings. A pipe roll from 1187 mentions him as the grandfather of Richard De Umfreville living in the time of Henry II (1154-1189). Odonell was still alive in 1162 to give a court judgement at Whalton. Odinell had issue: 4 sons, Odinell, Robert, Jordan and Gilbert Walcher of North Umberland ~1122 - <1176 Agnes of Aumale 54 54 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1153 - 1222 Piers of Skelton Brus 69 69 ~1125 - <1195 John Somery 70 70 pg 64, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 81, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1130 - 1208 Hawise Paynell 78 78 pg 64, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 81, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1113 - <1153 Ralph Paynell 40 40 pg 81, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1230 - ~1262 Robert Lisle 32 32 ~1238 - <1284 Alice Fitzgerald 46 46 ~1192 Robert II Insula 1007 - 1071 Robert Fitz- Winmarc 64 64 ~1194 - <1221 Roesia Wahull 27 27 ~1210 Henry Fitzgerald ~1128 William of Aldeburg ~1183 - 1174/1175 Warine Fitzgerald ~1154 Bryan Lisle Robert Insula ~1171 Beatrice Cormeilles Ralph Cormeilles Robert Insula ~1121 Galliena Blount 0926 - 0967 Renaud de Roucy 41 41 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

1  NAME Renaud /De Roucy/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 931
~1145 Roger Heyford ~1140 - <1193 Geoffrey Nevill 53 53 pg 212, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederilck Lewis Weis, sixth edition, 1988

vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg. 88 & 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1200 - 1230 Theobold Boteler 30 30 pg 75 & 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
~1210 - 10 Feb 1246/1247 Rohesia Verdon pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1196 - 1230 Gilbert of Meath Lacy 34 34 pg 75, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1160 - 24 Feb 1240/1241 Walter Lacy pg 75,94, 150 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0963 - 1026 Richard II of Normandy 63 63 pg 109,115 & 150.  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1182 - 2 Feb 1244/1245 Isabel Bolebec pg 56 & 201"Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1276 Maud Basset ~1065 - Jan 1128/1129 Ranulf III of Chester pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
0977 - UNKNOWN Wymarche 1267 - Bef. Mar. 1325/26 Hugh de Audley pg 156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 15, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887

pg 254, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 17, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
~1151 - 1219 Hugues IX of Lusignan 68 68 pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1264 - 1316/1317 Matthew Furneaux ~1137 Llywarch ap Bran Alice or Hia ~0948 Arnold of Schannis ~0969 - 0989 Heinrich of Speyergau 20 20 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Godwin vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
<1095 - 8 Sep 1143/1144 Robert of Fontney Marmion pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
vol 1,  pg 671 Burkes Landed Gentry
Millicent of Rethel pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
vol 1,  pg 671 Burkes Landed Gentry
1009 - 1086 Tadhg O'Brien King Of Munster 77 77 ~1127 Sibyl Devereux ~1105 - 1165 John Fitz Gilbert Marshall 60 60 ~1105 of Venuz ~1100 - ~1147 Walter of Salisbury devereux 47 47 pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1112 - <1147 Sibilla or Maud Chaworth 35 35 pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Ralph fitz Orm ~1224 - <1269 Hugh Morwick 45 45 pg 2384, Burke;s "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1065 - ~1127 Walter fitz Roger Pitres 62 62 Pons fitz William >1034 - <1086 Pons fitz Pons 52 52 0870 - UNKNOWN Lorcan macLachtnae ~1096 - 1146 Alan of Richmond 50 50 pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. <1167 Berthe of Bretagne pg 108 & 184, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 1148 Conan III of Bretagne pg 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
of Fonenay pg 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1053 - 1129/1130 Forne fitz Sigulf pg 254, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883


<aongusmclean@msn.com>
~1030 Sigulf fitz Forne <aongusmclean@msn.com> ~1127 - ~1190 Marie of Champagne 63 63 pg. 200, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0845 - UNKNOWN Lachtnae macCorcc ~1055 - ~1100 Ralph of Wigmore Mortimer 45 45 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1166 Suzanne Plantagenet deWarenne ~1119 - >1147 Agatha of Lorraine 28 28 ~1044 Paule of Maine ~1157 - 1206 William Bertram 49 49 pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Alice Umfreville pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1126 - 1174 Roger Bertram 48 48 pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 D. >1315 Ada pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1099 William Bertram pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 0870 - UNKNOWN Murchad 1108 Hawise Merley pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1076 Richard of Mitford Bertram pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1080 Sybilla (Sigel) Mitford pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1054 John Mitford pg 52, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
"A History of Northumberland Part II Vol II" by Rev. John Hodgson, published Newcastle 1832:  The Barony of Mitford extended over the whole of the parishes of Mitford, Meldon, Ponteland, and Felton, in this county, and of Greatham, in the county of Durham, and with the exception of such parts of it as were given in free alms to the clergy of its several parishes, and to monasteries and hospitals, continued in the possession of the ancient family of Bertram, unincumbered and entire, till the death of of Roger Bertram the Second in 1242.  Tradition holds her dim torch over it into times prior to the conquest: the steady rays of history do not begin to beam upon it till the reign of Henry the Second (1154-89).  John, lord of Mitford, had an only daughter, Sigil or Sybil, whom the Conqueror married to sir Richard Bertram, a son of the lord of Dignam, in Normandy. This Sigil is said to have had an uncle, Matthew de Mitford, from whom the families of Mitford, of Mitford and Exbury, and of Baron Redesdale, of Redesdale, derive their descent.
~1035 - >1086 Guillaume Arques 51 51 ~1088 Beatrice Vesci pg 555, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1094 - 1139 Walter of Lincoln Gant 45 45 pg 123 & 133, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 227, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1098 Maud of Bretagne pg 123 133, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 227, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1048 - ~1095 Gilbert of Lincoln Gant 47 47 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 227, 377 & 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1050 Alix Montfort pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 227 & 377, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. UNKNOWN Aife ingen Gilla Patraic Efa verch Blettrws pg 113, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1140 - 1190 Roger fitz Richard of Warkworth Stokes 50 50 pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1118 - 1165 Hugues VIII of Lusignan 47 47 pg 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1205 Margaret Gobion ~1054 - ~1130 William Mandeville 76 76 ~1076 Margaret Rie Gamel Alditheley vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" of Arques vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Wolfric vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" D. ~1114 Henry fitz Herbert 1114 - 1164 Mor ingen Muirchertaig O'Toole 50 50 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
0779 Bertha Princess of the Holy Roman Empire ~1082 - 1101 Emme of Blois 19 19 pg 232, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1146 - 1191 Nigil Mowbray 45 45 pg. 386, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1166 - ~1203 Mabel Clare 37 37 pg. 386, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1119 - ~1188 Roger Mowbray 69 69 pg. 386, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1120 Alice Gant pg. 227 & 386, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1134 - 1190 Ralph of Petherton Albini 56 56 vol   pg 501 Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 160, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1189 - >1294 Marmaduke Thweng 105 105 pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 80 & 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1223 Lucia Brus pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 80 & 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1081 - ~1126 Ralph IV Toni 45 45 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1065 - 1089 Donnchad macMurchada King of Leinster 24 24 Robert Thweng pg 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
D. >1238 Marmaduke Thweng pg 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1107 William Cheney D. >1238 Robert Thweng pg 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 147, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
Maud Kilton pg 532, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1181 - 1241 Piers II of Skelton Brus 60 60 pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 313, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1200 Helwise Lancaster pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 313, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0990 - 1047 Etienne II of Champagne 57 57 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1162 - <1220 Gilbert fitz Roger of Kendal 58 58 pg 678, Burkes Peerage

pg 313, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. UNKNOWN Eógan Cáech macNath í O'Chennselaig D. >1226 Helwise of Kendal Lancaster pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1114 - >1198 Roger fitz Reinfrid 84 84 D. 1184 William of Kendal Lancaster pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1165 Helewise Stuteville pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1060 - >1102 Beatrix of Lorraine 42 42 pg 42, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1056 - 1102 Etienne I of Bourgogne 46 46 0999 - 1079 Eudes of Bretagne 80 80 pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 184, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 0123 Cathair Mor of Ireland D. ~0220 Fiacha Baicheda D. 0436 Breasal Bealach of Leinster D. UNKNOWN Nath í macCrimthann O'Chennselaig Labhradh of Leinster D. >0365 Eanna Ceannsalach ~0924 Cadell ap Brochwel ~0770 Corf ap Caenog ~0954 Gwerystan ap Gwaethfoed ~1226 - 1314 Geoffrey of Trim Geneville 88 88 pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 228, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 216, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 228, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1240 - 1304 Mahaut (Maud) Lacy 64 64 pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 228 & 484, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. 1214 Gerald Camville pg 100, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1213 - 1307 Guy Bryan 94 94 pg 82, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1217 - 1274 Eve Tracy 57 57 pg 82, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1025 - 1070 Murchad macDiarmata meicMáel King of Leinster 45 45 Samuel Appleton ~1104 - 1156 Alan Dunstanville 52 52 <aongusmclean@msn.com> ~1085 - >1118 Hugh Talbot 33 33 pg 526, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1095 Beatrice Maudeville ~1050 - >1086 Richard Talbot 36 36 pg 526, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1070 Gournay pg 526, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1203 Albreda Biseth D. 1236 William de Albini pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 D. ~1235 Matilda Umfreville vol 2, pg 191, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" D. UNKNOWN Labraid Láidech macBressal Bélach ~1090 - 1176 William of Arundel Albini 86 86 pg 119 & 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
~1094 - 1151 Adeliza of Louvaine 57 57 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
~1171 Henry Biseth 1182 - 1195 Robert Umfreville 13 13 D. 1162/1163 Robert of Hamlake Ros pg 89, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1123 - >1218 Sybella Valognes 95 95 pg 89, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

vol   pg 501 Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 160 & 458, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 0436 Bressal Bélach macFiachu King of Leinster D. 1157 Peter Ros pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1092 Adeline Espec pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1130 William Trusbut ~1132 - ~1205 Albreda (Audrey) Harcourt 73 73 ~1030 - 1069 Godfrey of Verdon 39 39 pg 547, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1240 Joan Walter Maltravers Roger Fitzgeoffrey John Morville pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Endo Morville pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 D. UNKNOWN Fiachu Ba hAiccid macCathaír Már Wrokeshall pg 236, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Robert Crane Wrote letter # 5 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Jane Caldwell 1246 - seen 20 Mar 1271/1272 John III of Arundel Fitzalan vol 2, pg 36, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"

pg 79, 129 & 175, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1249 - 1282 Isabella de Mortimer 33 33 vol 2, pg 36, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"

pg 33, 79 & 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks



Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Alan Fitz Alan pg 1871, Burke's "Extant  Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1060 - 1101 Flaald of St. Florent 41 41 pg 1871, Burke's "Extant  Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition Beatrice pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1136 - 1212/1213 William Fitz Alan pg 1871, Burke's "Extant  Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Thomas Minshall D. UNKNOWN Cathaír Már King of Leinster 1705 - 1757 James Caldwell 52 52 This line need more  research. The dates do not match as well as I would like.

***
Caldwells in Lunenburg County, Virginia/ Court Order Books 1-9
***
Caldwell  James[Jr]  & Elizabeth, plt//14 July 1763
Execs of James Caldwell,[Sr.] dec’d; vs Jonathan Vernon, deft; dismissed /9/113/61
***
Caldwell, Elizabeth & Jas/ 6 Dec. 1757/probate, Jas Caldwell, [Sr] dec’d; Robt Woods security/5/21/11
***
Caldwell, Henry/6 Dec. 1757/orphan of Wm, bound out to Jas Caldwell [Sr.]5/23/11
***
Caldwell, Samuel/10 Feb 1763/Orphan of William Caldwell, dec’d; bound to Samuel Johnson; Cornwall Parish/9/3/4
***
Caldwell, William, dec’d/2 Nov. 1750/estate appraised by Wm Caldwell, John Stewart, Andrew Cunningham, Wm Dudgeon/2/383/85/
***
Caldwell,William/7 July 1752/present [at binding of Wm Caldwell’s children]? [present]?/2½A/69/12/
***
74. Caldwell, James 8-10-1757; 12-6-1757; W.B. 1/211
Page 211. Will. Aug 10, 1757. I, James Caldwell of L, being very sick - Firstly, I want my just debts and funeral charges paid.
To my wife Elizbeth - my personal estate, except what I shall further bequeath out of it. Also, to my wife, the use of this plantation, [until] my son George be of age, at which time I bequeath it to him, including 155 acres, excepting that it is to be continued in my wife's possession during life. Also, to my wife during life, Henry Caldwell, an orphan child, and then to my son James, the remainder of his servitude.
To my son James[Jr] - 155 acres of land, being part of the tract I now live on, including his house and improvement.
To my son John - 155 acres on the south side of this tract I live on, on both sides of the new road.
To my son-in-law George Scott - part of the tract he now lives on, and a deed to be made to him by my executors.
To Samuel Daves - the lower part of that tract Georg Scott lives on, and a deed to be made to him by my executors.
To James Berton - 1 English shilling.
To Joseph Irenmonger - 1 English shilling.
To Thomas Vernon - 1 English shilling.
To William Scot - 1 English shilling.
To Nehemiah and Joseph Vernons, sons of Isach Vernon - 1 £ each.
Executors - Elizabeth Caldwell, my wife, and James Calwell, my son.
Signed - James Caldwell.
Witnesses - John Tamplin [Pamplin?], Samuel Davies, Robert Woods.
At L Court of Dec 6, 1757, the will of the deceased was exhibited in Court by Elizabeth Caldwell and James Caldwell,[Jr] the executrix and executor, and the same was proved by the oaths of all the witnesses, which was ordered to be recorded. And on the motion of said executrix and executor, certificate is granted them for obtaining a probate of the said will, they giving bond and security, whereupon they, together with Robert Woods, their security, entered into bond for that purpose.
Page 237. An account of the appraisement of James Caldwell, deceased's estate, appraised by Thomas Vernon, John Logan, James Barton, & James Murphey. Includes: 8 sheep, 6 cows. Total: [about £ 48]. Witness - William Caldwell. Recorded Jun 6, 1758.

***
The will of James Caldwell, in 1757, lists Nehemiah and Joseph as son of Isaac Vernon. The former will also mentions Thomas Vernon. Although we have continually speculated that Isaac's first wife was Elizabeth Austin (he later married Jane Caldwell), there is also a strong possibility that the wife of Thomas Vernon, S. was the "Elizabeth" of the Richard Austin will, since "Mary" is nickname of Elizabeth. Further, the Elizabeth who married could have been the daughter of James Caldwell. In other words, Lt. Isaac probably married two Caldwell girls.

August 20, 1748 - Robert and Wm. Christian to lay out a road from Black James Armstrong's to Wm. Long's mill, thence to James Alexander's fence, with these workers: James Armstrong, George Rutlidge, Thomas Rutlidge, James Caldwell, James Armstrong. James Frain, William Robb, John Christian, James Alexander, John Black, John Wilson, Anthony Black, Wm. Wright, and Wm. and John
Robinson. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 2, Page 63

November 27, 1751 - Grand Jury--James Trimble, James Caldwell, Wm. Baskins, Wm. Henderson, Robert Patterson, Alexr. Thompson, Andrew Russell, Mathew Armstrong, Archibald Hamilton, Thos. Gordon, Wm. Bell, James Robinson, Patrick McCullow, James Callison, Alexr. McFeeters, Thomas Waters. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 3, Page 202

May 21, 1752 - James Caldwell--overseer of road from Nutt's Mill Creek, near his meadow, to Co. Ho. - Augusta County Court Records, Order Book 3, Page 252

SUNLIGHT ON THE SOUTHSIDE. Lists of Tithes, Lunenburg Co., VA
1748-1783. Compiled by Landon C. Bell. GPC. 1974
p. 76 Lists of Titables for 1748; List taken by William Caldwell
p.77 Willm Caldwell -- - - - - - -- - -1
p.78 John Caldwell --- -- - - - - - - - 1
- - - - James Caldwell - - - - - - - - - 1
- - - - David Caldwell - - - - - - - - - - 1
- - - - Wm. Caldwell - - - - - - - - - - - 3
p. 86 At June Court 1749, the appointments to take the list of
tithables were made as follows: William Caldwell, "from Falling
River to Little Ronoke River."
p. 88 James Caldwell
- - - - - James Caldwell, Jr - - 2
p. 91 John Caldwell - - - - - -1
- - - - - David Caldwell - - - - - 2
p. 92 William Caldwell - - - - 2
p. 93 William Caldwell - - - - 1
For 1750: List taken by William Caldwell:
p. 123 David Caldwell - - - - - - - - - - - 2
p. 124 Jas. Caldwell
- - - - - James Caldwell, Jr. - - - - - - - - 2
p. 125 Wm. Caldwell - - - - -- - - - - 3
p. 127 Henry Caldwell - - - -- - - - - - - 1
- - - - - Wm. Caldwell - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
- - - - - Jno Caldwell, Sr & Jr
- - - - - & Wm. March - - - - - - - - - - - 3
p. 187 James Colldwell, Sr
- - - - - - James Coldwell, Jr - - 2

p. 212 in 1758 orders directed to take the lists:
1764: David Caldwell, gentlemen, in Corwall Parish for the
ensuing year.
***
Austin, Richard 3-1-1759; 12-4-1759; W. B. 1/280
  Mentions: Wife: Doesn't mention her name
            Sons: Thomas Austin, Euzriah Austin
            Relationship of following not stated: Elizabeth Vernon,
               Sarah Joice, Samuel David, Thomas John, Peren Alday,
               David Reese
  Executors: Captain Chas. Anderson, James Anderson (of Cumberland County),
             Joseph Morton
  Witnesses: Nathan Austin, George Caldwell,
             Majer (his X mark) Weatherford.
D. ~0894 Bonifacio of Tuscagne pg 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1190 - 1246 Ralph de Mortimer 56 56 pg 32, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1205 - 1251 Gwladys verch Llewelyn 46 46 pg 32 & 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1168 - ~1205 Tangwystyl Verch Llywarch 37 37 pg 228, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 540, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 70, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H Turton, published 1928

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1285 - 1328 Eleanor Fitzalan 43 43 vol 2, pg 36, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"

pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 200 & 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
25 Mar 1272/1273 - 1314 Henry Percy pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 200 & 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1235 - 1272 Henry Percy 37 37 pg 132 & 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1251 - 1314 Alianore Warren 63 63 pg 132 & 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1231 - 1305 John of Warren & Surrey Plantagenet 74 74 pg 83, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Chorb ~1225 - 1291 Alice of Lusignan 66 66 pg 83, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1166 - 1240 William of Warren Plantagenet 74 74 pg 74, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 78, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 83, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1192 - 27 Mar 1247/1248 Maud Marshal pg 75, 78 & 83,"Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 358, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
0982 - 1017 Judith of Bretagne 35 35 pg 109 & 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1255 - 1343 Hawise de Grey 88 88 D. UNKNOWN Gilla Patraic 0773 - 0810 Pippin Carolman Italy 37 37 Arthur Wrote letter # 20 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Elizabeth de Puleston Ida de Clinton Her parentage is not clear.  She may be the sister, not the daughter, of John, 2nd lord Clinton. 1600 - 1691 Elizabeth Pritchard 91 91 D. UNKNOWN Echrad ingen Carlusa ~0823 Hrolf (Nefio) pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Berenger of Bayeaux pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Arduin of Turin ~0927 - 0992 Conan I Rennes of Bretagne 65 65 pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0952 - 0992 Ermengardeof Anjou 40 40 pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0958 - 0987 Geoffroi I of Anjou 28 28 pg 107 & 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
0950 - AFT 16 Mar 0974/0975 Adelais (Adelaide) of Vermandois pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 109, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0967 - <1040 Foulques III of Anjou 73 73 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1108 - UNKNOWN Aimon I Count Of Faucigny 1092 - 1143 Foulques V of Jerusalam 51 51 pg 107 & 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1096 - 1126 Erembourge of Maine 30 30 pg 107 & 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
1043 - 1109 Foulques IV of Anjou 66 66 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1004 - 1046 Geoffroi II of Gatinais 42 42 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg  6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
1018 - 1076 Ermengardeof Anjou 58 58 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0990 - 1040 Hildegarde 50 50 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0909 - 0958 Foulques II of Anjou 49 49 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0920 - 0952 Gerverge of Arles or Gatinais 32 32 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0888 - 0942 Foulques I of Anjou 54 54 pg 2575, Burkes Peerage

pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0880 Roscille of Loches pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Ailill ~0845 - ~0893 Ingelar I of Anjou 48 48 pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0844 Adelaideof Gatinais pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0821 Tertullus of Anjou pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0825 Petronilla of Auxerre pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0770 Regine pg 6, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0757 - 0783 Hildegardeof Schwaben 26 26 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 154, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1068 - 1139 Godfroi of Namur 71 71 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1090 - 1143 Ermensindeof Luxembourg 53 53 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1035 - 1102 Adelbert III of Namur 67 67 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1046 - 1102 Ida of Sachsen 56 56 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Gilla Michil Cinaed O'Braenain ~1000 - ABT 1063/1064 Adelbert II of Namur pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1007 - >1064 Regilindeof Lorraine 57 57 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 171, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928
~0946 - <1011 Adalbert I of Namur 65 65 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 0970/0975 - 1019 Ermentrudeof Lower Lorraine pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0954 - 0986 Charles of Lower Lorraine 32 32 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0921 - 0954 Louis IV of Franks 33 33 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0913/0914 - 0984 Gerberge of Sachsen pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Uchdelb ingen Cearnachain O'Gairbita D. UNKNOWN Cearnachan O'Gairbita King Ui Feilmeda D. 0694 Begga of Landen pg 159, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition of Weimar D. 1067 Oda of Ostmark ~1256 - <1292 Piers of Trim Geneville 36 36 pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 228, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1260 - <1322 Jeanne of Lusignan 62 62 pg 76 & 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
Robert deBertram D. UNKNOWN Sadb ingen Mael Morda O'Domnail ~1230 - ~1299 Ela de Longespee 69 69 pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1330 John de Whitfield Became Lord of Whitfield after the death of his older brother. John married Alice Milford daughter of Sir John Milford of Milford Castle, Northumberland. John and Alice had Matthew Whitfield. ~1410 Matthew Whitfield Was High Sheriff of Northumberland. He married about 1434 to Margaret De Lancaster, daughter of Sir John de Lancaster (obit. 1475). Matthew had John, William and Henry. Adam Alditheley vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Emma fitz Ralph ~1178 Lesceline Verdon pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1151 - ~1230 Nichola Hay 79 79 pg 100, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1100 - 1190 Richard Camville 90 90 pg 100, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~0865 Rheingar ~1207 - 8 Feb 1249/1250 William de Longespee pg 168, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Earl Of Salisbury
D. 1090 Mael Morda O'Domnail ~1186 - 1262 Idonea Camville 76 76 pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 100, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 168, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1389 Matthew de Whitfield Sons John, Robert, Thomas, Nicholas, Richard, Christopher and Sir Matthew Whitfield.
See Visitations of the North.
1274 - 1314 Robert Clifford 40 40 pg 72,82 & 139,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition
~1282 - 1324 Maud de Clare 42 42 pg 72 & 82, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1262 - >1331 Ranulf Nevill 68 68 pg 156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1267 - ~1329 Euphemia Clavering 62 62 pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1240 - 1271 Robert Nevill 31 31 pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1244 - <1320 Mary fitz Ralph 76 76 pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1223 - 1282 Robert Nevill 59 59 vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1144 - <1208 Emma Bulmer 64 64 pg 212, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederilck Lewis Weis, sixth edition, 1988

pg 1389, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg. 88 & 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 9, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
D. UNKNOWN Luanmaisi ingen Ceile O'Nuallain ~1197 - <1242 Geoffrey fitz Robert of Raby Nevill 45 45 vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 212, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, sixth edition, 1988

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 2, pg 9, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1208 - >1247 Joan (Margaret) Monmouth 39 39 pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 212, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, sixth edition, 1988

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1170 - <1248 Robert fitz Maldred of Raby 78 78 pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 212, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederilck Lewis Weis, sixth edition, 1988

vol 2, pg 9, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1176 - <1254 Isabel Nevill 78 78 pg 212, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederilck Lewis Weis, sixth edition, 1988

pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry

vol 2, pg 9, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
1216 Sibyl Ferrers pg 197, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Dommart D. UNKNOWN Cailleach ingen MacFaelin Gerold deMayence 0855 Waldrada ~1022 - 1130 Elias of Brimsfield Giffard 108 108 vol 3, pg 370 Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 231, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1064 Ala pg 231, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1030 - ~1086 Osbern Giffard 56 56 vol 3, pg 370 & vol  pg 762 Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 1208 Burke's "Peerage and Baronetage", 1970 Edition

pg 231, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1150 - 1222 Walter Clifford 72 72 pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition ~1160 Agnes Cundi pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition ~1189 - 1232 Roger Clifford 43 43 pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 122, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1254 - 1292 Isabel Vipont 38 38 pg 82, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 122, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1221 - 1285 Roger of Kingsbury Clifford 64 64 A Crusader

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~1214 Hawise Botterell D. UNKNOWN Cele O'Nuallain ~1185 John Botterell ~1176 - 1236 Sybilla Ewyas 60 60 pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 122 & 537, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1125 - <1198 Robert II of E Ewyas 73 73 ~1153 - >1204 Petronilla (Pernel) Scudamore 51 51 1222 - 1264 Robert of Westmoreland Vipont 42 42 pg 82, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~1234 Isabel fitz John pg 75, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 82, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1158 - 1227 Robert of Appleby Vipont 69 69 ~1169 - 1240 Idonea Busli 71 71 ~1215 - 1258 John fitz Geoffrey of Shere 43 43 pg 77,78 & 151,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
1163 - 1213 Geoffrey fitz Piers of Essex 50 50 pg 77, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 124, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Mael Maud O'Nuallain ~1172 - <1225 Aveline Clare 53 53 pg 77, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 124, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 206, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1186 - BEF 18 Feb 1224/1225 Hugh of Norfolk Bigod pg 75 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1250 - 1291 Emmeline deLongespee 41 41 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1150 - BEF 15 Jan 1203/1204 Gerald fitz Maurice of Offaly pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
BET. 1274 - 1275 - BEF 23 Jan 1274/1275 Stephen deLongespee pg 36 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 598, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
Robert Hepphale ~1205 - 1270 Alan La Zouche 65 65 pg 63,65 &156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 598, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"
~1222 - <1296 Elena or Helen Quincy 74 74 pg 45 & 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2198, Wurt's "Magna Charta"

pg. 447 & 598, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
~1097 - ~1153 Alice of Hainault 56 56 Robert Quincy pg 63, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
D. UNKNOWN Dunlaing O'Nuallain 1162 - 1218 Richard of Hertford Clare 56 56 pg 71, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1200 - 1250 Gilbert Sandford 50 50 pg 70, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 550, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1211 - >1273 Lora La Zouche 62 62 1081 - 1131 Isabel of Vermandois 50 50 pg 56, 62, 72, 89, 120, 121 & 175, Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. 1085 Gundred of England pg 568, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1057 - 1102 Hugues of France 45 45 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1061 - 28 Sep 1120/1124 Adelaideof Vermandois & Valois pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
10 May 1006/1007 - 1060 Henri I of France pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1036 - 1075 Anna (Agnesa) of Kiev 39 39 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1119/1120 - 1180 Louis VII of France pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 99, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
D. UNKNOWN Murchad macNuallain 1077 - 1137 Louis VI of France 60 60 pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 106, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 143, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1092 - 1154 Adelaideof Savoy 62 62 pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 106, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
<1053 - 1108 Philippe I of France 55 55 pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 99, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1055 - 1093/1094 Bertha of Holland pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 99, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0978 - 20 Feb 1053/1054 Jaroslav I of Kiev pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1001 - 1050 Ingegerda Olafsdottir of Sweden 49 49 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0972 - 1031 Robert II of France 59 59 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0984 - 1032 Constance of Toulouse 48 48 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0941 - 0996 Hugues of France 55 55 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0950 - 1006 Adelaideof Poitou 56 56 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0970 - 1030 Gormflaith 60 60 ~0895 - 0956 Hugues of France 61 61 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0922 - 10 Mar 0964/0965 Hedwig of Sachsen pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0880 - >0931 Beatrix of Vermandois 51 51 pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0840 - 0900 Herbert I of Vermandois 60 60 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 61, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1032 - 1080 Herbert IV of Vermandois 48 48 pg 56 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~1041 Adela of Vexin pg 56 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0998 - 1045 Otho or Eudes of Vermandois 47 47 pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~1012 Parvie or Pavia of Hamm pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~0955 - ~1002 Herbert III of Vermandois 47 47 pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
~0960 - >1035 Ermengardeof Bar-Sur- Seine 75 75 pg 55 & 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 112, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
1080 - 1164 Mouitchertch O'Toole King of Ui Muiedaig 84 84 ~0915 - Sep 0987/0988 Adelbert I of Vermandois pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0935 Gerberge of Lorraine pg 55, 120 & 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 112, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928
0880 - 0943 Herbert II of Vermandois & Troyes 63 63 pg 53, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 54, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 55, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII Sanchez of Castile 58 58 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 104 & 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition
1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet 52 52 pg 104 & 195, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition
D. UNKNOWN Maelind ingen Meic Dairgin 1171 - 1230 Alfonso IX Fernandez of Leon & Castile 59 59 pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1181 - 1246 Berenguela Alfonsez of Castile 65 65 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 104 & 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1177 - 20 Jan 1232/1233 Thomas I of Savoy pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1180 - 1257 Margarete of Geneva 77 77 pg. 12, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1160 - 1202 Aymar of Angouleme 42 42 pg 106 & 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 4, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928

pg 545, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1164 - 1211 Alice of Courtenay 47 47 pg 106 & 132,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 4, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1135 - 1200 Alberic II of Dammartin 65 65 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1138 - >1200 Mahaut (Maud) of Ponthieu 62 62 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
>1110 - 1150 Garcio VII Ramirez of Navarre 40 40 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100 ~1100 - 1141 Marguerite of Aigle 41 41 D. UNKNOWN Mac Dairgen O'Thairmeascain 1 Mar 1103/1104 - 1157 Alfonso VII Raimundez of Castile, Leon & Galicia pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1113 - 3 Feb 1148/1149 Berenguela Reimundez of Barcelona pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1073 - >1116 Ramiro II Ramirez of Monzon 43 43 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1077 - 1116 Christina (Elvira) Rodriguez of Vivar 39 39 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100 ~1043 - 1099 Rodrigo Diaz (El Cid) of Valencia 56 56 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1051 - ~1115 Jimena Diaz of Asturias 64 64 pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1182 - <1238 Roger La Zouche 56 56 pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 598, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
~1179 - >1232 Annora (Margaret) Beaumont 53 53 ~1157 - ~1190 Alan of Brittany La Coshe (Zouche) 33 33 pg 46 & 116,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 598, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
~1160 Alice Belmeis pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
D. 1026 Amargen O'Morda King of Loigsi ~1086 - ~1141 Geoffroi of Porhoet 55 55 pg 46 & 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 98, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1100 Hawise of Bretagne pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 98 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1015 - 1063 Bela I of Hungary 48 48 pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1018 - 1051 Rixa of Poland 33 33 pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0976 - 1038 Vazul of Poland 62 62 pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0990 - 1034 Mieszko II of Poland 44 44 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0998 - 1063 Richeza (Rixa) of Lorraine 65 65 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0960 - 1015 Vladimir I of Kiev 55 55 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0962 - 1002 Rogneideof Polotzk 40 40 D. UNKNOWN Cinaed O'Morda 0910 - 26 Jan 0945/0946 Edith England ~0955 - 1034 Ezzo of Rhine 79 79 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0978 - 1025 Mathilda of Sachsen 47 47 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0954/0955 - 0983 Otto II Hre pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1112 - UNKNOWN Clemencia ~0956 - 0991 Theophana of Byzantium 35 35 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 23, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1114 - 1190 Walter Clifford 76 76 pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 122, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1118 - 1185 Margaret Toni 67 67 pg 748, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 122, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Margery Issac Renaud III of Gontier pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1012 - 1067 Baudouin V of Flandres 55 55 pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1009 - 1079 Adele of France 70 70 pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. UNKNOWN Carlus macAilella King of Ui Aeda Odba Ricarda of Astarac ~1082 - 8 Jan 1151/1152 Thibaud IV of Blois pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1097 - 1160 Maud of Carinthia 63 63 pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1098 Isabel Fitz Richard deClare ~1045 - 1102 Etienne III of Blois 57 57 pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1137 - 1188 Fernando II Alfonsez of Leon 51 51 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1151 - 1188 Urraca Alfonsez of Portugal 37 37 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1130 - UNKNOWN Aldhelm deBurgo de Mortaigne ~1017 - 1061 Florent (Floris) I of Holland 44 44 pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1035 - 1113 Gertrudeof Sachsen 78 78 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0990 - UNKNOWN Henry deFerriers ~1084 - 1126 Alice of Northumbria 42 42 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1022 - 1054 Lambert II of Lens 32 32 pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1030 - <1090 Adelaideof Aumale 60 60 pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 1102 Ralph III Toni ~1061 Isabel Montfort ~1041 Isabel of Bruay ~1193 - 1245 William Percy 52 52 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

William de Percy; attained his majority some time between mid-1212 and mid-1214; was with Henry III at the taking of William de Forz, titular Count of Aumale's castle of Biham in Lincs 1221 (Aumale being another of the 25 magnates charged with ensuring that the Magna Carta was observed but who was now seen as in rebellion against royal authority rather than in understandable opposition to despotism, as had been the case when John was still on the throne five years earlier); married 1st Joan (died by 12 June 1233), daughter of Sir William Briwere or Brewer, his guardian when a minor; married 2nd Ellen (who brought him as dowry Dalton, Co Durham, in consequence called Dalton Percy (it is now in Cleveland), and died a short while before 22 Nov 1281), daughter of Ingram de Balliol by a daughter and heir of Walter de Berkeley, Chamberlain of Scotland, and died just before 28 July 1245.  [Burke's Peerage]



William de Percy, Lord of Topcliffe, co. York.  [Ancestral Roots]

--------------------------------------

William de Percy came into full possession of all those rights and properties which had been usurped at the decease of his mother but did not live long to enjoy them, for he d. in 1245, and was s. by his son (by his 2nd wife, Elena, dau. of Ingelram de Baliol, by whom he obtained in dower Dalton, afterwards Dalton Percy, in the bishopric of Durham), Henry de Percy. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 423, Percy, Barons Percy, Earls of Northumberland, &c.]
~1215 - 1281 Eleanor or Elena Baliol 66 66 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Walter Berkeley ~1185 Agnes Berkeley Goldie Clare Ingelram Baliol pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
1160 - 1198 Henry Percy 38 38 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

Henry; took the name Percy; married as her 1st husband Isabel (died in or after 1230), daughter of Adam de Brus, Lord of Skelton, Cleveland (through her he had the Manor of Levinton), for which he and his heirs were to repair to Skelton Castle every Christmas Day and lead the lady of the castle from her chamber to the chapel to mass and thence to her chamber again, there to take meat with her, and then withdraw), and  died by Michaelmas 1198.  [Burke's Peerage]



Henry de Percy, the eldest son, who appears to have d. before his mother, m. Isabel, dau. of Adam de Brus, Lord of Skelton, with whom he had the manor of Levington, for which he and his heirs were to repair to Skelton Castle every Christmas-day, and to lead the lady of the castle from her chamber to the chapel to mass, and thence to her chamber again, and after dining with her, to depart. This Henry left two son, William and Henry. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 423, Percy, Barons Percy, Earls of Northumberland, &c.]
~1160 - 1230 Isabel Brus 70 70 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. 1194 Bernard II of Biwell Baliol ~1148 Agnes Pinchini pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 ~1126 - 1196 Adam II le Brus 70 70 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
~1158 Joan Grammaire D. <1180 Joscelin of Petworth Louvaine pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weis, 6th Edition, 1988

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1134 - <1204 Agnes Percy 70 70 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weis, 6th Edition, 1988

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Gilbert Umfreville Went to Glamorgan in 1091 0967 Engenulf deFerriers ~1116 - 1206 Ivetta (Juetta) Arches 90 90 1540 - 1625 Joan Bunker 85 85 Udo I of Lahngau ~1034 - ~1094 Emme of Bretagne 60 60 ~1110 Aufrida (Emma) Fossard ~0978 - 1055 Sigurd of Northumbria 77 77 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0982 Elflaed of Northumbria pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 114, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 128, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0994 - 1038 Aldred of Bernicia 44 44 pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0971 - 1018 Uhtred of Northumbria 47 47 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition
Ecgfrida of Durham 0927 - UNKNOWN Roger deMontgomerie III Count of Montgomery <0960 - >1018 Ealdhun of Durham 58 58 ~0960 - >1006 Waltheof of Bernicia 46 46 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 0965 Oswulf of Northumbria D. >0926 Aldred Edulfing of Bamborough D. ~0918 Eadwulf of Bamborough ~0975 Bjorn Beresun of denmark ~0933 Ulsius of denmark Spratlingus Ursus ~0806 - 0858 Aethelwulf of Eng. 52 52 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0978 Fulbert de Falaise Aka: "the Tanner"  Rollo, or Fulbert,  chamberlain to Robert, Duke of Normandy, had the giftof the castle and honor of Croy, in Picardy, from whence his posterity assumed their surname, which was afterwards written de Grey. They had a daughter Hervela or Herlotta, who was the mother of William, the Conqueror, and a son, Reynold.
Sources: Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, p. 248.
               Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 1, p. 77; Vol.4, p. 340.
               Glover's History and Gazeteer of Derbyshire, Vol. 2, pp.308/9.
               Lipscomb's History of Buckinghamshire, Vol. 1, pp. 160,466.
               Banks Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 2, p. 224.
               Lewis' Manuscripts, pp. 154, 267.
               Cokayne's Complete Peerage of Great Britain, Vol. 4, pp.308-311, 761,  Appendix No. 1.
~0810 - >0876 Osburh of Isle of Wight 66 66 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Oslac of Isle of Wight 0775 - 0839 Egbert of Wessex 64 64 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0788 Raedburh pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0758 - 0786 Eahlmund of Kent 28 28 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0732 Eafa of Wessex pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0706 Eoppa of Wessex pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0680 - 0718 Ingild of Wessex 38 38 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0644 - >0694 Cenred of Wessex 50 50 pg 2, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >0688 Ceolwald of Wessex pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Geoffrey deGastinois 1050 - 19 Feb 1122/1123 Irene Ducaena D. 0584 Cutha (Cuthwulf) of Wessex pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0564 - 0584 Cuthwine of Wessex 20 20 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0547 - 0593 Ceawlin of Wessex 46 46 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0525 - 0560 Cynric of Wessex 35 35 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Aethelred Mucill of Mercia ~0467 - 0534 Cerdic of Wessex 67 67 pg 1, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Baldwin II deBlois ~0727 - ~0781 Fergus of Dalriada 54 54 Geraint ap Erb D. UNKNOWN Baldwin deBlois D. UNKNOWN Godfrey deNeustria ~0840 - 0936 Gorm Knudsson of denmark 96 96 D. UNKNOWN Roland deNeustria 0772 - 0811 Charles "The Younger" Duc deIngelheim 39 39 Eve Margery Whethill Juliana Butler 1318 - 1385 John de Botetourt 67 67 2nd Lord Botetourt.  He inherited from his grandfather.  He was age four in August, 1322, and seven in December, 1324.  He had livery of his lands in 1341, having had livery, although still a minor, of his mother's lands on July 16, 1338.  He distinguished himself in the French wars.  He was summoned to Parliament from February 25, 1342, to February 3, 1385. 1195 John de Arderne ~0850 - ~0933 Harald Halfdansson Of Norway 83 83 0919 - 0999 Mieceslas III of Obotrites 80 80 ~0959 Sofia ~0893 - 0985 Mitsui II of Obotrites 92 92 D. UNKNOWN Julianna of Ingleheim D. 0985 Mieceslas II of Obotrites of Puffow Eric of Puffow D. 0869 Mitsui I of Obotrites D. 0840 Rodigastus of Obotrites D. 0811 Mieceslas I of Obotrites Antonia D. 0798 Billung II of Obotrites Jutta Billung I of Obotrites 1019 - 1082 Richard 'le Goz' d'Avranches Vicomte d'Avranches 63 63 Richard was Vice Count de Abrinces, that is Auranches in Normandy. Hereconciled his father to the Duke of Normandy by his good carriage andgot more than his father had lost. He was Governor of the Castle of St.James in Normandy and Brittany. He married Emma, half sister of Williamthe Conqueror, daughter of Herloin, a Norman nobleman, who marriedHerlotta or Arlotta, the Conqueror's mother, who was not married to hisfather. Hildegarde D. 0724 Aribert I of Obotrites Mandana D. 0700 Vislas I of Obotrites Petrusa of Lombards 1232 - 1266 Manfred of Sicily 34 34 pg. 34 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1223 - 1259 Beatrix of Savoy 36 36 pg 34, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1176 Maud Vavasour pg 2047, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 213, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1165 - ~1239 Mathildeof Angouleme 74 74 ~0974 - 1039 Iago ap Idwal of Gwynedd 65 65 1157 - UNKNOWN Aufrica deScotland ~0949 Gwair ap Pill ~0974 Afandreg verch Gwair ~1240 - ~1270 Hugues Xii of Marche 30 30 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 228, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1240 - ~1274 Jeanne of Fougeres 34 34 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1245 - 1302 William II of Fiennes 57 57 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1252 - 1302 Blanche Brienne 50 50 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1177 - 1200 Margaret Braose 23 23 pg 75, 150 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1115 - 1185 Hugh of L Lacy 70 70 pg 150 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1090 - 1149 Rohese Clare 59 59 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1104 - ~1163 Gilbert of L Lacy 59 59 pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1094 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deSay 0931 - 0953 Luitgard Germany 22 22 1814 Elizabeth Van Wert 1803 - 1866 Jacob Van Wert 63 63 Emma Lacy ~1045 - 1084 Walter Lacy 39 39 pg 309, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Ermeline Jane Wilascot Thomas Noel ROBERT NOEL, of Ellenhall, Staffs., He was given land near 'Gnosill' by Robert de Stafford, between 1140 & 1150. In the reign of King Henry II he founded the priory of Ranton, near Ellenhall, Staffs., settling on it land & a mill. M Alice, d. of Hugh de Montfort. He had issue: VCH Staffs III, p 251 & IV 125 WSAS III, p 119
1].Thomas, of Raunton & Ellenhall, Staffs., M Margaret, d. of Guy le Strange. He was Sheriff of Staffs., for 7 years in the reign of King Henry II, & for 1 year upon the accession of King Richard I. He had issue: VCH Staffs III, p 251 Weis, p 60
]1a.Alice, M Sir William Harcourt, Kt., of Stanton Harcourt, Oxon. Gov. of Tamworth Castle, Warw., 1218. She had issue: (See HARCOURT) Weis, p 60
2a].Joan, M William de Dunstan. 2.PHILIP, of whom we presently. PHILIP NOEL, of Hilcote, Staffs., He had issue: Nichols III, p 254
ROBERT NOEL, of Crestford, Staffs., M Joan, d. of Sir John Acton, Kt. He received a grant of lands from his 1st cousin Alice, wife of Sir William Harcourt, Kt. He had issue: WSAS III, p 117
PHILIP NOEL, of Crestford & Newbold, Staffs., Living 1268. He had issue: HSP Leic, p 113
PHILIP NOEL, of Crestford & Newbold, Staffs., He had issue: Nichols III, p 254
PHILIP NOEL, of Crestford, Staffs., M Cecilia (called a "widow" in 1338). Died before 1338. He had issue: HSP Leic, p 113
THOMAS NOEL, of Hilcote & Newbold, Staffs., M Alice, d. & heir of Henry de Wiverston. He had issue: Nichols III, p 254
1.WILLIAM, of whom we presently. 2.Cicely, M Sir John Mynors, Kt., of Blacknall, Staffs. She had issue. Shaw II Pt 1, p 117
WILLIAM NOEL, of Hilcote & Newbold, Staffs., He had issue: Nichols III, p 254
RICHARD NOEL, of Hilcote & Newbold, Staffs., He had issue: HSP Leic, p 113 1.THOMAS, of whom we presently. 2.Robert, Living 1450. THOMAS NOEL, of Hilcote & Newbold, Staffs., M 1st Jane Sounde. M 2nd Jane, d. of Sir Roger Draycott, Kt., of Paynsley, in Draycott, Staffs., & wife Agnes, d. of Sir Roger Aston, Kt., of Haywood & Tixall, Staffs. (See DRAYCOTT). He had issue by his 1st wife: Nichols III, p 254 WSAS III, p 117 1.Isabel, M Thomas Chetwode (Died after 1485). Thomas Noel had further issue by his 2nd wife: 2.
ROBERT, of whom we presently.
ROBERT NOEL, of Hilcote & Newbold, Staffs., M Maud or Mathilda (Born c. 1450), d. of William Brereton (See BRERETON). Living 1467. He had issue: HSP Staffs, p 222 1.JAMES, of whom we presently. 2.Richard, M Margaret (mentioned in her husband's will, 12 July 1539). Will dated 12 July 1539. Died 1539. Will Proved at Lichfield, 6 Oct. 1539. Will 3.John (Rev)., Rector of Swinnerton, Staffs. He was sued as "John Nowell parson of Swinnerton" for "keeping the bible out of the parish church." Star Ch I, p 229
JAMES NOEL, J.P., of Hilcote, Staffs., Born c. 1480. M -- ,d. of Richard Pole, of Kirk Langley, Derbyshire (See POLE of RADBOURNE). He was a feoffee for his cousin Sir John Draycote, Kt., of Paynsley, who d 1522, by deed dated 8 Aug. 1512. He was nominated by Act of Parliament one of the Justices of the Peace for assessing & collecting the poll tax, 1514. Died 1546. Will Proved at Lichfield, 1546. He had issue: Nichols III, p 254 HSP Staffs, p 222 WSAS III, p 117
~1185 Robert Aguillon pg 10, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1185 Agatha Beaufou ~1160 Fulk Beaufou D. UNKNOWN Concubine ~1158 - <1214 Roger Mortimer 56 56 pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1166 - <1252 Isabel Ferrers 86 86 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Maud of Normandy pg. 76, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1135 Walcherine de Ferrers pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Alice Leche Alan Leche William Caldwell D. 1180/1181 Hugh of Wigmore Mortimer pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1138 Maud or Matilda Meschine pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1070 Roger Mortimer pg 382, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 1099 - UNKNOWN Hawise deClare Hawise of Vexin pg. 76, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1010 - 1074 Raoul III of Valois & Vexin 64 64 pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg. 76, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928
~1020 - ~1053 Adele of Bar-Sur- Aube 33 33 pg 76, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928

pg 112, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~1184 - ~1223 Gracia Briwere 39 39 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Thomas Caldwell ~1190 - ~1233 Simon of Joinville 43 43 pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1200 Beatrix of Auxonne <1169 - 1241 Etienne III of Auxonne 72 72 ~1174 - 1227 Beatrix of Chalons 53 53 pg 80 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1220 - 1250 Hugues Xi of Marche 30 30 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1683 Elizabeth Merritt 1218 - <1272 Yolandeof Dreux 54 54 pg 107, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1183 - 1246 Hugues IX of Marche 63 63 pg 80,106, 118 & 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg lii, Burke' "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 545, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1191 - 1250 Robert of Bretagne 59 59 pg 93 & 118 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1195 - 1221 Alix of Thouars 26 26 pg 93 & 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1206 - 1256 Raoul III of Fougeres 50 50 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1220 Isabel of Craon ~1180 - 1212 Geoffroi of Fougeres 32 32 ~1187 Maud of Porhoet pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1147 - 1187 Guillaume of Fougeres 40 40 D. 1231 Eudes III of Porhoet pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1038 Hubert deRie Marguerite ~1164 - 1226 Amaury I of Craon 62 62 Jeanne of Roches pg 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1215 Maurice III of Craon ~1143 Isabel of Meulan Beaumont Pyll ~0917 - 0986 Meurig ap Idwal 69 69 ~0945 - 0996 Idwal ap Meurig of Gwynedd 51 51 ~0883 - 0942 Idwal ap Anarawd 59 59 ~1145 - 1213/1214 Robert I Tregoz pg 222, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 537, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
0930 Herbastus Herfast deCrepon Crepon is a estate neare Bayeux, Normandy, France, Aka: Herfault  Herbastus  de Bolbec  de Crepon, Danish Knight. ~1204 - <1266 Margaret Quincy 62 62 pg 63, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 311, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1192 - 1240 John of Lincoln Lacy 48 48 pg 63, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 311, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

John de Lacy, Magna Charta Surety 1215, b. c 1192, d. 22 July 1240, Earl of Lincoln 1232, Constable of Chester, son of Roger de Lacy and Maud de Clare; m. (2) bef. 21 June 1221, Margaret de Quincy.  [Magna Charta Sureties]



on the Earldom of Lincoln, prior creations, [Burke's Peerage, p. 1712]:

The Earldom of Lincoln was revived twenty years after the 2nd Earl's death in favour of his cousin, Ranulph Earl of Chester, who of course also had a long-standing connection with the county through their common ancestress Countess Lucy.  Ranulph's prominent role in defeating the French invaders at the Battle of Lincoln earlier in 1217, the year he was made Earl of Lincoln, played a part in his elevation.  Soon after Michaelmas 1230 he made over the Earldom to his sister Hawise, from whom it was conveyed to her son-in-law John de Lacy, the traffic in the dignity being approved by Henry III in both cases in the autumn of 1232.

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John de Lacy, Constable of Chester, in the 15th year of King John, undertook the payment of 7,000 marks to the crown in the space of four years for the livery of the lands of his inheritance and to be discharged of all his father's debts due to the exchequer; further obliging himself by oath that, in case he should ever swerve from his allegiance and adhere to the king's enemies, all his possessions should devolve upon the crown; promising also that he would not marry without the king's license. By this agreement it was arranged that the king should retain the castles of Pontefract and Dunnington, still in his own hands; and that he, the said John, should allow £40 per annum for the custody of those fortresses. But the next year he had Dunnington restored to him upon hostages. About this period he joined the baronial standard and was one of the celebrated twenty-five barons appointed to enforce the observance of Magna Carta. But the next year he obtained letters of safe conduct to come to the king to make his peace, and he had similar letters upon the accession of Henry III, in the 2nd year of which monarch's reign he went with divers other noblemen into the Holy Land. He m. Margaret, dau. and heir of Robert de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, by Hawyse, 4th sister and co-heir of Ranulph de Meschines, Earl of Chester and Lincoln, which Ranulph, by a formal charter under his seal, granted the Earldom of Lincoln, that is, so much as he could grant thereof, to the said Hawyse, "to the end that she might be countess and that her heirs might also enjoy the earldom;" which grant was confirmed by the king and, at the especial request of the countess, this John de Lacy, constable of Chester, was created by charter, dated at Northampton, 23 November, 1232, Earl of Lincoln, with remainder to the heirs of his body, by his wife, the above-named Margaret. In the contest which occurred during the same year between the king and Richard Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, Earl Marshal, Matthew Paris states that the Earl of Lincoln was brought over to the king's party with John le Scot, Earl of Chester, by Peter de Rupibus, bishop of Winchester, for a bribe of 1,000 marks. In 1237, his lordship was one of those appointed to prohibit Oto, the pope's legate, from establishing anything derogatory to the king's crown and dignity in the council of prelates then assembled; and the same year he had a grant of the sheriffalty of Cheshire, being likewise constituted governor of the castle of Chester. The earl d. in 1240, leaving Margaret, his wife, surviving, who re-m. William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. His lordship left issue, Edmund, his successor, and two daus., which ladies in the 27th Henry III, were removed to Windsor, there to be educated with the king's own daus.; of these, Maud m. Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883]
~1172 - <1212 Roger of Halton Lacy 40 40 pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Roger de Lacy, constable of Chester, assisted at the siege of Acon in 1192 under the banner of the lion-hearted Richard, and shared in the subsequent triumphs of the chivalrous monarch. At the accession of John in 1199, he was a person of great eminence, for we find him shortly after the coronation of that prince deputed with the sheriff of Northumberland and other great men to conduct William, King of Scotland, to Lincoln, where the English king had fixed to give him an interview, and the next year he was one of the barons present at Lincoln, when David, of Scotland, did homage and fealty to King John.



It is doubtful, however, whether the privilege was transferred to the Duttons by this constable or his successor. The privilege was, "That, at the midsummer fair held at Chester, all the minstrels of that country, resorting to Chester, do attend the heir of Dutton, from his lodging to St. John's Church (he being then accompanied by many gentlemen of the country, one of them walking before him in a surcoat of his arms depicted on taffeta, the rest of his fellows proceeding two and two, and playing on their several sorts of musical instruments."] When divine service terminates, the like attendance upon Dutton to his lodging, where a court being kept by his steward, and all the minstrels formally called, certain orders and laws are made for the government of the society of minstrels.

Roger de Lacy was s. by his son, John de Lacy, constable of Chester. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 310-311, Lacy, Earls of Lincoln]
~1174 - 1213 Maud Clare 39 39 ~1130 - 1190 John of Halton & Pontefract Lacy 60 60 vol 3, pg 622 Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1141 Alice Mandeville ~1128 - ~1157 Richard Fitz Eustace 29 29 v2, pg 754, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1082 - 1144 Geoffrey of Essex Mandeville 62 62 Lettice Young Had two sons and five daughters. 1054 - 1087 Geoffrey deManDeville 33 33 ~1234 - 1296 Tomasso I of Saluzzo 62 62 pg 33, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1245 - 1291 Luisa of Cueva 46 46 pg 33, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1210 - 1244 Manfredo III of Saluzzo 34 34 pg 97, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1210 - 1268 Giorgio of Ceva 58 58 pg 33, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1229 Menzia D. <1244 Walter of Bray Ridelsford pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1193 Alianore de Vitre 1064 Adeliza de Balts ~1177 - >1226 Walter of Bray Ridelsford 49 49 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1248 Robert VII of Bethune ~1191 - >1249 Isabel of Moreaumes 58 58 ~1154 - 1218 Robert II of Dreux 64 64 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1164 - 18 Mar 1222/1223 Yolandeof Coucy pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1144 - 1201 Margaret of Huntingdon 57 57 pg 92 & 161, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 57, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1090 - 1120 Maud II of England 30 30 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1213 Gui V of Thouars pg 93, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1162 - 1201 Constance of Bretagne 39 39 pg 93, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1137 - 20 Feb 1171/1172 Conan IV of Bretagne pg 92 & 108, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1065 - UNKNOWN William deSaye ~1210 - 1267 Enguerrand II of Fiennes 57 57 pg 93 & 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1227 Isabel of Conde pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1217 - 1296 Jean Brienne 79 79 ~1227 Jeanne of Chateaudun ~1160 - 1241 William I Fiennes 81 81 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1166 Agnes of Dammartin pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1168 - 21 Mar 1236/1237 Jean deBrienne of Byzantium pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1199 - 1237 Berengaria of Leon 38 38 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1249 Geoffroi IV of Chateaudun ~1217 Clemence of Roches pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1032 Picot de Saye ~1170 Millicent Ferrers pg 196, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1119 - >1166 Gundred Warren 47 47 pg 83, 87 & 131,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 399 & 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1102 - 1153 Roger of Warwick Newburgh 51 51 pg 83 & 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1046 - 1117 Henry of Warwick Newburgh 71 71 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1082 - 1156 Margaret of Perche 74 74 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1165 William de Vipont 1173 - 1240 Llewellyn ap Lorwerth 67 67 pg 34, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 221, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 228, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

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~1174 - <1235 Piers fitz Herbert of Barnstable 61 61 pg 89, 208 & 233 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 206, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1020 - ~1095 Baudouin of Okehampton 75 75 pg 1390, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1120 - <1204 Herbert fitz Herbert of Winchester 84 84 pg 196, "208 & 233, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 206, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
0995 - UNKNOWN Robert FitzPicot deSaye Arnoldus deSaxony ~1144 - 1220 Lucia fitz Miles of Hereford 76 76 pg 196 & 233 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 206, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1161 - 1217 Robert fitz Roger of Warkworth Stokes 56 56 pg 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 233, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1162 - >1214 Margaret Chesney 52 52 pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1247 - 1310 Robert Clavering 63 63 pg 156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 121 & 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1248 Margery or Margaret La Zouche pg 156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1206 Ralph fitz Ranulf of Middleham pg. 399 & 530, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1216 Anastasia Percy Anastasia, daughter of William DE PERCY.  [Complete Peerage] ~1220 - 1249 Roger of Warkworth Clavering 29 29 pg 155 & 156, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1227 - >1256 Isabel 29 29 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1194 - 1240 John fitz Robert of Warkworth Clavering 46 46 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1075 Agnes de Grentemesnil ~1206 - 1251 Ada Baliol 45 45 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1191 - 1228 Hugh of Biwell Baliol 37 37 pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 ~1195 Cecilia Fontaine 1190 - <1233 Joan Briwere 43 43 Joan (died by 12 June 1233), daughter of Sir William Briwere or Brewer, his [William de Percy's] guardian when a minor.  [Burke's Peerage] 1180 Ranulf fitz Robert of Middleham pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1196 Mary Bigod pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1154 Isabel (or Ida) Plantagenet pg 53 & 569, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 Robert Tailboys Helewise Glanville 1055 - 1091 Adeliza Alice de Beaumont 36 36 ~1009 - ~1055 Godgifu (Goda) of England 46 46 pg 195, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition
D. 1222 Guillaume of Roches pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Marguerite of Sable pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1026 - 1086 Guillaume VI of Aquitaine 60 60 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1053 - >1104 Aldegardeor Hildegarde of Bourgogne 51 51 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0969 - 1030 Guillaume V of Aquitaine 61 61 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0987 - 1068 Agnes of Bourgogne 81 81 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0937 - 0995 Guillaume IV of Aquitaine 58 58 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0950 - >1003 Emme of Blois 53 53 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1015 Yves III de Beaumont ~0958 - 1026 Otto Guillaume of Lombards 68 68 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0963 - BEF 5 Mar 1004/1005 Ermentrudeof Roucy pg 6, 7  & 218, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I of Bourgogne pg 102 & 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1031 - 1109 Helie of Semur 78 78 pg 102 & 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0917 - 0963 Guillaume III of Aquitaine 46 46 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0919 - 0962 Gerlotte or Adele of Normandy 43 43 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
ABT 0910/0915 - 16 Jan 0974/0975 Thibaud II of Blois pg 54 & 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7 & 15, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
D. 0943 Liutgardeof Vermandois pg 54 & 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7 & 15, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~0875 - >0932 Ebles Mancer of Aquitaine 57 57 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
Emilane pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0995 - 1039 Robert deGrentemesnil 44 44 ~0855 - 0890 Ranulf II of Aquitaine 35 35 pg 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Adelaideof France 0866 - 0912 Leo VI of Byzantium 45 45 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0866 Zoe Carbonopsina Zautzina pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0812 - 0886 Basileos I of Byzantium 74 74 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0786 - ~0828 Konstantinos 42 42 1122 - 1190 Frederich III Hre 68 68 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1145 - 15 Nov 1184/1185 Beatrix of Bourgogne pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1090 - 1147 Friedrich II of Schwaben 57 57 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1103 - 22 Feb 1130/1135 Jutta of Bayern pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1010 - UNKNOWN Hawise D' Echafour ~1050 - 1105 Friedrich I of Schwaben & Alsace 55 55 1074 - 1143 Agnes Hre 69 69 1050 - 1106 Heinrich IV Hre 55 55 1051 - 1087 Bertha of Maurienne 36 36 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 39,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938
1017 - 1056 Heinrich III Hre 38 38 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1020 - 1077 Agnes of Poitou 57 57 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0819 - >0874 Gisele 55 55 <1040 - 1109 Alfonso VI Fernandez of Castile & Leon 69 69 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1071 - 1107 Zaa-ida (Isabella) of Seville 36 36 0960 - 0998 Gevase Le Breton 38 38 ~1135 - 1185 Richeza of Poland 50 50 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0660 Ingjald Braut- Onundsson ~1126 - 1183 Pierre I of France 57 57 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 106, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1148 - 1205 Elizabeth (Isabella) of Courtenay 57 57 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 106, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1042 - >1076 Guillaume Massey 34 34 ~0638 Braut- Onund Ingvarsson 1197 - 1253 Amadeus IV of Savoy 56 56 pg. 60, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1192 - 1242 Marguerite of Coligny 50 50 0988 - UNKNOWN Geroy Le Goz deMontreuil Marguerite of Faucigny 1161 - 1228 Beatrix of Vienne 67 67 ~0616 Ingvar Eysteinsson ~0640 Olaf I of Westfold ~1150 - 1203 Guillaume III of Chalons 53 53 ~1157 Beatrice of Germany 1104 - 1166 Waleran II of Worcester Beaumont 62 62 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 1122/1123 - 1181 Agnes (Elizabeth) Montfort pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1150 - 1202 Gilbert Basset 52 52 pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1155 - ~1214 Egelina Courtenay 59 59 0966 - UNKNOWN Arnold Le Gros ~1118 - >1186 Aline or Alice Dunstanville 68 68 <aongusmclean@msn.com> ~1102 - >1165 Gilbert Basset 63 63 ~1110 - >1165 Edith D'Oilly 55 55 pg 165, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies" ~1080 Alice Elizabeth Whittington ~1050 - ~1080 Thurstan Basset 30 30 pg 26, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 ~1068 Maud Mary Bigod pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 ~1060 - 25 Jan 1139/1140 Godfroi I of Lorraine pg 129, 133 & 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weis, 6th Edition, 1988

pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
~1085 - >1117 Ida of Namur 32 32 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 133, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1036 - >1084 Roger Albini 48 48 pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887 0939 - UNKNOWN Abbo Le Breton Avicia Mowbray ~1010 of Plessis pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1016 - >1066 Niel III of Cotentin 50 50 ~1015 Adela Eu 1773 John Merritt ~1000 - 1045 Niel II of St. Sauveur 45 45 pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0990 Roger of St. Sauveur pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0970 Niel of St. Sauveur pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0893 - ~0933 Richard I of Contentin & St. Sauveur 40 40 pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0845 - >0912 Malahule Eysteinsson of Maer 67 67 pg 107, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0990 Gisela Bertrand deBastenburg 1236 - 1274 Eleanor deFerrers 38 38 ~1100 Helias of Clun Saye pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1077 Henry of Clun Saye pg. 482, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1051 Robert (Picot)of Clun Saye pg. 482, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 Adeloyse <1086 Walter fitz Otho pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1038 Ernulf of Hesdin ~1074 - >1133 Maud (Matilda) of Hesdin 59 59 ~1025 Hugh Chaworth ~1000 - >1027 Anchetil Harcourt 27 27 vol   pg 883 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 261, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1008 Eve Boissay 0979 - UNKNOWN Hughes deMontfort 0965 - 1035/1040 Turchetil of Turqueville Harcourt vol   pg 883 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 261, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0970 Adeline Montfort vol 2, pg 221, Burke's  "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" ~1020 - ~1037 Hugh II Montfort 17 17 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 227 & 377, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1015 Alice Beaufort D. ~1081 Richard Beaufort Emme of Bayeux pg 88, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~1066 Raoul Beaufort 0975 Yves II de Beaumont ~1044 - 1060 Maud of Germany 16 16 ~1031 - 1080 Rudolf of Germany 49 49 ~1060 Tietburga of Rheinfelden pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weis, 6th editionublished 1988 <1034 - 1080 Geraud I of Geneva 46 46 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1061 - ~1118 Gilbert of Aigle 57 57 ~1072 - >1109 Julienne of Perche 37 37 ~1040 - 1085 Richard of Aigle 45 45 vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" ~1054 Judith of Avranches vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" 0995 - UNKNOWN Gisele Chevreuse 0945 Yves I de Beaumont ~1040 - 1086 Hugh Beauchamp 46 46 pg 29, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 William Horne George Ransom Hugh de Windsor D. >1074 Ralph I of Norfolk Gael pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1059 - >1095 Emma fitz William 36 36 pg 62, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Gytha pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition
1030 Ralph deGlanville ~1057 - 1115 Harold of Sudeley Ewyas 58 58 pg 195 & 222, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition

pg 520, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 530, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
~1085 - >1147 Robert I fitz Harold of E Ewyas 62 62 pg 222, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 520, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

pg 530, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
D. 1204 Pernel or Petronella pg 222, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1071 Maud or Matilda Avranches pg 530, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841 ~1050 - 1101 Hugh of Chester Avranches 51 51 vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

Hugh d'Avranches or Lupus (ie. "Wolf", so-called from his ferocity andacquisitiveness), Earl of Chester with quasi-regal powers, so created1071 in the reign of his great-uncle of the half blood William I ("TheConqueror").  [Burke's Peerage, p. 2884 on the Barony of Vernon]

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EARLDOM OF CHESTER (II, 1)

HUGH D'AVRANCHES, styled by his contemporaries "VRAS," or "LE GROS" and,in after ages (from his rapacity) "Lupus," was son and heir of Richard(LE Goz), VICOMTE AVRANCHES, &C., in Normandy (son of Thurstan LE Goz),by Emma, daughter of Herluin de Conteville and Herleve (or Harlotte) hiswife, who (by Robert, Duke of Normandy) was mother of William "theConqueror".  He is generally supposed to have fought at the battle ofHastings (1066), when, at the utmost, he would have been but 19 yearsold; anyhow, not long afterwards in 1071, he received from the King, hismaternal uncle, the whole of the county Palatine of Chester (exceptionthe Episcopal lands) "to hold as freely by the Sword, as he [the King]himself held the Kingdom of England by the Crown," becoming thereby CountPalatine (b) thereof, as EARL OF CHESTER. He succeeded his father, whowas living as late as 1082, as VICOMTE D'AVRANCHES, &C., in Normandy. Inthe rebellion (1096) against William II, he stood loyally by hisSovereign. He m. Ermentrude, daughter of Hugues, COUNT OF CLERMONT inBeauvaisis, by Margaret, daughter of Hilduin, COUNT OF Rouci andMONTDIDIER. Having founded the Abbeys of St. Sever in Normandy and St.Werburg at Chester (besides largely endowing that of Whitby, co. York),he became a monk 3 days before he died 27 July 1101, at St. Werburg's. Hewas buried in the cemetery at St. Werburg, but his body was afterwardremoved to the Chapter House by Earl Ranulph le Meschin. [CompletePeerage III:165, XIV:170, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(b) As such he had his hereditary Baron, who (besides one Robert deRhuddlon, General of his forces, who d. 3 July 1088, many years beforehim) are generally considered to have been eight, as under, viz. (1)Eustace of Mold, Baron of Hawarden, co. Flint, Hereditary Steward; (2)William Fitz Niel, Baron of Halton, Hereditary Constable and Marshal,whose descendants took the name of "de Lacy" and became Earls of Lincolnin 1232. (3) William Malbank, Baron of Nantwich, or Wich-Malbank, whoseissue maled ended with his grandson. (4) Robert Fitz Hugh, Baron ofMalpas, who dspm, but appears to have been succeeded (in Earl Hugh'slifetime) by David le Clerk (or Belward), said to have been hisson-in-law. (5) Hamond de Massey, Baron of Dunham-Massey, whorepresentation (through Fitton, Venables and Booth) passed to the Greys,Earls of Stafford and Warrington. (6) Richard Vernon, Baron ofShipbrooke. (7) William Venables, Baron of Kinderton, whose issue malecontinued till 1676. (8) Robert Stockport, Baron of Stockport, whoseexistence is somewhat questionable.  After 1265, however, when theEarldom of Chester was, by Henry III, annexed to the Crown, the dignityof these Barons became merely titular.

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Upon the detention of Gherbod, a prisoner in Flanders, a Fleming whofirst held the Earldom of Chester, that dignity was conferred, A.D. 1070,by the Conqueror, upon his half-sister's* son, Hugh de Abrincis (orAvranches, in Normandy), surnamed Lupus, and called by the Welch, Vras,or "the Fat." "Which Hugh," says Dugdale, "being a person of great noteat that time amongst the Norman nobility, and an expert soldier, was, forthat respect, chiefly placed so near those unconquered Britains, thebetter to restrain their bold incursions; for it was, 'consilioprudentium,' by the advice of his council, that King William thusadvanced him to that government; his power being, also, not ordinary;having royal jurisdiction within the precincts of his earldom--whichhonor he received to hold as freely . . . as the King himself heldEngland by the crown. But, though the time of his advancement was nottill the year 1070, certain it is that he came into England with theConqueror and thereupon had a grant of Whitby, in Yorkshire, whichlordship he soon afterwards disposed of to William de Percy, hisassociate in that famous expedition." In the contest between WilliamRufus and his brother, Robert Curthose, this powerful nobleman sided withthe former and remained faithful to him during the whole of his reign. Hewas subsequently in the confidence of Henry I, and one of that monarch'schief councillors.

"In his youth and flourishing age," continues Dugdale, "he was a greatlover of worldly pleasures and secular pomp; profuse in giving, and muchdelighted with interludes, jesters, horses, dogs, and other likevanities; having a large attendance of such persons, of all sorts, aswere disposed to those sports; but he had also in his family both clerksand soldiers, who were men of great honor, the venerable Anselme (abbotof Bec, and afterwards archbishop of Canterbury) being his confessor;nay, so devout he grew before his death, that sickness hanging long uponhim, he caused himself to be shorn a monk in the abbey of St. Werberge,where, within three days after, he died, 27 July, 1101."

His lordship m. Ermentrude, dau. of Hugh de Claremont, Earl of Bevois, inFrance, by whom he had an only son, Richard, his successor. Of hisillegitimate issue were Ottiwell, tutor to those children of King Henry Iwho perished at sea; Robert, originally a monk in the abbey of St.Ebrulf, in Normandy, and afterwards abbot of St. Edmundsbury, in Suffolk;and Geva, the wife of Geffrey Riddell, to whom the earl gave DraytonBasset, in Staffordshire.

That this powerful nobleman enjoyed immense wealth in England is evidentfrom the many lordships he held at the general survey; for, besides thewhole of Cheshire, excepting the small part which at that time belongedto the bishop, he had nine lordships in Berkshire, two in Devonshire,seven in Yorkshire, six in Wiltshire, ten in Dorsetshire, four inSomersetshire, thirty-two in Suffolk, twelve in Norfolk, one inHampshire, five in Oxfordshire, three in Buckinghamshire, four inGloucestershire, two in Huntingdonshire, four in Nottinghamshire, one inWarwickshire, and twenty-two in Leicestershire. It appears too, by thecharter of foundation to the abbey of St. Werburge, at Chester, thatseveral eminent persons held the rank of baron under him, which Baronesand Homines mentioned therein were the following: -- 1. William Melbanc;2. Robert, son of Hugo; 3. Hugo, son of Norman; 4. Richard de Vernon; 5.Richard de Rullos; 6. Ranulph Venator; 7. Hugh de Mara; 8. Ranulph, sonof Ermiwin; 9. Robert de Fremouz; 10. Walkelinus, nephew of Walter deVernon; 11. Seward; 12. Giselbert de Venables; 13. Gaufridus de Sartes;14. Richard de Mesnilwarin; 15. Walter de Vernun. The charterconcludes---"Et ut hæc omnia essent rata et stabilia in perpetuum, egoCome Hugo et mei Barones confirmavimus (&c.), ita quod singuli nostrumpropria manu, in testimonium posteris signum in modum Crucisfacerunt:"--and is signed by the earl himself; Richard his son; Hervey,bishop of Bangor; Ranulph de Meschines, his nephew, who eventuallyinherited the earldom; Roger Bigod; Alan de Perci; William Constabular;Ranulph Dapifer; William Malbanc; Robert FitzHugh; Hugh FitzNorman; Hamode Masci; and Bigod de Loges. Those barons, be it remembered, were eachand all of them men of great individual power and large territorialpossessions. Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, was s. by his only son (thenbut seven years of age), Richard de Abrincis, as 2nd earl. [Sir BernardBurke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883,pp. 1-2, Abrincis, Earls of Chester]

Note: Sir Bernard Burke's genealogy has been superceded somewhat,although much of the "meat" still holds.

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HUGH D'AVRANCHES, EARL OF CHESTER
The Conqueror and His Companions
by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874.

Here is a personage who, under the more popular name of Hugh Lupus, isperhaps almost as well known as the Conqueror himself.

Wace in his "Roman de Rou," speaks only of his father Richard:

"D'Avrancin i fu Richarz."

But it is generally contended that Richard was not in the battle, andthat it was Hugh, his son, who accompanied William to Hastings. Theauthors of "Les Recherches sur le Domesday," to whom we are so deeplyindebted for information on these points, hesitate to endorse the opinionof Mons. le Prévost upon these grounds, -- that Richard was living aslate as 1082, when he appears as a witness to a charter of Roger deMontgomeri, in favour of St. Stephen's at Caen, to which also his son,Earl Hugh, is a subscriber. Their observations only point, however, tothe probability of Richard, who in 1066 was Seigneur or Vicomte ofAvranches, having been in the Norman army of invasion, as he survived theevent some sixteen years; at the same time they deny that there is anyproof that his son Hugh was in the battle, and assert, without stating onwhat authority, that Hugh only joined the Conqueror in England after thevictory at Senlac, when he rendered the new King most important servicesby his valour and ability in the establishment of William on the throne,and contributed greatly towards the reduction of the Welsh to obedience.That there is authority for their assertion appears from the cartulary ofthe Abbey of Whitby, quoted by Dugdale in his "Monasticon," (Mon. Ang.vol. i, p. 72) where we read distinctly that Hugh Earl of Chester andWilliam de Percy came into England with William the Conqueror in 1067:"Anno Domini millesimo sexagesimo septimo," and that the King gave Whitbyto Hugo, which Hugo afterwards gave to William de Percy, the founder ofthe abbey there.

We have here, therefore, a parallel case to that of Roger de Montgomeri(Vide vol i, p. 181), and must similarly treat it as an open question.

The descent of Richard, surnamed Goz, Le Gotz, or Le Gois, from Ansfridthe Dane, the first who bore that surname, has been more or lesscorrectly recorded, but in "Les Recherches" it will be found criticallyexamined and carried up to Rongwald, or Raungwaldar, Earl of Maere andthe Orcades in the days of Harold Harfager, or the Fair-haired; whichsaid Rongwald was the father of Hrolf, or Rollo, the first Duke ofNormandy. Rongwald, like the majority of his countrymen and kinsmen, hadseveral children by a favourite slave, whom he had married "more Danico,"and Hrolf Turstain, th.e son of one of them, having followed his uncleRollo into Normandy, managed to secure the hand of Gerlotte de Blois,daughter of Thibaut Count of Blois and Chartres, which seems to have beenthe foundation of this branch of the great Norse family in Normandy, andthe stock from which descended the Lords of Briquebec, of Bec-Crispin, ofMontfort-sur-Risle, and others who figure as companions of the Conqueror.

The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of theHiemois, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz, above mentioned,whose son Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favouritc ofRobert Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accompanied himto the Holy Land, and was intrusted to bring back the relics the Duke hadobtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the Abbey ofCerisi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke William in1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands confiscatedand given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herluin deConteville.

Richard Goz, Vicomte d'Avranches, or more properly of the Avranchin, wasone of the sons of the aforesaid Turstain, by his wife Judith deMontanolier, and appears not only to have avoided being implicated in therebellion of his father, but obtained his pardon and restoration to theVicomté of the Hiemois, to which at his death he succeeded, and to havestrengthened his position at court by securing the hand of Emma deConteville, one of the daughters of Herluin and Herleve, and half-sisterof his sovereign. By this fortunate marriage he naturally recovered thelands forfeited by his father and bestowed on his mother-in-law, andacquired also much property in the Avranchin, of which he obtained theVicomté, in addition to that of the Hiemois.

There was every reason, therefore, that he should follow his threebrothers-in-law in the expedition to England, if not prevented by illnessor imperative circumstances. He must have been their senior by sometwenty years, but still scarcely past the prime of life, and his son Hugha stripling under age, as his mother, if even older than her brothers Odoand Robert, could not have been born before 1030, and if married atsixteen, her son in 1066 would not be more than nineteen at the utmost.Mr. Freeman, who places the marriage of Herleve with Herluin after thedeath of Duke Robert in 1035, would reduce this calculation by at leastsix years, rendering the presence of her grandson Hugh at Senlac morethan problematical. It is at any rate clear that he must have been a veryyoung man at the time of the Conquest. That "he came into England withWilliam the Conqueror," as stated by Dugdale, does not prove that he wasin the army at Hastings, and is reconcilable with the assertion in the"Recherches," that he joined him after the Conquest, corroborated by thecartulary of Whitby, before mentioned; very probably coming with him inthe winter of 1067, and in company with Roger de Montgomeri, respectingwhose first appearance in England the same diversity of opinion exists,and it might be his assistance in suppressing the rebellion in the Westand other parts of the kingdom that gained him the favour of the King,and ultimately the Earldom of Chester, at that time enjoyed by Gherbodthe Fleming, brother of Gundrada. The gift of Whitby, in Yorkshire, toHugh, which he soon afterwards gave to William de Percy, would seem toshow that he had been employed against the rebels beyond the Humber in1068.

In 1071, Gherbod Earl of Chester being summoned to Flanders by those towhom he had intrusted the management of his hereditary domains, whateverthey were, obtained from King William leave to make a short visit to thatcountry; but while there his evil fortune led him into a snare, andfalling into the hands of his enemies, he was thrown into a dungeon,"where he endured," says Orderic, "the sufferings of a long captivity,cut off from all the blessings of life." Whether he ended his days inthat dungeon Orderic does not tell us. A little more informationrespecting this Gherbod and his sister would be a great boon to us. Atpresent, what we hear about them is so vague that it looks absolutelysuspicious.

In consequence of this "evil fortune" which befell Gherbod, the King,continues Orderic, gave the earldom of Chester to Hugh d'Avranches, sonof Richard, surnamed Goz, who, in concert with Robert de Rhuddlan andRobert de Malpas, and other fierce knights, made great slaughter amongstthe Welsh.

Hugh was in fact a Count Palatine, and had the county of Chester grantedto him to hold as freely by the sword as the King held the kingdom by thecrown. He was all but a king himself, and had a court, and barons, andofficers, such as became a sovereign prince.

We hear but little of him during the remainder of the reign of Williamthe Conqueror, but in the rebellion against Rufus, in 1096, he stoodloyally by his sovereign; he is charged, however, with having barbarouslyblinded and mutilated his brother-in-law, William Comte d'Eu, who hadbeen made prisoner in that abortive uprising. In the same year he is alsoaccused of committing great cruelties upon the Welsh in the Isle ofAnglesea, which he ravaged in conjunction with Hugh de Montgomeri, Earlof Shrewsbury, who lost his life at that period in resisting the landingof the Norwegians nnder Magnus III, King of Norway. The Norse poet tellsus the Earl of Shrewsbury was so completely enveloped in armour thatnothing could be seen of his person but one eye. "King Magnus let fly anarrow at him, as also did a Heligoland man who stood beside the King.They both shot at once. The one shaft struck the nose-guard of thehelmet, and bent it on one side, the other arrow hit the Earl in the eyeand passed through his head, and this arrow was found to be the King's."

Giraldus Cambrensis gives a similar account, adding some few details,such as the derisive exclamation of Magnus, "Leit loupe! " -- "Let himleap!" as the Earl sprang from the saddle when struck, and fell dead intothe sea.

As this Earl of Shrewsbury was called by the Welsh "Goch," or "the Red,"from the colour of his hair, so was Hugh Earl of Chester called "Vras,"or "the Fat." His popular name of Lupus, or "the Wolf," is not to betraced to his own times, and Dugdale observes that it was an addition inafter ages for the sake of distinction; about the same time, I presume,that the heralds invented the coat of arms for him -- "Azure, a wolf'shead, erased, argent " -- suggested, probably, by the name, which, ifindeed of contemporary antiquity, might have been given him for hisgluttony, a vice to which Orderic says he was greatly addicted. "ThisHugh," he tells us, "was not merely liberal, but prodigal; not satisfiedwith being surrounded by his own retainers, he kept an army on foot. Heset no bounds either to his generosity or his rapacity. He continuallywasted even his own domains, and gave more encouragement to those whoattended him in hawking and hunting than to the cultivators of the soilor the votaries of Heaven. He indulged in gluttony to such a degree thathe could scarcely walk. He abandoned himself immoderately to carnalpleasures, and had a numerous progeny of illegitimate children of bothsexes, but they have been almost all carried off by one misfortune oranother."

With all this he displayed that curious veneration for the Church commonto his age, which so ill accorded with the constant violation of its mostdivine precepts. He founded the Abbey of St. Sever in Normandy, and was agreat benefactor to those of Bec and Ouche (St. Evroult) in that duchy,and also to the Abbey of Whitby in Yorkshire, and in 1092 restored theancient Abbey of St. Werburgh at Chester, and endowed it with amplepossessions, substituting Benedictine monks in lieu of the secular canonswho had previously occupied it; Richard, a monk of Bec, being broughtover by Abbot Anselm, the Earl's confessor and afterwards the greatArchbishop of Canterbury, to be the first abbot of the new community.

Being seized with a fatal illness, this pious profligate assumed themonastic habit in the Abbey of St. Werburgh, and three days after beingshorn a monk died therein, 6th kalends of August (July 27), 1101.

By his Countess Ermentrude, daughter of Hugh Comte de Clermont, inBeauvoisis, and Margaret de Rouci, his wife, he had one son, Richard,seven years of age at the time of his father's death, who succeeded himin the earldom, married Matilda de Blois, daughter of Stephen, Count ofBlois, by Adela, daughter of William the Conqueror, and perished with hisyoung wife in the fatal wreck of the White Ship in 1119, leaving no issue.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hugh, Count of Avranches and Earl of Chester presents the world of theeleventh century nobleman in its full diversity. A violent militaryadventurer, a student of vice and self-indulgence, he was a friend ofAnselm. Profligate with his income, he was a patron of monasteries. Hishousehold contained a bunch of rowdy thugs; it was also cultivated, evenpious. Nicknamed 'the fat' or 'the wolf', Hugh died in the habit of aBenedictine monk. If contemporaries saw a contradiction, they have leftno sign. Hugh, the son of the count of the Avranchin in western Normandyand nephew of William the Conqueror, probably fought at Hastings. Earlyin the 1070s he was granted palatine powers over a wide area of thenorthern Welsh Marches centered on Chester within which, except forchurch lands and pleas, he, not the king, was sovereign. This grantallowed Hugh complete freedom to establish, by force, French control overthe northern frontier with Wales and to penetrate along the coast ofNorth Wales towards Anglesey. Hugh was outside royal supervision, a lawunto himself, a tactic copied with the Montgomerys in Shropshire. Takingfull advantage of his opportunity, he campaigned relentlessly against theWelsh, extending his power to Bangor, where he established a bishopric in1092, and Anglesey. Beyond the English frontier, however, his authoritycould only be sustained by castles, garrisons and repeated raids which,in turn, provoked continual resistance and rebellion. On its fringes, theNorman Conquest remained a messy affair. Elsewhere, Hugh was one of theleading magnates in the Anglo-Norman realms, inheriting Avranches fromhis father in the 1080s and, by 1086, holding land in twenty countiesoutside Chester. In the succession disputes after the Conqueror's death,he supported William II and Henry I. Hugh acquired a foul reputation:vicious; violent; addicted to gambling and sex; and so greedy 'that,weighed down by a mountain of fat, he could hardly move.' He was alsogenerous, which explains why his household was always crowded with manyas debauched and sybaritic as he. But there was another side. Hugh was,according to Eadmer, an old and close friend of Anselm whom he persuadedto come to England in 1092 to supervise the installation of a communityof monks at St Werburgh's Chester. Open-handed to 'good men, clerks aswell as knights' as well as bad, he employed a Norman clerk, Gerold, whotook upon himself the moral instruction of his fellow courtiers, usingadmonitory stories from the Bible and, no doubt more popular, stirringtales of Christian warriors and 'holy knights.' In such a raucousatmosphere of passion, carnality, militarism and piety, was nurtured thementality which, in Hugh's lifetime, generated the Crusades. The knightswho, in 1099, stormed Jerusalem and massacred its inhabitants, some ofthem Hugh's relatives and friends, shared this heady brew ofself-righteous, self-pitying extremes of hedonism, brutality, guilt,obligation, spirituality and remorse. Hugh's only son Richard, who waschildless, drowned in the White Ship in November 1120. [Who's Who inEarly Medieval England, Christopher Tyerman, Shepheard-Walwyn, Ltd.,London, 1996; and Encyclopaedia Britannica CD, 1997]
1074 - 1126 Heinrich I of Bayern 52 52 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1075 - 1126 Wulfhilda of Sachsen 51 51 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
<1045 - 1106 Magnus of Sachsen 61 61 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1043 - 1095 Sofia of Hungary 52 52 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 200, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1020 - 28 Mar 1071/1072 Ordulf of Sachsen pg. 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 1114 Henry de Briwere ~1023 - 1070 Ulfhild Olafsdatter of Norway 47 47 ~0995 - 1059 Bernhard II of Sachsen 64 64 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1003 BertradeHaraldsdatter of Norway ~0995 - 1030 Olaf Haraldsson of Norway 35 35 ~1011 - >1028 Estrid Olafsdatter of Sweden 17 17 ~0950 - 9 Feb 1010/1011 Bernhard I of Sachsen Osberne of Bolebec pg. 108,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0930 - <0974 Harald II Ericsson of Norway 44 44 1036 - 1101 Guelph IV of Bayern 65 65 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1044 - 1094 Judith of Flandres 50 50 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
0960 - 1044 Agatha Christian 84 84 1009 - 1097 Azzo II of Este 88 88 pg 40, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1012 - 1054 Kunigundeof Altdorf 42 42 ~0980 - 1029 Azo I of Este 49 49 pg 40, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0975 Valdrada Candiano Pg. 40, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0976 Pietro IV Candiano of Venice Pg. 41, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Valdrada of Tuscagne pg 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0947 - 1014/1021 Oberto II of Este pg 40 & 41, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0960 Railendeof Como ~0885 - 0954 Eric I Haraldsson of Norway 69 69 D. >0970 Gunhilda Gormsdatter 1095 - 1167 Adam I le Brus 72 72 pg 80, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Ragnhilde pg 40, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0775 - 0810 Gudrod Halfdansson of Westfold 35 35 ~0823 - ~0863 Halfdan III Gudrodsson of Westfold 40 40 0830 Regnhild Sigurdsdatter D. 0959 Pietro III Candiano of Venice Pg. 41, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Arcielda D. 0939 Pietro II Candiano of Venice Pg. 41, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0887 Pietro I Candiano of Venice Pg. 41, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1145 Fonia of Moray vol 5, pg 31, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1174 - ~1212 Helen of the Isles 38 38 vol 5, pg 32, Paul's "Scots Peerage" 1143 - 1196 Adam de Brus 53 53 ~1148 - 1207 Rognvald or Reginald of the Isles 59 59 vol 5, pg 31, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1113 - 1164 Somerled II macGillebrideof the Isles 51 51 vol 5, pg 28, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 102, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1117 RagnhildeOlafsdottir of Man vol 5, pg 30, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1080 - 1170 Gillebrideof Argyll 90 90 vol 5, pg 28, Paul's "Scots Peerage" Giolla Adhamnan ~1030 - 1083 Solomon of Dublin 53 53 D. ~1065 Echmarcach of Dublin D. ~1035 Ranald II of Waterford of Roeux pg 167, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0938 - UNKNOWN Grelod Caithness 0952 Judith deBavaria 0930 - UNKNOWN Carrol Ireland Irish King 0902 - UNKNOWN Einar Orkney Earl Orkney 0988 - UNKNOWN Brusi Sigurdsson Earl Caithness 0918 Groa 0880 - UNKNOWN Thorstein the Red John de Hastang Sir John Hastang, father of Sir Thomas Hastang, appears to be the same who had letters of protection on going to the King in Gascony 8 March 1288/9 (Cal. Patent Rolls). Possibly he is the same who was on service in Scotland, Ireland, and Wales between 1284 and 1287 (Idem). On 30 July 1297 John de Hastang, of Staffordshire, was one of the sureties for John, Earl of Atholl, on his release (31 July) from the Tower (Cal. Close Rolls). In 1296 he had letters of protection on going beyond the seas on the King's service (Cal. Patent Rolls). On 31 August 1306 he was steward of the Queen's Household, and was on 1 December 1307 (when she was Queen Dowager) to accompany her abroad (Idem). On 1 August 1309 he had licence to crenellate his dwelling house at Chebsey (Idem). He was summoned for Military Service 1311, 1314, and 1315, and in 1316 was returned as lord of the township of Chebsey (Palgrave, Parl., Writs). On 20 August 1321 he was pardoned for his share against the Despensers, which pardon seems to have been annulled 25 September 1321 (Cal. Patent Rolls), but he was summoned to the Council of 9 May 1324 as from Staffordshire. He is mentioned as lord of Chebsey 1374/5, and in the Subsidy Roll of 1 Edward III he was assessed 5s. 3/4d. at Chebsey and Robert Hastang 2s. 3d. He was dead in or before 1332, when Thomas Hastang was assessed 5s. in Chebsey and Maud Hastang 2s. 6d. (Subsidy Roll, William Salt Soc.,vol.x,p.99). His wife Eva appears to have predeceased him. They are both mentioned in connection with the manor of East Leamington, co. Warwick, and tenements in Slyndon and Hilcote, co. Stafford, in 1311 (William Salt Soc., vol. ix, i, 35). [Complete Peerage Note on page VI:344-5, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] Edward Issac Noelus de Elenhall Maud Brereton Mary Roper 0898 - UNKNOWN Thurid D. ~0900 Hakon of Hlade Grjorgard Gerlangsson of Romsdal Herlang of Romsdal ~1024 - 1047 Magnus I Olafsson of Norway 23 23 ~1010 Astrid Olafsdatter of Sweden ~0952 - 0995/0998 Harald Gudrodsson 0853 - 0891 Olaf Dublin 38 38 ~0932 - 0963 Gudrod Bjornsson of Westfold 31 31 pg. 103, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0900 - ~0927 Bjorn Haraldsson of Norway 27 27 ~0841 SvanhildeEysteinsdatter ~0730 Hlif Dagsdatter Dag of Westmare ~0815 Sigurd Helgesson of Sogne ~0796 Helgi Fridleifsson ~0923 Gudbrand Olafsson of Uplands ~0927 Ulfhild (Gunhild) ~0880 Thora Audunsdatter 0860 - UNKNOWN Auda ~0854 Audun Bjornsson ~0820 Bjorn Hundarsson ~0778 Hundar Steinar ~0792 Alof Ragnarsdottir ~0820 - 0887 Giselbert of Darnau 67 67 pg 198, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Affrica of Galloway vol 4, pg 136, Paul's "Scots Peerage" ~1045 Aethelfreda of England D. ~1080 Rapato IV of Cham ~0939 - 0989 Olaf Ragnvaldsson of Man 50 50 pg 86, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0835 - UNKNOWN Ketel Flatness Lord Hebrides D. ~1005 Ragnvald Sigtrysson of Man D. 0896 Sigtry Ivarsson of Dublin ~0787 - 0873 Ivar Ragnarsson of Dublin 86 86 ~0926 - 1014 Brian Boru of Ireland 88 88 pg 148 & 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 144, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928
1101 - 1128 Guillaume III Clito of Flandres 27 27 pg. 76, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1104 - 1127 Joan of Montferrat 23 23 pg 76, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1054 - 1134 Robert of Normandy 80 80 pg. 76,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 D. Feb 1102/1103 Sybila of Conversano D. 0974 Donnchad of Ossory pg. 86, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0840 - UNKNOWN Inguild 0750 - 0797 Vermudo I Austurias 47 47 0811 - UNKNOWN Belang 0791 - 0846 Niall Caille of Ireland 55 55 pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0859/0860 Gormlaith of Meath pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition D. 0819 Aedh Oirdnidhe of Ireland pg 2026, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition 0805 - UNKNOWN Bjorn Bune Earl Sogne 0715 - 0778 Niall Frasach of Ireland 63 63 pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0768 Eithne of Brega pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0722 Fergal of Ireland pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Athiochta pg 2026, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0599 Aedh II of Ireland pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition D. 0571 Ainmire of Ireland pg 2025, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage, etc" 1970 edition Bridget ~1060 - 1096 Gerard of Gournay 36 36 pg 568, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1084 Gundred Edith Warren pg 568, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 <1044 - 1110 Hugh III Gournay 66 66 0780 - UNKNOWN Skaan- syvar- stelmi ~0998 - 1074 Hugh II Gournay 76 76 Hugh I Gournay Renaud Alberada Hugh D. ~0910 Eudes ~1100 - 1171 Diarmuid macMurrough of Leinster 71 71 pg 72, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1114 - 1191 Cacht O'Moore 77 77 Paulus Hoppe 0779 - UNKNOWN Vedrar Grim Earl Sogne ~0920 - ~1014 Dunlaing mac Tuathal of Leinster 94 94 pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1039 - ~1086 Aldgyth of Mercia 47 47 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1100 - 1153 Ranulf deGernon 53 53 vol 1, pg 25 & 49 Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1124 - 1189 Matilda (Maud) fitz Robert 65 65 vol 1, pg 25 & 49 Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0930 Balso of Bayeux pg 95, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 0785 - UNKNOWN Herware Sogne ~0895 Ranulf of Bayeux pg 95, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1080 - 1157 Eustace fitz John Clavering 77 77 pg 121 & 555, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1110 - 1166 Agnes fitzWilliam Halton 56 56 pg 692, Ormerod

pg 245, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 1151 John fitz Eustace Burgh pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1005 Eustace of Tonsburgh Burgh pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1085 - 1133 William fitz Nigel Halton 48 48 pg 692, Ormerod Beatrice of Gaunt 1636 - 1685 Jane Sherwood 48 48 1733 - 1746 Nathaniel Merritt 13 13 ~0985 Gerard Flaitel pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
0750 - UNKNOWN ThorgerdeSogne Earl Sogne ~0977 - ~1063 Osberne I of Bolebec 86 86 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 94 Turton's " Plantagenet Ancestry"
~0974 Aveline of Crepon pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0950 Herfast of Crepon ~1032 Hamon fitz Hamon of Creully ~0940 - >1005 Ivres I of Creil & Bellesme 65 65 pg 13, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. >1005 Godchildeof Ponthieu Fulk of Corbonais Roalis Adelaideof St. Varne Cynthia Smithdeal  < cysmithd@worldnet.att.net>

"Royalty For Commoners"  by Roderick W. Stuart, pub 2002
0750 - UNKNOWN Hjald ~0987 - ~1045 Aleida of Holland 58 58 D. 0965 Guillaume of Ponthieu pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0855 - ~0965 Guillaume I of Ponthieu 110 110 ~0880 - 0945 Herlouin II of Ponthieu 65 65 ~0857 - 0925 Helgaud II of Ponthieu & Montreuil 68 68 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0835 - ~0878 Herlouin I of Ponthieu 43 43 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0812 - 0866 Helgaud I of Ponthieu 54 54 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0790 - 0853 Nithard of Ponthieu 63 63 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0776 - 0814 Angilbert of Ponthieu 38 38 pg 13, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0720 - UNKNOWN Eylung Sogne Earl Sogne 1100 - 1185 Alfonso I of Portugal 85 85 pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1125 - 1157 Maud (Matilda) of Savoy 32 32 pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1134 - 1158 Sancho III Alfonsez of Castile 24 24 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1135 - 1156 Blanca Garciez of Navarre 21 21 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1065 - 1107 Raimond of Bourgogne 42 42 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1081 - 1126 Urraca Alfonsez of Castile 45 45 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 115, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1046 - BEF Feb 1092/1093 Constance of Bourgogne pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1082 - 1131 Ramon III of Barcelona 48 48 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 55, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
0720 - UNKNOWN Vatnar Prince of Rogaland ~0950 - 1017 Heinrich I in the Nordgau 67 67 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Amadeus II of Maurienne pg. 60,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0909 - 0967 Boleslav I of Bohemia 58 58 ~0910 Bolzine or Biagota of Stochou ~0885 - 13 Feb 0920/0921 Wratislav I of Bohemia ~0881 - 0937 Drahomira of Stodor 56 56 ~0842 - ~0894 Borivoj I of Bohemia 52 52 ~0853 - 0921 Ludmilla of Psov 68 68 ~0827 Slavibor of Psov ABT 1010/1015 Ealdgyth or Algitha of Northumbria vol 3, pg 241, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pgs 39 & 148 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2192. Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition

pg. 606, "A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
0695 - UNKNOWN Eivar Rogaland Prince Rogaland 1165 - 1223 Philip Augustus II France 57 57 Philip reigned as King of France for four decades and was the only son ofLouis VII and his fourth wife Adele. During his long reign, Philipgreatly solidified the power of the crown at the expense of thearistocratic elite and feudal lords and more than doubled the royallands. "The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, GeneralEditor. Elfgifu of England pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1164 - 1200 Roland of Galloway 36 36 vol 4, pg 138, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 45, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 74, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 196, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1100 - 1174 Uchtred of Galloway 74 74 vol 4, pg 136, Paul's "Scots Peerage"

pg 245, vol 3, Paul's "Scot's Peerage"

pg 45 & 110, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1155 - 1 Jan 1190/1191 Avicia of Lancaster ~1089 Gilbert of Kendal Lancaster pg 88, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1091 Godith ~0980 - 1014 Malfrida of Ohningen 34 34 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Gudbjorg Olafsson of Uplands Ulfhild Olaf 0660 - UNKNOWN Harold Rogaland Prince Rogaland Ivar Beitil Robert Valoines ~1035 Beatrice Bolebec ~1104 Theobold Valoines ~1120 Bertha Valoines Gry Lewis   <gn1@ix.netcom.com> ~1121 - 1191 Ranulph Glanville 70 70 D. 1254 Robert Vavasour vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 547, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1160 Juliana Ros vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 547, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
D. 1191 William Vavasour vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Mauger Vavasour vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" 1136 Alice de Cheney ~1105 Mauger Vavasour vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" ~1096 Gilbert of Steeton Ros vol 1, pg 51, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 547, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1184 - 1231 Nicholas of Alton Verdon 47 47 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1190 Joan Fitzpearce pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1142 - 1192 Bertram Verdon 50 50 pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1152 Rohesia Windsor pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1097 - >1153 Norman Verdon 56 56 pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1110 - ~1193 Lasceline Clinton 83 83 pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1062 Bertram Verdon pg 547, Burkes Extinct Peerage
Andrew  <andrewwaite@hotmail.com>
Geoffrey Clinton pg 399 & 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 1053 Robert deBrus 1096 - >1154 Renebault of Tankerville 58 58 pg. 108,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1048 - ~1130 Guillaume of Tankerville 82 82 ~1052 Maud of Arques pg. 108,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Raoul of Tankerville ~0976 Gerold of Tankerville ~0957 Helesindeof Arbitot ~1010 Guillaume of Arques ~0975 Beatrix of Bolebec pg 108, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0946 Godfroi of Arques Amelie 1044 - UNKNOWN William Fitz Ansculf ~0921 Gozelin of Arques ~0950 Geoffroi of Bolebec pg 108, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1110 - 1194 Aubrey Vere 84 84 pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

Acknowledgment, 1394, February 20. 17 Richard II. 1 item : parchment ; 23 x 40 cm.
SUMMARY: Document witnessing that John, son of William Doreward of Essex, on the morrow of St. Martin, 17 Richard II, by fine levied before the court of King's Bench between Robert Braybrooke , bishop of London, Aubrey de Veer, earl of Oxford, George Fillbrigge, knight, Thomas Erpyngham, knight, Walter Clopton of Suffolk, knight, Thomas Croser, parson of the church of Bockyng, Thomas Coggeshale, Clement Spire, John Corbet, Robert Rikedon, John Bercamsted, chaplain, John Somer, Walter Bacun, John Cumpton, John Gungee, and John Rotere, quaerents, and himself, deforciant, acknowledged his manor of Ledyn Rothyng (Essex) to be the right of John Rotere and surrendered it in court to the said querents named to hold to them named , John Rotere, and the heirs of John Rotere forever. Afterwards, John Rotere, by his deed dated 17 November, 17 Richard II, and enrolled in Chancery, quitclaimed to the said John Doreward, then occupying the manor, all his right therein; also the remaining quaerents named , by deed, release all thier right in the said manor to the said John, then tenant at the will of the said remaining quaerents. These two releases being in the possession of the prior and convent of Christ Church, Canterbury, the said John acknowledged himself bound to the said convent in the sum of 10 on certain conditions. This writing witnesses that in virtue of these releases John Doreward is tenant in fee simple of the said manor of Ledyn Rothyng. Given on 20 February, 17 Richard II. With 1 seal (2.3 cm.) of red wax, pendant on a tag, bearing arms, with the legend: SIGILLUM : IOHIS : DOREWARD.
NAMES: I. Doreward, William. II. Doreward, John. III. Cherlton, Robert IV. Braybrooke, Robert, Bishop of London, d. 1404. V. Oxford, Aubrey de Vere, Earl of, 1338x40-1400. VI. Fillbridge, George, Sir. VII. Erpyngham, Thomas, Sir. VIII. Clopton, Walter, Sir. IX. Croser, Thomas. X. Coggeshale, Thomas. XI. Spire, Clement. XII. Corbet, John. XIII. Rikedon, Robert. XIV. Berkhamstead, John. XV. Somer, John. XVI. Bacon, Walter. XVII. Compton, John. XVIII. Gunge, John. XIX. Rotere, John. XX. Canterbury Cathedral (England)
SUBJECTS: 1. Bocking Church (Essex, England) 2. Deeds--England--Essex. 3. Deeds--England--Leyton. 4. Essex (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 5. Leyton (Essex, England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 6. Bocking (Essex, England)
HOLLIS number: -BHL0119
~1135 - 1194 Agnes (Lucia) Essex 59 59 pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1205 - 1251 Hughes II Bolebec 46 46 pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 254, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1142 Sibil Vesci 1106 - 1163 Henry of Raleigh Essex 57 57 pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Cicely 1062 - 1141 Alberic II Vere 79 79 pg 201 & 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1077 - ABT 1163/1166 Adeliza fitzGilbert Clare pg 201 & 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1998, Burke's "Peerage & Baronetage" 1970 edition

pg 423 & 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1015 - UNKNOWN Ansculf <1040 - 1088 Alberic Vere 48 48 pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1060 - 1107 Roger Bigod 47 47 pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 2, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887

pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1065 Adeliza Grentmesnil pg 53, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Walter Bolebec ~1170 - 1250 Gilbert Sandford 80 80 Marshall Goisfrid Beke Rollo Beke Godfroi fitz Richard of Brionne Heloise of Guines pg 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~0913 - 0988 Owain ap Hywel of deheubarth 75 75 Geoffroi of Venuz pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 1130 - 1176 Richard of Pembroke Clare 46 46 pg 72 & 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 120, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1130 - 1186 Aoife (Eve) of Leinster 56 56 pg 72 & 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition


pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 180, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 120, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1100 - 6 Jan 1148/1149 Gilbert fitzGilbert of Pembroke pg 72 & 155 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 120, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 12, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
>1106 - >1172 Isabel Beaumont 66 66 pg 72 & 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 120, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1114 - 1164 Mor O'Toole 50 50 pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1050 - 1115 Donnchad mac Murchada of Dublin 65 65 pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1025 - ~1070 Murchadh mac Diarmata of Leinster 45 45 pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0386 Cynedda ap Edern of Gwynedd ~1089 Muirchertach Ua Tuathail pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1094 Inghin O'Byrne ~1055 - 1119 Gillacomghall O'Toole 64 64 D. ~1115 Donal O'Byrne ~1030 Donncuan O'Toole ~0980 - 1041 Gilla Comgaill O'Toole 61 61 ~0950 - 1018 Donncuan mac Dunlaing of Leinster 68 68 ~0890 - 0958 Tuathal mac Augaire of Leinster 68 68 1015 - 1035 Bertha deChartres 20 20 ~0860 - 0915 Augaire mac Ailill of Leinster 55 55 ~0830 - ~0871 Ailill mac Dunlaing of Leinster 41 41 D. 0869 Dunlaing of Leinster pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of Leinster ~0640 - 0693 Bran Muit mac Conaill of Leinster 53 53 ~0590 - ~0660 Conal 70 70 pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0560 - 0623 Faolan of Leinster 63 63 pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0641 Huaisle of Meath pg 114,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938 ~0525 - 0576 Columan of Leinster 51 51 pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0506 - 0546 Cairbre Dubh of Leinster 40 40 pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0994 - 1042 Ermengarde d'Auvergne 48 48 ~0470 - 0567 Cormac of Leinster 97 97 pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0445 - 0526 Oliol of Leinster 81 81 pg. 114, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Donnchad of Leinster pg. 115, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1052 Bran of Leinster pg. 115, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1014 MacLmordha of Leinster D. 0972 Murchad mac Finn of Leinster pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition O'Mahony D. 0923 Finn mac Mael Morda of Laaigin O'Sullivan D. 0917 Mael Mord mac Muirecain D. UNKNOWN Humberge 1129 - 1190 Theobald IV deBlois 61 61 Joan O'Neil D. 0863 Murecain mac Diamata of Laign D. 0831 Diarmait mac Ruadrach D. 0789 Ruaidri mac Faelain of Laign Faolan of Leinster D. 0749 Tualath of Munster D. 0742 Cathal of Munster D. 0696 Finguine of Munster D. 0665 Cuigenmathair of Munster D. 0625 Cathal of Munster 0967 - 1017 Bertha Princess of Burgundy 50 50 Aodh D. 0571 Cairbre of Munster D. 0542 Criomthann of Munster D. 0523 Eschaid of Munster D. 0490 Aongus of Munster Natfraich of Munster D. ~0420 Conal Core of Munster pg. 115, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Cas of Munster Bron O'Mahony D. 0903 Cian 0947 - 0995 Eudes I de Champagne 48 48 Spellan Cathniath Concobhar Cucongeilt Olioll Conaicce Ferdaleithe D. ~0675 Bece Fergus Fedlemidh 0910 - 16 Jan 0975/0976 Theobald 'le Tricheur' II Count of Blois Tighernach D. ~0520 Aodh Uargarbh D. 0542 Criomhthann of Munster pg. 115, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0523 Eochaidh Cruadh of Munster Beibhionn Corcalaidhe pg. 115, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1042 - 1100 Geoffroi II of Perche 58 58 pg 131 & 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1043 - >1109 Beatrix of Montdidier 66 66 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 0952/0953 Jutta of Bayern pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0947 - 1004 Otto of Carinthia- Waiblingen 57 57 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0917 - 9 Feb 0977/0978 Ledgarde de Normandy <0930 - 0955 Conrad of Lorraine 25 25 pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0931 - 0953 Liutgardeof Sachsen 22 22 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1130 - ~1184 Iorwerth Drwymdwn ap Owain 54 54 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1134 Maret verch Madoc of Powys-Vadoc pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1091 - 1160 Madoc ap Maredudd 69 69 pg 113, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg. 132, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1095 Susanna verch Gruffydd of Gwynedd pg 113, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1087 - 1169 Owain ap Gruffudd of Gwynedd 82 82 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1098 Gwladys verch Llywarch of N Wales pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0917 - 0987 Albert I "The Pious" Count of Vermandois 70 70 ~1070 - ~1129 Llywarch ap Trahern of N Wales 59 59 ~1060 Dyddgu verch Idnerth pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0995 - 1080 Godiva (Godgifu or Godwina) 85 85 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
0776 - 0825 Wigbart Duke of Saxony 49 49 D. 1210 Eustace of Biwell Baliol pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 Petronille 0740 - UNKNOWN Wittekind the Great King of the Saxons Wittekind, the Great, last King of the Saxons, 1st Duke of Saxony 807. Byfar the greater number of the campaigns of Charlemagne were directedagainst the pagan Saxons, who almost alone of the German tribes retainedtheir ancient idolatry. Thirty years and more of his 47-year reign wereoccupied in these wars across the Rhine. Reduced to submission again andagain, as often did the Saxons rise in desperate revolt. Wittekind, theheroic King of the Saxons, was called the 2nd Arminius, who encouragedhis countrymen to resist to the last the intruders upon their soil. Onlyafter great massacre--at one time Charlemagne put 4500 Saxons todeath--did Wittekind and the Saxons yield and accepted Christianity astheir religion and Charlemagne as their sovereign. (Arminius, mentionedabove, was a Saxon leader of A. D. 9, who conquered the Roman Army ofAugustus Caesar, which was an event of greatest significance in thehistory of European civilization. The Teutonic tribes were on the pointof being completely subjugated and Romanized, as had the Celts of Gaulbefore them. Had this occurred, the entire history of Europe would havebeen changed, and had Rome succeeded in exterminating them or enslavingthem, Britain would never have the name of England and the English nationwould never have had an existence.) 1109 - 1171 Baudouin IV of Hainault 62 62 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1124 - 1168 Alix of Namur 44 44 1087/1088 - 1120 Baudouin III of Hainault pg 96, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1089 Jolanthe of Wassenberg pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1056 - 1098 Baudouin II of Hainault 42 42 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1065 - ~1139 Ida of Louvaine 74 74 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1030 - 1070 Baudouin VI of Flandres 40 40 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1036 - 1086 Richildeof Mons 50 50 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1044 - 23 Jan 1114/1115 Thierry II of Lorraine pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1079 - 1117 Gertrudeof Flandres 38 38 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0890 Theobald I Troyes ~1033 - 1093 Robert I of Flandres 60 60 pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0981 - 1039 Dirk III of Holland 58 58 ~0993 - 1044 Uthildis of Sachsen 51 51 pg. 20, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1050 - ~1100 Hedwig of Formbach 50 50 ~1072 - 1139 Simon I of Lorraine 67 67 ~1148 - 1192 Hugues III of Bourgogne 44 44 ~1152 - ~1200 Alix of Lorraine 48 48 ~1119 - 1176 Matthieu I of Lorraine 57 57 ~1123 - ~1195 Bertha (Judith) of Schwaben 72 72 pg 200, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  bd 1928y W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1089 - ~1160 Adelaideof Louvaine 71 71 pg 200, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0950 Eudes Chartres ~0990 - 1061 Pons of Toulouse 71 71 pg 213, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1077 - 1151 Aimeri I of Chatellerhaut & Rochefoucauld 74 74 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1079 - 1151 Dangereuse of Bouchard 72 72 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1134 - 1187 Guilliaume IV of Angouleme 53 53 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1120 Marguerite of Turenne pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0931 - 0999 Adelaideof Bourgogne 68 68 pg 126, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0890 - 0937 Rodolph II of Bourgogne 47 47 pg 117 & 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 0907 - 0966 Berchta of Schwaben 59 59 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0924 - 0993 Conrad I of Bourgogne 69 69 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 160, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0890 - 14 Mar 0967/0968 Mechtildeof Ringleheim pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 122, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
M. deTours 1032 - 1080 Herbert IV deVermandois 48 48  4TH COUNT OF VERMANDOIS.

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

PED FROM ELIZABETH ANN KELSO - BORN 27 JUN 1926; 4TH COUNT OF VERMANDOIS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1130 - 1190 Robert III deBeaumont 60 60 Robert de Bellomont, 3rd Earl of Leicester, Lord of Hinchley Bretenne,Poci and the honour of Grentmaisnil. He was surnamed Blanchmaines, fromhaving such white hands. He married Petronillae, or Parnelle deGrentmaisnil, and had the honour of Hinckley, the Stewardship of England,as well as the Manor of Ware, in Hertfordshire, in Petronillae's right.This Robert on the monition of said Petronillae, Countess of Leicester,his wife, and their sons William, Robert and Roger, and daughter Amicia,confirmed to the monastery of St. Ebrulf, amongst other things, thedonations of Hugh de Grantemenyle, grandfather of the said Petronillae.This Robert de Bellomont, in the 19th of Henry II, 1173, was in armsagainst Henry II, when his son Prince Henry was in arms against hisfather, and being taken prisoner was held in confinement for four years,when he obtained his release and was restored to the King's favour, andhad restoration of most of his estates, and finally of all when they wererestored by Richard I, at whose coronation this Earl carried one of theswords of state. He died at Duras in Greece, on his return from a journeyto Jerusalem in 1190, and his Countess survived him. They had three sons,William, Robert and Roger, who all died sine prole, leaving their twosisters Amicia and Margaret the co-heirs. Earl of Leicester. ~0943 - ABT 26 Jan 0981/0982 Mathildeof France pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 138, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0973 - 1016/1017 Gerberge of Bourgogne pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0836 - 0912 Otto I of Sachsen 76 76 pg 120, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0856 - 0903 Hedwig of Sachsen 47 47 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0840 Oda of Bayern ~0828 - 0880 Carloman of Bayern 52 52 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0824 Litwindeof Carinthia 0806 - 0876 Ludwig II of E Franks 70 70 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0810 - 0876 Emma of Bayern 66 66 pg 121, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ABT 0947/0965 - ~0978 Mihaly of Hungary 0862 - 0892 Hugh Count of Bourges 30 30 0931 - 0972 Taksony of Hungary 41 41 www.dcs..hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal 0896 - 0949 Zoltan of Hungary 53 53 www.dcs..hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal ~0900 Men of Bihar pg 25, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928


www.dcs..hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal
~0874 Maroth of Bihar pg 25, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0840 - 0907 Arpad of Hungary 67 67 www.dcs..hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal

pg. 25, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928
~0835 - 0892/0895 Almos of Magyars pg. 25, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 Ogyek ~0805 Emse of Magyars 0980 - 1036 Baudouin IV of Flandres 56 56 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 141, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0870 - 0923 Roheut of France 53 53 ABT 0933/0940 - 1 Jan 0961/0962 Baudouin III of Flandres pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0958 - 1008 Mathilda (Maud) of Sachsen 50 50 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1055 - ~1137 Gruffudd ap Cynan of Gwynedd 82 82 pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 113 & 540, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
0852 RichildeCountess Metz ~1065 - 1162 Angharad verch Owain 97 97 pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1014 - 1063 Cynan ap Iago of Gwynedd 49 49 pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1031 Ragnhilde(Rhanullt) of Dublin pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1034 Olaf Sihtricssonof Dublin pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0970 - 1042 Sihtric Olafsson of Dublin 72 72 pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Slani ingen Brian of Ireland pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0926 - 0981 Olaf Sigtrygsson of Dublin 55 55 pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0940 - 1030 Gormflaith of Naas 90 90 pg 148, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 197, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
D. 0927 Sigtryg Sigtrysson of Dublin & York Sygtry of Hebrides pg. 128, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 0833 - 0864 Stephen Count of Bourges 31 31 Ivarsdottir of Northumbria pg. 128, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 ~1015 Robert Bigod 1112 - 1175 William Percy 63 63 pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1069 - 1120 Alan Percy 51 51 pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1071 - 1135 Emma Gaunt 64 64 pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1030 - 1096 William Percy 66 66 pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 423, Burkes Extinct Peerage
~1030 - ~1100 Emma Port 70 70 pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg. 423, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1005 Geoffry Percy 1145 - 1213 John Busli 68 68 0805 - 0853 Hugh Bourges deTours 48 48 Cicely Busli 1090 - 1164 William II Busli 74 74 ~1114 Roesia Clare ~1088 - 1171 Baldwin fitz Gilbert of Bourne 83 83 pg 119 & 563, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1096 Aeline (Adeline) of Rullos pg 563, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1190 - ~1251 Gerald Prendergast 61 61 pg 493, Series 2 , vol 1, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984 Agnes Bellomont pg. 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1100 - 1177 Maurice fitz Gerald of Lanstephen 77 77 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1120 Alice Montgomery pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. <1136 Gerald fitz Walter Windsor pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
0769 - 0860 Ava Countess Of Upper Alsace 91 91 ~1066 Arnulf Montgomery pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1090 Lafracoth O'Brien pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 1089 - 1140 Vulgrin II of Angouleme 51 51 ~1099 Poncia Montgomery D. 1119 Murrough O'Brien of Munster pg 204, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 D. 1098 Dubhehobhlaigh of Ossory pg 144, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1086 Turlogh O'Brien of Ireland D. 1098 dearbforgail of Ossory pg 144, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1023 Teige mac Brien of Munster D. UNKNOWN Robert I Count of Auvergne More O'Mulloy D. 1065 dermot of Ossory pg 145, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1027 Tadhg of Ossory Hawyse Romare pg 227 & 457, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 D. 1160 Gilbert of Lincoln Gant pg 226, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1129 - 1191 Raoul of Coucy & Marle 62 62 pg. 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 >1152 Alice of Dreux ~1110 - 1148 Enguerrand II of Coucy 38 38 pg. 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 <1108 Agnes of Beaugency pg 175, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1082 - 1130 Thomas I of Coucy 48 48 0975 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde Provence ~1084 - ~1147 Melesindeof Crecy 63 63 ~1052 - 1116 Enguerrand of Coucy 64 64 ~1054 Adele of Marle ~1022 - >1069 Dreux (Drogo) of Boves 47 47 Alberic of Coucy pg. 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Adela of Amiens ~1000 - 1035 Drogo (Dreux) of Vexin 35 35 pg 195, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 216, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 2575 Burke's " Peerage & Baronetage", 1970 edition
~1142 - <1174 Agnes of Hainault 32 32 pg. 178, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1150 - 1196 William of Salisbury devereux 46 46 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1162 - <1233 Alianore of Vitre 71 71 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
0913 - 0952 Gerberge Du Maine 39 39 ~1015 William devereux ~1033 Walter of Rosmar devereux pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 <1066 - >1120 Edward of Salisbury devereux 54 54 pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1070 Maud (Matilda) fitz Hubert ~1140 Goda Toni 0993 - 1093 Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr of deheubarth 100 100 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1045 - 1093 Gwladys verch Rhywallon of Powys 48 48 pg 1838, Wurtz Magna Charta ~1200 Sibyl Dinham pg 233, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition <1101 - >1153 William of Lincoln Romare 52 52 vol 1, pg 49, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 457, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
Hadewise or Maud Redvers pg 140 & 457, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 D. 1103 Beatrix ~1066 - ~1129 Niel (Nigel) Albini 63 63 pg. 386, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 ~1118 Gundred Gournay ~1248 - 1287 Thomas de Clare 39 39 pg 63, 72 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1249 - >1309 Amy or Juliana Fitzgerald 60 60 pg 72 & 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1250 - >1286 Maurice of Offaly Fitzgerald 36 36 pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1136 - 1174 William of Horsford Chesney 38 38 pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1042 Nigel Halton pg 692, Ormerod Offa of Angel Angeltheow 0825 - UNKNOWN Petronille d'Auxerre 0932 - 1010 Elystan Glodrydd ap Cynelinap of Builth 78 78 ~1069 - 1127 Miles of Courtenay 58 58 pg 102 & 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 790, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~1079 - 1095 Ermengardeof Nevers 16 16 pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 791, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~1034 - ~1075 Joscelin of Courtenay 41 41 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 790, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~1049 Isabel or Elizabeth of Montlhery pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 790, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~0985 Athon of Courtenay pg 790, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition ~1134 Piers Lutegareshale ~1138 Maud Mandeville ~1125 - 1185/1186 Richard Hay ~1127 - <1185 Maud (Matilda) Vernon 58 58 0800 Torquat deRennes ~1140 - 1185 Alice Vere 45 45 pg 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 121, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 310, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1135 - <1183 Maldred fitz Dolfin 48 48 pg 10, Burke's "Extant Peerage etc", 1970 edition

vol 2, pg 9, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984
~1110 - ~1136 Dolfin Fitz Uchtred 26 26 pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984 Northumberland.
.
vol 2, pg 9 Burkes History of the Commoners

pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition
Alice (or Adelaide) ~1080 - 1128/1129 Uchtred Fitz Maldred vol 3, pg 241, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984

pg 10, Burke's Extant Peerage, 1970 edition

vol 2, pg 105, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"

"
0869 Odo Eudes Toulouse ~1045 - >1084 Maldred fitz Maldred 39 39 vol 3, pg 241, Paul's  "Scots Peerage"

pg 149, Series 1, vol 3, "English Origins of New England Families, From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", pub 1984
~1140 - >1172 Stephen Bulmer 32 32 pg 88, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1100 - ~1166 Bertram Bulmer 66 66 pg. 88 & 399, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 1, pg 1389 Burke's Landed Gentry

vol 2, pg 9, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~0980 Manfred D. >1086 Hugh of Basing Port pg 1998, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition ~1025 Guillaume Poncius of Arques vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" Edulph Aelfwyn of England vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland" ~0990 - 1036 Osberne of Crepon 46 46 pg 100, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Regina deFrance Alberadeof Bayeux pg 100, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0439 Elesa of Sachsen ~0438 Elsa of Sachsen ~0383 Gewis of Sachsen ~0355 Wig of Sachsen Frewine of Sachsen 0794 - UNKNOWN Hugh L' Abbe Abbot of St. Quintin ~0080 Godwulf 0921 - 1006 Raimond III Toulouse 85 85 0895 Raimond II Toulouse Sigrada Venedobel of Magyars 0923 - 0950 Bertha Tuscany 27 27 0871 - UNKNOWN Garsinde de Alby 1299 - 1372 Ralph de Stafford 72 72 Sir Ralph de Stafford, KG, b. 24 Sep 1301, d. 31 Aug 1372, KG 23 Apr1349, Earl of Stafford. By his 1st wife, Katharine de Hastang, he hadMargaret Stafford, who married her cousin John de Stafford, Knight, ofBramshall, co. Stafford. [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: Ralph's 1301 birth date does not agree with Ancestral Roots, norline 136 in MCS. They have 1299.

-------------------------------------------

Ralph de Stafford, 2nd Lord (Baron) Stafford and 1st Earl of Stafford, socreated 5 March 1350/1, KG (1348), KB (Jan 1326/7), JP (Staffs March1331/2); campaigned against Scots 1336, 1337 and 1343 and French atBattles of Sluys 1340 and Crecy 1346 and Siege of Calais 1346-7, also1355-60; Steward of the Household Feb 1340/1, Seneschal of Aquitaine orGascony Feb 1344/5-March 1345/6 and Aquitaine Oct 1346-March 1346/7;married 1st probably c1326-27 Katharine, daughter of Sir John Hastang, ofChebsey, Staffs; married 2nd by 6 July 1336 Margaret, Baroness Audley inher own right, daughter of Hugh Audley, 1st and last Earl of Gloucesterof the 1337 creation and 1st Lord (Baron) Audley of the 1317 creation,and died 31 Aug 1372. [Burke's Peerage]

--------------------------------------------

Ralph de Stafford, 2nd baron, summoned to parliament from 14 January,1337, to 25 November, 1350. This nobleman attaining majority in the 17thEdward II [1324], and then doing his homage, had livery of his father'slands, and the next ensuing year, being made a knight by bathing andother sacred ceremonies, had robes, &c., as a banneret, allowed him outof the king's wardrobe for the solemnity; after which he soon became apersonage of celebrity in the wars of King Edward III. His lordship wasfirst engaged in Scotland for some years, and he then embarked forBrittany, where he was made prisoner at the siege of Nantes. In the 19thEdward III [1346], he was sent into Gascony with Henry of Lancaster, Earlof Derby, and while that nobleman assaulted Bergerath by land, LordStafford commanded the force which attacked it by sea. the next year hewas constituted seneschal of Aquitaine, when John, son and heir ofPhilip, King of France, coming to besiege Aguillon, where his lordshipthen resided, he stoutly defended that place against the whole power ofthe French, until King Edward came to his relief, and forced the enemy toraise the siege. After this, joining his troops with the army of KingEdward, he had a principal command in the van of the English at theglorious battle of Cressy. On the termination of this great conflict, hislordship being sent with Sir Reginald Cobham and three heralds to viewthe slain, reported the number to be 11 great princes, 80 banneret, 1,200knights, and more than 30,000 common soldiers. He was afterwards, whenCalais surrendered, appointed, together with Sir Walter Manny, and theEarl of Warwick, to take possession of that place for the king; andsubsequently his lordship was one of the ambassadors deputed to thecardinals of Naples and Claremont, to treat of peace between King Edwardand Philip de Valois, then assuming the title of King of France. The nextyear he had license to make castles of his manor houses at Stafford andNadeley; as also a grant from the king of £573, for his expenses inforeign service. About this time his lordship was elected a knight of theGarter, being one of the original members of that noble order. In the24th Edward III [1351], he was in commission with the bishop of Durham,and the Lords Percy and Nevill, to treat with the nobles of Scotland, atYork, for a firm and final peace between the two realms; for all whicheminent services he was created, 5 March, 1351, Earl of Stafford, andconstituted lieutenant and captain-general of the Duchy of Aquitaine. Hislordship m. Margaret, only dau. and heiress of Hugh de Audley, BaronAudley, and in right of his wife, Earl of Gloucester, by which alliancehe acquired a considerable inheritance, and the Barony of Audeley ispresumed to have merged in that of Stafford. He had issue, Ralph, who m.Maud, dau. of Henry, Earl of Derby, Duke of Lancaster, but d.v.p., s.p.;Hugh, his successor; Beatrice, m. 1st, Maurice, son and heir of Maurice,Earl of Desmond, 2ndly, Thomas, Lord Ros, of Hamlake, and 3rdly, SirRichard Burley, Knt.; Joane, m. to John, son and heir of John Cherlton,Lord Powis; Elizabeth, m. to Fulke le Strange; and Margaret, m. to SirJohn Stafford, Knt. His lordship d. 31 August, 1372, was buried atTunbridge, and was s. by his only surviving son, Hugh de Stafford. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 499, Stafford, Barons Stafford, Earls ofStafford, &c.]
0833 Raimond I Toulouse 1188 - 1252 Blanche deCastile 64 64 1  NAME Blanca Princess of /Castile/
1  BIRT
2  DATE MAR 1187/88
2  PLAC Valencia, Valencia, Spain
Robert Appleton Wrote letter # 10,14,15,30 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Robert Noel Given land near Gnosill by Robert de Stafford, 1140 - 1150. Robert founded the priory of Ranton near Ellenshall, Staffordshire in the reign of King Henry II. D. 1546 James Noel Judith Armistead 0840 - UNKNOWN Bertha deRemy D. 0426 Gonderic of Vandals Elisa of Granada Gondeguslus of Vandals Flora D. 0405 Radigaisus of Vandals Cella D. 0388 Miecislaus I of Heruli D. 0340 Wisimar of Heruli D. UNKNOWN Hermengild deAlby Comte de Alby Amalasunta of Sachsen D. 0292 Alberic I of Heruli ~0200 - 0237 Teneric of Heruli 37 37 Bigonna of Thuringen ~0175 - 0201 Dieteric of Heruli 26 26 ~0177 Diana of Trier ~0125 - 0162 Alaric I of Heruli 37 37 ~0127 Bela of Cologne 0048 - 0127 Vitilaus of Heruli 79 79 ~0081 Anarnia of Gothland 0977 - 21 Feb 1033/1034 Hawise Bretagne ~0058 - 0091 Viislaus I of Heruli 33 33 ! DIED AD 91 ~0035 Tiburnia of Norway 0032 BC - 0035 Hutterus of Heruli ABT 0034 BC Judith of Finland 0114 BC - 0034 BC Anthyrius II of Heruli ABT 0114 BC Maria of Jutland ABT 0210 BC - 0096 BC Alimer of Heruli ABT 0212 BC Ida 0250 BC - 0171 BC Anavas of Heruli ABT 0252 BC Drithva 0972 - 1008 Geoffrey Bretagne Duke Bretagne 36 36 ~1050 - >1107 Piers of Valognes 57 57 Agnes 0419 - 16 Mar 0454/0455 Valentian III of Rome ~0425 - ~0462 Licinia Eudoxia 37 37 ~0325 - 0421 Constantius III of Rome 96 96 ~0390 - ~0450 Aelin Galla Placidia 60 60 Feb 0316/0317 - 0360 Flavius Constantius II of Rome Faustina 11 Jan 0346/0347 - 0395 Theodosius I of Rome Aelia Flavia Flacilla 0937 - 0992 Conan Le Tort I Duke of Bretagne 55 55 ~0377 - 0408 Arcadius of Byzantium 31 31 Aelia Eudoxia of Franks 0401 - 0450 Theodosius II of Byzantium 49 49 D. 0454 Athenais Eudocia Galla 27 Feb 0272/0273 - 0337 Constantine of Rome ~0288 - ~0326 Flavia Maxima Fausta 38 38 0242 - 0306 Flavius Valerius Constantius I of Rome 64 64 0248 - 0328 Helena Augusta 80 80 ~0249 - ~0310 Maximianus Herculeus of Rome 61 61 0326 - 0375 Vallentinian I of Rome 49 49 Justina Gratian of Rome ~0340 Elen Lwyddog verch Eudaf Sevira verch Maxen D. 0530 Pabo Post Prydain of Pennines Gwladys verch Lleuvre <0139 - 0181 Lleuver Mawr ap Coel ofSiluria 42 42 ~0150 Gwladys verch Eurgen ~0120 Coel ap Cyllin of Siluria 0934 - 0985 Adelaide de Vermandois 51 51 ~0100 Cyllin ap Caradoc of Siluria ~0080 Caradoc ap Bran of Siluria pg 160, Wurtz Magna Carta 0855 I Alan 0860 - UNKNOWN Orequen deRennes 0882 - UNKNOWN Daughter deRennes 1198 - 1245 Raymond Berenger V deProvence 47 47 Berenger was the last and most illustrious of the Royal Provençal Counts;and,
even had he not been the sovereign of the land of song, his own verseswould
have entitled him to a distinguised rank among the Troubadour poets.
He was relatively impoverished count who could provide little dowry forhis four
daughters, who despite that became the Queen of England, Queen of France,Queen of the Germans and Queen of Naples and Sicily.

Count of Forcalquier
0860 Berenger deRennes 1204 - UNKNOWN Margaret deLongvillers 1255 - 1291 Roger de Somery 36 36 Frances Crane William de Harcourt ~0645 Almaith ingen Blathmaic ~1658 Mary Foster 1197 - 1242 Geoffrey Fitz Robert deNeville Lord Raby 45 45 Geoffrey de Nevill, son and heir of Robert Fitz-Maldred and IsabelNevill, in consequence of the great inheritance he derived from hismother, assumed the name of Nevill. Arthvael Sitsylt of Britain Owain of Britain 1226 - 1293 Agnes deNeville 67 67 Caffo of Britain Bleiddyd of Britain Merion Gorwst Clydno of Britain Clydog of Britain 0038 BC - 0009 BC Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus Antonia the younger ABT 0058 BC - 0029 BC Livia Drusilla Julia Augusta 0083 BC - Aug 0030 BC Marcus Antonius III 1178 - UNKNOWN Isabel deNeville ABT 0064 BC - 0011 BC Octavia the elder 0103 BC - 0071 BC Marcus Antonius II Creticus ABT 0103 BC - 0071 BC Julia Caesaria 0143 BC - 0087 BC Marcus Antonius I ABT 0170 BC Gaius Antonius ABT 0123 BC - AFT 0088 BC Lucius Julius Caesar III ABT 0090 BC - 0043 BC Atia Balbus Caius Octavius III D. 0052 BC Julia 1157 - UNKNOWN Emma deBulmer ABT 0143 BC Lucius Julius Caesar II ABT 0165 BC Sextus Julius Caesar II ABT 0185 BC Sextus Julius Caesar ABT 0215 BC Lucius Julius Caesar ABT 0250 BC Numerius Julius Caesar BEF 0250 BC Caius Octavius II Caius Octavius I D. AFT 0330 BC Enius Octavius Rufus D. 0084 BC Caius Julius II Caesar Aurelia 1155 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deNeville ABT 0163 BC Caius Julius I Caesar Marcia Quintas Marcius Rex <0069 - ~0090 Rathaerius of Franks 21 21 D. ~0069 Atenor IV of Franks ~0045 - ~0090 Ratherius of Franks 45 45 ~0003 - 0063 Clodomir III of Franks 60 60 D. 0020 Marcomir III of Franks D. ~0020 Clodius II of Franks 1135 - 1183 Maldred Fitz Dolfin 48 48 D. 0037 BC Antharius of Sicambri D. 0074 BC Cassander of Sicambri of Cambrai D. 0095 BC Merodacus of Sicambri D. 0123 BC Clodomir II of Sicambri D. 0143 BC Antenor III of Sicambri D. 0159 BC Clodius I of Sicambri D. 0170 BC Marcomir II of Sicambri D. 0198 BC Nicanor of Sicambri D. 0232 BC Clodomir I of Sicambri 1140 - UNKNOWN Daughter deStuteville D. 0250 BC Bassanus Magnus of Sicambri D. 0300 BC Diocles of Sicambri D. 0339 BC Helenus V of Sicambri D. 0358 BC Priamus of Sicambri D. 0384 BC Antenor II of Sicambri ~1000 Guillaume of Turenne pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Matilda D. 1091 Boso I of Turenne pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1118 - UNKNOWN John deStuteville 1008 - 1060 Henry I Capet France 52 52 D. 1105 Gerberge of Terrasson ~1091 - ~1122 Raimond I of Turenne 31 31 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1100 - 1143 Maud of Perche 43 43 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0962 Gerberge of Anjou ~0978 - 1028 Guillaume II of Angouleme 50 50 ~0988 - 1045/1048 Geoffroi I of Angouleme pg 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1000 Petronille of Archaic ~1029 - >1089 Foulques of Angouleme 60 60 ~1029 Condohe of Vogena ~1065 - 1120 Guillaume III of Angouleme 55 55 1120 - UNKNOWN Agnes of Stuteville ~1069 Vitapont of Benauges ABT 0983/0984 - >1018 Guillaume II of Provence ~0986 - 1020/1023 Gerberge of Bourgogne Pierre of Terrasson pg. 10,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0973 - <1048 Mainard of Archaic 75 75 ~0980 - >1048 Hildegarde 68 68 ~0952 - 0992 Arnaud I of Angouleme 40 40 Hildegarde ~1020 - 1086 Adalbart III of La Marche 66 66 pg. 10, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1030 Poncia 1115 - UNKNOWN Alice Durham Alice was the niece and heir of Walcher Bishop and Earl of Northumberland. ~0976 - 1047 Bernard I of La Marche 71 71 ~0990 - ~1072 Amelie of Aulnay 82 82 ~1000 Ounorman of Vogena Amanjeu of Benauges ~1060 Louis of Faucigny ~0975 - ~1000 Manfredo I of Susa 25 25 pg 60, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0972 - >0992 Prangorda of Canorsa 20 20 ~0978 - 1035 Olderic of Susa 57 57 pg. 60, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 ~1020 - 1084 Tetone of Saluzzo 64 64 pg. 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1025 Elena of Ventimiglia 1100 - 1136 Dolfin Fitz Uchtred Lord Raby 36 36 D. 1130 Bonifacio of Saluzzo Adalbert of Milano D. <0958 Sigfried of Canorsa pg 60, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1000 - ~1033 Kuno of Rheinfelden 33 33 Richildeof Ohningen pg 12, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0925 Kuno of Ohningen pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0952 - 0999 Richildeof Germany 47 47 pg 199, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1102 - 1183 Alberic I of Dammartin 81 81 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1110 - 20 Jan 1182/1183 Clemence of Bar-Le-Duc pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1070 - 1111 Hugues II of Dammartin 41 41 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. UNKNOWN Walcher Durham Bishop Durham ~1074 Rothride ~1042 - 1103 Hugues I of Dammartin 61 61 ~1046 Roaideof Bulles ~1010 - 1057 Manasses of Dammartin 47 47 1085 - 1143 Hugues II of Bourgogne 58 58 ~1065 - 1141 Engelbert II of Carinthia 76 76 ~1080 Edith of Carinthia pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1011 - ~1089 Thibaud III of Blois 78 78 pg 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition 1080 - 1130 Matilda Maud deLens 50 50 ~1111 Annora le Garnett ~1039 - 1083/1084 Ramiro I Garciez of Moncon pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1082 - 1162 Judith Alice of Huntingdon 80 80 ~1047 Teresa Gonsalez D. ~1041 Gonsalo Salvadorez D. ~1072 Sancha D. ~1010 Diego Fernandez of Oviedo The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg 44, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
D. ~1039 Christina Fernandez of Castile The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100 ~1002 - 1054 Garcio III Sanchez of Spain 52 52 pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1020 - ~1066 Estefana of Foix 46 46 ~0980 - 1035 Sancho III Garciez of Navarre 55 55 0984 - >1066 Nunia Sanchez of Castile 82 82 pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Vetred Of Northumbria ~0964 - <0999 Garcio V Sanchez of Navarre 35 35 pg. 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0960 Ximena Gonsalez of Asturias pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0965 - 1017 Sancho Garciez of Castile 52 52 pg 17, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0967 - 1025 Uracca Salvadorez 58 58 D. ~1058 Diego Lainez of Vivar pg. 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Teresa Nunez of Amaya D. >1063 Laino Nunez Nuno Lainez Engilona Fernandez 1022 Agatha I of Northumbria Ealdgyth or Algitha, only daughter by the 3rd wife, was heiress of Rabyand other large possessions belonging to her mother. She marriel Maldred,son and heir of Crinan, an eminent Thane, one of the greatest and mostopulent families of North England. Nuno Alfonsez of Amaya Gontroda Gutierez of Castro pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0994 - 1028 Alfonso V Bermudez of Leon 34 34 The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100

pg. 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
D. 1055 Gutierro of Castro pg 16, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1014 - 1079 Rotrou I of Chateaudun Montague 65 65 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1025 Adeline of Domfront pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1000 - 1063 Hildouin III of Rouci & Montdidier 63 63 pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1014 - 1062 Adele of Roucy 48 48 pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~1036 Regnier V of Hainault pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~1039 Maud of Lorraine pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 19, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton puvlished 1928
0975 - 1045 Crinan Atholl Thane Atholl 70 70 ~1010 - 1066 Engewulf of Aigle 56 56 vol 1, pg 12, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire" ~1010 Richvaride ~0980 Fulbert of Aigle ABT 1020/1021 - 1078/1079 Henri II of Lorraine pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 133, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1045 - ~1101 Adelaideof Orlamunde 56 56 pg 133, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0951 - 1013 Regnier IV of Hainault 62 62 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0979 - >1013 Hedwig of France 34 34 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0965 - 1029 Hermann of Verdun 64 64 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 19, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928
Maud of Dasbourg ~1002 - 1038 Liudolf of Sachsen 36 36 1016 - 1076 Waltheof Earl of Northumbria 60 60 0915 - 0963 William I dePoitou 48 48 William was also the Count of Auvergne, Velay, Limousin and the Duke ofAquitaine. ~1018 - 1077 Gertrudeof Egisheim 59 59 ~0980 - 1037 Bertha of Ivrea 57 57 ~1015 - 1091 Adelais of Susa & Turin 76 76 pg. 60,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 0961 - 0993 Arnulf I of W Friesland 32 32 ~0963 - >0995 Liutgardeof Luxembourg 32 32 ~0960 - ABT 1003/1006 Bruno II of Sachsen pg. 20, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0995 - 14 Feb 1042/1043 Gisele of Schwaben pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 20, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928
~0950 - 1003 Hermann II of Schwaben 53 53 pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0918 - 0955 Heinrich I of Bayern 37 37 ~0925 - 0978 Jutta of Bayern 53 53 1002 - 1093 Aelfgar Earl of Mercia 91 91 ~0886 - 0937 Arnulf I of Bayern 51 51 Gerberge of Wurzburg ~1013 - 1082 Gerhard II of Wassenberg 69 69 Bertha of Zutphen pg. 22, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1030 - ~1103 Eustace II of Boulogne 73 73 pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1041 - 1113 Ida of Lorraine 72 72 pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Kunigundeof France ~0826 - 0879 Gebhard in Lahngau 53 53 ~0965 - 1101 Robert I of Apulia Hauteville 136 136 pg 99, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0970 Alvareda of Apulia 1160 - UNKNOWN Robert Fitz Maldred Lord of Raby and Staindrope Robert FitzMaldred, the Saxon, Lord of Raby and Staindrope, marriedIsabel, only daughter of Geoffrey de Nevill and heir to her brotherHenry. Their mother was Emma, daughter of Bertram de Bulmer, and shebrought with her the lordship of Branspeth and other large possessions inDurham. ~0970 - ~1041 Tancred of Hauteville 71 71 ~0980 - abt 10571 Frasenda or Frederina of Normandy pg. 206,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 <1033 - 1118 Hugues I of Rethel 85 85 pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1035 Melesinde(Millicent) of Montlhery pg 100 & 204, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 197, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928
D. 6 Mar 1069/1070 Udalrich I of Istria pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 D. <1044 Poppo I of Weimar pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 25 Nov 1064/1065 Azzica Hadamut of Friuli ~1045 - 1096 Engelbert I of Sponheim 51 51 pg. 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 ABT 1040/1050 - ~1112 Hedwig of Flinsbach ~0989 - 1033 Mathilda (Maud) of Schwaben 44 44 pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0660 - UNKNOWN Alcwn ap Tegid ~1014 - 1049 Thimo II 35 35 pg 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton published 1928 D. >1003 Berthold I of Lurngau <0955 - >0995 Udalrich I of Lurngau 40 40 pg 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1055 - 1096 Leopold II of Austria 41 41 ~1060 - ~1101 Itha (Ida) of Cham 41 41 ~1073 - 1136 Leopold III of Austria 63 63 pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~0915 - 15 Jan 0975/0980 Berthold I in Nordgau ~0928 - 1015 Eiliswinta of Walbeck 87 87 pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1003 Wilhelm II of Weimar pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1017 - <1068 Oda of Lausatia 51 51 pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 1070 - UNKNOWN Duncan II King of Scotland D. 1030 Tietmar II of Sachsen pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 0963 Wilhelm I of Weimar pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 0978 Rapoto III of Norithal pg. 104,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 1015 - 1071 Thimo of Wettin 56 56 <0990 - 1034 Dietrich II of Hesse 44 44 pg. 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 <0990 Mathilda of Miessen D. 1009 dedi I of North Hesse pg. 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 Tetburge of Haldensleben pg. 31, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1072 - UNKNOWN Ethelreda of Northumberland 0922 - 1002 Ekkhard I of Meissen 80 80 pg 31,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938 ~0960 - 1014 Suanhildeof Sachsen 54 54 pg. 31,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0922 - 0973 Hermann Billung of Sachsen 51 51 pg 139, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0800 - 0844 Harold of Haithabu 44 44 D. 0986 Lothar II of Walbeck ~0915 - 0991 Mathilda of Arneburg 76 76 ~0945 - 0976 Heinrich of Stade 31 31 pg. 30,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 0973 Jutta of Franconia ~1066 - 1112 Henri I of Bourgogne 46 46 pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1070 - 1130 Teressa Alfonsez of Castile 60 60 pg 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1090 - 1154 William The Noble FitzDuncan Earl of Moray 64 64 Jimina Nunez of Guzman pg 36, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1092 - 30 Mar 1148/1149 Amadeus III of Savoy ~1092 - 1148 Mathildeof Vienne 56 56 1136 - 4 Mar 1188/1189 Humbert III of Savoy pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1157 - <1230 Beatrix of Macon 73 73 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1017 - 1065 Fernando I Sanchez of Castile 48 48 pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1015 - 1067 Sancha Alfonsez of Leon 52 52 ~0991 - 1022 Elvira Menendez of Valdez 31 31 1040 - 1072 Gospatrick Dunbar Earl of Northumberland 32 32 Gospatric, only son and heir, obtained the Earldom of Northumberland. Hewas unable to endure the austerity of the King's power and fled toScotland, taking with him the young Edgar Atheling (Atheling meantprince). Agatha, his mother, and her two daughters, Margaret andChristian, where Margaret married the Scottish King, Malcolm Conmore.(These were the last of the Saxon Royal line.) Gospatric was kindlyreceived by King Malcolm, who gave him lands and the Manor of Dunbar inEast Lothian and several Baronies in Berwickshire. His future conduct andbehavior showed that King Malcolm's favours were not misplaced, for heserved him faithfully and contributed greatly to establish peace andorder in the kingdom. He had Dolphin, Waltheof, Uchtred, Juliana andEtheldreda, who married Duncan, natural son of King Malcolm. ~1015 - 1094 Friedrich of Bueren & Hohenstauffen 79 79 ~1017 - <1095 Hildegardeof Schwaben 78 78 ~0989 - 1070/1075 Friedrich of Buren pg. 39, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1002 - 1 Mar 1059/1060 Otto I (Eudes) of Maurienne pg 50, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 60,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928
~1032 - 26 Jan 1079/1080 Amadeus II of Savoy D. ~1095 Pedro Ansurez of Valladolid pg. 46, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0898 - <0957 Arnaud I of Comminges 59 59 ~0912 - >0969 Arsindeof Carcassone 57 57 ~0935 - >1011 Roger I of Carcassone 76 76 1025 - UNKNOWN Waltheof II Earl of Northumbria D. ~0940 Ordono Fruelez of Asturias pg 65, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Fruelo II Alfonsez of Leon pg 46, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Nunila Sanchez of Navarre pg 46, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0848 - 0910 Alfonso III Ordoniz of Asturias 62 62 pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Ximena Garcia of Navarre pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0872 - 0924 Ordono II Alfonsez of Leon 52 52 pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0953 - 1037 Vermudo II Ordonez of Leon 84 84 1012 - >1063 Jimena Sanchez of Castile 51 51 ~0940 - 0995 Garcio Fernandez of Castile 55 55 1015 - 1045 Maldred Earl of Dunbar Lord Allerdale 30 30 D. >0995 Ava Ramiz of Ribagorza ~0926 - 0955 Ordono III Ramirez of Leon 29 29 pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Elvira Gonsalez of Asturias pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Gonsolo of Asturias pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Teresa ~0900 - 1 Jan 0950/0951 Ramiro II Ordonez of Leon pg 38, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Elvira Mendez ~1111 Elvira Gualter Pelayo of Asturias pg 48, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1105 Aimeri I of Narbonne pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0984 - UNKNOWN Siward Earl of Northumbria The Bull's head crest commemorates the Bulmers. Robert Fitz-Maldredmarried Isabel Nevill, daughter of Geoffrey Nevill and his wife Emma,daughter of Bertram de Bulmer. Isabel inherited from her mother theBulmer Lordship of Brancepeth near Durham, and henceforth BrancepethCastle became the other seat of the house, and Geoffrey, son of IsabelNevill and Robert Fitz-Maldred, adopted the surname Neville or the NormanNeuville. This noble, ancient and illustrious family "which was tomedieval England what the Douglass was to Scotland" for antiquity, greatand numerous honors, flourishing branches and mighty power, scarcely anyfamily can vie with the splendour possessed in former ages by theNevills. Of course, the lines connect with Royalty, but they inthemselves are great enough to be proud to claim descent through.

Siward, Earl of Northumbria, was a Dane by birth and probably came toEngland with Canute. In 1054 he invaded Scotland in the interests ofMalcolm Canmore and he completely routed Macbeth in battle. Shakespeareintroduces him and his son into "Macbeth." Siward, a man of unusualstrength and size, is said to have arisen from his bed at the approach ofdeath and to have died dressed in all his armor.
0917 - 0962 Adele de Normandy 45 45 ~1059 - >1112 Mathildeof Apulia Hauteville 53 53 ~0980 - 1066 Beringer I of Narbonne 86 86 pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1015 Gersindeof Besalu pg 52, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. >1023 Raimond I of Narbonne pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0960 - ~1032 Richardeof Rodez 72 72 pg  52, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0975 - 1020 Bernard I of Besalu 45 45 pg 52, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~0998 Toda Remundez of Barcelona pg 52, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1090 - 1190 Aldonza Dulcie of Provence 100 100 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928
~1057 - 1082 Ramon II of Barcelona 25 25 pg 55, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 1096 - UNKNOWN Alice Le Meschin ~0965 - 1017 Sancho V of Castile 52 52 pg 55, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1030 - 1089/1090 Sichelgaita of Salerno pg. 184, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1072 - ~1108 Gerbert of Gevaudan 36 36 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1072 - <1113 Gerberge of Provence 41 41 pg 218, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1095 - 1157 Ramiro II Sanchez of Aragon 62 62 ~1100 Maud Agnes of Aquitaine Urraca 0960 - UNKNOWN Roger I deMortimer ~0970 - 1038 Bernard Roger of Foix 68 68 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1000 GersindeArnaudez of Bigorre ~0947 - <1000 Arnoud I of Bigorre 53 53 ~0949 - >1011 Adelais of Rouergue & Carcassone 62 62 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 56, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
Maud of Turenne pg 200 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1046 - 1089 Renaud II of Nevers 43 43 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 791, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
~1057 - ~1085 Ida of Forez 28 28 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1085 Frederic of D Donjon pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1009 - <1095 Gui I of Corbeil & Montlhery 86 86 pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Adelaideof Crecy pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1096 William Le Meschines ~1040 - <1118 Milon I of Montlhlery 78 78 pg. 197, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 D. 1085 Artaud V of Forez pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1033 Ida ~1003 - 1076 Artaud IV of Forez 73 73 Raimonde pg 59, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1058 Giraud II of Forez Alice of Gevaudan D. 1007 Artaud II of Forez Theodeberge ~0789 - 0878 Rhodri Mawr ap Merfyn of Wales 89 89 1078 - UNKNOWN Hawise deMortimer Castillon of Renard D. ~1202 Guillaume of Faucigny Beatrice ~1142 - 1184 Gerard I of Macon 42 42 ~1140 - 1184 Maurette of Salins 44 44 Irmina ~1108 - ~1190 Aimon I of Faucigny 82 82 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1060 - 1103 Humbert II of Savoy 43 43 pg 98, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1060 - >1133 Gisele of Bourgogne 73 73 ~0825 Angharad verch Meurig 1070 - 1130 Stephen Count of Aumale 60 60 ~1055 - 1133 Guigues V of Albon 78 78 ~1075 - 1142/1144 Matilda of England D. 1142 Guigues VI of Albon ~1078 - 1125 Rodolph of Faucigny 47 47 D. ~1119 Guillaume of Faucigny Utilia 1090 - 1155 Guillaume III of Macon 65 65 pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1090 - >1156 Poncia Adala of Treves 66 66 ~1122 - >1173 Etienne II of Bourgogne 51 51 pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1110 - 1175 Gauthier IV of Salins 65 65 pg 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1150 - 1226 William de Briwere 76 76 ~1080 - ~1149 Humbert III of Salins 69 69 pg 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1050 - >1100 Gauthier III of Salins 50 50 pg 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1050 Beatrix ~1020 - >1050 Gauthier II of Salins 30 30 pg. 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0995 Artaud of Annonay ~0985 - >1028 Humbert II of Salins 43 43 pg. 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~0990 - 1028 Erembourge of Semur 38 38 pg. 61, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Godiva Envermeu Richard of Rullos pg 563, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 Elizabeth Wallace Hugh Envermeu D. ~1041 Salvador Gonsalez pg 62, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~1071 Nuna Gonsalo Salvadorez Salvador Gonsalez pg 62, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~0920 Gonsalo D. 1011 Fernando Alfonsez of Asturias The American Genealogist, vol, 9, pg 100 Guldregut Justa >1126 - 1189 Urraca Alfonsez of Castile 63 63 pg 71, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1078 - 1115 William Peverell 37 37 D. 0990 Adelais of Albi Gontroda Perez of Asturias pg 71, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1062 - 1135/1137 Regnier III of Montferrat pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1053 Geoffroi of Conversano pg 76, "The Ancestry Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, pub 1928 ~1180 - 1212 Bonifacio of Saluzzo 32 32 Maria of Torres pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1157 - 1215 Manfredo II of Saluzzo 58 58 pg. 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1160 - >1202 Alix (Adelheid) of Montferrat 42 42 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0887 Mareddon Verch Cadwr ~0730 Caenog ap Tegonwy 1105 - 1194 Ida Gertrude Hainault 89 89 Lineage Sources:
      Americana (Am. Hist. Soc. Pub.), Vol. 35, pp. 234-239.
      Enc. Brittanica, 11th ed., Vol. 12, p. 822.
      Allstrom's Dictionary of Royal Houses and Nobility of Europe.
      Betham's Charts of Royal Houses of Europe.
Melesindeof Picquigny pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Geoffrey Neufmarche pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1030 Ada of Hugelville pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1055 - >1100 Osberne fitz Richard 45 45 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1030 - ~1067 Richard fitz Scrob 37 37 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Essex Scrob Thurcytel pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. >1053 Richard of Hugelville pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0977 - >1011 Gilbert of St. Valery 34 34 1036 - 1086 Henry deFerrers II Earl Of Derby 50 50 0897 - 0956 Hugh the Great 59 59 Hugh Capet, the Great of Neustria, Count of Paris. Papia of Normandy pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 178,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928
~1005 - 1066 Bernard II St. Valery 61 61 ~1160 - 1190 Geoffroi IV of Joinville 30 30 pg. 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 Helvideof Dampierre ~1130 - 1184 Geoffroi III of Joinville 54 54 pg. 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1134 Felicite Brienne ~1082 - 1151 Gui I of Dampierre 69 69 ~1100 - 1165 Helvideof Baudement 65 65 pg 79, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1090 - 1132 Roger Joinville 42 42 1105 Aldeardeof Vignory pg 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  bd 1928y W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1214 - >1266 Lucy FitzPiers 52 52 ~1058 - ~1100 Geoffroi II of Joigny 42 42 pg 790, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition ~1063 Hodierne Courtenay pg 790, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition D. >1105 Gui I of Vignory pg 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  bd 1928y W. H. Turton, published 1928 1063 Beatrix of Bourgogne pg 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  bd 1928y W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1080 Geoffroi I of Joigny pg. 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Blanche of Reynel pg. 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Hildegardeof Gatinais ~1005 - ~1057 Etienne of Joinville 52 52 pg. 79, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Arnoul of Reynel pg 79, 'The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Beatrix or Judith of Lorraine pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1045 Andre I deVitre Seigneur de Vitre Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Guillaume II of Chalons pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1064 - ~1153 Thibault II of Treves 89 89 Alice Thibault I of Treves Etienne of Treves D. ~1073 Hugues of Treves D. 1113 Gui of Chalons pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Guillaume II of Thiers pg. 80,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 1080 AdelaideII of Chalons pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1065 Thibault of Chalons pg 80, "The Plantagenet Ancetry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1060 - UNKNOWN Agnes deMortaigne Ermentrude <1020 - ~1060 Etienne II of Thiers 40 40 pg. 80,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 <1025 Blanche D. 1048 Guillaume I of Thiers pg. 80,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Ponce D. 1031 Gui II of Thiers pg. 80,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 1050 - 1113 William Peverell 63 63 William de Peveral is usually said to be an illegitimate son of the Willaim the Conqueror. He had at least four children, William, d. s. p., and William again, who succeeded him, and two daughters, Maud and Adelise, the wife of Richard Redvers. The Conqueror gave William Peveral the custody of Notts Castle, when it was built in 1068, and extensive possessions,afterwards known as the honour of Peveral, consisting of 100 lordships incounties Notts and Northants, 14 in Derby, and some 20 others in othercounties. William Peveral died Jan., 1113. D. 1048 Reclinde ~1090 - >1151 Hugues VII of Lusignan 61 61 ~1095 - ~1144 Sarazine or Bruidhe 49 49 D. ~1148 Geoffroi III of Tailleburg pg. 81,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1140 - 1187 Vulgrin III of Angouleme 47 47 D. 1137 Geoffroi II of Rancon pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Adeliza Fosslefic D. ~1063 Geoffroi I of Rancon pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of Bourgogne pg 81 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1013 Aimeri I of Rancon pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1039 - 1110 Hugues VI of Lusignan 71 71 pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1060 Hildegardeof Thouars pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 <1040 Geoffroi III of Thouars pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1030 Hugues IV of Lusignan pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1054 - UNKNOWN Roger deMontgomery Lord of Lancaster Aldegardeof Thouars pg 81, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of Thours Aremburge 1120 - 1194 Raoul II of Fougeres 74 74 ~1125 Jeanne of Dol ~1087 - 1154 Henri I of Fougeres 67 67 ~1102 Olive of Penthievre pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1100 - 1137 Geldouin of Dol 37 37 Noga D. 1124 Raoul I of Fougeres 1010 - 1089 Walkelin de Ferrers 79 79 Avoye fitz Richard ~1050 - 1136 Etienne I of Bretagne 86 86 pg 108,123, 133, 174, & 184 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 162, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1066 - >1135 Hawise of Guingamp 69 69 pg 174 & 184, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 188 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928
Jean I of Dol Basilie D. ~1164 Eudes II of Porhoet pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Eleanora of Leon pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1169 Harvo II of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of England ~1066 - >1092 Eudes I of Porhoet 26 26 pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1020 Robert I deVitre Seigneur de Vitre D. 1092 Ann of Leon Guiomark III of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1074 Joscelin I of Porhoet pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 <1008 - 1040 Guithenoc of Porhoet 32 32 D. ~1128 Hervo of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1103 Guiomark II of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Alano of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Morvano of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Morvano of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Eveno of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 1025 - UNKNOWN Genergan dela Vicaire Pirinio of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0824 Wiomark of Leon pg. 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 0818 Morvan of Bretagne pg 82, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Rivalon I of Combourg Aremburge of Puiset D. 1092 Mien II of Fougeres ~1036 Adelaide Giffard D. 1048 Alfred of Fougeres D. 1020 Mien I of Fougeres <0931 - ~0970 Juhel Berenger of Rennes 39 39 pg 188, 'The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1040 - 1090 Robert deMortaigne 50 50 Earl of Cornwall. 0945 - 0983 Otto II 38 38 OTTO II, Holy Roman Emperor (967-83), king of Germany (961-83), the Sonof Otto I, with whom he ruled jointly from 967 to 973. In 976 hesuppressed a rebellion that was led by his cousin Henry II, duke ofBavaria. Two years later, having been attacked by Lothair, king ofFrance, Otto drove the French out of Lorraine but was unsuccessful inbesieging Paris. Later Lothair renounced Lorraine, and peace wasestablished. Otto next invaded the southern Italy, gaining possession ofNaples, Salerno, and Taranto, but he was overwhelmingly defeated by theGreeks and Saracens at Crotona in 982. He died in Rome while planning asecond invasion. ~1117 Hugues of Craon Isabel ~1095 Maurice I of Craon ~1099 Tiphanie of Chantoce Renaud of Craon Ennaguendeof Vitre pg. 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Hugues of Chantoce Elvise ~1026 - 1098 Robert of Nevers 72 72 pg. 180,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1045 - 1070 Avice of Sable 25 25 pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 1040 - 1085 Matilda deMontgomery 45 45 ~1061 - 1110 Robert II of Sable 49 49 pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 Bernard of Chantoce Robert of Vitre pg. 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Bertha of Craon Tristan of Vitre pg. 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Ennoguendeof Fougeres D. ~1030 Guerin of Craon Anne of Crequy D. ~1007 Baudouin of Crequy Marguerite of Louvaine pg 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0995 - UNKNOWN Tristan deVitre Suhard of Craon D. 1038 Henri I of Louvaine pg 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Maud of Lorraine pg 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0960 - 1015 Lambert I of Louvaine 55 55 pg 127, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0973 - >1017 Gerberge of L Lorraine 44 44 pg 127 & 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 83, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928
~0991 - >1062 Lambert II of Brabant & Louvaine 71 71 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0977 Baric of Bacqueville ~1026 - 1070 Rhywallon ap Cynfyn of Powys 44 44 pg 1838, Wurtz Magna Charta D. 1076 Gormlaith O'Fogurty ~1030 - ABT 1101/1103 Hugues I of Clermont pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1000 Ennoguende de Fourgeres ~1043 - ~1110 Marguerite of Roucy 67 67 pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1108 - <1162 Renaud II of Clermont 54 54 D. ~1130 Philip Belmeis pg 46, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 116, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~0528 Rimo verch Maelgwyn of Gwynedd ~0496 Pewyr verch Rhun of Wales ~1110 Walter Beaumeis D. ~1090 Richard of Beaumeis pg 98, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~1070 Robert of Beaumeis pg 98, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 1219 Guglielmo II of Ceva of Saluzzo pg. 99, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 0980 - UNKNOWN Alfred deFourgeres Baron de Fourgeres D. 1197 Guglielmo I of Ceva pg 99, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 of Vento pg. 99, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 of Vento pg. 99, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Anselmo of Ceva Agnes of Vermandois pg 99 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0990 - 1069 Waleran of Meulan 79 79 pg 56, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 131, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~0994 Oda of Conteville ~0968 - ~1020 Giroie of Escalfoy Eschauffen 52 52 ~1118 - ~1157 Payne of Bedford Beauchamp 39 39 pg 29, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 ~1109 - ~1166 Rohese Vere 57 57 pg 549, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 0940 - 1020 Mien I deFourgeres Baron de Fourgeres 80 80 ~1003 - 1044 Oda of Lorraine 41 41 pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1067 Otto of Orlamunda pg. 104, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Adelaide ~0985 - 1015 Ernst I of Swaben 30 30 pg. 104, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1001 - 1070 Godfroi IV of Lorraine 69 69 pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 105, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928
~1010 Ida or Ode pg 135, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0967 - 1044 Gonzelon I of Lorraine 77 77 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 132, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
0960 - UNKNOWN Rivallon deVitre Seigneur de Vitre ~0954 - 1005 Gottfried of Verdun & Bidgau 51 51 Cynthia Smithdeal  < cysmithd@worldnet.att.net>

"Royalty For Commoners"  by Roderick W. Stuart, pub 2002
D. ~1066 Robert I Stuteville Jeanne Talbot Hugh of Cleuville Talbot ~1190 - <1273 Roger de Somery 83 83 Roger de Somery, d. on or bef. 26 Aug 1273, Lord Dudley, held DinasPowis; m. (1) Nichole d'Augbigny; m. (2) in or bef. 1254, Amabilia deChaucombe, d. c 1278, daughter & coheir of Sir Robert de Chaucombe andwidow of Sir Gilbert de Segrave.  [Ancestral Roots]

The Magna Charta Sureties states that Roger is the son of John de Someryand Hawise de Paynell.  However Ancestral Roots has John and Hawise asgrandparents with a generation "27a" (obviously a later addition to theoriginal numbering for line 55) indicating Ralph de Somery and MargaretMarshal.  I believe that Ancestral Roots has the latest and correctinformation.

-------------------------

ROGER DE SOMERY, uncle and heir. In 1229 he made an agreement withMaurice de Gant, granting to the latter Dudley and Sedgley for 7 years,and undertaking not to marry within that term without Maurice's consent.On 20 April 1230 he was granted protection. In 1233 his lands were seizedbecause he had not come to be knighted; and in January 1233/4 he wasappointed to remain at Shrewsbury to maintain order in those parts. On 11July 1245 he was summoned to be at Chester with arms and horses; and on30 July 1247 he had a grant of free warren at Chipping Campden,Gloucester, and Sedgley, Staffs. In 1251 he was in a commission; in May1253 was going to Gascony; and on 3 November 1253 he was granted freewarren at Clent. In December 1253 and January 1253/4 he was with theKing. In July 1257 he was summoned to Chester to go to Wales with theKing. In 1258 he was one of 12 elected to treat with the King's Council,and one of the 24 appointed by the barons. In 1260 he was summoned toLondon and later to Shrewsbury, and on 11 September 1261 to St. Albans.In 1262 he was to be warned for building a castle at Dudley withoutlicence. On 23 December 1262 he was summoned to be at Worcester, and on25 May 1263 to be at Hereford. On 10 August 1263 he was directed todeliver to Hamon Lestrange the cos. of Salop and Staffs; and on 17October was summoned to Windsor. On 16 March 1263/4 he obtained licenceto enclose his manor houses of Dudley, Staffs, and Weoley, Worcs, with aditch and wall of stone, and fortify and crenellate them. On 30 January1265/6 he was granted protection as going to the Marches on the King'sservice. In 1267 he was commissioned with others to hear complaints andto carry out the terms of the dictum of Kenilworth, and to complete thepeace with Llewelin. In 1268 with Philip Basset and others he was electedby the Counties of Hereford, Salop, Staffs and Warwick, to act with theCouncil of the earls and barons; and was appointed as a commissioner toordain the aid for a number of countics. In 1268 also he was appointed tosettle affairs in the March; and on 28 April 1269 to hear contentions inWales. On 12 February 1269/70 he was granted a market and a yearly fairat Newport (Pagnell), Bucks; on 16 October 1270 he was sent as envoy toLlewelin. In June 1271 he pronounced a sentence of excommunicationagainst an official of Canterbury, which was subsequently cancelled bythe Chancellor.

He married, 1stly, Nichole, daughter and one of the coheirs of William(DE AUBIGNY), EARL OF ARUNDEL, by Mabel, sister and heir of Ranulph, EARLOF CHESTER. He married, 2ndly, in or before 1254, Amabil, widow ofGilbert DE SEGRAVE, daughter and coheir of Robert DE CHAUCOMBE, ofChalcombe, Northants. He died on or before 26 August 1273.  [CompletePeerage XII/1:112-3, XIV:586, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
~1130 - 1175 Manfredo I of Saluzzo 45 45 pg. 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 0970 - UNKNOWN Guenegaude d'Auray ~1134 Eleanora of Arborea Alicia of Maurienne pg 109,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938 Gonario of Arborea Eleanora of Arborea D. 1116 Comito I of Arborea ~1047 - 1078 Pietro of Maurienne 31 31 pg 109,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton published 1938 D. <1014 Anselmo II of Savona Conrad II of Ventimiglia pg 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Adela D. 0998 Anselmo I of Saluzzo pg. 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 0945 - UNKNOWN Rennes d'Auray Gisele of Tuscagne pg 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0963 Conrad I of Ivrea Richilde pg. 109, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1110 - 1164 Jeutte of Austria 54 54 ~1110 - 1191 Guillaume IV of Montferrat 81 81 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  bd 1928y W. H. Turton, published 1928 1126 - ~1191 Guillaume II of Montferrat 65 65 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Otta of Aglie pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1100 Bonifacio I of Montferrat pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Marie Tebaldo Aglie 0930 Martin Vitre deAcigne- Marcilly-Vitre ~1027 - 1075 Ernst of Austria 48 48 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1030 - 1071 Maud Adelaideof Lausnitz 41 41 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0987 - 1065 Adelbert of Austria 78 78 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1000 - 1059 AdelaideOrseola of Venice 59 59 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 1012 - 1075 dedi II of Lausnitz 63 63 Friedrich II of Herz D. ~1060 Guillaume I of Montferrat pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Uvaza ~0970 Otto of Venice pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0982 Grimelda of Hungary pg. 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 0912 Gerberga 0745 - UNKNOWN Carloman of the Franks 0960 - 1009 Pietro II of Venice 49 49 pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Maria Candiana pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0948 - 0997 Geza of Hungary 49 49 www.dcs..hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal Adelaideof Poland D. 0987 Pietro I of Venice pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Felicita of Malpiero pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Vitale Candiano pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Pietro Orseolo pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of Malpiero pg 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0932 - 0994 Luitpold I of Bayern 62 62 pg 205, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0975 - 1 Mar 1057/1058 ErmesindeOf Carcassone ~0960 Richenza of Sualafeld 0901 - 0933 Adelbert II of Babenburg 32 32 pg 110, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~0906 Adelbert I of Babenburg pg 110, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 Brunchildeof Sachsen pg. 110, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 D. 1216 Comito III of Torres pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Spella of Arborea D. 1186 Barisono II of Torres pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Preziosa of Orrubu 1123 - 1147 Gonario II of Torres 24 24 pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Elena of Gunale 0995 Bertrade de Gommetz D. 1127 Constantino I of Torres pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Marcusa of Gunale D. 1112 Mariano II of Torres pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Susanna of Gunale pg 111, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Andreo of Gallura D. 1073 Barisono III of Sardinia Pg. 111, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Barisono II of Cagliari D. ~1060 Orlando of Cagliari Pg. 111, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~0950 Ugo of Cagliari Pg. 111, "The Plantagenet History" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0960 William de Hainault O'Mahoney Ralph Taillebois ~1105 Agatha Brus William I deGometz Seigneur De Bures Ribald Beatrice D. 1167 Barnard I of Biwell Baliol pg 21, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883 Matilda Hugh Baliol 0948 - 0992 Borrell II Count of Barcelona 44 44 Reginald Bailleul pg. 124, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1162 - 1205 Aleaume Fontaine 43 43 ~1163 Laurette St. Valery ~1138 - ~1164 Enguerrand Fontaine 26 26 ~1115 - ~1119 William Fontaine 4 4 ~1117 Charlotte of Mailly ~1094 - ~1166 Renaud II St. Valery 72 72 ~1117 - 1190 Bernard IV of St. Valery 73 73 Ralph Fitz Orme Orme 0954 - 0998 Luitgarde de Toulouse 44 44 Beauchamp Nicholas Beauchamp ~1120 - 1173 Robert II of Vitre 53 53 pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weis, sixth edition, published 1988

pg 167, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1140 Emme of Dinan pg 126, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1090 - ~1155 Robert I of Vitre 65 65 pg. 126, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Emme of Guerche pg. 126 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1088 - 1155/1156 Oliver II of Dinan pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1090 Aleanor of Penthievre pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1084 - 1157 Adeliza (Alicia) Warren 73 73 D. ~1094 Gualter of Guerche pg. 126 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0863 - 0912 Malahule Haldrick Eysteinsson 49 49 D. ~1094 Basilie Geoffroi of Guerche pg. 126 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1032 Olivier I of Dinan ~1006 Geoffroi I of Dinan pg 173, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1008 Oria ~0985 - ~1066 Bertrand of Dinan 81 81 pg 126, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~0956 - <1030 Hamon of Dinan 74 74 pg 126, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Ammon of Dinan pg 126, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0840 - UNKNOWN Ascrida Ragnvaldsdottir D. 1096 Silvestre of Guerche pg. 126 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Manguene of Guerche pg. 126 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Thibault of Rennes pg. 126 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Genargaud Loscoran Robert Hay Muriel Chapelle pg 127, "The Plantagenet Ancestry " by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Ralph Hay ~1106 Oliva Albini ~1025 Richard of St. Sauveur pg 127, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0889 - 0950 Sunifred Count of Besalu 61 61 Anna ~1000 - ~1066 Eudo of Contentin deCapello 66 66 pg 27, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1042 Muriel of Conteville pg 127, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1087 - 1142/1150 Robert of Hook Norton D'Oilly pg 164, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
<aongusmclean@msn.com>
~1085 - ~1152 Edith fitz Forne 67 67 pg 165, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
<aongusmclean@msn.com>
Paen Hen Aaron ap Paen Hen ~1125 - ~1190 Renaud of Courtenay 65 65 on Crusade 1147

pg 102 & 119, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
Gwenllian verch Aaron ~1040 Idnerth ap Cadwgan of Builth 0930 - 0955 Adelaide de Toulouse 25 25 1099 William X Duke of Aquitaine 1112 Amicia de La Ware ~1020 Cadwgan ap Elystan of Builth Margaret verch Brocwell ~0995 Gwenllian verch Eionion Brochwell ap Aeddan pg. 130, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Aeddan >0998 Caradoc ap Cynfyn 0980 - 1023 Llewellyn ap Seisyll of Gwynedd 43 43 pg 149, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. ~0997 Tewdwr Mawr ap Cadell of S Wales Gwenlian verch Colwyn ~0953 Cadell ap Einion of S Wales 0929 Garsinde of Provence Colwyn ap Ednowen of Anglesea Ednowen ~1044 - <1129 Maredudd ap Bledyn of Powys 85 85 pg 113, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1063 Hunydd verch Eynudd pg 113, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg. 132, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928
>0998 - 1075 Bleddyn ap Cynfin of Powys 77 77 Haer verch Cillin ~0933 Cillin ap Blaidd ~1195 Guy Bryan pg 211, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 ~1202 Joan or Jane dela Pole Maurice dela Pole D. UNKNOWN Heilwig Richard dela Pole ~1128 Maud ~0990 - >1045 Gilbert of Brionne Crispin 55 55 ~1010 Gunnora of Aunou ~0986 Fulk of Aunou Elias Barclay D. 1133 Clemence of Bourgogne 0860 - 0898 Wilfred I 'el Velloso' Count of Besalu 38 38 ~1090 - >1154 Guillaume of Arques 64 64 pg. 108,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 Beatrix of Bolebec pg. 108,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1128 Roger of Covenby Cundi D. >1202 William Vipont ~1130 Maud Morville William Vipont Robert Vipont pg. 142, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Guillaume of Vieuxpont pg. 142, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 1116 - 1179 Richard Busli 63 63 Emma 0869 - UNKNOWN Guinidilda of Flanders 1091 - 1162 Jordan Busli 71 71 Ernald Busli ~1038 Roger Busli D. ~1178 William I Busli ~1070 Hawise Espec ~1051 - ~1086 William Espec 35 35 ~1156 - 8 Feb 1190/1191 Erard II of Brienne pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1156 - 1218 Agnes of Montfaucon 62 62 pg 105, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1054 - 1089 Gauthier I of Brienne 35 35 Eustache of Bar-Sur- Seine pg 206, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. 0937 Armengol deToulouse Count of Rouergue 1060 - 1114 Erard I of Brienne 54 54 ~0965 - 1032 Dietrich I of Lothringen 67 67 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0977 - 1029 Richildeof Luneville 52 52 pg 181, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 <0987 - 1028 Friedrich II of Lothringen 41 41 pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0945 - 1019 Friedrich I of Luxembourg 74 74 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0964 Irmtrudeof Gleiberg pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0987 - 14 Aug 1056/1059 Giselbert of Luxembourg ~0916 - 0980 Robert I of Lomme 64 64 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1019 - 1086 Konrad I of Luxembourg 67 67 pg 140, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0918 - 0998 Siegfried of Luxembourg 80 80 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition Adelhaide Toulouse D. 0992 Hedwig in Nordgau pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0925 - 0992 Heribert I in Kinziggau 67 67 pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0940 Irmintrudeof Avalgau pg 123, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg. 29, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928
Mathilda (Maud) of Normandy D. 1192 Baudouin of Mortaigne pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Hildiardeof Wavrin pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Eberhard III of Mortaigne pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1115 - ~1187 Gertrudeof Montaigu 72 72 D. 1198 Robert of Wavrin pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Adele (Alice) of Ghent D. 0849 Sunifred I Eberhard II of Mortaigne pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Richildeof Hainault pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by H.W. Turton published 1928 D. ~1112 Eberhard I of Mortaigne pg. 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. ~1165 Roger of Wavrin pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1049 Emme of Lilers pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1107 - ~1169 Arnoul II of Ghent 62 62 ~1109 Maud of St Omer pg. 174 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1128 Baudouin of Wavrin pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Wenemar of Lilers pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1070 - ~1140 Wenemar of Ghent 70 70 0830 - 0924 Ermesende 94 94 ~1080 Gisele of Gusnes D. 1143 Guillaume of St Omer Ingelram of Lilers pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1051 - 1091 Baldwin I of Guisnes 40 40 ~1059 Adele (Chretienne) ~1027 - 1052 Eustace of Guisnes 25 25 1025 Susanne of Gramines 0810 - 0864 Odoacer Count of Flanders 54 54 D. ~1089 Gauthier of Wavrin pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1066 Thierry of Wavrin pg 174, "The Plantagenet Ancestryl" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 of St. Venant pg. 174,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1044 - >1085 Lambert II of Ghent 41 41 ~1049 - ~1071 Gisele 22 22 ~1024 Folecard of Ghent ~1014 Landradeof Louvaine ~1004 - 1039 Adalbert of Ghent 35 35 D. UNKNOWN Enguerrand 1103 Eleanor Chatellerault deRochefoucauld Ermengardeof Flandres D. 1127 Rostom of St Omer pg. 174 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. ~1097 Baudouin of St Omer pg. 174 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 1088 Rabel of St Omer pg. 174 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 D. 1063 Lambert I of St Omer pg. 174 "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 1123 - 1188 Robert I of Dreux 65 65 pg 117, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition ~1130 - 1218 Agnes of Baudemont 88 88 pg 118, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 178, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~1082 - ~1130 Raoul I of Beaugency 48 48 pg 175, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1080 - 1130 Mathildeof Vermandois 50 50 pg. 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 ~1018 - 1098 Lancelin II of Beaugency 80 80 pg 175, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 0798 - 0834 Eudes (Odo) Count of Orleans 36 36 ~1020 Adelberge ~0989 - 1036 Herbert of Maine 47 47 pg 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. >1015 Hugues III of Maine D. ~0992 Hugues II of Maine Lietaud of Marle pg 175, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 0951/0956 - 0990 Giselbert of Roucy pg 100, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~0988 - 1033 Ebles I of Roucy 45 45 pg 101, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1095 - >1153 Raoul II of Soissons & Nesle 58 58 pg. 176,  "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by L.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1090 - 1150 Renaud I of Bar-Le- Duc 60 60 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 0736 - 0798 Emma of Allemania Duchess of Swabia & Vinzgau 62 62 ~1091 - <1127 Gisele of Vaudemont 36 36 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition ~1085 - >1147 Lambert of Montaigu 62 62 ~1010 - >1098 Renaud I of Clermont 88 88 ~1010 Ermengardeof Clermont pg 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 ~1085 - ~1139 Ida of Hainault 54 54 pg. 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0990 - ~1042 Baudouin II of Clermont 52 52 ~0965 - ~1023 Baudouin I of Clermont 58 58 ~0970 - 1060 Hildouin of Breteuil 90 90 ~0974 Emmeline of Chartres pg. 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0948 Fouche of Chartres pg. 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 0765 - 0836 Waldrat von Hornbach 71 71 D. ~1162 Guigues VIII of Vienne ~1152 Beatrix of Montferrat ~1100 - 1164 Marguerite of Macon 64 64 ~1001 - 1063 Guigues III of Albon 62 62 ~1025 - 1075 Guigues IV of Albon 50 50 ~1025 - <1070 Petronille 45 45 Eleanor of Dommart ~1065 - ~1096 Bernard III St. Valery 31 31 ~1098 Gui of Baudemont & Braine pg 178, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 0776 - 0819 Welf Count in the Entgau 43 43 ~1100 Adelaide(Alix) ~1050 - 1142 Andre of Baudemont 92 92 pg 178, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 D. ~1064 Agnes of Braine pg 178, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1035 - ~1061 Gauthier (Walter) St. Valery 26 26 ~1040 Elizabeth of Montlhery pg. 178, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by H.W.Turton published 1928 D. 1218 Geoffroi III of Chateaudun Alix of Freteval 0782 - 0836 Egilwich Abbess of Challes 54 54 D. 1191 Hugues V of Chateaudun Jeanne of Preuilly D. 1180 Hugues IV of Chateaudun Margaret of Montdoubleau pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Giselbert of Preuilly D. 1141 Geoffroi II of Chateaudun Hawise of Montdoubleau Eschivard of Preuilly pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0745 - 0800 II Welf 55 55 D. 1110 Hugues III of Chateaudun Agnes of Freteval Hugues of Montdoubleau pg 176, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H.Turton, published 1928 D. 1102 Geoffroi III of Preuilly pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Euphrosyne of Vendome pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 >0992 - ~1017 Bodon of Nevers 25 25 pg 179 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~0995 - ~1060 Adele of Anjou 65 65 ~1020 - ~1065 Fulk of Vendome 45 45 pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1024 - ~1078 Petronille of Renard 54 54 pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1028 Landry IV of Nevers pg 204 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0726 - 0758 Hermenlindis 32 32 ~0906 Nikola of Makedonija >0992 - 1040 Renaud I of Nevers 48 48 pg 102, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition D. 1031 Geoffroi I of Mortaigne pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H.Turton, published 1928 Heloise Hervise of Montague pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Guerin of Domfront >1031 Geoffroi II of Preuilly pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0715 - 0775 Ruthard Count in the Argengau 60 60 Aveline Geoffroi I of Preuilly pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Almodie D. >1054 Effroi of Preuilly pg 179, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by 1928 by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Beatrice Fulcher of Freteval Baudouin of Roches pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 Herbert of Roches pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. UNKNOWN Berthold ~1147 - 1196 Robert IV of Sable 49 49 pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1167 - 1209 Clemence of Mayenne 42 42 pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1115 - ~1151 Robert III of Sable 36 36 pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1120 - ~1151 Hersendeof Athenaise 31 31 pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1114 - 1161 Juhel II of Mayenne 47 47 pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1116 Clemence of Alencon pg 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 ~1085 - ~1145 Lisiard of Sable 60 60 ~1095 - >1123 Tephanie Brioule 28 28 ~1080 Savarie of Athenaise pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1126 Gauthier of Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 0690 - 15 Jan 0760/0761 Richbold Count in the Arengau 1076 Aimery I Châtellérault deRochefoucauld Alice of Beaugency pg 180, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1064 - >1110 Hersende Suse 46 46 ~1062 - ~1103 Geoffroi Brioule 41 41 ~1070 Garnoise Jarze 1040 - 1106 Hamelyn I of Athenaise 66 66 pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1050 Dometi D. 1079 Geoffroi III of Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Hildeburge of Nantes pg 180, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928 ~1010 - 1072 Joscelin of Athenaise 62 62 pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 ~1015 Agnes Bazougers 0695 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde ~0985 Guillaume of Athenaise pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928 D. 1057 Geoffroi II of Mayenne pg 180 , "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Gervaise of Gontier ~1035 - ~1066 Artaud Brioule 31 31 ~1040 Arsende ~1038 Herbert Suse ~1028 Geoffroi of Sable pg. 180, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Tyrton, published 1928 ~1030 Adelais ~1045 - 2 Jan 1104/1105 Thierry of Bar pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1059 - >1105 Ermentrudeof Bourgogne 46 46 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1035 - UNKNOWN Adeleiza de Toeni ~1019 - ABT 1071/1076 Louis II of Montbeliard pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 142, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1014 - 1092 Sophie of Bar-Le- Duc 78 78 pg 125, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 181, Turton's "The Plantagenet Ancestry" published 1928
~0982 - >1022 Louis I of Bar Mousson 40 40 ~1057 - ~1120 Gerhard I of Vaudemont 63 63 ~1075 - >1118 Heilwig of Egisheim 43 43 ~0953 - 1038 Gerhard II in the Nordgau 85 85 Berta of Bourgogne ~0928 - <0986 Hugo V in Nordgau 58 58 John Pryor ~1309 - DECEASED Ralph Basset 0946 - 1031 Gunnora deCrepon 85 85  aka gunnor of Denmark

aka gunnor of Denmark
~1300 - >1357 John de Driby 57 57 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 8WKF-MX 1180 Robert de Chaucombe ~1184 Julian ~1245 Isabel Fitz- Piers 1261 - 1320 Walter devereux 59 59 <1232 - <1292 Richard de Braose 60 60 Sir Richard de Braose, said to be a younger son (not fully documented), Lord of Stinton, Norfolk; Brumlagh, Surrey; Ludborough, co Lincoln; Akenham, Hasketon, Stradbrooke, and Rouse Hall, Suffolk, all in right of his wife; also granted part of the manor of Thorganby, co York by his brother William; born before 1232, died before 18 June 1292, buried Woodbridge Priory; married before 9 Sep 1265 Alice le Rus, widow of Richard Longespee, died shortly before 28 Jan 1300/1, daughter and heir of William le Rus of Stinton, Norfolk by Agatha (dsp shortly before 27 Dec 1261), daughter and heir of Roger de Clere of Brumlegh, Surrey and Ludborough, Lincoln.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: I am not sure how to read the above.  MCS cannot mean that Agatha "dsp" because in the same statement she is said to have a daughter (Alice) by her husband William le Rus.

---------------------------------

SIR RICHARD DE BREUSE, a younger son of John de Breuse, Lord of Bramber and Gower, by Margaret, daughter of Llewelyn ap lorwerth, PRINCE OF NORTH WALES, born 1232. He was summoned cum equis et armis 12 December 1276 to 14 June 1287, and to attend the King at Shrewsbury, 28 June 1283, by writs directed Ricardo de Brehuse or Breuse.

He married, before 9 September 1265 Alice, widow of Richard LUNGESPEYE (who died s.p. shortly before 27 Dec. 1261, and daughter and heir of William LE Rus, of Stinton, Norfolk, Akenham and Whittingham, Suffolk, by Agatha. daughter and heir of Roger DE CLERE, of Bramley, Surrey, and Ludborough, co. Lincoln. She was born 25 December 1245 or 1247, or 1 January 1245/6. He died before 18 June 1292 (i). His widow died shortly before 28 January 1300/1. They were buried in Woodbridge Priory.  [Complete Peerage II:304, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(i) At which time his widow was claiming her dower.  On the morrow of St. John the Baptist 25 Edward I, Richard de Brewose obtained from (his mother) Alice, que fuit uxor Ricardi de Brewesa, the manor of Stradbroke, Suffolk.  The younger Richard m. Alianore.  He was summoned cum equis et armis 12 Mar 1300/1.  Blomefield erroneously assigns to the elder Richard the Inq.p.m. on his nephew Richard, for which see p. 308, note "d".
1245 - BEF 28 Jan 1300/1301 Alice le Rus Alice le Rus, widow of Richard Longespee, died shortly before 28 Jan 1300/1, daughter and heir of William le Rus of Stinton, Norfolk by Agatha (dsp shortly before 27 Dec 1261), daughter and heir of Roger de Clere of Brumlegh, Surrey and Ludborough, Lincoln.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: I am not sure how to read the above.  MCS cannot mean that Agatha "dsp" because in the same statement she is said to have a daughter (Alice) by her husband William le Rus.

----------------------------

He [Richard de Breuse] married, before 9 September 1265 Alice, widow of Richard LUNGESPEYE (who died s.p. shortly before 27 Dec. 1261, and daughter and heir of William LE Rus, of Stinton, Norfolk, Akenham and Whittingham, Suffolk, by Agatha. daughter and heir of Roger DE CLERE, of Bramley, Surrey, and Ludborough, co. Lincoln. She was born 25 December 1245 or 1247, or 1 January 1245/6. He died before 18 June 1292. His widow died shortly before 28 January 1300/1. They were buried in Woodbridge Priory.  [Complete Peerage II:304, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
1236 - <1265 Richard deLongespee 29 29 <1295 - 1328 Simon Basset 33 33 Simon Basset, son and heir, by 1st wife.  He m. bef. 1309, Isabel, daughter of William Boteler, (Lord Boteler of Wem).  He d. 1328.  His widow m. in 1330 after 18 Mar 1329/30, Sir Alexander Walsham, at which time she sealed a deed with the arms of Basset (barry wavy) and Boteler of Wem, on two shields side by side.  [Complete Peerage II:7] ~1295 - >1330 Isabel Boteler 35 35 He [Simon Basset] m. bef. 1309, Isabel, daughter of William Boteler, (Lord Boteler of Wem).  He d. 1328.  His widow m. in 1330 after 18 Mar 1329/30, Sir Alexander Walsham, at which time she sealed a deed with the arms of Basset (barry wavy) and Boteler of Wem, on two shields side by side.  [Complete Peerage II:7] 1078 - 1154 Cecily deRumilly 76 76 ~1266 - 1322 Ralph Basset 56 56 RALPH BASSET, son and heir. He was returned as Knight of the Shire for co. Stafford on 6 March 1299/I300. He was lord of one of the two manors in Cheadle, co. Stafford, in 1316.

He married 1stly, Elizabeth, 1st daughter and in her issue coheir of Roger COLVILL, [LORD COLVILL] by Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard BREWES. He married 2ndly shortly before 21 July 1295, Margaret, widow of Urian DE ST. PIERRE of Peckforton, Horsley, &c., co. Chester. He is said to have died 1322.  [Complete Peerage II:7, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
~1280 - <1295 Elizbeth Colvill 15 15 He [Ralph Basset] married 1stly, Elizabeth, 1st daughter and in her issue coheir of Roger COLVILL, [LORD COLVILL] by Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard BREWES.  Complete Peerage II:7,
Note: With her mother Margaret the daughter of a "bef 9 Sep 1265" marriage and her son "b. bef 1295" when Elizabeth was presumably dead and Ralph was marrying for the 2nd time, there is not a lot of room for variation in the birth dates of the three inidividuals: (1) 1265 for Margaret, which is the earliest possible given the marriage date; (2) 1280 for Elizabeth, which splits the difference and has two women in a row bearing children at the age of 15; (3) abt 1295 for the son Simon, which is the latest possible.  It also means that poor Elizabeth had a very short life; I would guess that she probably died in child birth having her son Simon.
~1251 - BEF 6 Mar 1287/1288 Roger Colvill ROGER DE COLEVILLE, son and heir, aged 26 at his father's death. On 28 June 1283 he was summoned, by writ directed Rogero de Colevilla de Byham, to attend the King at Shrewsbury, but this does not seem to have been a summons to Parliament.

He married Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard DE BREWES, of Stinton, Norfolk, by Alice, daughter and heir of William Le Rus, of Stinton. He died 1287/8, before 6 March, date of writ for Inq. p. m. His widow died 1335, before 12 May, when the writ for her Inq. p. m. is dated.  [Complete Peerage III:374, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

----------------------------------------

Sir Roger de Coleville, Knight, born c1251, aged 26 in 1277, died shortly before 6 Mar 1287/8, Lord of Bytham, co Lincoln, son of Walter de Coleville, Lord of Bytham, co Lincoln, died 1277, by Isabel or Elizabeth.  [Magna Charta Sureties]
~1193 - BET 1227 AND 1230 Roger Colvill <1195 - >1265 Beatrice de Stuteville 70 70 ~1270 Margaret He [Ralph Basset] married 2ndly shortly before 21 July 1295, Margaret, widow of Urian DE ST. PIERRE of Peckforton, Horsley, &c., co. Chester. He is said to have died 1322.  [Complete Peerage II:7, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

Note: I wouldn't be surprised if the manor of Cheadle came to Ralph Basset through his marriage to Margaret.  He certainly acquired it after the marriage.  It might provide some clues as to who Margaret is.  I believe that the manor then descended through John Basset, son of Ralph & Margaret.
~1235 - <1295 Simon Basset 60 60 SIMON BASSET, son and heir. On 28 June 1283 he was summoned to attend the King at Shrewsbury, and on 8 June 1294, he was summoned to attend-the King wherever he might be, by writ directed Simoni Basset. On 14 June 1294. he was summoned to accompany the King cum equis et armis to Gascony. He died before Michaelmas 1295.  [Complete Peerage II:6-7, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] Anne Frebodye ~1213 Milicent de Chaucombe ~1270 - 1321 Robert de Driby 51 51 1056 - 1099 Robert deRumilly 43 43 ~1272 - 1329 Joan de Tateshal 57 57 On the death of Robert 1st Baron de Tateshal's grandson, Robert 3rd Baron de Tateshal, b. 18 Mar 1288, dsp 30 Jan 1305/6, according to Complete Peerage, vol. XII/1, p. 653 & notes (c) and (d):

"his estates were divided between his 3 coheirs: 2 ladies who were almost certainly the daughters of the 1st Lord Tateshal (though described as his sisters) and the son and heir of their elder sister (c).  On this assumption, the Barony supposed to have been created by the writ of 1295 would have fallen into abeyance, according to modern doctrine, between his 3 coheirs (d)."

(c) In the inquisition of 1306 the jurors stated that Emma, Joan and Isabel were the sisters of Robert his grandfather (d. 1298).  There are grounds for supposing that the statements were inaccurate, and that they were the latter's daughters by Joan his wife.  Reasons to this effect have been given in "Early Yorks Charters", dealing with lands of the Honour of Richmond held by Joan, wife of Robert de Tateshal, and her two sisters, expecially Joan's tenure of the manor of Hethersett, Norfolk, where a statement is cited from Blomefield that Joan de Tateshall settled it on Sir William Bernak and Alice his wife, Alice's mother being described as Joan "one of the three daughters and heiresses" of the abovenamed Joan de Tateshall.  A careful examination of the chronological details relating to Emma, Joan and Isabel and their issue strongly supports the suggestion that they were daughters and not sisters of Robert de Tateshal, 1st Lord Tateshal, who d. in 1298.  If so, the barony supposed to have been created by the writ of 1295 would have fallen into abeyance, according to modern doctrine, in 1306 between them and their representatives.

(d) (i) Thomas de Cailly, afterwards Lord Cailly, s. of Adam de Cailly (living 1303), by Emma de Tateshal; (ii) Joan de Tateshal, m. Robert de Driby and received Tatershall in her pourparty; (iii) Isabel, m., as his 1st wife John de Orreby, afterwards Lord Orreby.  Thomas de Cailly and John de Orreby were each summoned to Parliament 1308/9 to 1311, presumably as coheirs of Tateshal.
~1195 - 1261 Hugh FitzRalph 66 66 ~1200 Agnes de Gresley ~1170 Ralph de Gresley ~1230 - <1289 Simon de Driby 59 59 ~1235 Alice FitzHugh ~1175 Isabel de Muschamp ~1130 Hugh de Muschamp ~1145 - 1230 Roger de Gresley 85 85 ~1155 Margaret de Longchamp Some have Margaret as daughter of Henry de Longchamps, but birth dates make him more appropriate as her brother.
Grant, 1340, March 5. 15 Edward II. 1 item : parchment ; 15.5 x 27.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Henry de Longchaump, lord of the county of Essex, to Robert, prior of the episcopal church of Canterbury and the convent of the same of his manor of Stistede (Essex), with dwellings, etc., therto belonging. Dated at Stistede on 5 March, 15 Edward II.
WITNESSES: Richard de Bouytone, John de Clareryngg, Ralph Doreward, John Fernier, Reginald de Bockyngg, John Polay, John atte Feen, Bartholomew Lem, Luke Morel, Zewall Spicer, Nicholas Prere, Adam Parder, et m.a. With 1 seal (2.9 cm) of red wax, bearing an armorial shield surmounted by helmet and crest, with the legend; S HENRICUS DE ..ONSCHAUMP.
NAMES: I. De Longchamp, Henry. II. Robert Prior of St. Augstine's Abbey. III. De Bouytone, Richard. IV. De Clavering, John. V. Doreward, Ralph. VI. Fernier, John. VII. De Bocking, Reginald. VIII. Polay, John. IX. Atte Feen, John. X. Leon, Bartholomew. XI. Morel, Luke. XII. Spicer, Zewall. XIII. Frere, Nicholas. XIV. Parker, Adam.
SUBJECTS: 1. Canterbury Cathedral. 2. St. Augustine's Abbey (Canterbury, England) 3. Deeds--England--Essex. 4. Deeds-- England--Stisted. 5. Essex (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges. 6. Stisted (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AOA8220
1060 - 1128 Ranulph III le Meschines 68 68 Randle I, surnamed Micines or Meschines, Viscount Bayeux in Normandy, and Earl of Cumberland and Lord of Carlisle, obtained the Earldom of Chester from Henry I, King of England, with all the patrimony thereof as nextheir to that deceased nobleman, Richard 2nd, Earl of Chester, his cousin(son of his mother's brother Hugh, 1st Earl of Chester), who was drownedcrossing the English Channel and died sine prole. Randle restored to KingHenry all the land which he had by his wife, the widow of Roger deRomara, for the Earldom of Chester. He married Lucy, Granddaughter ofAlgar, Earl of Mercia, and great-granddaughter of Lady Godiva ofCoventry. Lucy had married 1st Ivo, son of Geoffrey, Earl of Anjou, andbrother of Fulk, King of Jerusalem. 2nd, Roger de Romara, by whom she hadWilliam, Earl of Lincoln. Thus Randle was her 3rd husband. She with hertwo sons founded the Priory of nuns at Stikeswold in Lincolnshire. Theyalso had a daughter Agnes who married Robert de Grentmaisnil and Adeliza,who married Richard de Clare and they were the grandparents of Richard deClare, Surety for the Magna Charta, from whom you descend through RobertAbell and John Whitney. Randle I died 1128, after he had been Earl ofChester 8 years. Lucia, his widow, gave 266œ 13s 4d for the livery of herfather's lands and also 500 marks fine that she might not be compelled tomarry within 5 years. Her sister Agatha married Harold, King of England,slain at Hastings 1066. ~1154 Ralph de Levington 1222 - 1273 Robert de Tateshal 51 51 BARONY of TATESHAL (ancestors of)

ROBERT DE TATESHAL, son and heir, by 1st wife, born 1222, on the death of his maternal uncle, Hugh, Earl of Arundel, 7 May 1243, succeeded to the castle and manor of Buckenham, Norfolk; but although the senior coheir, he did not claim or succeed to the Earldom of Arundel (originally and properly of Sussex). He served with his father in 1244, went to Gascony with the King in 1253, was going on the King's service to Wales in 1257 and was summoned to muster at Chester for service against Llewellyn in 1258. He was also summoned for service against the Welsh in 1260, 1263 and 1264; and was called under arms to London in 1260 and 1261. In 1263 he was a Commissioner to complete the eyre in co. Lincoln. During the Barons' War he supported the King and he was captured at the Battle of Lewes, 14 May 1264. After the royal victory at Evesham in 1265, he aided the Crown in restoring peace. He was appointed in June 1266 to keep the peace in co. Lincoln and to receive into the King's peace those who were willing to stand trial for their misdeeds. In March 1267 he was one of the Royal commanders in East Anglia and in 1268 he was called in to aid in the enforcement of order in the realm. He married, before 1249, Nichole, and died 22 July 1273, probably at Tattershall Castle. His widow was living, 30 May 1277. [Complete Peerage XII/1:649-50]
~1226 - >1277 Nichole 51 51 He [Robert de Tateshal] married, before 1249, Nichole, and died 22 July 1273, probably at Tattershall Castle. His widow was living, 30 May 1277. [Complete Peerage XII/1:649-50] >1193 - 1249 Robert de Tateshal 56 56 BARONY of TATESHAL (ancestors of)

ROBERT DE TATESHAL, nephew [of Robert, d. bef. 6 Sep 1212] and heir, being son and heir of his [Robert's] brother Walter DE TATESHAL (died 1199 or 1200), by Iseult, daughter and eventually heir of William PANTULF, of Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicester, was a minor in 1214. In 1223, being in the King's service with horses and arms, he obtained livery of the lands of his mother Iseult Pantulf, which had been taken into the King's hand by reason of her debt to the Crown. In 1224 he joined in the pursuit of Fawkes de BreautE across England, and in 1226 and 1227 he was given the custody of the castles and towns of Bolsover, co. Derby (till 19 February 1232/3) and Lincoln. He served at the siege of Biham Castle in 1221 and in the Welsh campaign of 1228. In October 1229 he was going overseas in the King's service; and he served in Brittany in 1230. In March 1242 orders were issued for him to be supplied with one or two ships to accompany the King abroad; and in 1244 he and his son Robert were going on service in Scotland and Wales. He was a Commissioner in May 1242 to enforce peace, to swear to arms and to hold an assize of arms in co. Lincoln. In July 1245 he was summoned before the King's Court at Chester for having tourneyed in defiance of the royal conimands. He married, 1stly, before 1222, Maud, sister and in her issue coheir of Hugh, 5th EARL OF ARUNDEL, 1st daughter of William (d'AUBIGNY), EARL OF ARUNDEL, by Mabel, 2nd daughter of Hugh (LE MESCHIN, styled also DE KEVELIOC), EARL OF CHESTER. She died between 1238 and 1242. He married, 2ndly, before 1242, [----] daughter of John DE GREY, with whom he obtained the manor of Shalbourne, Wilts. He died 16 July 1249. [Complete Peerage XII/1:648-9, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
~1196 - BET 1238 AND 1242 Maud d' Aubigny Maud, sister and in her issue coheir of Hugh, 5th EARL OF ARUNDEL, 1st daughter of William (d'AUBIGNY), EARL OF ARUNDEL, by Mabel, 2nd daughter of Hugh (LE MESCHIN, styled also DE KEVELIOC), EARL OF CHESTER. She died between 1238 and 1242.  [Complete Peerage] ~1159 - BET 1199 AND 1200 Walter de Tateshal ROBERT DE TATESHAL, nephew [of Robert, d. bef. 6 Sep 1212] and heir, being son and heir of his [Robert's] brother Walter DE TATESHAL (died 1199 or 1200), by Iseult, daughter and eventually heir of William PANTULF, of Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicester.  [Complete Peerage] ~1170 - ~1222 Iseult Pantulf 52 52 Iseult, daughter and eventually heir of William PANTULF, of Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicester (d).

(d) "CP", vol xi, p. 296, note "b" sub Saint Amand, where details of Iseult's 5 marriages are given, Walter de Tateshal being the 2nd husband; but the 3rd and 4th are transposed in order, Walter de Baskerville being the 3rd and Henry Biset the 4th, for on 26 Mar 1215 "Isolda (Iseult)" formerly wife of Walter de Baskerville, is mentioned.  Moreover this Iseult cannot be the Iseult living in "1267", as she was dead about 1222.  She brought Breedon and the patronage of Langley Priory, Leics., to the Tateshal family.  In 1217 she confirmed gifts to Langley (which had been made by her grandfather William Pantulf and her grandmother Burga, who had 3 sons William, Roger and Philip.  [Complete Peerage]

Note: Note (b) in Complete Peerage, Vol XI, p. 296 gives the complete marriages of Iseult.  It also states "Her son and heir, Robert de Tateshale undertook payment of her debts, and orders were consequently made in 1223 and 1228 [restoring her property to him], which would normally connote her death; but as late as 1267 she was still prosecuting her rights of dower, etc. against her grandson Robert de Tateshale, 1264-68."  The note (d) above states she was not the same Iseult that was living 1267, for she had d. c 1222, and that Walter de Baskerville should be 3rd (not 4th) husband and Henry Biset should be 4th, aft. 26 Mar 1215, (not 3rd, which also requires a change in the death date given in XI:296 (b)).
1248 - <1298 Robert 1st Baron de Tateshal 49 49 BARONY of TATESHAL (I)

ROBERT DE TATESHAL, son and heir, born 5 December 1248. He was summoned for service in Wales in 1277, 1282, 1283, 1287 and was campaigning there in 1294-95. On 28 June 1283 he was summoned to attend the Assembly to be held at Shrewsbury on 30 September. He was summoned to a military Council at Gloucester in 1287, and for service in Scotland, 1291, 1296, 1297 and 1298; and he was going to Gascony on the King's service in 1294. He was summoned to Parliament from 24 June 1295 to 26 January 1296/7, by writs directed Roberto de Tateshal, whereby he is said to have become LORD TATESHAL. In December 1296 he was invited to the wedding of the Count of Flanders and the King's daughter, Elizabeth. Siding with the King against the Barons in 1297, he was appointed to aid the sheriffs of Norfolk and Suffolk in arresting evildoers and to negotiate with the clergy, 1 March; was summoned for service in Flanders (where he was represented by his son), 15 May, to a Council in London, 9 September, and to be in London under arms, 16 September; and was appointed a Commissioner to enforce peace between the Cinque Ports and Yarmouth and to restore order in Yarmouth, 6 and 11 September 1297. He was going to Rome with Hugh de Vere on the King's business, March 1297/8; and fought (with his son and 7 lances) in the vanguard at the battle of Falkirk, 22 July 1298. He married, perhaps before 1268, Joan, 2nd daughter and coheir of Ralph FITZRANULF (or FITZRANDOLF), of Middleham, Yorks, by Anastasia, daughter of William DE PERCY. He died shortly before 8 September 1298, aged 49. His widow died shortly before 1 April 1310. [Complete Peerage XII/1:650-1, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
~1250 - <1310 Joan FitzRandolph 60 60 He [Robert de Tateshal] married, perhaps before 1268, Joan, 2nd daughter and coheir of Ralph FITZRANULF (or FITZRANDOLF), of Middleham, Yorks, by Anastasia, daughter of William DE PERCY. He died shortly before 8 September 1298, aged 49. His widow died shortly before 1 April 1310. [Complete Peerage XII/1:650-1, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] ~1210 - 1270 Ralph FitzRandolph 60 60 Ralph FITZRANULF (or FITZRANDOLF), of Middleham, Yorks, by Anastasia, daughter of William DE PERCY.  [Complete Peerage] 1090 - 1115 Hasculf de St.Hilarie 25 25 ~1200 - <1281 Ellen de Baliol 81 81 Ellen (who brought him as dowry Dalton, Co Durham, in consequence called Dalton Percy (it is now in Cleveland), and died a short while before 22 Nov 1281), daughter of Ingram de Balliol by a daughter and heir of Walter de Berkeley, Chamberlain of Scotland.  [Burke's Peerage] ~1105 - 1175 Reynold de Reginald 70 70 EARLDOM of CORNWALL (I)

Reynold de Dunstanville, one of the 14 illegitimate children of Henry I, was the son of Sybil, daughter of Sir Robert Corbet, of Alcester, co. Warwick, and having m. ?Mabel, daughter and (in her issue) heir of William Fitz Richard, a man of huge estates in Cornwall, was created about Apr 1141, Earl of Cornwall, probably by the Empress Maud, but the title was fully recognised subsequently by King Stephen.  He was a witness to the compromise between Stephen and Henry, 1153.  Sheriff of Devon, 1173-75.  He was in command, ex parte Regis, Oct 1173, against the rebellious Barons.  He d. spm legit, at Chertsey, Surrey, 1 July 1175, and was buried in the Abbey of Reading, when the Earldom reverted to the Crown.  [Complete Peerage, III:429 as corrected by XIV:207]
1172 - >1230 Isabel le Brus 58 58 Isabel (died in or after 1230), daughter of Adam de Brus, Lord of Skelton, Cleveland (through her he had the Manor of Levinton), for which he [Henry Percy] and his heirs were to repair to Skelton Castle every Christmas Day and lead the lady of the castle from her chamber to the chapel to mass and thence to her chamber again, there to take meat with her, and then withdraw).  [Burke's Peerage] ~1170 - <1252 Randolph Ranulf FitzRobert 82 82 ~1196 Mary Bigod ~1145 - <1185 Robert FitzRalph de Taillebois 40 40 ~1148 - 1 Mar 1194/1195 Helewise de Glanville 1156 - <1211 Henry Biset 55 55 Henry, son and heir of Manasser Biset.  Henry d. bef 4 Apr 1211. [Complete Peerage]

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dcrdcr4@aol.com (Dcrdcr4) [Douglas Richardson] posted to GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com on 26 Mar 1999
Subject: Re: SIR ROGER LA ZOUCHE: .
"This is based on original research not found elsewhere in print.
. Margaret, wife of Roger la Zouche, was the daughter of Henry Biset, of Kidderminster, co. Worcester and Rockbourne, Hampshire, benfactor of Hospital of Maiden Bradley. He married (lst) Aubrey, daughter of Richard Fitz Eustace (ancestor of the Lacy family), with whom he had land in Emsal, Marton, Plumtree, and the whole town of Harworth, co. Nottingham in frank marriage. They had three children, William, John and Margaret (above). He married (2nd) Iseult Pantolf, daughter of Roger Pantolf, of Abkettleby, co. Leciester, widow of Walter de Tateshall and Hugh de Montpincon. He died shortly before 11 Dec. 1213. His widow married (4th) Amaury de St. Amand of Bloxham, co. Oxford."

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reedpcgen@aol.com (Reedpcgen) [Paul Reed] posted to GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com on 1 Apr 1999
Subject: Re: SIR ROGER LA ZOUCHE:
. "A kind soul has faxed me the pertinent pages of the Cirencester Cartulary. . .
. . . . This Henry definitely married Isolde, but she might be a second wife, rather than mother of his heir. I know of no specific evidence or rationale to claim that this Henry, who was seated at Kidderminster, Worcester, married a Yorkshire girl. No Yorkshire lands are evidenced in this branch of the family or their descendants."

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Sire de Cany - lost Cany when French took Normandy.
1179 - <1213 Walter de Baskerville 34 34 1156 Roger Mauduit 1575 Mary Merwin ~1165 - <1186 Hugh de Munpincun 21 21 ~1175 - <1241 Amaury de St. Amand 66 66 ~1210 Daughter de Grey 1260 - 1302 Ernaud de Gaveston 42 42 1225 - 1290 Nicholas de Stapleton 65 65 Judge of the Kings bench. ~1140 Ada de Engaine 1217 - 1291 Eleanor of Provence 74 74 ~1201 - 1266 Beatrice of Savoy 65 65 1243 - 1295 Gilbert de Clare 52 52 Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, d. 7 Dec 1295; m. (2) 1290 Joan Plantagenet, b. Acre 1272, d. Clare, Suffolk 23 Apr 1307, daughter of Edward I, King of England and Eleanor Castile.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Gilbert de Clare, surnamed the Red, 7th Earl of Hertford and 3rd Earl of Gloucester, who, by the king's procurement, m. in 1257, Alice, dau. of Guy, Earl of AngoulIme, and niece of the king of France, which monarch bestowed upon the lady a marriage portion of 5,000 marks. This nobleman, who, like his predecessors, was zealous in the cause of the barons, proceeded to London immediately after the defeat sustained by the insurrectionary lords at Northampton (48th Henry III) [1264], in order to rouse the citizens, which, having effected, he received the honour of knighthood from Montfort, Earl of Leicester, at the head of the army at Lewes; of which army, his lordship, with John Fitz-John and William de Montchensi, commanded the second brigade, and having mainly contributed to the victory in which the king and prince became prisoners, while the whole power of the realm fell into the hands of the victors, the earl procured a grant under the great seal of all the lands and possessions lying in England of John de Warren, Earl of Surrey, one of the most faithful adherents of the king, excepting the castles of Riegate and Lewes, to hold during the pleasure of the crown, and he soon after, with some of the principal barons, extorted from the captive monarch a commission authorizing Stephen, then bishop of Chichester, Simon Montford, Earl of Leicester, and himself, to nominate nine persons of "the most faithful, prudent, and most studious of the public weal," as well prelates as others, to manage all things according to the laws and customs of the realm until the consultations at Lewes should terminate. Being jealous, however, of the power of Leicester, the earl soon after abandoned the baronial cause and, having assisted in procuring the liberty of the king and prince, commanded the second brigade of the royal arm at the battle of Evesham, which restored the kingly power to its former lustre. In reward of these eminent services he received a full pardon for himself and his brother Thomas of all prior treasons, and the custody of the castle of Bergavenny during the minority of Maud, wife of Humphrey de Bohun. His lordship veered again though in his allegiance and he does not appear to have been sincerely reconciled to the royal cause until 1270, in which year, demanding from Prince Edward repayment of the expenses he had incurred at the battle of Evesham, with livery of all the castles and lands which his ancestors had possessed and, those demands having been complied with, he thenceforward became a good and loyal subject of the crown. Upon the death of King Henry, the Earl of Hertford and Gloucester was one of the lords who met at the New Temple in London to proclaim Prince Edward, then in the Holy Land, successor to the crown, and so soon as the new monarch returned to England, his lordship was the first to entertain him and his whole retinue with great magnificence for several days at his castle of Tonebruge. In the 13th Edward I [1285], his lordship divorced his wife Alice, the French princess, and in consideration of her illustrious birth, granted for her support during her life, six extensive manors and parks, and he m. in 1289, Joan of Acre, dau. of King Edward I, upon which occasion he gave up the inheritance of his castles and manors, as well in England as i Wales, to his royal father-in-law, to dispose of as he might think proper; which manors, &c., were entailed by the king upon the earl's issue by the said Joane, and in default, upon her heirs and assigns, should she survive the lordship. By this lady he had issue, Gilbert, his successor, Alianore, Margaret, and Elizabeth. His lordship d. in 1295, and the Countess Joan surviving, m. a "plain esquire," called Ralph de Monthermer, clandestinely, without the king, her father's, knowledge, but to which alliance he was reconciled through the intercession of Anthony Beke, the celebrated bishop of Durham, and became eventually much attached to his now son-in-law. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, pp. 119-120, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

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Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester (1243-1295), 8th earl of Gloucester and 9th earl of Clare, was born at Christchurch, Hampshire, on Sept. 2, 1243. He married Alice of AngoulIme, niece of king Henry III, succeeded his father in July 1262, and joined the baronial party led by Simon de Montfort. With Simon, Gloucester was at the battle of Lewes in May 1264, when the king himself surrendered to him, and after this victory he was one of the three persons selected to nominate a council. Soon, however, he quarreled with Simon. Leaving London for his lands on the Welsh border he met Prince Edward, afterward king Edward I, at Ludlow, just after his escape from captivity; and contributed largely to the prince's victory at Evesham in August 1265. But this alliance was as transitory as the one with Leicester, Gloucester championed the barons who had surrendered at Kenilworth in November and December 1266, and after putting his demands before the king, secured possession of London (April 1267). The earl quickly made his peace with Henry III and with Prince Edward. Under Edward I he spent several years in fighting in Wales, or on the Welsh border; in 1289 when the barons were asked for a subsidy he replied on their behalf that they would grant nothing until they saw the king in person (nihi prius personaliter viderent in Anglia faciem regis), and in 1291 he was fined and imprisoned on account of levying private war on Humphrey de Bohun, earl of Hereford. Having divorced his wife Alice, he married in 1290 Edward's daughter Joan, or Johanna (d. 1307). The "Red Earl," as he is sometimes called, died at Monmouth on Dec. 7, 1295, leaving, in addition to three daughters, a son, Gilbert, earl of Gloucester, killed at Bannockburn. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 10, p. 434, GLOUCESTER, GILBERT DE CLARE, EARL OF.]
1272 - 1307 Joan "of Acre" Plantagenet 35 35 Joan of Acre, b. 1272, d. 23 Apr 1307, daughter of Edward I, King of England, by Eleanor of Castile; widow of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford; m. (2) 1297 Sir Ralph de Monthermer, styled Earl of Gloucester and Hertford during the life of his wife, created Lord Monthermer 1308, d. 5 Apr 1325.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Gilbert de Clare was not young when he married the fiery-spirited, sloe-eyed Joanna and took her to live at his country retreat in Clerkenwell not far from the Tower, where the king and queen were again in residence. She left for her new home with great fanfare, laden with royal gifts. After being a widow a year, she secretly married a completely unknown squire in her husbands retinue, Ralph de Monthermer. Through this marriage he became possessed in his own right of the earldoms of Gloucester & Hertford. The fact that a royal princess had dared to marry this obscure fellow became a cause celebrE which for a time separated her from the affection of her father. It proved to be a marriage, however, leading ultimately to a firm friendship between the new son-in-law and Edward.
1025 - 1092 Ranulph II Vicount of Bayeaux 67 67 ~1172 - 1257 Robert de Quincy 85 85 1180 - BEF 3 Mar 1242/1243 Hawise le Meschin on the Earldom of Lincoln, prior creations, [Burke's Peerage, p. 1712]:

The Earldom of Lincoln was revived twenty years after the 2nd Earl's death in favour of his cousin, Ranulph Earl of Chester, who of course also had a long-standing connection with the county through their common ancestress Countess Lucy.  Ranulph's prominent role in defeating the French invaders at the Battle of Lincoln earlier in 1217, the year he was made Earl of Lincoln, played a part in his elevation.  Soon after Michaelmas 1230 he made over the Earldom to his sister Hawise, from whom it was conveyed to her son-in-law John de Lacy, the traffic in the dignity being approved by Henry III in both cases in the autumn of 1232.

vol 1, pg 27, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
vol 3, pg 259 Ormerod's History of Cheshire
pg 63, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
~1180 - 1230 Gilbert de Clare 50 50 Sir Gilbert de Clare, Magna Charta Surety 1215, b. say 1180, d. Penrose, Brittany 25 Oct 1230, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford; m. as 1st husband 9 Oct 1217, Isabel Marshal.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford, who, after the decease of Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, the 2nd wife of Isabel, the divorced wife of King John, and in her right Earl of Gloucester, and her own decease, s. p., as also the decease of Almarick D'Evereux, son of the Earl of Evereux by Mabell, the other co-heiress, who likewise succeeded to the Earldom of Gloucester, became Earl of Gloucester, in right of his mother, Amicia, the other co-heiress. This nobleman was amongst the principal barons who took up arms against King John, and was appointed one of the twenty-five chosen to enforce the observance of Magna Carta. In the ensuing reign, still opposing the arbitrary proceedings of the crown, he fought on the side of the barons at Lincoln, and was taken prisoner there by William Marshall, Earl of Pembroke; but he soon afterwards made his peace. His lordship m. Isabel (who m. after his decease, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, brother of King Henry III), one of the daus., and eventually co-heiress of William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, by whom he had issue, Richard, his successor; William; Amicia, m. to Baldwin de Redvers, 4th Earl of Devon; Agnes; Isabel, m. to Robert de Brus. The earl d. in 1229 and was s. by his eldest son, Richard de Clare. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]
1208 - <1266 Margaret de Quincy 58 58 ~1284 - 1312 Piers de Gaveston 28 28 Piers Gaveston was a favorite (and possible lover) of King Edward II.  He was given title of Earl of Cornwall in 1307.  5 years later he was murdered by a lynch mob of nobles jealous of his influence over King Edward II. 1292 - 1342 Margaret de Clare 49 49 Margaret de Clare, b. c 1292, d. 9 Apr 1342; m. (2) Windsor, 28 Apr 1317, Hugh de Audley, d. 10 Nov 1347, Earl of Gloucester.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Margaret de Clare, b. c 1292, d. Apr 1342; m. (1) 1 Nov 1307, Piers de Gaveston, b. c 1284 (probably son of Sir Ernaud de Gaveston by Clarmunda de Marsau et de Louvigny), created Earl of Cornwall, executed 19 June 1312.  She m. (2) 28 Apr 1317, Hugh de Audley.  [Ancestral Roots]
~1295 - 1347 Hugh Baron de Audley 52 52 Hugh de Audley, who had been summoned to parliament in the lifetime of his father as "Hugh de Audley, Junior," from 20 November, 1317, to 15 May, 1321, and after that nobleman's decease, as "Hugh de Audlie," from 3 December, 1326, 20th Edward II, to 10th Edward III [1337]. His lordship m. Margaret, sister and co-heiress of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, and widow of Piers Gavestone, by whom he left an only dau. and heiress, Margaret, who m. Ralph, Lord Stafford. Hugh, Lord Audley, was created Earl of Gloucester, 23 April, 1337. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 17, Audley, or de Alditheley, Barons Audley, and Subsequently Earl of Gloucester] 1201 - 1252 Ferdinand III "The Saint" King of Leon & Castile 50 50 Ferdinand III, also called SAINT FERDINAND, Spanish SAN FERNANDO (b. 1201?--d. May 30, 1252, Seville; canonized Feb. 4, 1671; feast day May 30), king of Castile from 1217 to 1252 and of Leon from 1230 to 1252 and conqueror of the Muslim cities of CUrdoba (1236), JaEn (1246), and Seville (1248). During his campaigns, Murcia submitted to his son Alfonso (later Alfonso X), and the Muslim kingdom of Granada became his vassal.

Ferdinand was the son of Alfonso IX of Leon and Berenguela, daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile. When born, he was the heir to Leon, but his uncle, Henry I of Castile, died young, and his mother inherited the crown of Castile, which she conferred on him. His father, like many Leonese, opposed the union, and Ferdinand found himself at war with him. By his will Alfonso IX tried to disinherit his son, but the will was set aside, and Castile and Leon were permanently united in 1230.

Ferdinand married Beatrice of Swabia, daughter of the Holy Roman emperor, a title that Ferdinand's son Alfonso X was to claim. His conquest of Lower Andalusia was the result of the disintegration of the Almohad state. The Castilians and other conquerors occupied the cities, driving out the Muslims and taking over vast estates.

Ferdinand's second wife was Joan of Ponthieu, whom he married in 1237; their daughter Eleanor married the future Edward I of England in 1254. Ferdinand settled in Seville, where he is buried. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]
1216 - 15 Mar 1278/1279 Joan de Dammartin ~1240 - 1290 Alice de Lusignan 50 50 Became hypochondriac leading to divorce. 1033 - 1089 Maud Margaret d'Avranches 56 56 Maud d'Avranches or de Abrincis married Randle or Ranulph de Meschines,Viscount of Bayeux in Normandy, and Lord of Cumberland and Carlisle inEngland, for after the Normans invaded England, Cumberland fell to theshare of Ranulph de Meschines. They had two sons, William, to whom KingHenry I gave the Castle of Egremont in Cumberland, and another son,Ranulph or Randle. D. 1154 AdelaideMaurienne De Savoy 1255 - 1328 Johanna Stapleton 73 73 1260 Clarmunda deMarsau & de Louvigny 1262 - 1325 Ralph 1st Baron de Monthermer 63 63 Sir Ralph de Monthermer, styled Earl of Gloucester and Hertford during the life of his wife (Joan), created Lord Monthermer 1308, died 5 April 1325.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Ralph de Monthermer, "a plain Esquire," having m. the Lady Joane Plantagenet (commonly called Joane of Acre), dau. of King Edward I and widow of Gilbert, Earl of Clare, Gloucester, and Hertford, in her right, and was summoned to parliament as "Comiti Gloucester' et Hertf." from 6 February, 1299 to 3 November, 1306. In the 26th Edward I [1298], his lordship was in the expedition then made into Scotland, and behaved so valiantly that the king rendered to him and his wife, the said Joane, the castle and honour of Tonebruge with other lands in Kent, Surrey, and Sussex, as also the Isle of Portland and divers other estates belonging to the said Joane, which had been seized by the crown in consequence of her marriage without license with the said Ralph, and the king became eventually much attached to his son-in-law, to whom he had been reconciled through the intercession of Anthony Bek, the celebrated bishop of Durham. In the 31st, 32nd, and 34th of his father-in-law [1203, 1304, and 1306], the earl was again in Scotland and in the contest with Bruce. King Edward conferred upon him the whole of Anandale with the title of Earl of Atholl, the Scottish nobleman who held that dignity having espoused the fortunes of Bruce, but it was not long after that that Joane of Acre departed this life (viz., 1st Edward II), and he never, subsequently, obtained the title of Earl of Gloucester and Hertford although he lived for several years; in a grant of considerable landed property made to him and his sons in two years afterwards, he is styled Ralph de Monthermer only. Nor is he otherwise denominated in the 5th Edward II [1312], at which time, for recompense of his service in Scotland, the king gave him 300 marks, part of the 600 marks which he was to have paid for the wardship of John ap Adam, a great man of that age. Nor in two years afterwards, when again in the wars of Scotland, he was made prisoner at Bannockburn, but he then found favour from his former familiarity with the King of Scotland, at the court of England, and obtained his freedom without paying ransom. He was, however, summoned to parliament as a Baron from 4 March, 1309, to 30 October, 1321. His lordship m. 2ndly, Isabel, widow of John de Hastings, and sister and co-heir of Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, by whom he had no issue. By his first wife, the Princess Joane, he had two sons, viz., Thomas, his heir; Edward, who was summoned to parliament as a Baron, 23 April, 1337, 11th Edward III, but never afterwards, and nothing further is known of him or his descendants. Ralph, Lord Monthermer, d. 19th Edward II [1326], and was s. by his son, Thomas, Lord Monthermer. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, pp. 378-9, Monthermer, Baron Monthermer, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford]
~1020 Algar 3rd Earl of Mercia 1202 - 1234 Beatrice von Hohenstauffen 32 32 ~1240 Garsie de Gabaston ~1240 Arnaud Guilldaume de Marsan 1170 Ines Iniguez de Mendoza John Whitley 1222 - 1237 Margaret de Burgh 15 15 1030 Ramfray deRumilly 1171 - Jan 1232/1233 William Pantulf ~1220 - 1281 Ralph le Boteler 61 61 Ralph Boteler m. Maud, dau. and heiress of William Pantulf, by whom he acquired the great lordship of Wemme in the co. of Salop. This feudal baron had divers summonses to attend the king, Henry III, in his wars with the Welsh and, adhering faithfully to that monarch against Simon de Montfort and the revolted barons, he was amply rewarded by grants of land and money from the crown. He was s. at his decease by his son, William Boteler. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 63, Boteler, Barons Boteler, of Oversley and Wemme] ~1224 - <1289 Maud Pantulf 65 65 1207 Hawise FitzWarin ~1185 Maurice le Boteler Maurice Boteler, one of the justices of assize for the co. of Warwick in the 13th and 16th Henry III [1229 and 1232], and a commissioner for assessing and collecting the fourteenth part of all men's movable goods, according to the form and order then appointed. This feudal lord filled the office of justice of assize for the same shire a second and third time, and was repeatedly justice for the gaol delivery at Warwick in the same king's reign. He was s. by his son, Ralph Boteler. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 63, Boteler, Barons Boteler, of Oversley and Wemme] ~1175 - <1246 Henry de Audley 71 71 Henry of Aldithley, 2nd son of Adam of Aldithley, (who d. bet. 1203 and 1211) by Emma, daughter of Ralf fitz Orm, of Darlaston, Staffs; was b. about 1175; with his father, he was witness to a charter of Harvey Bagot in 1194.  He bought large estates from Eleanor Malbank in 1214; in 1227 he acquired the manors of Edgmund and Newport, and in 1230 that of Ford, all in Salop, and all held by him direct from the Crown, though not by military or knight service.  He was Under Sheriff of Salop and co. Stafford 1217-20, and Sheriff 1227-32; was in command of the Welsh Marches 1223-46.  He built the castle of Heligh, co. Stafford; and Red Castle, Salop.  In 1223 he founded Hulton Abbey.  He was appointed Custodian of Chester and Beeston Castle, 22 June 1237, on the extinction of the the earldom of Chester.  He m. in 1217, Bertred, daughter of Ralf Mainwaring, Seneschal of Chester.  He d. in 1246, shortly bef. Nov.  His widow was living in 1249.  She was buried in Hulton Abbey.  [Complete Peerage I:337 XIV:50]

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"That this family of Alditheley, vulgarly called Audley," says Dugdale, "came to be great and eminent, the ensuing discourse will sufficiently manifest: but that the rise thereof was no higher than King John's time, and that the first who assumed this surname was a branch of that ancient and noble family of Verdon, whose chief seat was at Alton Castle in the northern part of Staffordshire, I am very inclined to believe; partly by reason that Henry had the inheritance of Alditheley given him by Nicholas de Verdon, who d. in the 16th Henry III [1232], or near that time; and partly for that he bore for his arms the same ordinary as Vernon did. . .so that probably the ancestor of this Henry first seated himself at Alditheley: for that there hath been an ancient mansion there, the large moat, northwards from the parish church there (somewhat less than a furlong, and upon the chief part of a fair ascent), do sufficiently manifest."

Henry de Alditheley, to whom Dugdale alludes above, being in great favour with Ranulph, Earl of Chester and Lincoln (the most powerful subject of England in his time), obtained from that nobleman a grant of Newhall in Cheshire with manors in Staffordshire and other parts--and for his adhesion to King John, in that monarch's struggle with the insurrectionary barons, a royal grant of the lordship of Storton in Warwickshire, part of the possessions of Roger de Summerville. In the first four years of King Henry III [1216-1220], he executed the office of sheriff for the counties of Salop and Stafford as deputy for his patron, the great Earl Ranulph. In the 10th of Henry III [1226], this Henry de Alditheley was appointed governor of the castles of Carmarthen and Cardigan and made sheriff the next year of the counties of Salop and Stafford and constable of the castles of Salop and Bridgenorth, which sheriffalty he held for five years. Upon his retirement from office, he had a confirmation of all such lands whereof he was then possessed as well those granted to him by Ranulph, Earl of Chester, and Nicholas de Verdon, as those in Ireland given him by Hugh de Lacy, Earl of Ulster, whose constable he was in that province. He subsequently obtained divers other territorial grants from the crown, but, notwithstanding, when Richard Mareschall, Earl of Pembroke, rebelled and made an incursion into Wales, the king, Henry III, thought it prudent to secure the persons of this Henry and all the other barons-marchers. He was afterwards, however, constituted governor of Shrewsbury in place of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, and, on the death of John, Earl of Chester, governor of the castle of Chester, and also that of Beeston, then called the "Castle on the Rock," and soon after made governor of Newcastle-under-Lyne. This powerful feudal baron m. Bertred, dau. of Ralph de Meisnil-warin, of Cheshire, and had a son, James, and a dau., Emme, who m. Griffith ap Madoc, Lord of Bromefield, a person of great power in Wales. He d. in 1236, having founded and endowed the Abbey of Hilton near to his castle at Heleigh, in Staffordshire, for Cistercian monks, and was s. by his son, James de Alditheley. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 15, Audley, Barons Audley, of Heleigh]
~1196 - >1249 Bertrade(Bertred) de Mainwaring 53 53 He [Henry of Aldithley] m. in 1217, Bertred, daughter of Ralf Mainwaring, Seneschal of Chester.  He d. in 1246, shortly bef. Nov.  His widow was living in 1249.  She was buried in Hulton Abbey.  [Complete Peerage I:337 XIV:50] ~1245 - <1283 William le Boteler 38 38 William le Botiler of Wem, Salop, son & heir of Ralph le Botiler of Oversley, co. Warwick, by Maud, daughter & heir of William Pantulf of Wem. He succeeded his father shortly before 3 July 1281 He was summoned cum equis et armis, 24 May 1282 and 14 March 1282/3, and to attend the King at Shrewsbury, 28 July 1283, by writs directed Willelmo le Botiler (or le Botiller) de Wemme.

He married, after 2 October 1261, Angharad, daughter of Griffith ap Madoc ap Griffith Maelor, Lord of Bromfield, Dinas Bran and Yale (now co. Denbigh), i.e. of Lower Powis, by Emma, daughter of Henry AUDLEY, of Heleigh, co. Stafford. He died shortly before 11 December 1283. His widow, to whom dower was ordered to be assigned, 8 February 1283/4, was living 22 July 1308.  [Complete Peerage II:231, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

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William Boteler, who, in the lifetime of his father, had m. Ankaret, niece of James de Aldithley, died, however, in a very few years after inheriting his paternal property (anno 1283), leaving three sons, John, Gawine, and William, and was s. by his eldest, John Boteler. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 63, Boteler, Barons Boteler, of Oversley and Wemme]
~1245 - >1308 Angharad verch Gruffudd 63 63 He [William le Botiler] married, after 2 October 1261, Angharad, daughter of Griffith ap Madoc ap Griffith Maelor, Lord of Bromfield, Dinas Bran and Yale (now co. Denbigh), i.e. of Lower Powis, by Emma, daughter of Henry AUDLEY, of Heleigh, co. Stafford. He died shortly before 11 December 1283. His widow, to whom dower was ordered to be assigned, 8 February 1283/4, was living 22 July 1308.  [Complete Peerage II:231, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] ~1218 - 1269 Gruffudd ap Madog 51 51 Lord of Bromfield  [Ancestral Roots] 1102 - 1157 Payne deBeauchamp 55 55 ~1218 - AFT Feb 1264/1265 Emma de Audley ~1185 - 1236 Madog ap Gruffudd 51 51 ~1185 Gwladus verch Ithel 1274 - <1334 William 1st Baron le Boteler 60 60 BARONY of BOTELER of Wem (I)

WILLIAM LE BOTILER of Wem and Oversley, next brother and heir, born 11 June 1274. He had livery of his brother's lands 8 April 1296, and having served in the wars with Scotland, was summoned to Parliament 10 March 1307/8 to 10 October 1325, by writs directed Willelmo le Botiller (or sometimes le Butiller) de Wemme, whereby he be held to have become LORD LE BOTILLER.

He married 1stly, before 1298, Beatrice, who was living in I305-06. He married, 2ndly, before February 1315/6, Ela daughter and coheir of Roger OF HERDEBURGH. He died 1334, before 14 September. His widow was living 5 July 1343, and died s.p.m.  [Complete Peerage II:232, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

Note: According to Some Correction to CP, William and his 2nd wife were survived by two sons Edmund & Edward, and the male line (by the 2nd wife) did not die out until the death of Edward.

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William Boteler, in the 24th Edward I [1296], was in ward to Walter de Langton, lord treasurer of England, and Walter de Beauchamp, of Alcester, steward of the king's household. This feudal lord obtaining renown in the Scottish wars of the period, was summoned to parliament as a Baron from 10 March, 1308, to 10 October, 1325. His lordship m. Ankeret, dau. of Griffin, and had an only son, William, his successor. He m. 2ndly, Ela, dau. and co-heiress of Roger de Herdeburgh, by whom he had two sons, Edmund and Edward, who both died issueless, and four daus., viz., Ankeret, m. to John, Lord Strange, of Blackmere; Ida, m. to Wm. Trussell; Alice, m. to Nicholas Langford; Dionyse, m. to Hugh de Cokesey. He d. in 1334, and was s. by his eldest son, William Boteler, 2nd Baron Boteler. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 63, Boteler, Barons Boteler, of Oversley and Wemme]

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NOTE: There is an error here in Burke, for he states that William married Ankeret, dau. of Griffin, whereas Ankeret was, in fact, William's mother, not his wife. Burke states, regarding William's father, "William Boteler, who, in the lifetime of his father, had m. Ankaret, niece of James de Auldithley." These two Ankaret's are one in the same person, for she was the daughter of Gruffydd ap Madog by Emma de Audley, sister of James of Aldithley. I have changed my records to indicate the wife of William, the son, is Beatrice, as found on CD100, Automated Archives, Automated Family Pedigrees #1, the reference for which is given as NCP II :320-3.
~1278 - AFT Feb 1305/1306 Beatrice ~1206 - BEF 8 Jan 1241/1242 Henry Tuchet HENRY TUCHET, son and heir, did homage for his father's lands shortly before 2 Jan. 1234/5. He may be the Henry Tuchet who, with his wife Basilea, entered into an agreement with the Abbot of Burton in 1226. If this is so, Basilea must have died before the end of 1241, for at Henry's death his wife was Emma, daughter of Henry DE AUDLEY (or ALDITHLEY), of Heleigh, Staffs, by Bertred, daughter of Ralph MAINWARING, Steward of Chester. He died s.p. shortly before 8 January 1241/2. His widow married Gruffydd MAELOR II, who died 7 December 1269. She was living, February 1264/5.  [Complete Peerage XII/2:56, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] ~1329 - 1378 Ralph I Basset 49 49 BARONY of BASSET (of Sapcote) (I)

RALPH BASSET, son and heir, under age in 1330. In July 1369, being then aged over 40, he became, by the death of his cousin, Robert, Lord Colvill one of the two coheirs of the estates and Barony of that family, inheriting the Castle and Honour of Bytham, co. Lincoln, Thornton Steward, co. York, &C. In consequence, doubtless, of these acquisitions, he was summoned to Parliament 8 January 1370/1 and 6 October 1372, by writs directed Radulfo Basset de Sapcote, whereby he is held to have become LORD BASSET. He fought in the French wars and was one of the heroes of Crecy.

He married 1stly, about 1346, Sibyl, sister of Thomas ASTLEY [3rd LORD ASTLEY], and daughter of Sir Giles Astley, by Alice, 2nd daughter and coheir of Sir Thomas DE WOLVEY. He married, 2ndly, Alice, daughter of John DERBY. He died s.p.m., 17 July 1378, when the Barony fell (according to modern doctrine) into abeyance between his two daughters and coheirs. Will, as Ralph Basset, knight, Lord of Sapcote, directing his burial to be at Castle Bytham, dated there the Monday after the Ascension I I May 1377, proved at Lincoln. His widow, who married Sir Robert TUCHET, and afterwards Sir Anketine MALLORY, died a widow, 12 October 1412, and was buried at Stamford, near her last husband.  [Complete Peerage II:7-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
~1335 - >1378 Robert Tuchet 43 43 ~1312 - <1360 Sibyl Astley 48 48 He [Ralph Basset] married 1stly, about 1346, Sibyl, sister of Thomas ASTLEY [3rd LORD ASTLEY], and daughter of Sir Giles Astley, by Alice, 2nd daughter and coheir of Sir Thomas DE WOLVEY.  [Complete Peerage II:7-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] AFT 6 Jan 1311/1312 - >1340 Amy de Gaveston Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 8WKF-N4

Amy de Gaveston, damsel of the Chamber to Queen Philippa, b. soon after 6 Jan 1312; m. in or before 1334, John de Driby, son of Robert of Wokefield, Berks, d. after 30 Nov 1357.  [Ancestral Roots]

Note: Brad Verity in a series of postings to soc.genalogy.medieval makes the case that Amy was an illegitimate daughter of Piers de Gaveston, in that she was not the daughter of Margaret de Clare because she did not share in her inheritance; plus her position as a lady of the household at court was much lower than the daughter of an Earl would merit -- more in keeping with an illegitimate daughter.
1021 - UNKNOWN Alix of Normandy ~1784 David Westerfield ~1755 - ~1826 Samuel Jr demaree 71 71 Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1752 - Unknown Lea demaree Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1748 - ~1825 Tryntie demaree 77 77 Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1745 - ~1746 Daniel demaree 1 1 Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1744 - Unknown Rachel demaree Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1741 - Unknown Sara demaree Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1739 - Unknown Elizabeth demaree Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1737 - Unknown Petrus demaree Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1733 - Unknown Antjin demaree Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 0980 Duxia de Falaise ~1730 - Unknown Anatje demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 1724 - Unknown Jacob demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1719 - Unknown Peter demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1717 - Unknown Christian demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1716 - Unknown Rachel demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1712 - Unknown Maria demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1710 - Unknown Joost demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1708 - Unknown Eliazbeth demaree (des Marets) Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 ~1756 William Van Westerfield 1770 - Unknown Catrina Westerfield 1026 - UNKNOWN Gytha Clopa 1764 - 1813 Leah Westerfield 49 49 1762 - Unknown Isaac Von Westerfield 1760 - 1832 Samuel Westerfield 71 71 1758 - 1758 Leah Westerfield 1m 1m 1768 - 1827 Deborah Westerfield 58 58 Captured by Indians when her father was killed in April 1781along with her niece Mary Polly. They were later ransomed in Ft. Detroit. After French & Indian W ar was over prisoners were released and Deborah returned to her family in KY. 1741 - Unknown Dirckye Westerfield 1739 - Unknown Isaac Westerfield 1734 - Unknown Jan Westerfield 1725 - Unknown Sara Westerfield 1724 - Unknown Gerrit Westerfield 0950 Alwara Mercia 1719 - Unknown Maritie Westerfield ~1715 - Unknown Elena Westerfield ~1710 - Unknown Hillena Westerfield ~1694 - Unknown Andries Westerfield ~1685 - Unknown Aetie L. Westerfield ~1682 Pieteer deWesterfield 1658 - >1733 Roelof Lubbertse deWesterfield 75 75 >1662 - >1718 Jan Juriense Westerfield 56 56 1654 Maritie Lubbertse deWesterfield 0980 - 1074 Lady Godiva Godgifu 94 94 1646 - ~1742 Margrietje Westerfield 96 96 ~1641 - >1698 Jan Westerfield 57 57 Gerritje Van Nes Roeloff Van Houten Vanwybergen ~1585 Heribert Van Westervelt Wilhelm Van Westervelt 1818 - 1891 J. Harvey Vanderipe 72 72 1817 - 1864 Julia Ann Vanderipe 47 47 ~1804 - ~1848 John W. Vanderipe 44 44 D. UNKNOWN Aethelred II Duke of Mercia William Martin Rebecca Pryor 1797 - 1891 Catherine Vanderipe 93 93 ~1797 Sarah Vanderipe Caterdiente Suebering Harmon Vanderipe ~1774 - 1858 Cornelius P. Vanderipe 84 84 May 22, 1858 in Harrodsburg, Mercer Co., KY. ~1804 - ~1867 Isaac Westerfield 63 63 1798 - 1875 Phoebe deWesterfield 77 77 ~1797 - ~1824 David Westerfield 27 27 0885 - UNKNOWN Aethelflaed of Mercia Lady of Mercia ~1788 - ~1862 Ann Westerfield 74 74 1785 - 1872 John Westerfield 87 87 ~1783 - 1867 James Cozine Westerfield 84 84 1782 - 1852 Cornelius Sr. Westerfield 70 70 1780 - 1853 Mary Polly Westerfield 73 73 Margrieta Unknown - Unknown Francois Sohier Marguerite de Herville Unknown - Unknown Jean des Marets Unknown - 1681 Marie Sohier 0854 - 0920 Ealswith of Mercia 66 66 1152 - 7 Mar 1225/1226 William deLongespée  Earl of Salisbury

pg 35, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 103, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 112, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 168, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Unknown - Unknown David des Marets Unknown - Unknown Vroutj Gerretse Unknown - Unknown Gerrit Cozynszen Unknown - Unknown Belitje Jacobs Quick 1640 - ~1703 Gerrit Cozynszen 63 63 Aeltje (Olive) Janse (Vankouwenhoven) 1687 - 1739 Jacobus Cozynszen 52 52 Unknown ~1569 - ~1623 Hendrik Wilhelm Van Westervelt 54 54 ~1636 - >1696 Geesie Grace Roelofse Van Houten 60 60 D. UNKNOWN Ermesindeof Longwy ~1620 - 1686 Lubbert Lubbertsen Van Westervelt 66 66 Came to America between 1661 and 1663. Hilletje Pouluse D. 1694 Lubbert Westerfield Dirckie Huybertse Blauvelt Jan Lubbertse Westerfield Maria de Reuine 1656 - 1728 Samuel des Marets 72 72 Unknown - Unknown Elizabeth Drabbe Joost de Baun 1690 - 1752 Matie Martha de Baun 62 62 0958 - 1045 Gerhard 87 87 1681 - 1761 David Samuel des Marets 79 79 1703 - 1731 Antie Losier 28 28 Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 Unknown - Unknown Lummatje Veghte Unknown - Unknown Pieter Statts 1722 - 1775 Anna (Antje) Statts 53 53 1718 - 1788 Cornelius Cozine 69 69 Information Source: GEDCOM file from David Mark Wilson (dmwilson@tds.net); Rt 1, Box 2250; Fletcher, OK 73541 Unknown - Unknown Marritye Meet Pieter de Marest 1713 Leah de Marest 1707 Samuel de Maree Christening Feb. 1, 1707 Hackensack, Bergen, New Jersey 1000 - 1048 Adalbert III Duke of Upper Lorraine 48 48 Also the Count of Longwy. ~1716 Debora Van Schywen 1712 - 1743 Jacobus "James" Westerfield 31 31 1735 Maria de Maree 1737 - 1781 Jacobus "James" Westerfield 43 43 Christening July 17, 1727, Died in Indian Raid Upon Arrival to KY, death date  Aug. 1780 1759 - 1847 Ufmey Phoebe Femitie Corzine 88 88 Christenting Dec 9, 1759 Dutch Reformed Church New Jersey 1755 - 1826 James Jacobus Westerfield 70 70 Christening Sept. 15, 1755 in Schraalenburgh, New Jersey. ~1802 - ~1868 Elizabeth B. Westerfield 66 66 D. 1739 Experience Folger Dorcas Folger D. Mar 1717/1718 Patience Folger 0995 - 1068 Agnes of Burgundy Princess of Lombardy 73 73 D. 1669 Bethiah Folger She drowned with husband, Isaac Coleman, and an Indian  when returning with Eleazor Folger in a canoe from Martha's Vineyard where they had been to purchase some furniture. Bethshua Folger ~1560 William Swain 1667 - 1752 Abiah (Abia) Folger 85 85 1664 - 29 Jan 1738/1739 John Swain He was the first male white child born on the island of Nantucket. When he died, he was the oldest white man on the island.  He owned a farm in Polpis, where he resided, being a farmer.  His land adjoined that of his brother-in-law John Folger. 1500 John Gibbs Alice or Emly 1688 - 1770 William Swain 81 81 D. 1750 Eliakim Swain 1703 - 1785 Stephen Swain 81 81 0969 - 31 Jan 1029/1030 William III 'the Great' Duke of Normandy D. 1797 George Swain ~1695 - 1775 Ruth Swain 80 80 1694 - 1783 Catharine Swain 89 89 D. 1779 Hannah Swain D. 1737 Priscilla Swain 1703 Eleanor Ellis 1670 Sarah Swain 1666 Stephen Swain 1693 Elizabeth Ellis 1679 - 1757 Benjamin Swain 78 78 1003 Gerard Von Heinsberg- Falkenburg 1702 - >1737 Mordecai Ellis 35 35 7 Feb 1695/1696 Ebenezer Ellis 1661 - <1728 Edmund Freeman Ellis 67 67 1668 Mercy Winslow 1620 - 23 Mar 1676/1677 John Ellis 1624 - 1692 Elizabeth Freeman 68 68 "The Ten Men of Saugus: The first information of the settling of Sandwich is in an item in Plymouth Colony Records dated April 3, 1637, Page 3:
"It is also agreed by the Court that those tenn men of Saugust, viz Edmond Freeman, Henry Feake, Thomas Dexter, Edward Dillingham, William Wood, John Carman, Richard Chadwell, William Almey, Thomas Tupper & George Knott shall have liberty to view a place to sitt down & have sufficient lands for three score famylies, upon the conditions propounded to them by the Governor and Mr. Winslowe." p 4 The Lynn historian Alonzo Lewis wrote of the migration down to Cape Cod:
"This year (1637) a large number of people removed from Lynn and commenced a new settlement at Sandwich. The grant of the town was made on the third of April by the Colony of Plymouth...Thomas-Dexter did not remove, but the rest of the above named went with forty six other men from Lynn." p 4 Those Who Went to Sandwich "The impetus for founding a new town on Cape Cod originated from a dedicated and persuaisive leader, Edmund' Freeman of Pulborough, Sussex (England). He arrived in October 1635 on the ship Abigail with his wife Elizabeth and children Edmund, John, Alice, and **Elizabeth.***
Freeman was a person of some prestige as a brother-in-law of Mr. John Beauchamp of London, an investor in Colonial ventures with a stake in Plymouth Colony."  p 5 "The English origins of Edmund Freeman are better known than those of many early settlers in New England. He owned property in Pulborough, Sussex, where he married his first wife Bennett Hodsoll, and had six children. Two died young, and Bennett herself died in 1630.
Edmund then married a wife named Elizabeth whose identity has long been sought by his descendants and by genealogists. She has been called Gurney, Gravely, Perry and Bennett, but we believe now that her name was Elizabeth Raymen or Raymond as shown in her marriage to Edmund Freeman August 10, 1632 at Shipley, Sussex.
Edmund, Elizabeth, and four youngsters, Alice 17, Edmund Jr. 15, ***Elizabeth 12,*** and John 8 embarked on the Abigail in 1635.
Another unrelated Freeman group was on the same ship, which has caused confusion as to their possible relationship to the Edmund Freemans. Later, in Sandwich, a fifth child Mary Freeman was in the family, but her birth is not recorded. She may have been born in Massachusetts to Edmund and Elizabeth, or may have been adopted here. p 7 Settlers from Plymouth. "Mr. Freeman must have decided on founding his town in Plymouth Colony but there has been no record so far found as to his reasons or procedures. He and Mr. Leveridge established a brief residence in Plymouth
~1629 - 1718 Hester (Esther) (Weare) Wyer 89 89 Francis Swain William Swain Dorothy Swain Gersende Bigorre Elizabeth Swain Richard Swain 1631 - 1718 Nathaniel (Weare) Wyer 87 87 1724 - 1807 Reuban Swain 83 83 D. 1744 John Swain 1701 - 1786 Catharine Sillevan 85 85 D. 1 Mar 1680/1681 Nathaniel Wyer Also spelled: Nathaniel OR Wier OR Weare OR Wyer. Parkhurst D. ~1660 John (Foulger) Folger "John Folger and his son Peter (their name then being frequently written Foulger) are said to have crossed the Atlantic in the same ship with Hugh Peters (who at one time was chaplain to Oliver Cromwell) in 1635.  They came from Norwich, in the county Norfolk, England. Peter Folger was then about 18 years old.  At what time they settled at Watertown, Mass. is not known, but in 1642 John Folger was possessed of a homestead in that town and owned six acres of land.  It is probable that John and Peter Folger accompanied Thomas Mayhew, Jr. to Martha's Vineyard in 1641 or 1642.  John owned a home, upland and commonage and meadow land at the Vineyard, as appears by the Vineyard Records.  John died about 1660.  Meribell Folger, his widow, was living in 1664. Her surname is said to have been Gibbs.  According to tradition, John was a widower when he came over; if this be correct, he must have married her after his arrival in America."  They arrived in Boston on the ship Abigail.

Sources:
James E. Banks, The History of Martha's Vineyard, Vol. III, Dukes County Historical Society, Edgartown, Mass., 1966.
Florence B. Anderson, A Grandfather for Benjamin Franklin, Meador Publishing Co., Boston, Mass., 1940.
New England Historic Genealogical Society, Vital Records of Nantucket, Massachusetts to the Year 1850, Boston, 1926, Vols. I and V.
William C. Folger, "The Folger Family," New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XVI, New England Historic-Genealogical Society, Albany, NY, 1862, pp. 269-279.
Henry B. Worth, Nantucket Lands and Land Owners, Heritage Books, Bowie, Maryland, 1992.
James Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Vol. II, 1860 (Republished by Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994).
Thelma P. Simpson and Rebecca W. Sanders, ‘Kith and Kin' of Eastern Carteret County, Carteret County Historicl Society, Morehead City, N.C., 1983.
D. >1664 Meribell Meribah Gibbs The History of Nantucket says John Folger was a widower when he came to America. D. UNKNOWN Bernard Rodger Count of Conserans D. 1746 Patience Swain D. 1780 Hepzibah Swain Stephen Swain Agnes De Cobham Wife number 1. Eleanor Swain Alice Elmy 1673 - 1766 Joseph Swain 92 92 Foulgier D. 1657 Elizabeth Basselle ~1618 - 1690 Peter Folger 72 72 "Peter Folger, son of John, born in England, accompanied his father to America in 1635 to Boston and probably emigrated with him to the Vineyard in 1642.  He married in 1644 Mary Morrill, who had been Governess in the family of Hugh Peters and according to tradition a fellow passenger with him from England. Whilst at the Vineyard he taught school and also practiced as a surveyor of lands.  He also assisted the younger Thomas Mayhew in his work of Christianizing the native Indians.  Rev. Experience Mayhew, in a letter to John Gardner, Esq. dated 1694, stated that when Thomas Mayhew, Jr. left for England in 1657, he left the care of his church or mission with Peter Folger. Peter became a Baptist in his sentiments, and after his removal to Nantucket is said to have baptized two persons in Waiptequage pond."

"At a meeting of the proprietors of the Island of Nantucket held in Salisbury in the latter part of 1660 or early part of 1661, five persons were chosen to measure and lay out the land, and in the order it is said, that what shall be done by them, or any three of them, Peter Folger being one, shall be accounted legal and valid. This vote shows the confidence they placed in his judgment and integrity."

"Whilst a resident at the Vineyard he acquired the Indian language, which was of great service to him in business affairs and in enabling him to communicate religious instruction to the natives."

"In the summer of 1659, he is said to have accompanied as an interpreter, Tristram Coffin and others who visited the island of Nantucket to view it about the time of the purchase from Mayhew.  He was there in 1661 and 1662, surveying, and on the 4th of July, 1663, the proprietors of Nantucket granted him half a share of land on Nantucket, or half as much as one of the twenty purchasers, provided he would come to inhabit with his family on the aforesaid island within one year after that date, and attend the English in the way of interpreter between the Indians and them upon all necessary occasions. He accepted the grant and moved there with his family within the specified time."

"On the 21st of July, 1673, he was chosen clerk of the courts, which office he held some years.  In his poem--'A Looking-Glass for the Times,' published in April 23, 1676, he shows himself an advocate for religious liberty, and strongly condemns the persecuting spirit exhibited in New England in his day.  Dr. Benjamin Franklin, his grandson, when in England, found no arms for the Folgers at the Herald Office, and concluded that they were a Flemish family who came over in the time of Queen Elizabeth."

Peter Folger was the only child of John Folger, 1590 - 1660, and Meribah Gibbs. John and Peter came from Norwich, Norfolk Co. England to Watertown, MA in 1635. In 1636 Peter went to Martha's Vinyard with Thomas Mayhew. In 1663 he went to Nantucket to interpret for Tristram Coffin with the Indians. "Peter Married Mary Morrill in 1644, having bought her of Hugh Peters, to whom she owed service, and paid the sum of 20 pounds which he very gallantly declared was the best appropriation of money he had ever made."
D. UNKNOWN Ricar d'Astarac D. 1704 Mary Morrill Sources:
Dr. Charles Banks, History of Martha's Vinyard, Vol. III, Published 1925
Clarence Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior To 1700, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1985 David W. Hoyt, The Old Families of Salisbury and Amesbury, Massachusetts (in 3 volumes) Providence, RI: 1897 New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Boston, MA: New England Historical and Genealogical Society)Vol. 10, p. 269 and Vol. 12, p. 129
A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register / James Savage and O. P. Dexter
"It all began with a shipboard romance in the year 1635. The ship was the 'Abigail,' out of Plymouth, England, bound for the new world, and the lovers were Peter Folger and Mary Morrill. Peter, then 18 years old, was proficient in mathematics, writing and history and he hoped that his academic training at Norwich Grammer School would enable him to get a job as a clerk to Thomas Mayhew at Watertown, Massachusetts. His father, John Folger, had worked as a mason, carpenter, and cabinetmaker in Norfolkshire and now, with the death of his wife, Meriah Gibbs, earlier in the same year, had embarked on this voyage to the New England Colonies . Mary Morrill was an orphan girl "bound out" to Hugh Peters and his wife. Her indenture had been purchased by Hugh Peters for 20 pounds (roughly $100) and she must serve the Peters family for a given number of years until the indenture expired or was purchased by another. Hugh Peters was a well known independent preacher whose unorthodox teachings brought him into conflict with authorities in England and later, in Holland, where he had fled to escape persecution. The voyage in the 'Abigail' offered him the opportunity to voice his opinions in a new climate. He was headed for Salem, Massachusets where he was to assume the pastorate of th e church. Upon reaching the new world, the lovers found themselves widely seperated, Peter in Watertown and Mary in Salem. Hugh Peters and his wife were kind to Mary, treating her as one of the family. However, 20 pounds was not easily earned and Peter Folger knew that he would have to buy Mary's indenture before entertaining any hope of marriage. It took nine years of hard work and steady saving but at last Peter purchased Mary's indenture and the couple were married on June 23, 1644. Peter and Mary began their married life on Martha's Vineyard where Peter taught school and where he became deeply involved in Indian affairs. He learned the Algonquin Indian language and converted many of the Indians to Christianity. The Indians called him "Shite Chief's Young Old Man." In 1659 Peter was asked by a group of men to act as surveyor in a project for developing a settlement on Nantucket Island. He helped to lay out the house lots for the village of Nantucket and to establish boundary lines between land to be owned by the white settlers and that to be retained by the Indians. Later, he served the small community as a weaver, surveyor, blacksmith, keeper of Island records and interpreter of the Indian language. Peter was a man of principal. His stubborn refusal to give up documents that he feared would be altered to the detriment of the Indians' interests brought him several months in the Nantucket jail until he ws pardoned by the governor."
1648 - 1716 Eleazor Folger 68 68 "He was a man of marked ability and satisfactorily filled the important positions to which he was called.  At the time of his death he was one of the Representatives of the Town in the General Court."

From NEHGS:
"He came to Nantucket from the Vineyard, having half a share of land on the island of Nantucket granted him, to act in the capacity of a shoemaker... He is said to have represented the county in the Gen.Court."
1659 - 1732 John Folger 73 73 "John Folger II, son of Peter, was born in 1659, married Mary Barnard, daughter of Nathaniel Barnard.  John Folger was a miller and farmer and was a Quaker.  He lived in that part of the town called Polpis. He died Aug. 23, 1732 (O.S.)" Sarah D. 1719 Joanna Folger ~1645 - 1688 Samuel Briggs 43 43 2 Feb 1664/1665 - 1688 Elizabeth Ellis Jane Bailiffe Wife number 2. John Hodsell English Genealogy of Edmund Freeman of Sandwich and his wife Bennett Hodsoll, daughter of John and Faith (Gratwick) Hodsoll, and the mother of all his children. Original source:  Hartford Connecticut State Library (1931):
1. Chancery Deposition, case of Edmund Freeman of Pulborough (1633/4) 3. Extracts from Register of the Parish Church Pulborough, co Sussex 4. Sussex Record Society ... Parish Register of Cowfold, Sussex, 1558-1812 II.C.C. (Prerogative Court of Canterbury) Swann, 59. Will of Edmund Freeman of Pulborough (father of immigrant, dated 30 May 1623). 5. II.C.C. Bowyer 56. Will of Alice Freeman of Rigate, co Surrey, widow (i.e. nee Coles) dated 13 Nov 1650. 6. Hodsoll 4ine...Sussex Record Society Inquisition of John Hodsoll of Shermanbury, died 12 Nov 1628, of son John Hodsoll of Cowfold, died 1617 (his will dated August 1617); of Bennet Hodsoll. 8. Beauchamp lineage per Visitation of London (Harleian Society). (Thomas Beauchamp of Cosgrave and son John Beauchamp of London).


HODSOLL LINEAGE  Edmund Freeman (the immigrant) was first married to Bennet Hodsoll. Following is the lineage of this ancient English family. Source is Burke's Landed Gentry (1952) page 1249     

John Hodshole         b 13__             
    Of Kensing and Stanstead, Kent co.                 
    Paid subsidy in 1373; party to a fine in 1384/5.                
                    
John Hodsole        b 13__     mar    Margaret ________________    
        d betw 1/27/1423-4 & 3/20/1423-4            
        bur Ash, Kent co.            
        Will dated Jan 27, 1423/4; proved in Prerogative Court Canterbury Mar 20, 1423/4            
        Held two acres in Stanstead called Parsons. Collector of Subsidy for Kent, 1414. Subsidy "In England, formerly, money     granted by Parliament to the king".            
                    
William Hodsoll         b _____    mar    Joan___________    
        d aft 10/8/1455            
        Mentioned in father's will. Will dated Oct 8, 1455; proved in Consistory Court of Rochester. Had eldest son Thomas; 3rd son, John of Chalice? in Ash.            
                    
William Hodsoll        b _______    mar    Isabel    
        d aft Jul 6, 1499             
        Will dated Jul 6, 1499            
        2nd son; of Wrotham and Ash.             
        Tenant of Manor of Stanstead.             
        Held Parsons (property, see above) 1493/4             
                    
Thomas Hodsoll of Ash                    
    Eldest son mentioned in father's will.                
        b _______            
        d betw 7/29/1536 & 6/2/1537            
        Will dated Jul 29, 1536             
        Will proved Jun 2, 1537.            
        Paid Subsidy 1523/4            
                    
William Hodsoll         b ______             
        Only son.            
        Held Parsons in Stanstead 1538/9.             
        Mentioned in father's will.            
                    
John Hodsoll         b _______             
        Lord of the Manor of South Ash.             
        Held Parsons in Stanstead.             
                    
John Hodsoll         b _______             
        d aft 1570/71            
        Second son.             
        Held Parsons 1567 and ?Bakus in Stanstead.            
        Paid Subsidy at Stanstead 1570/1.
William Hodsoll  mar Eleanor b Widow of Richard Parker bur Jul 9, 1631 d Oct 1, 1616, leaving one son. Party to indenture Oct 9, 1588. Lord of Manor of South Ash. Yeoman (i.e., a small landowner)

John Hodsoll of Cowfold  mar Faith __________________ d Will proved Nov 16, 1617 Left 1 son & 5 daughters.

John Hodsoll  mar Elizabeth Gratwick b Daughter of John Gratwick of Jervis in Cowfold.

Bennett Hodsoll mar Edmund Freeman b ?1598 bur Apr 12, 1630.
Mother of all his children
1596 - 23 Mar 1675/1676 John Ellis D. UNKNOWN Garcia Arnaldo Count of Bigorre 0958 - 0988 Hlodver Thorfinsson deOrkney 30 30 1598 - 6 Mar 1653/1654 Ann Materson 1596 - 1682 Edmund Freman 85 85 Excerpts from Freeman Geneology, published by Franklin Press; Rand, Avery, and Company, 1875. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875 by Frederick Freeman, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington: "Regretting the absence of definite, positive and reliable information in regard to the place of nativity of our Ancestor, or the precise date of his birth, we can only gather such facts as remain, and submit them to the reader. Family tradition has it that "he came from Devonshire." There are circumstances indicating that he came "from Oxford." He was born, as is supposed in the year 1590." …"He came from England in the year 1635, in "the ship 'Abigail,' Richard Hackwell master." The loading of the ship was begun in May; and, "after considerable delay," The Abigail sailed from London, "arrived safely in this country, and with her came many passengers."….in May certificates were secured by those who intended to embark in her, at different periods of considerable interval. Among others, were the following bearing the name of FREEMAN: viz, In a certificate bearing date, "July 1, 1635," are the names of "Elizabeth Freeman, 12 yrs; Alice Freeman, 17 yrs; Edmund Freeman, 15 yrs; and John Freeman, 8 yrs. "Edmund Freeman, husbandman, 34," and "Elizabeth Freeman, uxor, 35," are in another certificate of the same date. Previously, "June 17," certificates were furnished embracing "Marie Freeman, 50"; Jo: Freeman, 9; Sycillae Freeman, 4." The admiralty register also, after an interval, reports: "John Freeman, 35; Thomas Freeman, 24" and "Edmund Freeman, 45." The last named, we suppose is our ancestor; the four first mentioned, viz., Elizabeth, Alice, Edmund, and John, being his children. The lists of early passengers to New England, as they appear in the admiralty office, further show that "Anthony Freeman, 22" received a certificate, "Sept. 4, 1635, to embark in the ship 'Hopewell.'" 

Thomas Tupper and his Descendants by Franklyn W Tupper, pub 1945 DPL: G929.2T839tu, page 11.
"Mr Edmund Freeman, a native of Pulborough, county Sussex, was a brother-in-law to John Beauchamp, merchant of London, to whom the leaders of the colony of New Plymouth were heavily indebted. Mr Freeman was also brother-in-law of the Earl of Warwick, whose word went a great way with the leaders of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay. He came over under power of attorney from John Beauchamp to collect monies due from Plymouth colonists, and also armed with authority to organize a colonization under his own initiative granted through the direction of his powerful kinsman. He made the collections for his principal, and opportunely, after a short residence in Duxbury, he made use of his organizing authority to promote the establishment of a town on Cape Code, the first in that section of the Colony". 

Mr. Edmund Freeman, was baptized in 1596 in Pulborough, and, as the eldest son, inherited the bulk: of his father's significant estate (800 pounds) sometime after 8 June 1623. After that date. his mother (nee Alice Coles) resided with son-in-law John Beauchamp and her daughter Alice at Reigate, Surrey county- a short distance north of Pulborough.
John Beauchamp was one of the London Merchants who provided financial assistance to Plymouth Colony until at least 1645. This assistance was mentioned frequently in William Bradford's account: Of Plymouth Plantation.
In 1635, Mr Edmund Freeman came to the Colony via the ship Abigail and landed north of Boston in Saugus, now called Lynn, MA. The next year he moved down south of Boston to Duxbury, then to Plymouth in 1637. While there, he was elected a freeman; he was also given a charter for creating the first English Colony on Cape Cod: called Sandwich, where he was the principal landowner (and the "Founder of Sandwich"). When he first arrived at Saugus, he made a gift to the Colony of "20 corseletts or pieces of armor".
From 1640 to 1646, Mr Edmund Freeman was Assistant Governor of Plymouth Colony, serving under Governors William Bradford and Thomas Prence. In 1641, he was Deputy to the Colony; in 1642, he was a member of the Council of War; later he was a judge.
1596 - 1630 Bennett Hodsoll 34 34 Married Bennett Hodsoll in the Parish Church in Cowfold (St Peter's) on June 16, 1617.

Bennett Hodsoll's family history recedes to the 1300's when the family was titled HODSOLE. The first of the line in the records, per "Burke's Landed Gentry", published 1952, page 1249, was John Hodsole "of Kensing and Stanstead, Kent county", England. At various times during the centuries following, the Hodsole/Hodsoll family lived in various towns in Kent county such as: the aforesaid Kensing and Stanstead; also Ash and Wrotham.
Edmond's first wife, Bennett, according to St Mary's Parish Church records, was buried in Pulborough on April 12, 1630. While she was living, the Edmund Freeman family lived in Pulborough and Billingshurst, Sussex county: in Pulborough, from 1617 to about 1620; in Billingshurst from about 1620 to 1627; and in Pulborough again from 1627 to 1635.
1620 - 1673 Edmund (Edward) Freeman 52 52 ~1572 - 1623 Edmund Freman 51 51 "The Freeman Family" by American Genealogical Society, pub 1973. "The Coat of Arms in Emblazon A was brought to Lynn Massachusetts by Edmund Freeman from Oxfordshire, England, in 1635 .All the descendants of the various Freeman branches in America today are entitled to claim the arms of Freeman.  “Motto: Liber et Audax” “Motto: Free and Bold.”

The will of Edmund Freeman's was dated May 30, 1623, just a week before he was buried in Pulborough, Sussex co. England on June 6, 1623. The bequests set forth in this will were:
200 pounds to wife Alice (Coles) also 1/3rd of his lands plus his copyhold. The copyhold, although not described in any manner, is a tenure of property less than a freehold proven by a written transcript or record in the rolls of a manorial court. 50 pounds to daughter Alice (Freeman) Beauchamp 3 tenements in Pulborough to son John Freeman; also 100 pounds.
300 pounds to, youngest daughter Elizabeth Freeman 5 pounds to 'sister Harte * 20 pounds to each of the seven grandchildren 5 pounds to wife's brother George Coles of Amberly 10 pence to George Wate 40 pence to John Lew 5 pounds to Searam Flusher 20 pence to Abe Lee
6 pence to the High Church at Chichester Rest of goods to son Edmund Freeman, the immigrant, and to William Freeman.
~1576 Alice Coles Alice (Coles) Freeman, in a will dated November 13, 1651 in Reigate, Surrey co (she was buried there on February 14, 1651/2) provided the following bequests:
4 pounds to son Edmund Freeman (the immigrant) and his wife.
3 pounds to son William Freeman.
The house in Pulborough, bed stead, etc to sons Edmund Freeman and William Freeman.
40 pence each to son John Cuddington and his wife Elizabeth (Freeman).
All goods of hers to daughter Elizabeth (Freeman) Cuddington for life; then to her daughters Alice and Elizabeth Cuddington.
40 pence each to grandchildren Edmond Beauchamp, Richard Beauchamp, George Beauchamp, Alice Dogett, Mary Woolsley, and Elizabeth Beauchamp.
The bed from Pulborough to son William Freeman's children from his last wife (i.e., Jane Gratwick of Cowfold). 20 pence to William Fisher 40 pence to Rygate Parish.
1541 John Freman Agnes Cocke 1550 George Coles Birth: Surrey, England? 1515 Henry Freeman Edmund Freeman, birth/christening 1529 England, Father: Henry Freeman, Mother: Mary Wintershall Guillermo I Count of Astarac 1519 Mary Wintershall Some sources show a birth place of Hampshire England. My research shows She was born in the area of Little Stoke, in Oxfordshire, England. ~1636 - 1715 Kenelm Winslow 79 79 1508 - 1540 Richard Sayer 32 32 1509 - 1595 Ann Bouchier Knyvett 86 86 1700 - 1760 Gideon Ellis 60 60 1687 Thankful Ellis 1688 - 1731 Joel Ellis 43 43 1691 Dorothy Ellis 1530 Philip Lamoral Von Egmond Source: "Among the Tombs," Anonymous Pamphlet, dated 1880, courtesy of St. Peter's of  Colchester Essex England web site.  Some of the information about the Sayrs family from this site is disputed. 1532 Elizabeth Hawkins D. UNKNOWN Arnold I Count of Bigorre 1528 John Bourchier I Sayer ~1563 Marie Lamoral Von Egmond Agnes 1705 Mercy Ellis 1639 - 1688 Mercy Worden 49 49 1599 - 1672 Kenelm Winslow 73 73 1599 Elenore Newton Adams 1560 - ~1620 Edward Winslow 60 60 ~1535 - 1607 Kenelm Winslow 72 72 Winslow Gersendeof Bigorre Catherine 1562 Magdalene Ollyver ~1536 Gilbert Ollyver ~1540 Margery Young 1608 - 11 Jan 1678/1679 Peter Worden 1610 - 1687 Mary Magdaline Sears 76 76 1613 - 1676 Richard Sears 63 63 This line is yet unproved.  some researchers state that this Richard "might"  be the son of Richard Serrys and Eve Taylort who was baptised at Crosscombe, Somerset County, England on March 30, 1605. The town of Crosscombe adjoins the town of Finder, the birth place of Dorthy Jones, the wife of Richard Sares.  I have kept the line as shown for the information contained therein. 1569 - 1639 Peter Worden 70 70 1561 - 1629 John Bourchier II Sayer 68 68 Kenelm Winslow 0964 - 1087 Robert D'Evereux Count of Evereux 123 123 Thomas Winslow Josiah Winslow Samuel Winslow Nathaniel Winslow Edward Winslow Ollyver Young Adams 1595 - 1665 Edward Winslow 69 69 <1597 - <1674 John Winslow 77 77 1004 - 1034 Adelaide of Barcelona 30 30 1598 Eleanor Winslow 1600 Gilbert Winslow 11 Feb 1604/1605 - 1674 Josiah Winslow Eleanor Pelham Richard Winslow 1563 Mary Ollyver 1567 Edmund Ollyver 1569 - 1571 Frances Ollyver 2 2 1570 Thomas Ollyver 1572 George Ollyver D. UNKNOWN Anzar 1573 - 1575 Francis Ollyver 2 2 1574 Dorothy Ollyver 1576 - 1579 Gilbert Ollyver 3 3 1578 - 1580 Edward Ollyver 2 2 1640/1641 Mary Worden 1643 Martha Worden 1646 Samuel Worden 1568 Mary M. Grice 1534 - 1580 Peter Worden 46 46 1603 - 1678 Dorothy Jones 75 75 D. 0954 Acfrid II Count of Carcassonne and Rasez William Worden Mary Watson Mary Winslow Isabella Worthington 1514 Peter Worthington Isabell Anderton Worthington Anderton George Jones 1644 Esther Worden D. 0879 Oliva II Count of Carcassonne and Rasez 1647 Peter Worden Winslow Unknown ~1372 Constantine de Clifton D. 1433 Margaret Howard ~1366 - 1437 Sir John Howard 71 71 BET. 1366 - 1367 - 1391 Margaret Plaiz ~1353 - 1388 Sir John de Clifton 35 35 D. BET. 1393 - 1394 Elizabeth Cromwell D. 1398 Sir Ralph De Cromwell D. 0837 Oliva I Count of Carcassonne D. 1476 John Tyrrell Margaret de Coggishall 1386 John de Marney 1395 Joan de Throckmorton ~1360 Thomas Darcy Daughter Tirrel Henry Fitz Langley Uunknown Unknown 1640 - 1720 James Coffin 79 79 0826 - UNKNOWN Ermentrude 1045 Athelreda de England 1247 Isabella DeAragon 1268 Philippe Capet IV Capet 1270 Charles Capet 1279 Margaret (Marguerite) Capet ~1221 Louis IX Capet 1221 - 1295 Marguerite de Berenger 74 74 Raimund Berender de Provence 1198 Beatrice Savoy 1180 - 1209 Alfonso II Aragon 29 29 ~1180 Gersinde II de Sabran 0897 Gunhildeof Besalu 1152 Alfonso II Raimundez Sancha Alfonsez ~1154 Raimon Sabran du Cailar ~1156 Garsinde Forcalquier 1187 - 1226 Louis VIII Capet 39 39 Blancha Alphonsa 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII Alphonsa 58 58 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet 52 52 5 Mar 1132/1133 King Henry Il Plantagenet Eleanor Of Aquitaine 0968 Herleve deRouen 20 Mar 1176/1177 - 20 Jan 1232/1233 Thomas Savoy ~1180 Beatrix De Geneva 1136 Humbert De Savoy ~1138 Beatrix De Vienne ~1130 - 1195 William I De Geneva 65 65 Beatrix de Faucigny 1165 Philip II Augustus Capet 1170 - 1190 Isabelle Hainault 20 20 1150 - 1195 Baldwin V Hainault 45 45 D. 1194 Marguerite De Flanders 1084 Walter deBeauchamp 1135 - 1158 Sancho III, Rey de Alphonsa 23 23 ~1134 - 1156 Blanche de Navarre 22 22 1121 - 1180 Louis VII Capet 59 59 1140 - 1206 Alice de Blois 66 66 1113 Geoffrey Plantagenet William X Of Aquitaine Aenor de Chatellerault De Flanders Feb 1101/1102 - 1169 Matilda 1110 - 1150 Garcias V Navarre 40 40 1094 - 1162 Odinel deUmfreville Baron of Prudhoe 68 68 D. 1141 Marguerite de l'Aigle 1070 - Jan 1115/1116 Ramiro Sanchez Navarre 1077 Christina (Elvira) Diaz 'El Cid Campeador' de Rodrigo Diaz ' Jimena (Ximena) Diaz de Oviedo 1024 Diego Of Oviedo 1035 Christina Fernandez 0995 Fernando Gondemarez 1016 Jimina 0969 - 1011 Gondemaro Gondemarez 42 42 1060 - UNKNOWN Robert deUmfreville 0986 - 1028 Alfonso V 42 42 0953 - 0999 Bermudo II Ordonez 46 46 0970 - 1 Mar 1027/1028 Elvira Garcia de Castile 1010 Urraca Navarre Sancho III Garces Garces ~0955 - 1005 Garcia II Garces 50 50 >0935 - ~0994 Sancho II Garces 59 59 0942 Urraca ~0992 Urraca Alvar ~0960 Jimema 1 Fernandez D. UNKNOWN Eberhert Betewe Unknown Alvar Unknown Fernando Vermudez de Leon Richard Cocke Edmund Freeman Unknown Constantine de Clifton Catherine de La Pole ~1300 Adam de Clifton ~1305 Eleanor de Mortimer 1068 - 25 Jan 1139/1140 Godfrey I Duke of Lorraine ~1270 Robert de Mortimer Margery Fastolf ~1250 Constantine de Mortimer Agnes Roger de Clifton Margery de Cailly Adam de Cailly Emma de Tattershall D. 1389 John Plaiz Joan de Stapleton 1030 - 1102 Albert III Count of Namur 72 72 ~1318 - 1364 Miles de Stapleton 46 46 1308 Joan Ingham 1287 Oliver Ingham 1282 - <1344 Elizabeth La Zouche 62 62 ~1244 - ~1279 Eudo La Zouche 35 35 ~1250 Millicent de Cantilupe ~1216 - 1254 William III de Cantilupe 38 38 ~1220 - 1255 Eva Braose 35 35 1204 - 1230 William V Braose 26 26 Eve de Marshall 1085 Edith de Warenne ~1182 - 1227/1228 Reginald Braose ~1186 Grace de Briwere D. 1226 William de Briwere D. ~1216 Beatrice de Vaux William de Briwere ~1144 - 1211 William 3 Braose 67 67 D. 1210 Maud (Matilda) St. Valerie D. 1066 Reginald St. Valerie D. 1192 William De Braose Berta Fitz water D. UNKNOWN Alberic Danmartin I High Chamberlain of France 0948 Forno Duncan deMormaer D. 1143 Miles (milo) Fitz Walter Sibyl de Neufmarché ~1070 - Bet 1134/1155 Philip De Braose ~1094 Aenor De Totnais Johel (Judhael) de Toteneis ABT 1030/1049 - 1087 William I de Braose ~1041 Agnes de St. Clar Philip de Braose Gunnor D'ivry 1166 - 1216 John Lackland Plantegenet 49 49 1151 - 1200 Alberic II deDammartin Count De Dammartin 49 49 Clemence de Arcy D. 1232 Nicholas Stuteville Devorgilda Nicholas 1 Stuteville Gundred Gournay 1155 - 1219 Saher (Saire) IV de Quincy 64 64 ~1154 - 12 Jan 1234/1236 Margaret de Beaumont Robert III de Beaumont ~1134 - 1212 Petronilla (Pernel) Grantmesnil 78 78 ~1130 - ~1184 Iorwerth Ap Owain Llewelyn 54 54 D. 1130 Thomas deMarla ~1129 - ~1200 Margaret Ferch Madog 71 71 1100 - 1197 Robert de Quincy 97 97 ~1133 - 1181 Orabella (Oribalis) de Leuchars 48 48 1135 - 1200 Lord Roland de Galloway 65 65 1153 - 1217 Helena Elena de Morville 64 64 ~1138 - 1226 William de Briwere 88 88 Beatrice de Vaux ~1137 - 1197/1198 Baldwin Wake ~1160 - ~1224 Agnes Du Hommet 64 64 ~1125 - 1180 Thomas de Arcy 55 55 D. UNKNOWN Melesinde de Croucy ~1140 - 1183 Alice D' Enincourt 43 43 II Henry Plantegenet ~1085 Frederic d' Donjon ~1069 - 1127 Milo Miles de Courtenay 58 58 Corbeil ~1073 - 1095 Ermengarde d' Nevers 22 22 Unknown Unklnown Unknown de Valence Unknown 1028 - 1110 Hugh II de Gournay 82 82 Hugues II married Basilia, or Basille, daughter of Gerard de Flaitel andhis wife, who was the daughter of Robert, Count of Evereux, who was sonof Richard I, Duke of Normandy. Hugues II took part in the foundation ofSt. Etienne (Stephen) at Caen, established by William the Conqueror athis marriage to Matilda of Flanders. Hugues had been at Hastings in 1066.In 1080 he and his wife quit Gournay, took the habit of St. Benoit, andwith two sisters of Basilia entered the Abbey of Bec. In their old ageBasilia died and then Hugues built himself a hut deep in the forest untilthe Abbe ordained his obedience to leave his hermitage and become Priorof the monastery of St. Nicaise de Meulan. The monk Hugues bowed his headand went. He died 1110 and was buried by the side of Basilia. They hadRaoul, Gerard and Basilia. De Pecguigny ~1015 Waldron de St. Clar ~1020 Helena Le Bon 1175 Joan De Braose ABT 1084 in Scotland - 1116 Mary Canmore ~1059 - 1125 Eustache III Boulogne 66 66 1652 - 1734 Stephen Coffin 82 82 1652 - 1724 Mary Bunker 72 72 Richard Plantagenet D. 1653 Peter Weare 1024 - 1107 Basilia de Flaitel 83 83 Joan Massadar Elizabeth Godfrey Richard Willoughby The Visitation of Bedfordshire, England. Page 16. 1621 - 1708 John Chipman 86 86 1629 - 1684 Hope Howland 54 54 1602 - 23 Feb 1671/1672 John Howland Came to America  on the ship " MayFlower". 1607 - 1687 Elizabeth Tilley 80 80 1564 - 1635 Henry Howland 71 71 1567 - 1629 Margaret Anne Aires 62 62 1540 Aires D. 1116 Enguerrand deCoucy 1544 Miss 1604 Henry Howland 1590 Arthur Howland 1609 Hannah Howland 1602 George Howland 1605 Simon Howland 1605 Arthur Howland 1601/1602 Margaret Howland 1610/1611 William Howland 1571 - 11 Jan 1620/1621 John Tilley Came on the ship, " May Flower". D. UNKNOWN Ada deMarla 13 Mar 1567/1568 - ABT. MAR 1620/21 Joan Rogers Hurst 1530 - 1569 William Hurst 39 39 1534 - 1601 Rose Marshe 67 67 1540 - 1612/1613 Robert Tilley Will dated Dec. 31, 1612 and Proved April 6, 1613. D. 1614 Elizabeth 1515 - Jan 1578/1579 William Tilley Will dated Jan. 1, 1578/9 and Proved Jan. 28. 1578/9. 1519 Agnes Will dated June 1, 1582/3 and Proved July 13, 1582/3. ~1490 - <1556 Thomas Tilley 66 66 Will dated Aug. 21, 1556 and Proved Oct. 6, 1556. 1490 Margaret 1465 - <1520 Henry Tilley 55 55 Will dated Sept. 1, 1520 and Proved Dec. 4, 1520. D. UNKNOWN Guy deCroucy ~1468 Joan 1574 Rose Tilley 1577 George Tilley 1579 Agnes Tilley 1582 Elizabeth Tilley 1585 William Tilley 1588 Edward Tilley 1590 Alice Tilley ~1510 Agnes Tilley ? ~1535 Elizabeth Tilley 1000 Gerard deFlaitel Mary Tilley Alice Tilley <1700 - 1757 Samuel Gardner 57 57 <1706 Patience Swain 1645 Mary Severence ~1633 - 1715/1717 John Swain One of nine persons who purchased the Island of Nantucket in 1659. D. 1714 Mary Weare 1661 Mary Swain Elizabeth Swain D. 1 Mar 1680/1681 Nathaniel Weare D. UNKNOWN Dreux deCoucy 1092 - 1143 Fulk V deAnjou 51 51 Fulk V, Count of Anjou, was born 1092, and was Count 1109-1142. Hemarried 1st Ermengarde, daughter of Helias, Count of Maine, and had byher his heir, Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, Helias, who became Count of Maineor Mayenne, and two daughters, Sybilla and Matilda. He married 2ndMelesenda, daughter of Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, and became King ofJerusalem at the death of his father-in-law Sept. 4, 1131. Fulk V was sonof Bertrada de Montford, who eventually deserted her husband and becamethe mistress of Philip I of France. Fulk became Count of Anjou in 1109,and showed himself a doughty opponent to Henry I, King of England,against whom he continually supported Louis VI of France until, in 1127,Henry I won him over by betrothing his daughter Matilda to Fulk's sonGeoffrey Plantagenet. Already in 1120 Fulk V had visited the Holy Landand became a close friend of the Templars. On his return he assigned tothe Order of the Templars an annual subsidy, while he also maintained twoknights in the Holy Land for a year. In 1128 he was preparing to returnto the East when he received an embassy from Baldwin II, King ofJerusalem, who had no male heir to succeed him, offering his daughterMelisinda in marriage, with the right of eventual succession to thekingdom. Fulk accepted the offer, and in 1129 he came and marriedMelisinda, receiving the towns of Acre and Tyre as her dower. In 1131,when Baldwin died, he became King of Jerusalem. His reign is not markedby any considerable events; the kingdom which had reached its zenithunder Baldwin II, and did not begin to decline till the capture of Edessain the reign of Baldwin III, was quietly prosperous under his rule. Inthe beginning of his reign he had to act as Regent of Antioch, andprovide a husband, Raymond of Poitou, for the infant heiress Constance,daughter of Bohemund. (Her 2nd husband was Raymond of Chatillion). Twicein Fulk's reign the Eastern Emperor John Comnenus appeared in northernSyria, in 1137 and 1142, but his coming did not affect the King, who wasable to decline politely a visit which the Emperor proposed to make toJerusalem. In 1143 he died, leaving two sons by Melisande, who bothbecame Kings of Jerusalem, as Baldwin III and Almaric I. Fulk hadcontinued the tradition of good statesmanship and sound churchmanshipwhich Melisande's father and grandfather, Baldwin I and II had begun. Hisson by his first wife succeeded him as Count of Anjou. Sarah John Weare ABT 1628/1630 Esther "Hester" Weare ~1633 Nathaniel (Wyer) Weare 1637 Ruth Howland 1624 Henry Howland William Tilley 24 Feb 1626/1627 John Howland 1631 Elizabeth Howland 1633 Lydia Howland D. UNKNOWN Liutgarde De Marla 1637 Hannah Howland 1640 Joseph Howland 1644 Jabez Howland 1649 Isaac Howland Elizabeth Southworth 20 Mar 1635/1636 - 1727 Zachary Paddock Capt. 1639 - 1732 Deborah Sears 92 92 1385 - 1440 Robert Wyatt 55 55 Anne Wiot Anne was a cousin to of her husband Geoffrey. 1350 - 1388 William Wyatt 38 38 William Of Colnbrook. Agnes de Norwood was the 5th wife and widow of Sir Roger de Norwood, and her maiden name was Agnes de Cobham, 3rd daughter of Lord Cobham of Kent. 1359 was charged with transferring Sir John de Moyens (a prisoner) from Nottingham Castle to Cambridge Castle. Served under the Black Prince. 1368 Had a house at Charing, Westminster. Buried at Langley Marish, Near Windsor. 1371 & 1377 was witness to two deeds relates to Jewerby?, Nr Bradlington, Yorkshire. 1082 - UNKNOWN Aubrey deMello Jane Skipwith 1410 - 1460 Geoffrey Wyatt 50 50 Ann Holland Robert Humphrey Twice mayor of the borough of Thaxted, Essex Co., England. His will is dated 20 Oct 1637 and was proved 4 Feb. 1638 at Braintree Commissary Court of London, Essex and Herts division. In it he mentions wife Dorcas, son John, daughter Ann and her children Thomas, John, Ronert, Francis, Humphrey, Ann, Grace, Mary and Elleanor (no last name given), and to his daughter Mary "if she comes to demand it." Also mentions his sister Joan and son-in-law, Thomas Clayton.
Mary (Humphrey) Warner," TAG, Vol. 26 (1950), pg. 218.
1506 - 1595 John Hawkins 89 89 Hawkins also spelled Hawkyns, Sir John, navigator, born in Plymouth, county of Devonshire, England, in 1520[1532] ; died at sea off the coast of Puerto Rico, 21 November, 1595. His father, William, began the African slave-trade in which England was engaged for nearly three hundred years. John was knighted by Queen Elizabeth for his success in the same enterprise. In January, 1565, he crossed with a cargo of captives from Guinea to the West Indies, arrived at the island of Dominica, and traded along the Spanish coasts and Florida until about the first of June, when he returned to England. Hawkins is the first Englishman who gives any detailed account of Florida. The struggling French colony of Landonniere was then in the second year of its existence. He showed them great kindness, and left them a vessel in which to return to France. In his narrative regarding Florida he mentions the abundance of tobacco, sorrel, maize, and grapes, and ascribes the failure of the French colony to their lack of thrift, as "in such a climate and soil, with marvellous store of deer, and divers other beasts, all men may live." On his return he was presented with a coat of arms, on which was graven the figure of a savage, bound and captive, and to intimate that the African slave-trade was the true crusade of the reign of Elizabeth, the pilgrims' scallop-shell in gold, between two palmers' staves. In 1567 he embarked on a third voyage with his kinsman, Francis Drake. They captured several hundred negroes in Guinea, crossed again to Dominica, and, when the Spaniards refused to trade with them, stormed the town of Rio de la Hacha, and, not with standing the prohibition of the government, exchanged negroes with the planters for jewels and produce. They then crossed the Gulf of Mexico toward Florida, were forced to put into San Juan de Ulna for supplies, and the next day engaged in a naval action with the Spanish, in which Hawkins lost his whole fleet except two small ships. Returning to England, he became treasurer of the navy, and in 1588 was vice-admiral of the squadron that was sent against the Spanish armada. In 1595 Drake prevailed upon Elizabeth to send him with Hawkins on another expedition to Spanish America. They sailed from Plymouth with the intention of seizing Nombre de Dies, but the commanders quarrelled and separated. Porto Rico successfully resisted the English, and Hawkins died at sea, overcome by his reverses. He was an able seaman, but rude, cunning, and avaricious. He founded a hospital at Chatham for seamen. Hawkins published "A True Declaration of the Troublesome Voyage of Mr. John Hawkins to the Partes of Guynea and the West Indies, 1567-'8" (London, 1569).  Source: Edited Appletons Encyclopedia Catherine Gonson D. 1555 William Hawkins 1500 Joan or Mary Trelawney The Visitations of Cornwall states her name as :Mary sole heir to her father Roger. Roger Trelawney 1450 - 1513 Sir John Trelawney 63 63 1086 - UNKNOWN Aelis deDammartin 1446 Florence Courtenay 1423 John Trelawney 1424 Candida Blanche Pownd 1395 John Pownd 1393 - >1423 John Trelawney 30 30 1395 Joan Helligan John Trelawney ~1405 Agnes Tregodack ~1350 John Trelawney Maud Menwynick 1010 - 1064 Raoul III le Grand Count deValois & Vexin 54 54 Robert Tregodack ~1312 William Trelawney ~1315 Joan Doyngull Richard Doyngull ~1290 William Trelawney ~1296 Margery de Reparus ~1266 John de Trelawney ~1268 Laura Sergeaux William de Trelawney Jane Trewynick 0997 - UNKNOWN Pavia deVermandois John de Trelawney Joan Botterell ~1210 John de Trelawny ~1185 William de Trelawny ~1160 Richard de Trelawny ~1135 Hamelin de Trelawny ~1110 Edwin de Trelawny 1450 - 1489 John Hawkins 39 39 Declaration, 1487, April 4. 2 Henry VII. 1 item : parchment ; 10 x 23 cm.
SUMMARY: Declaration by John Hawkyn of Waishfeld (Devon), franklin, that in the grant which he made 1 April last of all his lands in Wayshfeld to Robert Hart, Richard Weysey, and John Hawkyn his brother his intention is that they shall suffer him to enjoy the lands, etc., during his life; and after his death, they shall make an estate of all the lands, etc., to John his son and heir and to the heirs of his body, with remainder to the right heirs of the grantor. Done at Wayshfeld on 4 April, 2 "Harry the VIIth." With 1 seal (1.3 cm.) of red wax, pendant on a tag, bearing a device (defaced) see similar seal on Deeds 44.
NAMES: I. Hawkin, John. II. Hart, Robert. III. Weysey, Richard. IV. Hawkin, John.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Devon. 2. Deeds--England--Washfield. 3. Devon (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Washfield (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -BBN9671

Demise, 1498, May 6. 13 Henry VII. 1 item : parchment ; 12 x 32.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Demise by Robert Harte, Richard Weysey, and John Hawkyn to John Hawkyn, son and heir of John Hawkyn, late of Wayshfeld (Devon), deceased, of all the lands, etc., which they lately had of the gift of the late John Hawkyn in Wayshfeld, to hold to him and the heirs of the said late John Hawkyn, and appointment by them of William Snow, clerk, rector of Kydysford and William Gebyns as their attorneys to deliver seisin.
WITNESSES: William Courteney, knight, son and heir of Edward Courteney, knight, earl of Devon, Peter Courteney and Humfrey Calwodeley, esquires. With 3 seals of red wax, pendant on tags: (1) (1.5 cm.) bearing a device, effaced, labeled "Hart"; (2) (1.2 cm.) bearing a device, effaced, labeled "Weysey", with rush-band tied around tag; (3) (1.3 cm.) bearing a device: a hawk with outstretched wings, labeled "Hawkyn."
NAMES: I. Hart, Robert. II. Weysey, Richard. III. Hawkin, John. IV. Snow, William. V. Gibbins, William. VI. Courtenay, Peter. VII. Calverleigh, Humfrey. VIII. Devon, Edward Courtenay, Earl of, d. 1511. IX. Devon, William Courtenay, Earl of, ca. 1475-1511.
SUBJECTS: 1. Kydysferd Church? (Devon, England) 2. Deeds--England--Devon. 3. Deeds--England--Washfield. 4. Devon (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 5. Washfield (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -APU5105

Grant, 1514, December 31. 6 Henry VIII. 1 item : parchment ; 14.5 x 25.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by John Hawkyn to William Newham, Robert Catford, and Simon Vayse of all his lands, etc., in Waysshfeld (Devon) and appointment by him of Thomas Turner and Robert Jenyn as his attornies to deliver seisin. Given 31 December, 6 Henry VIII. With a declaration English, undated of the same John Hawkyn of the intent of the above grant, namely that his feoffees should be seised to his use during his life and after his death should secure 8s. 4d. a year to Pernell, the wife of Thomas Hawkyn his son and heir, with remainders to the heirs of Thomas and Pernell, and to the grantor's right heirs. Witnesses to grant: Humfrey Calwodeley, Richard Bluet, John Cruys of Morchard. Indenture, with 1 seal of red wax, pendant on a tag, broken. Ref.: Margaret C.S. Cruwys, "A Cruwys Morchard Notebook, 1066- 1874," (London and Exeter, 1939)
NAMES: I. Hawkin, John. II. Newham, William. III. Catford, Robert. IV. Vayse, Simon. V. Turner, Thomas. VI. Jenyn, Robert. VII. Hawkin, Pernell. VIII. Hawkin, Thomas. IX. Calverleigh, Humfrey. X. Bluett, Richard. XI. Cruwys, John, fl. 1485-1555.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Devon. 2. Deeds--England--Washfield. 3. Devon (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Washfield (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 5. Cruwys Morchard (England).
HOLLIS number: -BBN9696
1465 Joan Amados ~1420 William Esquire Amados 1090 - 10 Mar 1149/1150 Renaud I Count of Bar 1425 Margaret Hawkins 1421 Andrew Hawkins 1429 Joan de Nash 1393 Osbert Hawkins 1666 - 1753 Nathaniel Jr Starbuck 86 86 D. 1750 Dinah Coffin 1581 Robert Stevens 1585 - 1648 Dionis 63 63 ~1520 - >1580 Peter Coffyn 60 60 1514 - 1566 Sir James Coffyn 52 52 Can be spelled both with a Y or a I.  Coffyn or Coffin.  Member of Privy Chamber of King Henry VIII. 1099 - 1127 Gisela deVauDemont 28 28 1545 - 1579 Mary Cole 34 34 ~1490 Willmot Chudleigh BET. 1475 - 1490 - 1555 Richard Coffyn 1450 John Coffin Philippa Elizabeth Hingston Philip Hingston Richard Coffin 1437 Alice Gambon ~1407 John Gambon 1420 - 1486 William Coffin 66 66 D. UNKNOWN Gilbert deMello 1427 Margaret Cockworthy Giffard Thomas Giffard Wilmot Knight 1382 John Coffin ~1386 Thomasin Harthey 1361 David Coffin Unknown 1332 David Coffin 1301 John Coffin 1280 Richard Coffin 1042 - 1103 Huges deDammartin 61 61 Phillippa Fitz Alan D. 1393 Richard Sergeaux Source: Burkes Peerage. Page 201. Fitz Alan Earls of Arundel, Barons Maltravers. ~1483 - 1546 Sergeant Edmund Porter Knyvett 63 63 ~1497 - 1561 Jane Or Joan Bouchier 64 64 ~1460 Edmund Knyvett ~1460 Eleanor Tyrrell William Tyrrell 1425 Margaret Darcy ~1425 - Bet. 1489 - 1490 John Knyvett 1415 - 1474 Alice Grey 59 59 1066 - UNKNOWN Rohais deBulles D. UNKNOWN Hermengarde De Bourbon ~1387 - 1439 John Grey 52 52 1387 Constance de Holand ~1355 - 9 Jan 1398/1399 John de Holand Bet. 1362 - 1363 - 1425 Elizabeth Plantagenet 1314 - 1360 Thomas de Holand 46 46 Earl of Kent by right of his wife.  He was a younger son.  In 1340 he was in the expedition to Flanders, taking part in the battle of Sluys on June 24, and the siege of Tournai in July.  He fought at Crecy on August 26, 1346, in the Prince's division, and after the battle superintended the counting of the slain.   He took the count of Eu prisoner at the capture of Caen on July 26, 1346, but surrendered him to Edward III for 80,000 florins with the shield, June 16, 1347.  During his absence abroad, his wife, Joan of Kent, went through a form of marriage (possibly under compulsion) with William Montagu, Earl of Salisbury.  Thomas was a founder Knight of the Garter in 1348.  On November 17, 1349, the Pope ordered Joan to be restored to  him.  He was summoned to Parliament from March 15, 1353/54, as Thome de Holand', whereby he is held to have become lord Holand.  His wife may possibly be the lady in whose honor the Order of the Garter was named.  On March 18, 1353, he was appointed lieutenant and captain in the duchy of Brittany.  On June 6, 1356, he was appointed keeper of the Channel Islands.  On November 20, 1360, he was summoned to Parliament as Thome Comiti Kanc'. 1328 - 1385 Joan Princess Of Wales 56 56 1301 Edmund Prince Of Wales Plantagenet Margaret Wake ~1280 Robert de Holand 1239 - 1307 "Longshanks" England Edward I Plantagenet 68 68 1050 - 1130 Forne Fitz Sigulf 80 80 1275 - 1317 Queen Marguerite Capet 42 42 1245 - 1285 King Philippe III Capet 40 40 Marie De Brabant 1207 - 1272 King Henry III Plantagenet 65 65 ~1223 - 1291 Queen Eleanor 68 68 1167 - 1216 King John Lackland King John Plantagenet 48 48 1188 Isabella Taillefer de Angouleme 3 Mar 1132/1133 - 1189 King Henry ll Plantagenet ~1122 - 1204 Eleanor Aquitaine 82 82 1113 - 1151 Count Geoffrey V Plantagenant 38 38 1026 - UNKNOWN Sigulf Fitz Forne 1102 - 1167 Queen Matilda De Beauclerk 65 65 1092 - 1143 King Foulques Fulk 51 51 ~1068 - 1135 King Henry I de Beauclerk 67 67 1079 - 1118 Queen Matilda Edith Canmore 39 39 1031 - 1093 King Malcolm III Canmore 62 62 1043/1045 - 1093 Margaret Atheling William The Conqueror 1031 - 1083 Matilda Baldwin V 52 52 Robert II Herlette of Falaise 1018 - UNKNOWN Constance of France 0963 - 1026 Richard II 63 63 0956 - 1017 Judith Judith 61 61 0933 - 0966 Richard The Fearless 33 33 0936 - 1031 Gonnor de Crepon 95 95 0911 Herbastus de Crepon 0873 - 0943 Guillaume of Normandy 70 70 Sporte de Bretagne 0880 Hubert de Bretagne 1482 - 1509 John D Sayer 27 27 1240 - 27 Feb 1274/1275 Queen Margaret Plantagenet 1010 - 1037 Manasses 27 27 1242 - 24 Mar 1274/1275 Princess Beatrice Plantagenet 16 Jan 1244/1245 Edmund Plantagenet 1253 Princess Katherine Plantagenet 1247 - 1300 D' Artois D' Artois Queen Of Navarre 53 53 ~1092 - 1126 Ermangade du Maine 34 34 1043 - 1109 de Anjou IV Fulk 66 66 1059 - 1117 Bertrade de Montfort 58 58 1060 - 1110 Count Elias du Maine 50 50 1055 - 1099 Matilda du Loire 44 44 ~1004 Geoffroy de Orleans 0973 - 1032 Constance Arles Toulose 59 59 1018 Ermengarde de Anjou Robert Of Burgundy ~1049 - >1104 Hildegarde Of Burgundy 55 55 ~1026 Guillaume Of Aquitaine 1012 in Flanders, Fra - 1067 Count Flanders Baldwin V 1009 - 1079 Adele(Alix) France 70 70 1005 - 1040 King Duncan Canmore 35 35 ~0988 Sibyl Biornsson Donald Bane The Bear Canmore Melmaer Canmore ? 1020 - 1098 Renaud deClermont 78 78 0975 - 1045 Crinan Albanah Thane of Albanah Canmore 70 70 ~0988 princess Beatrice (Bethroe) (Beatrix) Maldred Canmore ? Cospatrie Canmore ? ~1247 - <1256 Prince Richard Plantagenet 9 9 ~1250 - <1256 Prince John Plantagenet 6 6 1210 - 1238 Joan Plantagenet ? 27 27 D. 1218 Aymer De Taillefer de Valence Alice de Courtenay D. 1178 William IV de Valence 1026 Ermengardis deClermont Marguerite de Turenne Wulgrim II de Valence 1126 - 1183 Prince Pierre Capet 57 57 Unknown D. 1122 Viscount Raymond I de Turenne 1105 - 1143 Maud de Perche 38 38 1071/1100 - 1125/1185 Count William X Aquitaine 1031/1074 - 1071/1155 Count William IX Aquitaine Phillipa ~1103 - Mar 1129/1130 Eleanor de Chatellerault 1057 - 1120 Gerhard I deLorraine 63 63 ~1076 - 1151 Aimery Vicomte de Chatellerault l 75 75 ~1079 - 1119 Dangereuse de I'isle-Couchard 40 40 1127 - 1205 Elizabeth de Courtenay 78 78 1148 - 1205 Elizabeth De Courtenay 57 57 1100/1119 - 1194 Renaud (Reginald) de Courtenay ~1113 - >1158 Josceline du Donjon 45 45 1081 - 1137 King Louis VI Capet 56 56 ~1148 Isabella De Courtenay Count William VI Count of Poitou Aquitaine ~1044 Hildegarde Of Burgundy 1075 - 1116 Edith von Egisheim 41 41 D. 1108 King Philippe Auguste Capet Bertha De Holland Count Geoffrey II de Perche Beatrice Of Montdidier Of Montdidier Boson I de Turenne Gerberge de Terrasson Reginald De Courtenay Hawise de Donjon 0967 Foulques III de Anjou 0934 Adelaide de Vermandois 1045 - 2 Jan 1113/1114 Thierry II Count deMouson 1085 Agnes de Aquitaine 1138 - UNKNOWN Robert D'Oyly Count William IV Emma de Montain 1036 - 1092 Boso de Chatellerault l 56 56 1050 - 1093 Eleanor de Thouars 43 43 Barthelmy Of Isle Bouchard Gerbage ABT 1025/1026 - ~1087 Count Simon de Montfort ~1030 Agnes D'evereux ~1030 Jean de La Fleche ~1044 Paula 1019 - 1076 Louis II Count deMouson 57 57 Prince Edward Atheling Princess Agath von Brunswick 1016 - 1057 Prince Edward Atheling 41 41 ~1018 - >1044 Agatha of Germany 26 26 ABT 1195/1198 - 1245 King Raimond V ~1201 Ctss Savoy Beatrix 1177 - 1233 Thomas Savoy 55 55 Count Humbert III Savoy 1680 - 1760 Solomon Gardner 79 79 ~1685 - 1749 Anna Coffin 64 64 1028 - 21 Jan 1092/1093 Sophia of Bar 1340 - 1399 John of Gaunt Plantagenet 58 58 1345 - 1369 Blanche Plantagenet 24 24 1312 - 1377 III Edward Plantagenet 64 64 1311 - 1369 Phillipa Of Hainault 58 58 ~1300 - 24 Mar 1360/1361 Henry "Of Grosmont" Plantagenet ~1282 - >1317 Maud de Chaworth 35 35 ~1268 - ~1300 John Wake 32 32 1290 - 1349 Maud La Zouche 59 59 ~1253 Robert de Holand l 1256 Elizabeth de Salmesbury D. UNKNOWN Matilda of Swabia 1227 William de Salmesbury 1231 Avina Denotton 1267 - 25 Mar 1313/1314 Alan La Zouche ~1270 - ~1314 Eleanor Seagrave 44 44 ~1295 Lord Nicholas Seagrave D. ~1254 Glibert Seagrave D. ~1247 Maude De Lucy ~1242 Lord Roger La Zouche Ela (Eleanora) Longespee ~1220 - 1275 Thurstan de Holand l 55 55 0995 - 1029 II Frederic 34 34 ~1229 de Kellet ~1287 Joan Fitz- Barnard Baldwin Wake ~1250 John Fitz- Barnard Margaret de Grey Hawise de Quincy D. 1295 Robert de Grey D. 1312 Joan de Valoines D. 1306 Ralph Fitz- Barnard Agatha de La Lee 0992 - 1028 Frederick II Duke deUpper Lorraine 36 36 ABT 1186/1188 Robert de Quincy Ellen (Helen) ] Llewelyn 1173 - 1240 ap Iorwerth Llewelyn 67 67 1191 - ~1250 Joanna Plantegenet 59 59 ~1215 - <1259 John Fitz- Barnard 44 44 Joan Aguillon Hugh Wake Joan Stuteville 1183 - 1224 Baldwin le Wake Wake 41 41 ~1184 - <1233 Isabel de Briwere 49 49 0996 - UNKNOWN Maudeof Swabia ~1161 - ~1203 Fubert de Douvres 42 42 ~1200 - 1264 Rohese de Douvres 64 64 ~1186 - ~1248 Richard Plantagenet 62 62 Count Florent De Holland ~1030 - 1113 Gertrude of Saxony 83 83 1006 King Henri Capet ~0968 Bjorn Bearsson ~0949 - ~0950 Mormaer Duncan 1 1 WFT Est. 948-975 Seward Northumbria ~0950 De Isles D. UNKNOWN Clemence deFoix Malcolm II MacKenneth Kenneth Scotland ~0897 Malcolm Scotland 0862 Donald Scotland 0836 Constantine Scotland 0810 - 6 Feb 0858/0859 Kenneth Macalpin Scotland 0778 - 0834 Alpin Scotland 56 56 ~1467 Sir John Bouchier ~1467 - 1536 Catherine Howard 69 69 ~1444 - 1471 Humphrey Bouchier 27 27 0976 - UNKNOWN Gisele of Metz ~1450 - 1497 Elizabeth Tilney 47 47 ~1430 Frederick Tilney ~1428 - 1473 Elizabeth Cheney 45 45 D. 1485 Sir John Howard Margaret Chedworth 1385 - 1437 Robert Howard 52 52 ~1387 - 1425 Margaret de Mowbray 38 38 ~1383 - 1441 Sir John Knyvett 58 58 ~1387 Elizabeth Clifton 1408 - 1475 Thomas Tyrrell 67 67 0952 - 1024 Eve of Luxemburg 72 72 1416 Anne de Marney ~1415 - 1474 Lord John Bouchier 59 59 Lady Margery Berners Margaret Wyfold 1410 John Chedworth ~1391 - 1449 Sir Robert Darcy 58 58 1395 Alice Fitz Langley John Wyfold Uknown 22 Mar 1365/1366 Thomas de Mowbray 0938 - UNKNOWN Gerhard 0852 - 0897 Iremgard France 45 45 ~1366 Fitzallen 1362 - 1440 Reynold de Gray 78 78 ~1361 - 1414 Margaret de Ros 53 53 ~1323 - 1388 Reynold de Gray 65 65 ~1300 - ~1328 Eleanore Le Strange 28 28 ~1352 - BEF 24 Jan 1418/1419 Sir John Knyvett ~1356 - 1417 Joan Botetourt 61 61 ~1322 - 1381 Sir John Knyvett 59 59 ~1325 - 1389 Eleanor Basset 64 64 ~1333 - 1377 Sir John Botetourt 44 44 0938 - 1023 II Adelbert 85 85 1334 Katherine Wayland D. >1330 Sir Robert de Wayland Cecily de Baldock ~1278 Thomas Baldock Unknown de Wayland Unknown Uknown D. 1345 Sir Otto (or Otes) de Botetourt Sibyl ~1270 - 1324 Lord John de Botetourt 54 54 0940 - 1034 Judith 94 94 D. >1329 Maud Fitz Thomas 1239 King Edward I Plantagenet Marguerite de France ~1231 - 1274 Thomas Fitz Otto 43 43 D. 1280 Beatrice de Beauchamp Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown 0930 - UNKNOWN Sigifrid Count of Luxembourg Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown de Wayland Unknown Unknown Baldock Unknown ~1291 Sir Richard Knyvett 0875 - 0940 III Hugh 65 65 ~1295 Johanna Wourth ~1269 Richard (Robert) Wourth Wourth Unknown ~1265 John Knyvett ~1269 Johanna de Engayne 1300 - 1341 Ralph Basset 40 40 1303 Alianore Joan Sturdon ~1273 Sir Richard Basset Joan de Huntingfield Unknown Sturdon 0879 - UNKNOWN Hildegarde Sarah Jenney Gabriel Fallowell 1690 Mary Peckham Lucy 1610 - 1659 Nathaniel Pope 49 49 Came from England to Va. settled at Popes Creek on a grant from King Charles I, 1655. Col. Nathaniel's will, 1659, named only 2 sons -- Nathaniel Jr. & Thomas, both of whom were still minors. "Col. Nathaniel Pope, Gentleman," of Appomatox, Westmoreland Co., VA. He was a commissioned officer, and John Washington, serving under him, as major, married his daughter.
London Visitation 1664, p. 112 Nathaniel Pope son of John Pope of Shenfield, Essex and Mary Nicholls of London.

Immigrated to America in 1635 and settled in what is know as St. Mary' Hundred; was a member of the MD Assembly, 1641-42; and was dent as agent to Kent Island in 1647; removed to Virginia_________acres of land and named it "The Cliffs" in 1651. Commissioned Lieutenant Colonel of Westmoreland Troops Virginia, April 4, 1655. He married Lucy-----named in will Luce.

Will:(from Crozier's Virginia County Record Publications) Pope,Nathaniel, 16 May 1659; 26 April 1660 To son Thomas Pope land and plantation situated upon the cliffs, to aforesaid Thomas five cows or heifers to be given him when he shall come to the age of 21 years or day of marriage, which shall first happen. To son Nathaniel Pope the land and plantation where on I now live; my wife Lucy Pope to have the land where I now live as long as she live or remains unmarried. To John Washington that sum of money which he oweth unto me. To my son in law John Washington; to my son-in-law William Hardidge; son Thomas to be exor, and in case of his death son Nathaniel. Witnesses: John Rosier, Laurence Washington; John Washington, William Hardich.

Nathaniel's daughter, Ann married Colonel John Washington, at which time Nathaniel deeded her 700 acres of "The Cliffs". This land became part of the "Wakefield" estate, the ancestral home of the Washingtons. The land on which the Clifts Plantation was situated was first patented in 1651 by Nathaniel Pope, shortly after the Northern Neck was first opened to white settlement. Pope was one of a relatively small group of men who through connections with provincial government managed to obtain huge tracts of land in what was then a wilderness. These men and their descendants would rule Westmoreland Co., VA throughout the colonial period. Although he arrived in the New World as an illiterate yeoman, Pope was one of the richest men in Westmoreland County, a justice of the peace and a Colonel in the county militia when he died in 1660.

Nathaniel willed the Clifts Plantation to his son Thomas, during whose ownership it was first occupied circa 1670 Three Pope Immigrants came to America and settled in adjoining counties in the Northern Neck Nathaniel He setted on the Potomac in Westmoreland co., VA between Appomattox (central Virginia, where General Lee surrendered to General Grant Apr 9 1865, ending the Civil War), now Mattox, and Pope's Creek.

Excerpt from Wills: volume 1 Pope,Nathaniel, of Appomatox, 16 May 1659, 20 Apr 1660 son Thomas when 21; son Nathaniel; my wife Lucy; my son in law John Washington; son in law William Hardidge. Wit. by John Washington, Lawrence Washington, John Rosier.
Americans of Gentle Birth by Hannah Pittman Vol II: Lieut-Col. of Militia, 1655, Westmoreland Co., VA
1607 - 1648 Mary Clarke 41 41 1565 - 1616 Henry Peckham 51 51 ~1570 - 1633 Elizabeth Badger 63 63 ~1530 Robert Badger ABT 15 Feb 1524/1525 - ~1598 Henry Peckham 0842 - 0898 III Eberhard 56 56 ~1545 - BET 1573 AND 1633 Mary Badger ~1500 - 1566 John George Peckham 66 66 ~1505 Elizabeth Brane John Peckham ~1555 - 1631 Grace Sambourne 76 76 1597 - 1688 Rebecca Holbrook 91 91 ~1568 - 1625 WIlliam Holbrook 57 57 ~1570 - 1612 Edith Coles 42 42 John Broud 1560 Thomas Weaver 0900 Cunigun de Ardennes ~1562 Margaret Adams ~1440 John Weaver 1590 - 1683 Clement Weaver 93 93 ~1530 John Weaver 1533 Alice Anton 1506 Griffith Weaver 1510 Ellen Sadler 1469 Jenkin Weaver 1473 Marguerite Nanton 1505 Thomas Anton 0879 - 0933 Richwin Count of Verdun 54 54 ~1517 Katherine Chamberlain ~1491 James Chamberlain Unknown 1489 Thomas Anton ~1493 Jane Cowdrey ~1512 Nicholas Adams ~1532 Margaret Squires ~1482 John Adams ~1484 Catherine Stebbings ~1490 John Stebbings 1115 - 1183 Clemence of Bar-le-Duc 68 68 ~1452 John Adams ~1454 Jane Ranneleigh 1422 Thomas Adams ~1424 Marie Upton ~1392 Roger Adams ~1394 Jane Ellyott John Sadler ~1538 Thomas Coles 1529 - 1571 Thomas Holbrook 42 42 1532 Constance Thayer 1145 - 1205 Maud deClermont De Ponthieu 60 60 1138 - UNKNOWN Maud deValoignes 1503 - 11 Feb 1560/1561 John Thayer ~1507 - 4 Mar 1575/1576 Constance 1500 Thomas Holbrook 1500 Agnes 1474 William Holbrook 1595 - 5 Jan 1680/1681 John Peckham Crafts D. 1684/1685 Thomas Pope Will dated: Sept. 1683/4 and proved 20 Oct. 1684/5. St. Philip and Jacob, Bristal, Somersetshire, England
Names wife Joanna, Sons: Charles and Nathaniel and Thomas Pope. Also names sons Richard and John. Names daughters Mary, Elizabeth and Margaret they being under 21. [Cann, 124 (P.C.C.)

Named in the will of John Washington, the emigrant, dated 11 Sept. 1675."... I doe give to my brother Thomas Pope ten pounds out of yt money I have in England." " Also left Thomas 1,000 pounds Brit. sterling. John Washiington was the great grandfather of George Washington. John Washington married Ann Pope the sister of Thomas and da. of Col. Nathaniel Pope.
Joanna Fallowell Named in husbands will. ~1440 Jane Apleby 1085 - 1162 Renaud Clermont II Count En-Beauvaisis 77 77 ~1410 Thomas Weaver ~1410 Anne Delebere Living Warner 1591 William Walker Wifes maiden mane could be: CLARK OR COLLIER
Visitation of Surrey
1012 - UNKNOWN Hedwig Princess of Hungary 1150 - 1199 Alice Capet of France 49 49 1127 Henry I The Liberal Count of Champaigne & Brie 1176 - 7 Mar 1224/1225 William Longespée Earl of Salisbury 1045 - 1102 Stephen III Count of Blois 57 57 Count of Blois, Champaigne, Chartres, Count of Meaux and Tourain. Acrusader under Godfrey de Bouillon, who fell, gallantly fighting againstthe Infidels at Rames. He was one of the seven leaders of the FirstCrusade.
Sources:  Burke's Royal Families, Eng., Scot. and Wales, Part 1, pp. xvi,xvii,
     xxiv, xxv.
     Betham's Geneological Tables of Sovereigns of the World, Tables DCIII
     and DCLXIX, LXIX, XVI, XXIV, XXV, etc.
     Koch's Tables of Genealogies of Sovereigns of Europe, Pub. in
     Strassburg 1782, Tables LXI, LXVI.
     Allstrom's Geneological Dict. of Royal Houses of Europe, Vol. 1,
     pp. 135, 279-280, 273-4-5, Vol. 2, pp. 376-7.
     Collins, Peerage of England, Vol. 6, p. 550.
1033 - 1093 Malcolm III King of Scotland 60 60 Malcolm III "Ceanmor (Longneck)" King of Scotland, founder of the dynastythat consolidated royal power in the Scottish kingdom. The son of KingDuncan I, Malcolm lived in exile in England during part of the reign ofhis father's murderer, Macbeth.  Malcolm killed Macbeth in battle in 1057and then ascended the throne. After the conquest of England by Williamthe Conqueror, in 1066, Malcolm gave refuge to the Anglo-Saxon princeEdgar the Aetheling and his sisters, one of whom, Margaret (later St.Margaret), became his second wife. Malcolm acknowledged the overlordshipof William in 1072 but nevertheless soon violated his feudal obligationsand made five raids into England. During the last of these invasions hewas killed by the forces of King William II Rufus (reigned 1087-1100),near Alnwick, Northumberland, England. Except for a brief interval afterMalcolm's death, the Scottish throne remained in his family until thedeath of Queen Margaret, the Maid of Norway, in 1290. Of Malcolm's sixsons by Margaret, three succeeded to the throne: Edgar (reigned1097-1107), Alexander I (1107-24), and David I (1124-53). 1042 - 1093 Margaret "Atheling" Queen of Scotland 51 51 Canonised 1250 and her feast day is 16th November. In 1057 she arrived atthe
English court of Edward the Confessor. Ten years later she was in exileafter
William defeated Harold at the Battle of Hastings. She fled to Scotlandwhere
she was married against her wishes to King Malcolm to whom she bore sixsons and two daughters. Her unlearned and boorish husband grew daily moregraceful and Christian under the queen's graceful influence. Her remainswere removed to Escorial Spain and her head Douai, France.
Ancestors of Margaret from "The Forgotten Monarchy of Scotland" by HRHMichael of Albany.
1077 - UNKNOWN Alexander I King of Scotland 1080 - 1118 Matilda Princess of Scotland 38 38 1031 - 1083 Matilda of Flanders 52 52 1069 - UNKNOWN Edmund Prince of Scotland 1022 - 1057 Edward "Atheling" Prince of England 35 35 D. UNKNOWN Maroth Prince of Bihar 1045 - 1099 Ulrich "the Rich" 54 54 1044 - UNKNOWN Christina "Atheling" Princess of England 1053 - UNKNOWN Edgar Atheling King of England D. UNKNOWN Hildeswinde of Croatie 0953 - 1006 Bruno I Count of Brunswick 53 53 1023 Ida Countess Of Brunswick 1031 - UNKNOWN Ekbert I Margrave Of Meissen 0918 - 0955 Henry "The Quarrelsome" I Duke of Bavaria 37 37 1207 - 1272 Henry III King of England 65 65 Henry was crowned King at the age of nine after the death of his FatherKing John in 1216. The kingdom was ruled by William Marshall, Earl ofPembroke, the regent while Henry was growing up. When Marshall died in1219, Hubert de Burgh ruled until 1232, when Henry assumed the throne."The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. 1217 - 1291 Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence 74 74 1057 - 1110 Adelheid Von Fratenhausen 53 53 0440 - UNKNOWN Adelbert Prince of the S. Franks 0480 - UNKNOWN Wambert Ferreolus Prince of Sigermerus Franks D. 0918 Conrad I Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire 1040 - 1096 Ingelbret I Duke of Carinthia 56 56 D. UNKNOWN Maud of Burgundy 1045 - 1100 Hedwig Von Flinsbach 55 55 0932 - UNKNOWN Henri Duke Of Lorraine 0937 - UNKNOWN Wiltrude Duchess Of Bavaria ~1225 - <1289 Ralph II de Cromwell 64 64 Ralph (II) de Cromwell; summoned for military service under Edward I inWales 1276-March 1282/3. [Burke's Peerage]

----------------------------

RALPH DE CROMWELL, son and heir of Ralph DE CROMWELL, of Cromwell, Notts,West Hallam, co. Derby, &C. He was with the King, in the Army of Wales,10 Edw. I, and was summoned for Military Service from 12 December 1276 to14 March 1282/,3, and to attend the King at Shrewsbury,28 June 1283, bywrits directed Radulfo de Crumwell, Crumbwell, or Crumbewell.

He married, 1stly, Mazere or Macerie, 2nd daughter and in her issuecoheir of Philip MARMION, of Scrivelsby, co. Lincoln, Tamworth, co.Warwick, &c., by his 1st wife, Joan, 2nd daughter and coheir of Hugh DEKILPEK, of Kilpeck, co. Hereford. She died s.p.m (g). He married, 2ndly,before 26 January 1270/1, Margaret, widow of Ralph BASSET, of Drayton,co. Stafford (slain at Evesham, 4 August 1265), 1st daughter of Roger DESOMERY, of Dudley, co. Worcester, by his 1st wife (to whom she wascoheir), Nicole, 3rd daughter and eventmaclly coheir of William(D'AUBIGNY), EARL OF ARUNDEL. He died shortly before 15 September 1289(i). His widow took the veil between 5 March and 18 June 1293. [CompletePeerage III:551, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(g) Her only child, Joan, m. Alexander de Friville. They were ancestorsof the Frevilles of Tamworth.

(i) Writ of diem cl. ext., 18 Sep 1289. There is no Inq.p.m. extant. Hisson and heir, Ralph, d. shortly before 2 Mar 1298/9, leaving a son andheir Ralph, aged 7. John de Cromwell, probably a younger son, wassummoned 1308.
Nicholas Sidley 0853 - ~0930 Theodoric Count Of Ringleheim 77 77 Margery Lee Mary 0925 - 0965 Bruno I Archbishop Of Koln 40 40 0989 - 1037 Odo II (Eudes) Count of Blois and Champagne 48 48 0780 - UNKNOWN Billing Of Saxony 0865 - UNKNOWN Enda Princess Of Saxony 0856 - 0880 Bruno Prince Of Saxony 24 24 0853 - 0885 Liutgard Princess Of Saxony 32 32 0855 - UNKNOWN Thankmar Princess Of Saxony 0857 - UNKNOWN Ecbert Prince Of Saxony 0859 - 0874 Hathumoda Princess Of Saxony 15 15 0830 - 0864 Budwine Count of Italy and Metz 34 34 0861 - 0896 Gerberga Princess Of Saxony 35 35 0863 - 0919 Christina Princess Of Saxony 56 56 Alieen Murphy 1897 - 1975 William Leon Allen 77 77 William II Leon Allen son of William I Leon Allen and Martha Ann Howard. He moved his family to New Orleans La. before 1936 as he was employed by Sears Robuck and Co. on 201 Barrone St. as of 1936. This William II who married a lady named Aileen Murphy, had two [or more] sons. The first was William III Leon Allen and a son, my Bio-Father, named James Costello Allen.

Anna Warner nee Van Wart states he [William Leon II Allen] was a New Orleans Police Officer.

SSI form SS-5  SS# 433-01-5226 [as written] William Leon Allen //Age at last birthday: 39 Date of Birth: Sept. 24, 1897 Employed by:  Sears Robuck and Co. on 201 Barrone St.
Place of Birth: Camden, New Jersey. Fathers full name: William Leon Allen [deceased] Mothers full name: Martha Ann Howard [deceased] Date signed: Nov. 25, 1936
State or Territory Where Number Was Issued: Louisiana
Death Residence Localities ZIP Code: 70726
Localities: Denham Springs, Livingston, Louisiana Port Vincent, Livingston, Louisiana
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Census Records for William Allen[s]

William ALLEN  Male
Other Information: Birth Year <1859>
Birthplace NJ
Age 21
Occupation Works On Farm
Marital Status S <Single>
Race W <White>
Head of Household William ALLEN 
Relation Son
Father's Birthplace IRE
Mother's Birthplace IRE
Source Information: Census Place Bridgewater, Somerset, New Jersey
Family History Library Film 1254798 
NA Film Number T9-0798 Page Number 400C 1880 US Census
************************

William ALLEN Household  Male
Other Information: Birth Year <1826>
Birthplace IRE Age 54 Occupation Farmer
Marital Status M <Married>
Race W <White>
Head of Household William ALLEN
Relation Self Father's Birthplace
IRE Mother's
Birthplace IRE
Source Information: Census Place Bridgewater, Somerset, New Jersey Family History Library Film 1254798  NA Film Number T9-0798 Page Number 400C 1880USCensus
************************
Other William Allens from the census that match +or- 2 years:
William ALLEN Household  Male
Other Information:
Birth Year <1857>
Birthplace NJ
Age 23
Occupation Works In Car Shop On R.R.
Marital Status M <Married>
Race W <White>
Head of Household William ALLEN
Relation Self
Father's Birthplace
NJ Mother's Birthplace NJ
Source Information: Census Place Manchester, Ocean, New Jersey Family History Library Film 1254794
NA Film Number T9-0794 Page Number 107B 1880 US Census
*******************
William Leon Allen b. 1795??
85 y.o. 1880 Census Warnen Co. NJ 1840 Census, Somerset Co. Bridgewater twnsp.
1830 Census same place Somerset Co. list of wills has a William L. Allen Inv. 1863/ and a /William L. Allen Inv. 1889/ as well as 3 other "William Allen[s]"
******************
Martha Ann Howard 
1880 census has her name as Mary E. if this is the same wife
******************
From Genforum:
I did a general search on Ancestry for William Leon Allen. And for all the WLA's you've got they only had one. He is listed in the California Deaths, 1940-97 database as born in Pennsylvania 31 Aug 1874 and dying in Riverside County, CA on 7 Dec 1956. Any chances this is your guy? Good hunting, Phil Barclay
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0820 - 0879 Gottfried Ragnhildis King of Haithabu 59 59 0800 - 0890 Wolpert Von Ringleheim 90 90 0800 - 0890 Alburgis Von Ringelheim 90 90 0968 - UNKNOWN Bertha Ivrea 0870 - 0980 Willa Of Burgundy 110 110 0950 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosele Susanna Princess Of Italy Rosele's second husband was Robert II King of France. 0830 - 0883 Richildeof Arles 53 53 0855 - 0915 Adalbert Marquis Of Tuscany 60 60 0871 - 8 Mar 0924/0925 Bertha Princess Of Lorraine 0836 - 0875 Waldrade Queen Of Lorraine 39 39 0805 - 0855 Lothaire I Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 50 50 0800 - 20 Mar 0850/0851 Ermengarde Countess Of Tours 0867 - UNKNOWN Hugues Prince Of Lorraine 0840 - 0907 Gisela Princess Of Lorraine 67 67 0873 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde Princess Of Lorraine 0778 - 0840 Louis I Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 62 62 Louis I, Le Debonnaire or Gentle, Roman Emperor, 814-840, was born 778,and was son of Charlemagne by his wife Hildegarde. He married LadyJudith, the Fair Maid of Bavaria, and by her had a son who succeded him,Charles II, King of France. He had succeeded his father in 814, but in817 he yielded to the wishes of his sons and gave each of them a share ofhis dominions, and thus complications arose from which resulted thedissolution of the Empire. He died 840. By his first wife, Irmingardis,daughter of Ingram, Count of Hasbania in Saxony, he had a daughterAlpaidia. 0785 - 0818 Ermengarde Princess Of Hesbaye 33 33 0800 - 0855 Boso III Turin 55 55 1079 Dangereuse del'Isle- Bouchard 0712 - UNKNOWN Landree of Hesbaye 0833 - UNKNOWN Rotrud Princess Of Italy 0825 - 0875 Louis II Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 50 50 0828 - UNKNOWN Charles King Of Provence 0996 - 1037 Albert (Alberic) II Count Of Macon 41 41 0830 - UNKNOWN Helletrude Princess Of Italy 0834 - UNKNOWN Gisle Princess Of Italy 0740 - 0802 Luitfrid II Count Of Upper Alsace 62 62 0825 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey Count de Gastinois 0798 Luitfrid III Count Of Upper Alsace 0801 - 0831 Richard Count of Amiens and Meaux 30 30 0810 - 0866 Adelaide De Tours & Alsace 56 56 0748 - 0779 Luitfrid I Duke Of Alsace 31 31 0665 - 0722 Liutwin Count and Bishop of Treves 57 57 0675 - 0741 Adalbert Duke Of Alsace 66 66 D. UNKNOWN Ansaud 0742 Theitbaldus Of Alsace 0645 - 20 Feb 0719/0720 Eticho I Duke Of Alsace 0650 - 0744 Berswinde Duchess Of Alsace 94 94 0697 Eberhard Duke Of Alsace 0699 Eugenia Of Alsace 0772 - UNKNOWN Boso II Count of Italy 0701 Attala Of Alsace 0703 Gundlindis Of Alsace 0705 Maso Of Alsace 0620 Lendisius Duke of Alsace 0673 Eticho II Count Of Lower Alsace 0677 Ottilia Of Alsace 0679 Rosvvinda Of Alsace 0681 Hugo Of Alsace 0590 Erchembaldus Duke of Alsace 0564 - UNKNOWN Gerberga Of Franconia 0750 - UNKNOWN Boso I Count of Italy 0560 Ega Duke of Alsace 0594 - 0688 Leudefindis 94 94 0538 - UNKNOWN Richemeres Duke Of Franconia 0540 - 0658 Gertrudis Duchess Of Franconia 118 118 1013 - 1040 Duncan I King of Scotland 27 27 Malcolm violated the established system of succession whereby thekingship alternated between two branches of the royal family. UponMalcolm's death, Duncan succeeded peacefully, but he soon faced therivalry of Macbeth, Mormaor (subking) of Moray, who probably had a betterclaim to the throne. Duncan besieged Durham unsuccessfully in 1039 and inthe following year was murdered by Macbeth near Elgin, Moray. Duncan'selder son later killed Macbeth and ruled as King Malcolm III Canmore. D. UNKNOWN Ordgar Devon Earl of Devon 0984 Bethoc Princess of Scotland 0954 - 1034 Malcolm II King of Scotland 80 80 The first to reign over an extent of land roughly corresponding to muchof modern Scotland. Malcolm succeeded to the throne after killing hispredecessor, Kenneth III, and allegedly secured his territory bydefeating a Northumbrian army at the Battle of Carham (1016). He not onlyconfirmed the Scottish hold over the land between the rivers Forth andTweed but also secured Strathclyde about the same time. Eager to securethe royal succession for his daughter's son Duncan, he tried to eliminatepossible rival claimants, but Macbeth, with royal connections to bothKenneth II and Kenneth III, survived to challenge the succession. 0890 - 0954 Malcolm I King of Scotland 64 64 King of the Picts and Scots (Alba), also called Malcolm Macdonald.Malcolm succeeded to the crown when his cousin Constantine II entered amonastery (943). He annexed Moray to the kingdom for the first time.After driving the Danes from York, the English king Edmund turned Cumbriaover to Malcolm, apparently as a fief or seal of alliance. Later, whenNorsemen again invaded the land, the Scots sent raids against theEnglish, and in 954 the West Saxon king Eadred reunited the northerncounties to his dominions. Malcolm was slain the same year at Fordoun inthe Mearns in a conflict with his own northern regions. 1064 - UNKNOWN Edward Prince of Scotland 0902 - 0948 Hugh Count of Vienne and Burgundy 46 46 1061 - UNKNOWN Ethelred Abernathy Earl of Fife Ethelred or Aethelred was also Abbot of DunkeldIn and this title carriedthe ownership of the lands belonging to the Church but involved noecclesiastical functions. In the twelfth century the Abernethy familyemerges as the Lay Abbots of the Culdee Irish Christian Monastery ofAbernethy. Its members exercised great territorial rights, and presentlyassumed the title of Lords of Abernethy. "He furthermore says that, "Inthe last chapter we have seen that the Lord of Abernethy, the Earl ofFife, and the Priest of Wadele were the three supreme judges inconnection with the law of Clan Macduff; some close blood connectionseems to have existed between the Lord of Abernethy and the Earl of Fife,for the armorial bearings of the two families support the relationship".Ethelred, the first Earl of Fife and the first known to have adopted thesurname "Abernethy", was succeeded by his son, Sir Alexander, who in turnwas succeeded by his son, Sir Hugh. The title as Earl of Fife devolvedupon his eldest son, Duncan.
Source:   "Abernethy Family"  Call Number: Gc 929.2 Ab3701a
1074 - UNKNOWN Edgar King of Scotland D. UNKNOWN Sibyl Princess of England 1050 - UNKNOWN Robert II Duke of Normandy 1155 - 1183 Henry The Young King of England 28 28 1058 - 1100 William II King of England 42 42 William II was King of England from 1087-1100. 1158 - 1186 Geoffery Prince of England 27 27 0876 Rothildeof Neustria 1157 - 1199 Richard I Lion-Hearted King of England 41 41 0870 - UNKNOWN Roger Count Du Maine Mary Crane Philip Noel Stated in the pedigree of Noel in the Visitation of Leicester to be living in 1268. Robert Greesebroke 0930 - UNKNOWN Hoel II Count deNantes 0547 - 0591 Ceawlin King of Wessex 44 44 0742 - 0818 Charlemagne Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 76 76 Charlemagne was King of the Franks 768-814 and Emperor of the Holy RomanEmpire from 800-814. His Empire included all of Christian Western Europe(Italy, France, Austria, Germany, Spain). 0803 - 0838 Pippin I King of Aquitaine 35 35 0816 - UNKNOWN Hildegard Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0758 - 0783 Hildegard Princess of Alemannien 25 25 0774 - UNKNOWN Adelheid Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0776 - 0825 Welf of Swabia 49 49 0775 - UNKNOWN Dhuada Princess of France 0779 - UNKNOWN Bertha Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0781 - UNKNOWN Gisela Princess of Franken 0782 - UNKNOWN Hildegard Princess of Franken 0773 - 0810 Pippin Carolman King of Italy 37 37 D. UNKNOWN Gerold Bishop of Mayence 0800 - UNKNOWN Rotrud Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0806 - UNKNOWN Ludwig II King of France 0910 - 26 Jan 0945/0946 Edith Princess of England 0933 - UNKNOWN Archbishop Wilhelm of Mainz 0765 - 0856 Hugh III Count Of Upper Alsace 91 91 0931 - 0953 Luitgard Princess of Germany 22 22 D. UNKNOWN Arnoldus of Saxony 1208 - 1265 Simon de Montfort VI Earl of Leicester 57 57 1129 - 1190 Theobald IV Blois Count of Blois 61 61 1008 - 1060 Henry Capet I King of France 52 52 0915 - 0963 William I "Towhead" Count of Poitou 48 48 William was also the Count of Auvergne, Velay, Limousin and the Duke ofAquitaine. 0917 - 0962 Adele of Normandy 45 45 0897 - 0956 Hugh the Great 59 59 Hugh Capet, the Great of Neustria, Count of Paris. 0945 - 0983 Otto II Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 38 38 OTTO II, Holy Roman Emperor (967-83), king of Germany (961-83), the Sonof Otto I, with whom he ruled jointly from 967 to 973. In 976 hesuppressed a rebellion that was led by his cousin Henry II, duke ofBavaria. Two years later, having been attacked by Lothair, king ofFrance, Otto drove the French out of Lorraine but was unsuccessful inbesieging Paris. Later Lothair renounced Lorraine, and peace wasestablished. Otto next invaded the southern Italy, gaining possession ofNaples, Salerno, and Taranto, but he was overwhelmingly defeated by theGreeks and Saracens at Crotona in 982. He died in Rome while planning asecond invasion. 0745 - UNKNOWN Carloman of the Franks 0780 - 0840 Rutpert III Count in the Wormsgau & Upper Rhine 60 60 1158 - 1214 Alfonso VIII Sanchez King of Castile 56 56 1103 - UNKNOWN Eleanor De Chatellerault de Rochefoucauld 1076 - UNKNOWN Aimery I Viscount Châtellérault de Rochefoucauld D. UNKNOWN Gisela of France 1152 - 1225 William De Longspee Prince of England 73 73 0982 - UNKNOWN Donalda Princess of Scotland 0948 Forno Duncan of Mormaer 1034 - 1194 Donald Ban III King of Scotland 160 160 Also spelled Donaldbane, Donalbane, Bane also spelled Ban or Bain was sonof Duncan I.  Upon the death of his brother Malcolm III Canmore (1093)there was a fierce contest for the crown. Donald Bane besieged EdinburghCastle, took it, and, with the support of the Celtic Scots and the customof tanistry (q.v.; the Celtic system of electing kings or chiefs), he wasking nominally for at least six months. He was expelled by Duncan II, sonof Malcolm, assisted by English and Normans and some Saxons. Duncan'sreign was equally short, for Donald Bane had his nephew slain and againreigned for three years.  These years saw the last attempt of the Celtsto maintain a king of their race and a kingdom governed according totheir customs. Edgar the Aetheling (q.v.), who had newly befriended theNorman king of England, led an army into Scotland, dispossessed DonaldBane, and advanced his nephew Edgar, son of Malcolm III, as sole king ofthe Scots. 1037 Melmare Earl of Atholl 1038 - UNKNOWN Duncan Earl of Moray 0792 Waldrada deOrleans 1102 - UNKNOWN William Atheling Prince of England 1104 - UNKNOWN Richard Prince of England 1092 - 1143 Fulk V Count of Anjou 51 51 Fulk V, Count of Anjou, was born 1092, and was Count 1109-1142. Hemarried 1st Ermengarde, daughter of Helias, Count of Maine, and had byher his heir, Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, Helias, who became Count of Maineor Mayenne, and two daughters, Sybilla and Matilda. He married 2ndMelesenda, daughter of Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, and became King ofJerusalem at the death of his father-in-law Sept. 4, 1131. Fulk V was sonof Bertrada de Montford, who eventually deserted her husband and becamethe mistress of Philip I of France. Fulk became Count of Anjou in 1109,and showed himself a doughty opponent to Henry I, King of England,against whom he continually supported Louis VI of France until, in 1127,Henry I won him over by betrothing his daughter Matilda to Fulk's sonGeoffrey Plantagenet. Already in 1120 Fulk V had visited the Holy Landand became a close friend of the Templars. On his return he assigned tothe Order of the Templars an annual subsidy, while he also maintained twoknights in the Holy Land for a year. In 1128 he was preparing to returnto the East when he received an embassy from Baldwin II, King ofJerusalem, who had no male heir to succeed him, offering his daughterMelisinda in marriage, with the right of eventual succession to thekingdom. Fulk accepted the offer, and in 1129 he came and marriedMelisinda, receiving the towns of Acre and Tyre as her dower. In 1131,when Baldwin died, he became King of Jerusalem. His reign is not markedby any considerable events; the kingdom which had reached its zenithunder Baldwin II, and did not begin to decline till the capture of Edessain the reign of Baldwin III, was quietly prosperous under his rule. Inthe beginning of his reign he had to act as Regent of Antioch, andprovide a husband, Raymond of Poitou, for the infant heiress Constance,daughter of Bohemund. (Her 2nd husband was Raymond of Chatillion). Twicein Fulk's reign the Eastern Emperor John Comnenus appeared in northernSyria, in 1137 and 1142, but his coming did not affect the King, who wasable to decline politely a visit which the Emperor proposed to make toJerusalem. In 1143 he died, leaving two sons by Melisande, who bothbecame Kings of Jerusalem, as Baldwin III and Almaric I. Fulk hadcontinued the tradition of good statesmanship and sound churchmanshipwhich Melisande's father and grandfather, Baldwin I and II had begun. Hisson by his first wife succeeded him as Count of Anjou. D. UNKNOWN Hermengarde De Bourbon 1134 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey VI Mantel Plantagenet 1138 - 1212 Emma Plantagenet 74 74 1164 - 1199 Joanna Princess of England 35 35 1156 - 1189 Matilda Princess of England 33 33 0752 - 0807 Rutpert II Count in the Wormsgau & Upper Rhine 55 55 1160 - 1161 Philip Prince of England England 1 1 1164 - 1198 Constance Countess of Bretagne 34 34 1163 - 1182 Guglielmo II King of Sicily 19 19 1145 - UNKNOWN Mary Capet of France 0899 - 0938 Bozon Marquis Of Tuscany 39 39 1066 - UNKNOWN Anna Princess of England 1054 - UNKNOWN Richard Prince of England 0762 - 0789 Theodedrata 27 27 1055 - UNKNOWN Cecilia Princess of England 1061 - UNKNOWN Constance Princess of England 1064 - UNKNOWN Agatha Matilda Princess of England 1035 - UNKNOWN Henry Count of Flanders 1037 - UNKNOWN Judith Countess of Flanders 0769 - 0825 Hadrian Count of Orleans 56 56 John Sewell 1682 Judith Scott 0715 - 0788 Nebi Duke of Allemania Count in the Linzgau 73 73 0910 - UNKNOWN Jubel Juhel Bérenger Comte de Rennes 0978 - 1026 Ulf (Wolf) Thorkilsson Jarl of Denmark 48 48 D. UNKNOWN Berenger de Senlis Count of Bayeux 0999 - 1035 Robert The Devil II Duke of Normandy 36 36 Duke of Normandy from 1027 to 1035. 0863 - UNKNOWN Ermetrude Roucy of Rheims 1005 - UNKNOWN Eleanor Princess of Normandy 1026 - UNKNOWN Elena of Normandy 0993 - 26 Jan 1057/1058 William Poincius Duke of Normandy 0685 - UNKNOWN Sigrand Count of Hesbaye 1027 - 1054 Adelaide Countess of Ponthieu 27 27 0467 - 0535 Cedric King of Wessex 68 68 0600 - 0678 Anisgise Mayor of Austrasia 78 78 D. 0641 Pepin of Austrasia 0764 Ulrich I Count of Argengau 0780 - 0830 Heilwig of Saxony 50 50 0725 - 0823 Welf de Altdorf 98 98 0690 - 0724 Chrotrudeof Alemania Duchess of Austra 34 34 0905 - 0967 Bertha Von Swabia 62 62 0744 - 0830 HiltrudeCountess Of Upper Alsace 86 86 0679 - 0773 GerlindeDuchess Of Alsace 94 94 1160 - UNKNOWN Margaret Capet of France 0719 - 0799 Edith Duchess Of Alsace 80 80 1160 - 1218 Aymer of Angoulême Count of Taillefer 58 58 1214 - 1241 Elizabeth Empress of Germany 27 27 1125 Petronella Alix 0958 - 1018 William I Count of Provence 60 60 0883 - 0928 Louis III King of Provence 45 45 0920 - 0965 Bozon Count of Provence 45 45 D. UNKNOWN Konrad Rheingau D. UNKNOWN Judith Swabia 0630 Gunza de Treves D. UNKNOWN Cedde 0929 - 1013 Alix Countess of Equish 84 84 0955 - 1013 Rainer IV Count of Hainault 58 58 Rainer or Reginar IV, Count of Hainault, succeeded to his father's titleafter a long struggle to assert his claims. When Rainer III was sent intoexile Duke Bruno gave Hainault to Garmer and Renaud, and after Otto diedRainer and his brother Lambert attacked the two counts and slew them inbattle. Whereupon Otto II took Hainault away from them, but Rainer andLambert reappeared with new forces, but were defeated in 976, and it wasnot until much later that Rainer established himself as first proprietaryCount of Hainault, and ruled in peace after establishing himself at Mons,capital of Hainault. He married Hedwige, daughter of Hugh Capet, King ofFrance, and had Rainer V, and a daughter Beatrix married Count Rouci. 0972 - UNKNOWN Adwige Princess of France 0936 - 0961 Constance of Provence 25 25 D. UNKNOWN Warinus of Troyes D. UNKNOWN Teutberga of Arles D. 0726 Ine King of Wessex D. UNKNOWN Athelbur Von Wessex 0742 - 0840 N Von Kent 98 98 0590 - UNKNOWN Bodilon Count and Bishop of Treves 0770 - 0858 Redburga de Toulouse 88 88 D. UNKNOWN Oslac Von Wessex D. UNKNOWN Ethelwith Von Wessex D. UNKNOWN Cuthburh D. UNKNOWN Cwenburh D. UNKNOWN Aldfrith King of Northumbria D. UNKNOWN Burgred King of Mercia 0815 - UNKNOWN Gerard de Auvergne Count de Auvergne 0795 - 0843 Renaud Count de Poitiers 48 48 D. UNKNOWN Ringart D. UNKNOWN Singrada 0900 - UNKNOWN William The Younger II Count of Auvergne 0650 - UNKNOWN Godfrey Duke of Allemania 1592 - 1635 Sarah 43 43 Children
John BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1625
George BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1613
Thomas BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1614
Nathaneal BLANCHARD b: ABT. 1616
Samuel BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1618
William BLANCHARD b: ABT. 1620
Peter BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1622
Gorlick BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1624
Jonathan BLANCHARD  b: ABT. 1626
1076 - 1120 Ralph Basset 44 44 Few families in the early annals of England can boast of a more eminentprogenitor than the Bassets, and the descendants of few of theAnglo-Norman nobles attained a higher degree of power than those of RalphBasset (son of Thurstan, the Norman), who was justice of England underKing Henry I. We find his son Ralph, in the reign of Stephen, "aboundingin wealth and erecting a strong castle upon some part of his inheritancein Normandy." Ralph Basset, the justice of England, required none of theartificial aids of ancestry to attain distinction; he had within himselfpowers sufficient at any period to reach the goal of honour, butparticularly to the rude age in which he lived. To his wisdom we are saidto be indebted for many salutary laws, and among others for that of frankpledge. Like all the great men of his day, he was a most liberalbenefactor to the church. He d. in 1120, leaving issue, Thurstine,Thomas, Richard, Nicholas, and Gilbert. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,1883, p. 26, Basset, Barons Basset, of Welden]

pg 26, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", pub 1883
~1198 - <1271 Richard de Grey 73 73 Richard de Grey, of Codnor, co. Derby, the eldest son, having adhered toKing John, had the lands of John de Humez, in Leicestershire, and Simonde Canci, in Lincolnshire, two of the rebellious bars, conferred uponhim; and in the 10th Henry III [1226] he was made governor of the Islesof Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, and Sarke, of which, in the 36th of thesame king, he had a grant, in fee farm, for 400 marks, to be paid yearlyinto the king's exchequer. In which year the king, intending a pilgrimageto the Holy Land, and causing the bishops of Worcester and Chichester topreach a similar course to the people, although, generally speaking, thediscourses of the prelates had but little effect, this Richard, and John,his brother, came forward, which so pleased the king that he embracedthem in his arms, kissed them, and called them brothers. In a few yearsafterwards (42nd Henry III) [1258], we find Richard de Grey constable ofDover Castle and warden of the Cinque Ports, and being both diligent andtrusty in those offices, discovered much treasure which the Poictovins(the in high favour with the king) ha read to convey into France. "Butabout this time," says Dugdale, "there being no little contest touchingAthelmure, the king's brother, by the mother, then elect bishop ofWinchester, divers of the great barons opposing him, in regard he was ofthat party against whom they took high exception for misleading the kingand consuming the wealth of the land. Whereupon he fled to Rome and, byfalse suggestions, procured the pope's letters for his institution, whichwere sent by Walescho, a grey friar, who landed at Dover. The barons grewso incensed that they forthwith sent Hugh Bigot, then justice of England,thither to inquire by what authority he was suffered to come on shore;who went to this Richard (then constable of the castle), and said, 'Haveyou been trusted by the people of England, as a faithful warden of theports, and suffered this person to land, without our knowledge, to themanifest violations of your oath? We think you not only unworthy of thisplace any longer, but to be farther questioned for so great atransgression tending to the public damage of the whole realm,' andthereupon took the custody of the castle and of all the ports into hisowns hands." Subsequently to this period, Richard de Grey arrayed himselfunder the baronial standard and, being with his son John in the arms ofyoung Simon de Montfort at Kenilworth, was surprised in the night-time bya party from Prince Edward's army, and taken prisoner with several otherbarons. For this reason his lands were seized upon by the crown but wereafterwards restored upon the payment of a fine under the decreedenominated "Dictum de Kenilworth." Richard de Grey m. Lucia, dau. andheiress of John de Humez mentioned above, and (with two daus., Agnes, m.to Sir William Fitz-William,; and Isabel, m. William, son of Henry deFauconberg), had a son, John, who m. Lucy de Mohun. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, England, 1883, p. 248, Grey, Baron Grey, of Codnor, co. Derby]

____________________________

Richard de Grey, of Codnor; Warde Guernsey and Jersey 1226 and 1254,Sheriff of Essex and Herts 1239, Steward of Gascony c1248 and 1253; sidedwith Simon de Montfort in the Baron's War 1258 on; Keeper of Dover Castleon behalf of the baronial party, Keeper of Rochester after Battle ofLewes 1264; later taken prisoner by Henry III and his lands wereconfiscated but these were shortly afterwards restored to him. [Burke'sPeerage]
William de Warren Woodcock Robert Castell 1039 - 1086 Thurston Basset 47 47 0465 - 0543 Chrotechilde of Burgundy 78 78 0822 - 0904 Eadburh of Mercia 82 82 0411 - 0502 Esla King of Saxony 91 91 1015 - UNKNOWN Fouque deAulney 0383 - 0474 Gewis King of Saxony 91 91 0355 - 0446 Wig King of Saxony 91 91 0327 - 0418 Freawine King of Saxony 91 91 0299 - 0390 Frithogar 91 91 0248 - 0341 Nanna 93 93 0190 - 0280 Frithuwald 90 90 0960 Osmond deCenterville 0160 - 0245 Freothalaf 85 85 0130 - 0220 Finn 90 90 ~0100 - 0179 Flocwald 79 79 D. UNKNOWN Gewar King of Norway 0592 - 0652 Itte of Landen 60 60 0530 - UNKNOWN Cloderic The Parricide King of Cologne The Riparian, Frankish Kings of Cologne, of the Mergovinigian family,kinsman of Clovis I King of the Salic Franks. Cloderic was murdered byagents of Clovis I. 0415 - 0468 Childeric I King of the Franks 53 53 Clodius was known as Clodius "Long Hair" King of Franks. 0422 - 0470 Basinna Queen of the Franks 48 48 D. UNKNOWN Genebald D. UNKNOWN Merovee King of Franks D. UNKNOWN Luitfried 0380 - 0429 Pharamond King of the Franks 49 49 Pharamond, Duke of the East Franks in 404 A. D., was elected King of theWest Franks 419, and is reckoned by historians as the first King ofFrance. He married Argotta. 0390 - 0459 Argotta Queen of Franks 69 69 Argotta was descended from Heli, first King of the Britons, one of whosedescendants had married one of the Kings of France, a daughter Althildiswho married Marconier IV, King of France A. D. 128, from whom Argotta was14th in line. Thus she was 22nd in line from Heli, King of the Britons,and was called the mother of all the Kings of France. 0350 - 0404 Marcomir Duke of the Franks 54 54 0330 - 0389 Clodius Duke of Franks 59 59 0300 - 0379 Dagobert Duke of Franks 79 79 0272 - 0350 Genebald Duke of Franks 78 78 0250 - 0317 Dagobert Kind of Franks 67 67 0223 - 0306 Walter King of the Franks 83 83 ~0199 - 0298 Clodius III King of the Franks 99 99 ~0175 - 0272 Partherus King of the Franks 97 97 1154 Agatha deBruce 1160 - 1218 Alice deCourtenay 58 58 ~0158 - 0253 Hilderic King of the Franks 95 95 ~0137 - 0213 Sunno King of the Franks 76 76 ~0120 - 0186 Farabert King of the Franks 66 66 ~0104 - 0166 Clodmir IV King of the Franks 62 62 ~0106 - 0179 Hafilda Princess of the Rugij 73 73 <0100 - 0149 Marcomir IV King of the Franks 49 49 <0100 - 0128 Odomir King of the Franks 28 28 <0100 - 0114 Richemer King of the Franks 14 14 <0100 - UNKNOWN Ratherius King of the Franks <0100 - UNKNOWN Antenor IV King of the Franks 0927 - 0987 Judith of Bavaria 60 60 <0100 - UNKNOWN Clodemir III King of the Franks <0100 - UNKNOWN Marcomir III King of the Franks <0100 - UNKNOWN Clodius II King of the Franks D. UNKNOWN Queen of the Franks Verica 0817 - 0850 Pepin Seigneur II Count of Perrone 33 33 0797 - 0818 Bernard King of Italy 21 21 0500 - 0571 Ausbert the Senator of Moselle 71 71 0476 - 0506 Tonatius Bishop Of Uzes 30 30 0440 - UNKNOWN Tonatius Ferreolus Praetorian Perfect of Gaul 0410 - 0476 Ferreolus Tonatius 66 66 D. 1075 Gebhardt Count of Supplinburg 0454 - 0525 Dode 71 71 1163 - 1230 Berengaria De Navarre 67 67 1211 - UNKNOWN Joan Princess of England 1055 - 1088 William de Warenne Ist Earl of Surrey 33 33 William de Warren married Gundred, 4th daughter of William, theConqueror, and his wife Matilda of Flanders. (It has been said thatGundred was not the daughter of William, the Conqueror, but that she wasthe daughter of Matilda of Flanders by, perhaps, a previous marriage. TheInvincible Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 5, p. 26, says that the inseription onGundred's tombstone describes her as wife of William de Warren anddaughter of Wm., the Conqueror. Also in Burke's Dormant and ExtinctPeerage, pp. 154, 568 and 588, she is called daughter by Wm., theConqueror, in a charter signed by Wm., William de Warren and Henry I, sonof William, the Conqueror. Thus proving this much discussed question. E.E. W.) For the important part that William de Warren took in the Conquestof England he received 300 lordships in the counties of Salop, Essex,Suffolk, Oxford, Hants, Cambridge, Bucks, Norfolk, Lincoln and York.

Ancestry shown differs from that shown by Cokayne in "The CompletePeerage",
and follows "Aspects of Robert of Torigny's genealogies revisted";"Nottingham
Medieval Studies,xxxvii,1993,pp.21-27; as cited by A.B.Wilson andS.Baldwin
<abwilson@uclink2.berkeley.edu>. The Complete Peerage vol.XIIpI,p.493-495.
1112 Adelaide of Angers D. UNKNOWN Adelindis 1136 - UNKNOWN William Count of Poitou D. UNKNOWN Helias Count of Maine D. UNKNOWN Isabel de Aragon D. UNKNOWN Pedro de Aragon 0945 - 1004 Adelaide of Poitou 59 59 0937 - 0995 William II "Ironarm" Count of Poitou 58 58 0846 - 0895 Pepin I De Vermandois Count of Senlis 49 49 D. UNKNOWN Almondis von Gévaudan 0689 Rutpert I de Wormsgau 1004 William Duke of Aquitaine 1012 Odo (Eudes) of Aquitaine 1014 Theobald of Aquitaine 1071 William IX "The Troubador" of Aquitaine 1115 - UNKNOWN Helias Count of Mayenne 1119 Isabella Matilda of Anjou 1024 - 1087 William I "The Conqueror" King of England 63 63 William I The Conqueror, King of England from 1066 to 1087, was a man ofremarkable political and military skill and a dominant force in WesternEurope. The Domesday Survey of 1086 was a striking illustration of hisadministrative capabilities. William was the illegitimate son of Robert Iof Normandy and Herleve, a Tanner's daughter from Falaise, and becameDuke of Normandy as a child in 1035. William the Conqueror died whilecampaigning to maintain his hold on Maine and was buried in his ownmonastic foundation of Saint-Etienne at Caen. "The Encyclopedia of theMiddle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. 0945 - UNKNOWN Odo (Otto) Duke of Burgundy 0629 - UNKNOWN Doda of Poitiers 0948 - UNKNOWN Otto-Henry "The Great" Duke of Burgundy D. UNKNOWN Herbert Bishop of Auxerre D. UNKNOWN Emma of Paris 0893 - UNKNOWN Emma Capet 0889 - UNKNOWN Adela Capet 1018 - 1024 Agatha of Brunswick 6 6 Some sources say Agatha is the daughter of Stephen King of Hungary andsome say Agatha was the daughter of Henry II of Germany. Both areincorrect. 0972 - 1060 Robert II "The Pious" King of France 88 88 0961 - 0993 Arnulf I Count of Holland 32 32 0921 - 0988 Dirk II Count of Holland 67 67 0935 - 0980 Berthold Margrave Of The Nordgau 45 45 0941 - 1015 Heliksuinda von Walbeck 74 74 0889 - 0910 Judith of Fruili 21 21 0980 - 1049 Hugh IV Count Of Egisheim 69 69 0860 - 0900 Kunigunde of Swabia 40 40 0812 - 0862 Eberhard Marquis of Friuli 50 50 0820 - 0874 Gisela of Friuli 54 54 0838 Eberhard Duke of Bavaria 0835 - 0899 Arnuph Emperor of Germany 64 64 D. UNKNOWN Thierry Count of Flanders 1114 Sybil of Anjou 0965 - UNKNOWN Ludwig Count Of Dagsburg 1030 - 1113 Gertrude of Saxony 83 83 1009 - 1038 Ludolf von Brunswick Count in the Derlingau 29 29 0967 - 1025 Boleslaw I 'Chrobny' Count Of Poland 58 58 0922 - 0992 Mieszko I Prince Of Poland 70 70 Miescyslaw was a Danish Viking. 1084 - 1153 David I The Saint King of Scotland 69 69 One of the most powerful Scottish kings (reigned from 1124). He admittedinto Scotland an Anglo-French (Norman) aristocracy that played a majorpart in the later history of the kingdom. He also reorganized ScottishChristianity to conform with continental European and English usages andfounded many religious communities, mostly for Cistercian monks andAugustinian canons. The youngest of the six sons of the Scottish kingMalcolm III Canmore and Queen Margaret (afterward St. Margaret), Davidspent much of his early life at the court of his brother-in-law KingHenry I of England. Through David's marriage (1113) to a daughter ofWaltheof, earl of Northumbria, he acquired the English earldom ofHuntingdon and obtained much land in that county and in Northamptonshire.With Anglo-Norman help, David secured from his brother Alexander I, kingof Scots from 1107, the right to rule Cumbria, Strathclyde, and part ofLothian. In April 1124, on the death of Alexander, David became king ofScots.

David recognized his niece, the Holy Roman empress Matilda (died 1167),as heir to Henry I in England, and from 1136 he fought for her againstKing Stephen (crowned as Henry's successor in December 1135), hopingthereby to gain Northumberland for himself. A brief peace made withStephen in 1136 resulted in the cession of Cumberland to David and thetransfer of Huntingdon to his son Earl Henry. David, however, continuedto switch sides. While fighting for Matilda again, he was defeated in theBattle of the Standard, near Northallerton, Yorkshire (Aug. 22, 1138). Hethen made peace once more with Stephen, who in 1139 grantedNorthumberland (as an English fief) to Earl Henry. In 1141 Davidreentered the war on Matilda's behalf, and in 1149 he knighted her sonHenry Plantagenet (afterward King Henry II of England), who acknowledgedDavid's right to Northumberland.

In Scotland, David created a rudimentary central administration, issuedthe first Scottish royal coinage, and built or rebuilt the castles aroundwhich grew the first Scottish burghs: Edinburgh, Stirling, Berwick,Roxburgh, and perhaps Perth. As ruler of Cumbria he had takenAnglo-Normans into his service, and during his kingship many otherssettled in Scotland, founding important families and intermarrying withthe older Scottish aristocracy. Bruce, Stewart, Comyn, and Oliphant areamong the noted names whose bearers went from northern France to Englandduring the Norman Conquest in 1066 and then to Scotland in the reign ofDavid I. To these and other French-speaking immigrants, David grantedland in return for specified military service or contributions of money,as had been done in England from the time of the Conquest.
0800 - 0843 Judith Empress of the West 43 43 0820 - UNKNOWN Gisele of France 0805 - UNKNOWN Engeltrude of Paris 0968 - UNKNOWN Judith of Swabia 0786 - UNKNOWN Leutaud Count of Paris 0844 - 0870 Judith de France Princess of France 26 26 0840 - 0879 Baldwin I 'Bras de Fer' Count of Flanders 39 39 0865 - UNKNOWN Baldwin II Count of Flanders 0877 - UNKNOWN Elfridam 0914 - 0969 Adele De Vermandois 55 55 0940 - 0992 Baldwin III Count of Flanders 52 52 0955 - 0989 Hugh III Nordgau 34 34 1280 John Basset 0530 - UNKNOWN Guntramm King of Burgundy 0910 - UNKNOWN Gerletta of Normandy 0962 - UNKNOWN Berlinda Of Ortenburg D. UNKNOWN Conrad II Duke of Swabia D. UNKNOWN Biolin King of Scotland D. UNKNOWN Rorico Bishop of Laon 0937 - UNKNOWN Conrad I Duke of Alsace D. UNKNOWN Alfred of England D. UNKNOWN Aelfweard King of England D. UNKNOWN Edwin King of Kent 0870 - UNKNOWN Edmund of England 0516 - UNKNOWN Blithida of Austrasia 0890 - UNKNOWN Arnold I Count of Flanders 1190 - UNKNOWN William Marshal V Earl of Pembroke 1200 - 17 Jan 1240/1241 Isabel Marshall 1136 - 1199 Isabelle de Warenne 63 63 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess of England 60 60 1225 - 1261 Sanchia Berenger Queen of the Germans 36 36 D. UNKNOWN Judith Ohningen D. UNKNOWN Ingeborg 1129 - 1195 Henry V "The Lion" Duke of Saxony & Bavaria 66 66 Added to his possesions the counties of Mecklenburg and Luneburg, byconquest
from the Sclaves. He neglected his duty to Emperor Barbarossa and was
publicly proscribed in 1180. He was obliged to absent himself fromGermany for
three years and he repaired to England with his second consort Maud.
1042 - UNKNOWN William de la Ferte de Massey 1086 - 1147 Robert de Caen Earl of Gloucester 61 61 The illegitimate son of King Henry I of England (reigned 1100-35), Robertwas made Earl of Gloucester in 1122. After the death of Henry I andusurpation of power by Stephen (December 1135), Gloucester became theleader of the party loyal to Matilda, his half sister, who had beendesignated heir to the throne by Henry I. He took Matilda to England inSeptember 1139 and at the head of her forces won from Stephen most ofwestern England and southern Wales. In February 1141 he captured Stephenat Lincoln and imprisoned him in Bristol. Later that year Gloucester wascaptured at Winchester, Hampshire, and exchanged for the king. Hecontinued to be the mainstay of Matilda's cause until his death.Chroniclers considered Gloucester an able and sagacious leader. 1090 - 1157 Mabel Fitzhamon 67 67 0930 - UNKNOWN Liudulph Duke of Saxony 0730 - 0778 Gunderland Count of Hasbania 48 48 1170 - 1217 Isabella Countess of Gloucester 47 47 0982 - 3 Mar 1032/1033 Cunigunde of Luxembourg 1133 - 1203 Dafydd ap Owain Gwynedd Prince of Gwynedd 70 70 0912 - 0973 Otto I 60 60 1170 - 1249 Alexander II King of Scotland 79 79 0975 - 1038 Stephen I Saint King of Hungary 63 63 D. UNKNOWN Joan of Burgundy D. UNKNOWN Blanche of Burgundy After her divorce in 1322 she entered the convent of Maubuisson. 0843 - UNKNOWN Ignode of Harlebeck 1005 - UNKNOWN Alfred of England 1002 - UNKNOWN Manuel Comnenus 0930 - 0995 Kenneth II King of Scotland 65 65 Kenneth began his reign by ravaging the Britons, probably as an act ofvengeance, but his name is also included among a group of northern andwestern kings said to have made submission to the Anglo-Saxon king Edgarin 973, perhaps at Chester; and the chronicler Roger of Wendover (FloresHistoriarum, under the year 975) states that shortly afterward Kennethreceived from Edgar all the land called Lothian (i.e., between the Tweedand the Forth rivers). This is the first mention of the River Tweed asthe recognized border between England and Scotland. Kenneth was slain,apparently by his own subjects, at Fettercairn in the Mearns. 0975 - UNKNOWN Finlaech Mormaer of Moray 0803 - UNKNOWN Conrad I Count in the Arengau & Linzgau 0941 - 2 Mar 0985/0986 Lothair King of France D. UNKNOWN Anna Dalassena 1210 - 1286 Alexander III King of Scotland 76 76 1238 - UNKNOWN Margaret of Princess of England D. UNKNOWN Cunigunde of Germany 0869 - UNKNOWN Zoe Carbonpsina Tzautzes D. UNKNOWN Ives D. UNKNOWN Athelbald King of Wessex 0896 - UNKNOWN Eadgifu 0980 - 1016 Bruno II Count Of Brunswick 36 36 0924 - 0944 Aethelflaed of Damerham 20 20 0942 - UNKNOWN Eadwig of England 0944 - 0975 Edgar The Peacful King of England 31 31 King of Mercia and Northumbria 957 and King of England 959-975. D. UNKNOWN Athelflaed The Fair 0963 - 0978 Edward The Martyr King of England 15 15 D. UNKNOWN Aelfrthryth of Devon 1005 Ealdgyth 0918 Malek of Lubech PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0942 - 1014 Sigrid The Haughty Skoglar-Testedot 72 72 0980 - UNKNOWN Estrith (Margaret) of Denmark 0900 - UNKNOWN Thyri Klacksdottir D. UNKNOWN Cnut II The Great King of England & Denmark 1018 - UNKNOWN Cnutsson of Denmark King of England 0877 - 0945 Igor Grand Duke of Kiev 68 68 0892 - 0962 Ziemomsyl Prince Of Poland 70 70 0931 - 0972 Taksony Of Hungary 41 41 0865 - 0921 Leszek IV Prince Of Poland 56 56 0835 - 0892 Ziemowit Prince Of Poland 57 57 0942 - 0972 Svyatoslav I Grand Duke of Kiev 30 30 0813 - 0892 Piast Chosciszko Duke Of Poland 79 79 1027 - UNKNOWN Judith Of Northumbria 0976 - 1037 Vazul Vazoly Prince Of Hungary 61 61 0978 - 1050 Anastasia Princess Of Hungary 72 72 0970 - 1050 Ottone Orseolo Doge Of Venice 80 80 0955 - 0985 Michael Regent Of Poland Hungary 30 30 0932 - 0990 Princess of the Kumans 58 58 0896 - 0950 Zoltan Prince Of Hungary 54 54 0905 - 0989 Princess Of Bihar Men 84 84 0944 - 1002 Malusha of Lubech 58 58 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0840 - 0907 Arpad Prince Of Hungary 67 67 Arpad was leader of the next band of Turanian Invaders called theMagyars, or Hungarians, another branch of the Hunnic race, who in 895 ledhis savage hordes through the Vereczka Pass into the region now calledHungary, there establishing their kingdom. These people, in markedcontrast to almost every other tribe of Turanian origin, adopted themanners, customs and religion of the people about them, became, in aword, thoroughly Europeanized, and for a long time were the main defenseof Christian Europe against the Turkish tribes of the same race thatfollowed closely in their footsteps. Thus they took their religion andcivilization along with it from Germany. 0865 - 0850 Arpad Princess Of Hungary 15 15 0820 - 0895 Almos Prince of Hungary 75 75 0796 - 0835 Ogyek Prince Of Hungary 39 39 Attila, the leader of the non-Aryan Huns, defeated the armies of theEastern Emperor, and exacted tribute from the court of Constantinople. Heinvaded Western Europe and was driven back with the loss of from 100,000to 200,000 and retreated across the Rhine and led his warriers beyond theAlps. Shortly after he had crossed the Danube he died suddenly in hiscamp. These Turanian people were pagan. He was followed by Chabla. Edus,Vergerus, Elendus, two whose names were unknown, Avarius and Almus.Attila was King of Hungary in 453 and Ogyek is a direct descendent. 0800 - 0850 Emese Princess Of Hungary 50 50 0822 - 0900 Princess Almos Of Hungary 78 78 0955 - 0997 Adelajda 'The White' Princess Of Poland 42 42 0972 - 1056 Maria Helena Princess Of Hungary 84 84 0960 - 1020 Richeza Sualafeld 60 60 0898 - 0948 Romanus I Emperor of Byzantine 50 50 1017 - 1065 Heinrich III Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 48 48 1194 - UNKNOWN Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor Holy Roman Emperor. Sources differ over which Isabel Frederick married,some say Isabella daughter of John I Lackland of England and some saydaughter of John of Brienne King of Jerusalem and Emperor ofConstantinople. King of Naples and Sicily 1197. 0800 - UNKNOWN Bruno of Saxony 0840 - UNKNOWN Hedwige of Friuli 0845 - 0939 Judith of Friuli 94 94 D. UNKNOWN Hardicanute King of England 0950 - 0990 Emma of Italy 40 40 0875 - UNKNOWN Theophylaktos Abstartus 0905 - UNKNOWN Kathlin of Normandy 1334 - 1361 John de Welle 27 27 4th Lord Welles.  He had seisin of his lands on August 27, 1355.  He was summoned against the Scots in 1355, and served overseas from 1359 to 1360.  He was summoned to Parliament from December 15, 1357, to November 20, 1360, by writs directed Johanni de Welle. 0289 - 0326 Flavia Maximiana Fausta 37 37 0690 - 0735 Harald Hildetand King Of Denmark & Sweden 45 45 Harold Hildetand or Golden Teeth, raised Denmark to an unprecedentedheight of power. He conquered many of the neighboring states and hisnaval resources were very great. 0840 - UNKNOWN Renaud Seigneur Roucy Count Of Rheims 0900 - UNKNOWN Ingeborg Thrandsson 0942 - 1002 Gunhild Haraldsdottir of Denmark 60 60 D. UNKNOWN Jarl Palig Ealdorman in Devon 1190 - UNKNOWN Richard FitzJohn Baron Chilham 1200 - 1265 Roshia de Dover 65 65 0247 - 0310 Marcus Aurelias Maximian I Emperor of Rome 63 63 0972 - 1024 Henry II Emperor of Germany 52 52 0920 - UNKNOWN Louis IV "D'Outremer" King of France 0844 - 0905 Adelbert "The Illustrious" Count Thurgau 61 61 1166 - UNKNOWN William de Montgomerie III Count of Ponthieu 0907 - UNKNOWN Rudolf II Von Swabia D. UNKNOWN Gorka 0486 - 0534 Theuderic I King of Austrasia 48 48 0491 - UNKNOWN Clotild 0252 - UNKNOWN Eutropia 0490 - UNKNOWN Chlodomer 0525 - UNKNOWN Chramm of Austrasia Adam Chetwyn ~1373 - 1415 Henry le Scrope 42 42 3rd Lord Scrope of Masham and Upsal.  He fought for Henry IV at Shrewsbury in 1403 and created lord treasurer in 1410.  His marriage to Joan, the widow of the duke of York, in 1411, may have changed his allegiance.  He was charged with involvement in the earl of Cambridge's plot.  He admitted knowledge of it all, but said that he had been gathering evidence for King Henry V and had been about to make a full disclosure.  He was executed outside of Southampton and his head was sent north to be placed on a spike over Micklegate Bar in York, and there left to rot.  Shakespeare describes him as "the bedfellow" of Henry V and he had obviously been a trusted confidante.  Henry was furious at his betrayal. 0567 - UNKNOWN Rigunth of Neustria 1024 - 1077 Andronicus Ducas 53 53 0848 - 0900 Donald II King of Scotland 52 52 0585 - 0670 Dagobert I King of Austrasia & Neustria 85 85 0589 - UNKNOWN Charibert II Neustria 0587 - 0665 Nanthild 78 78 0610 - 0681 Clovis II King of Neustria 71 71 0628 - 0705 Theuderic III King of the Franks 77 77 0632 - UNKNOWN Clothar II King of Neustria 0635 - 0675 Childeric King of Austrasias 40 40 0630 - 0714 St. Amalaberga 84 84 1032 - UNKNOWN Maria of Bulgaria D. UNKNOWN Wandregisi D. UNKNOWN Farahild 0648 - 0745 Chrotlind 97 97 0650 - UNKNOWN Clovis III King of Austrasia & Neustria 0652 - 0711 Childebert III King of Austrasia & Neustria 59 59 0654 - UNKNOWN IV Chlothar 0650 - 0741 Lambert II Count of Neustria 91 91 0620 - 0680 Chrobertus Robert II of Neustrasia 60 60 0598 - UNKNOWN Lambert I of Neustrasia 0998 - UNKNOWN Trojan of Bulgaria 0690 - 0715 Dagobert III King of Austrasia & Neustria 25 25 0618 - UNKNOWN Regentrude Neustria 0456 Audofelda 0596 - 0660 Clodoule Bishop Of Metz 64 64 0513 - 0600 Princess Blithilda 87 87 0582 - 0640 Saint Arnoul Bishop of Metz 58 58 St. Arnolph, the First Major Domus of Clothary II, was the commonpatriarch of the Carlovinian and Capetian Kings. He married Dodo, a Saxonlady. D. UNKNOWN Erchenauld 1188 - 1245 Isabella De Taillefer of Angoulême 57 57 Isabella was betrothed to Hugh before she married John, King of England.After John's death she retired to her native city and eventually marriedHugh after about 3 years. 1070 - 1154 Nesta Ferch Rhys 84 84 Nesta was firstly mistress to Henry I; secondly she married Stephen,Constable of Cardigan; thirdly she married Gerald of Windsor. Gerald andNesta had four children:
1. William fitzGerald.
2. Maurice fitzGerald.
3. David fitzGerald.
4. Angarat, a daughter.
Known as the most beautiful woman in Wales. She had many lovers.
In Christmas 1108 Owain ap Cadwgan of Cardigan came to visit Gerald andNesta. He so lusted after her that he, that night, attacked the castleand carried
her off and had his way with her. This upset Henry I so much that theincident
started a war.
D. UNKNOWN John Ducas 1088 - 1157 Henry FitzHenry 69 69 Winnefred Horne 0955 - 0994 Hadwig of Bavaria 39 39 Elizabeth Leigh 1113 - UNKNOWN Henry De La Pomerai D. UNKNOWN Eudocia Ingerina 0977 - UNKNOWN Thora Princess of Scotland 0500 - UNKNOWN Lluan 0450 - UNKNOWN Brychan Prince of Manau Gododdin 0480 - UNKNOWN Ingenach D. UNKNOWN Saint Cadoc D. UNKNOWN Ribrawst D. 0464 Vortigern of Powys D. UNKNOWN Sereva D. UNKNOWN Elen D. UNKNOWN Llyr Llediath Stylianos Basilopator Tzautzes D. UNKNOWN Bran D. UNKNOWN Gratiana Guletic D. UNKNOWN Eudes D. UNKNOWN Caradawc of Archenfield 0360 - 0421 Constantia III Emperor Gratianus Roman Empire 61 61 D. UNKNOWN Helen D. 0388 Magnus Maximus Guletic 0900 - 0961 Charles Constantine 61 61 D. UNKNOWN Gladys 0887 - 0924 Anna of Byzantine 37 37 0900 - 0960 Teutberge Troyes 60 60 0945 William III Taillefer 0785 - UNKNOWN Constantine of Macedonia 1105 - 1152 Matilda Countess of Boulogne 47 47 1142 Eva de Redvers D. UNKNOWN Beli Katherine Jernegan D. UNKNOWN Blichilde 0750 - UNKNOWN Hmayeak a Mamikonid 0760 - 0828 Guilhelm de Toulouse de Gellone 68 68 D. UNKNOWN Guibourg D. UNKNOWN Bernard Prince of Septimania D. UNKNOWN Angilibert De Ponthieu 0950 - UNKNOWN Godfrey II Duke of Upper Lorraine D. UNKNOWN Doda 0903 - UNKNOWN Gozelo I Duke of Lower Lorraine D. UNKNOWN Sigebert of Verdun 0875 - UNKNOWN Kunigund 0726 - UNKNOWN Artavazo a Mamikonid 0998 - UNKNOWN Hildegarde 0877 - UNKNOWN II Parkuritan 0880 - UNKNOWN Roscilla of Loches 0845 - 0900 Ingeler Anjou Count Anjou 55 55 D. 0885 Sigebert V Comte de Razes 0844 - UNKNOWN Rotilde Princess of France 1107 - UNKNOWN Melisende Queen of Jerusalem 0966 - 1018 Ivan Vladislav Czar of Bulgaria 52 52 1038 Geoffrey IV Comte D' Anjou D. UNKNOWN Baudouin III King of Jerusalem D. 1174 Amaury I King of Jerusalem D. UNKNOWN Ermengarde Du Maine 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V Plantagenent Count of Anjou 38 38 Geoffrey "The Fair" . He was one of the most powerful Prince's of Franceand after his marriage to Matilda, daughter of Henry I King of England,became head of the plantagent line of English Kings. The namePlantagenet, according to Rapin, came from when Fulk the Great beingstung from remorse for some wicked action, in order to atone for it, wenta pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and was scourged before the Holy Sepulchrewith broom twigs. Earlier authorities say it was because Geoffrey bore abranch of yellow broom (Planta-genistae) in his helmet. Duke of Normandy1144-1150. Private Eurgen of Britain 0972 - UNKNOWN Marija of Bulgaria D. UNKNOWN Andronicus Ducas 0940 - UNKNOWN Aron Lord of West Bulgaria 0990 Baudouin II deClermont 1187 - 1261 Ela FitzPatrick 74 74 0876 - 0936 Heinrich I "The Fowler" King Of The Germans 60 60 Also the Empereror of the Holy Roman Empire. 0535 - 0601 Arnoldus Bishop of Metz 66 66 1203 - UNKNOWN Baron Ralph de Monthermer Ralph was Baron Monthermer, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford.
Lineage Sources:
      Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct
      Peerages of the British Empire, Pub. 1886, by J. B. Burke, pp. 378/9
      and 372 and 82.
     History of the Deanery of Trigg Manor, County Cornwall, by Mac-Lean,
     Vol. 1, p. 683; Chart showing these lines of Montacute andMonthermer.
     Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum or History of British Peerage,
     Vol. 4, p. 351.
     Banks' Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 2, pp. 45 and 63.
D. UNKNOWN Beatrix von Falkenburg 1064 - 8 Mar 1134/1135 Adela Princess of England 0995 - 1060 Hugh deCreil 65 65 0697 - UNKNOWN Hersuinda 0630 - 0677 Guerin Count de Poitiers 47 47 0635 - UNKNOWN Leutwinus Count Bishop Of Treves D. 0650 Dode Clothilde De Heristal 0840 - UNKNOWN Berenger de Senlis Count of Bayeux 0970 - 1047 Renaud deCreil 77 77 D. UNKNOWN Bernard of Septamania 0879 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey 1st "Ferreol" Count Of The Gastinois D. UNKNOWN Aubri Count of the Gastinois 0958 - 1027 William 1st Pereginus King Of Lombard 69 69 0865 - UNKNOWN Gilbert (Giselbert) Count Of Roucy 0860 - 0927 Hersent Duchess Of Lorraine 67 67 0846 - 0916 Rainer I Hainaut Duke Of Lorraine 70 70 Rainer or Reginar I, surnamed "Longneck," Duke of Lorraine, was the firstdefinitely established Count of Hainault. He died in 916.  He firstappears in history in 875, when in alliance with Ratbod, Duke of Frisia,he attempted to dislodge the Norman chief Rollo from the Island ofWalcheren in Zeeland. The two allies were defeated by Rollo, who enteredHainault the following year and took Ranier prisoner. The count wasransomed by his wife, who exchanged for him 12 Norman leaders who were inher power, and all the gold and silver she possessed. Rainer I becameembroiled with Zwentibold. ruler of Lorraine, and being defeated he wasforced to withdraw into France. After the death of Zwentibold, Rainerrecovered both his land and his title, and added them to the duchy ofLorraine, which Charles the Simple, King of France, granted him in 911. 0822 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Count of Darnu & Brabant & Massagau 0823 - 0877 Charles II Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 54 54 0866 - UNKNOWN Giselbert Duke of Lorraine 0965 - UNKNOWN Baudouin I Count deClermont 1058 - 1085 Gundred Princess of England 27 27 0868 - 0932 Regnier II Hainault Count of Hainault 64 64 Rainer or Reginar II, Count of Hainault, is not mentioned as living laterthan 928, but probably died about 932. During his reign he quarreledalmost continually with his brother Gislebert, Duke of Lorraine.Gislebert was imprisoned by Berenger, his brother-in-law, in 924, butalthough Rainer II obtained his release by offering his sons as hostages,Giselbert was no sooner at liberty than he began to ravage the lands ofBerenger and of Isaac, Count of Cambrai. Rainer retaliated, but thebrothers presumably became reconciled, since in 925 Giselbert made hispeace with the King of France. Rainer II married Alix daughter of RichardI, Duke of Burgundy. 0874 Adelaide of Burgundy 0972 - UNKNOWN Ermetrude De Roucy 0855 Carolman of Bavaria D. UNKNOWN Litwinde D. UNKNOWN Beatrice of Macon D. UNKNOWN Adelaide of Alsace & Tours 0733 - 0780 Eystein Halfdansson King in Raumarike 47 47 0695 - UNKNOWN Olaf Ingjaldsson King of Vestfold & Jutland 0679 - UNKNOWN Ingjald Braut-Onundsson Evilheart King of Sweden 1015 - 1043 Adele deBar sur Aube 28 28 0638 - UNKNOWN Braut- Onund Ingvarsson 0616 - UNKNOWN Ingvar Eysteinsson 0572 - UNKNOWN Adils Ottarsson 0551 - UNKNOWN Ottar Egilsson 0509 - UNKNOWN Aun The Aged Jorgundsson 0302 - UNKNOWN Driva Snaersdottir Suomi 0403 - UNKNOWN Dag Dyggvasson 0382 - UNKNOWN Dyggvi Domarsson 0992 - UNKNOWN Adele deBréteuil 0364 - UNKNOWN Domar Domaldsdotter Sverige 0340 - UNKNOWN Domaldi Visbursson 0319 - UNKNOWN Visbur Vanlandsson 0298 - UNKNOWN Vanlandi Svegdasson 0277 - UNKNOWN Svegdi Fjolnarsson 0256 - UNKNOWN Fjolner Vngvifreysson King of Swedes 0235 - UNKNOWN Yngvi-Frey King of Njord Swedes 0727 - 0772 Guerin Count Thurgau 45 45 0998 - 1050 Gilbert Crispin I Count of Brionne 52 52 0989 - 1030 Raoul II Count deVexin Valois & Amiens 41 41 1710 Elizabeth Saunders Benjamin and Elizabeth and their three daughters in 1733 sold the land, half of an estate called "Hazard" that she had inherited from her parents and grandfather. At that time, Benjamin's occupation was that of house carpenter.

Children from this union:

Benjamin H. , Jr. STINNETT  b: Abt 1736 in Charles Co.,Maryland
Dorcus STINNETT  b: Abt 1733 in Charles Co.,Maryland
Priscilla STINNETT b: Abt 1740
William B. STINNETT  b: Abt 1746 in Albemarle Co.,Virginia
Susannah STINNETT  b: Abt 1750 in Amherst Co,Virginia


Will of:  Sanders, William, planter, Charles Co., 25th Aug., 1731; 14th Oct., 1731. To dau. Frances (wife of Charles Sample) and hrs., 1/2 of "Hazard"'; sd. land not to be sold or mortgaged. To dau. Elizabeth (wife of Benjamin Stennett) and hrs., residue of "Hazard," same conditions. To dau. Ann and hrs., land where mother Eleanor Sanders now lives; sd. dau. dying without issue, to pass to dau. Rachel and hrs.; if both die without issue, to hr. at law; and personalty. To dau. Rachel and hrs., after her mother's decease, dwell. plan. -----; she dying without issue, to pass to dau. Anne after decease of her mother-in-law Catherine; and personalty. To wife Katherine, extx., dwell. plan. ---- during life and residue of personalty; to keep dau. Anne until of age or marriage; shd. sd. Catherine die during minority of dau. Ann, to be in care of her sister Frances Sample. Test: William Ross, Eliza. Elder, T. Thompson. 20, 239.
0913 - UNKNOWN Gerlotte de Blois 0890 - UNKNOWN Thibault Count of Tours and Chartres 0850 - UNKNOWN Hilda Ragnhild Hrolfsdottir 0772 - UNKNOWN Lifa Vestfold 0688 - UNKNOWN Solveig Halfdansdottir 0735 - UNKNOWN Hilda Ericsdotter Vestfold 0695 - UNKNOWN Eric Agnarsson Vestfold 0955 - 0997 Herbert III de Vermandois 42 42 0715 - UNKNOWN Asa Eysteinsdotter Throndheim D. UNKNOWN Angar Vestfold 0663 - UNKNOWN Haadraade Eystein 0698 - UNKNOWN Solveig Halfdansdotter 0635 - UNKNOWN Halfdan Guldand 0575 - UNKNOWN Yrsa Helgasdotter ~1165 Beatrice (Cecily) Bardolf Beatrice or Cecily Bardolf, daughter and heir in her issue of HughBardolf, d. c 1176, of Waddington, co. Lincoln, & Isabel de Condet.[Ancestral Roots] 0960 - 1036 Ermengard deBar 76 76 0424 - UNKNOWN Agni Dagsson 0361 - UNKNOWN Drott Danpsson 0428 - UNKNOWN Skjalf Frostasdottir 0400 - UNKNOWN Frosti 0275 - UNKNOWN Snaer Suomi King Of Finland 0278 - UNKNOWN Vana 0239 - UNKNOWN Gerd Gymersdottir 0217 - UNKNOWN Gymer 0218 - UNKNOWN Orboda 0214 - UNKNOWN Njord King Of Swedes 0935 - UNKNOWN Reinald Count deBar 0219 - UNKNOWN Dotter Svierge 0190 - UNKNOWN Son Svierge 0756 - UNKNOWN Geva Eysteinsdotter 0970 - 1045 Ralph II Seigneur De Toeni 75 75 0990 - UNKNOWN Adela Estefania de Barcelona 0970 - 1060 Hildouin Count deBréteuil 90 90 0929 - 0980 Gerberge Princess Of Lorraine 51 51 0884 - 23 Feb 0930/0931 Herbert II Count deVermandois 0895 - 0931 Hildebrante Princess of France 36 36 D. UNKNOWN Gozelo of Lower Lorraine 1130 - UNKNOWN Aldhelm de Burgo de Mortaigne 1003 - 1050 Herleva De Falaise 47 47 0978 - UNKNOWN Fulbert the Tanner de Falaise Rollo, or Fulbert, chamberlain to Robert, Duke of Normandy, had the giftof the castle and honor of Croy, in Picardy, from whence his posterityassumed their surname, which was afterwards written de Grey. They had adaughter Hervela or Herlotta, who was the mother of William, theConqueror, and a son, Reynold.
Sources: Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, p. 248.
               Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 1, p. 77; Vol.4, p. 340.
               Glover's History and Gazeteer of Derbyshire, Vol. 2, pp.308/9.
               Lipscomb's History of Buckinghamshire, Vol. 1, pp. 160,466.
               Banks Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 2, p. 224.
               Lewis' Manuscripts, pp. 154, 267.
               Cokayne's Complete Peerage of Great Britain, Vol. 4, pp.308-311, 761,
               Appendix No. 1.
D. UNKNOWN Geoffrey de Gastinois 0772 - 0811 Charles "The Younger" Duc de Ingelheim 39 39 D. UNKNOWN Julianna of Ingleheim 1019 - 1082 Richard 'le Goz' d'Avranches Vicomte d'Avranches 63 63 Richard was Vice Count de Abrinces, that is Auranches in Normandy. Hereconciled his father to the Duke of Normandy by his good carriage andgot more than his father had lost. He was Governor of the Castle of St.James in Normandy and Brittany. He married Emma, half sister of Williamthe Conqueror, daughter of Herloin, a Norman nobleman, who marriedHerlotta or Arlotta, the Conqueror's mother, who was not married to hisfather. 0988 - UNKNOWN Anleta MacKenneth 0838 - 0905 Herbert I deVermandois 67 67 ANCESTRAL FILE; MLC/RA; COUNT OF VERMANDOIS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1135 Alice (Alicia) Alicia Uxor Radulfi II Basset, wife of Ralph II Basset, son of Richardwho died shortly before 1166. She occurs in the Cartae of htat year asRalph's unnamed widow. Her name is supplied by a grant of her husband toCanwell priory. [Domesday Descendants p164] <1244 - 1299 Ralph Basset 55 55 Ralph Basset, d. 31 Dec 1299, 1st Lord Basset of Drayton, MP 1295-1299;m. Hawise. [Magna Charta Sureties]

----------------------------

BARONY of BASSET (of Drayton) (I)

RALPH BASSET, son and heir, served in the French ai-id Scottish wars. Hesucceeded his father 4 August 1265. He held lands of Ralph Basset ofWeldon 1284/5; he was summoned to attend the King at Shrewsbury, 28 June1283 and was summoned to Parlliament 23 June 1295 to 10 April 1299I, bywrits directed Radulfo Basset de Drayton, whereby he is held to havebecome LORD BASSET OF DRAYTON. ) He married Hawise. He died 31 December1299, and was buried at Drayton. [Complete Peerage II:2, (transcribed byDave Utzinger)]
John Leventhorp Isaac Jermye John Morton D. 1375 Baldwin de Freville 1602 - 1654 Edward Dudley 52 52 Some researchers claim this is a gateway line to the Royal and Noble Houses of England but documention is lacking at this time.
Edward Dudley-
Emigrated to Virginia before May 19, 1637.
Resided first in New Norfolk, later in York Co. where he purchased land Feb 6, 1661/2.
Emigrated To VA. Before 19 May 1637; Resided In Norfork,
First Dudley Ancestor to the New World. VA Mag, Vol VI, p. 191,
Land Patents; Gov Harvey issues to Rev Thomas Hampton 300 acres in Norfolk County for bringing 6 adult persons into the colony; viz: John Bagworth, Edward Dudley, John Bass, Thomas Hampton, John Broune, Richard Eggleston. Source: Green's "List of Early Immigrants", page 200.
Mr. Dudley 1st settled in York County and in 1654 was in Lancaster Co. VA. VA MAG, Vol 5, pages 154, 429, 430. His widow m. Robinson.
Arms - Or, a lion rampart, vert, double queried. Crest - a Lion Head erased. Motto - Nec gladio nec arcu.

"The Winthrop Fleet of 1630" by Charles Edward Banks : Dudley, Thomas Dudley, Dorothy (Yorke) (wife of Thomas) Dudley, Samuel (son of Thomas) Dudley, Anne (daughter of Thomas) Dudley, Patience (daughter of Thomas) Dudley, Sarah (daughter of Thomas) Dudley, Mercy (daughter of Thomas) Dudley, Thomas, Jr. (son of Thomas)

1704 VA Rent tolls: Dudley Ambrose (Sherifff(?)) Glocester, Kingston Parish Dudley Capt Glocester, Kingston Parish Dudley Christopher Nansemond County, 1704 Dudley James Glocester, Petso Parish Dudley James Middlesex County, 1704 Dudley Richd Glocester, Kingston Parish Dudley Richd Glocester, Petso Parish Dudley Richd. Junr Glocester, Ware Parish Dudley Robt. Middlesex County, 1704 Dudley Thomas Glocester, Petso Parish Dudly Thomas Middlesex County, 1704
0846 Bertha of France 0925 - UNKNOWN Adele of Vexin 0869 - UNKNOWN Odo (Eudes) Toulouse Count Toulouse D. UNKNOWN Regina de France 0794 - UNKNOWN Hugh L' Abbe Abbot of St. Quintin 0921 - 1006 Raimond III Toulouse Count Toulouse 85 85 0895 - UNKNOWN Raimond II Toulouse Count Toulouse 0956 - UNKNOWN Adelheid of Toulouse 0923 - 0950 Bertha of Tuscany 27 27 0871 - UNKNOWN Garsinde de Alby 0948 - UNKNOWN Fouche Viscount deChartres 0833 - UNKNOWN Raimond I Toulouse Count Toulouse 0840 - UNKNOWN Bertha De Remy D. UNKNOWN Hermengild de Alby Comte de Alby 0934 - 0985 Adelaide De Vermandois 51 51 0860 - UNKNOWN Orequen De Rennes 0944 - UNKNOWN Hildouin dePonthieu 0882 - UNKNOWN Daughter De Rennes 0860 - UNKNOWN Berenger De Rennes 1080 - 1130 Matilda Maud De Lens 50 50 Vetred Of Northumbria 1022 Agatha I of Northumbria Ealdgyth or Algitha, only daughter by the 3rd wife, was heiress of Rabyand other large possessions belonging to her mother. She marriel Maldred,son and heir of Crinan, an eminent Thane, one of the greatest and mostopulent families of North England. 0975 - 1045 Crinan Atholl Thane Atholl 70 70 1016 - 1076 Waltheof Earl of Northumbria 60 60 1002 - 1093 Aelfgar Earl of Mercia 91 91 1070 - UNKNOWN Duncan II King of Scotland 1072 - UNKNOWN Ethelreda of Northumberland 0946 - UNKNOWN Hersende(de Ponthieu} 0984 - UNKNOWN Siward Earl of Northumbria The Bull's head crest commemorates the Bulmers. Robert Fitz-Maldredmarried Isabel Nevill, daughter of Geoffrey Nevill and his wife Emma,daughter of Bertram de Bulmer. Isabel inherited from her mother theBulmer Lordship of Brancepeth near Durham, and henceforth BrancepethCastle became the other seat of the house, and Geoffrey, son of IsabelNevill and Robert Fitz-Maldred, adopted the surname Neville or the NormanNeuville. This noble, ancient and illustrious family "which was tomedieval England what the Douglass was to Scotland" for antiquity, greatand numerous honors, flourishing branches and mighty power, scarcely anyfamily can vie with the splendour possessed in former ages by theNevills. Of course, the lines connect with Royalty, but they inthemselves are great enough to be proud to claim descent through.

Siward, Earl of Northumbria, was a Dane by birth and probably came toEngland with Canute. In 1054 he invaded Scotland in the interests ofMalcolm Canmore and he completely routed Macbeth in battle. Shakespeareintroduces him and his son into "Macbeth." Siward, a man of unusualstrength and size, is said to have arisen from his bed at the approach ofdeath and to have died dressed in all his armor.
1050 - 1113 William Peverell 63 63 William de Peveral is usually said to be an illegitimate son of theConqueror. He had at least four children, William, d. s. p., and Williamagain, who succeeded him, and two daughters, Maud and Adelise, the wifeof Richard Redvers. The Conqueror gave William Peveral the custody ofNotts Castle, when it was built in 1068, and extensive possessions,afterwards known as the honour of Peveral, consisting of 100 lordships incounties Notts and Northants, 14 in Derby, and some 20 others in othercounties. William Peveral died Jan., 1113. 1040 - 1090 Robert de Mortaigne Earl of Cornwall 50 50 1040 - 1085 Matilda De Montgomery 45 45 0940 - 1020 Mien I de Fourgeres Baron de Fourgeres 80 80 1053 - UNKNOWN Petronilla deVerdon Charles Scott Sir Charles Scott of Egerton, Kent, m. Lady Jane Wyatt, dau. of Sir Thomas Wyatt who was executed Apr.11,1554, London Tower. She is the Aunt of Gov. Francis Wyatt of Virginia. D. UNKNOWN Raimond deBigorre D. UNKNOWN Matfred Vicomte de Narbonne 1020 - UNKNOWN Eberhard Count deLower Alsace 1025 - 1075 Hedwige of Namur 50 50 Urraca 0892 - UNKNOWN Wilfred II Borrel Count of Barcelona 0997 - UNKNOWN Raimond Berenger Count of Barcelona Matilda de Marmion 0952 - UNKNOWN Robert I Count deLomme Cecilia Stated in the pedigree of Noel in the Visitation of Leicester as a widow in 1338, [12 E.2.] D. 1369 John de Botetourt He died in the lifetime of his father and his daughter became her grandfather's heiress.  She also died without male heirs. 1000 - UNKNOWN Gerard De Flaitel 1025 - 1070 Gerard II deLorraine Duke de Lorraine 45 45 1018 - UNKNOWN Constance of France 1010 - 1037 Manasses 27 27 0973 - 1032 Constance of Arles\ Toulose 59 59 0952 - 1024 Eve of Luxemburg 72 72 0938 - UNKNOWN Gerhard 0930 - UNKNOWN Sigifrid Count of Luxembourg 0900 Cunigunde Countess Of Trier Ardennes 0879 - 0933 Richwin Count of Verdun 54 54 1006 - UNKNOWN Gisela deAlsace 0945 - UNKNOWN Hildegarde 0979 Hugh III deAlsace D. UNKNOWN Hugh I Vicomte de Chateaudun 1002 - UNKNOWN Gerard deMetz Count de Metz 1126 - 1197 Robert Bermingham Baron of Offaly 71 71 Robert accompanied Richard de Clare, called Strongbow, on his conquest ofIreland in 1170. 1032 - 1119 Murnough Murcertach O'Brien 87 87 0970 - UNKNOWN Conrad III Count of Ortenau 1623 - 1687 Richard Dudley 64 64 Col Richard DUDLEY 1623-1687 Summoned to Orphan Court, York Co;
1646 was granted more than 1000 acres in Glouchester Co. VA.
1657 was Sheriff of Gloucester Co. VA.
1679 was appointed Colonel of Militia Gloucester Co. VA.
Lived in Kingston Parrish, Gloucester County Wm & Mary College, Vol XIII, page 28.
Settled in Gloucester County, VA;
Was High Sheriff in 1675 and Col of Militia.
He married Mary SEWELL, daughter of Richard SEWELL & Mary DUGDALE, Before 11 Aug 1642 in England. Born Circa 1616 in Coventry, England.


Richard Dudley Jr., born 1642 Gloucester Co. VA and noted in the  will of Henry Sewall, 25 apr 1664; MD Calendar of Wills, Vol. II, p. 246. Living Descendants of Blood Royal, p. 326.
D. UNKNOWN Helena of Rome 1052 - 1098 Dubhehabhlaigh of Ossory 46 46 D. UNKNOWN Eudocia Ingerina D. UNKNOWN Stylianos Basilopator Tzautzes 0900 - 0961 Charles Constantine Count Of Vienne 61 61 0900 - 0960 Teutberge Of Troyes 60 60 0947 - UNKNOWN William III Taillefer Count Toulouse 0785 - UNKNOWN Constantine of Macedonia 0750 - UNKNOWN Hmayeak a Mamikonid 0726 - UNKNOWN Artavazo a Mamikonid 0860 - 0920 King Of The dessi Cormac 60 60 0929 - 0980 Gerberge Princess Of Lorraine 51 51 0884 - 23 Feb 0930/0931 Herbert II Count De Vermandois 0895 - 0931 Hildebrante Princess of France 36 36 0838 - 0939 Herbert I Count De Vermandois 101 101 0846 - UNKNOWN Bertha of France D. UNKNOWN Eric I Bloodaxe King of Norway 0984 - 1075 Adele Capet of France 91 91 0837 - UNKNOWN Blichilde de Maine 0804 - UNKNOWN Rorgo de Maine Count de Maine 0775 - 0825 Fergal King Of Ossory 50 50 0968 - 1036 Baldwin IV 68 68 Sources: RC 141, 353; Kraentzler 1157, 1218, 1244, 1258,1265; Coe; A. Roots; AF; K and Q of Britain; Smallwood; Onslow; Pfafman; AIS;Davis. RC: Baldwin IV de Lille of Flanders. Count of Artois and Flanders, 988,and
Count of Valenciennes in Spain, 1007. K: Boudouin IV, le Barbu, Count deFlandre and Zeeland. AIS: Baldwin IV, Count of Flandre. Davis: Baldwin IV, Count of Flanders.
0833 - 0866 Ramnulf I Count of Poitou 33 33 1001 - 1080 Herluin de Conteville Viscount Conteville 79 79 1020 - 1065 dermont of Ossory 45 45 1125 - UNKNOWN Reginald Dunstanville FitzRoy Earl of Cornwall 1135 - UNKNOWN Beatrice FitzRichard 1068 - 1135 Henry I 'Beauclerc' King of England 67 67 Henry I was Duke of Normandy from 1106-1135 and King of England from1100-1135. William I left Normandy to his oldest son Robert II Curthoseand England to his next oldest son, William II Rufus. Henry was leftgreat wealth and eventually outmanuvered his brothers to become King ofEngland in 1100 and ruled 35 years. Henry is remembered for expanding andstrengthening royal justice, integrating the Norman and Anglo-Saxon legalsystems, and laying the foundation for more centralized royal rule. "TheEncyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. 0982 - 1027 Tadg macGilla Pátraic of Ossory 45 45 1025 - 1087 Simon de Montfort 62 62 1070 - 1137 Amaury de Montfort III Count de Evreux 67 67 1095 - 1143 Agnes de Garlande 48 48 0990 - 1031 Amauri de Montfort Seigneur de Montfort-l'Amauri 41 41 D. 1 Mar 1057/1058 Ermensinde de Carcassonne 0972 - 25 Feb 1017/1018 Raimund Borrel I Count de Barcelona Thomas Morton Henry Wiverston ~1350 - ~1387 Baldwin de Freville 37 37 0700 - 0765 Cu-Chercca King Of Ossary 65 65 1215 - UNKNOWN Jeanne De Valletort 1025 - UNKNOWN Hubert Huse 0911 - UNKNOWN Nigel De St. Sauveur 0944 - UNKNOWN Roger De St. Sauveur 0658 - 0710 Faelan King Of Ossary 52 52 1008 - UNKNOWN Emelia of Germany D. UNKNOWN Hunda-Steinar of England Earl in England D. UNKNOWN Alof Ragnarsdottir 0407 - UNKNOWN Flavius Valentinian III Roman Emperor 0390 - UNKNOWN Aelia Galla Placidia 0730 - UNKNOWN Sigurd Wolsung 0320 - UNKNOWN Flavius Theodosius 0734 - 0810 Alfhild Gandolsdottir 76 76 0780 - 0820 Guthfrith the Proud King of Denmark & Norway 40 40 D. UNKNOWN Asa Haraldsdottir 0975 - 1056 Hugh I deMontgomery 81 81 Hugh de Montgomerie, Count of Montgomery, married Josseline, the daughterof Tourode and his wife, Neva Duceline de Crepon. Josseline was theyoungest sister of Humphros de Velutes, and he was the father of Roger deBeaumont or Bellomont, father of Robert de Bellomont, who married Isabelde Vermandois, daughter of Hugh Magnus, crusader. This shows theconnection of the Montgomeries with the most noted families. Hugh andJosseline had four sons: Roger, Robert, William and Gilbert. This lastson, Gilbert, was undesignedly killed by his brother Roger's wife Mabelin 1064. In her hatred for the family of Giroie she had designed to makeaway with Ernauld, son of William Giroie. She invited him, on his returnfrom Poland, to pay her husband a visit and prepared for him poisonedmeat and drink. The design was discovered to him in time and on arrivingat her house he declined partaking of any refreshment. But Gilbert, whoaccompanied Ernauld, ignorant of Mabel's plans, took unhesitatingly thecup and drank the wine and died within three days. Vicomte de laHiesmois. The Complete Peerage vol.XI,p.682-683. 0639 - UNKNOWN Algaut Gautreksson 0756 - UNKNOWN Lifa Dagsdotter 0540 - UNKNOWN Helgi Halfdansson 0503 - UNKNOWN Halfdan Frodasson 0479 - UNKNOWN Frodi Fridleifsson 0456 - UNKNOWN Fridleif Frodasson 0995 - 1067 Hildeburg deAlençon 72 72 0695 - UNKNOWN Ronan Rigflaith King Of Ossary D. UNKNOWN Helgi the Keen Olafsson D. UNKNOWN Aslaug Sigurdsdottir 0738 - UNKNOWN Gudrod Halfdansson King in Heidark 0665 - UNKNOWN Colman Mor King Of Ossary 0920 - 0937 St. Edith of England 17 17 0920 - 0937 Sitric II King of Dublin & York 17 17 D. UNKNOWN Alfhild Gandolsdottir 0980 - 1014 Sigurd Hlodvirsson the Stout Earl of Orkney 34 34 William Horne 0990 - UNKNOWN Odele Of Bois Ferrand 0970 - 0997 Arnold II The Young Count of Flanders 27 27 1116 - 1151 Adaliza of Louvain 35 35 1170 - UNKNOWN Suzanne De Warenne 0635 - UNKNOWN Bicne Caech 0965 - UNKNOWN Luitgarde of Luxemburg 0935 - 0990 Hildegarde of Flanders 55 55 D. UNKNOWN Arviragus Hugh de Montfort William Noel James Bassett 0613 - UNKNOWN Laignech Faelad 1004 - 21 Feb 1029/1030 Otgive De Luxembourg Thomas Fitch Grant, 1578, March 16. 20 Elizabeth I. 1 item : parchment ; 13 x 21 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Thomas Fynche of Tenterden (Kent), yeoman, to John Fynche of Tenterden, his brother, of a piece of land called "le Bandernick" containing approximately 3 acres, situated in Tenterden on the denne of Lightnotesden, the lands of the said John Fynche toward the east, the lands of John Whitfilde toward the south, the lands of John Withernden toward the south and west, and with a certian lane both to the west and north. Given on 16 March, 20 Elizabeth I .
WITNESSES: William Browne, John Hatch, Timothy Fremann, scrivener. With 1 seal (2 cm.) of red wax, oval, pendant on a tag, bearing a device.
NAMES: I. Fynche, Thomas. II. Fynche, John. III. Whitfield, John. IV. Withernden, John. V. Browne, William. VI. Fremann, Timothy. VII. Hatch, John.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Kent. 2. Deeds--England--Tenterden. 3. Kent (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Tenterden (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQE0526

Grant, 1544, Aug. 23. 34 Henry VIII. 1 item : parchment ; 20.5 x 35 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Christopher Baker, one of the sons and heirs of John Baker, late of Tenterden (Kent), deceased, to William Lawles of Rolvynden (Kent) of 4 pieces of land containing 22 acres called Nottisden in the parish of Tenterden on the denne of Nottisden, with the lands of Thomas Fynche to the east and north, and the lands of John Buldeford, knight, to the east, and the lands of the heirs of Edmund Lewkenor and the lands of the heirs of Thomas Assherynden and the lands of John Felip to the north, and the lands of Thomas Wetherden to the west, and a certain lane called "Nottisdenlane" to the north; also 3 pieces of land in the same parish called Knok on the denne of Knock, the lands of William Lawles and the King's way and the same lane to the east, north, and west and the King's Highway and the lands of the aforesaid John Baker to the north, containing 34 acres; and also a parcel of wood called Addyngherstewoode on the denne of Addyngherst, the lands of Thomas Smyth to the north and east and of John Puffton senior to the south and a certain street called "Dastwesell Strete" to the north, containing 7 acres, all of which he had by the grant of Peter Baker, vicar of the parish church of Tenterden, his brother. Given on 23 Aug. 36 Henry VIII (Endorsed on reverse).
WITNESSES: Richard Alcok, William de Tenterden, Stephen coper, Thomas Hoigges, Richard Hope. With 1 seal (1.5 cm.) of red wax, pendant on a tag, bearing the initials E.W.
NAMES: I. Baker, Christopher. II. Baker, John. III. Lawles, William. IV. Fynche, Thomas. V. Buldeford, John. VI. Baker, Peter. VII. De Tenterden, William. VIII. Hoigges, Thomas. IX. Lewkenor, Edmund. X. Ashenden, Thomas. XI. Felip, John. XII. Smyth, Thomas. XIII. Puffton, John. XIV. Alcok, Richard. XV. Coper, Stephen. XVI. Hope, Richard.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Kent. 2. Deeds--England--Tenterden. 3. Kent (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Tenterden (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 5. Rolvenden (England)
HOLLIS number: -AQE0737
0326 - UNKNOWN Fincormach 0806 Lethlabar 0304 - UNKNOWN Thrinklind 0239 - UNKNOWN Corbred 0255 - UNKNOWN Eochaid 0214 - UNKNOWN II Conaire 0495 - UNKNOWN Deuteria 0450 - UNKNOWN Afranius Syagrius Gallo-Roman Consul D. UNKNOWN Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus D. UNKNOWN Antonia Minor D. UNKNOWN Marc Anthony The Triumvir 0802 - 0882 Eochucan 80 80 D. UNKNOWN Octavia D. UNKNOWN Julia D. UNKNOWN Antonius Creticus D. UNKNOWN Luscius Julius Caeser Consul D. UNKNOWN Luscius Julius Caeser D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser Consul D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser Consul D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser D. UNKNOWN Lucius Julius Caeser D. UNKNOWN Numerius Julius Caeser 0812 - UNKNOWN Indreb of Ireland 1040 - UNKNOWN Muriel de Mortaigne 1039 - 1090 Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert of Exeter 51 51 Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert, of Brionis or Moels, 2nd son, a follower of theConqueror, called Vicecomes, and Baldwin of Exetor. He was Seigneur deMeules and du Sap, in Normandy. After the death of his father, who wasmurdered by the son of Giroie, he and his brother Richard, who wasancestor of the de Clares, took refuge at the court of the Duke ofFlanders. Duke William afterwards restored to Baldwin his estates ofMeules and Sap, and to Richard FitzGilbert his estates of Bienfaite andOrbec, portions of their father's lands. Baldwin received from theConqueror some 150 lordships in Devonshire, Hemington and Parlock andApley in Somerset, and Iwerne in Dorset. Okehampton was the capital seatof his barony. He was Sheriff of Dorset 1080-1086 probably until hisdeath. (After the Conquest the sheriffs were still the King'srepresentatives in the county. As the King was nearly absolute, thesheriff was very powerful. The sheriff had important duties: 1. Finance.He farmed the shire at a fixed sum a year. 2. Justice. He was the King'srepresentative in the shire court, and he sat there as president, or as aroyal judge. 3. War. It was the duty of the sheriff to summon the forcesof the county. The great lords led their own retainers, but the sheriffled all the rest of the troops.--Montague's Elements of EnglishConstitutional History. E. E. W. Very different from modern sheriffs.This was from a textbook at Washington University.) In Domesday Book heis called Baldwin of Exeter, or Baldwin, the Sheriff. He married Emma orAlbreda, niece of the Conqueror. He died 1090. They had Robert, Richardand William. 1059 - UNKNOWN Emma Aldreda of Ivry 0790 - 0886 Mael- Duin Of Ireland 96 96 0460 - UNKNOWN Hartwake Prince of Saxons 0426 - 0488 Hengest Prince of Saxons 62 62 Hengest and Horsa, who led the Saxon bands who invaded England in 446.William of Malmesbury says that they were grandsons of the ancient Woden,from whom almost all the royal families of these barbarous nations deducetheir origin, and to whom the nations of the Angles, fondly deifying him,have consecrated the fourth day of the week Wodens-day, and the sixth dayunto his wife Frea. For the fatherland of the English race we must lookfar away from England itself. Three tribes of Germany, Angles, Saxons andJutes, by whom Britain was subdued, seem originally to have constitutedbut one nation, speaking the same language, and ruled by monarchs who allclaimed descent from the deified monarch of the Teutons, Woden or Odin.Jutes with their neighbors the Angles dwelt in the peninsula of Jutland,which parts the Baltic from the North Sea. In the adjoining Holsteinthere is still a district called Anglen. Hengest and Horsa had gone toEngland at the request of the British King Vortigern to help him in hisbattles with the Picts. They were at first given the Island of Thanet asa home, but soon quarreled with their British allies, and graduallypossessed themselves of what became the Kingdom of Kent. In 455 the SaxonChronicle records a battle between Hengest and Horsa and Vortigen, inwhich Horsa was killed, and thenceforth Hengest reigned in Kent until hisdeath in 488. 0400 - UNKNOWN Witegeslus King of Saxony 0428 - UNKNOWN Horsa Prince of Saxons 0376 - UNKNOWN Witte King of Saxony 0340 - UNKNOWN Witte King of Saxony 0306 - UNKNOWN Bode King of Saxony 0830 - UNKNOWN Mothla 0279 - UNKNOWN Marbed of Saxony 0249 - UNKNOWN Wilke of Saxony 0217 - UNKNOWN Witekind King of Saxony 0193 - UNKNOWN Sigward of Saxony 0166 - UNKNOWN Swarticke of Saxony 0130 - UNKNOWN Swarticke Prince of Saxony 0104 - UNKNOWN Wilke Prince of Saxony D. 0120 Harderick King of Saxony 0918 - 0987 Harald Bluetooth Gormsson II King of Denmark 69 69 Harald refused to accept the crown until he had first performed hisfather's obsequies with all the magnificence becoming his high rank. Oneof his earliest was the conquest of Norway, which became a province ofDenmark. Styrbear, King of Sweden, solicited the aid of King Harold inone of his wars, and to enforce his request he brought along with himGyntha, his sister, a lady of admirable beauty. The stratagem had theintended effect; Harold Bluetooth became enamored and married her. Theprogress of Christianity gained some headway during his reign, and theKing received baptism, and erected a splendid church. His daughterGunilda married Richard I, Duke of Normandy.
Sources:
     Harrison's History of Yorkshire; Preface and Charts.
     Britannica Encyclopedia, Vol. 26, p. 224; Vol. 12, p. 179; Vol. 20,p.
     4; Vol. 28, p. 767.
     Williams' Historians History of the World, Vol. 16, pp. 37-49.
     Edward S. Lewis Manuscripts, pp. 164, 162, 226, 274.
     The Plantagenet Ancestry, by Lt. Col. W. H. Turton, pp. 26-7.
0918 - UNKNOWN Knud Prince of Denmark 0800 - UNKNOWN Ruaidri 0603 - UNKNOWN Halfdan III King of Denmark 0640 - UNKNOWN Ivar Vidfadmus King of Denmark & Sweden His name meaning "the Far-Famed." These ancient Scandinavian peoples,speaking the same language as their brethren the Angles, began at a veryearly period, as might naturally be expected, to settle amongst theAngles in the North of England. About the beginning of the 7th centurythe celebrated Ivar conquered the northern parts of England, havingpreviously conquered Sweden and Saxland (Germany) and other parts ofEurope. He is called King of Denmark, Sweden, Saxland and Northumberland. D. UNKNOWN Valentine II Roman Emperor 0540 - UNKNOWN Eudoxia D. UNKNOWN Emperor Theodosius 0865 - UNKNOWN Turstan De Bastenburg 0540 - UNKNOWN Frode VI King of Denmark 0513 - UNKNOWN Roe King of Denmark 0570 - UNKNOWN Frode VII King of Denmark 0450 - UNKNOWN Frode IV King of Denmark 0770 - UNKNOWN Cormac 0422 - UNKNOWN Fridlief III King of Denmark 0390 - UNKNOWN Halfdan King of Denmark 0364 - UNKNOWN Frode III the Pacific King of Denmark 0328 - UNKNOWN Danus MyKillati King of Scandia & Denmark Dan or Danus MyKillati, who was King of Scania and Denmark, died 270 A.D. He married Olufa, Queen of Jutland and Zealand in 205 A. D. when herfather died. She was descended in the sixth generation from Skiold, sonof Odin. Dan reduced the whole country to subjection and is alleged tohave given his name to the new kingdom. The union of his sister withDyggve of Sweden is reckoned the earliest matrimonial alliance that wasformed between two countries. Wars and other events of no importance fillup the history of his successors for ten or twelve generations. 1030 - UNKNOWN Eadgyth 0855 - 0898 Aethelhelm Ealdorman of Wessex 43 43 1003 - UNKNOWN Herleva De Evereux 0740 - UNKNOWN Domnall 1022 - 1072 Ivo FitzRichard De Taillebois 50 50 1060 - UNKNOWN Lucy of Mercia 0710 - UNKNOWN Dunchad 1012 - UNKNOWN Alice Lesseline De Harcourt 1025 - UNKNOWN Avicia of Normandy 1020 - UNKNOWN Galfridus Duke of Brittany 1118 - 1153 William De Tracy 35 35 0974 - UNKNOWN Maugher De Corbeil Earl of Corbeil 0680 - UNKNOWN Bregdolb 0955 - UNKNOWN Frederic I of Luxembourg 0980 - UNKNOWN Germaine De Corbeil 0878 - UNKNOWN Athelstan King of the Saxons 0300 - UNKNOWN Olaf The Mild King of Denmark 0270 - UNKNOWN Vermund The Sage King of Denmark Vermund became King of Denmark, A. D. 87, and died A. D. 140. 0240 - UNKNOWN Frode II King of Denmark 0210 - UNKNOWN Frode Fredigod King of Denmark 0185 - UNKNOWN Fridleif King of Denmark ~1174 - <1232 Mabel le Meschin 58 58 0125 - UNKNOWN Odin King of Scandinavia Odin was supreme ruler of the Scythians, in Asaland, or Asaheim,Turkestan, between the Euxine and Caspian Seas, in Asia. He reigned atAsgard, whence he removed in the year B. C. 70, and became the first Kingof Scandinavia. He died in the year B. C. 50, and was succeeded by hissons, who reigned in different parts of Scandinavia. 0100 - UNKNOWN Fridulf Supreme Ruler of the Scythians 0650 - UNKNOWN Cummascach 0730 - UNKNOWN Throud King of Frodheim 0709 - 0790 Sigurd Hring King of Denmark & Norway 81 81 0802 - UNKNOWN Eisten Glumru King of Thrandia 0477 - UNKNOWN Halfdan II King of Denmark 0619 - UNKNOWN Alof Queen of Sweden 0620 - UNKNOWN Cobthach 0795 - UNKNOWN Louis The German 0798 - UNKNOWN Emma of Spain 0770 - UNKNOWN Louis Le Debonaire 0775 - UNKNOWN Judith of Saxony 1072 - UNKNOWN Maud Margaret Princess of England 1120 - UNKNOWN Gundred Rohesia Princess of England 0979 - UNKNOWN Gilbert De St. Valery 0218 - UNKNOWN Saeming King Of The Norse Agnes 0590 - UNKNOWN Aed 0895 - UNKNOWN Alof Haraldsdatter Princess Of Norway 0874 - UNKNOWN Thorir Rognvaldsson Earl Of More 0998 - UNKNOWN Irmtrud Countess Of Luxemburg 0938 - UNKNOWN Richilde Princess Of The Holy Roman Empire 0930 - UNKNOWN Cuno Count Of Oeningen 0924 - UNKNOWN Heribert Count In Kinziggau 0874 - UNKNOWN Bertha De Vermandois 0860 - UNKNOWN Udo Count Of The Wetterau 0560 - UNKNOWN Fintan 0830 Gebhard de Wetterau 0800 - UNKNOWN Gebhard Count Of Lower Lahngau 0994 - UNKNOWN Walram II Count Of Limburg 1000 - UNKNOWN Jutta Countess Of Luxembourg D. UNKNOWN Don Ferch Mathonwy D. UNKNOWN Eurgen D. UNKNOWN Marius D. UNKNOWN Anyn D. UNKNOWN Dingad 0530 - UNKNOWN Mac- Laisre D. UNKNOWN Brywlais D. UNKNOWN Ceraint Feddw An irreclaimable drunkard, deposed by his subjects for setting fire justbefore harvest to the cornfields of Siluria, now County Monmouthshire,England.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 159
D. UNKNOWN Berwyn D. UNKNOWN Morgan D. UNKNOWN Bleddyn D. UNKNOWN Rhun D. UNKNOWN Idwal D. UNKNOWN Llywarch D. UNKNOWN Calchwynydd 0485 - UNKNOWN Cainnech D. UNKNOWN Enir Fardd D. UNKNOWN Ithel D. UNKNOWN Llarian D. UNKNOWN Teuged D. UNKNOWN Llyfeinydd D. UNKNOWN Peredur D. UNKNOWN Gweyrydd D. UNKNOWN Ithon D. UNKNOWN Cymryw D. UNKNOWN Brwt 0460 - UNKNOWN Ernbrand D. UNKNOWN Selys Hen D. UNKNOWN Annyn Tro D. UNKNOWN Brydain He settled the island at an early date and being a great legislator aswell as warrior, according to tradition gave his name to the entireisland, which has since been corrupted into Britain.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 158
D. UNKNOWN Aedd Mawr Aedd Mawr "King Edward The Great", who appears to have lived ca. 1300 BC.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 158
     http://home.gvi.net/~rlmann2/admwr.htm
D. UNKNOWN Fausta D. UNKNOWN Heli Matthatsson D. UNKNOWN Eutropious 0982 - UNKNOWN Ladislau of Hungary 0990 - UNKNOWN Prbemieslawa 1030 - UNKNOWN Walderne De St. Clair Walderne or Waldernus, Compte de St. Clare, married Helena, daughter ofthe Duke of Normandie, cousin-german of William the Conqueror. He cameover to England with that great prince in 1066.
Source:   "The MacDonough-Hackstaff Ancestry"  Rodney MacDonough  CallNumber: R929.2 M132
0430 - UNKNOWN Nia 1002 - UNKNOWN Mauger le Jeune Count De St. Clair 1010 - UNKNOWN Daughter St. Clair De Basseneville 1034 - UNKNOWN Helene De Normandy 1063 - UNKNOWN Daughter of Lulach King of Scots 0480 - UNKNOWN Loarn King Of Dalrieda 0935 - 0966 Dubh MacMalcolm 31 31 1188 - 1246 Isabella De Taillefer D' Angouleme 58 58 Isabella De Gloucester 0405 - UNKNOWN Brion Richard Of Dover Baron Of Chilham FitzJohn ~1150 - 1202 Hamelin De Warrenne Plantagenet 52 52 ~1145 - 1199 Isabel De Warenne 54 54 1144 - 1219 William Marshall 75 75 28 Feb 1154/1155 - 1182 Henry Plantagenet 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet 28 28 1165 - 1199 Joanna Dof Henry II Plantagenet 34 34 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Wof King Alonso Plantagenet 52 52 0380 - UNKNOWN Eogan Brecc 0968 - UNKNOWN Irmtrud Countess Of Gleiberg 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII King Of Castile&Leon 58 58 Suzanne Warren Alice Princess Of France Petronilla Of Aquitaine 1134 - 1157 Geoffrey of Anjou Plantagenet 23 23 D. 1261 Sanchia Of Provence 1145 Marie Princess Of France Geoffrey Plantagenet 0942 - 1004 Godehaut 62 62 D. 1192 Agnes Plantagenet Geoffrey Plantagenet 1210 - 1238 Joanna Plantagenet 28 28  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of King John of England

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of King John of England

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of King John of England
1214 - 1241 Isabel Plantagenet 27 27 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess Of England Plantagenet 60 60 ~1174 - 1247 Alice Agnes De Meschines 73 73 D. 1240 Isabella Marshall 1059 - 14 Feb 1116/1117 Bertrade De Montfort John Sidley Wrote letter # 18 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. 0893 - 0931 Hildebrante Princess Of France 38 38 0923 - UNKNOWN Yves Of Creil 1044 Paula Of Maine ~0925 Gerberga Countess Of Lorraine  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Daughter of Duke of Lorraine
Albert I The Pious Count De Vermandois  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Albert the Pious
Liegarde Princess Of France  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of Robert I of France
Herbert II Count Of Vermandois  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

succeeded 902 AD
0993 - 1016 Edmund Ironside King Of England 23 23  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

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King of England 1016

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King of England 1016

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King of England 1016
0943 - 0975 Edgar The Peaceable King Of England 32 32  [daddy5.FTW]

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[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975

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[daddy3.FTW]

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King of England, 959-975
~0940 - 0959 Edwy King Of England 19 19  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 955 - 959
Also known as Eadwig
15 years aold when he asnednded the throne;
lost thenorthern part of his kingdom in 957
Arguments with Dunstan over monastic revival

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 955 - 959
Also known as Eadwig
15 years aold when he asnednded the throne;
lost thenorthern part of his kingdom in 957
Arguments with Dunstan over monastic revival
~0963 - 18 Mar 0977/0978 Edward The Martyr King Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England,975- 978

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England,975- 978

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England,975- 978
D. 1036 Alfred Atheling Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

murdered 1036

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

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murdered 1036
0925 - UNKNOWN Geile 1004 - 5 Jan 1065/1066 Edward The Confessor King Of England King of England,1042-1066

Reigned 1042-1066. Named for his piety and his foundation of a newWestminster Abbey (consecrated in 1065). He lived in Normandy (1016-41)and
his early reign was dominated by rivalry between his Norman favourites and
his father-in-Law. After 1053 the Goodwins were in the ascendant. Edward's
childlessness led ultimately to the Norman conquest. He was canonised in1161.
His feast day is 13th October.
0931 Adelheid Empress Of Germany 0997 Elfgifu Princess Of England ~1030 - 1059 Alfgar III Earl Of Mercia 29 29 1214 - UNKNOWN Ralph FitzBernard ~1200 - <1235 Emma de Glanville 35 35 Henry Seawell 0936 - 1031 Gonnor Duchess De Crepon 95 95  aka gunnor of Denmark

aka gunnor of Denmark
~0981 William II Count Of Provence 1229 - UNKNOWN Joan deAquillon 0913 Theobald I Count Of Champagne 0920 Ledgarde Duchess Of Normandy 0933 - 0996 Richard I Of Normandy 63 63 0955 William 2nd Count Of Eu ~0911 Adele Of Normandy Godfrey Duke Of Brittany Allan III Count Of Brittany 0915 - 0958 Adela De Vermandois 43 43 1205 - 1256 Giles deBadlesmere 51 51 0969 - 1008 Matilda Countess Of Flanders 39 39 0925 - 0993 Conrad I King Of Burgundy 68 68 BET. 943 - 948 - 26 Jan 0981/0982 Matilde Princess Of The Franks 0921 - 0954 Louis IV King Of The Franks 33 33 0890 Gilbert Duke Of Lorraine 0930 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Alberade Of Lorraine D. 0959 Eadwig King Of England 1012 - 1089 Theobald III Count Of Blois 77 77 BET. 1002 - 1043 - BET. 1045 - 1106 Gersende Berthe Of Maine 0990 - 1037 Eudes Otto II Count Of Blois 47 47 1184 - 1206 Bartholomew deBadlesmere 22 22 BET. 973 - 997 - 10 Mar 1039/1040 Ermengarde Of Auvergne 0945 - 0995 Eudes Odo I Count Of Blois 50 50 0962 - ~1010 Bertha Of Burgundy 48 48 BET. 1010 - 1029 - 1085 Bertha Of Blois BET. 1010 - 1029 Almodis Of Blois 1015 Stephen Of Blois <0904 Theobald II Count Of Blois ~0915 Luitgarde De Vermandois ~0860 - 0904 Theobald Viscount Of Troyes 44 44 0888 Richilde Of Bourges 1185 - UNKNOWN Agathe deBeaufoe 0965 - 1016 Gerberga Of Burgundy 51 51 0970 Rudolph III King Of Burgundy D. 1036 Herbert I Count Of Maine BET. 1025 - 1041 - 1072 Hawise Of Brittany 1034 - 1094 Emma Of Brittany 60 60 0966 - 0970 Edmund Prince Of England 4 4 0994 Uchtred Earl Of Northumberland 0885 - 0931 Gorm Del Gammel 46 46 ~0887 Thyre ~1002 Alfred Prince Of England 1160 - UNKNOWN Fulk deBeaufoe Lord of Thitcham ~1004 Goda Princess Of England ~0966 Boso Count Of Provence 0942 - 1026 Adela Blanca D' Anjou 84 84 D. 1032 Robert I Count Of Auvergne Ermengarde Of Arles D. ~1016 William IV Count Of Auvergne Humberge D. 0989 Robert II Viscount Of Auvergne Angelberg Dame De Beaumont 0955 - 0994 William I Count Of Provence 39 39 1180 - UNKNOWN Robert deAquillon 1030 - 1089 Robert deUmfreville Lord Tours Vian 59 59 Constance Of Vienne Rudolph II King Of Burgundy Bertha Queen Of Swabia 1157 - 1199 King Of England Richard I Plantagenet 41 41  [daddy5.FTW]

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[daddy2.FTW]

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[daddy5.FTW]

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[daddy2.FTW]
1102 - 1167 Matilda the Empress Plantagenet 65 65 ~1136 Rosamund De Clifford <1173 - BET. 1225 - 1226 William Longspee 1086 - 1147 Isabel(Elizabeth) Queen Of England De Beaumont 61 61 1184 - UNKNOWN John FitzBernard 1209 - 1272 Richard Plantagenet 63 63 1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet 33 33 1136 - BET. 1163 - 1164 William Count of Poitou Plantagenet 1127 - 16 Mar 1180/1181 Henry Count Of Champagne 1152 - 1156 William Plantagenet 3 3 Robert Plantagenet ~0970 Adele Princess Of France 0945 - 1019 Frederick Count Of Luxembourg 74 74 0897 Guidenilde Maude Peverel 1155 William deAquillon 1085 William Peverel 1042 John I De Beaugency De La Fleche ~1083 - 1153 David I King Of Scotland 70 70  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]


[daddy2.FTW]

King of Scotland 1124-1153
1068 - 1135 King Of England Henry I Beauclerc Plantagenet 67 67 King 1100-1135 ~1073 - ~1165 Sybilla Corbet 92 92 0934 - 0982 Adelaide Countess De Vermandois 48 48 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V The Handsome Plantagenet Of Anjou 38 38 1055 Adeliza Nun Henry II The Wrangler Of Bavaria Hildeswinde Of Croatia 1223 - UNKNOWN Margaret Leveland D. 1097 Odo Earl Of Kent Bishop Of Bayeux D. 0972 Eberhard IV Count Of Luxembourg Robert Count Of Mortain 1066 Constance Of Normandy Edward Of Scotland 1080 - 1116 Mary Of Scotland 36 36 ~1074 - 8 Jan 1106/1107 Edgar King Of Scotland Malcolm Of Scotland 1145 - 1189 Bartholomew deBadlesmere 44 44 Lawsuit in Kent, tre. in King's forest 1176 Christina Nun Of Romsey Ethelred Abbot Of Dunkeld 1064 Agatha Of Normandy 1008 - 1040 Henri Capet I King Of France 32 32 1088 - 1134 Gervase Count Of Rethel 46 46 BET. 1054 - 1055 - 1075 Richard Duke Of Bernay 1056 - 1127 Cecilia Abbess Of Caen 71 71 Hadwig ~1078 - 1124 Alexander I King Of Scotland 46 46  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

b 1077 King 1107-1124
Gerberga Of Hildesheim 1092 - 1144 Elizabeth deNamur 52 52 Sybilla Queen Of Scotland  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

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[daddy3.FTW]

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[daddy2.FTW]
1017 - 1056 Henry III Emperor Of Germany 38 38 1057 - 1100 William II Rufus King Of England 43 43  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King or England 1087 -1100
1121 - 1204 Eleanor Queen Of England Of Aquitaine 83 83  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

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Edmund I King Of Scotland 1050 - UNKNOWN Ralph deLa Haye Donald Of Scotland ~1200 - 18 Mar 1265/1266 John de Grey Sir John de Grey (d 1266), judge, was second son of Henry de Grey, first baron Grey of Codnor, by his wife Isolda, the eldest of the nieces ofRobert Bardolf, and possibly related to Walter de Grey, archbiship ofYork.  Heving a seat at Eaton, near Fenny Stratford, he served as sheriffof Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire in the twenty-third year of HenryIII, and seven years later became constable of the castle of Gannoe inNorth Wales, and justice of Chester.  In the thirtyt-fifth year of HenryIII he married Johanna, widow of Paulinus Peiure.  The king, however, haddestined her for another husband, and for thus marrying her without theroyal license Grey was fined five hundred marks, and lost hisappointments in Wales.  He took the cross in 1252, and on his return fromthe crusade was received again into favour, and in 1258 was forgiven hisfine and debts to the crown to the extent of 300 l.  He was alsoappointed steward of Gascony and custos of the castles of Northampton,Shrewsbury and Dover.  In 1255 he withdrew from court, disliking thecourse taken by the royal councillors, and pleading old age.  But in 1258he was one of the twelve representatives of the commonalty, and of thetwenty-four 'a treiter de aide le rei.' He was also appointed by thebarons one of the counsellors to Prince Edward, and castellan ofHereford.  In 1260 he became a justice in eyre in Somersetshire,Dorsetshire, and Devonshire.  On 9 July 1261 he was appointed by the kingsheriff of Hereford and custos of Hereford Castle.  In the king's warwith his barons he adhered to the king, took command of the army in Walesin February 1263, in July his house was attacked by the Londoners, and heescaped with difficulty.  He was one of the king's sureties that he wouldabide by the award made by King Louis of France, and in 1265, after thebattle of Evesham, was made sheirff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire.He died in the following year.  By his first wife, Emma, daughter andheiress of Geoffrey de Glanville, he had a daghter and a son, Reginald,first baron Grey de Wilton ( d 1308, from whom descend the Earl of Wiltonand Marquis of Ripon. [Dictionary of National Biography VIII:634]

_______________________

Sir John de Grey, 2nd son of Henry de Grey, of Thurrock, co. Essex,served the office of sheriff for the cos. Buckingham and Bedford in the23rd Henry III [1249], and had summons to attend the king in the 26th ofthe same reign, with horse and arms, upon the expedition then made intoFlanders. "In the 35th Henry III [1251]," says Dugdale, "the Lady JoanePeyvre, widow of Pauline Pevere (a great man in that age), beingpossessed of all her husband's estate, sold to this John the marriage ofher son for 500 marks, he undertaking to discharge her of any fine to theking; whereupon he married him to his own daughter, and when this Joaneheard that the king had given her in marriage (as she was a widow) to oneStephen de Salines, an alien, she, by the advice of her friends, beingthen in London, matched herself to this John de Grey, which being told tothe king, he grew much offended but at length accepted of a fine of 500marks from him for that transgression." In the 37th Henry III [1253], SirJohn de Grey was made governor of Northampton Castle and the next yearconstituted steward of all Gascony, but in three years afterward, "beingan aged knight, much esteemed to his civility and valour, as also chiefof the king's council," yet weary of the vanities of the court, hewithdrew from public life. In the very next year, however, we find himnominated to the governorship of Shrewsbury Castle, and soon afterappointed constable of that of Dover. In the 47th Henry III [1263], hewas sheriff of Herefordshire and governor of Hereford Castle. The nextyear he had the custody of all the lands of Anker de Frescheville in thecos. of Nottingham and Derby, and was one of those barons who undertookthat the king should abide the arbitration of Lewis, King of France,touching the misunderstanding with the barons. Remaining subsequentlyloyal to the king, he was appointed, after the victory of Evesham,sheriff for the cos. of Nottingham and Derby. Sir John de Grey d. in1265, and was s. by his son, Reginald de Grey. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, England, 1883, p. 245, Grey, Barons Grey of Wilton, co. Hereford]

----------

John, sometime justice of Chester, progenitor of the Greys of Wilton, andGreys of Ruthyn. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 248,Grey, Baron Grey, of Codnor, co. Derby]
1051 - 1125 Edgar Atheling King Of England 74 74  lived in Scotland 1068-1072
Submitted to William I 1074
1086 led Norman force to conquer Apulia in Italy
1091 deprived of his Norman Lands
1102 crusade to the Hly Land
Captured by Henry I int he battle of Tinchebrai 1102 siding with Robert duke of Normandy
~1060 - 1094 Duncan King Of Scotland 34 34 Thomas Keene 0963 - 0995 Liutgard Countess Of Luxembourg 32 32 ~1063 Matilda Of Normandy 1104 - 1165 Lucy de Tancarville 61 61 Isabel Hedwig Of England Hedwige(Hartwige) Princess Of Germany 0915 William I Of Aquitaine 0947 William III Count Taillefer 0948 Arsinde (Blanche) Countess D' Anjou 0921 - 0960 Raimond III Count Of Toulouse 39 39 Garsinde 1080 - 1156 Adelise Peverell 76 76 1063 - 1085 Gundred Princess Of England 22 22 0882 - 0921 Richard Duke Of Burgundy 39 39 0890 - 0956 Gilbert Gislebert Duke Of Burgundy 66 66 1014 - ~1040 Aelflead Sybil FitzSiward Of Northumbria 26 26 1009 - 1079 Adele Alix Princess Of France 70 70 1031 - 1083 Matilda Of Flanders 52 52 1062 - 1137 Adela Alice Princess Of England 75 75 1054 - Feb 1133/1134 Robert II Curthose Duke Of Normandy Herluin Viscount Of Conteville 1025 - 1087 Simon I De Montfort 62 62 1055 - 1120 Hugh I Count Of Rethel 65 65 0955 - 1008 Mathilde of Burgundy 53 53 1096 - 1126 Ermengarde(Ermentrude) Countess Du Maine 30 30 1033 - 1109 Foulques IV Count D' Anjou 76 76 1105 - 1151 Adeliza Of Louvain 46 46 0952 Adelaide Princess Of Aquitaine 1030 Erenburg Mrs Du Chateau Du Loire ~0970 - ~1040 Hedwige aka Hawise Of Normandy 70 70 D. 1006 Brunon I Margrave Of Saxony Finnsdottir Ingibiorg Earls Mother 0895 Raymond II Count Of Toulouse 0953 Geoffrey Count Of Eu & Brionne 1055 - 1097 Melisanda Of Montlheri 42 42 0908 - 0935 Ermengarde Of Burgundy 27 27 0913 - 0952 Gerberge Du Maine 39 39 Ermangarde I D' Anjou Adeka (Blanca) D' Anjou 1025 - UNKNOWN Gerald deCamville 0874 Roscilles De Loche 0972 Adwige(Avoise) Princess Of France 1008 Bertha Countess Of Flanders 0884 Adelheid Of Burgundy D. 0920 Monassas I Count Of Chalons ~1045 - 1076 Waltheof Earl Of Northumberland Of Huntingdon 31 31 1012 - 1067 Baldwin V De Lille Count Of Flanders 55 55 1003 Judith Adelais Countess Of Normandy 1005 Gerard deCamville 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I Of Burgundy 0990 - 1039 Conrad II Duke Of Burgundy 49 49 0988 - UNKNOWN William of Gommentz 0949 - 3 Feb 0992/0993 Guillaume IV Duke Of Aquitaine 0985 - 1035 Milon I Seigneur deLa Ferte 50 50 0954 Adalbert Marquis Ivrea 0932 - 0942 Adelaide Countess Of Burgundy 10 10 0967 William De Hainault 1010 - UNKNOWN Thibauda Of Montlheri Elias Count of Maine D' Anjou 1056 - ~1143 Matilda Princess Of England 87 87 ~0962 - 21 Feb 1033/1034 Hedwige Hawise Of Normandy 1027 Alice Of Normandy 0975 - 1031 Thibaud Seigneur Of Montlheri Che Vereuse 56 56 ~1005 Ermengarde De Flandres Of Flanders D. 1119 William Plantagenet  died in th e white ship 1030 - 1070 Baldwin VI Of Mons Of Flanders 40 40 1022 - 1056 Manasser III Count Of Rethel 34 34 1033 Robert The Friesian Of Flanders ~1189 - ~1261 Ela Fitz- Patrick 72 72 Maude Of Swabia 0960 - BET. JAN - DEC Brunon II Margrave Of Saxony 0988 - 1077 Gertrude Of Egisheim 89 89 1015 - 1038 III Herman 23 23 0974 - 1015 Ernst 41 41 1037 Judith Countess Of Northumberland D. 0967 Duff King Of Scotland 1035 - UNKNOWN Judith deRoucy 1003 Adelaide Havoise Princess Of France ~1007 Hugh The Grand Of France ~1013 Eudo Odes Prince Of France 0931 - 0975 Ebles Abbot Of Saint Martin Of Aquitaine 44 44 Maldred Earl Of Dunbar D. 0932 Elstrude Of Flanders ~1005 Eleanore Princess Of Normandy Judith Of Flanders 1035 Henry Count Of Flanders ~0986 Donada Of Scotland 0956 - 1039 Giselbert Count Of Roucy 83 83 0892 - 0971 Rainer III Count of Hainault 79 79 Rainer or Reginar III succeeded his father.  With his brother Rodolfe hetook the side of Louis d'Outremer, King of France, against Otto I, Kingof Germany. Rainer was forced to subdue Conrad, Duke of Lorraine, in 952,but after peace was restored he committed many acts of violence, evendaring to seize lands possessed by the Dowager Queen Gerberga, widow ofKing Louis. King Lothair forced Rainer, in 956, to restore the lands hehad taken from the Queen. The next year Rainer made war on Duke Bruno,Archbishop of Cologne and brother of King Otto, but was defeated andforced to submit to the prelate. Later he was deposed by Bruno in 958 andsent into exile. He married Alix, daughter of Hugo, Count of Dagsburg andEgisheim, and had Lambert, Count of Louvain, and Rainer or Reginar IV,Count of Hainaul. 1113 Baldwin Redvers Baldwin de Redvers was founder of Bremer Abbey, County Wilts, and QuarrAbbey, County Hants. In April, 1136, there were rumors of the death ofKing Stephen, and on hearing this he was one of the first to break out inrevolt. Seizing the royal castle of Exeter, he sustained a long siege bythe King, and was ultimately allowed to withdraw his forces on giving upthe castle. The King then proceeded to the Isle of Wight, took possessionof the island, and drove him, with his wife and children, into exile.Baldwin then took refuge at the court of the Count of Anjou, and soonafterwards conducted a successful raid into Normandy. About Lent, 1138,he was taken prisoner in Normandy by Enguerrard de Say, a partisan ofKing Stephen. He returned to England in the autumn of 1139, shortlybefore the arrival of the Empress Maud, and landing at Warham, seized thecastle of Corfe. This he defended successfully against the King, forcinghim to eventually raise the siege. By the Empress Maud. (daughter ofHenry I and mother of Henry II) he was created Earl of Devonshire in theyear 1141. He married 1st Adeliza, 2nd Lucia. His daughter Eve married Anchitel Grey. Earl of Devonshire. Elizabeth Plantagenet Ethelfreda Princess Of England Duncan Marmor of Atholl Siward Earl Of Northumberland Elfleda Of Northumberland Aldred Earl Of Northumberland Ecgfrid Alduine Bishop Of Durham D. 1161 Melisende Of Jerusalem Badouin III King Of Jerusalem 1060 Alice deVere The Complete Peerage vol.X,Appendix J,p.112,note j. D. 1174 Amaury King Of Jerusalem ~0922 Hadwig Thangmar Suana Of Montfort Liudulf 1070 - UNKNOWN Sybil deChateau- Porcien ~0876 - 0936 Henry The Fowler Emperor Of Hre 60 60 ~0836 - 0912 Otto The Illustrious Of Saxony 76 76 ~0806 - 0866 Liudolf Of Saxony 60 60 0912 - 0973 Otto I The Great Emperor Of Germany 60 60  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
0918 - 0955 Henry I The Quarellsome Dule Of Bavaria 37 37 Oda 0925 - 0965 St Bruno The Great Of Cologne 40 40 ~1188 - 1245 Isabella de Taillefer 57 57 TITL [QUEEN OF ENGLAND]/

DEAT PLAC Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-et-Loire, France

BURI PLAC Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-et-Loire, France
!BIR-MARR-DEATH: ROYAL ANCESTORS 10/88
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md. p 378
!NAME: Frederick Lewis Weis, MAGNA CHARTA SURETY; 1215; Third Edition;line
151-2. Jack Davis



Countess of Gloucester
Isabella was crowned Queen at Westminster Abby. Her first husband KingJohn of England was 3 2 and she was only 15. King John divorced his wife,Avisa, the granddaughter of the great Knig ht of the bend sinster, Robertof Gloucester, in order to marry Isabella.  Isabella was ofte n called theHelen of the Middle Ages.[FIX.ged]
1448 - 1492 Elizabeth de Grey 44 44 D. <1242 Eudo FitzRoy 1044 - 1110 Ida Relinda of Saxony 66 66 1173 - 1240 Llewelyn (Lord Snowden) Orwerth 67 67  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

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TITL [PRINCE OF WALES]/[colvill1286a.ged]

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TITL [PRINCE OF WALES]/
1340 Eudo Welles 1423 - 1475 Katherine de Percy 52 52 Anne ~1187 - 1219 Oliver Plantagent 32 32 ~1340 Maude Greystoke 1374 - 1398 Roger Mortimer 24 24 1438 - 17 Jan 1482/1483 Robert Greystoke 1467 - 1525 Thomas Ralph de Dacre 57 57 1421 - 1461 Henry Percy 39 39 1049 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde 1421 - Feb 1483/1484 Eleanor Poynings 1166 - 1240 Isabel Ferrers 74 74 1364 - 1403 Henry de Percy 39 39  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Also called "Hotspur". Killed doing battle with the King of England over a
personal offence.[FIX.ged]

Also called "Hotspur". Killed doing battle with the King of England over a personal offence.
12 Feb 1369/1370 - 1417 Elizabeth de Mortimer 1194 - 1268 Joane de Mortimer 74 74 ~1150 - 1235 Walter Beauchamp 85 85 1362 Elizabeth of England 1355 - 9 Jan 1398/1399 John Holland ~1340 - 1401 Thomas Beauchamp 61 61 Roger Mortimer 0969 - UNKNOWN Harold II 'Graypelt' King of Norway 1158 - 1214 Roger II de Mortimer 56 56 ~1151 - 1170 Bertha Braose 19 19 Walter Beauchamp Margery Bohun Henry de Newburgh 1388 - 13 Mar 1420/1421 John Clifford Baron Clifford 1395 - 1437 Elizabeth de Percy 42 42 Walderan II de Newburgh D. UNKNOWN Eric I Bloodaxe King of Norway Gundred de Newburgh D. 1261 Sanchia D. 1240 Isabel Marshal ~1360 - 1411 William Beauchamp 51 51 1376 - 1447 Henry "Cardinal" Beaufort 71 71 1196 - 1263 Alice de Newburgh 67 67 1209 - 1265 Simon de Montfort 56 56 D. 1231 William Marshal 1000 - 1095 Bernhard II Duke of Saxony 95 95 Emeline Le Despenser aka: de Abitot ~1253 Beatrice of Falkenstein Roger de Puleston D. >1470 Roger Draycott 1152 Alfonso of Castile And Molina  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Alphonso is the start of the House of Molina.[f.ged]

Alphonso is the start of the House of Molina.

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Alphonso is the start of the House of Molina.[FIX.ged]

Alphonso is the start of the House of Molina.
~1227 - <1268 Isabel Mauduit 41 41 1270 - 1325 Charles de France 55 55 1268 - 1314 Philip IV of France 46 46 ~1249 - 1323 Isabel Beauchamp 74 74 1020 - UNKNOWN Adela of Rethel 1129 - 1195 Henry V "The Lion" 66 66  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duke of Brunswick, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Saxony

Aka: Henry X.[FIX.ged]

Duke of Brunswick, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Saxony
Aka: Henry X.
Annabel Balliol Helie (Ela) Borel D. 1299 Margaret de Anjou 1247 Thomas Beauchamp 1188 - 1252 Blanche de Castile 64 64 ~0939 - 0996 Hugues de Capet 57 57  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Sovereign of all France, lineal decendant in the 6th generation fromCharlemagne
and first King of the Capetian Dynasty. he was crowned , theunanimous choice of
the great feudal Barons, 3rd of July, 987 at Noyon.This reign marks the
beginning of modern history. Though Duke of France,Hugh, before his accession,
had also been Abbott of St. Martin de Tours.Hence, the surname, Capet, from
Capetus a monks hood.[FIX.ged]

Sovereign of all France, lineal decendant in the 6th generation fromCharlemagne and first Kin g of the Capetian Dynasty. he was crowned , theunanimous choice of the great feudal Barons, 3 rd of July, 987 at Noyon.This reign marks the beginning of modern history. Though Duke of Fra nce,Hugh, before his accession, had also been Abbott of St. Martin de Tours.Hence, the surnam e, Capet, from Capetus a monks hood.
0975 - UNKNOWN Manasser II Of Rethel 1249 Joan Beauchamp ~1012 - 1067 Baudouin V of Flanders 55 55  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

(Baldwin) Count of Flanders 1036-1067, Regent of France  1060-1067 duringthe
minority of his nephew, Philip I., King of France 1060-1108 who waseight years
old at the death of his father, Henry I., King of France1031-1060.  Also known
as:  " le Debonaire " and " le Pious." Heaccompanied William the Conqueror to
England in 1066. Aka:[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

(Baldwin) Count of Flanders 1036-1067, Regent of France  1060-1067 duringthe minority of hi s nephew, Philip I., King of France 1060-1108 who waseight years old at the death of his fath er, Henry I., King of France1031-1060.  Also known as:  " le Debonaire " and " le Pious." Hea ccompanied William the Conqueror to England in 1066. Aka:
0915 William III de Poitou  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Guienne, Count of Auvergne, Count of Poitou, 951-963, by hiswife,
Heloys.  AKA: Guillaume III (I) Duke of Aquitaine.

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Guienne, Count of Auvergne, Count of Poitou, 951-963, by hiswife, Heloys.  AKA: Guill aume III (I) Duke of Aquitaine.
1251 Sybil Beauchamp D. UNKNOWN Dada 1024 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Ermengarde D'Anjou ~1255 - 1306 Sarah Beauchamp 51 51 0950 - UNKNOWN Manasser I Of Rethel 1009 - 8 Jan 1078/1079 Adela Capet of France Princess of France 1105 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deStanton Duke of Stanton D. 1328 Clementia Martel of Hungary 1230 - 1280 William IV Blount 50 50 Michael Armyne Wrote letter # 31 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Dorothy Mallory  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

First Wife.[FIX.ged]

First Wife.
Muriel Bowes V Foulques Ermengarde du Maine Ykenai or Hikenai 1158 - 1197 Marguerite of France 39 39  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.
D. ~1230 Princess of Navarre Berengaria 1120 - 1165 Luitgardeof Sultzbach 45 45 D. 1201 Constance of Richmond 1119 - 19 Jan 1147/1148 William III de Warenne A crusader who died in the Holy Land. See: " The Complete Peerage,vol.XII,
pages 496-7.
1155 - 1214 Alfonso Sanchez VIII of Castile 59 59 II Guglielmo D. 1358 Isabella of France 1284 - 1327 Edward II 43 43 ~0898 - 0956 Hughes Magnus de Capet 58 58  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duke and King of Burgundy, Duke of France, Count of Vermandois, Count ofParis
and Marquis of Orleans.[FIX.ged]

Duke and King of Burgundy, Duke of France, Count of Vermandois, Count ofParis and Marquis o f Orleans.
1185 - 1223 Alphonso II of Portugal 38 38 1341 - 1402 Edmund England 61 61 1209 - 1272 Richard of England 63 63 1050 - 1086 Everard Le Donjon 36 36 1210 Joan Makepeace of England  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Joan was first betrothed to her mother's  (Isabella) jilted lover, Hughof
Lusignan.

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Joan was first betrothed to her mother's  (Isabella) jilted lover, Hughof
Lusignan.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Joan was first betrothed to her mother's  (Isabella) jilted lover, Hughof Lusignan.

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Joan was first betrothed to her mother's  (Isabella) jilted lover, Hughof Lusignan.
Alexander of Scotland 1215 - 1275 Eleanorof England 60 60 1222 - 1291 Eleanor of Provence 69 69 1164 - 1199 Joanna Plantagenet Princess of England 34 34 William Talvas of Ponthieu Patrick de Salisbury 1492 - 19 Jan 1555/1556 William Hussey D. 1305 Blanche of France 1020 - 1084 Artald V Count deForez & Lyons 64 64 D. ~1260 Ferdinand of Aumale 1207 - 1272 Henry III of England 65 65 Was 9 years old when he was made King by the death of his father KingJohn.

October 28, 1216 crowned King of England.
1194 - 1250 II Frederick 56 56  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Holy Roman Emperor 1215.

Holy Roman Emperor 1215.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Holy Roman Emperor 1215.

Holy Roman Emperor 1215.
1243 - 1267 Beatrice of Provence 24 24 D. 1277 Frederick of Castile  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Slain in battle, 1277.

Slain in battle, 1277.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Slain in battle, 1277.

Slain in battle, 1277.
Philip of Castile Jane Bowes D. 1304 Henry of Castile 1029 Ida dela Forez Eleanor de Castro D. 1283 John Emanuel of Castile D. 1292 Beatrix of Savoy Constance of Aragon 1189 - 1211 Ferdinand of Castile 22 22 D. 1220 Urraca of Castile 1204 - 1217 Henry I Castile 13 13 D. 1280 Yolande of Burgundy 1050 - UNKNOWN Renald Count Of Bar-Sur-Seine Elizabeth Huston Children of William Caldwell and Elizabeth Huston are: i. JOHN5 CALDWELL, b. Abt 19 August 1653. ii. ROBERT CALDWELL, b. Abt 03 November 1654. iii. THOMAS CALDWELL, b. Abt 10 June 1656. iv. ALEXANDER CALDWELL, b. Abt 23 September 1658. v. JEAN CALDWELL, b. Abt 02 September 1661. 1256 - 1275 Ferdinand de La Cerda of Castile 19 19  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

From this marrage came the House De La Cerda, Dukes of Medina Celi.

From this marrage came the House De La Cerda, Dukes of Medina Celi.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

From this marrage came the House De La Cerda, Dukes of Medina Celi.

From this marrage came the House De La Cerda, Dukes of Medina Celi.
1253 - 1300 Blanche of France 47 47 Joan Holand 1216 - 1250 Robert I Capet of France 34 34 1220 - 1271 Alphonso Capet of France 51 51 1014 - 1100 Guillaume deNevers I Count de Nevers & Auxerre 86 86 1254 - 1291 Joan of Chatillon 37 37 1220 - 1271 Joan of Toulouse 51 51 D. 1288 Matilda of Brabant 1250 - 1270 John Tristan of France 20 20 1256 - 1317 Robert of France 61 61 D. 1327 Agnes of France 1234 - 1271 Isabel de Aragon 37 37 William Bowes Alphonso of Aragon D. 1310 Beatrice of Burgundy 0955 - UNKNOWN Renaud deCastellan Governor Chasteare Reynard 1294 - 1328 Charles IV of France 34 34  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France
1310 - 1371 Joan d'Evreux 61 61 Stephen Bowes 1304 - 1324 Mary of Luxemburg 20 20 1276 - 1319 Louis Evreux of France 43 43 D. 1311 Margaret of Artois Roger Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

3rd. Son, ob.s.p..[FIX.ged]

3rd. Son, ob.s.p..
Thomas Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd. Son

[FIX.ged]

2nd. Son
0996 - UNKNOWN Artald IV Count deForez & Lyons D. UNKNOWN Richlin of Saxony 1239 - 1307 Edward I England 68 68 In the 25th year of his reign, he solemnly, though with great
reluctance,confirmed the Magna Charta. King of England

Edward I was King of England 1272-1307 and was one of the most powerfulEnglish Kings of the middle ages. Edward made permanent achievements inboth political and constitutional fields. : "The Middle Ages" by H.R.Loyn and "The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, GeneralEditor.
1282 - 1307 Rudolph III of Bohemia 25 25 1289 - 1316 Louis X of France 27 27 1291 - 1322 Philip V of France 31 31 1248 - 1315 Margaret of Burgundy 67 67 1529 Jane- Sibilla Hussey 1002 - UNKNOWN Ida Ramona deGeilin John Bowes 1330 - 1376 Edward England 46 46 1328 - 1385 Joan Plantagenet 57 57 1795 ?? 1355 - 1393 Isabel of Castile 38 38 D. 1386 Violante Visconti 1316 - 1336 John 20 20 1275 - 1312 John II of Brabant 37 37 1272 - 1307 Joan of England 35 35 1243 - 1295 Gilbert de Clare 52 52 1100 Renaud deTonnerre D. 1323 Ralph de Monthermer 1241 - 1286 Alexander III Scotland 45 45 1245 - 1296 Edmund of England 51 51 D. 1302 Blanche of Artois 1300 - 1338 Thomas 38 38 1301 - 1330 Edmund 29 29 Alice Halys D. 1349 Margaret Wake Rodger Bigod 1321 - 1362 Joan 41 41 1106 Helvise of Noyen 1324 - 1371 David II Scotland 47 47 1370 - 1394 Mary Bohun 24 24 1370 - 1437 Joan of Navarre 67 67 ~1537 Grace Midleton Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666. Thomas Folkingham Isabel Plantagenet- de Warenne Dorothy Hussey ~1126 Alix (Pernelle) de Poitiers ~1124 Guillaume "Le Hardi" D' Aquitaine 0984 - 1097 Renaud deNevers I Count de Nevers & Auxerre 113 113 5 Mar 1132/1133 - 1189 Henry II England Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The
Birth of Britain", Vol. 1 at pgs 199-225. Henry II became king in 1154 and
reigned until his death in 1189. For a more detailed account of King Henry's
reign see chapter 12 of Sir  Winston's book (above). He conquered Normandy in
September 1106

FitzEmpress, Henry II Curtmantle, King of England : Henry II was King ofEngland from 1135-1154. His titles included Duke of Normandy, Count ofBrittany, Count of Anjou, Duke of Aquitaine. He ruled an empire thatstretched from the Tweed to the
Pyrenees. In spite of frequent hostitilties with the French King his own
family and rebellious Barons (culminating in the great revolt of 1173-74)and
his quarrel with Thomas Becket, Henry maintained control over hispossessions
until shortly before his death. His judicial and administrative reformswhich
increased Royal control and influence at the expense of the Barons were of
great constitutional importance. Introduced trial by Jury. During his 35year rule he created the Angevin empire which covered much of France andthe British Isles. His success made him one of the most powerful rulersof medieval English kings and European monarchs. "The Encyclopedia of theMiddle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.
1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet Princess of England Princess 33 33  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duchess of Saxony and Bavaria

Daughter of Henry II., King of England first of the Plantagenet Kings.[FIX.ged]

Duchess of Saxony and Bavaria
Daughter of Henry II., King of England first of the Plantagenet Kings.
1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet Prince of England 27 27  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Brittany

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Brittany[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Brittany

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of Brittany
1152 - 1156 William Plantagenet of England 3 3 1155 - 1183 Henry Plantagenet of England Prince of England 28 28  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Rex Filius of England, 1170.

Rex Filius of England, 1170.[FIX.ged]

Rex Filius of England, 1170.

Rex Filius of England, 1170.
Mary of Shaftesbury Plantagenet ~1160 - ~1160 Philip Plantagenet Prince of England  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died as a infant

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Died as a infant[FIX.ged]

Died as a infant

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Died as a infant
1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet Princess of England Princess 52 52 Queen of Castile D. 1240 William Plantagenet- de Warenne William- Henry Fitz Hugh 0960 - UNKNOWN Landri deMonceaux Count de Auverre & Nevers Maud Fitz Hugh ~1186 - 1270 Richard Fitz- Roy 84 84  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th ed.  This book insists on complete and conclusive legal proof forevery

connection. Hardly anyone qustions any of the lines printed in this book.But

some would qustion Richards surname: FitzJohn/ or / FitzRoy. My research

tends to lead to my using the surname: FitzJohn as research leads to it and not
to the surname: FitzRoy. See sources listed.

********

!NOTE: " Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy "  by Alison Weir,
Pimlico, 1996; ; ; ; , Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: Sir Bernard Bu., "The Royal Families of England, Scotland and Wales with
pedigrees of Royal descents in illustration."; ; ; ; ;

!NOTE: Patrick W. Montague-Smith, "The Royal Line of Sucession - The British
Monarchy from Cerdic AD. 534, to Queen Elizabeth"  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book. "The Royal Line of Sucession - The British Monarchy from Cerdic AD. 534,
to Queen Elizabeth"  by:  Patrick W. Montague-Smith. ( Late editor of
"Debrett's Peerage)

!NOTE: F.L. Weis, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists." ; ; ; ; , Source Media
Type: Book[FIX.ged]

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",
7th ed.  This book insists on complete and conclusive legal proof forevery
connection. Hardly anyone qustions any of the lines printed in this book.But
some would qustion Richards surname: FitzJohn/ or / FitzRoy. My research
tends to lead to my using the surname: FitzJohn as research leads to it and not to the surnam e: FitzRoy. See sources listed.
********
~1218 - 1276 Isabel Fitz-Roy de Chilham 58 58 1166 De Warenne Plantagenet A unnamed sister of William de Warenne was the mother of Richard FitzJohn.

!NOTE: " Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy "  by Alison Weir,
Pimlico, 1996; ; ; ; , Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book. "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords and all its
members from the earliest times."  by: G.E. Cokayne, revised by G.H. White
1953. All volumes have been referenced.

!NOTE: Anne Taut, "Kings and Queens of Great Britain"   ; ; A Large Wall Chart;
; , Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: "King Alfred the Great" by: Alfred P. Smyth, Oxford University Press.; ;
; ; , Source Media Type: Book

[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Line 7608 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [CONCUBINE 10 OF ENGLAND]/[colvill1286a.ged]

Line 7608 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [CONCUBINE 10 OF ENGLAND]/[colvill1286b.ged]

Line 7608 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [CONCUBINE 10 OF ENGLAND]/[colvill1286c.ged]

Line 7608 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [CONCUBINE 10 OF ENGLAND]/
~1215 - 1270 Richard Fitz-Roy de Chilham 55 55 Maud Plantagenet- de Warenne ~1188 Rohsia (Rose) of Dover Emma Plantagenet Reynald de Warrenne Gundred de Warrenne 0984 - 1075 Adele Capet of France 91 91 D. 1174 Ala Talvas Richard FitzRoy  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251
Editha de Warrenne 1136 - 1203 Isabel de Warenne 67 67 "Stammtafeln" Leipzig, 1877 says she died 13 July 1199. Adelaide de Warrenne Ralph de Warrenne 0965 - UNKNOWN MathildeMahaud de Bourgogne 1015 - 1076 Sancha of Oviedo And Leon 61 61 1075 Milo IV deTonnerre Margery Bowes Katherine Bowes Tabba Sadler 1008 - 1060 Henry I de Capet 52 52 Acceded: 1031 King of France 1031-1060 1080 Ermengarde de Bar-sur-Seine John Swennowe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Full name: John Swennowe (Swinnow) of Roke[FIX.ged]

Full name: John Swennowe (Swinnow) of Roke
0837 - UNKNOWN Blichilde de Maine 1262 - UNKNOWN Alivia deMulton Giles Alington William Caldwell William Caldwell, Prebendary of Glasgow, was Lord Chancellor of Scotland. Philip Noel 1497 Gilbert Hussey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Source: English Org. of New Eng. Faml. vol.III,p.700.
0804 - UNKNOWN Rorgo deMaine Count de Maine Thomas Hussey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died, d.s.p. Ref. Burke.
Raoul Capet of France Herbert V. de Vermandois D. 1515 Margaret Blount  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

(1st Wife of John) Dau. and Heir of Sir. Simon Blount.

!NOTE: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book

!NOTE: " Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy "  by Alison Weir,
Pimlico, 1996; ; ; ; , Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: F.L. Weis, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists." ; ; ; ; , Source Media
Type: Book
Aldelia de Mowbray 1528 Anne Hussey 1065 - 28 Sep 1120/1121 Adelaide de Vermandois 1104 - 1141 Waleran Beaumont 37 37 ~1104 Isabel Beaumont 0833 - 0866 Ramnulf I Count of Poitou 33 33 Robert II Beaumont 0960 - 1085 Gunereda St. Omer 125 125 Some records show the wife of William de Warenne as Miss de Tosta.  Also at one
time it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William the Conqueror. For
details see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C.T. Clay or "Etudes surQuelques
Points de L'Histoire de Guillame le Conquerant" by H.Prentout described under
Surrey in "The Complete Peerage" by G.E. Gibbs.
1506 Elizabeth Hussey 1503 Reginald Hussey 1055 - 1088 William I de Warenne 33 33 Acceded: 16 April 1088 Gerbod of St. Omer 1020 Beatrice de Vascoeuil Emma 0998 Rudolf I de Warrene John Bowes D. UNKNOWN Agnes deBeaugency Dorothy Bowes John Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

7th Son, ob/ s.p.

[FIX.ged]

7th Son, ob/ s.p.
Henry Bowes Anna Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and coheir.[FIX.ged]

Dau. and coheir.
Jane Talbot  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. of Sir John's 2nd Wife.[FIX.ged]

Dau. of Sir John's 2nd Wife.
John Jackson Adam Bowes Baliol Bernard Baliol Ralph Wicliffe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Full name: Ralph Wicliffe of Wicliffe.[FIX.ged]

Full name: Ralph Wicliffe of Wicliffe.
0995 Beatrice de Bolbec Anne Bowes John I Trayner  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

In the Bishoprick of Durham. England, G.B.

[FIX.ged]

In the Bishoprick of Durham. England, G.B.
John II Trayner  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Knight in 1310.

[FIX.ged]

Knight in 1310.
Elizabeth Bowes Jane de Dacre Dau. of Ralph Dacre, Baron of Graystoke. Ralph Bulmer Humphrey Lisle William I Bowes Jordan de Dalden Miss. Baliol 0940 Osbern deBolbec Thomas Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

o.s.p.

[FIX.ged]

o.s.p.
George Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Marshall to Queen Elizabeth, and one of her Privy Council.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.39; ;

!BIRTH: Richard St. George Esq., Norroy King of Arms & Henry St. George
Esq.,Blue Mantle Pursuivant of Arms., Pedigrees from the Heraldic Visitation of
Northumberland.; ; Anno Domini 1615,  Typis Medio-Montanis, Excudit, Jacobus
Rogers., 1858; DeLaVal, Pedigree; ; On this Pedigree "Sir. John Bowes" father
of Anne, wife of John DeLaVal coflicts with

the Pedigree of " Bowes of Streatlam" in that Sir. John is called Sir. George
in that pedigree by the same King of Arms. Therefore I shall show him as: "Sir.
John-George Bowes" of Streatlam. MDW

[FIX.ged]

Marshall to Queen Elizabeth, and one of her Privy Council.
John Blakiston Cuthbert Collingwood Ralph I Bowes Margaret Conyers Dau. and one of the heirs of Sir. Richard Coigniers of Cowton, Knight. Robert Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

5th Son.

[FIX.ged]

5th Son.
The Widow Clervaulx Ralph II Bowes William Hilton 0948 Wevie deCrepon Mrs. Clervaulx  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Widow of Clervaulx of Croft.[FIX.ged]

Widow of Clervaulx of Croft.
Henry FitzRoy ~1192 Isabel La Blanche Ralph Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

6th Son. ob.s.p.

[FIX.ged]

6th Son. ob.s.p.
~1460 - ~1525 Anne Salvin 65 65 Adam Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

5th Son. ob. s.p.[FIX.ged]

5th Son. ob. s.p.
Ann Bowes Francis Bowes Ralph Bowes 1130 - UNKNOWN Roger deManwaring William Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

4th Son, ob.s.p.

[FIX.ged]

4th Son, ob.s.p.
William Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Living 1575, Eldest Son and heir.

[FIX.ged]

Living 1575, Eldest Son and heir.
Robert Bowes Henry Bowes George Bowes Mary Scrope Miss. Carnaby Magdalen Bray Elizabeth Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and co-heir to her father.

[FIX.ged]

Dau. and co-heir to her father.
Henry dePierrepoint Agnes Bowes John Conyers Maud de Dalden  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and Co-Heir of Jordan de Dalden, Sir. Knight.[FIX.ged]

Dau. and Co-Heir of Jordan de Dalden, Sir. Knight.
Christopher Wandesforde Thomas Preston >1680 Alice Faulkner 1685 - 1731 William Saunders 46 46 Mathew Sanders 5.150 CH £5.5.0 Apr 2 1720 Estate of William Sanders:
Appraisers: James Simpson, James Ward, Next of kin: John Sanders, William Sanders. === Sanders, William, planter, Charles Co., 25th Aug., 1731; 14th Oct., 1731. To dau. Frances (wife of Charles Sample) and hrs., 1/2 of "Hazard"'; sd. land not to be sold or mortgaged. To dau. Elizabeth (wife of Benjamin Stennett) and hrs., residue of "Hazard," same conditions. To dau. Ann and hrs., land where mother Eleanor Sanders now lives; sd. dau. dying without issue, to pass to dau. Rachel and hrs.; if both die without issue, to hr. at law; and personalty. To dau. Rachel and hrs., after her mother's decease, dwell. plan. -----; she dying without issue, to pass to dau. Anne after decease of her mother-in-law Catherine; and personalty. To wife Katherine, extx., dwell. plan. ---- during life and residue of personalty; to keep dau. Anne until of age or marriage; shd. sd. Catherine die during minority of dau. Ann, to be in care of her sister Frances Sample. Test: William Ross, Eliza. Elder, T. Thompson. 20, 239. === Mathew Sanders, Jr, 8,509 A CH £80.18.5 £36.1.11 Feb 3 1727 Received from: Thomas Millstead. Payments to: John Henrick, William McDaniel, William Saunders, David Cockran, James Lutwidge,, James Panandeer, Elox. Sanders. Stephen Brown, John Hanby, Patrick Connell, Samuell Hanson. Administrator: William Nellson.
William Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dubbed Knight at Poictiers in France.

[FIX.ged]

Dubbed Knight at Poictiers in France.
Elizabeth Leyburne  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Leyburne or Lilburne.[FIX.ged]

Leyburne or Lilburne.
John Talbot 1215 - 1295 Thomas deMulton III Baron Lucy 80 80 Zilpha Speight Dorothy Bowes Mrs. Morton D. 1660 Thomas Bowes John Bowes Anne Bowes Ann Bowes Anthony Morton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Batchelor in Divinity, and preby in the Cathedrall of Durham.

Batchelor in Divinity, and preby in the Cathedrall of Durham.
1654 Thomas Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Aged 12 years, 18 Aug. 1666.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.39; ;

[FIX.ged]

Aged 12 years, 18 Aug. 1666.
George Bowes 1230 - 1293 Isabel deBolteby 63 63 0955 Adele de Senlis Anthony Bowes Talbot Bowes Jane Bowes William Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Captain of horse for his Late Majesty King Charles the First, in the regiment
of Prince Rupert. Died Unmarried.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.39; ;

[FIX.ged]

Captain of horse for his Late Majesty King Charles the First, in the regiment of Prince Ruper t. Died Unmarried.
Joan Headlam Elizabeth Bowes Anne Morton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. And co-heir of her father." Pedigree Certified by Anne Bowes on behalf of
Thomas Bowes, Esq., her son now in minoritie."

Dau. And co-heir of her father." Pedigree Certified by Anne Bowes on behalf of Thomas Bowes , Esq., her son now in minoritie."
1256 Peter De Geneville 1710 Sarah Scott 1200 - UNKNOWN Lambert deMulton de Lucy Isabel De Cyprus Elizabeth Bowes Anne (Ann) Bowes Timothy Hutton D. ~1606 Thomas Hilton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.169; ;
Alice Trayner  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and one of the Heirs of Sir. John Trayner of Streatlam, Knight, in 1310.[FIX.ged]

Dau. and one of the Heirs of Sir. John Trayner of Streatlam, Knight, in 1310.
D. 1652 John Delaval Mr. Clopton 1102 - 1167 Matilda (Maud) of England 65 65 Empress of Germany, Queen of England, Princess Royal of England,  married at 12 years old: He nry V, German Roman Emperor, who died soon after. 1394 - 1420 Richard Le Scrope 26 26 1200 - 1276 Amabel deLucy 76 76 ~1130 - 1192 Agnes Plantagenet 62 62 1134 - 1157 Geoffrey VI Plantagenet 23 23 1136 - 30 Jan 1163/1164 Guillaume(William) Plantagenet ~1138 Emma Plantagenet Dafydd ap Owain Rosamond de Clifford Ann Warcop Blanch Mortimer Elizabeth Dayvill Lady Warcop 1175 - 1240 Thomas II deMulton 65 65 Thomas de Multon, Sheriff of Lincolnshire 1206; sided with the baronsagainst King John in 1215, was imprisoned in Corfu Castle 1215-1217;witness to Magna Charta 1215; Sheriff of Cumberland. In 1214 he paid1,000 marks for custody or wardship and marriage of the two daughters ofRichard de Lucy of Egremont, whom he married to his two sons and hehimself married the widow. Thomas de Multon married 1st a daughter ofRicard Delfliet and had two sons, Lambert, who married Amabel de Lucy,and Alan, who married Alice de Lucy, changing his name to Lucy. Thomas deMulton married 2nd, without license in 1218, Ada, daughter and co-heiressof Hugh de Morville, widow of Richard de Lucy and mother of Alice andAmabel de Lucy, who married his sons, Lambert and Alan. Agnes Warcop  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and heir of her father. Pensionet to Queen Elizabeth.[FIX.ged]

Dau. and heir of her father. Pensionet to Queen Elizabeth.
1244 - 1290 Eleanor de Castile Leon 46 46 1214 - 1241 Isabella of England 27 27 Sarah Newman Thomas Warcop 1226 - 1285 Charles I Capet of Naples 59 59 Fitz Hugh John Bowes 1234 - 1262 Christine of Norway 28 28 1150 - 1201 Thomas I deMulton 51 51 D. ~1628 Thomas Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Batchelor in Divinity, and preby in Cathedrall of Durham.

[FIX.ged]

Batchelor in Divinity, and preby in Cathedrall of Durham.
Fitz Hugh Fitz Hugh 1275 - 1318 Margaret of England 43 43 Francis Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

op.s.p.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.39; ;

[FIX.ged]

op.s.p.
Talbot Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

ob.s.p.[FIX.ged]

ob.s.p.
~1435 - ~1500 Getton 65 65 D. 1525 William Willoughby 1430 - ~1490 Gilbert Hussey 60 60  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Gilbert Hussey, son of John Hussey and Elizabeth Neffield

Hussey, was born about 1430, probably in Lincolnshire.  He

was married about l460 to a Miss Getton.

Children born to Gilbert Hussey include:

John Hussey born about 1462

Jane Hussey born about 1464

Anne Hussey born about 1467
1125 - 1169 Lambert deMulton 44 44 1475 - 1525 Mary Hussey 50 50  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Mary Hussey, daughter of William Hussey and Elizabeth

Berkeley Hussey, was born about 1475, at Sleaford,

Lincolnshire.  She was married about 1500 "to William, Ninth

Lord Willoughby of Eresby," according to "Visitation of

Yorkshire."  In 1511 he commanded 700 men in an expedition

to Spain, according to "Calendar of State Papers."  William

Willoughby  died in 1525 at Parham manor, Suffolk.  She died

in 1525 also, according to "Hussey Record."  No male heir

was born to this couple.
Morton Bowes ~1400 - 1464 Margaret de Neville 64 64 1363 - 1425 Ralph Dawraby de Neville 62 62  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

The Complete Peerage, Vol. XIIpII,pp 544-549

!NOTE: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; ; ;

!NOTE: " Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy "  by Alison Weir,
Pimlico, 1996; ; ; ; , Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: "Anderson's Royal Genealogies"; ; ; ; , ABBR Anderson's Royal
Genealogies

Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: "The Complete Peerage Vol.XIIpI,P.495-496"; ; ; ; ;[FIX.ged]

The Complete Peerage, Vol. XIIpII,pp 544-549
<1364 - 1396 Margaret de Stafford 32 32 Anne(Ann) de Neville Ralph de Neville  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd. Son.[FIX.ged]

2nd. Son.
Maulde de Neville Alice Neville Philippa de Neville deBriwere Elizabeth de Neville  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

A Nun in the Minories at London, England.[FIX.ged]

A Nun in the Minories at London, England.
D. 1458 Thomas de Dacre of Heyton de Grey Mauley 1352 - 4 Jan 1421/1422 Elizabeth de Holland  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and co-heir of her father, Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent.

!NOTE: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p248; ;[FIX.ged]

Dau. and co-heir of her father, Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent.
1387 John de Neville  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.248; ;
<1343 - 1386 Hugh Stafford 43 43 D. 1440 Joan Beaufort Richard de Neville George de Neville 1152 Eleanor deBoston Edward de Neville Robert de Neville 1373 - 1410 John Beaufort 37 37 Katharine de Neville Robert Bowes Roger Conyers Sibylla Langton Christopher Conyers Richard Conyers  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Heir.

[FIX.ged]

Heir.
John II Conyers 1180 - UNKNOWN Sarah FitzJosce deFlete Margaret D'Arcy Ellen Rilleston John I Conyers Heiress St. Quintin St. Quintin Robert Conyers D. 9 Jan 1462/1463 William Neville  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; Vol. VII, p.163; , Source
Media Type: Book. Lord Fauconberge,  (by right of his wife)  Earl of Kent.
1406 - 1490 Joan Fauconberge 84 84  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; Vol. Z, p.281-287.; ,
Source Media Type: Book. A idiot from birth.
D. 1588 Anne Talbot D. <1386 Philippe Beauchamp D. UNKNOWN Richard deFlete D. 1571 Elizabeth Hussey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Married the Lord Hungerford 1st.. Married Sir. Robert Throgmorton 2nd. In the
house of Mr. Throgmorton on a table (ref. marked XXIII) is this inscription: "
Quarterly of 5: 1) Throgmorton. 2) Olney. 3) A fess between six cross crosslets
fitchee'. 4) Spynne.  6) Bossan, impaling,Quarterly of six: 1) A chevron
betweenten crosses pat'ee. (Berkley) 2)......? 3) Checky. 4) A lion rampant. 5)
Sable. a lion rampant Argent, crowned Or. 6) Azure Semmee of crosses Or, a lion
rampant.  Over it is written: Sr. Robert Mar' first the daughtr of Moris Lorde
Barkley, and after to the Lorde huses daughtr.

On the same table is this inscription, ( ref. marked XXIV) :  Blank, impaling,
Quarterly 1 and 4, Or a cross Vert. 2)Argent on a bend cotised Sable a bendlet
wavy of the last. 3) Erm. three bars Gules. Over it is written, : Elizabeth
daughtr to the Lord Hussey & wydow to the Lord Hungerford, wyffe to sr. Robert.
(Throgmorton)

!NOTE: The Visitation of the County of Oxford, 1566,1574 and 1634. Together
with The Gatherings of Oxfordshire, 1574. ; ; From Harl. MS. No. 1412, p.
28(+-); ; ;
Enstance Delaval D. >1575 George Bainbrigge  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Baynbrigge of Snotterton.

"This Pedigree is witnessed for true by the subscription of George Baynbrigge
of Snotterton, aforsaid, on

Fryday, the 29th of July, 1575, at Auklana, in the Bishoprick of Durham."

Signed: George Baynbrige.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.5; ;[FIX.ged]

Baynbrigge of Snotterton.
"This Pedigree is witnessed for true by the subscription of George Baynbrigge of Snotterton , aforsaid, on
Fryday, the 29th of July, 1575, at Auklana, in the Bishoprick of Durham."
Signed: George Baynbrige.
Joane Mortimer ~1298 Edmund Mortimer John Folkingham Anne Folkingham D. 1577 James Standish 1521 - 1588 George Baildon 67 67  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!DEATH: Edited by:  Joseph Foster, "Glover's Visitation of Yorkshire"; ; ;
p.303; ;

!DEATH: Transcribed and Edited By: George Denison Lumb., "The Registers of the
Parish Church of Methley, In the County of York, From 1560-1812."; ; ; p.3; ;
Goffrey Mortimer D. 1213 Richard deLucy Lord Coupland Richard de Lucy of Egremont had grant of Forestership of Cumberland,temp. King John. Died about 15 of John 1213-1214. He married Ada,daughter and co-heiress of Hugh de Morville, Forester of Cumberland andLord of the Barony of Burgh. His widow, Ada, married within a few monthsThomas de Multon. Richard de Lucy's two daughters, Amabel and Alice,married the two sons of Thomas de Multon. 0919 - UNKNOWN Bormard deSenlis D. 1487 Ralph Greystoke Richard FitzRoy  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[colvill1286a.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251

[f.ged]

[colvill1286b.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251

[f.ged]

[colvill1286c.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251
Elizabeth Fitz Hugh ~1357 - 1417 Ralph Greystoke 60 60 Catherine Clifford Roger Clifford Lord Clifford 1389 - 1436 John Greystoke 47 47 Elizabeth Ferrers Anthony de Grey 1184 - 1240 Ada deMorville 56 56 1  NAME Ada /De Morvill/
1  NAME Ada /Morvill/
1321 - 1359 William Greystoke 38 38 Joane Fitz Hugh Lucy de Lucie 1298 - 1322 Ralph Greystoke Lord Greystoke 24 24 William Herbert Thomas de Dacre Ralph de Dacre D. 1509 Humphrey de Dacre 1162 - 1227 Helwise de Stuteville 65 65 Richard de Dacre George de Dacre Joan de Dacre Isabel de Dacre Lord Scrope of Upsal Scrope Thomas de Clifford Maud Parr Thomas Parr Mary Greystoke Elizabeth Greystoke 1155 - UNKNOWN Hugh deMorville William Howard Thomas Howard Humphrey de Dacre Mary de Dacre Margaret de Dacre Henry Scrope Francis Shrewsbury, D. ~1317 Robert Greystoke Elizabeth de Neville Hugh I De Cyprus D. 11 Jan 1198/1199 Reginald deLucy Reginald de Lucy was associated with Cumberland County as early as 1158.Governor of Nottingham in time of Henry II. He married Amabel, 2nddaughter and co-heiress of William Fitz-Duncan, Earl of Murray, inScotland, by Alice, daughter of Robert de Rumelli, Lord of Skipton. Shehad Egremont for her share. 1470 - 1516 Elizabeth Hussey 46 46 <1478 - 1523 Richard de Grey 45 45  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died pennyless gambler.[FIX.ged]

Died pennyless gambler.
D. 1562 Henry de Grey Anne Blanerhasset Anthony de Grey Robert Bowes Richard FitzRoy D. 1571 William Parr Lawrence Sweetenham See: Omerod. D. UNKNOWN Amabilis FitzDuncan Elizabeth Oldfield Frances Jennings D. 1339 Ranulph de Dacre Margaret de Multon Baroness de Multon 1357 - 1403 William de Dacre 46 46 Joan James D. 1383 Hugh de Dacre Ela Maxwell Alexander Maxwell Lord Maxwell D. UNKNOWN Julianne (de Flete) D. 1361 William de Dacre Thomas de Dacre D. 1375 Ralph de Dacre 1265 William de Dacre Joane Garnet  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Some authorities say this woman was the dau. of Sir. Wilm. Bluet.[FIX.ged]

Some authorities say this woman was the dau. of Sir. Wilm. Bluet.
Benedict Garnet Ranulph de Dacre Joane de Luci William de Dacre 1206 - 1272 Henry III King Plantagent 66 66  Henry III King Of England

BURI PLAC Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989
The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 70, 367 1884 Edition: Crowned at Gloucester28 Oct
1216;
Pedigrees of some Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants - Langston-Buck;
The Noble Lineage of the Delaware West Family by Anne Fox 1958;
House of Plantagenet
D. UNKNOWN William deLucy Margery Bowes 1434 - ~1499 Thomas Hussey 65 65  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Thomas Hussey, son of John Hussey and Elizabeth Neffield

Hussey, was born about 1435, probbly in Lincolnshire.  He

was married about 1465, wifes name unknown.

Children born to Thomas Hussey include:

Peter Hussey    born about 1467

Gilbert Hussey  born about 1470
~1440 - ~1490 Hussey 50 50 ~1435 - ~1500 Whetehill 65 65 1472 - 1546 Robert Hussey 74 74 1467 - 1531 William Hussey 64 64 Anne Say Hubert Browne Dokurray Dmmock D. UNKNOWN Cecilia deLucy Alice Hussey Blaje Holland Elizabeth Hussey Percivall Lumley John Hussey Francis Hussey ~1527 Elizabeth Hussey ~1520 Thomas Stydolf ~1497 - ~1550 Ursula Lovell 53 53 William Blakyston 0969 John deBourg de Tonsburgh Earl of Comyn D. Mar 1596/1597 Elizabeth Metcalfe Robert Throgmorton Hungerford  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

In the house of Mr. Throgmorton  on a table refernce marked XXIII is this
inscription: " Quarterly of 5: 1) Throgmorton. 2) Olney. 3) A fess between six
cross crosslets fitchee'. 4) Spynne.  6) Bossan, impaling,Quarterly of six: 1)
A chevron betweenten crosses pat'ee. (Berkley) 2)......? 3) Checky. 4) A lion
rampant. 5) Sable. a lion rampant Argent, crowned Or. 6) Azure Semmeeof crosses
Or, a lion rampant.  Over this inscription is written:

"Sir. Robert Marr. first the daughtr of Moris Lord Barkley, and after to the
Lord Huses daughtr."

!NOTE: The Visitation of the County of Oxford, 1566,1574 and 1634. Together
with The Gatherings of Oxfordshire, 1574. ; ; From Harl. MS. No. 1412, p.
28(+-); ; ;
Anne Bourchier Baroness Bourchier Maud Green 1512 - 1548 Catherine Parr 36 36 1493 - 2 Mar 1542/1543 John de Nevill Edward Borough Thomas Seymour Baron Seymour Henry VIII Tudor Elizabeth Whypple V~ Norfolk 1563 , PP. 309 0900 - 0967 Robert Count of Vermandois 67 67 In "The Forgotten Monarchy of Scotland" by Prince Michael of AlbanyRobert in titled the "Count of Troyes." Isabel Beauchamp D. 1205 Geofrey FitzRoy 5 Jan 1208/1209 - 1272 Richard I Cornwall Alice Medcalfe ~1153 - 1211 William de Braose 58 58 William II Bowes ~1155 - 1210 Matilda de Saint Valery 55 55 ~1186 - 1217 Richard de Chilham 31 31 D. <1386 Philippa Beauchamp 14 Feb 1313/1314 - 1369 Thomas Beauchamp Bouchard de Fezensac 1310 - 1369 Katherine de Mortimer 59 59 Alice De Champagne D. 1369 Maud Beauchamp D. 1337 Margaret de Mortimer Joan de Mortimer ~1304 - >1345 Maud de Mortimer de Montgomery 41 41 ~1205 Osbert Gifford ~1304 - 1367 Juliane de Leyburne 63 63 BEF. 16 MAR 1338/39 - 1401 4th Earl of Warwick Beauchamp Thomas Aubri the Burgundian Count de Fezensac Sir William La Zounche ~1311 - >1372 Joyce La Zouche de Mortimer 61 61 D. 1348 Agnes de Mortimer ~1274 Thomas de Leyburne Elizabeth Beauchamp D. 1597 John Hussey D. 1359 Adm Sir Geoffrey de Saye, IV Christopher Bowes Elizabeth Clifford  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. of Henry, Lord Clifford.[FIX.ged]

Dau. of Henry, Lord Clifford.
D. >1201 John FitzRoy Bouchard de Corsica Lady Baliol Thomas Speight Thomas  Speight or Spight. Ivo FitzRoy ~1115 - 1170 William I Lancaster 55 55 ~1166 - 1235 Piers Fitz Herbert 69 69 1100 - 1132 William Le Meschin 32 32 1100 - >1153 <Living> 53 53 ~1120 - >1190 Maud Meschines 70 70 D. >1127 Philip Belmeis Alice Belmeis D. 0772 Guerin de Hesbaye ~1115 Alice de Meschines ~1120 - 1178 Ada de Warenne 58 58 John de Limesi William de Lancaster 1104 Roger III de Toeni 1108 Ida of Hainaut ~1130 - 1162 Ralph V de Toeni 32 32 1136 Godeheut de Toeni ~1084 Aenor de Toteneis Adelindis de Hesbaye ~1145 - AFT. 5 FEB 1227/28 Sibyl Braiose D. >1189 Maud\Matilda\ Alberade Beaumont ~1136 - >1220 Lucy Fitz Walter 84 84 ~1118 - >1155 Milicent de Rethell 37 37 Robert Marmion <1133 - ~1181 Robert III Marmion 48 48 1180 - 1236 Walcheline Beauchamp 56 56 ~1196 - 1257 William Mauduit 61 61 ~1176 - 1224 Isabel Basset 48 48 ~1109 Maud Braose 0700 Robert de Hesbaye <1153 - 1204 Waleran de Newburg 51 51 D. 1210 William Beauchamp ~1154 Joane Waleries 1130 - 1169 William Beauchamp 39 39 ~1172 - 1221 Robert Mauduit 49 49 ~1146 - ~1223 Thurstan Basset 77 77 ~1109 Sir Thomas Waleries ~1120 - 26 Feb 1180/1181 Hugh II de Mortimer 1090 Hugh de Mortimer ~1090 - 1553 Roger de Newburgh 463 463 D. UNKNOWN Williswinda ~1117 - >1166 Gundred de Warenne 49 49 ~1045 - 1119 Henry Beaumont 74 74 ~1067 - >1156 Margaret de Perche 89 89 ~1152 - 1201 Roger de Harcourt 49 49 ~1152 Isabel de Camville 1130 - 1180 John\ ivo de Harcourt 50 50 ~1138 Richard de Camville ~1135 - >1189 Walkelin Ferrers 54 54 ~1126 - ~1150 William Braiose 24 24 ~1130 Berta de Gloucester 0640 Lambert de Hesbaye ~1132 - 1187 Margery de Hereford 55 55 ~1100 Maud of Normandy 1105 <Living> 1105 - 1136 Henry II Ferrers 31 31 Avice de Meschines Reginald de Warren ~1155 - 1 Jan 1190/1191 Avicia Lancaster D. UNKNOWN Waldrada ~1138 - 1195 William Mauduit 57 57 ~1118 - 1170 William Mauduit 52 52 ~1120 Isabel de St. Liz 1250 - <1306 Sir Richard Talbot 56 56 ~1114 Gildon Braiose ~1112 Philip Braiose ~1116 Braiose ~1135 - <1217 Maud Beauchamp 82 82 Roger de Gloucester Walter de Gloucester Bertila de Spoleto 0914 - 0967 Adelis of Burgundy 53 53 Henry de Gloucester Mahel de Glouster ? ~1165 - ~1215 Giles Braiose 50 50 ~1150 Roger Braiose ~1126 - >1177 Richard Basset 51 51 ~1138 - 1191 Robert Mauduit 53 53 D. 1223 Sir William de Harcourt ~1350 Roger Beauchamp D. ~1147 Elizabeth (Isabel) Beaumont Adeline Newburgh\ Beaumont 0825 - 0887 Conrad II Count Auxerre Margrave of Burgundy 62 62 Marmaduke Vincent Robert Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Master of the Rolls. 3rd son.

Had 4 sons, all died s.p.

Master of the Rolls. 3rd son.
Had 4 sons, all died s.p.
Alice Beauchamp Joan Le Brune Isabel D'Ibelin Beatrix Mortimer John Leyburne  [FIX.ged]

Elizabeth is the Dau. of 2nd Wife.; Leyburne or Lilburne.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Elizabeth is the Dau. of 2nd Wife.; Leyburne or Lilburne.
William de Dacre Lord de Dacre 1240 Hugh I De Lusignan King of Jerusalem 1269-1284
King of Cyprus 1267-1284
Henry De Lusignan 0800 - 16 Feb 0862/0863 Conrad de Argengau Phillip Mortimer ~1258 William Mortimer 1356 Richard Skipwith George II Hussey Dora Davenport Jones (Mrs. Jo Buck Jones), The Village Apts.4717 Wellesley, 143, Fort Worth , TX 76107, in 1988 (now deceased), researched and compiled a genealogy that traces the line b ack seven generations prior to that John Hussey. Mrs. Jones indicates that John Hussey is th e son of George II, last generation on "Lincoln Pedigrees".

Source:  The reference included for George Hussey is MS. C.23, Herald's College. "History o f Doddington" by Rev. R.E.G. Cole.
Source: "Pedigrees Recorded at the Vistations of the County Palatine of Durham, England." (Fo r the years: 1575 / 1615 / 1666)
<1466 - 1546 Ann de Grey 80 80  [FIX.ged]

In 1536 she was sent to the Tower for calling the 'illegitimized' Mary
(daughter of Henry VIII by his divorced wife Catherine of Arragon)
'princess'.  Henry's reason:  he did not want a female heir to the Crown.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

In 1536 she was sent to the Tower for calling the 'illegitimized' Mary

(daughter of Henry VIII by his divorced wife Catherine of Arragon)

'princess'.  Henry's reason:  he did not want a female heir to the Crown.

!NOTE: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book

!NOTE: F.L. Weis, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists." ; ; ; ; , Source Media
Type: Book

!NOTE: Patrick W. Montague-Smith, "The Royal Line of Sucession - The British
Monarchy from Cerdic AD. 534, to Queen Elizabeth"  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book
1465 - 1537 John Hussey 72 72  [FIX.ged]

A great deal has been written concerning the political activities of Sir
John Hussey during the reign of Henry VIII and even though all data were
abstracted from original court records, some details vary slightly.  He
fought on the king's side at Stokes in 1486 and became comptroller of the
royal household. Hussey received large grants of land in Lincolnshire and
neighboring counties, became one of the council, master of the king's
wards, knight of the body, and took 340 men to the French War in 1513,
when he was one of the commanders in the rear guard.  He was employed on
various diplomatic missions, and was sent as envoy to the emporor after
the Field of Cloth of Gold.

John Hussey was amoung those knighted at the battle of Blackheath, Jun
17, 1497.  He was made a 'Knight Banneret', possibly at the Battle of Spurs, in
France on 16 Aug. 1513.  A banneret had the privilege of leading his
retainers to battle under his own flag. They ranked at the next order
below Knights of the Garter providing they were created by the king on
the field of battle.

In 1521 he was made chief butler of England.  In 1529 he was summoned by
writ to the House of Lords as 'Johannes Hussey de sleford, chivaler'.  He
was a signatory to the document sent from England begging the papal
sanction to Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Arragon, and was one
of those at the queens trial who gave evidence as to her previous
marriage with Prince Arthur.  He was appointed in 1533 chamberlain to
the illegitimized "Princess" Mary, and his allegiance to her father seems
about the same time to have begun to waver.

On the outbreak of the Lincolnshire rebellion, known as the Pilgriamage
of Grace, in the autumn of 1536, Hussey seemed to remain firm in his
allegiance to the King.  Lord Hussey had been able to bring in his
tenants to fight for the king when he had been ordered to do so.  He was
accused of making no effort to raise men to put down the rebellion, and
the king accused him of being a traitor when he refused to tell the names
of the men behind the rebellion.  He was tried with Lord Darcy at
Westminster on 15 May 1537.  Cromwell offered him a pardon if he would
furnish particulars concerning the rebellion and he said he could not do
so.  There is a difference of opinion as to where he was executed --
Sleaford or Tyburn, and as to whether he was hung or beheaded.

In a history of "The Earlier Tudors" by Mackie, it is related that Hussey
was beheaded in Lincoln.

After John Hussey, (Age 71) was attainted of high treason and executed, his manor of
Sleford, with other lands to the value of five thousand pounds per annum
were confiscated, and barony forfeited.  His children were, however,
afterwards restored in blood, by parliament the 5th year of the reign of Queen
Elizabeth (1563); but neither his estates nor the title were granted to
his heirs.

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir John Hussey of Sleaford,
Knight, 1st son and heir; Sheriff of county Lincoln 9 Henry 7; aet. 30 at
his father's death; Knight of the King;s Body 5 Henry 8; Chief Butler of
England 13 Henry 8; summoned to Parliament 3 Nov 21 Henry 8, 1529;
attained and beheaded at Lincoln 29 June 29 Henry 8, 1537; his children
restored in blood only 5 Eliz., 1562.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

A great deal has been written concerning the political activities of Sir

John Hussey during the reign of Henry VIII and even though all data were

abstracted from original court records, some details vary slightly.  He

fought on the king's side at Stokes in 1486 and became comptroller of the

royal household. Hussey received large grants of land in Lincolnshire and

neighboring counties, became one of the council, master of the king's

wards, knight of the body, and took 340 men to the French War in 1513,

when he was one of the commanders in the rear guard.  He was employed on

various diplomatic missions, and was sent as envoy to the emporor after

the Field of Cloth of Gold.

John Hussey was amoung those knighted at the battle of Blackheath, Jun

17, 1497.  He was made a 'Knight Banneret', possibly at the Battle of Spurs, in

France on 16 Aug. 1513.  A banneret had the privilege of leading his

retainers to battle under his own flag. They ranked at the next order

below Knights of the Garter providing they were created by the king on

the field of battle.

In 1521 he was made chief butler of England.  In 1529 he was summoned by

writ to the House of Lords as 'Johannes Hussey de sleford, chivaler'.  He

was a signatory to the document sent from England begging the papal

sanction to Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Arragon, and was one

of those at the queens trial who gave evidence as to her previous

marriage with Prince Arthur.  He was appointed in 1533 chamberlain to

the illegitimized "Princess" Mary, and his allegiance to her father seems

about the same time to have begun to waver.

On the outbreak of the Lincolnshire rebellion, known as the Pilgriamage

of Grace, in the autumn of 1536, Hussey seemed to remain firm in his

allegiance to the King.  Lord Hussey had been able to bring in his

tenants to fight for the king when he had been ordered to do so.  He was

accused of making no effort to raise men to put down the rebellion, and

the king accused him of being a traitor when he refused to tell the names

of the men behind the rebellion.  He was tried with Lord Darcy at

Westminster on 15 May 1537.  Cromwell offered him a pardon if he would

furnish particulars concerning the rebellion and he said he could not do

so.  There is a difference of opinion as to where he was executed --

Sleaford or Tyburn, and as to whether he was hung or beheaded.

In a history of "The Earlier Tudors" by Mackie, it is related that Hussey

was beheaded in Lincoln.

After John Hussey, (Age 71) was attainted of high treason and executed, his
manor of

Sleford, with other lands to the value of five thousand pounds per annum

were confiscated, and barony forfeited.  His children were, however,

afterwards restored in blood, by parliament the 5th year of the reign of Queen

Elizabeth (1563); but neither his estates nor the title were granted to

his heirs.

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir John Hussey of Sleaford,

Knight, 1st son and heir; Sheriff of county Lincoln 9 Henry 7; aet. 30 at

his father's death; Knight of the King;s Body 5 Henry 8; Chief Butler of

England 13 Henry 8; summoned to Parliament 3 Nov 21 Henry 8, 1529;

attained and beheaded at Lincoln 29 June 29 Henry 8, 1537; his children

restored in blood only 5 Eliz., 1562.

!NOTE: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book

!DEATH: F.L. Weis, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists." ; ; ; ; , Source Media
Type: Book

!DEATH: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book
Bridget Bowes Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666." Katherine Herbert 1218 - 1281 Maurice de Berkeley 63 63  [FIX.ged]

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",
7th ed.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th ed.
0850 - 0921 Richard "The Justiciar" Duke of Burgundy 71 71 Thomas Bowes Robert Bowes Isabella Bowes Henry Bowes ~1212 Lauretta Fitz-Roy de Chilham Anne Conyers 1366 - 1413 Henry IV of England 47 47 Talbot Bowes 1188 - Feb 1236/1237 Joan England The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon and Griffith.
THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500 IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305[colvill1286a.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305[colvill1286b.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305[colvill1286c.ged]

!The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 305
0926 - 0976 Umberto of Burgundy 50 50 1338 - 1368 Lionel England 29 29 7 Jan 1354/1355 - 1397 Thomas England 1332 - 1363 Elizabeth de Burgh 31 31 1366 - 1399 Eleanor- Alianore Bohun 33 33 1394 - 1472 Eleanor de Neville 78 78 1415 - 1495 Cecily de Neville 80 80 3 Feb 1391/1392 - 1455 Henry de Percy 1402 - 1460 Humphrey Stafford 58 58 Grant, 1461, Aug. 10. 1 Edward IV. 1 item : parchment ; 10.5 x 30.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Robert Boghay to Sir Henry Stafford, knight, son of Humfrey, duke of Buckingham, Hugh Eggerton, John Harecourte, John Leegh of Bothes, Hugh Davenport, Hugh Erdeswyk, and Ralph Bostok, esquires, of all his lands, etce., in Annesley, Dorlaston, and Bokenall, or elsewhere in the county of Stafford. Given at Bokenall on the feast of St. Laurence the Martyr, 1 Edward IV.
WITNESSES: Robert Cuny, Thomas Wode of Mere, Richard Aleok of Hanley, John Cradok of Bokenall, Thomas Wode of Botteslowe. With 1 seal (1.2 cm.) of red wax, bearing a deuce.
NAMES: I. Boghay, Robert. II. Buckingham, Henry Stafford, Duke of, 1454?-1483. III. Buckingham, Humphrey Stafford, Duke of, 1402-1460. IV. Eggerton, Hugh. V. Harecourte, John. VI. Legh, John. VII. Cradok, John. VIII. De Davenport, Hugh. IX. De Erdeswyk, Hugh. X. Bostok, Ralph. XI. Cuny, Robert. XII. Wode, Thomas. XIII. Alcok, Richard.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England-- Staffordshire. 2. Deeds--England--Anslow. 3. Deeds--England--Darlaston. 4. Deeds-- England--Bucknall. 5. Staffordshire (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 6. Anslow (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 7. Darlaston (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges. 8. Bucknall (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQD0644
1114 - 1183 Robert IV deStuteville 69 69 1378 - 1416 Alice FitzAlan 38 38 1471 - 1516 Elizabeth Greystoke 45 45 1 Feb 1350/1351 - 1381 Edmund de Mortimer 1392 - 1405 Eleanor (Alianore) Holand 13 13 1173 - 1240 Llewelyn The Great Wales 67 67 ~1256 - ~1326 Roger Mortimer 70 70 Hugh Mortimer Isolda Mortimer Milicent (Ela) Berkeley 1075 - 1119 Robert III de Stuteville 44 44 During the reign of King Henry II Robert  laid claim to the barony ofRoger de Moubray which, on the rebellion of his father, had been given toNigel de Albini, father of the said Roger de Moubray, and part of whichhe received back by arbitration. He married Erneburga, daughter andheiress of Hugh, son of Baldric, a great Saxon Thane, and, among otherlands, had the lordship of Skipwith, or Skipwic as anciently written, inthe East Riding of Yorkshire. Guy D'Ibelin Constable of Cyprus Richard Coigniers ~1269 - ~1296 Margaret Mortimer 27 27 Elizabeth Bowes ~1248 Isabella Mortimer ~1296 Margaret Mortimer D. 1227 Hugh Mortimer Milisent ~1270 Isolde Mortimer Robert Mortimer 1105 - 1162 Hugh deMoreville 57 57 Joan Headlam ~1190 - 1246 Ralph II de Mortimer 56 56 ~1300 John Mortimer ~1302 Elizabeth Mortimer ~1286 Matilda Mortimer Gladuse Day 1219 - 1226 John Capet of France 7 7 1251 - 1283 Peter I of France 32 32 ~1289 Hugh Mortimer 1135 Beatrice deBeauchamp BET. 1262 - 1270 Margaret Fiennes Urso Le Despenser aka: de Abitot de Worchester Hugh Beauchamp Companion of William the Conq. ~1250 Ralph Mortimer 1252 - 1303 Edmund Mortimer 51 51 Maud Braose Le Despenser 1221 - 1282 Roger Mortimer 61 61 ~1307 Maud Mortimer Agnes Mortimer 1040 Robert II de Estuteville Robert called Grundeboef (or rather Fronteboef), Baron of Cottingham,lived during the reign of William the Conqueror. He was made prisoner byking Henry I at the battle of Tenerchebray where he was taken fighting on the side of Robert Curthose, for which his lands were seized and given toNigel de Albini. Margaret Mortimer ~1293 Joan Mortimer ~1292 Maud Mortimer Robert Le Despenser Steward to Wilam the Conq. PeterJohn Mortimer Anne de Grey ~1294 Walter Mortimer D. 1597 Jane Pigot Leeds Parish Registers, 1586.
Dau and Coheir of her Father.
The Publications of the Thoresby Society, "Leeds Parish Church, Registers, First and Second Books 1571-1612."; ; Volume 1, Leeds: 1891; p.324;
~1485 - <1535 Giles Hussey 50 50 2nd Son of John, Lord Hussey.

***

"Knights of England", vol II, p 45 lists:  Giles Hussey - 1523, July 1

Knights made by the Lord Admiral after taking of Morlaix "for their

hardness and courage".  He was probably about 18 at this time.  Bravery,

family, standing, etc. counted more than a mature age.

Over the years, many Husseys of England and Ireland were knighted.  Half

brother, William was knighted in 1513.

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees; Sir Giles Hussey of Caythorpe,

Knight, knighted by the Earl of Surrey at the Sacking of Morlaix in

France 1522.

There is a more recent series "The Complete Peerage" that clears up the

matter placing Anne Grey as Hussey's second (2nd) wife rather than the first

wife.  The Giles that died as an infant or young child was of the first

wife.

Wills have been found of John Hussey and Anne Grey.  John's dated

October 22, 1535, has provisions for wife, Lady Anne, sons William,

Thomas, Gilbert and Sir Giles and others.   Lady Anne's will was dated

March 1, 1544/5 and probated February 11, 1545/6, mentions two daughters

and sons Sir William and Sir Giles.  If you have access to "Ancestral

Roots of Sixty Colonists", Fifth Edition by Frederick Lewis Weis with

additions and revisions by Walter Lee Shepard, Jr. you will find links

between John and Anne (Grey) Hussey back to the Planteganets and beyond.



G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."

F.L. Weis, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists." ; ; ; ; , Source Media
Type: Book

The Publications of the Thoresby Society, "Leeds Parish Church
Registers, First and Second Books 1571-1612."; ; Volume 1, Leeds: 1891; p.52; ;
1014 Robert de Estuteville 0876 - 0956 Gislebert Duke of Burgundy 80 80 Gilbert Hussey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died d.s.p. Ref. Burke.
~1254 Geffrey Mortimer D. 1591 Thomas Hussey Source:  From Hussey chart "Lincoln Pedigrees", edited by Rev. Canon A.R.
Maddison, 1902-1906.

Source: Pedigrees Recorded at the Visitations of the County Palatine of Durham.
Years: 1575 / 1615 / 1666

Source: Parish Registers of Kirkburton, Co. York, with appendix of family
histories;  Re: " In 1565 Henry Batt,

Gent., was the plaintiff, and Thomas Hussey and Bridgett his wife were
deforciants in the sale of the

Capital Messuage called Okewell Hall."

"Thomas Hussey may have been named for his father's brother, Thomas.  The

exact number of children of these generations is not known but no doubt

there were other children as in the 1700s"  There was a famous portrait

painter by the name of Giles Hussey in England.

!NOTE: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.38; ;

[FIX.ged]

Source:  From Hussey chart "Lincoln Pedigrees", edited by Rev. Canon A.R. Maddison, 1902-1906 .
Source: Pedigrees Recorded at the Visitations of the County Palatine of Durham. Years: 157 5 / 1615 / 1666
Source: Parish Registers of Kirkburton, Co. York, with appendix of family histories;  Re: " I n 1565 Henry Batt,
Gent., was the plaintiff, and Thomas Hussey and Bridgett his wife were deforciants in the sal e of the
Capital Messuage called Okewell Hall."

"Thomas Hussey may have been named for his father's brother, Thomas.  The
exact number of children of these generations is not known but no doubt
there were other children as in the 1700s"  There was a famous portrait
painter by the name of Giles Hussey in England.
Thomas Pigot  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Some records say " of  Nappay-?"

!NOTE: The Publications of the Thoresby Society, "Leeds Parish Church
Registers, First and Second Books 1571-1612."; ; Volume 1, Leeds: 1891; p.52; ;
John Hussey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Recorded in the 19th year of the reign of Henry 6, 1440.

John Hussey, son of William Hussey, was born about 1402.

He was married  about 1425  to Elizabeth Neffield [or Nesfield]

of  Yorkshire.   "Complete  Peerage"   shows  her   name  as

"Elizabeth Sheffield.   John Hussey was collector of customs

and subsidies at Boston, Lincolnshire in 1431.

On April  30, 1438  a pardon  was given  to "John Pawelyn of

Brampton, Lincolnshire,  a gentleman,  for not  appearing to

answer John  Husy touching  a plea  of a  debt of 10 marks,"

according to  "Patent  Rolls."    John  Hussey  was  holding

Sleaford manor, Lincolnshire in 1440.

Children born  to John  Hussey and Elizabeth Neffield Hussey

include:

William Hussey          born about 1427

Gilbert Hussey            born about 1430

Thomas Hussey           born about 1435
~1409 Elizabeth Neffield  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Heiress whose arms were quartered with those of the Huses/Husseys.

Aka: Nesfield & Sheffield
~1379 - ~1444 William Hussey 65 65  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

The British Harleian Society, Volume 51, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, was

compiled in about 1750.  Pages 526 - 532 contain an extensive genealogy

of "Hussey of Sleaford and Honington" that starts with William Hussey in

the late 14th century and continues through about 1750.  One line of this

genealogy is represented here.  It runs from William Hussey, born about

1391 through John Hussey, born in the late 1500s.  The Lincolnshire

Pedigrees for this specific Hussey line ends with that John Hussey with

no information other than his name. However, that John Hussey's family is

of Surrey County, England, the same county as the John Hussey who is the

father of the recognized immigrant to America in 1632, Christopher

Hussey.

William Hussey,  believed to be a son of William Hussey, was

born about  1379, probably at Flintham, Nottinghamshire.  It

is believed  that he removed to Lincolnshire.  John Campbell

refers to  him as  a Lincolnshireman of small means.  He was

married  about   1400  to   a  Miss   Lumley,  according  to

"Lincolnshire Pedigrees."

Children born to them include:

John Hussey           born about 1402
~1393 - ~1458 Lumley 65 65 D. 1495 William Hussey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench (1481-1495).

According to Burke, Sir William Hussey, knight, an eminent lawyer  in the

time of Edward IV., after filling the office of attorney-general,  and

having been called by writ to the degree of serjeant at law, was

constituted lord chief justice of the court of the King's Bench, in the 17th

year of that monarch's  reign,when he received an allowance of 140 marks,

for greater state.  He was living temp. Henry VII., as is evident by this
inscription

over his arms, in the semicircular or bow window, of Grey's Inn Hall, viz., "W.

House miles capitalls  justiclarius de banco regis, temp. R. Henry VII."

In one of the windows of the chapel, belonging to the same inn, are his

arms impalling those of his wife, with the following inscription.

"Will. Hussee miles capitalis justic. ad placita coram rege, et Elizabeth

a uxor ejur filia Thomae Berkeley arm."

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir William Hussey, Knight  of

Gray's Inn; Commissioner of Sewers for Kesteven 7 Edward 4; M. P.  for

Grantham 1467; Attorney-General 16 June 11 Edward 4. 1471; Serjeant-at-

Law 14 Oct 17 Edward 4, 1477; Chief Justice of King's Bench 7 May 21

Edward 4, 1481; Commissioner  of Array in county of Lincoln 23 Dec 4

Henry 7, 1489; died 8 Sept 11  Henry 7, 1495; burried at Sempringham.

Will dated 15 Dec 10 Henry 7;  proved (C.P.C.) 4 July 1496.

William Hussey,  son of  John Hussey  and Elizabeth Neffield

Hussey,  was   born  about   1427,  probably   at  Sleaford,

Lincolnshire.   He became the most prominent figure in legal

circles in late fifteenth century England.

He was married about 1460 to Elizabeth Berkeley, daughter of

Thomas Berkeley  of Wymondham,  Leicestershire.  "Visitation

of Yorkshire"  records her  father as  "Sir Morris Berkeley,

knight."

William Hussey was appointed by King Edward IV July 16, 1463

to  inventory  the  estate  of  William  Viscount  Beaumont,

according to  "Cambridge Society  Publications,"  Volume  I,

Series III.   He and John Murdock received property from the

king  at  Staunford,  Lincolnshire  in  1464,  according  to

"Hussey Record."   He  became  commissioner  of  sewers  for

Kesteven,  Lincolnshire   in  1467   and  was   summoned  to

Parliament  in   the  same   year  to   represent  Grantham,

Lincolnshire.

William Hussey  was appointed  Chief Justice  of the  Common

Pleas April  21, 1470.   Part of his compensation was "a fee

of 40  marks and  a cask  of wine  from the  Port of  London

yearly."   He was  a resident  of Lincolnshire  in 1475, ac-

cording to  "Hastings Manuscripts."   As Attorney-General he

conducted the  impeachment  of  the  Duke  of  Clarence  for

treason.

He was  Serjeant-at-Law to  King Henry  VII on  October  17,

1477.   He was  Chief Justice  of the Kings Bench on May 7,

1481 at  a salary of 140 marks a year.  This appointment was

repeated by  each of  the next  three kings  of England.  He

received a  portion of  Tateshall manor, Lincolnshire August

8, 1481,  according to "Manuscripts of Lord DLisle."  Under

Henry VII  he was  a commissioner  who decided the claims to

fill various  offices at the coronation.  He was a member of

Parliament  in  1485,  1486  and  1487.    In  1489  he  was

Commissioner of  Array in  Lincolnshire.   In  1492  he  was

appointed to negotiate with the French ambassadors.

He died  September 8,  1495 and  was buried  at Sempringham,

Lincolnshire.   His  will,  dated  December  15,  1494,  was

probated July  4, 1496.   A  probable  relative  of  William

Hussey was  "Sir Mark  [or Marques]  Hussey, master  of  All

Saints Church  in  Lombard  Street,  London,"  according  to

"Camden Society  Publications."

Sir. Mark  Hussey, who previously held the office of chantry priest in

Charing church, died in London in 1499.

Elizabeth Berkeley  Hussey wrote  her will in August 1503 in

which she  also requested  to be buried at Sempringham.  Her

will was probated December 21, 1504.

Children born  to  William  Hussey  and  Elizabeth  Berkeley Hussey include:

John Hussey         born about 1465

William Hussey        born about 1467

Elizabeth Hussey        born about 1470

Robert Hussey       born about 1472

Mary Hussey         born about 1475

!BIRTH: G.E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage or a history of the house of Lords
and all its members from the earliest times."  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book
1445 - 1504 Elizabeth Berkeley 59 59  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas

Berkeley of Wymondham, county Leicester.  Her will is dated Aug 1503;

proved (C.P.C.) 21 Dec. 1504; (to be) burried at Sempringham.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and

Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Some records show her name spelled as"Barkley"
0972 Ancitel deBayeux Viscount de Bayeux 1413 - 1488 Thomas IV Berkeley 75 75  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

OCCU Sheriff of Leicestershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and

Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th ed.
~1415 Petronella Brooksby 1387 - 1458 Lawrence Berkeley 71 71  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

OCCU Sheriff of Leicestershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and

Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th ed.
~1389 Joan Woodford 1361 - 20 Mar 1412/1413 John III Berkeley  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

OCCU Sheriff of Lancastershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and

Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th  ed.
1363 - 1437 Isabel Berkeley 74 74 1335 - 1374 John II Berkeley 39 39  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

OCCU Sheriff of Lancastershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750. Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited,

and  Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th  ed.
1337 - 1400 Elizabeth Berkeley 63 63 1310 - 1356 John I Berkeley 46 46  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750.  Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited,

and  Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th  ed.
~1312 Isabel Burdet D. UNKNOWN Emina Ragnvaldsson 1280 - 1346 Thomas III Berkeley 66 66  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750.  Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited,

and  Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th  ed.
~1276 Isabel Hamelin 1245 - 1321 Thomas Berkeley 76 76  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about

1750.  Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited,

and  Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th ed.
~1238 - 19 Mar 1309/1310 Joan de Ferrers  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Health: 9 SEP 1931
~1250 John Hamelin  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Knight
~1252 Matilda Erdington ~1286 Robert Burdet ~1363 Robert Woodford Mary Plantagenet- de Warenne 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V Plantagenet 38 38 Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the  Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22. Count of Anjou and Maine. Called " The Fair".


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the  Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22. Count of Anjou and Maine. Called " The Fair".
~1679 - 1710 Hester Devou 31 31 Miss Clifton William III Bowes ~1389 William Brooksby 1525 Bridget Hussey 1129 - 1202 Hamelin Plantagenet- de Warenne 73 73 Assumed the name of " Warren" and became the Earl of Surrey(5), Vicomte
(ViceCount) of Touraine in France. See Early Yorkshire Charters,Vol.viii, pages
20-24 for daughters details. The Complete Peerage, vol.XIIpI, pages 499-500.
1521 Mary Hussey Jane Conyers Co-heir of her father Sir. Roger Coigniers, of Sockburne. 5 Jan 1208/1209 - 1272 Richard Prince of Plantagent EARL OF CORNWALL
MARR PLACE:  Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
1285 - 1356 Joan De Geneville 71 71 Isabel Berkeley 0900 - 0945 Hugh I Count du Maine 45 45 1210 - 4 Mar 1237/1238 Joane Princess of Plantagent QUEEN OF SCOTLAND 1411 - 1480 Anne Neville 69 69 1411 - 1460 Richard Plantagenet 49 49 ~1360 - 1435 Joan FitzAlan 75 75  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Thie lady had Dau's, but none survived.
1416 - 1490 Edmund de Grey 4th Lord de Grey 73 73 1355 - 7 Jan 1376/1377 Phillipa Plantagenet 1214 - 1241 Isabel Princess of Plantagent 27 27 EMPRESS OF GERMANY 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess of Plantagent 60 60 Catherine Beauchamp D. UNKNOWN Gherardo Gherardini Margaret Beauchamp Joane Beauchamp Thomas Laybourne Guy Beauchamp Reynburne Beauchamp John Beauchamp Hierom Beauchamp Maud Beauchamp 1272 - 1315 Guy Beauchamp 43 43 D. 1 Jan 1324/1325 Alice Laybourne 1129 - 1197 Alice de Lucy 68 68 John Beauchamp Emma Beauchamp Isabel Beauchamp Lucia Beauchamp 1237 - 1298 William Beauchamp 61 61 Maud Fitz- John Isabel Beauchamp Maud Beauchamp Margaret Beauchamp Anne Beauchamp 1050 William Bertram 1215 - 1268 William Beauchamp 53 53 1245 - >1297 John Beauchamp 52 52 ~1282 - 1303 Walter Beauchamp 21 21 1287 - 1330 Roger IV de Mortimer 43 43 1196 - 1233 James Beauchamp 37 37 Alice Bohun 1130 - 1202 Hameline Plantagenet 72 72 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1054 Daughter deBostenburgh ~1632 - ~1660 Joseph Foster 28 28 1173 - 1240 Llewelyn Ap Iorwerth 67 67 [PRINCE OF WALES]/ V Foulques Ermengarde du Maine 0960 - 1085 Gundred- Gunereda of St. Omer 125 125 Some records show the wife of William de Warenne as Miss de Tosta.  Also at one time it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William theConqueror. For details see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C.T. Clay or "Etudes surQuelques Points de L'Histoire de Guillame le Conquerant" by H.Prentout described under Surrey in "The Complete Peerage" by G.E. Gibbs.
[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]
1055 - 1088 William I de Warenne 33 33 Acceded: 16 April 1088 1282 - 1316 Elizabeth Plantagenet 33 33 1270 - 14 Feb 1316/1317 Marguerite Hardi of France The early death of the brave son and successor of Saint Louis IX, King ofFrance, King Philip the Hardy of France, left his youngest daughter, thePrincess Marguerite, fatherless at a very tender age. If she possessedany comliness of person, her claims to beauty were wholly overlooked byher contemporaries, who admired the exquisite persons of her elderbrother and sister, Philip le Bel and Blanche le Belle. A marriage treatywas made between Edward and Blanche, but through the scheming of theirbrother Philip, Marguerite, then a child of eleven, was substituted and awar immediately ensued, lasting from 1294 to 1298, and by this timeMarguerite had grown up; as Edward was a widower of 60, he agreed to theterms and they were married Sept. 8, 1299, nine years after the death ofhis first wife. She is the ancestress of all the English nobility bearingthe name of Howard through her son Thomas and all who bore the name ofHolland through her son Edmund of Woodstock, through his daughter Joan,the Fair Maid of Kent, who married Sir Thomas Holland. 1281 - 1345 Henry III Earl of Lancaster & Leicester 64 64 Earl of Leicester 1324. He was one of the leaders of the great confederacy
which overturned the power of the Spencers and deposed Kind Edward II. He was
appointed guardian of the new King Edward III. He was appointed captain-
general of all the King's forces in the Marches of Scotland. Lord of Beaumont and Nogent 1336. AKA 'Tortcol'.
1000 - UNKNOWN Gervase Paganell 1244 - 1290 Eleanor Princess Of Castile And Lâeon 46 46 Lineage Sources:
      Early Genealogical Hist. of House of Arundel, being an account of
      the origin of the Families of Montgomery, Albini, Fitzzalan andHoward,
      pp. 1-64, by John Pym Yeatman.
      History and Pedigree of House of Montgomery, by Thomas Harrison
      Montgomery, pp. 1-11, 12, 13, 20, 22, 26, 33, 35/36, 37, 38
1283 - 1345 Maud De Chaworth 62 62 ~0970 Adele Princess Of France 0945 - 1019 Frederick Count Of Luxembourg 74 74 0897 Guidenilde Maude Peverel 1085 William Peverel ~1093 - 1147 Robert Gloucester 54 54 1090 Emiline deAbitot 0930 - 0987 Geoffrey I Count of Anjou 57 57 Geoffrey surnamed Grisegonelle, who received, in requittal of hisservices against the Emperor Otho, a grant from King Robert of thedignified office of Seneschal of France. He married Adelais ofVermandois, daughter of Robert, Count of Troyes and Vermandois. He diedJuly 21, 987. ~1090 - 1157 Mabel Sibyl Maud FitzHamon Countess Gloucester 67 67 ~1073 - ~1165 Sybilla Corbet 92 92 0934 - 0982 Adelaide Countess De Vermandois 48 48 D. 1097 Odo Earl Of Kent Bishop Of Bayeux D. 0972 Eberhard IV Count Of Luxembourg Robert Count Of Mortain 1066 Constance Of Normandy 0939 - 0996 Hugh Capet King Of France 57 57  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1064 Agatha Of Normandy 1008 - 1040 Henri Capet I King Of France 32 32 1125 Reginald Dunstanville FitzRoy BET. 1054 - 1055 - 1075 Richard Duke Of Bernay 1056 - 1127 Cecilia Abbess Of Caen 71 71 1024 - 1087 William I The Conqueror King Of England 62 62 1057 - 1100 William II Rufus King Of England 43 43  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King or England 1087 -1100
1135 Beatrice FitzRichard D. 0939 Athelstan King Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 924 - 939
Edith Princess Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
D. 0955 Eadred King Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 946-955
0904 - 0955 Eadgifu Princess Of England 51 51  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Married Charles the simple of France
~0940 - 0959 Edwy King Of England 19 19  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 955 - 959
Also known as Eadwig
15 years aold when he asnednded the throne;
lost thenorthern part of his kingdom in 957
Arguments with Dunstan over monastic revival
D. 1036 Alfred Atheling Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

murdered 1036
~0920 - 0996 Richard II The Good Duke Of Normandy 76 76 Duke of Normandy ~0900 - 0942 Wiiliam I Longsword Of Normandy 42 42  [daddy5.FTW]

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Ricahrd I, Duke of Normandy
1068 - 1135 Henry I England 67 67 Henry I was Duke of Normandy from 1106-1135 and King of England from1100-1135. William I left Normandy to his oldest son Robert II Curthoseand England to his next oldest son, William II Rufus. Henry was leftgreat wealth and eventually outmanuvered his brothers to become King ofEngland in 1100 and ruled 35 years. Henry is remembered for expanding andstrengthening royal justice, integrating the Norman and Anglo-Saxon legalsystems, and laying the foundation for more centralized royal rule. "TheEncyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.

King of England 1100-1135; duke of Normandy 1106-35
Source: Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants, 1993, p 396
Source: The Royal Bastards of Medieval England, London (Routledge & Kegan Paul) 1984, p 63
Source: Heraldry by Anthony R Wagner in Medieval England, Oxford, v 1, 1958 pg. 347
Source Notes: Chris Given-Wilson and Alice Curteis, The Royal Bastards of Medieval England, Routledge & Kegan Paul (London, Boston) 1984, p 60-61; Henry I was one of the most effective kings ever to wear the English crown.  He was of medium height, thick-set, with black hair which was already receding from his forehead at the age of thirty, deep, bright eyes, and a voice like thunder.  Despite the voice, he was a man of few words; he preferred to listen and, once he had listened, to issue commands.  When he issued commands, he expected to be obeyed; when aroused by disobedience or treachery, his temper was fearsome.  He was a practical statesman of the highest ability, a man noted for his inflexible enforcement of the laws, his authoritarian handling of barons, and his inveterate hoarding of money.  He knew that to be successful a king must be rich, and he missed no opportunity to increase his wealth.  Like his father and brother, he could be cruel to the point of savagery: he believed in ruling, at least in part, by fear.  Yet he was respected as well as feared, for he maintained peace in England for most of his reign, and won a reputation as a man of learning and one who encouraged other men of learning to his court: his nickname was Beauclerc.  In his private life he was methodical and, in every aspect except one, abstemious: he kept regular hours, was noted for his personal piety, never drank, and partook of a plain diet.  He was, however, an incessant womaniser.  He fathered, by various mistresses, at least twenty royal bastards, more than any other kind in English history.   One of Henry's greatest achievements was to unite the two parts of his father's Anglo-Norman empire.  William the Conqueror, at his death in 1087, had left Normandy to his eldest son, Robert Curthose, England to his second son, William Rufus, while to Henry, his third son, he left only a hoard of silver.  Yet Henry was by far the ablest of the three.  In 1100, after Rufus had been 'accidentally' struck by an arrow while hunting in the New Forest (there has always been a suspicion that Henry himself may have been implicated in his brother's death), Henry seized the English throne; six years later, he defeated his brother Robert at the battle of Tinchebrau and overran the duchy of Normandy. Robert Curthose was led away to prison, where he remained until his death in 1134.  Thus for the last thirty years of his life, Henry I was ruler of both England and Normandy, the most powerful monarch in Western Europe.  .....  (P) The contemporary historian William of Malmesbury, while recognising the often brutal character of Henry's kingship, clearly admired his king:  'Inferior in wisdom to no king of modern time, he preferred contending by counsel rather than by the sword: if he could, he conquered without bloodshed ... Throughout his life he was wholly free from impure desires. ...'  In the light of his twenty known bastards, this last comment appears to come as something of a surprise, but it is worth noting how Malmesbury continues:  ' ... he was wholly free from impure desires for, as we have learned from those who were well informed, he partook of female blandishments not for the gratification of his lust, but for the sake of issue; nor did he condescend to casual intercourse, unless where it might produce that effect: in this respect [he was] the master of his inclinations, not the passive slave of desire.'  Malmesbury provides us here with a fascinating view of the royal bastard in medieval society: not as the unfortunate by-product of a royal affair, the regrettable misfit likely to do little more than make demands on the royal purse, but as a child who could perform a useful role in the service of the king, who could provide very positive benefits for his or her father. ..... (P) Henry's unofficial families ... generated a vast network of relations in England, Ireland, Wales, Scotland, Brittany, Normandy and the French kingdom."

Source: William Richard Cutter, *New England Families*, NY 1913, p 1897-1898:   "The pedigree of King Henry I. is as follows:  (I) King Charles, of France, married Lady Rotrude.  (II) Pepin L'Bref, married Lady Bertha de Leon.  (III) Charlemagne, Emperor of the West, married Lady of Savoy.  (IV) Louis I., King of France, married Lady Judith.  (V) Charles II., King of France, married Lady Ermentrudic, daughter of the count of Orleans.  (VI) Count Baldwin I., of Flanders, married Lady Judith [! repetition].  (VII) Count Baldwin II., of Flanders, married Lady Ethelwida.  (VIII) Ardolph the Great, of Flanders, married Lady Alice, daughter of Count de Vermandois.  (IX) Baldwin III., of Flanders, married Matilda of Saxony.  (X) Ardolph II., of Flanders, married Lady Susanna, daughter of Duke of Italy. (XI) Baldwin IV., of Flanders, married Lady Eleanore of Normandy. (XII) Baldwin V., of Flanders, married Lady Adele, granddaughter of Hugh Capet.  (XIII) Matilda, daughter of Baldwin V., married William the Conqueror, William I. of England.  (XIV) Henry I., King of England, son of William the Conqueror.

"The pedigree of Edward I. is as follows:

(I) Egbert, Saxon king, first king of England, married Redburga.  (II) Ethelwold, king of England, married Oshurga, daughter of the Earl of Osiac.  (III) Alfred the Great of England, married Ethelbith. daughter of the Earl of Ethelran.  (IV) Edward, of England, married Edgiva, daughter of Earl of Sigeline.  (V) Edmund I., of England, married Elgiva.  (VI) Edgar, of England, married Elfrida, daughter of Earl of Devon.  (VII) Ethelred, of England, married Elgiva, daughter of Earl of Thorad.  (VIII) Edmund II. of England, married Elgatha of Denmark. (IX) Prince Edward, King of England, married Agatha of Germany.  (X) Princess Margaret of England, married Malcolm III., King of Scotland. (XI) Henry I., King of England, married Princess Matilda.  (XII) Geoffrey, King of England, married Maud, Empress of Germany.  (XIII) Henry II., King of England, married Eleanor, daughter of Duke of Aquitaine.  (XIV) John, King of England, married Isabella, daughter of Count de Augouieme.  (XV) Henry III., King of England, married Eleanor, daughter of Count of Provence. (XVI) Edward I., King of England, married Eleanor of Castile.  (XVII) Princess Elizabeth, daughter of Edward I., married Humphrey, Earl of Hereford.  (XVIII) William, Earl of Northampton, married Elizabeth.  (XIX) Robert Fitz Alan, tenth Earl of Arundel, married Elizabeth.  (XX) Sir Robert Groushill, knight, married Joan.  (XXI) Thomas, first Lord Stanley, married Margaret.  (XXII) Sir William Troutbeck.  (XXIII) Jane Troutbeck married Sir William Griffith.  (XXIV) Sir William Griffith married Jane Poleston.  (XXV) Sibill Griffith married Owen ap Hugh. (XXVI) Jane Owen married Hugh Gwyn.  (XXVII) Sibill Gwyn married James Powell.  (XXVIII) Elizabeth Powell married Humphrey ap HUgh.  (XXIX) Owen Humphrey married Jane.  (XXX) Rebecca Humphrey married Robert Owen.  (XXXI) Robert Owen married Susanna Hudson.  (XXXII) Mary Owen married Henry Burr.  (XXXIII) Rachel BUrr married Josiah Foster. (XXXIV) Mary Foster married Samuel Clement.  (XXXV) Robert Wharton Clement married Sarah A. Mathis.  (XXXVI) Samuel M. Clement married Annie Browning.  (XXXVII) John Browning Clement.

"The pedigree of Hugh Capet is as follows:  (I) Hengst, King of Saxons. (II) Hartwaker, Prince of Saxons.  (III) Hattivigate, Prince of Saxons. (IV) Hulderic, King of Saxons.  (V) Bodicus, King of Saxons.  (VI) Berthold, King of Saxons.  (VII) Sighard, King of Saxons.  (VIII) Dietric, King of Saxons.  (IX) Dobrogera, daughter of Dietric, King of Saxons, was son of Dobrogera.  (X) Wenicke, King of Saxons, was son of Dobregera. (XI) Witekind, King of Saxons.  (XII) Witekind II., Count of Wetten. (XIII) Witekind III., Count of Wetten. (XIV) Robert Fortes, Duke of France.  (XV) Robert II., Duke of France. (XVI) Hugh the Great of Burgundy, Count of Paris.  (XVII) Hugh Capet, King of France, married Adelia, daughter of Adelheld of Germany. (XVIII) Robert, King of France, married Constance of Provence.  (XIX) Princess Adela of France married Baldwin V., of Flanders.  (XX) Matilda, daughter of Baldwin V., married William the Conqueror of England.  (XXI) Henry I. of England married Princess Matilda, daughter of Malcolm III., King of Scotland, and wife Princess Margaret of England."
~1079 - 1118 Matilda Edith Of Scotland 39 39  [daddy5.FTW]

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0963 - 0995 Liutgard Countess Of Luxembourg 32 32 0933 Siegfried Comte De Luxembourg 0937 Hedwig Comtesse De Luxembourg ~1063 Matilda Of Normandy 0972 - 1031 Robert II The Pious King Of France 59 59 Isabel Hedwig Of England 1030 - 1081 Hugh Corbeau 51 51 Hugh was a man of considerable importance in the Pais de Caux, inNormandy. He had four sons, Hugh, Roger, Renaud, and Robert. Hugh, theeldest son, was like his father, a knight, and from him descended theCorbets of France. Renaud, the third son, was the ancestor of the Corbetsof Flanders. Roger and Robert, the second and fourth sons, accompaniedtheir father in the expedition of William the Conqueror, and obtainedfrom that monarch large possessions, chiefly in Shropshire, where theirrelation, Roger de Montgomery, earl of Shrewsbury, was their patron andlord paramount.
Corbet Family source:  "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of theCommoners of Great Britain and Ireland"  Vol III,  Pp. 187-88  Author: John Burke  Call Number: R929.725 B95

Courbeau; Hugh was a man of considerable importance in the Pais de Caux, in Normandy. He had four sons, Hugh, Roger, Renaud, and Robert. Hugh, the eldest son, was like his father, a knight, and from him descended the Corbets of France. Renaud, the third son, was the ancestor of the Corbets of Flanders. Roger and Robert, the second and fourth sons, accompanied their father in the expedition of William the Conqueror, and obtained from that monarch large possessions, chiefly in Shropshire, where their relation, Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, was their patron and lord paramount.
Corbet Family source:  "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"  Vol III,  Pp. 187-88 Author: John Burke Call Number: R929.725 B95
0915 William I Of Aquitaine 0917 Adele Princess Of Normandy 0947 William III Count Taillefer 0948 Arsinde (Blanche) Countess D' Anjou 0921 - 0960 Raimond III Count Of Toulouse 39 39 1063 - 1085 Gundred Princess Of England 22 22 0890 - 0956 Gilbert Gislebert Duke Of Burgundy 66 66 1009 - 1079 Adele Alix Princess Of France 70 70 1058 - 1140 William deMortaigne Earl of Cornwall 82 82 1031 - 1083 Matilda Of Flanders 52 52 1062 - 1137 Adela Alice Princess Of England 75 75 1054 - Feb 1133/1134 Robert II Curthose Duke Of Normandy 1105 - 1151 Adeliza Of Louvain 46 46 ~0970 - ~1040 Hedwige aka Hawise Of Normandy 70 70 ~0870 - 0932 Rollo Duke Of Normandy 62 62 0895 Raymond II Count Of Toulouse 0922 Ordgar Ealdorman 1672 - 1722 Samuel Merritt 50 50 0953 Geoffrey Count Of Eu & Brionne 0908 Ermengarde Of Burgundy 0909 - 0958 Foulques II Le Bon Count D' Anjou 49 49 0913 - 0952 Gerberge Du Maine 39 39 Ermangarde I D' Anjou 1025 - 1087 Simon deMontfort 62 62 Adeka (Blanca) D' Anjou 0874 Roscilles De Loche 0972 Adwige(Avoise) Princess Of France 1008 Bertha Countess Of Flanders 0927 Mrs Ordgar Ealdorman 0896 - 0961 Edgiva Queen Of England 65 65 0936 - 1031 Gonnor Duchess De Crepon 95 95  aka gunnor of Denmark 1110 - 13 Mar 1180/1181 Simon deEvreux the Bold Count de Evreux 0911 - 0987 Herbastu De Crepon 76 76 Poppa Duchess Of Normandy 1012 - 1067 Baldwin V De Lille Count Of Flanders 55 55 Ethelred Duke Of Mercia 1003 Judith Adelais Countess Of Normandy 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I Of Burgundy 0964 - 1037 Robert Archbishop Of Rouen Of Normandy 73 73 0954 Adalbert Marquis Ivrea ~0900 - ~0966 Berenger II King Of Italy 66 66  marquis d'ivrea e de gisla Willa Princess Of Tuscany 1070 - 1137 Amaury deMontfort III Count de Evreux 67 67 0932 - 0942 Adelaide Countess Of Burgundy 10 10 0904 - 0938 Bozon Marquis Of Tuscany 34 34 0906 Willa Of Burgundy 0945 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosele Of Italy 0933 - 0996 Richard I Of Normandy 63 63 D. 1027 Richard III Duke Of Normandy 0956 - 1017 Judith Princess Of Brittany 61 61 0927 Conan I Count Of Brittany Elgiva Princess Of England 1095 - 1143 Agnes deGarlande 48 48 1010 - 1095 Guy deMontlhery 85 85 1120 Adeliza 0955 William 2nd Count Of Eu ~0911 Adele Of Normandy ~0962 - 21 Feb 1033/1034 Hedwige Hawise Of Normandy 1027 Alice Of Normandy 0925 - 0992 Heribert Count Gleibert 67 67 0986 Ogive De Luxembourg 0980 - 1035 Baldwin IV the Bearded Count Of Flanders 55 55 ~1005 Ermengarde De Flandres Of Flanders ~0868 - 0920 Elfrida Princess Of England 52 52 1134 - 1212 Petronilla deGrendmesnil 78 78 De Grentmaisnil, De Beaumont, De Vere, Devereux Sources:
   Clutterbuck's History and Antiquities of Hertfordshire, England.
   Charts showing the descent of the owners of the Manor of Ware,
   from the time of William, the Conqueror, Vol. 3, pp. 287-90.
   Browning's Col. Dames of Royal Descent, p. 227.
   David Starr Jordan's "Your Family Tree", p. .....
   Browning's Magna Charta Barons, p. .....
   Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, p. .....
   Mellville's Ancestry of John Whitney.
   National Society Daughters of Barons of Runnemede. Register, pp. 183,385.
~0889 - 0964 Arnold I Count Of Flanders 75 75 0915 - 0958 Adela De Vermandois 43 43 0933 - 0962 Baldwin III Count Of Flanders 29 29 0969 - 1008 Matilda Countess Of Flanders 39 39 0941 - 0987 Arnold II Count Of Flanders 46 46 0925 - 0993 Conrad I King Of Burgundy 68 68 BET. 943 - 948 - 26 Jan 0981/0982 Matilde Princess Of The Franks 0852 - 0905 Ethelswida Queen Of England 53 53 0871 Sigehelm Earl Of Kent D. 1119 William Plantagenet  died in th e white ship 0990 - 1031 Amauri deMontfort Seigneur de Montfort-l'Amauri 41 41 1030 - 1070 Baldwin VI Of Mons Of Flanders 40 40 1033 Robert The Friesian Of Flanders 0962 - ~1010 Bertha Of Burgundy 48 48 0965 - 1016 Gerberga Of Burgundy 51 51 0970 Rudolph III King Of Burgundy 1037 Judith Countess Of Northumberland 1003 Adelaide Havoise Princess Of France ~1007 Hugh The Grand Of France ~1013 Eudo Odes Prince Of France 0966 - 0970 Edmund Prince Of England 4 4 D. UNKNOWN Adam deGarlande 0994 Uchtred Earl Of Northumberland D. 0932 Elstrude Of Flanders ~1005 Eleanore Princess Of Normandy Judith Of Flanders 1035 Henry Count Of Flanders 0885 - 0931 Gorm Del Gammel 46 46 ~1002 Alfred Prince Of England ~1004 Goda Princess Of England 1037 - 1108 Guy II the Red deMontlhery 71 71 Elizabeth Plantagenet ~1093 - 1147 Robert Gloucester 54 54 ~1073 - ~1165 Sybilla Corbet 92 92 1092 - 1143 Foulques V Le Jeune Count D' Anjou 51 51 1121 - 1204 Eleanor Queen Of England Of Aquitaine 83 83  [daddy5.FTW]

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Roger de Puleston ~1136 Rosamund De Clifford 1099 - 1137 William X Lejeune Of Aquitaine 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

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1048 Elise deCorbeil ~1123 Eleanor Aenor De Castelherault  [daddy5.FTW]

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~1079 - 1118 Matilda Edith Of Scotland 39 39  [daddy5.FTW]

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1120 - 1180 Louis VII King Of France 60 60 1086 - 1147 Isabel(Elizabeth) Queen Of England De Beaumont 61 61 Isabel Hedwig Of England 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess Of England Plantagenet 60 60 1144 - 1219 William Marshall 75 75 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet 28 28 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Wof King Alonso Plantagenet 52 52 D. UNKNOWN Bouchard deMontlhery 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII King Of Castile&Leon 58 58 1105 - 1151 Adeliza Of Louvain 46 46 1054 Andre Seigneur De Vitre 1054 Agnes De Mortaigne 1037 Robert De Mortaigne 1039 Maude De Montgomery 1100 Agnes Maud Of Aquitaine 1071 - 10 Feb 1126/1127 Guillaume IX Of Aquitaine  Mediaeval troubadour whose songs have come down to us. 1073 Phillipa Matilda Maud Countess Of Toulouse 1014 - UNKNOWN Hodierne deGometz la Ferte 1058 Emma De Mortaigne Elias Count of Maine D' Anjou 1075 - 1136 Aimer I Viscount Chatellerault 61 61 Alice Princess Of France Petronilla Of Aquitaine D. 1119 William Plantagenet  died in th e white ship 1086 - 1125 Henry V Emperor Of Germany 38 38 1134 - 1157 Geoffrey of Anjou Plantagenet 23 23 0998 - UNKNOWN Guillaume deGometz la Ferte 1145 Marie Princess Of France 1030 - 1098 Robert I De Brus 68 68 <1173 - BET. 1225 - 1226 William Longspee Geoffrey Plantagenet Elizabeth Plantagenet 1152 - 1156 William Plantagenet 3 3 D. 1203 David Ap Owain D. 1192 Agnes Plantagenet D. 1161 Melisende Of Jerusalem Badouin III King Of Jerusalem D. UNKNOWN Milan I sn dela ferte-sur- Ourcy D. 1174 Amaury King Of Jerusalem 1168 Agatha Ferrers  L.R. Tucker THE ARISTOCRATIC & ROYAL ANCESTORS; Vol 1;; FamilyHistory
Library; Jack Davis
Ingibiorg 1191 - 1237 Joan Plantagenet 46 46 0877 II Parkuritan 0882 Unknown de Rennes 0860 Orequen de Rennes 1145 - 1198 Marie of France 53 53 <1173 - 7 Mar 1225/1226 William Longespee D. UNKNOWN Dame deChevereuse 0904 - 0961 Fulk II Count of Anjou 57 57 Rosamond de Clifford 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Plantagenet 60 60 de Warenne 1172 - UNKNOWN Agatha de Ferrers It is known that Agatha was a mistress of John, but it is only supposition
that she is the mother of his child.
~1225 - >1293 Margaret de Somery 68 68 ~1080 - 1153 St. David I 73 73 1085 - 1120 Maud of England 35 35 1120 - 1180 Louis VII "The Young" King of France 60 60 ~1152 - 1156 William of England 4 4 1155 - 1183 Henry King of England 28 28 D. UNKNOWN Havoise (de Garlande) 1157 - 1199 Richard "The Lion Hearted" King of England 42 42 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey of Brittany 28 28 Isabel of Gloucester Alice of France Isabel la Blanche unknown mistress3 Isabella Plantagenet 1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet 33 33 1165 - 1199 Joan I Plantagenets 34 34 Amice de Montfort D. 1 Mar 1057/1058 Ermensinde de Carcassonne Richard , Earl of Cornwall 1207 - 1272 Henry III King of England 65 65 1167 - 1216 John Plantagenet 48 48 "Lackland" refered to John's status as the youngest son, resulting in no significant inherited fiefs from his Father. His titles included King of Ireland 1177, Count of Mortain 1189, Earl of Gloucester. John succeeded his brother Richard I as King in 1199. In 1215 he put his seal on the Magna Carta (Great Charter). The Magna Carta is the foundation of English Constitutional law and liberties and placed the King, like the subjects he ruled, subject to the rule of law. He is Interred in Worcester Cathedral. "The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor,General Editor.
Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition: Crowned at Westminster 27May
1199; signed Magna Charta 15 Jun 1215;
Pedigrees of some Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants - Langston-Buck
The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th  ed.
Vol. 1 of "A History ofthe English Speaking Peoples - The Birth of Britain" at pgs.236-237
John was the youngest of the 4 sons of King Henry. He first claimed the crown in 1193 when news broke that his brother, King Richard (the LionHearted), was held prisoner "somewhere in Germany." In April 1193 Richard was offered for ransom by the Holy Roman Emperor. Richard reclaimed the crown in 1194 after his release. Richard was killed by a crossbow in a small skirmish in 1199. He died on April 6, 1199 from the wound, and John had been declared his heir before Richard died.
1188 - 3 Jun 1245/1246 Isabella d'Angouleme Richard fitz Roy 1161 - 1214 Eleanora of England 53 53 ~1100 Constance of England ~1105 - 1157 Henry fitz Henry 52 52 0972 - 25 Feb 1017/1018 Raimund I Borrel Count of Barcelona 1136 - 1174 Amalric I d'Anjou 38 38 ~0880 Hugues I de Lusignan ~1035 - 1099 Donald Bane King of Scotland 64 64 ~1084 Elizabeth of England ~1070 - 1137 Amaury IV de Montfort 67 67 ~1070 - >1157 Sybil Corbet 87 87 D. 1147 Ermengarde of Anjou 1140 - UNKNOWN Radulphus FitzOrm 1130 - ~1162 Baldwin III , King of Jerusalem 32 32 ~1030 - 1100 William I , Count of Nevers 70 70 ABT 1110/1115 - 1175 Reynold de Dunstanville Sybil of Anjou ~1000 - ~1037 Alice (Adelaide) of Normandy 37 37 1672 - 1685 Hackaliah Odell 13 13 ~1062 - 1137 Adela of Normandy 75 75 1086 - 1120 Matilda of England 34 34 ~1080 - 1116 Mary of Scotland 36 36 ~1035 - 1093 Robert le Frison 58 58 D. 1094 Judith de Flanders ~1020 - 1055 Siward 35 35 ~1009 - 1040 Sibyl fitz Seward 31 31 ~1030 - 1070 Baldwin\ Baudouin VI , Count of Flanders 40 40 0986 - 1045 Neil de St. Sauveur 59 59 D. AFT 1175/1176 Rohese ~1130 - 1202 Hamline Plantagenet 72 72 Denise de Mortaigne ~1026 - <1055 Isobel de Montfort 29 29 ~0990 - 1038/1039 Roger I "the Spainiard" de Toni ~1103 - 1151 Adeliza of Louvain 48 48 ~1062 - >1099 Maud de Chateau du Loire 37 37 ~1032 John I de la Fleche ~1002 - 1055 Lanzelin I , Seigneur de Baugency 53 53 1127 Sibyl de Salisbury ~1032 Paula du Maine ~1032 - >1099 Gervase , Seigneur de Chateau de Loire 67 67 ~1032 Erenburg ~0973 Doda ~1001 Herluin , Seigneur de Conteville D. 1068 Egbert I , Count of Brunswick ~1092 - 1126 Ermengarde du Maine 34 34 1043 - 1109 Fulk IV "Rechin" , Count of Anjou 66 66 ~0983 - >1000 Geoffrey I , Count of the Gatinais 17 17 D. UNKNOWN Daughter deVenuz ~0986 - 1067 Richard , Count d'Evereux 81 81 ~1030 Agnes d'Evereux ~1026 - 1087 Simon I de Montfort 61 61 1045 - 1073 Waltheof II 28 28 ~0984 Bethoc\Beatrice , Princess of Scotland 0978 - 1045 Crinan 67 67 Alice Ragdale 1030 - <1090 Adelaide , Countess of Aumale 60 60 1252 - UNKNOWN Margaret verch Rhys Fychan ~1070 - 1134 Robert II de Normandy 64 64 Stephanie of Normandy ~0970 Papia of Normandy Hildegarde de Gastinois D. 1078 Robert de Never ~0970 - 1051 Ralph\ Rodulf II de Toeni 81 81 ~1004 Adela de Toni ~1030 - 1096 Odo , Earl of Kent , Bishop of Bayeux 66 66 ~1062 - 1113 William, "the Elder" Peverel 51 51 1226 - UNKNOWN Rhys Fychan ap Rhys Mitchell 0845 Garnier Seigneur deLoches Muriel de Conteville Maud (Perverel) ~1026 - <1055 Isabel de Broyes 29 29 ~1005 Ermengarde de Flanders D. 1081 Lancelin II , Sire de Beaugency Papia Adele d'Anjou , Countess de Vendome ~0960 - ~0999 Elizabeth de Vendome 39 39 Emma d'Anjou Eustacia of England 1246 - UNKNOWN Madoc Grupl Lord Glyndwrdwy Alice of England ~0996 - ~1053 Bertrade de Gommetz 57 57 D. 1093 Edward of Scotland D. 1107 Edgar King of Scotland D. 1124 Alexander I King of Scotland Arnulph de Montgomery D. 1025 Hugh , Prince of France 1220 - UNKNOWN Gruffydd Fychan ap Gruffydd Lord Glyndwrdwy ~1030 Gersende \Bertha of Maine ~1103 - 1120 William , Prince of England 17 17 ~1110 - 1151 Helie , Count of Maine 41 41 ~1036 - >1126 Edgar "Atheling" 90 90 1060 - 1094 Duncan II King of Scots 34 34 14 Oct 1024/1027 - 1087 William The Conqueror 1133 - 1189 Henry II King of England 56 56 1228 - UNKNOWN Margaret Verch Gruffydd ~0948 - ~0985 Hugues III de Lusignan 37 37 1204 - UNKNOWN Gruffydd ap Cadwgan ap Meilir ~1031 - 1083 Matilda de Flanders 52 52 ~1000 - 22 Jul 1035/1038 Robert "the Magnificent" de Normandy ~1003 Herleva de Falaise ~1003 - 1079 Adele de France 76 76 Emma de Conteville 1178 - 1235 Madoc ap Gruffydd Maelor Lord Bromfield 57 57 1005 - 1045 Malred 40 40 ~0973 Fulbert de Falaise 1198 - UNKNOWN Gwyladys Verch Ithel 0971 - 1031 Robert II "The Pious" de France 60 60 0985 - 1032 Constance de Toulouse 47 47 D. ~1061 Drogo de Montacute Cicely Noel 1008 - 1060 Henry I 52 52 Grace de Tracy >1090 - >1135 William de Tracy 45 45 ~1024 - 1077 Agnes of Aquitaine 53 53 1154 - 1191 Gruffydd Maelor ap Madoc Lord Bromfield 37 37 ~1049 - 1107 Maud de Montgomery 58 58 ~1084 William fitz Robert Emma de Mortain ~1054 Agnes de Mortaigne ~1016 - 1109 Helie of Semur 93 93 ~1035 - 1070/1074 Henry , Duke of Burgundy D. >1104 Hildegarde \Aldegarde of Burgundy Irmgard of Anjou ~0983 - ~1055 Dalmas I , Count of Semur 72 72 ~0980 Aremburge de Vergy 1160 Angharad verch Owain Gwynedd ~1026 - 1086 William IV , Count of Poitou 60 60 ~0937 - 0995 Guillaume II "Fier de Bras" , Count of Poitou 58 58 ~0969 - 1030 William III "The Great" , Count of Poitou 61 61 ~1066 Sybil de Montgomery Stephanie of Barcelona ~0990 - 1057 Renaud I , Count of Burgundy 67 67 ~1024 - 1093 Aimery IV de Thouars 69 69 ~1030 - <1069 Aurengarde de Mauleon 39 39 Eleanor de Thouars 1174 - UNKNOWN Ithel ap Rhys of Ewyas Hugh de Chastellerault William Leon Allen Census:
1860, Lake Providence, Ser. M653, page 353, Willim L. Allen, aged 57 from N.C. and wife named "Amertia"  aged 54 from Miss. Also in family William G.R. Allen aged 19.
D. 1092 Boso II , Vicount of Chastellerault D. 1136 Aimery I , Vicount of Chastellerault Dangerose ~0995 - 1068 Agnes de Bourgone 73 73 0962/0966 - 1026 Otto William , Count of Burgundy & Macon ~0952 - ~1004 Emma de Blois 52 52 Ameline Matilda Ann Horne 1145 - 1211 Adam de Aldithley 66 66 1065 - 1139 Ida of Louvain 74 74 ~1173 - BEF Jan 1220/1221 William d' Aubigny WILLIAM (D'AuBIGNY), EARL OF SUSSEX, and EARL OF ARUNDEL, son and heir.He was a favourite of King John, whose concession of the Kingdom to thePope, 15 May 1213, he witnessed, and whom he accompanied to Runnymede, 15June 1215. When, however, King John abandoned Winchester, 14 June 1216,to Louis (afterwards Louis VIII) of France, he joined that Prince, but(consistently taking the winning side) returned to his allegiance I 4July 12 I 7, after the Royalist victory at Lincoln. Shortly afterwards heacted as JUSTICIAR, the young King, Henry III, having restored to him hisforfeited possessions. He married Mabel 2nd daughter of Hugh (LE MESCHINsurnamed KEVELIOC), EARL OF CHESTER, by Bertrade, daughter of Simon,COUNT OF EVREUX in Normandy. She, in her issue, was (1232) one of thefour coheirs to her brother Ranulph (surnamed BLUNDEVILLE), EARL OFCHESTER. He embarked in the crusade of I2I8. and was at the taking ofDamietta in Nov. 1219, but died at Cainell, near Rome, ("quoddamoppidulum Kainel nomine") shortly before 30 March 1221 [when the newsreached England], and was buried at Wymondham Priory. [Complete PeerageI:236]

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William de Albini, Earl of Arundel, (d 1221), and grandson of thepreceding , also styled Earl of Sussex, was son of William, the secondearl, whom he succeeded in 1196.  He was a favourite of King John; hewitnessed John's concession of the kingdom to the pope (15 June 1213),and accompanying him to Runnymede (15 June 1215), became one of thesureties for his faithful observance of the charter; but on John'sabandonment of Winchester to Lousi (14 June 1216) he went over to thewinning side.  After the royalist victory at Lincoln he returned to hisallegiance (14 July 1217), and shortly after acted as justiciar.  In 1218he set sail for the East, took part in the siege of Damietta (1219), anddied in Italy on his way home, his son doing homage for his lands, 12April 1221. [Dictionary of National Biography I:234]

___________________________

William de Albini, 4th earl, m. Mabel, second of the four sisters andco-heiresses of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, with whom he obtained greatlanded property. At he, however, died issueless in 1224, or, by somestatements, in 1233, his honours devolved upon his only brother, then inminority, Hugh de Albini, 5th earl. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.3, Albini, Earls of Arundel]
Amelia Alberic III , Count de la Marche ~0985 - 1020/1023 Gerberge de Bourgone Ermengarde de Toulouse 0958 - 1005 Ermentrude of Rouncy 47 47 ~0940 - 0981/0982 Alberic II , Count d'Macon ~0983 Beatrice d'Macon Adda Maria de Valladoild 1165 Emma FitzOrm Le derleveston D. ~1075 Pedro Ansurez , Count de Valladolid ~1054 Andre de Vitre' Almode de Toulouse Maud of Aquitaine ~1046 - 1092/1093 Constance of Burgundy Lucia de la Marche Mayor Perez de Valladolid 1155 - UNKNOWN Rafe deManwaring Seneschal D. 1082 Raymund III ~1054 - 1131 Robert II , 3rd Earl of Salisbury 77 77 ~1039 - 1110 Hugues VI, "le Diable" de Lusignan 71 71 ~1060 - >1099 Audearde de Thouars 39 39 ~0975 - 1005 Mathilda of Burgundy 30 30 D. 1135 Aimery V , Vicount de Thouars Garsinde de Toulouse D. 1105 Raymond IV de St. Gilles , Count de Tripoli 1115 - 1135 Aimar I de Poitiers , Count de Valentincis 20 20 1158 - UNKNOWN Amicia le Meschines deKeveliock Amicia married Ralph Mainwaring. There has been much discussion abouther, some claiming she was by a first wife and some that she wasillegitimate. Sir Peter Leicester and Sir Thomas Mainwaring having manyarguments over it. There are 14 books about it, and eventually the matterwas referred to the judges. At an assize held at Chester in 1675 thecontroversy was decided with Thomas Mainwaring that she was legitimate. ~1023 - 1058 Peter , Count of Poitou 35 35 1120 Adam II de Aldithley ~0975 - <1056 Roger I de Montgomery 81 81 1550 John Hill Dorothy Noel ~0980 - 1047 Bernard I , Count de la Haute Marche 67 67 ~0980 - 1053/1058 Amelie d'Aulnay ~1026 - 1079 Mabel Talvas d'Alencon 53 53 1126 - UNKNOWN Mabella deStanley ~1054 - 19 Jan 1119/1120 Adeliza ~0996 - ~1026 Warin de Domfront 30 30 ~0975 Joscline ~0945 Senfrie ~0943 Cadelon V , Viscount of Aulnay ~0930 - ABT 1030/1033 Cadelon IV , Vicomte of Aulnay ~0950 - 0997 Adalbert I , Count de la Haute Marche 47 47 ~0950 - 1007/1011 Almode of Limoges ~1090 - 1157 Mabel Sibyl Maud FitzHamon Countess Gloucester 67 67 D. UNKNOWN Henry deStanley ~0997 Elfgifu PED OF VERN ORVEL CURTIS, 1934; PED AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; DO NOT
TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0968 - 1016 Ethelred II "The Unready" 48 48 FGRA; PED OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER; ANCESTRAL FILE; CDROM & ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES
MARR TO ALFGIFU AS ABT 985; KING OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1219 - ~1278 Amabilia de Chaucombe 59 59 ~0947 - 1000 Elfrida (Elfthryth), Queen Of England 53 53 ES II:78; ANCESTRAL FILE; QUEEN OF ENGLAND.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1110 - UNKNOWN Orme Le Gulden 0876 - 0935 Ebles II de Poitier 59 59 DUKE OF ACQUITAINE; COUNT OF POITOU; ES 11:76; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0912 Elgiva FGRA; PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.PEDIGREE OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0910/0915 - 0993 Herbert de Vermandois ES 111:49; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0982 - 1052 Emma Princess Of Normandy 70 70 QUEEN OF ENGLAND AND DENMARK; ROYAL ANCESTORS, CHART 546.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0908 - 0937 Ethile (Eadhilde) 29 29 PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1120 - UNKNOWN Emma deBeauchamp ~0922 - 0944 Elgiva Queen Of England 22 22 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1092 - UNKNOWN Nicholas deBeauchamp Viscount de Stafford ~0942 Aethelwold Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0876 Ecgwy (or Ecgwyn) Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0943 - 0975 Edgar "The Peacable", King Of England 32 32 1014 - UNKNOWN Gilbert d'Oilly 0910 - UNKNOWN Jubel Juhel Bérenger Comte deRennes ~0765 Hugues II Count Of Upper Alsace 1012 - UNKNOWN Hedwig Princess of Hungary 1150 - 1199 Alice Capet of France 49 49 1077 - UNKNOWN Richardus Forestaius 1176 - 7 Mar 1224/1225 William Longespée Earl of Salisbury 1033 - 1093 Malcolm III King of Scotland 60 60 Malcolm III "Ceanmor (Longneck)" King of Scotland, founder of the dynastythat consolidated royal power in the Scottish kingdom. The son of KingDuncan I, Malcolm lived in exile in England during part of the reign ofhis father's murderer, Macbeth.  Malcolm killed Macbeth in battle in 1057and then ascended the throne. After the conquest of England by Williamthe Conqueror, in 1066, Malcolm gave refuge to the Anglo-Saxon princeEdgar the Aetheling and his sisters, one of whom, Margaret (later St.Margaret), became his second wife. Malcolm acknowledged the overlordshipof William in 1072 but nevertheless soon violated his feudal obligationsand made five raids into England. During the last of these invasions hewas killed by the forces of King William II Rufus (reigned 1087-1100),near Alnwick, Northumberland, England. Except for a brief interval afterMalcolm's death, the Scottish throne remained in his family until thedeath of Queen Margaret, the Maid of Norway, in 1290. Of Malcolm's sixsons by Margaret, three succeeded to the throne: Edgar (reigned1097-1107), Alexander I (1107-24), and David I (1124-53). 1042 - 1093 Margaret "Atheling" Queen of Scotland 51 51 Canonised 1250 and her feast day is 16th November. In 1057 she arrived atthe
English court of Edward the Confessor. Ten years later she was in exileafter
William defeated Harold at the Battle of Hastings. She fled to Scotlandwhere
she was married against her wishes to King Malcolm to whom she bore sixsons and two daughters. Her unlearned and boorish husband grew daily moregraceful and Christian under the queen's graceful influence. Her remainswere removed to Escorial Spain and her head Douai, France.
Ancestors of Margaret from "The Forgotten Monarchy of Scotland" by HRHMichael of Albany.
1077 - UNKNOWN Alexander I King of Scotland 1080 - 1118 Matilda Princess of Scotland 38 38 1031 - 1083 Matilda of Flanders 52 52 1069 - UNKNOWN Edmund Prince of Scotland 1022 - 1057 Edward "Atheling" Prince of England 35 35 1086 Daughter Of Bardulf D. UNKNOWN Maroth Prince of Bihar 1044 - UNKNOWN Christina "Atheling" Princess of England 1053 - UNKNOWN Edgar Atheling King of England D. UNKNOWN Hildeswinde of Croatie 1031 - UNKNOWN Ekbert I Margrave Of Meissen 0999 - 14 Feb 1042/1043 Gisela Dutchess of Swabia 1207 - 1272 Henry III King of England 65 65 Henry was crowned King at the age of nine after the death of his FatherKing John in 1216. The kingdom was ruled by William Marshall, Earl ofPembroke, the regent while Henry was growing up. When Marshall died in1219, Hubert de Burgh ruled until 1232, when Henry assumed the throne."The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. 1050 Bardulf deWhitern 1217 - 1291 Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence 74 74 0440 - UNKNOWN Adelbert Prince of the S. Franks 0480 - UNKNOWN Wambert Ferreolus Prince of Sigermerus Franks D. 0918 Conrad I Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire 1066 - 1141 Hugh de Beauchamp 75 75 1100 - UNKNOWN Emeline Le despenser Jane Issac Robert Wodcote Reginald Horne 1665 - 1718 Elizabeth Ransom 53 53 1065 - 1129 Walter FitzRoger Sheriff of Gloucestershire 64 64 Appears in the Domesday book as tenant-in-chief. Complete Peerage V6.P451 John Drokensford 0857 - UNKNOWN Ecbert Prince Of Saxony 1070 - UNKNOWN Berthe of Gloucester 0859 - 0874 Hathumoda Princess Of Saxony 15 15 0861 - 0896 Gerberga Princess Of Saxony 35 35 0863 - 0919 Christina Princess Of Saxony 56 56 0828 - ~0905 Reginhart Count Of Ringleheim 77 77 0833 - 0910 Matilda Countess Of Ringelheim 77 77 0820 - 0879 Gottfried Ragnhildis King of Haithabu 59 59 0800 - 0890 Wolpert Von Ringleheim 90 90 0800 - 0890 Alburgis Von Ringelheim 90 90 0968 - UNKNOWN Bertha Ivrea 1050 Pons Fitzpons 0950 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosele Susanna Princess Of Italy Rosele's second husband was Robert II King of France. 0855 - 0915 Adalbert Marquis Of Tuscany 60 60 0871 - 8 Mar 0924/0925 Bertha Princess Of Lorraine 0836 - 0875 Waldrade Queen Of Lorraine 39 39 0805 - 0855 Lothaire I Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 50 50 0800 - 20 Mar 0850/0851 Ermengarde Countess Of Tours 0867 - UNKNOWN Hugues Prince Of Lorraine 0840 - 0907 Gisela Princess Of Lorraine 67 67 0873 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde Princess Of Lorraine 0778 - 0840 Louis I Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 62 62 Louis I, Le Debonnaire or Gentle, Roman Emperor, 814-840, was born 778,and was son of Charlemagne by his wife Hildegarde. He married LadyJudith, the Fair Maid of Bavaria, and by her had a son who succeded him,Charles II, King of France. He had succeeded his father in 814, but in817 he yielded to the wishes of his sons and gave each of them a share ofhis dominions, and thus complications arose from which resulted thedissolution of the Empire. He died 840. By his first wife, Irmingardis,daughter of Ingram, Count of Hasbania in Saxony, he had a daughterAlpaidia. 1060 - UNKNOWN Elias I Giffard 0785 - 0818 Ermengarde Princess Of Hesbaye 33 33 0712 - UNKNOWN Landree of Hesbaye 0833 - UNKNOWN Rotrud Princess Of Italy 0825 - 0875 Louis II Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 50 50 0828 - UNKNOWN Charles King Of Provence 0996 - 1037 Albert (Alberic) II Count Of Macon 41 41 0830 - UNKNOWN Helletrude Princess Of Italy 0834 - UNKNOWN Gisle Princess Of Italy 0825 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey Count de Gastinois 1019 Emma deConteville 1026 - 1104 Adeline de Crecy 78 78 0665 - 0722 Liutwin Count and Bishop of Treves 57 57 D. UNKNOWN Ansaud D. UNKNOWN Osgood Clapa 0934 - 0975 Elvira Diaz of Saldana 41 41 0564 - UNKNOWN Gerberga Of Franconia 0594 - 0688 Leudefindis 94 94 0538 - UNKNOWN Richemeres Duke Of Franconia 0540 - 0658 Gertrudis Duchess Of Franconia 118 118 1013 - 1040 Duncan I King of Scotland 27 27 Malcolm violated the established system of succession whereby thekingship alternated between two branches of the royal family. UponMalcolm's death, Duncan succeeded peacefully, but he soon faced therivalry of Macbeth, Mormaor (subking) of Moray, who probably had a betterclaim to the throne. Duncan besieged Durham unsuccessfully in 1039 and inthe following year was murdered by Macbeth near Elgin, Moray. Duncan'selder son later killed Macbeth and ruled as King Malcolm III Canmore. D. UNKNOWN Ordgar Devon Earl of Devon 0984 Bethoc Princess of Scotland 0954 - 1034 Malcolm II King of Scotland 80 80 The first to reign over an extent of land roughly corresponding to muchof modern Scotland. Malcolm succeeded to the throne after killing hispredecessor, Kenneth III, and allegedly secured his territory bydefeating a Northumbrian army at the Battle of Carham (1016). He not onlyconfirmed the Scottish hold over the land between the rivers Forth andTweed but also secured Strathclyde about the same time. Eager to securethe royal succession for his daughter's son Duncan, he tried to eliminatepossible rival claimants, but Macbeth, with royal connections to bothKenneth II and Kenneth III, survived to challenge the succession. 0890 - 0954 Malcolm I King of Scotland 64 64 King of the Picts and Scots (Alba), also called Malcolm Macdonald.Malcolm succeeded to the crown when his cousin Constantine II entered amonastery (943). He annexed Moray to the kingdom for the first time.After driving the Danes from York, the English king Edmund turned Cumbriaover to Malcolm, apparently as a fief or seal of alliance. Later, whenNorsemen again invaded the land, the Scots sent raids against theEnglish, and in 954 the West Saxon king Eadred reunited the northerncounties to his dominions. Malcolm was slain the same year at Fordoun inthe Mearns in a conflict with his own northern regions. 1090 - UNKNOWN Robert deLucy 1064 - UNKNOWN Edward Prince of Scotland 0930 - 0978 Fernando Vermudez 48 48 0900 - 0951 Diego Count of Saldana Muoz 51 51 ~1165 Isabel Anne Crane Wrote letter # 32 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Philip Noel Ellena Horne 0912 Velasquita Velasquez 0564 - 0635 Cuthwine King of Wessex 71 71 0742 - 0818 Charlemagne Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 76 76 Charlemagne was King of the Franks 768-814 and Emperor of the Holy RomanEmpire from 800-814. His Empire included all of Christian Western Europe(Italy, France, Austria, Germany, Spain). 0816 - UNKNOWN Hildegard Princess of the Holy Roman Empire D. UNKNOWN Vela Nuez 0774 - UNKNOWN Adelheid Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0775 - UNKNOWN Dhuada Princess of France 0779 - UNKNOWN Bertha Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0781 - UNKNOWN Gisela Princess of Franken 0782 - UNKNOWN Hildegard Princess of Franken 0773 - 0810 Pippin Carolman King of Italy 37 37 D. UNKNOWN Gerold Bishop of Mayence 0800 - UNKNOWN Rotrud Princess of the Holy Roman Empire 0806 - UNKNOWN Ludwig II King of France 0910 - 26 Jan 0945/0946 Edith Princess of England 0900 - 0958 Vermudo Nuez 58 58 0933 - UNKNOWN Archbishop Wilhelm of Mainz 0931 - 0953 Luitgard Princess of Germany 22 22 D. UNKNOWN Arnoldus of Saxony 1208 - 1265 Simon de Montfort VI Earl of Leicester 57 57 1008 - 1060 Henry Capet I King of France 52 52 0915 - 0963 William I "Towhead" Count of Poitou 48 48 William was also the Count of Auvergne, Velay, Limousin and the Duke ofAquitaine. 0917 - 0962 Adele of Normandy 45 45 0897 - 0956 Hugh the Great 59 59 Hugh Capet, the Great of Neustria, Count of Paris. 0945 - 0983 Otto II Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 38 38 OTTO II, Holy Roman Emperor (967-83), king of Germany (961-83), the Sonof Otto I, with whom he ruled jointly from 967 to 973. In 976 hesuppressed a rebellion that was led by his cousin Henry II, duke ofBavaria. Two years later, having been attacked by Lothair, king ofFrance, Otto drove the French out of Lorraine but was unsuccessful inbesieging Paris. Later Lothair renounced Lorraine, and peace wasestablished. Otto next invaded the southern Italy, gaining possession ofNaples, Salerno, and Taranto, but he was overwhelmingly defeated by theGreeks and Saracens at Crotona in 982. He died in Rome while planning asecond invasion. 0870 - UNKNOWN Nunio Ordonez 0745 - UNKNOWN Carloman of the Franks 1103 - UNKNOWN Eleanor De Chatellerault de Rochefoucauld 1076 - UNKNOWN Aimery I Viscount Châtellérault de Rochefoucauld D. UNKNOWN Gisela of France 1152 - 1225 William De Longspee Prince of England 73 73 0982 - UNKNOWN Donalda Princess of Scotland 0948 Forno Duncan of Mormaer 1034 - 1194 Donald Ban III King of Scotland 160 160 Also spelled Donaldbane, Donalbane, Bane also spelled Ban or Bain was sonof Duncan I.  Upon the death of his brother Malcolm III Canmore (1093)there was a fierce contest for the crown. Donald Bane besieged EdinburghCastle, took it, and, with the support of the Celtic Scots and the customof tanistry (q.v.; the Celtic system of electing kings or chiefs), he wasking nominally for at least six months. He was expelled by Duncan II, sonof Malcolm, assisted by English and Normans and some Saxons. Duncan'sreign was equally short, for Donald Bane had his nephew slain and againreigned for three years.  These years saw the last attempt of the Celtsto maintain a king of their race and a kingdom governed according totheir customs. Edgar the Aetheling (q.v.), who had newly befriended theNorman king of England, led an army into Scotland, dispossessed DonaldBane, and advanced his nephew Edgar, son of Malcolm III, as sole king ofthe Scots. 0833 - 0866 Ordogno I King of the Asturias and Galicia 33 33 D. UNKNOWN Berenger deSenlis Count of Bayeux 1038 - UNKNOWN Duncan Earl of Moray 1102 - UNKNOWN William Atheling Prince of England 1104 - UNKNOWN Richard Prince of England D. UNKNOWN Hermengarde De Bourbon 1078 - UNKNOWN Rodolph I Sire deFaucigny 0810 - UNKNOWN Paterna Queen of Asturias deCastile Robert dePoultney Assumed the Surname "Poultney" Thomas Woodcock Constance Haward 0773 - UNKNOWN Ursinda Munilona 0910 - UNKNOWN Jubel Juhel Bérenger Comte de Rennes 0978 - 1026 Ulf (Wolf) Thorkilsson Jarl of Denmark 48 48 D. UNKNOWN Berenger de Senlis Count of Bayeux 0999 - 1035 Robert The Devil II Duke of Normandy 36 36 Duke of Normandy from 1027 to 1035. 0863 - UNKNOWN Ermetrude Roucy of Rheims 1005 - UNKNOWN Eleanor Princess of Normandy 1026 - UNKNOWN Elena of Normandy 0720 - 0775 Fruela of Count of Bartulio Bardalia 55 55 0993 - 26 Jan 1057/1058 William Poincius Duke of Normandy 1027 - 1054 Adelaide Countess of Ponthieu 27 27 0467 - 0535 Cedric King of Wessex 68 68 D. 0641 Pepin of Austrasia 0780 - 0830 Heilwig of Saxony 50 50 0690 - UNKNOWN Pedro Duke of Cantabria 0725 - 0823 Welf de Altdorf 98 98 0670 - UNKNOWN Liubigotona of Spain 0660 - UNKNOWN Ervigio of Spain 0635 - UNKNOWN Ardebasto 1160 - UNKNOWN Margaret Capet of France 1214 - 1241 Elizabeth Empress of Germany 27 27 0958 - 1018 William I Count of Provence 60 60 0960 - 1026 Adelais D'Anjou 66 66 0883 - 0928 Louis III King of Provence 45 45 0920 - 0965 Bozon Count of Provence 45 45 D. UNKNOWN Konrad Rheingau 0640 - UNKNOWN Flavia Juliana 1623 - >1670 Eleanor Weaver 47 47 ~1145 Mabel de Limes D. UNKNOWN Cedde 0929 - 1013 Alix Countess of Equish 84 84 0955 - 1013 Rainer IV Count of Hainault 58 58 Rainer or Reginar IV, Count of Hainault, succeeded to his father's titleafter a long struggle to assert his claims. When Rainer III was sent intoexile Duke Bruno gave Hainault to Garmer and Renaud, and after Otto diedRainer and his brother Lambert attacked the two counts and slew them inbattle. Whereupon Otto II took Hainault away from them, but Rainer andLambert reappeared with new forces, but were defeated in 976, and it wasnot until much later that Rainer established himself as first proprietaryCount of Hainault, and ruled in peace after establishing himself at Mons,capital of Hainault. He married Hedwige, daughter of Hugh Capet, King ofFrance, and had Rainer V, and a daughter Beatrix married Count Rouci. 0972 - UNKNOWN Adwige Princess of France 0936 - 0961 Constance of Provence 25 25 D. UNKNOWN Warinus of Troyes D. UNKNOWN Teutberga of Arles D. 0726 Ine King of Wessex D. UNKNOWN Athelbur Von Wessex 0610 - 0685 Hermengild 75 75 0742 - 0840 N Von Kent 98 98 0770 - 0858 Redburga de Toulouse 88 88 D. UNKNOWN Oslac Von Wessex D. UNKNOWN Ethelwith Von Wessex D. UNKNOWN Cuthburh D. UNKNOWN Cwenburh D. UNKNOWN Aldfrith King of Northumbria D. UNKNOWN Burgred King of Mercia 0815 - UNKNOWN Gerard de Auvergne Count de Auvergne 0795 - 0843 Renaud Count de Poitiers 48 48 0495 - UNKNOWN Athanagild King Of The Visigoths D. UNKNOWN Ringart D. UNKNOWN Ingunda deFrance 1590 - 1654 Thomas Blanchard 64 64 Came to New England on the ship [1639] "JONATHAN",  to Braintree, Mass. Thomas, Yeoman, Came from Penton, Hampshire, england to Braintree, Mass., 1640. Source: Directory of the Ancestral Heads of New England Families, 1620 - 1700, page XXIV. 0475 - UNKNOWN II Amalaric Agharad de Warren Jacobus Dugdale Visitation of Warwickshire, 1619 and 1682. D. UNKNOWN Clotilda 0822 - 0904 Eadburh of Mercia 82 82 0455 - UNKNOWN Arevagni 0411 - 0502 Esla King of Saxony 91 91 0383 - 0474 Gewis King of Saxony 91 91 0355 - 0446 Wig King of Saxony 91 91 0327 - 0418 Freawine King of Saxony 91 91 0299 - 0390 Frithogar 91 91 0248 - 0341 Nanna 93 93 0190 - 0280 Frithuwald 90 90 0430 - 0526 Theodoric King of the Ostrogoths 96 96 0160 - 0245 Freothalaf 85 85 0130 - 0220 Finn 90 90 ~0100 - 0179 Flocwald 79 79 D. UNKNOWN Gewar King of Norway 0592 - 0652 Itte of Landen 60 60 0530 - UNKNOWN Cloderic The Parricide King of Cologne The Riparian, Frankish Kings of Cologne, of the Mergovinigian family,kinsman of Clovis I King of the Salic Franks. Cloderic was murdered byagents of Clovis I. 0415 - 0468 Childeric I King of the Franks 53 53 Clodius was known as Clodius "Long Hair" King of Franks. 0422 - 0470 Basinna Queen of the Franks 48 48 D. UNKNOWN Genebald 0400 - 0474 Theudemir King of the Ostrogoths 74 74 D. UNKNOWN Merovee King of Franks 0380 - 0429 Pharamond King of the Franks 49 49 Pharamond, Duke of the East Franks in 404 A. D., was elected King of theWest Franks 419, and is reckoned by historians as the first King ofFrance. He married Argotta. 0390 - 0459 Argotta Queen of Franks 69 69 Argotta was descended from Heli, first King of the Britons, one of whosedescendants had married one of the Kings of France, a daughter Althildiswho married Marconier IV, King of France A. D. 128, from whom Argotta was14th in line. Thus she was 22nd in line from Heli, King of the Britons,and was called the mother of all the Kings of France. 0350 - 0404 Marcomir Duke of the Franks 54 54 0330 - 0389 Clodius Duke of Franks 59 59 0300 - 0379 Dagobert Duke of Franks 79 79 0272 - 0350 Genebald Duke of Franks 78 78 0250 - 0317 Dagobert Kind of Franks 67 67 0223 - 0306 Walter King of the Franks 83 83 ~0199 - 0298 Clodius III King of the Franks 99 99 0412 - UNKNOWN Erelicia ~0175 - 0272 Partherus King of the Franks 97 97 ~0158 - 0253 Hilderic King of the Franks 95 95 ~0137 - 0213 Sunno King of the Franks 76 76 ~0120 - 0186 Farabert King of the Franks 66 66 ~0104 - 0166 Clodmir IV King of the Franks 62 62 ~0106 - 0179 Hafilda Princess of the Rugij 73 73 <0100 - 0149 Marcomir IV King of the Franks 49 49 <0100 - 0128 Odomir King of the Franks 28 28 <0100 - 0114 Richemer King of the Franks 14 14 <0100 - UNKNOWN Ratherius King of the Franks 0390 - 0459 Wandalar King of the Ostrogoths 69 69 0863 - UNKNOWN ErmetrudeRoucy of Rheims <0100 - UNKNOWN Antenor IV King of the Franks <0100 - UNKNOWN Clodemir III King of the Franks <0100 - UNKNOWN Marcomir III King of the Franks <0100 - UNKNOWN Clodius II King of the Franks D. UNKNOWN Queen of the Franks Verica 0817 - 0850 Pepin Seigneur II Count of Perrone 33 33 0797 - 0818 Bernard King of Italy 21 21 0500 - 0571 Ausbert the Senator of Moselle 71 71 0476 - 0506 Tonatius Bishop Of Uzes 30 30 0440 - UNKNOWN Tonatius Ferreolus Praetorian Perfect of Gaul 0365 - 0400 Winithar King of the Ostrogoths 35 35 0410 - 0476 Ferreolus Tonatius 66 66 0454 - 0525 Dode 71 71 1055 - 1088 William de Warenne Ist Earl of Surrey 33 33 William de Warren married Gundred, 4th daughter of William, theConqueror, and his wife Matilda of Flanders. (It has been said thatGundred was not the daughter of William, the Conqueror, but that she wasthe daughter of Matilda of Flanders by, perhaps, a previous marriage. TheInvincible Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 5, p. 26, says that the inseription onGundred's tombstone describes her as wife of William de Warren anddaughter of Wm., the Conqueror. Also in Burke's Dormant and ExtinctPeerage, pp. 154, 568 and 588, she is called daughter by Wm., theConqueror, in a charter signed by Wm., William de Warren and Henry I, sonof William, the Conqueror. Thus proving this much discussed question. E.E. W.) For the important part that William de Warren took in the Conquestof England he received 300 lordships in the counties of Salop, Essex,Suffolk, Oxford, Hants, Cambridge, Bucks, Norfolk, Lincoln and York.

Ancestry shown differs from that shown by Cokayne in "The CompletePeerage",
and follows "Aspects of Robert of Torigny's genealogies revisted";"Nottingham
Medieval Studies,xxxvii,1993,pp.21-27; as cited by A.B.Wilson andS.Baldwin
<abwilson@uclink2.berkeley.edu>. The Complete Peerage vol.XIIpI,p.493-495.
0337 Vultwulf 1136 - UNKNOWN William Count of Poitou D. UNKNOWN Helias Count of Maine D. UNKNOWN Isabel de Aragon D. UNKNOWN Pedro de Aragon 0945 - 1004 Adelaide of Poitou 59 59 0937 - 0995 William II "Ironarm" Count of Poitou 58 58 0846 - 0895 Pepin I De Vermandois Count of Senlis 49 49 0310 - UNKNOWN Achiulf D. UNKNOWN Almondis von Gévaudan 1115 - UNKNOWN Helias Count of Mayenne 1024 - 1087 William I "The Conqueror" King of England 63 63 William I The Conqueror, King of England from 1066 to 1087, was a man ofremarkable political and military skill and a dominant force in WesternEurope. The Domesday Survey of 1086 was a striking illustration of hisadministrative capabilities. William was the illegitimate son of Robert Iof Normandy and Herleve, a Tanner's daughter from Falaise, and becameDuke of Normandy as a child in 1035. William the Conqueror died whilecampaigning to maintain his hold on Maine and was buried in his ownmonastic foundation of Saint-Etienne at Caen. "The Encyclopedia of theMiddle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. 0285 - UNKNOWN Athal 0260 - UNKNOWN Hunuil 0961 - 0993 Arnulf I Count of Holland 32 32 0921 - 0988 Dirk II Count of Holland 67 67 0935 - 0980 Berthold Margrave Of The Nordgau 45 45 0941 - 1015 Heliksuinda von Walbeck 74 74 0889 - 0910 Judith of Fruili 21 21 1171 - 6 Jan 1232/1233 Maud le Meschin 0230 - UNKNOWN Ostrogotha 0860 - 0900 Kunigunde of Swabia 40 40 0812 - 0862 Eberhard Marquis of Friuli 50 50 0820 - 0874 Gisela of Friuli 54 54 0835 - 0899 Arnuph Emperor of Germany 64 64 D. UNKNOWN Thierry Count of Flanders 0205 - UNKNOWN Hisarna 1009 - 1038 Ludolf von Brunswick Count in the Derlingau 29 29 0967 - 1025 Boleslaw I 'Chrobny' Count Of Poland 58 58 0922 - 0992 Mieszko I Prince Of Poland 70 70 Miescyslaw was a Danish Viking. 1084 - 1153 David I The Saint King of Scotland 69 69 One of the most powerful Scottish kings (reigned from 1124). He admittedinto Scotland an Anglo-French (Norman) aristocracy that played a majorpart in the later history of the kingdom. He also reorganized ScottishChristianity to conform with continental European and English usages andfounded many religious communities, mostly for Cistercian monks andAugustinian canons. The youngest of the six sons of the Scottish kingMalcolm III Canmore and Queen Margaret (afterward St. Margaret), Davidspent much of his early life at the court of his brother-in-law KingHenry I of England. Through David's marriage (1113) to a daughter ofWaltheof, earl of Northumbria, he acquired the English earldom ofHuntingdon and obtained much land in that county and in Northamptonshire.With Anglo-Norman help, David secured from his brother Alexander I, kingof Scots from 1107, the right to rule Cumbria, Strathclyde, and part ofLothian. In April 1124, on the death of Alexander, David became king ofScots.

David recognized his niece, the Holy Roman empress Matilda (died 1167),as heir to Henry I in England, and from 1136 he fought for her againstKing Stephen (crowned as Henry's successor in December 1135), hopingthereby to gain Northumberland for himself. A brief peace made withStephen in 1136 resulted in the cession of Cumberland to David and thetransfer of Huntingdon to his son Earl Henry. David, however, continuedto switch sides. While fighting for Matilda again, he was defeated in theBattle of the Standard, near Northallerton, Yorkshire (Aug. 22, 1138). Hethen made peace once more with Stephen, who in 1139 grantedNorthumberland (as an English fief) to Earl Henry. In 1141 Davidreentered the war on Matilda's behalf, and in 1149 he knighted her sonHenry Plantagenet (afterward King Henry II of England), who acknowledgedDavid's right to Northumberland.

In Scotland, David created a rudimentary central administration, issuedthe first Scottish royal coinage, and built or rebuilt the castles aroundwhich grew the first Scottish burghs: Edinburgh, Stirling, Berwick,Roxburgh, and perhaps Perth. As ruler of Cumbria he had takenAnglo-Normans into his service, and during his kingship many otherssettled in Scotland, founding important families and intermarrying withthe older Scottish aristocracy. Bruce, Stewart, Comyn, and Oliphant areamong the noted names whose bearers went from northern France to Englandduring the Norman Conquest in 1066 and then to Scotland in the reign ofDavid I. To these and other French-speaking immigrants, David grantedland in return for specified military service or contributions of money,as had been done in England from the time of the Conquest.
0800 - 0843 Judith Empress of the West 43 43 0820 - UNKNOWN Gisele of France 0180 - UNKNOWN Amal 0805 - UNKNOWN Engeltrude of Paris 0786 - UNKNOWN Leutaud Count of Paris 0844 - 0870 Judith de France Princess of France 26 26 0840 - 0879 Baldwin I 'Bras de Fer' Count of Flanders 39 39 0865 - UNKNOWN Baldwin II Count of Flanders 0877 - UNKNOWN Elfridam 0914 - 0969 Adele De Vermandois 55 55 0940 - 0992 Baldwin III Count of Flanders 52 52 0160 - UNKNOWN Augus 0130 - UNKNOWN Hulmul 1005 Eleanor Princess of Normandy 0580 - UNKNOWN Leovigild of Spain 0590 - UNKNOWN Theodosia of Cartagena 0565 - UNKNOWN Severinus Count of Cartagena 1190 - UNKNOWN William Marshal V Earl of Pembroke 1200 - 17 Jan 1240/1241 Isabel Marshall 1136 - 1199 Isabelle de Warenne 63 63 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess of England 60 60 1225 - 1261 Sanchia Berenger Queen of the Germans 36 36 0570 - UNKNOWN Theodora 1042 - UNKNOWN William de la Ferte de Massey 1086 - 1147 Robert de Caen Earl of Gloucester 61 61 The illegitimate son of King Henry I of England (reigned 1100-35), Robertwas made Earl of Gloucester in 1122. After the death of Henry I andusurpation of power by Stephen (December 1135), Gloucester became theleader of the party loyal to Matilda, his half sister, who had beendesignated heir to the throne by Henry I. He took Matilda to England inSeptember 1139 and at the head of her forces won from Stephen most ofwestern England and southern Wales. In February 1141 he captured Stephenat Lincoln and imprisoned him in Bristol. Later that year Gloucester wascaptured at Winchester, Hampshire, and exchanged for the king. Hecontinued to be the mainstay of Matilda's cause until his death.Chroniclers considered Gloucester an able and sagacious leader. 0545 - 0626 Theodoric King of Macedonia 81 81 1090 - 1157 Mabel Fitzhamon 67 67 0730 - 0778 Gunderland Count of Hasbania 48 48 1170 - 1217 Isabella Countess of Gloucester 47 47 0552 - UNKNOWN Thoedora 1170 - 1249 Alexander II King of Scotland 79 79 0975 - 1038 Stephen I Saint King of Hungary 63 63 0520 - 0575 Theodemer 55 55 0526 - UNKNOWN Erchiva 1210 - 1286 Alexander III King of Scotland 76 76 1238 - UNKNOWN Margaret of Princess of England D. UNKNOWN Letecie D. UNKNOWN Athelbald King of Wessex 0896 - UNKNOWN Eadgifu 0980 - 1016 Bruno II Count Of Brunswick 36 36 0924 - 0944 Aethelflaed of Damerham 20 20 0942 - UNKNOWN Eadwig of England 0944 - 0975 Edgar The Peacful King of England 31 31 King of Mercia and Northumbria 957 and King of England 959-975. D. UNKNOWN Athelflaed The Fair 0963 - 0978 Edward The Martyr King of England 15 15 D. UNKNOWN Aelfrthryth of Devon D. 1090 Louis I Seigneur deFaucigny 0993 - 26 Jan 1057/1058 William Poincius Duke of Normandy 1050 - 1139 Richard deCamville 89 89 1005 Ealdgyth 0942 - 1014 Sigrid The Haughty Skoglar-Testedot 72 72 0980 - UNKNOWN Estrith (Margaret) of Denmark 0900 - UNKNOWN Thyri Klacksdottir D. UNKNOWN Cnut II The Great King of England & Denmark 1008 - 1065 Gerold I Geneva Count of Geneva 57 57 0892 - 0962 Ziemomsyl Prince Of Poland 70 70 0931 - 0972 Taksony Of Hungary 41 41 0865 - 0921 Leszek IV Prince Of Poland 56 56 0982 - UNKNOWN Amadeo I Count of Savoy 0835 - 0892 Ziemowit Prince Of Poland 57 57 0813 - 0892 Piast Chosciszko Duke Of Poland 79 79 1027 - UNKNOWN Judith Of Northumbria 0976 - 1037 Vazul Vazoly Prince Of Hungary 61 61 0978 - 1050 Anastasia Princess Of Hungary 72 72 0970 - 1050 Ottone Orseolo Doge Of Venice 80 80 0955 - 0985 Michael Regent Of Poland Hungary 30 30 0932 - 0990 Princess of the Kumans 58 58 0896 - 0950 Zoltan Prince Of Hungary 54 54 D. UNKNOWN Ermenrad Lord of Faucigny 0905 - 0989 Princess Of Bihar Men 84 84 0840 - 0907 Arpad Prince Of Hungary 67 67 Arpad was leader of the next band of Turanian Invaders called theMagyars, or Hungarians, another branch of the Hunnic race, who in 895 ledhis savage hordes through the Vereczka Pass into the region now calledHungary, there establishing their kingdom. These people, in markedcontrast to almost every other tribe of Turanian origin, adopted themanners, customs and religion of the people about them, became, in aword, thoroughly Europeanized, and for a long time were the main defenseof Christian Europe against the Turkish tribes of the same race thatfollowed closely in their footsteps. Thus they took their religion andcivilization along with it from Germany. 0865 - 0850 Arpad Princess Of Hungary 15 15 0820 - 0895 Almos Prince of Hungary 75 75 0796 - 0835 Ogyek Prince Of Hungary 39 39 Attila, the leader of the non-Aryan Huns, defeated the armies of theEastern Emperor, and exacted tribute from the court of Constantinople. Heinvaded Western Europe and was driven back with the loss of from 100,000to 200,000 and retreated across the Rhine and led his warriers beyond theAlps. Shortly after he had crossed the Danube he died suddenly in hiscamp. These Turanian people were pagan. He was followed by Chabla. Edus,Vergerus, Elendus, two whose names were unknown, Avarius and Almus.Attila was King of Hungary in 453 and Ogyek is a direct descendent. 0800 - 0850 Emese Princess Of Hungary 50 50 0822 - 0900 Princess Almos Of Hungary 78 78 0955 - 0997 Adelajda 'The White' Princess Of Poland 42 42 0972 - 1056 Maria Helena Princess Of Hungary 84 84 D. UNKNOWN Aalgut 0960 - 1020 Richeza Sualafeld 60 60 1017 - 1065 Heinrich III Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 48 48 1194 - UNKNOWN Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor Holy Roman Emperor. Sources differ over which Isabel Frederick married,some say Isabella daughter of John I Lackland of England and some saydaughter of John of Brienne King of Jerusalem and Emperor ofConstantinople. King of Naples and Sicily 1197. 0800 - UNKNOWN Bruno of Saxony 0840 - UNKNOWN Hedwige of Friuli 0845 - 0939 Judith of Friuli 94 94 0852 - 0930 Adelaide of Burgundy 78 78 D. 1422 Margery de Welle 0900 - UNKNOWN Willa of Burgundy 0690 - 0735 Harald Hildetand King Of Denmark & Sweden 45 45 Harold Hildetand or Golden Teeth, raised Denmark to an unprecedentedheight of power. He conquered many of the neighboring states and hisnaval resources were very great. 0840 - UNKNOWN Renaud Seigneur Roucy Count Of Rheims 0900 - UNKNOWN Ingeborg Thrandsson 0942 - 1002 Gunhild Haraldsdottir of Denmark 60 60 D. UNKNOWN Jarl Palig Ealdorman in Devon 1190 - UNKNOWN Richard FitzJohn Baron Chilham 0962 - UNKNOWN Auxilia 1200 - 1265 Roshia de Dover 65 65 0972 - 1024 Henry II Emperor of Germany 52 52 0920 - UNKNOWN Louis IV "D'Outremer" King of France 0844 - 0905 Adelbert "The Illustrious" Count Thurgau 61 61 1166 - UNKNOWN William de Montgomerie III Count of Ponthieu 0907 - UNKNOWN Rudolf II Von Swabia D. UNKNOWN Gorka 0935 - UNKNOWN Anselm II Count of Noyen Jorden de Puleston in or bef 1388 - 1455 John le Scrope 4th Lord Scrope of Masham and Upsal.  He was the fourth of five sons.  After the death without heirs of his two older brothers he became heir to the attainted barony and he family estates, being then aged 30 years and more.  The barony forfeited by his brother, Henry, executed at Southampton before Agincourt, was restored to him in 1426.  He bought back the Scrope lands that had been confiscated.  He was summoned to Parliament from January 7, 1425/36, to May 26, 1455, as Johanni Lescrop de Masham.  He served in the French wars after 1429 and became lord treasurer on February 26, 1431/32. 0980 - UNKNOWN Odo I Count of Maurienne 0567 - UNKNOWN Rigunth of Neustria 0585 - 0670 Dagobert I King of Austrasia & Neustria 85 85 0589 - UNKNOWN Charibert II Neustria 0587 - 0665 Nanthild 78 78 0610 - 0681 Clovis II King of Neustria 71 71 0628 - 0705 Theuderic III King of the Franks 77 77 0632 - UNKNOWN Clothar II King of Neustria 0944 - UNKNOWN Adelaideheiress of Ortigen 1027 - 1054 Adelaide Ponthieu 27 27 0630 - 0714 St. Amalaberga 84 84 D. UNKNOWN Wandregisi D. UNKNOWN Farahild 0648 - 0745 Chrotlind 97 97 0650 - UNKNOWN Clovis III King of Austrasia & Neustria 0652 - 0711 Childebert III King of Austrasia & Neustria 59 59 0654 - UNKNOWN IV Chlothar 0650 - 0741 Lambert II Count of Neustria 91 91 0620 - 0680 Chrobertus Robert II of Neustrasia 60 60 Adelbert III Count of Zurich 0906 - UNKNOWN Anselm I Count of Noyen 0598 - UNKNOWN Lambert I of Neustrasia 0690 - 0715 Dagobert III King of Austrasia & Neustria 25 25 0618 - UNKNOWN Regentrude Neustria 0596 - 0660 Clodoule Bishop Of Metz 64 64 0582 - 0640 Saint Arnoul Bishop of Metz 58 58 St. Arnolph, the First Major Domus of Clothary II, was the commonpatriarch of the Carlovinian and Capetian Kings. He married Dodo, a Saxonlady. D. UNKNOWN Erchenauld 1104 - 1178 Amadeo I Count of Geneva 74 74 1070 - 1154 Nesta Ferch Rhys 84 84 Nesta was firstly mistress to Henry I; secondly she married Stephen,Constable of Cardigan; thirdly she married Gerald of Windsor. Gerald andNesta had four children:
1. William fitzGerald.
2. Maurice fitzGerald.
3. David fitzGerald.
4. Angarat, a daughter.
Known as the most beautiful woman in Wales. She had many lovers.
In Christmas 1108 Owain ap Cadwgan of Cardigan came to visit Gerald andNesta. He so lusted after her that he, that night, attacked the castleand carried
her off and had his way with her. This upset Henry I so much that theincident
started a war.
1088 - 1157 Henry FitzHenry 69 69 ~1542 William Sewell D. <1414 Thomas de Aston 1110 - 1137 Matilda deCuiseaux 27 27 0977 - UNKNOWN Thora Princess of Scotland 0500 - UNKNOWN Lluan 0450 - UNKNOWN Brychan Prince of Manau Gododdin 0480 - UNKNOWN Ingenach D. UNKNOWN Saint Cadoc D. UNKNOWN Ribrawst D. 0464 Vortigern of Powys D. UNKNOWN Sereva D. UNKNOWN Elen 0987 Hugh deCuiseaux Seigneuer de Cuiseaux D. UNKNOWN Llyr Llediath D. UNKNOWN Bran D. UNKNOWN Gratiana Guletic D. UNKNOWN Eudes D. UNKNOWN Caradawc of Archenfield 0360 - 0421 Constantia III Emperor Gratianus Roman Empire 61 61 D. UNKNOWN Helen D. 0388 Magnus Maximus Guletic 1050 - 1125 Aimon I Count of Geneva 75 75 D. 1191 Ida of Faucigny 1004 - UNKNOWN Thietburga deSavoie 0982 - UNKNOWN Bertha of Burgundy 0980 - 1016 Aimon I Count Of Vienne 36 36 Henry Crane 0988 - UNKNOWN Laura deSenecy 1146 - 1190 Ingelram deFiennes Lord of Martock 44 44 D. UNKNOWN Guibourg D. UNKNOWN Bernard Prince of Septimania D. UNKNOWN Angilibert De Ponthieu 0950 - UNKNOWN Godfrey II Duke of Upper Lorraine D. UNKNOWN Doda 0903 - UNKNOWN Gozelo I Duke of Lower Lorraine D. UNKNOWN Sigebert of Verdun 0875 - UNKNOWN Kunigund Utalin 0998 - UNKNOWN Hildegarde 0877 - UNKNOWN II Parkuritan 0880 - UNKNOWN Roscilla of Loches 0848 Aelendis D'Amboise D. 0885 Sigebert V Comte de Razes 0844 - UNKNOWN Rotilde Princess of France D. 1175 Gautier III Sire deSalins 1107 - UNKNOWN Melisende Queen of Jerusalem 1038 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey IV Comte D' Anjou D. UNKNOWN Baudouin III King of Jerusalem D. 1174 Amaury I King of Jerusalem D. UNKNOWN Ermengarde Du Maine 1090 - UNKNOWN Poncette Dame deTreves 1060 - 1125 Guigues VIII Count d'Albon 65 65 1075 - UNKNOWN Mathilda 1050 - UNKNOWN Eadyth of Northumberland 0876 - 0936 Heinrich I "The Fowler" King Of The Germans 60 60 Also the Empereror of the Holy Roman Empire. 0535 - 0601 Arnoldus Bishop of Metz 66 66 1064 - 8 Mar 1134/1135 Adela Princess of England 1025 - 1075 Guiges VII 'le Gros' Count of Albon and Grenoble 50 50 0697 - UNKNOWN Hersuinda 0630 - 0677 Guerin Count de Poitiers 47 47 0635 - UNKNOWN Leutwinus Count Bishop Of Treves D. 0650 Dode Clothilde De Heristal 1042 - 1070 Adelais Petronel Turin 28 28 D. UNKNOWN Bernard of Septamania 0879 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey 1st "Ferreol" Count Of The Gastinois D. UNKNOWN Aubri Count of the Gastinois 0958 - 1027 William 1st Pereginus King Of Lombard 69 69 0865 - UNKNOWN Gilbert (Giselbert) Count Of Roucy 0860 - 0927 Hersent Duchess Of Lorraine 67 67 0846 - 0916 Rainer I Hainaut Duke Of Lorraine 70 70 Rainer or Reginar I, surnamed "Longneck," Duke of Lorraine, was the firstdefinitely established Count of Hainault. He died in 916.  He firstappears in history in 875, when in alliance with Ratbod, Duke of Frisia,he attempted to dislodge the Norman chief Rollo from the Island ofWalcheren in Zeeland. The two allies were defeated by Rollo, who enteredHainault the following year and took Ranier prisoner. The count wasransomed by his wife, who exchanged for him 12 Norman leaders who were inher power, and all the gold and silver she possessed. Rainer I becameembroiled with Zwentibold. ruler of Lorraine, and being defeated he wasforced to withdraw into France. After the death of Zwentibold, Rainerrecovered both his land and his title, and added them to the duchy ofLorraine, which Charles the Simple, King of France, granted him in 911. 0822 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Count of Darnu & Brabant & Massagau 0823 - 0877 Charles II Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 54 54 1030 - 1066 Agatha Von Brunswick 36 36 0866 - UNKNOWN Giselbert Duke of Lorraine 0868 - 0932 Regnier II Hainault Count of Hainault 64 64 Rainer or Reginar II, Count of Hainault, is not mentioned as living laterthan 928, but probably died about 932. During his reign he quarreledalmost continually with his brother Gislebert, Duke of Lorraine.Gislebert was imprisoned by Berenger, his brother-in-law, in 924, butalthough Rainer II obtained his release by offering his sons as hostages,Giselbert was no sooner at liberty than he began to ravage the lands ofBerenger and of Isaac, Count of Cambrai. Rainer retaliated, but thebrothers presumably became reconciled, since in 925 Giselbert made hispeace with the King of France. Rainer II married Alix daughter of RichardI, Duke of Burgundy. 0972 - UNKNOWN Ermetrude De Roucy D. UNKNOWN Litwinde D. UNKNOWN Beatrice of Macon D. UNKNOWN Adelaide of Alsace & Tours 0733 - 0780 Eystein Halfdansson King in Raumarike 47 47 0695 - UNKNOWN Olaf Ingjaldsson King of Vestfold & Jutland 1048 - 1126 Eadgar 'the Exile' Atheling 78 78 1147 - 1223 Sibyl deTingrie 76 76 0679 - UNKNOWN Ingjald Braut-Onundsson Evilheart King of Sweden 0638 - UNKNOWN Braut- Onund Ingvarsson 0616 - UNKNOWN Ingvar Eysteinsson 0572 - UNKNOWN Adils Ottarsson 0551 - UNKNOWN Ottar Egilsson 0509 - UNKNOWN Aun The Aged Jorgundsson 0302 - UNKNOWN Driva Snaersdottir Suomi 0403 - UNKNOWN Dag Dyggvasson 1183 - 1224 Baldwin deWake 41 41 0382 - UNKNOWN Dyggvi Domarsson 0364 - UNKNOWN Domar Domaldsdotter Sverige 0340 - UNKNOWN Domaldi Visbursson 0319 - UNKNOWN Visbur Vanlandsson 0298 - UNKNOWN Vanlandi Svegdasson 0277 - UNKNOWN Svegdi Fjolnarsson 0256 - UNKNOWN Fjolner Vngvifreysson King of Swedes 0235 - UNKNOWN Yngvi-Frey King of Njord Swedes 0727 - 0772 Guerin Count Thurgau 45 45 1181 - 1233 Isabel de Briwere 52 52 0913 - UNKNOWN Gerlotte de Blois 0890 - UNKNOWN Thibault Count of Tours and Chartres 0850 - UNKNOWN Hilda Ragnhild Hrolfsdottir 0772 - UNKNOWN Lifa Vestfold 0688 - UNKNOWN Solveig Halfdansdottir 0735 - UNKNOWN Hilda Ericsdotter Vestfold 1185 - 1260 Milicent de Gournay 75 75 0695 - UNKNOWN Eric Agnarsson Vestfold 0715 - UNKNOWN Asa Eysteinsdotter Throndheim D. UNKNOWN Angar Vestfold 0663 - UNKNOWN Haadraade Eystein 0698 - UNKNOWN Solveig Halfdansdotter 0635 - UNKNOWN Halfdan Guldand 0575 - UNKNOWN Yrsa Helgasdotter 1152 William I deCantilou 0424 - UNKNOWN Agni Dagsson 0361 - UNKNOWN Drott Danpsson 0428 - UNKNOWN Skjalf Frostasdottir 0400 - UNKNOWN Frosti 0275 - UNKNOWN Snaer Suomi King Of Finland 0278 - UNKNOWN Vana 0239 - UNKNOWN Gerd Gymersdottir 0217 - UNKNOWN Gymer 0218 - UNKNOWN Orboda 1101 - 1175/1176 Hugh deWake 0214 - UNKNOWN Njord King Of Swedes 0219 - UNKNOWN Dotter Svierge 0190 - UNKNOWN Son Svierge 0756 - UNKNOWN Geva Eysteinsdotter 0970 - 1045 Ralph II Seigneur De Toeni 75 75 0990 - UNKNOWN Adela Estefania de Barcelona 1114 - 1168 Emma Fitzgilbert de Clare 54 54 1088 - 1171 Baldwin Fitz Gilbert de Clare 83 83 1092 Adeline de Rollos 1065 Geoffrey de Wake 1130 - UNKNOWN Aldhelm de Burgo de Mortaigne 1003 - 1050 Herleva De Falaise 47 47 0978 - UNKNOWN Fulbert the Tanner de Falaise Rollo, or Fulbert, chamberlain to Robert, Duke of Normandy, had the giftof the castle and honor of Croy, in Picardy, from whence his posterityassumed their surname, which was afterwards written de Grey. They had adaughter Hervela or Herlotta, who was the mother of William, theConqueror, and a son, Reynold.
Sources: Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, p. 248.
               Edmondson's Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 1, p. 77; Vol.4, p. 340.
               Glover's History and Gazeteer of Derbyshire, Vol. 2, pp.308/9.
               Lipscomb's History of Buckinghamshire, Vol. 1, pp. 160,466.
               Banks Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 2, p. 224.
               Lewis' Manuscripts, pp. 154, 267.
               Cokayne's Complete Peerage of Great Britain, Vol. 4, pp.308-311, 761,
               Appendix No. 1.
D. UNKNOWN Geoffrey de Gastinois 0772 - 0811 Charles "The Younger" Duc de Ingelheim 39 39 D. UNKNOWN Julianna of Ingleheim 1019 - 1082 Richard 'le Goz' d'Avranches Vicomte d'Avranches 63 63 Richard was Vice Count de Abrinces, that is Auranches in Normandy. Hereconciled his father to the Duke of Normandy by his good carriage andgot more than his father had lost. He was Governor of the Castle of St.James in Normandy and Brittany. He married Emma, half sister of Williamthe Conqueror, daughter of Herloin, a Norman nobleman, who marriedHerlotta or Arlotta, the Conqueror's mother, who was not married to hisfather. 1060 Richard II de Rollos D. UNKNOWN Pharamus deBoloin De Tingrie ~1131 - 1160 Ralph Basset 29 29 Ralph who d. 1160, son of Richard Basset, Justiciar temp. Henry I, whoheld Drayton through his marriage with Maud Ridel, and d. 1144. [CompletePeerage II:1 note (b)]
--------------------------
Ralph, of Drayton, co. Stafford (a lordship bestowed upon his mother bythe Earl of Chester). [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited,and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 26, Basset,Barons Basset, of Welden]
________________
Radulf II Basset, son or Richard Basset the justiciar and Matilda Ridel.He inherited his father's Norman property, and was granted land in theEnglish inheritance by his brother Geoffrey II Ridel. He was sheriff ofWarwickshire and Leicestershire from 1159 to 1162. He died 1163/4 leavinga son Ralph (d 1211) by his wife Alice. [Domesday Descendants p165]
~1300 - 1366 Catherine de Stafford 66 66 Thomas Leventhorp John Jermye Philip de Marmion D. 1420 Joyce de Botetourt 1616 Mary Sewall aka: Sewell or Seawell or Seawall.
Mary is named in the Warwickshire Visitation of 1619 as then being three years old. Mary married Richard Dudley at  Danvers, MA, before 11 AUG 1642. She is named in her brother Richard's will as Mrs. Mary Dudley.
1064 Godiva de Evermer 1035 Hugh de Evermer 0948 Arsinde D'Anjou 0869 - UNKNOWN Odo (Eudes) Toulouse Count Toulouse D. UNKNOWN Regina de France 0794 - UNKNOWN Hugh L' Abbe Abbot of St. Quintin 0921 - 1006 Raimond III Toulouse Count Toulouse 85 85 0895 - UNKNOWN Raimond II Toulouse Count Toulouse 0956 - UNKNOWN Adelheid of Toulouse 0923 - 0950 Bertha of Tuscany 27 27 0955 Thorold de Lincoln 0871 - UNKNOWN Garsinde de Alby 0833 - UNKNOWN Raimond I Toulouse Count Toulouse 0840 - UNKNOWN Bertha De Remy D. UNKNOWN Hermengild de Alby Comte de Alby 0952 - 0992 Ermengarde D'Anjou 40 40 0934 - 0985 Adelaide De Vermandois 51 51 1004 Herwaldus Le Wake Harold de Wake or Herwaldus or Hewaldus, as it is observed by Dr.Patrick, was the first who gave rise to the name of Wake, and wassurnamed de Wake or le Wake. He was one of the bravest heroes of his ageand country, whose actions are celebrated by Ingulphus; and was the lastwho submitted to William, the Conqueror.
Sources for Wake and Stuteville Descendents:
    Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerages, pp. 563, 433, 372, 278, 447,598.
    Burke's Royal Families of England, Scotland and Waies, pp. xxxiv-v-vi,
    Part 2, p. vi.
    Lipscomb's History and Atiquities of Buckinghamshire, Vol. 4, pp.125/6.
    Metcalf's Visitation of Northamptonshire, pp. 52/3.
    Bank's Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 3, pp. 174/5, 440/1.
    Clutterbuck's History of Hertfordshire, Vol. 3, pp. 287/8.
0860 - UNKNOWN Orequen De Rennes 0882 - UNKNOWN Daughter De Rennes 0860 - UNKNOWN Berenger De Rennes 1080 - 1130 Matilda Maud De Lens 50 50 Vetred Of Northumbria 1022 Agatha I of Northumbria Ealdgyth or Algitha, only daughter by the 3rd wife, was heiress of Rabyand other large possessions belonging to her mother. She marriel Maldred,son and heir of Crinan, an eminent Thane, one of the greatest and mostopulent families of North England. 1016 - 1076 Waltheof Earl of Northumbria 60 60 1002 - 1093 Aelfgar Earl of Mercia 91 91 1070 - UNKNOWN Duncan II King of Scotland 1041 - UNKNOWN Thufrida of Mercia 1072 - UNKNOWN Ethelreda of Northumberland 0984 - UNKNOWN Siward Earl of Northumbria The Bull's head crest commemorates the Bulmers. Robert Fitz-Maldredmarried Isabel Nevill, daughter of Geoffrey Nevill and his wife Emma,daughter of Bertram de Bulmer. Isabel inherited from her mother theBulmer Lordship of Brancepeth near Durham, and henceforth BrancepethCastle became the other seat of the house, and Geoffrey, son of IsabelNevill and Robert Fitz-Maldred, adopted the surname Neville or the NormanNeuville. This noble, ancient and illustrious family "which was tomedieval England what the Douglass was to Scotland" for antiquity, greatand numerous honors, flourishing branches and mighty power, scarcely anyfamily can vie with the splendour possessed in former ages by theNevills. Of course, the lines connect with Royalty, but they inthemselves are great enough to be proud to claim descent through.

Siward, Earl of Northumbria, was a Dane by birth and probably came toEngland with Canute. In 1054 he invaded Scotland in the interests ofMalcolm Canmore and he completely routed Macbeth in battle. Shakespeareintroduces him and his son into "Macbeth." Siward, a man of unusualstrength and size, is said to have arisen from his bed at the approach ofdeath and to have died dressed in all his armor.
1050 - 1113 William Peverell 63 63 William de Peveral is usually said to be an illegitimate son of theConqueror. He had at least four children, William, d. s. p., and Williamagain, who succeeded him, and two daughters, Maud and Adelise, the wifeof Richard Redvers. The Conqueror gave William Peveral the custody ofNotts Castle, when it was built in 1068, and extensive possessions,afterwards known as the honour of Peveral, consisting of 100 lordships incounties Notts and Northants, 14 in Derby, and some 20 others in othercounties. William Peveral died Jan., 1113. 1040 - 1090 Robert de Mortaigne Earl of Cornwall 50 50 1040 - 1085 Matilda De Montgomery 45 45 0940 - 1020 Mien I de Fourgeres Baron de Fourgeres 80 80 0920 - UNKNOWN Athelstan Mannesson ~1632 Mary Bassett Research notes:
Bassett - This family was of the Isle of Wight, William, of Newport, had one son, William Bassett, of Southampton, England, captain in the British army at Dunkirk, who came to America and setttled in New Kent Co., VA, 1671. He married Bridget Cary. Their son, William, of Eltham, born 1670, in his will styles himself "Gent" of the parish of Blissland, New Kent Co. etc, etc.

American's of Gentle Birth and Their Ancestors, p. 287: Old New Kent County Some Account of The Planters, Plantations, and Places in New Kent County., Vol. I, p. 139

"OLD KENT COUNTY" VOL. 1,  By:  Harris:
The Bassetts of Eltham, Blisland Parish, New Kent County from Southampton England. p.42-43: William son of William lived on Pamunkey River Feb. 1664. he was an officer in Rutherford's Regiment at the Battle of Dunkirk. He was given the task of securing the defenses for the colony for which he received 10,000 pounds of tobacco. In his will is mentioned his sister Mary Scott.

William BASSETT was born abt. 1630 in Southampton, Hampshire, England. He d. 1671, Blisland Parish, New Kent Co., VA. He is described as a captain in the British army and a royalist who came to VA. He m. 1672 Bridget CARY, b. 1652, Warwick Co., VA. His father was William BASSETT of Newport, Isle of Wight, England. His mother was Anne ??

William Bassett the Councillor, son of the Yeoman William Bassett and wife Anne of Newport, Isle of Wight, Southampton Co., England, IMMIGRATED about 1665 and married 1670c in Virginia Bridget CARY born 1652, daughter of Captain Miles CARY and Anne TAYLOR. (Lyon G. Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia, p. 181) They lived in Eltham, New Kent County, VA, where their only child William Bassett, Jr. (the minor, later known as William Bassett, Esq.) was born in 1671. Shortly thereafter, William the Immigrant died 1671/72. Family Bible records at the Virginia State Library record the marriage of William Bassett, Jr. (the minor, later known as Esq.) 28 November 1693 to Joanna Burwell, daughter of Lewis Burwell and Abagail Smith, niece of Nathaniel Bacon, the elder, who immigrated to the Colony of Virginia in 1651, and later became president of the Council.

Col. John Scott and Mary Bassett, were the great greatgrandparents of William Henry Harrison, 9th President of the United States.

William BASSETT s/o William lived on the Pamunkey River 2/1664. He was an officer in Rutherford’s Regiment at the Battle of Dunkirk. He had the task of securing the defenses for the colony and for this he received 10,000 pounds of tobacco. In his will is mentioned…to my sister Mary SCOTT.
0924 - UNKNOWN Elfwina of Mercia 1131 Anchitel de Grey Anchitel de Grey, eldest son, married Eva, daughter of Baldwin de Redvers, Earl of Devonshire. 1030 - 1071 William Fitz Osbert 41 41 1008 Reynold de Falaise 1121 - UNKNOWN Alan deFiennes Ralph Butler 2nd. brother to the Lord of Norbury.  Sir Ralph le Boteler (d. 1307) of the Oversley and Wemme family, married Matilda, daughter of Philip de Marmion, heiress of Pulverbatch, Shropshire and Norbury, Saffords., whose great- grandson Sir Philip le Boteler (d. 1293) was father of another Sir Philip, father of Philip de Butler. D. <1338 Philip Noel Joyce la Zouche She was his second wife. 1033 John de Grai John, Lord Grey of Groy, married Adela, daughter and co-heir of William Fitz Osbert, son of Robert Crispin, Earl of Hereford, whose arms were:Gules a bend argent, over all a fesse or. Robert Crispin's wife was Aldreda, daughter of Ralph de Yvery, whose arms were: Or, threechevronels gules. In Howard's lately published "Life of L. J. Grey," the descent of this family is from Rollo to Sir Henry Grey of Turroc. 1000 - UNKNOWN Gerard De Flaitel 1018 - UNKNOWN Constance of France 1010 - 1037 Manasses 27 27 0952 - 1024 Eve of Luxemburg 72 72 0938 - UNKNOWN Gerhard 0930 - UNKNOWN Sigifrid Count of Luxembourg 0879 - 0933 Richwin Count of Verdun 54 54 1057 Adeliza Fitz Osbert 1088 Anchitel de Grai Anchitel de Grey held divers lands in Oxfordshire, and Lavendon andWeston in Bucks, 20th of William, and lived at Bartin, County Oxford. 0978 - UNKNOWN Ralph Count of Ivry D. UNKNOWN Herfast deCrepon 0963 Herfast de Crepon Peter Ransom 1000 Robert Osbern de Crepon D. UNKNOWN Eudocia Ingerina D. UNKNOWN Stylianos Basilopator Tzautzes 0900 - 0961 Charles Constantine Count Of Vienne 61 61 0900 - 0960 Teutberge Of Troyes 60 60 0947 - UNKNOWN William III Taillefer Count Toulouse 0785 - UNKNOWN Constantine of Macedonia 0750 - UNKNOWN Hmayeak a Mamikonid 1590 - 1632 Thomas Bocking Fitch 42 42  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

of England.
0726 - UNKNOWN Artavazo a Mamikonid 0929 - 0980 Gerberge Princess Of Lorraine 51 51 0884 - 23 Feb 0930/0931 Herbert II Count De Vermandois 0895 - 0931 Hildebrante Princess of France 36 36 0838 - 0939 Herbert I Count De Vermandois 101 101 0846 - UNKNOWN Bertha of France D. UNKNOWN Eric I Bloodaxe King of Norway 0984 - 1075 Adele Capet of France 91 91 0837 - UNKNOWN Blichilde de Maine 1599 - 20 Jan 1685/1686 Ann Reeve 0804 - UNKNOWN Rorgo de Maine Count de Maine 0833 - 0866 Ramnulf I Count of Poitou 33 33 1545 - 1605 George Fitch 60 60 1095 - UNKNOWN John deFiennes 1125 - UNKNOWN Reginald Dunstanville FitzRoy Earl of Cornwall 1135 - UNKNOWN Beatrice FitzRichard 1565 - UNKNOWN Joan Thurgood 1068 - 1135 Henry I 'Beauclerc' King of England 67 67 Henry I was Duke of Normandy from 1106-1135 and King of England from1100-1135. William I left Normandy to his oldest son Robert II Curthoseand England to his next oldest son, William II Rufus. Henry was leftgreat wealth and eventually outmanuvered his brothers to become King ofEngland in 1100 and ruled 35 years. Henry is remembered for expanding andstrengthening royal justice, integrating the Norman and Anglo-Saxon legalsystems, and laying the foundation for more centralized royal rule. "TheEncyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. 1025 - 1087 Simon de Montfort 62 62 1070 - 1137 Amaury de Montfort III Count de Evreux 67 67 1095 - 1143 Agnes de Garlande 48 48 0990 - 1031 Amauri de Montfort Seigneur de Montfort-l'Amauri 41 41 D. 1 Mar 1057/1058 Ermensinde de Carcassonne 0972 - 25 Feb 1017/1018 Raimund Borrel I Count de Barcelona Wilscot Alice Wiverston 1540 - 1618 Nicholas Thurgood 78 78 Jane Draycott 1215 - UNKNOWN Jeanne De Valletort 0911 - UNKNOWN Nigel De St. Sauveur 1498 - 12 Jan 1557/1558 Roger Fitch 0944 - UNKNOWN Roger De St. Sauveur 1008 - UNKNOWN Emelia of Germany D. UNKNOWN Hunda-Steinar of England Earl in England D. UNKNOWN Alof Ragnarsdottir 0407 - UNKNOWN Flavius Valentinian III Roman Emperor 0390 - UNKNOWN Aelia Galla Placidia 0730 - UNKNOWN Sigurd Wolsung 0320 - UNKNOWN Flavius Theodosius 0734 - 0810 Alfhild Gandolsdottir 76 76 0780 - 0820 Guthfrith the Proud King of Denmark & Norway 40 40 1465 - 1514 Thomas Fitche 49 49 D. UNKNOWN Asa Haraldsdottir 0639 - UNKNOWN Algaut Gautreksson 0756 - UNKNOWN Lifa Dagsdotter 0540 - UNKNOWN Helgi Halfdansson 0503 - UNKNOWN Halfdan Frodasson 0479 - UNKNOWN Frodi Fridleifsson 0456 - UNKNOWN Fridleif Frodasson 1476 - 1527 Agnes Algore 51 51 1435 - 1493 Robert Algore 58 58 1435 - 1468 Thomas Fitche 33 33 Jane Adonay 0990 - UNKNOWN Odele Of Bois Ferrand 0970 - 0997 Arnold II The Young Count of Flanders 27 27 1116 - 1151 Adaliza of Louvain 35 35 1404 - 1466 William Fitche 62 62 1170 - UNKNOWN Suzanne De Warenne 0965 - UNKNOWN Luitgarde of Luxemburg 0935 - 0990 Hildegarde of Flanders 55 55 D. UNKNOWN Arviragus Alice de Montfort Cecily Pole ~1706 Judith Scott 1035 - UNKNOWN Peter deVermandois John Leigh Grant, 1461, Aug. 10. 1 Edward IV. 1 item : parchment ; 10.5 x 30.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Robert Boghay to Sir Henry Stafford, knight, son of Humfrey, duke of Buckingham, Hugh Eggerton, John Harecourte, John Leegh of Bothes, Hugh Davenport, Hugh Erdeswyk, and Ralph Bostok, esquires, of all his lands, etce., in Annesley, Dorlaston, and Bokenall, or elsewhere in the county of Stafford. Given at Bokenall on the feast of St. Laurence the Martyr, 1 Edward IV.
WITNESSES: Robert Cuny, Thomas Wode of Mere, Richard Aleok of Hanley, John Cradok of Bokenall, Thomas Wode of Botteslowe. With 1 seal (1.2 cm.) of red wax, bearing a deuce.
NAMES: I. Boghay, Robert. II. Buckingham, Henry Stafford, Duke of, 1454?-1483. III. Buckingham, Humphrey Stafford, Duke of, 1402-1460. IV. Eggerton, Hugh. V. Harecourte, John. VI. Legh, John. VII. Cradok, John. VIII. De Davenport, Hugh. IX. De Erdeswyk, Hugh. X. Bostok, Ralph. XI. Cuny, Robert. XII. Wode, Thomas. XIII. Alcok, Richard.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England-- Staffordshire. 2. Deeds--England--Anslow. 3. Deeds--England--Darlaston. 4. Deeds-- England--Bucknall. 5. Staffordshire (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 6. Anslow (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 7. Darlaston (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges. 8. Bucknall (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQD0644
0997 - 1028 Richard III Duke of Normandy 31 31 1069 - UNKNOWN James deFiennes 0326 - UNKNOWN Fincormach 0304 - UNKNOWN Thrinklind 0239 - UNKNOWN Corbred 0255 - UNKNOWN Eochaid 0214 - UNKNOWN II Conaire 0495 - UNKNOWN Deuteria 0450 - UNKNOWN Afranius Syagrius Gallo-Roman Consul D. UNKNOWN Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus D. UNKNOWN Antonia Minor 1086 - UNKNOWN Lucy deRumilly D. UNKNOWN Marc Anthony The Triumvir D. UNKNOWN Octavia D. UNKNOWN Julia D. UNKNOWN Antonius Creticus D. UNKNOWN Luscius Julius Caeser Consul D. UNKNOWN Luscius Julius Caeser D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser Consul D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser Consul D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser D. UNKNOWN Lucius Julius Caeser 1127 Jordan de Say D. UNKNOWN Numerius Julius Caeser 1040 - UNKNOWN Muriel de Mortaigne 1039 - 1090 Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert of Exeter 51 51 Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert, of Brionis or Moels, 2nd son, a follower of theConqueror, called Vicecomes, and Baldwin of Exetor. He was Seigneur deMeules and du Sap, in Normandy. After the death of his father, who wasmurdered by the son of Giroie, he and his brother Richard, who wasancestor of the de Clares, took refuge at the court of the Duke ofFlanders. Duke William afterwards restored to Baldwin his estates ofMeules and Sap, and to Richard FitzGilbert his estates of Bienfaite andOrbec, portions of their father's lands. Baldwin received from theConqueror some 150 lordships in Devonshire, Hemington and Parlock andApley in Somerset, and Iwerne in Dorset. Okehampton was the capital seatof his barony. He was Sheriff of Dorset 1080-1086 probably until hisdeath. (After the Conquest the sheriffs were still the King'srepresentatives in the county. As the King was nearly absolute, thesheriff was very powerful. The sheriff had important duties: 1. Finance.He farmed the shire at a fixed sum a year. 2. Justice. He was the King'srepresentative in the shire court, and he sat there as president, or as aroyal judge. 3. War. It was the duty of the sheriff to summon the forcesof the county. The great lords led their own retainers, but the sheriffled all the rest of the troops.--Montague's Elements of EnglishConstitutional History. E. E. W. Very different from modern sheriffs.This was from a textbook at Washington University.) In Domesday Book heis called Baldwin of Exeter, or Baldwin, the Sheriff. He married Emma orAlbreda, niece of the Conqueror. He died 1090. They had Robert, Richardand William. 1059 - UNKNOWN Emma Aldreda of Ivry 1079 - UNKNOWN Simon deMoreville 0460 - UNKNOWN Hartwake Prince of Saxons 0426 - 0488 Hengest Prince of Saxons 62 62 Hengest and Horsa, who led the Saxon bands who invaded England in 446.William of Malmesbury says that they were grandsons of the ancient Woden,from whom almost all the royal families of these barbarous nations deducetheir origin, and to whom the nations of the Angles, fondly deifying him,have consecrated the fourth day of the week Wodens-day, and the sixth dayunto his wife Frea. For the fatherland of the English race we must lookfar away from England itself. Three tribes of Germany, Angles, Saxons andJutes, by whom Britain was subdued, seem originally to have constitutedbut one nation, speaking the same language, and ruled by monarchs who allclaimed descent from the deified monarch of the Teutons, Woden or Odin.Jutes with their neighbors the Angles dwelt in the peninsula of Jutland,which parts the Baltic from the North Sea. In the adjoining Holsteinthere is still a district called Anglen. Hengest and Horsa had gone toEngland at the request of the British King Vortigern to help him in hisbattles with the Picts. They were at first given the Island of Thanet asa home, but soon quarreled with their British allies, and graduallypossessed themselves of what became the Kingdom of Kent. In 455 the SaxonChronicle records a battle between Hengest and Horsa and Vortigen, inwhich Horsa was killed, and thenceforth Hengest reigned in Kent until hisdeath in 488. 0400 - UNKNOWN Witegeslus King of Saxony 0428 - UNKNOWN Horsa Prince of Saxons 0376 - UNKNOWN Witte King of Saxony 0340 - UNKNOWN Witte King of Saxony 1156 Richard de La Haye 0306 - UNKNOWN Bode King of Saxony 0279 - UNKNOWN Marbed of Saxony 0249 - UNKNOWN Wilke of Saxony 0217 - UNKNOWN Witekind King of Saxony 0193 - UNKNOWN Sigward of Saxony 0166 - UNKNOWN Swarticke of Saxony 0130 - UNKNOWN Swarticke Prince of Saxony 0104 - UNKNOWN Wilke Prince of Saxony D. 0120 Harderick King of Saxony 0918 - 0987 Harald Bluetooth Gormsson II King of Denmark 69 69 Harald refused to accept the crown until he had first performed hisfather's obsequies with all the magnificence becoming his high rank. Oneof his earliest was the conquest of Norway, which became a province ofDenmark. Styrbear, King of Sweden, solicited the aid of King Harold inone of his wars, and to enforce his request he brought along with himGyntha, his sister, a lady of admirable beauty. The stratagem had theintended effect; Harold Bluetooth became enamored and married her. Theprogress of Christianity gained some headway during his reign, and theKing received baptism, and erected a splendid church. His daughterGunilda married Richard I, Duke of Normandy.
Sources:
     Harrison's History of Yorkshire; Preface and Charts.
     Britannica Encyclopedia, Vol. 26, p. 224; Vol. 12, p. 179; Vol. 20,p.
     4; Vol. 28, p. 767.
     Williams' Historians History of the World, Vol. 16, pp. 37-49.
     Edward S. Lewis Manuscripts, pp. 164, 162, 226, 274.
     The Plantagenet Ancestry, by Lt. Col. W. H. Turton, pp. 26-7.
1088 Ada de Engayne 0918 - UNKNOWN Knud Prince of Denmark 0603 - UNKNOWN Halfdan III King of Denmark 0640 - UNKNOWN Ivar Vidfadmus King of Denmark & Sweden His name meaning "the Far-Famed." These ancient Scandinavian peoples,speaking the same language as their brethren the Angles, began at a veryearly period, as might naturally be expected, to settle amongst theAngles in the North of England. About the beginning of the 7th centurythe celebrated Ivar conquered the northern parts of England, havingpreviously conquered Sweden and Saxland (Germany) and other parts ofEurope. He is called King of Denmark, Sweden, Saxland and Northumberland. D. UNKNOWN Valentine II Roman Emperor 0540 - UNKNOWN Eudoxia D. UNKNOWN Emperor Theodosius 0865 - UNKNOWN Turstan De Bastenburg 0540 - UNKNOWN Frode VI King of Denmark 0513 - UNKNOWN Roe King of Denmark 0570 - UNKNOWN Frode VII King of Denmark 1060 Ralph de Engayne 0450 - UNKNOWN Frode IV King of Denmark 0422 - UNKNOWN Fridlief III King of Denmark 0390 - UNKNOWN Halfdan King of Denmark 0364 - UNKNOWN Frode III the Pacific King of Denmark 0328 - UNKNOWN Danus MyKillati King of Scandia & Denmark Dan or Danus MyKillati, who was King of Scania and Denmark, died 270 A.D. He married Olufa, Queen of Jutland and Zealand in 205 A. D. when herfather died. She was descended in the sixth generation from Skiold, sonof Odin. Dan reduced the whole country to subjection and is alleged tohave given his name to the new kingdom. The union of his sister withDyggve of Sweden is reckoned the earliest matrimonial alliance that wasformed between two countries. Wars and other events of no importance fillup the history of his successors for ten or twelve generations. 1030 - UNKNOWN Eadgyth 1070 - 1158 Ebria deTriveres 88 88 0994 Geoffrey III Comte D' Anjou 1022 - 1072 Ivo FitzRichard De Taillebois 50 50 1047 - UNKNOWN Ranulph deTriveres 1060 - UNKNOWN Lucy of Mercia 1012 - UNKNOWN Alice Lesseline De Harcourt 1052 - UNKNOWN Alice deMeschines 0974 - UNKNOWN Maugher De Corbeil Earl of Corbeil 0980 - UNKNOWN Germaine De Corbeil 0878 - UNKNOWN Athelstan King of the Saxons 0300 - UNKNOWN Olaf The Mild King of Denmark 0270 - UNKNOWN Vermund The Sage King of Denmark Vermund became King of Denmark, A. D. 87, and died A. D. 140. 0240 - UNKNOWN Frode II King of Denmark 0210 - UNKNOWN Frode Fredigod King of Denmark 0185 - UNKNOWN Fridleif King of Denmark 0125 - UNKNOWN Odin King of Scandinavia Odin was supreme ruler of the Scythians, in Asaland, or Asaheim,Turkestan, between the Euxine and Caspian Seas, in Asia. He reigned atAsgard, whence he removed in the year B. C. 70, and became the first Kingof Scandinavia. He died in the year B. C. 50, and was succeeded by hissons, who reigned in different parts of Scandinavia. 1017 Ranulf le Meschines 1043 - UNKNOWN John deFiennes 0100 - UNKNOWN Fridulf Supreme Ruler of the Scythians 0730 - UNKNOWN Throud King of Frodheim 0709 - 0790 Sigurd Hring King of Denmark & Norway 81 81 0802 - UNKNOWN Eisten Glumru King of Thrandia 0477 - UNKNOWN Halfdan II King of Denmark 0619 - UNKNOWN Alof Queen of Sweden 0970 - UNKNOWN Berengal deSenlis 0795 - UNKNOWN Louis The German 0798 - UNKNOWN Emma of Spain 0770 - UNKNOWN Louis Le Debonaire 0775 - UNKNOWN Judith of Saxony 1072 - UNKNOWN Maud Margaret Princess of England 0979 - UNKNOWN Gilbert De St. Valery 0218 - UNKNOWN Saeming King Of The Norse 0996 - UNKNOWN Poppa deSenlis 1565 Edward Keene 0895 - UNKNOWN Alof Haraldsdatter Princess Of Norway 0874 - UNKNOWN Thorir Rognvaldsson Earl Of More 0998 - UNKNOWN Irmtrud Countess Of Luxemburg 0938 - UNKNOWN Richilde Princess Of The Holy Roman Empire 0930 - UNKNOWN Cuno Count Of Oeningen 0924 - UNKNOWN Heribert Count In Kinziggau 0874 - UNKNOWN Bertha De Vermandois 0955 - UNKNOWN Albert of Geneva ~1108 - ~1141 Robert de Condet 33 33 [JaneMorgan.FTW]

Robert de Condet (or Cundy), d. c 1141, lord of Thorngate Castle in thecity of Lincoln, and of Wickhambreux, Ken, Grimston, co. Nottingham, andSouth Carlton, Thurlby, Eagle and Skellingthorpe, co. Lincoln, son ofOsbert de Condet (or Cundy), d. by 1130, lord of Wickhambreux, Kent,Grimston, co. Nottingham, and South Carlton, Eagle and Skellingthorpe,co. Lincoln, by Adelaide, daughter and heir of William de Chesney, lordof Caenby and Glentham, co. Lincoln. [Magna Charta Sureties]
0800 - UNKNOWN Gebhard Count Of Lower Lahngau D. UNKNOWN Don Ferch Mathonwy D. UNKNOWN Eurgen D. UNKNOWN Marius D. UNKNOWN Anyn 0930 - UNKNOWN Robert of Geneva D. UNKNOWN Dingad D. UNKNOWN Brywlais D. UNKNOWN Ceraint Feddw An irreclaimable drunkard, deposed by his subjects for setting fire justbefore harvest to the cornfields of Siluria, now County Monmouthshire,England.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 159
D. UNKNOWN Berwyn D. UNKNOWN Morgan D. UNKNOWN Bleddyn D. UNKNOWN Rhun D. UNKNOWN Idwal D. UNKNOWN Llywarch 0905 - UNKNOWN Conrad of Geneva D. UNKNOWN Calchwynydd D. UNKNOWN Enir Fardd D. UNKNOWN Ithel D. UNKNOWN Llarian D. UNKNOWN Teuged D. UNKNOWN Llyfeinydd D. UNKNOWN Peredur D. UNKNOWN Gweyrydd D. UNKNOWN Ithon D. UNKNOWN Cymryw 0879 - 0931 Albert of Geneva 52 52 D. UNKNOWN Brwt D. UNKNOWN Selys Hen D. UNKNOWN Annyn Tro D. UNKNOWN Brydain He settled the island at an early date and being a great legislator aswell as warrior, according to tradition gave his name to the entireisland, which has since been corrupted into Britain.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 158
D. UNKNOWN Aedd Mawr Aedd Mawr "King Edward The Great", who appears to have lived ca. 1300 BC.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 158
     http://home.gvi.net/~rlmann2/admwr.htm
D. UNKNOWN Fausta D. UNKNOWN Heli Matthatsson D. UNKNOWN Eutropious 0982 - UNKNOWN Ladislau of Hungary 0990 - UNKNOWN Prbemieslawa 0855 - 0880 Ratbert Of Geneva 25 25 1063 - UNKNOWN Daughter of Lulach King of Scots 0480 - UNKNOWN Loarn King Of Dalrieda 0935 - 0966 Dubh MacMalcolm 31 31 1188 - 1246 Isabella De Taillefer D' Angouleme 58 58  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1023 - 1089 Roger dePitres 66 66 ~1150 - 1202 Hamelin De Warrenne Plantagenet 52 52 ~1145 - 1199 Isabel De Warenne 54 54 1144 - 1219 William Marshall 75 75 28 Feb 1154/1155 - 1182 Henry Plantagenet 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet 28 28 1165 - 1199 Joanna Dof Henry II Plantagenet 34 34 1045 Eunice de Baalun 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Wof King Alonso Plantagenet 52 52 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII King Of Castile&Leon 58 58 Anthony Cage Michael Morton 1145 Marie Princess Of France 1025 Drew de Baalun 1035 - 1116 Finn O'CaellaideKing of Osraige 81 81 D. 1192 Agnes Plantagenet Geoffrey Plantagenet ~1235 Henry de Grey 1214 - 1241 Isabel Plantagenet 27 27 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess Of England Plantagenet 60 60 ~1174 - 1247 Alice Agnes De Meschines 73 73 D. 1240 Isabella Marshall ~1220 - 1256 Joan le Esquire 36 36 Isaac Sidley 1120 - UNKNOWN Walter FitzRichard Baron of Clifford 0893 - 0931 Hildebrante Princess Of France 38 38 1044 Paula Of Maine ~0925 Gerberga Countess Of Lorraine  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Daughter of Duke of Lorraine
Albert I The Pious Count De Vermandois  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Albert the Pious
Liegarde Princess Of France  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of Robert I of France
Herbert II Count Of Vermandois  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

succeeded 902 AD
0993 - 1016 Edmund Ironside King Of England 23 23  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England 1016

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England 1016

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England 1016
0943 - 0975 Edgar The Peaceable King Of England 32 32  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975
~0940 - 0959 Edwy King Of England 19 19  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 955 - 959
Also known as Eadwig
15 years aold when he asnednded the throne;
lost thenorthern part of his kingdom in 957
Arguments with Dunstan over monastic revival

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 955 - 959
Also known as Eadwig
15 years aold when he asnednded the throne;
lost thenorthern part of his kingdom in 957
Arguments with Dunstan over monastic revival
~0963 - 18 Mar 0977/0978 Edward The Martyr King Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England,975- 978

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England,975- 978

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England,975- 978
1160 - 1223 Walter II de Clifford 63 63 Clifford Family Sources:
    Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage of Eng., p. 122.
    Turton's Charts of Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 119/120.
    Collins' Peerage of Eng., Vol. 7, p. 117.
    Edmondson's Baronagium and Genealogicum, Vol. 4, p. 363.
    Cokayne's Complete Peerage of England, Vol. 5, pp. 300-340.
    Clay's Extinct and Dormant Peerages of the Northern Countries of
    England. (Alphabetical. Clifford.). 2nd Baron Baron Clifford.
1168 Agnes de Condet ~1210 - <1251 Emma de Cauz 41 41 ~1597 - BEF 30 Mar 1647/1648 Mary Dugdale She was the sister of the well-known antiquary and author, John Dugdale. 1710 Charles Scott 1188 - 1250 Rosamund De Clifford 62 62 0920 Ledgarde Duchess Of Normandy 0933 - 0996 Richard I Of Normandy 63 63 0955 William 2nd Count Of Eu ~0911 Adele Of Normandy Godfrey Duke Of Brittany Allan III Count Of Brittany 1140 Margaret deToeni 0915 - 0958 Adela De Vermandois 43 43 0969 - 1008 Matilda Countess Of Flanders 39 39 0925 - 0993 Conrad I King Of Burgundy 68 68 BET. 943 - 948 - 26 Jan 0981/0982 Matilde Princess Of The Franks 0921 - 0954 Louis IV King Of The Franks 33 33 0890 Gilbert Duke Of Lorraine 0930 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Alberade Of Lorraine D. 0959 Eadwig King Of England 1012 - 1089 Theobald III Count Of Blois 77 77 BET. 1002 - 1043 - BET. 1045 - 1106 Gersende Berthe Of Maine 1130 Roger de Condet 0990 - 1037 Eudes Otto II Count Of Blois 47 47 BET. 973 - 997 - 10 Mar 1039/1040 Ermengarde Of Auvergne 0945 - 0995 Eudes Odo I Count Of Blois 50 50 0962 - ~1010 Bertha Of Burgundy 48 48 BET. 1010 - 1029 - 1085 Bertha Of Blois BET. 1010 - 1029 Almodis Of Blois 1015 Stephen Of Blois <0904 Theobald II Count Of Blois ~0915 Luitgarde De Vermandois ~0860 - 0904 Theobald Viscount Of Troyes 44 44 1107 William de Cheney 0888 Richilde Of Bourges 0965 - 1016 Gerberga Of Burgundy 51 51 0970 Rudolph III King Of Burgundy D. 1036 Herbert I Count Of Maine BET. 1025 - 1041 - 1072 Hawise Of Brittany 1034 - 1094 Emma Of Brittany 60 60 0966 - 0970 Edmund Prince Of England 4 4 0994 Uchtred Earl Of Northumberland 0885 - 0931 Gorm Del Gammel 46 46 ~0887 Thyre Anthonie Power ~1002 Alfred Prince Of England ~1004 Goda Princess Of England ~0966 Boso Count Of Provence 0942 - 1026 Adela Blanca D' Anjou 84 84 D. 1032 Robert I Count Of Auvergne Ermengarde Of Arles D. ~1016 William IV Count Of Auvergne Humberge D. 0989 Robert II Viscount Of Auvergne Angelberg Dame De Beaumont Abraham Randell 0955 - 0994 William I Count Of Provence 39 39 Constance Of Vienne Rudolph II King Of Burgundy Bertha Queen Of Swabia ~1136 Rosamund De Clifford <1173 - BET. 1225 - 1226 William Longspee 1082 Osbert de Condet Wulfgurd of Paris 1128 - UNKNOWN Gerard deCamville Gerard purchased from King Richard the custody of Lincoln Castle and theprovince adjacent. This Gerald was a power feudal lord in the reign ofKing John, to which monarch he stanchly adhered. He married Nichola,eldest daughter and co-heir of Richard de la Hay. 1012 Hedwig deHungary 1086 - 1147 Isabel(Elizabeth) Queen Of England De Beaumont 61 61 1127 - 16 Mar 1180/1181 Henry Count Of Champagne Robert Plantagenet ~0970 Adele Princess Of France 0945 - 1019 Frederick Count Of Luxembourg 74 74 0897 Guidenilde Anne Sewell Maude Peverel 1085 William Peverel 1042 John I De Beaugency De La Fleche ~1083 - 1153 David I King Of Scotland 70 70  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]


[daddy2.FTW]

King of Scotland 1124-1153
1068 - 1135 King Of England Henry I Beauclerc Plantagenet 67 67 King 1100-1135 ~1073 - ~1165 Sybilla Corbet 92 92 0934 - 0982 Adelaide Countess De Vermandois 48 48 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V The Handsome Plantagenet Of Anjou 38 38 1055 Adeliza Nun Henry II The Wrangler Of Bavaria Henry Sewell Sewells Point, a corruption of "Mr. Seawell's Pointe," takes its name from Henry Seawell, who had settled by 1629 in Elizabeth City County, from which Lower Norfolk County was carved in 1637. According to the record, Henry Seawell the elder did "cleare, seate, build, and plant" on one hundred and fifty acres of the tract later known by his name shortly after December of 1633. With his neighbor, Captain Thomas Willoughby, Seawell was among the Virginia executors of Captain Adam Thorowgood, the leading Norfolk area citizen of his day, when the latter died in 1640.
Between 1638 and 1640, the first parish church of Lower Norfolk County, the mother church of the Episcopal Church in the Norfolk area, was built on Sewells Point somewhere on the site of the present Norfolk Naval Station. And when Seawell and his wife died in the early 1640s, they were buried in its chancel.

Henry Seawell, a magistrate of Lower Norfolk county, for whom Seawell’s Point was named, died in 1644, and the court ordered his orphan, Henry Seawell, born May 1, 1639, to be sent to Holland for his education. In 1653 he could write and cypher well, and spoke French and Dutch as well as English. He died without issue before 1672, leaving a sister, wife of Lemuel Mason. (Lower Norfolk county records.)
Hildeswinde Of Croatia D. 1097 Odo Earl Of Kent Bishop Of Bayeux D. 0972 Eberhard IV Count Of Luxembourg Robert Count Of Mortain 1066 Constance Of Normandy 1022 William Waterville 1525 - 1586 Thomas Merwin 61 61 1085 - 1141 Walter de Cheney 56 56 1121 - 1204 Eleanor Queen Of England Of Aquitaine 83 83  [daddy5.FTW]

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1090 Eve de Broc ~1271 - 2 Mar 1298/1299 Ralph III de Cromwell ~1236 - 1308 Reynold de Grey 72 72 Reynold de Grey, 1st Lord (Baron) Grey (of Wilton), so created by writ ofsummons to Parliament 24 June 1295 (although the assembly in question isnot now recognised as a bona fide Parliament; he had, however, attendedthe assembly called a full Parliament of 29 May 1290); held the Manors ofBrogborough, Thurleigh and Wrest, Beds; Great Brickhill, Snellson andWater Eaton or Waterhall, Bucks; Hemingford, Toseland and Yelling, Hunts;Kempleigh, Glos; Purleigh, Essex; Rushton, Cheshire; Ruthin, Denbighs;Shirland and Wilton, Herefs; Sheriff of Notts and Derbys and Constable ofNottingham Castle March 1265/6; Constable of Northampton Castle June1267-Jan 1267/8; Justice of Chester, Constable of Chester Castle andSheriff of Cheshire 1270-74; Justice of Chester 1281; granted 1282 RuthinCastle; present at English victory over Scots at Falkirk 1298. [Burke'sPeerage]

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BARONY OF GREY OF WILTON (I)

SIR REYNOLD DE GREY, of Ruthin, co. Denbigh, Wilton, co. Hereford,Shirland, co. Derby, Rushton, co. Chester, Purleigh, Essex, Toseland,Hemingford, and YeIling, Hunts, Water Eaton or Waterhall, Snellson, andGreat Brickhill, Bucks, Thurleigh, Wrest, and Brogborough, Beds, andKempley, co. Gloucester, son and heir of Sir John DE GREY, of Shirland(who died shortly before 18 March 1265/6) by his 2nd wife, Emma,apparently widow of John De SEGRAVE, who died s.p. 1230, and daughter ofRoger DE CAUZ, by Nichole, daughter and heir of Bartholomew DE LEIGH. In1257 he had a grant to him and his heirs of a weekly market at his manorof Wilton. He was appointed Sheriff of cos. Notts and Derby, andConstable of Nottingham Castle, 18 Mar. 1265/6, in succession to hisfather, then recently dead. On 28 March 1266 he had livery of hisfather's lands, by special grace, his homage being respited. On 28December 1266 he was ordered to deliver Nottingham Castle to Roger deLeyburne . He was Constable of Northampton Castle from 25 June 1267 to 30January 1267/8, and justice of Chester, Constable of Chester Castle, andSheriff of co. Chester, from 1270 to 16 October 1274. He was summoned forMilitary Service from 12 December 1274 to 8 July 1306, to attend the Kingat Shrewsbury, 28 June 1283, to attend the King at Salisbury, 26 January1296/7, and to Parliament from 24 June 1295 to 26 August 1307, by writsdirected Reginaldo de Grey, and, moreover, is recorded to have beenpresent in pleno parliamento domini Regis on the morrow of Trinity 29 May1290, with other magnates et proceres tunc in parliamento existentes,whereby he is held to have become LORD GREY. As Reginaldus de Greydominus de Ruthyn he took pirt in the Barons' Letter to the Pope, 12February 1300/1. In Jan. 1276/7 be was about to go to Wales on the King'sservice, and he was with the King in Wales in 1277 and 1282. On 14November 1281 he was appointed justice of Chester and Keeper of co.Chester, of all the demesne lands of the King in that county, of thecastles of Chester and Flint, and the cantreds of Englefield and Ros,&c., for 8 years from Michaelmas 1281, at a rent of 1,000 marks a year:he was reappointed 30 June 1290, for 9 years from Michaelmas following,at a rent of 727 marks 8s. On 15 June 1282 the King granted him seizin ofthe lands of Bromfield and Yale [co. Denbigh], during pleasure, and on 23October following the castle of Ruthin, the cantred of Dyffryn Clwyd, andthe lands that had belonged to Gwenllian de Lascy in the cantreds ofDyffryn Clwyd and Englefield, to hold in fee, by the service of threeknights' fees. On 16 October 1294 he was about. to go to Wales. He was atthe battle of Falkirk, 22 July 1298. On 26 May 1301 he did homage andfealty for the castle of Ruthin to Edward, Prince of Wales, at Kenilworth.

He married Maud, daughter and heir of Sir Henry DE LONGCHAMP, of Wilton,co. Hereford. She died before 21 November 1302. He died 5 April 1308.[Complete Peerage VI:171-3, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
John Belasyse Wrote letter # 35 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. Robert Noel Received a grant of lands from his first cousin Alice, wife to Sir. William Harcourt, Knight. Isabel Rugeley 1708 Samuel Scott 1040 Hugh FitzBaldric John York Hedwige(Hartwige) Princess Of Germany 0915 William I Of Aquitaine 0947 William III Count Taillefer 0948 Arsinde (Blanche) Countess D' Anjou 0921 - 0960 Raimond III Count Of Toulouse 39 39 1124 - UNKNOWN Sibilla deValognes Garsinde 1063 - 1085 Gundred Princess Of England 22 22 0882 - 0921 Richard Duke Of Burgundy 39 39 0890 - 0956 Gilbert Gislebert Duke Of Burgundy 66 66 1014 - ~1040 Aelflead Sybil FitzSiward Of Northumbria 26 26 1009 - 1079 Adele Alix Princess Of France 70 70 1031 - 1083 Matilda Of Flanders 52 52 1062 - 1137 Adela Alice Princess Of England 75 75 1054 - Feb 1133/1134 Robert II Curthose Duke Of Normandy Herluin Viscount Of Conteville 1167 - 1234 Geoffrey deGlanville 67 67 1025 - 1087 Simon I De Montfort 62 62 1096 - 1126 Ermengarde(Ermentrude) Countess Du Maine 30 30 1033 - 1109 Foulques IV Count D' Anjou 76 76 1105 - 1151 Adeliza Of Louvain 46 46 0952 Adelaide Princess Of Aquitaine 1030 Erenburg Mrs Du Chateau Du Loire ~0970 - ~1040 Hedwige aka Hawise Of Normandy 70 70 D. 1006 Brunon I Margrave Of Saxony Finnsdottir Ingibiorg Earls Mother 0895 Raymond II Count Of Toulouse 1188 - UNKNOWN Margaret deLa Haye Mary Cage 0953 Geoffrey Count Of Eu & Brionne 0908 - 0935 Ermengarde Of Burgundy 27 27 0962 Gerberga Countess D' Anjou 0909 - 0958 Foulques II Le Bon Count D' Anjou 49 49 0913 - 0952 Gerberge Du Maine 39 39 Harry Scrope 0956 - 1040 Foulques III Le Noir Count D' Anjou 84 84 Adeka (Blanca) D' Anjou 1637 Thomas Vernon Thomas Vernon made the surveying voyage to Pennsylvania with William Penn in 1681 and returned later that year to England. He and his brothers were among the first to obtain property in the newly acquired land. Land Titles in Delaware County Records the Three Vernon Brothers purchase of 625 acres each in March 1681. Randall Vernon purchased a further 829 acres in 1711 and 1712. Robert Vernon purchased a further 330 acres in 1684.

Thomas Vernon, Quaker, is particularly tormented during the late 1600's, having his stock driven off his estate and other property taken from him at will. Consequently, it is quite easy to understand the settlement of these Vernons in the New World. (VV June 1974 p 14)The inscription on the monument at the ruins of Caldwell Settlement states that Rev. John caldwell, ancestor of John C. Calhoun of South Carolina and Dr. Joseph Caldwell, First President of the University of North carolina, waited on the Presbyterian synod of Philadelphia in 1738 for permission to settle in Virginia. He was also the ancestor of Dr. David Caldwell, founder of Caldwell College of Greensborough, N.C., and educator of Governors of N.C., as well as Generals for the South in the Civil War. Dr. David died at the age of 97. I visited this site on two occasions, the last being in 1970. The Synod applied to Governor Gooch, and permission was granted in Williamsburgh on Nov. 4, 1738. Rev. John and his followers purchased 20,000acres along both sides of Cub Creek, which was then in Old Brunswick county.
0874 Roscilles De Loche 0972 Adwige(Avoise) Princess Of France 1008 Bertha Countess Of Flanders 0884 Adelheid Of Burgundy D. 0920 Monassas I Count Of Chalons ~1045 - 1076 Waltheof Earl Of Northumberland Of Huntingdon 31 31 1012 - 1067 Baldwin V De Lille Count Of Flanders 55 55 1145 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deLa Haye 1003 Judith Adelais Countess Of Normandy 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I Of Burgundy 0990 - 1039 Conrad II Duke Of Burgundy 49 49 1137 Bartholomew deGlanville 1145 - UNKNOWN Isabella deBerking 1113 - UNKNOWN William deGlanville Lord of Bromholm 1120 - UNKNOWN Beatrix deSalkevil 1090 William deSalkevil ~1189 - ~1261 Ela Fitz- Patrick 72 72 0960 - BET. JAN - DEC Brunon II Margrave Of Saxony 0988 - 1077 Gertrude Of Egisheim 89 89 1015 - 1038 III Herman 23 23 0974 - 1015 Ernst 41 41 1037 Judith Countess Of Northumberland 1095 - UNKNOWN Albreda D. 0967 Duff King Of Scotland 1003 Adelaide Havoise Princess Of France ~1007 Hugh The Grand Of France ~1013 Eudo Odes Prince Of France 0931 - 0975 Ebles Abbot Of Saint Martin Of Aquitaine 44 44 Maldred Earl Of Dunbar D. 0932 Elstrude Of Flanders ~1005 Eleanore Princess Of Normandy Judith Of Flanders 1035 Henry Count Of Flanders 1060 Herbrand deSalchevilla ~0986 Donada Of Scotland Elizabeth Plantagenet Ethelfreda Princess Of England Duncan Marmor of Atholl Siward Earl Of Northumberland Elfleda Of Northumberland Aldred Earl Of Northumberland Ecgfrid Alduine Bishop Of Durham D. 1161 Melisende Of Jerusalem 1070 - UNKNOWN Ranulph deGlanville 1630 - 19 Feb 1684/1685 Anthony Nutter d. Dover, NH 19 Feb 1685-6 of small pox (Rev. John Pike's Diary);

ANTHONY b. England ca 1630, d. Dover, NH 19 Feb1685-6 of small pox (Rev. John Pike's Diary); m. ca 1662 SARAH LANGSTAFF,daughter of Henry Langstaff, still living 14 July 1712. Anthony Nutterwas the first of the family to settle in Newington removing from DoverNeck to Welchman's [Welch's] Cove in Newington. The land was propertygiven him by his father in 1669. His house was used as a garrison.

The administration of Anthony Nutter's estate was not granted to hissons, Hatevil II, and Henry, until 21 June 1720 (NH Probate 8:409). The heirsof Anthony Nutter brought a suit against John Rawlins, et al of Durham,NH in 1733 for having withheld 5/9 of a parcel of land in Newington fromthem (NH Archival Court Case 27558). The case alleges that "AnthonyNutter, late of Dover aforesaid, gewntleman, otherwisecalled yeomandeceased, was in his lifetme seized of the premises in his demise aboutthe year 1685, died and intestate leavig issue John (since deceased),Hatevil, Henry [-] his sons, Sarah now Sarah Hill, Mary now Mary Walton,Elizabeth now Elizabeth Lavers, Abigail afterwards Abigail Jones sincedeceased and Ann now Ann Jones [-] his daughters. They sought to retrievetheir father's land or 1000 pounds in compensation. The settlement of thecase does not explain why but the final allowance, 16 Aug 1733, was for47 shillings plus expenses for a total of 2.7.6.

See page 209, Farmers genealogical register.
Badouin III King Of Jerusalem D. 1174 Amaury King Of Jerusalem Suana Of Montfort 1089 - UNKNOWN Flandrina Liudulf ~0876 - 0936 Henry The Fowler Emperor Of Hre 60 60 ~0836 - 0912 Otto The Illustrious Of Saxony 76 76 ~0806 - 0866 Liudolf Of Saxony 60 60 0912 - 0973 Otto I The Great Emperor Of Germany 60 60  [daddy5.FTW]

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0918 - 0955 Henry I The Quarellsome Dule Of Bavaria 37 37 Oda 0925 - 0965 St Bruno The Great Of Cologne 40 40 1000 - UNKNOWN Richard deBelfois Glanville Anne Markenfield  [FIX.ged]

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!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p. 83; ;
D. <1242 Eudo FitzRoy 1173 - 1240 Llewelyn (Lord Snowden) Orwerth 67 67  [FIX.ged]

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~1187 - 1219 Oliver Plantagent 32 32 0980 Godchilde 0980 - UNKNOWN Hammon de St. Sauveur 1625 John Blanchard 1158 - 1214 Roger II de Mortimer 56 56 ~1181 - >1212 Alice de Harcourt 31 31 Margery Bohun 0881 - 0913 Richard de St. Sauveur 32 32 1310 - 1361 John Mowbray 50 50 Lord of Axholm, Bramber and Gower. Died of the Plague. 0911 - UNKNOWN Nigel de St. Sauveur Chetwynd Angharad verch Ieuan 0944 Roger de St. Sauveur 1270 - 1325 Charles de France 55 55 1268 - 1314 Philip IV of France 46 46 1129 - 1195 Henry V "The Lion" 66 66  [FIX.ged]

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Duke of Brunswick, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Saxony

Aka: Henry X.[FIX.ged]

Duke of Brunswick, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Saxony
Aka: Henry X.
Annabel Balliol D. 1299 Margaret de Anjou 1188 - 1252 Blanche de Castile 64 64 ~0939 - 0996 Hugues de Capet 57 57  [FIX.ged]

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Sovereign of all France, lineal decendant in the 6th generation fromCharlemagne
and first King of the Capetian Dynasty. he was crowned , theunanimous choice of
the great feudal Barons, 3rd of July, 987 at Noyon.This reign marks the
beginning of modern history. Though Duke of France,Hugh, before his accession,
had also been Abbott of St. Martin de Tours.Hence, the surname, Capet, from
Capetus a monks hood.[FIX.ged]

Sovereign of all France, lineal decendant in the 6th generation fromCharlemagne and first Kin g of the Capetian Dynasty. he was crowned , theunanimous choice of the great feudal Barons, 3 rd of July, 987 at Noyon.This reign marks the beginning of modern history. Though Duke of Fra nce,Hugh, before his accession, had also been Abbott of St. Martin de Tours.Hence, the surnam e, Capet, from Capetus a monks hood.
1102 Walter deCantilupe 1070 - 1120 Hugh deTalbot 50 50 was made Castellan (Governor) of Plesses, in Normandy, by his cousin,Hugh de Gournay, in 1119. He was a benefactor of the monastery ofBeaubec, in Normandy, and in the decline of life, assumed the cowl there.He married Beatrice, daughter of William de Mandeville, who was divorcedfrom him and married William de Say, and Hugh became a monk. Soloman Armstrong 1090 - 1165 Gilbert deLacy 75 75 This feudal lord, in the conflict between Stephen of Blois and theEmpress Maud, over the successor of Henry I, espoused the cause of thelatter. He eventually became a Knight Templar, and was succeeded by hisson, Hugh.

This feudal lord, in the conflict between Stephen of Blois and the Empress Maud, over the successor of Henry I, espoused the cause of the latter. He eventually became a Knight Templar, and was succeeded by his son, Hugh.
1080 - 1179 Humphrey deBohun II Baron De Bohun 99 99 Humphrey de Bohun, the founder of this family in England, was kinsman andcompanion in arms of William, the Conqueror, and was generally known as"Humphrey with the Beard." Of this Humphrey little more is ascertainedthan that he possessed the lordship of Taterford, in Norfolk. ~1632 John Scott The Link to Charles is not clear at  this time. This link is for the information contained.

Col.
John SCOTT II b c. 1632 married Mary BASSETT FOSTER, widow of Joseph FOSTER c. 1662. Mary BASSETT’s brother William BASSETT s/o William lived on the Pamunkey River 2/1664. He was an officer in Rutherford’s Regiment at the Battle of Dunkirk. He had the task of securing the defenses for the colony and for this he received 10,000 pounds of tobacco. In his will is mentioned…to my sister Mary SCOTT. Also Mary BASSETT FOSTER born c. 1632 marriedc. 1652 Newport Isle of Wight England to Joseph FOSTER born c 1632 Newport Isle of Wight England. He died c 1660 York Co. VA. She then went with her three children, Joseph FOSTER, Jr. b/a 1654, Anne FOSTER b/a 1656, and Mary FOSTER b/a1658 to live with her brother William BASSETT in 1660. About 1662 she married York Co., VA John SCOTT. Col. John SCOTT and Mary BASSETT, (d/o William BASSETTand Bridget CAREY), were the great great grandparents of William Henry HARRISON9th President of the United States.
1042 - 1084 Walter deLacy Baron Lacy 42 42 Two distinguished members of this ancient family, namely, Walter de Lacieand Ilbert de Lacie, fellow soldiers, if not kinsman, came into Englandwith William, the Conqueror, but in what degree allied, if at all, hasnot been ascertained. From Ilbert de Lacie, descended John de Lacie,Surety. Walter de Lacie, when power of his royal master was firmlyestablished in England, was one of the commanders whom William I sentinto Wales to subject the principality, and being victorious thereacquired large possessions, in addition to those already obtained as hisportion of the spoils of Hastings. He was killed in April, 1084, byfalling from a ladder, which he had ascended to inspect the completion ofthe church of St. Peter, in Hereford, of which he was the founder. Heleft three sons, Roger, Hugh and Walter, a monk in the Abbey of St.Peter's, in Gloucester, and two daughters, Ermeline and Emme. Roger deLacie, oldest son, through the bounty of the Conqueror, as well as byinheritance from his father, had large possessions in the counties ofBerks, Salop, Hereford, Gloucester and Worcester, where the Castle ofEwyas was the head of his barony. But joining in the rebellion againstWilliam Rufus, in favour of Robert of Normandy (Crusader, son of Wm., theConqueror), he was banished from England, and all his lands wereconferred upon his brother Hugh de Lacie, who, with many other Normansoldiers of fortune, had been permitted by Rufus to invade thePrincipality of Wales, and to acquire by their good swords, lands there,wherein the barons enjoyed a kind of Palatine jurisdiction, with power toadminister justice, hold courts, invested with divers privileges and suchwas the government of the Marches of Wales down to Henry VIII. Hugh deLacie, 2nd son of Walter, died sine prole bequeathing the great familyinheritance to his two sisters, Ermeline, who had no children, and Emmede Lacie, and her son Gilbert  who assumed the name of Lacie. ~1203 Hugh de Grey William Armyne Dorothy Mallory  [FIX.ged]

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First Wife.[FIX.ged]

First Wife.
Muriel Bowes V Foulques Ermengarde du Maine Ykenai or Hikenai 1020 - UNKNOWN Hugh deLacy 1158 - 1197 Marguerite of France 39 39  [FIX.ged]

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Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.

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Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.[FIX.ged]

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Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.

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Princess of France, Some records show Marguerite being born at 1158.
D. ~1230 Princess of Navarre Berengaria D. 1201 Constance of Richmond 1119 - 19 Jan 1147/1148 William III de Warenne A crusader who died in the Holy Land. See: " The Complete Peerage,vol.XII,
pages 496-7.
II Guglielmo D. 1358 Isabella of France 1284 - 1327 Edward II 43 43 ~0898 - 0956 Hughes Magnus de Capet 58 58  [FIX.ged]

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Duke and King of Burgundy, Duke of France, Count of Vermandois, Count ofParis
and Marquis of Orleans.[FIX.ged]

Duke and King of Burgundy, Duke of France, Count of Vermandois, Count ofParis and Marquis o f Orleans.
1045 - UNKNOWN Richard Talbot Anne Sherwood 1050 - UNKNOWN Aimee deAlbini 1080 - 1159 Nigel Scutifer deAlbini 79 79 Sir Nigel d'Albini, who came to England with the Conqueror and obtainedseveral extensive lordships after the Battle of Hastings. He was knightedby Henry I, who conferred many grants and favors upon him, and soattached him to his sovereign that he served him faithfully in his causeagainst Robert Curthose (Robert of Normandy, Crusader), the King'sbrother, whom he captured and delivered over to King Henry, for which hehad further rich grants of confiscated manors. For distinguished militaryservices in Normandy he was remunerated by a royal grant of the forfeitedlands and castles of his maternal uncle, Robert de Mowbray, both inNormandy and England. These grants made him possessor of 240 knight'sfees, and consequently one of the most influential barons of his time. Hedied at an advanced age and was buried with his ancestors in the Abbey ofBec in Normandy. He married first his Aunt Maud (wife of his UncleRobert), daughter of Richard, Baron Aquila. by papal dispensation, herhusband Robert aforesaid being then alive, but in prison for rebellion.From her, by whom he had no issue, he was separated by the Pope onaccount of consanguinity and the scandal the marriage caused. He married2nd in 1118 Gundreda, daughter of Gerald, second Baron de Gournay by hiswife Edith, daughter of William de Warren, first Earl of Surrey and hiswife Gundreda, daughter of William the Conqueror. By his 2nd wife he hadRoger de Mowbray, 1st Baron. Mary Laton 1105 - UNKNOWN Gundred deGournay 1628 - 1698 William Caldwell 70 70 Notes William is buried at Parish Glendemott, County Donegal, IRE. Published by Irish Parish Society; Marriages Derry Cathedral; "The Banns between William Caldwell and  Elizabeth Husten, both of Glendermott Parish published before the congregation. Londonderry, Three  Lord's Day (27 May 1652) by John Hanford, Mayor."  Marriage Notes "The banns between Wm. Caldwell & Eliz. Husten, both of Glendermott Parish, Published before the  congregation. Londonderry, Three Lord's Day (27 May 1652), by John Hanford, Mayor." (Published by Irish Parish Socty.-Marriages Derry Cath.) Thomas Noel Sheriff of Staffordshire, England, for seven [7] years during the reign of King Henry II, and for one [1] year of the reign of King Richard I. Margery Morton Joan Holand 1216 - 1250 Robert I Capet of France 34 34 1044 - 1100 Amice deMowbray 56 56 1220 - 1271 Alphonso Capet of France 51 51 1254 - 1291 Joan of Chatillon 37 37 1220 - 1271 Joan of Toulouse 51 51 D. 1288 Matilda of Brabant 1250 - 1270 John Tristan of France 20 20 1256 - 1317 Robert of France 61 61 D. 1327 Agnes of France 1234 - 1271 Isabel de Aragon 37 37 William Bowes Alphonso of Aragon D. UNKNOWN Ermaline D. 1310 Beatrice of Burgundy Jane Wyatt 1025 - UNKNOWN Emma deBois L'Eveque 1000 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Marshall 0467 - 0535 Cedric Wessex 68 68 Cuthbert Conyers John Bowes 1330 - 1376 Edward England 46 46 1328 - 1385 Joan Plantagenet 57 57 1350 - 1403 Katherine Roelt 53 53 D. 1386 Violante Visconti 1316 - 1336 John 20 20 Ralph Bainbrigge ~1281 Margaret deWalDeshef 1272 - 1307 Joan of England 35 35 1243 - 1295 Gilbert de Clare 52 52 D. 1323 Ralph de Monthermer Anthony Bainbrigge  [FIX.ged]

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Son and Heir.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.5; ;
1241 - 1286 Alexander III Scotland 45 45 1245 - 1296 Edmund of England 51 51 D. 1302 Blanche of Artois 1300 - 1338 Thomas 38 38 1301 - 1330 Edmund 29 29 Alice Halys ~1355 - 1440 Beatrix de Braose 85 85 Beatrix, sister and heir of John de Braose of West Neston, Sussex.[Burke's Peerage] D. 1349 Margaret Wake 1321 - 1362 Joan 41 41 1324 - 1371 David II Scotland 47 47 1370 - 1437 Joan of Navarre 67 67 D. 17th Dec. 1739 Mary Richard Bainbrigge ~1126 Alix (Pernelle) de Poitiers 1127 - 1177 Beatrice deManDeville 50 50 1  BIRT
2  DATE 1105
5 Mar 1132/1133 - 1189 Henry II England Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The
Birth of Britain", Vol. 1 at pgs 199-225. Henry II became king in 1154 and
reigned until his death in 1189. For a more detailed account of King Henry's
reign see chapter 12 of Sir  Winston's book (above). He conquered Normandy in
September 1106

FitzEmpress, Henry II Curtmantle, King of England : Henry II was King ofEngland from 1135-1154. His titles included Duke of Normandy, Count ofBrittany, Count of Anjou, Duke of Aquitaine. He ruled an empire thatstretched from the Tweed to the
Pyrenees. In spite of frequent hostitilties with the French King his own
family and rebellious Barons (culminating in the great revolt of 1173-74)and
his quarrel with Thomas Becket, Henry maintained control over hispossessions
until shortly before his death. His judicial and administrative reformswhich
increased Royal control and influence at the expense of the Barons were of
great constitutional importance. Introduced trial by Jury. During his 35year rule he created the Angevin empire which covered much of France andthe British Isles. His success made him one of the most powerful rulersof medieval English kings and European monarchs. "The Encyclopedia of theMiddle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.
1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet Princess of England Princess 33 33  [FIX.ged]

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Duchess of Saxony and Bavaria

Daughter of Henry II., King of England first of the Plantagenet Kings.[FIX.ged]

Duchess of Saxony and Bavaria
Daughter of Henry II., King of England first of the Plantagenet Kings.
1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet Prince of England 27 27  [FIX.ged]

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Duke of Brittany

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Duke of Brittany[FIX.ged]

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Duke of Brittany

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Duke of Brittany
1152 - 1156 William Plantagenet of England 3 3 1155 - 1183 Henry Plantagenet of England Prince of England 28 28  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Rex Filius of England, 1170.

Rex Filius of England, 1170.[FIX.ged]

Rex Filius of England, 1170.

Rex Filius of England, 1170.
Mary of Shaftesbury Plantagenet ~1160 - ~1160 Philip Plantagenet Prince of England  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died as a infant

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Died as a infant[FIX.ged]

Died as a infant

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Died as a infant
1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet Princess of England Princess 52 52 Queen of Castile William- Henry Fitz Hugh 1910 - 1987 Miles Edward Van Wart 77 77 SSI Document Form SS-5: Application for SSI Number
Name: Miles Edward Van Wart
Address: 6522 S.E. Carlton Street, Portland, Oregon
Employer: The Associated Press, Journal Building, Portland, Oregon
Birth Date and age at time document filed: Age 26, Jan. 17, 1910, Portland Oregon, Multnomah  County Oregon.
Fathers Name: Miles Harrington Van Wart
Mothers Name: Minnie Johnson
Signed: Nov. 30, 1936,  Miles Van Wart

Died fishing on the Sandy River,  just outside his front door.
1150 - 1201 Susan deBraose 51 51 ~1186 - 1270 Richard Fitz- Roy 84 84  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th ed.  This book insists on complete and conclusive legal proof forevery

connection. Hardly anyone qustions any of the lines printed in this book.But

some would qustion Richards surname: FitzJohn/ or / FitzRoy. My research

tends to lead to my using the surname: FitzJohn as research leads to it and not
to the surname: FitzRoy. See sources listed.

********

!NOTE: " Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy "  by Alison Weir,
Pimlico, 1996; ; ; ; , Source Media Type: Book

!NOTE: Sir Bernard Bu., "The Royal Families of England, Scotland and Wales with
pedigrees of Royal descents in illustration."; ; ; ; ;

!NOTE: Patrick W. Montague-Smith, "The Royal Line of Sucession - The British
Monarchy from Cerdic AD. 534, to Queen Elizabeth"  ; ; ; ; , Source Media Type:
Book. "The Royal Line of Sucession - The British Monarchy from Cerdic AD. 534,
to Queen Elizabeth"  by:  Patrick W. Montague-Smith. ( Late editor of
"Debrett's Peerage)

!NOTE: F.L. Weis, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists." ; ; ; ; , Source Media
Type: Book[FIX.ged]

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",
7th ed.  This book insists on complete and conclusive legal proof forevery
connection. Hardly anyone qustions any of the lines printed in this book.But
some would qustion Richards surname: FitzJohn/ or / FitzRoy. My research
tends to lead to my using the surname: FitzJohn as research leads to it and not to the surnam e: FitzRoy. See sources listed.
********
D. ~1497 Elizabeth Le Scrope 1120 - 1196 Rhys Ap Gruffydd Prince of deheubarth 76 76 1095 - 1165 Susanna Verch Gruffydd 70 70 1094 - UNKNOWN Gwenlian verch Gruffydd of Gwynedd 1060 - UNKNOWN Gwladus verch Iestyn of Powys 1030 - UNKNOWN Iestyn ap Gwrgast Lord Glamorgan ~1215 - 1251 Paul (Paulin) Peyvre 36 36 SIR PAULIN PEYVERE, was put in possession, in January 1226/7, of land inChesham, Bucks, as heir of his brother Lawrence, whose wife was Emma dePinkeny. He obtained a footing at Court, and served the King in numerousresponsible positions till his death. In 1237 he was a collector in Bedsof the Aid granted to the King. From 1238 to 1244 he was keeper of theBishopric of Winchester during the vacancy; sheriff of Beds and Bucks,1239-41. In 1242 he was attorney for the King in a case before theCouncil; and in 1250, as Paulin Peyvre the elder, a justice before whorna fine was levied. In 1242 he was also charged with the provision ofships for the expedition to Poitou, where he followed the King. He wasthe King's steward in 1245, and in 1249 "Master Paulin, the King'sbuyer." In that year he was fellow justice with the Bishop of Salisburyto partition the lands of William Marshal, late Earl of Pembroke. Hemarried Joan, daughter and coheir of Thomas LE ESQUIER, a Justice. Hedied early in June 1251, in London, and was buried there. His widow hadwrit for dower 15 June. In August she obtained custody of the lands andmarriage of the heirs for 500 marks. This marriage she sold for that sumto Sir John DE GREY (of Shirland), father of the first Lord Grey ofWilton, and she married Sir John, presumably as his 3rd wife, before 17October following. She died at Layham., (Suff.), in 1256, and was buriedat Woburn. [Complete Peerage X:513-4] John Cage Richard de Puleston John de Acton Raoul Capet of France Herbert V. de Vermandois Aldelia de Mowbray 0997 Tewdwr Mawr 1095 - 1150 Garcia IV The Restorer King of Navarre 55 55 1065 - 28 Sep 1120/1121 Adelaide de Vermandois Robert II Beaumont 0960 - 1085 Gunereda St. Omer 125 125 Some records show the wife of William de Warenne as Miss de Tosta.  Also at one
time it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William the Conqueror. For
details see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C.T. Clay or "Etudes surQuelques
Points de L'Histoire de Guillame le Conquerant" by H.Prentout described under
Surrey in "The Complete Peerage" by G.E. Gibbs.
1055 - 1088 William I de Warenne 33 33 Acceded: 16 April 1088 Gerbod of St. Omer 1020 Beatrice de Vascoeuil Emma 0998 Rudolf I de Warrene 1020 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian verch Gwyn of Dyvet 0993 - UNKNOWN Gwyn ap Rhytherch Lord Dyvet 1876 Nelli Bengtson 1914 - 1986 John Oliver Van Wart 71 71 SSI Document Form SS-5: Application for SSI Number
Name: John Oliver Van Wart,
Address: 409 North G Street, Tacoma Washington.
Employer: Dean witter and Cpmpany, Washington Bldg. Tacoma Washington.
Birth Date & age at last birthday:  Age:  22,   November 7, 1914, Portland Oregon.
Fathers Full Name: Miles Hannington Van Wart
Mothers Full Name: Minnie Benson
Date Signed: Nov. 5, 1936,
Signed: John O. Van Wart

Burial:
Vanwart  jr., John Oliver, b. 11/17/1914, d. 07/28/1986, CPT US ARMY, Plot: W-J CR-6 N-3, bur. 08/08/1986, son of Miles  Van Wart
0963 - UNKNOWN Cadell ap Einion Dorothy Morrow Aaron Blanchard 1707 - owned land on Crany Creek - Upper Parish - Nansmond Co- VA and then in 1728 he was granted 152 ac in  Nansmond County. Aron had two known  brothers Ephraim and Benjamin Blanchard 0980 - UNKNOWN Elinor verch Gwerystan ~1192 Isabel La Blanche Ralph Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

6th Son. ob.s.p.

[FIX.ged]

6th Son. ob.s.p.
Adam Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

5th Son. ob. s.p.[FIX.ged]

5th Son. ob. s.p.
Ann Bowes 0920 - UNKNOWN Cadell Ap Brochwel 1418 - 14 Jan 1457/1458 Henry Scrope 0913 - UNKNOWN Gwaithfoed Ap Gwynnan Catharine Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Sole Dau. & Heir.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; P.115; ;

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.38; ;[FIX.ged]

Sole Dau. & Heir.
D. ~1629 William II Eure- Evre  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Surname spelled both: Evre and Eure of Elvet.

3rd. Son.[FIX.ged]

Surname spelled both: Evre and Eure of Elvet.
3rd. Son.
Thomas Midleton Recorded in 1575

Recorded in 1575
Elizabeth Martindall Dau. and heir of her Father James Martindall. 0943 - UNKNOWN Nesta of devon Barbara Midleton Charles Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

ob.s.p.
Samuel Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

ob.s.p.
Thomas Hutton James Martindall Margaret Bowes Margaret Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

This union had two dau.s, My research has not found their names.

This union had two dau.s, My research has not found their names.
Rev. Robinson Ambrose Midleton 1st. Son and heir. Cecilia Crackenthorpe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd Dau. and coheir of her Father who d. 11th year of King Henry VIII of
England.
0812 - 0850 Aserida Rognvaldsdottir 38 38 Anthony Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd Son.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd Son, ob.s.p.
John Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

temp. King Henry VI of England.
Elizabeth Baynbrige Thomas Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Temp.3  of King Henry VII.
Joan Hedlam  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and Heir of her father.
John Hedlam Thomlin Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Records show his name spelled both: Thomas and Thomlin (alias)
Elizabeth Leyburne  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Leyburne or Lilburne.[FIX.ged]

Leyburne or Lilburne.
Anthony Crackenthorpe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died: 11 King Henry VIII of England.
D. 1220 Gilbert FitzRoger FitzReinfrid Baron Kendal Grace Crackenthorpe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

3rd Dau. and coheir.
Margaret Crackenthorpe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Eldest dau. and coheir.
Thomas Sandford William Hutton Jonathen Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

3rd. Son, Sheriff of Cumberland, 1585
Henry Midleton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

4th Son, Livg. 1586
Ann Hutton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd wife.
Eleanor Sandford  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

1st. wife.
Frances Crackenthorpe John Crackenthorpe  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Temp. King Edward IV of England.
D. 1226 Helwise deLancaster 1110 - UNKNOWN Marguerite deL' Aigle John Talbot ~1420 - ~1470 Robert Crackenthorpe 50 50  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Robert C. Lord of the Manor of Milborne, in (by the) right of his Wife,
Elizabeth Lancaster.
~1429 - ~1473 Elizabeth Lancaster 44 44  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

2nd Dau and coheir to her fathers lands and inheritance. abt.  14 King Henry VI
of England.
~1404 - ~1454 John Lancaster 50 50  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Abt. 7 King Henry VI of England, G.B.//

Abt. 14 King Henry VI of England,  These 3 Dau's: Christian, Margery and
Isabel,  as coheirs,

made partition of their fathers lands and inheritance.
~1405 - ~1450 Catherine 45 45  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Abt. 7 King Henry VI, of England
~1427 - ~1477 Christian Lancaster 50 50  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Eldest dau. and coheir.
~1430 - ~1480 Margery Lancaster 50 50  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

3rd Dau. and coheir.
~1433 - ~1483 Isabel Lancaster 50 50  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

4th Dau. and coheir.
Richard Harington Mathew Whitfield 1168 - 1222 Peter le Brus II Baron Skelton & Danby 54 54 Thomas Flemynge D. 1424 John Lancaster  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Abt. 15  King Richard II, of England.
~1369 - ~1420 Olivia 51 51 ~1310 - ~1370 William Lancaster 60 60 ~1315 - ~1370 Lancaster 55 55 1281 Henry Lancaster  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Note: Died: 17 King Edward II, of England.

Note: Lord of the Manor of Milneborne in Co. Westmorland.

Note: Called "John" in Queen's Collage copy of this pedigree.
Richard Aske 1182 - UNKNOWN Helwise FitzGilbert deLancaster Elizabath 1136 - UNKNOWN Peter le Brus Baron Skelton & Danby William Armyne Wrote letter # 27 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. 1256 Peter De Geneville ~1704 John Scott Isabel De Cyprus ~1608 William III Eure- Evre  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

of Elvet in the suburbs of Durham, Esq., aet. 58, 17 Aug.1666[FIX.ged]

of Elvet in the suburbs of Durham, Esq., aet. 58, 17 Aug.1666
Henry Eure- Evre  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died Young.[FIX.ged]

Died Young.
D. 1184 William deLancaster II Baron Kendal Timothy Hutton D. ~1606 Thomas Hilton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.169; ;
D. 1643 Thomas Eure- Evre  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Major of a Regt. of horses under Col. William Evers, a younger son to the Lord
Evers, "Slayne in ye first battail

of Newbury, on the part of King Chas. ye 1st, 20, Sept. 1643, unmarried.

!DEATH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.115; ;[FIX.ged]

Major of a Regt. of horses under Col. William Evers, a younger son to the Lord Evers, "Slayn e in ye first battail
of Newbury, on the part of King Chas. ye 1st, 20, Sept. 1643, unmarried.
Anne Eure- Evre  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died in infancy.[FIX.ged]

Died in infancy.
Mary Forcer Alice Trayner  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and one of the Heirs of Sir. John Trayner of Streatlam, Knight, in 1310.[FIX.ged]

Dau. and one of the Heirs of Sir. John Trayner of Streatlam, Knight, in 1310.
Thomas Howard Elizabeth Eure- Evre D. 1652 John Delaval 1110 - UNKNOWN Roger FitzReinfrid Mr. Clopton 1102 - 1167 Matilda (Maud) of England 65 65 Empress of Germany, Queen of England, Princess Royal of England,  married at 12 years old: He nry V, German Roman Emperor, who died soon after. 1394 - 1420 Richard Le Scrope 26 26 ~1130 - 1192 Agnes Plantagenet 62 62 1134 - 1157 Geoffrey VI Plantagenet 23 23 1136 - 30 Jan 1163/1164 Guillaume(William) Plantagenet Elizabeth Scrope Richard Scrope ~1138 Emma Plantagenet Dafydd ap Owain D. UNKNOWN Rohese deRomare Rosamond de Clifford Margaret Eure- Evre Ann Warcop Blanch Mortimer Elizabeth Dayvill Lady Warcop Agnes Warcop  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Dau. and heir of her father. Pensionet to Queen Elizabeth.[FIX.ged]

Dau. and heir of her father. Pensionet to Queen Elizabeth.
1244 - 1290 Eleanor de Castile Leon 46 46 Anne(Ann) Thirkell Cuthbert Bainbrigge 1114 - 1 Jan 1169/1170 William de Lancaster Baron Kendal 1214 - 1241 Isabella of England 27 27 Thomas Layton  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.115; ;
Richard Bowes Thomas Warcop John III Bainbrigge 1226 - 1285 Charles I Capet of Naples 59 59 Fitz Hugh John Bowes 1234 - 1262 Christine of Norway 28 28 Margaret de Grey 1100 - 1219 William deValognes 119 119 D. ~1628 Thomas Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Batchelor in Divinity, and preby in Cathedrall of Durham.

[FIX.ged]

Batchelor in Divinity, and preby in Cathedrall of Durham.
Fitz Hugh Fitz Hugh D. 1506 John de Grey 1275 - 1318 Margaret of England 43 43 Henry Bainbrigge Francis Bowes  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

op.s.p.

!BIRTH: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.39; ;

[FIX.ged]

op.s.p.
Francis Bainbrigge 1074 Christian William Conyers 1070 - UNKNOWN Ketel deRadcliffe III Baron Kendal 0654 - 0748 Alpaida 94 94 Ralph Sherwood John II Bainbrigge  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Son and Heir.
Richard II Bainbrigge John I Bainbrigge Richard I Bainbrigge  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

In the Bishoprick of Durham.
Richard Lancaster 1048 Ethelred II Baron Kendal Lady Crackenthorpe Lady Crackenthorpe II Lady Martindall Lady Midleton 1387 John de Neville  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: Edited by: Joseph Foster, "Pedigrees recorded at the Visitations of the
County Palatine of Durham 1575-1666."; ; ; p.248; ;
Anne Bigod Christopher Conyers Christopher Conyers Mary Eure- Evre <1343 - 1386 Hugh Stafford 43 43 1072 - UNKNOWN Peter deValognes D. 1440 Joan Beaufort Richard de Neville George de Neville Edward de Neville Robert de Neville Katharine de Neville Robert Bowes 1045 Roger deValognes Margery Conyers Joan Scrope John Lumley John Hornes Joan le Scrope 1677 - 1774 Ambrose Dudley 97 97 1020 Peter deValognes D. <1386 Philippe Beauchamp Robert Delaval  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

s.p.

[FIX.ged]

s.p.
Mary Delaval  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

s.p.[FIX.ged]

s.p.
Andrew Singleton 1046 - 1096 Eudes Odo Troyes 50 50 Robert Delaval Joane Mortimer ~1298 Edmund Mortimer Hugh Delaval Elizabeth D'Arcy Leonard D'Arcy Catharine Delaval Henry Delaval Helen Moulton Henry Delaval  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Heir to his brother, Sir. Robert DeLaVal
1101 - 1180 Adam III le Brus 79 79 Jane Greystock  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: Richard St. George Esq., Norroy King of Arms & Henry St. George
Esq.,Blue Mantle Pursuivant of Arms., Pedigrees from the Heraldic Visitation of
Northumberland.; ; Anno Domini 1615,  Typis Medio-Montanis, Excudit, Jacobus
Rogers., 1858; p.5; ;
Hugh Delaval Eusace Delaval Elizabeth Eslington Gilbert Delaval Margaret Claveringe John Delaval Mary Campayne Goffrey Mortimer William Delaval 1100 - 1130 Agnes deAumale 30 30 1  DEAT
2  DATE Deceased
Bridget de Grey  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!BIRTH: Richard St. George Esq., Norroy King of Arms & Henry St. George
Esq.,Blue Mantle Pursuivant of Arms., Pedigrees from the Heraldic Visitation of
Northumberland.; ; Anno Domini 1615,  Typis Medio-Montanis, Excudit, Jacobus
Rogers., 1858; p.5; ;
Ralph de Grey Henry Delaval Beatrice Bulmore Anthony Bulmore Mary Delaval  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: Richard St. George Esq., Norroy King of Arms & Henry St. George
Esq.,Blue Mantle Pursuivant of Arms., Pedigrees from the Heraldic Visitation of
Northumberland.; ; Anno Domini 1615,  Typis Medio-Montanis, Excudit, Jacobus
Rogers., 1858; p.5; ;
Robert Delaval Jane D'Arcy Robert D'Arcy Lewis Delaval 1048 - 1090 Adeliza of Normandy 42 42 Miss. Gobiun John Gobiun Henry Delaval Anne Longueville John Longueville Henry Delaval Lord of Seaton Delaval  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Lord at the time of the Conquest.
Delaval D. 1487 Ralph Greystoke Richard FitzRoy  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[colvill1286a.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251

[f.ged]

[colvill1286b.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251

[f.ged]

[colvill1286c.ged]

!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md.; p 251
Elizabeth Fitz Hugh 1024 - 1048 Stephen II de Blois 24 24 ~1357 - 1417 Ralph Greystoke 60 60 Catherine Clifford Anne de Grey John de Grey 0972 - 1040 Adelheid Von Equiseheim 68 68 0615 - 0698 Beggue of Brabant 83 83 Anchises or Andegisus married Begga, heiress of Brabant, and was Duke ofBrabant in her right, after the death of his brother-in-law, who wasslain 685. John de Dacre 0950 - UNKNOWN Gerard deLower Alsace Joane de Dacre Richard Fienes 1008 - UNKNOWN Emelia of Germany Hugh I De Cyprus Anne Widville 1873 Emma Bengtson 1001 - 1050 Anna Ingigred Sweden 49 49 Richard FitzRoy D. 1571 William Parr Jean Scott John Hocknell William Boteler D. 1339 Ranulph de Dacre Margaret de Multon Baroness de Multon 1357 - 1403 William de Dacre 46 46 Joan James 0407 - UNKNOWN Flavius Valentinian III Roman Emperor D. 1383 Hugh de Dacre Ela Maxwell Alexander Maxwell Lord Maxwell D. 1361 William de Dacre Thomas de Dacre D. 1375 Ralph de Dacre 1265 William de Dacre Joane Garnet  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Some authorities say this woman was the dau. of Sir. Wilm. Bluet.[FIX.ged]

Some authorities say this woman was the dau. of Sir. Wilm. Bluet.
Benedict Garnet Ranulph de Dacre 0390 - UNKNOWN Aelia Galla Placidia Joane de Luci William de Dacre Miss Lee Anne Bourchier Baroness Bourchier Maud Green 1512 - 1548 Catherine Parr 36 36 1493 - 2 Mar 1542/1543 John de Nevill Edward Borough 0730 - UNKNOWN Sigurd Wolsung Thomas Seymour Baron Seymour Henry VIII Tudor Isabel Beauchamp 1725 - 1783 Francis Saunders 58 58 Noted in Gates Co. North Carolina census 1786-1790
Children from this union:

Abraham Sanders  b: BEF. 1762 in Gates County, North Carolina
Jemima Sanders b: BEF. 1765 in Gates County, North Carolina
Mary Sanders  b: BEF. 1765 in Gates County, North Carolina
Zipha Sanders  b: BEF. 1765 in Gates County, North Carolina
Ann Sanders  b: AFT. 1766 in Gates County, North Carolina
William Sanders  b: BET. 1770 - 1780 in Gates County, North Carolina
Francis Sanders  b: 1782 in North Carolina
~1155 - 1210 Matilda de Saint Valery 55 55 ~1186 - 1217 Richard de Chilham 31 31 0320 - UNKNOWN Flavius Theodosius Alice De Champagne Joan de Acton ~1205 Osbert Gifford 0734 - 0810 Alfhild Gandolsdottir 76 76 ~1304 - 1367 Juliane de Leyburne 63 63 BEF. 16 MAR 1338/39 - 1401 4th Earl of Warwick Beauchamp Thomas Sir William La Zounche ~1311 - >1372 Joyce La Zouche de Mortimer 61 61 D. 1348 Agnes de Mortimer ~1274 Thomas de Leyburne Elizabeth Beauchamp D. 1359 Adm Sir Geoffrey de Saye, IV Christopher Bowes 0639 Algaut Gautreksson Elizabeth Aske Dau. and co-heir of Roger (or) Richard Aske of Aske.
Source: Durham Pedigrees Recorded at the Visitations of the  County Palatine of Durham.1575-1 666
Ivo FitzRoy ~1115 - 1170 William I Lancaster 55 55 ~1166 - 1235 Piers Fitz Herbert 69 69 1100 - 1132 William Le Meschin 32 32 1100 - >1153 <Living> 53 53 ~1120 - >1190 Maud Meschines 70 70 D. >1127 Philip Belmeis 0756 - UNKNOWN Lifa Dagsdotter 0600 - 0678 Anisgise Mayor of Austrasia 78 78 Alice Belmeis ~1115 Alice de Meschines ~1120 - 1178 Ada de Warenne 58 58 John de Limesi William de Lancaster 1104 Roger III de Toeni 1108 Ida of Hainaut ~1130 - 1162 Ralph V de Toeni 32 32 1136 Godeheut de Toeni 0540 - UNKNOWN Helgi Halfdansson ~1084 Aenor de Toteneis D. >1189 Maud\Matilda\ Alberade Beaumont ~1136 - >1220 Lucy Fitz Walter 84 84 ~1118 - >1155 Milicent de Rethell 37 37 Robert Marmion <1133 - ~1181 Robert III Marmion 48 48 0503 - 0580 Halfdan Frodasson 77 77 Mary 0479 - 0548 Frodi Fridleifsson 69 69 0456 Fridleif Frodasson 0433 Frodi Dansson 0412 Dan Olafsson 0391 Olaf Vermundsson Alice Beauchamp Joan Le Brune Isabel D'Ibelin Beatrix Mortimer William Mallory John Leyburne  [FIX.ged]

Elizabeth is the Dau. of 2nd Wife.; Leyburne or Lilburne.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Elizabeth is the Dau. of 2nd Wife.; Leyburne or Lilburne.
William de Dacre Lord de Dacre 0369 Vermund Frodasson 1240 Hugh I De Lusignan King of Jerusalem 1269-1284
King of Cyprus 1267-1284
Henry De Lusignan Phillip Mortimer ~1258 William Mortimer William I Evre Richard Bowes 4th Son. D. 1730 John Saunders Ethelbert Doyne 11.163 SM £293.9.3 Nov 17 1725  Dec 14 1725 Appraisers: Clement Gardiner, Richard Millard. Creditors: Augustin Washington, John Young. Next of kin: Jesse Doyne, Edward Aloysius Doyne. Administratrix: Jane Doyne (deceased prior to November 17, 1725), Administrator; John Sanders of Charles County === Sanders, John, Charles Co., 22nd Oct., 1724; 15th April, 1730. Ex. instructed as to payt. of debts, especially debt to estate of Wm. Hutchison, dec'd. To priest attendant at death, 500 lbs. tob. To wife Mary and hrs., in lieu of dowry, certain designated personalty absolutely (not to include altar or church furniture); and certain personalty for life, to pass to dau, Mary Power for her life, and then to grandson John Power and hrs. To daus. Mary Power and Jane Doyne, 20s. each. To son John and hrs., 100 A. of "Cane's Purchase" at Port tobacco (for desc. see will); and personalty. To son Edward and hrs., pt. of last named tract adj. to land of bro. ----- To dau. Ann, personalty. To son William and hrs., residue of land at "Port-tobacco," being plan. where Thomas Osborn lived; and personalty; to receive estate at death of testator. To eldest son Thomas, ex., and hrs., residue of estate, real and personal (except land in Virginia sold by father) To Edward Sanders to Nicholas Russell, whose rights therein is hereby acknowledged).  Test: Thomas Mudd, Robert Thompson, Joseph Gardner, Benjamin Gardner, Charles Clements. Codicil: 6th July, 1729. Testator states that estate of Ethelbert Doyne, dec'd, with 3 small child. being in his hands, is to be distributed as follows: Grandson Ethelbert Doyne, to care of Clement Gardiner until of age to receive his estate, real and personal, as designated; 2 granddaus. Mary and Jane Doyne, with personalty, to care of Thomas Thompson, Port-tobacco. Test: James Whitgreave, Edward Neale., Edward Magatee, 19.892, === Mr John Sanders 15.634 CH £523.18,2 Aug 1 1730 Aug 17 1730 Appraisers: Robert Hanson, Richard Taevin. Creditors: Rand. Morris, Thomas Morris. Next of kin: John Sanders, Edward Sanders. Executor: Thomas Sanders. === John Sanders 11.153 A CH £523.18.2 £344.16,1 Aug 16 1731 Deceased is administrator de bonis non of Ethelbert Doyne. Received from: Mr. Gerrard Slye, John Monokes, Thomas Scot, William Mcferson, John Williams, John Teans, administrator of Charles Sanders, John Cecil, John Sanders, Edward Sanders. Payments to: estate of Ethelbert Doyne, estate of Mr. William Hutchison paid to his administrator de bonis non John Abington, John Parnham, Rand. Morris, John Whetenhal, Nicholas Power, Thomas Morris, John Howard, Thomas Mathews, William Mcferson, Jonathon Throne, executrix of Edward Henry Calvert, Esq., Charles Calvert, Esq., Samuel Hanson, Mr. George Sherald.  Executor: Thomas Sanders.  === John Sanders 16.448 CH £69,0,11 May 11 1732 Jun 6 1732 Appraisers: John Manning, Matthew Stone. Creditors: Gustavus Brown, Francis Ware. Next of kin: Thomas Sanders, Jr., Edward Sanders. Executrix: Virlinda Sanders. === Ethelbert Doyne 11.156 A CH £l.11.10 Aug 16 1731 John Sanders was administrator de bonis non. Payments to: Charles Calvert, Esq., Samuel Hanson. Administrator (de bonis non): Thomas Sanders. === Marriage 1 Mary  Children John SANDERS b: BET. 1645 - 1710 Edward SANDERS b: BET. 1645 - 1710 Ann SANDERS b: BET. 1645 - 1710 William SANDERS b: BET. 1645 - 1710 Thomas SANDERS b: BET. 1645 - 1710 Mary SANDERS b: BET. 1645 - 1710 Jane SANDERS b: BET. 1670 - 1690  Marriage 2 Mary JARBOE b: ABT. 1669 in SMC, MD Children Elizabeth SANDERS === January 08, 1693/94 probate John Wheeler Will   To son Thomas and hrs.,200 A.(unnamed) on which he now lives, and 230 A,"Wheelers's Rests.'  To wife Mary,extx, 600 A,"Planter's delight' and all personalty  To son Ignatius and hrs," Planter's Delight" at death of wife afsd.  To son Francis and hrs., 187 A "Mayor' Choice." and 96 A,"Middleton's Lot"  to grandson, John Wheeler, son of dec'd son James,200 A,part of 500 A," Wheeler's Purchase"  To granddaughter Ann wheeler, dau of sd.dec'd son james,100a, residue of" Wheelers Purchase"  To grandau. Ann, 165 A. Wheeler's Delight  To grandson Richard,son of afsd,and his hrs,"Wheelers Delight" in event of death of grandau. Ann afsd,without issue   Test: Jno Sanders, Wm. Montgomery, Ann Montgomery  === Last wife was Mary Saunders Maryland Calandar of Wills, Vol 6  Sanders, Mary, Charles Co., 12th Mar., 1739; 17th Dec., 1739. To sons Benedict, John Baptist and Francis Boarman, exs.,. personal estate. daus. Mary Sly, Elizabeth Hammersley and Clare Shirbin, personalty. priest that buries testator and the poor, personalty. Test: Nathan Rosemand, Thomas Ash. 22. 119 === Nichols, John, Charles Co., 28th Apr., 1713;  4th May, 1713. To dau-in-law Mary Ratcliff and to Richard Ratcliff and to Thomas (unknown) personalty. To rest of child. (undesignated), residue of estate, plantation being already recorded between Jonathan and William both dying without issue, to pass to son Solomon and hrs., or next of kin. Child. to be in charge of their godfathers or overseers during minority. Exs. and overseers: Jonh Saunders of Mattawoman, and Thomas Harris, of Patuxent. Test: Nich. Calvin., James Simpson. 13. 539. === John Nicholas 34.l86 I CH £21.14.0 May 25 1713 Appraisers: John Elder, James Simeon, Creditors: Edward Rookwood (did not come), John Boyce (came, got sick, and died). Next of kin: only small children. Executors: John Sanders. === Maj. William Boarman 32B.247 A CH £304.1.8 £58.13.4 Sep 4 1711 Received from: Richard Lemaster, Jacob Miller, Payments to: Mr. James Heath, Capt. Thomas Crabb, Alexander Willson, Capt. Walter Story, Nathaniell Seutte, John Bowling, Lord Baltimore, Madam Mary Contee, Capt. Thomas Dent, John Sanders, William Balden, Esq. Executrix: Mary Sanders, wife of Mr. John Sanders. === Patrick Macatee 38A.134 I CH £86.8.9 Jun 25 1717 Appraisers: Anthony Neale, John Sanders. Approvers: William Rossell, Patrick Macatee. === John Warren 3.16 A CH £164.12.0 £214.3.8 May 6 1720 A second inventory is cited in the amount of £123.15.0. Received from; John Loften, Robertt King, John Steuart, John Duley Payments to: Samuell Love, Darby Ocane, Capt. Thomas Dent, Mr, Samuel Hanson, John Sanders, Gerard Ocain, Dr. Gustavus Brown, Dr. Pelletear, Mr. Manning, Samuell Hanson, Benamin Warren, John Neal. Distribution to (equally): 2 children (unnamed). Executrix: Judith Bruce (relict), now wife of John Bruce, <1445 - 1504 George de Grey 59 59 1647 - 20 Feb 1719/1720 Matthew I Saunders Will of:
Sanders, Mathew, Sr., Charles Co., 19th Dec., 1719; 20th Feb., 1719-20. To grandson Robt. Roberson and hrs.., 100 A. dwelling plantation " Prickard". Shd. he die without issue, sd. plantation to pass to 2 sons, John and William. To son John and hrs.., 30 A.., "Sander's Folly." To eldest son Mathew, half a crown and personalty. To dau. Margt. Ward and hrs., 83 A., whereon. they now live. Wife Elinor extx. and residuary legatee. Tests, James Ward, Richard Houldin, James Simson.15.313. === Mathew Sanders 5.150 CH £5.5.0 Apr 2 1720 Appraisers: James Simpson, James Ward, Next of kin: John Sanders, William Sanders. === Sanders, Robt., Charles Co., 22nd Jan., 1717; 4th Feb., 1717. To Ann Coulson, widow, two sets of bills of exchange for £14 sterling drawn by Capt. John Morecraft of Liverpool, mariner, consigned to John Crosby, merchant, in Liverpool, and the money Capt. John Gardiner, Capt. John Ball and Stephen M. Robinson owe testator.  To bro. Mathew and father Mathew, Henry Ward, sister Margaret Ward and to bro. John (Sanders), personalty. To Capt. Samuell Bowman's cabin boy, 100 lbs. tobacco.  To Anthony Smith, 16d. Wm., son of Mary Johns (an orphan bound to Wm. Sanders), 20s. when of age. Mary, dau. of Geo. Ares., 20s. when at age of 16 yrs. To Elizabeth and Chas. Camill, personalty,, they to live with Francis Robinson and Wm. Sanders. Should they not be willing to live with them during minority, their portion to be equally divided between executors. Exs.: Francis Robinson and Wm. Sanders, jointly. Test: Stephen Robinson, Dan. Hopper, Calri: Brown. 14, 445. === Richard Nelson 30,278 1 CH £123.1.0 Apr 23 1709 Appraisers: Mathew Sanders, John Sanders. Approvers: Margret Nelson (daughter), Alice Nelson (daughter). === Henry Tompson 19.41 I £20,6,6 Apr 21 1699 Appraisers: Mathew Saunders, Edward Roockwood.
0347 Frodi Havarsson 0325 Haver Fridleifsson D. 0641 Pepin of Austrasia 1134 - UNKNOWN Millicent deStanton 0303 Fridleif Frodasson ~1260 - ~1320 Lancaster 60 60 ~1256 - ~1326 Roger Mortimer 70 70 Hugh Mortimer Isolda Mortimer Guy D'Ibelin Constable of Cyprus 0281 Frodi Fridleifsson D. >1790 Charity ~1269 - ~1296 Margaret Mortimer 27 27 Elizabeth Bowes ~1248 Isabella Mortimer ~1296 Margaret Mortimer D. 1227 Hugh Mortimer Milisent ~1270 Isolde Mortimer Robert Mortimer Joan Headlam 0259 Fridleif Skjoldsson ~1190 - 1246 Ralph II de Mortimer 56 56 ~1300 John Mortimer ~1302 Elizabeth Mortimer ~1286 Matilda Mortimer Gladuse Day 1219 - 1226 John Capet of France 7 7 1251 - 1283 Peter I of France 32 32 ~1289 Hugh Mortimer Lady Eure- Evre 0237 Skjoldr of Asgard King of denmark & Norway BET. 1262 - 1270 Margaret Fiennes ~1250 Ralph Mortimer 1252 - 1303 Edmund Mortimer 51 51 Maud Braose 1221 - 1282 Roger Mortimer 61 61 Agnes Mortimer 0241 Gefion of Denmark Robert Lambton Frances Evre Ralph Evre Ever Margaret Mortimer ~1293 Joan Mortimer ~1292 Maud Mortimer PeterJohn Mortimer 0215 - 0306 Odin of Asgard 91 91 ~1294 Walter Mortimer ~1254 Geffrey Mortimer D. 1735 Eleanor Children of this union:
Mathew Jr. Saunders  b: BEF 1720
Margaret Saunders b: BEF 1720 in Charles Co. MD
Unknown Wife Saunders  b: BEF 1720 in Charles Co. MD
John Saunders b: BEF 1720 in Charles Co. MD
Robert Saunders  b: ABT 1682 in Charles Co. MD
William Saunders  b: ABT 1690 in Charles Co. MD
*Sanders, Eleanor, widow, Charles Co., 14thJune, 1732; 16thMarch 1736 To son Matthew, 1 shilling. to dau. Margaret Ward and hrs., 1/2 of estate, after debt to William Robertson is paid; wearing apparel to be divided bet. Elizabeth and Anne Ward and Jane Newton. to grandson John, personalty. to grandson William Robertson, 1/2 of present estate equally to be divided between his aunt Margaret Ward, and he, and his own proportional share already above-mentioned, (that is to say what did belong to his father's estate). Exs. William Robertson and dau. Margaret. Test: Ruben Elder, Stanly (Standley) Elder, Thomas Thompson. MCW 214751. === Elenor Sanders 16,229 A CH £39.15.10 £6.8.1 Jun 21 1738 Sureties: William Millstead, John Beanshet. Payments to: Daniel Dulany, Esq., Sam. Hanson. Executor: William Robinson.
1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V Plantagenet 38 38 Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the  Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22. Count of Anjou and Maine. Called " The Fair".


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the  Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22. Count of Anjou and Maine. Called " The Fair".
Miss Clifton William III Bowes 1129 - 1202 Hamelin Plantagenet- de Warenne 73 73 Assumed the name of " Warren" and became the Earl of Surrey(5), Vicomte
(ViceCount) of Touraine in France. See Early Yorkshire Charters,Vol.viii, pages
20-24 for daughters details. The Complete Peerage, vol.XIIpI, pages 499-500.
1866 Charles Bengtson 5 Jan 1208/1209 - 1272 Richard Prince of Plantagent EARL OF CORNWALL
MARR PLACE:  Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
0226 - UNKNOWN Friege 1285 - 1356 Joan De Geneville 71 71 ~1360 - 1435 Joan FitzAlan 75 75  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Thie lady had Dau's, but none survived.
1312 - 1349 Joan Plantagenet Lancaster 37 37 1214 - 1241 Isabel Princess of Plantagent 27 27 EMPRESS OF GERMANY 0449 Dagreid Dagsdottir Richard Sewall One Royal line of Richard Sewells decendents:
1. Sir Baldwin de Freville = Maud le Scrope
2. Joyce Freville = Sir Roger Aston, of Tixall, co. Staffs. (d. 1446)
3. Joan (or Agnes) Aston = Sir Roger Draycott, of Paynsley, co. Staffs. (d. aft 1470)
4. Jane Draycott = Thomas Noel, of Hilcote, co. Staffs.
5. Robert Noel, of Hilcote & Newbold, co. Staffs. = Maud Brereton
6. James Noel, of Hilcote & Newbold, d. 1546 = Cecily Pole
7. Dorothy Noel, = (lstly) William Swynfen, of Swynfen, co. Staffs.
8. Arthur Swynfen, of Dunchurch, co. Warwick = Alice Ragdale
9. Elizabeth Swinfen or Swynfen = John Dugdale, of Shustoke, co. Warwick
10. Mary Dugdale = Richard Sewall, of Nuneaton, co. Warwick
Catherine Beauchamp Margaret Beauchamp Joane Beauchamp Robert Armstrong D. 0830 Sigurd Ragnarsson 0945 - UNKNOWN Mieceslas III Prince of Obotrites 1166 - 1213 Geoffrey Fitz Piers IV Earl of Essex 47 47 1287 - 1330 Roger IV de Mortimer 43 43 ~1130 - <1194 Thomas Bardolf 64 64 Thomas Bardolf, who, upon the scutage being levied of such barons as didnot attend King Henry II into Ireland in the 18th of that monarch's reign[1172] nor contribute men or money to that service, paid £25 for thescutage of those knights' fees which formerly belonged to Ralph Hanselyn,Baron of Schelford, in the county of Nottingham, whose dau. and heiress,Rose, he had married. This Thomas obtained from William, brother of KingHenry II, the Lordship of Bradewell to hold to himself and his heirs bythe service of one knight's fee; three parts of which he bestowed uponhis three daus., viz., -----, wife of Robert de St. Remigio; -----, wifeof William Bacon; and -----, wife of Baldwin de Thoni. Thomas Bardolf wass. by his son, Doun Bardolf. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.22, Bardolf, Barons Bardolf]

________________________

There existed none the less a Bardol fee in the Norman Pays de Caux,identified by Mr Stapleton with the church of Bernonville near Gisors,which Thomas Bardol, with Rose Alselyn his wife, bestowed on the Abbey ofBec-Herlouin. He was the son of William Bardol, Sheriff of Norfolk andSuffolk for five consecutive years under Henry II, with whom Dugdale'spedigree begins. No doubt William must have been a landowner in either orboth of these counties; but it is upon Thomas' brilliant marriage thatthe first foundation of their future importance rests.  Rose had broughthim twenty-five knight's fees, which had descended to her from Goisfridd'Alselin, one of the Barons of Domesday, whose name became in Englishspeech Hauselyn; having been "disfigured by English genealogists, whoconverted its first syllable, Al, into hau." - Recherches su le Domesday.In like manner, Bardol or Bardul, grew into Bardolf or Bardolph.

Thomas and Rose had two sons: 1. Dodo, or Doon; 2. Thomas, castellan ofVerneuil in 1179 and 1180; "and perhaps two others , for Dodo witnessesRichard de la Haie's grant to Blanchelande Abbey with Hugh Bardolf andHamelinus Bardolf. In 1168 Hugh held two knights fees, and Doon I ofRichard de la Haie's fief in Lincoln." - A S Ellis. Dugdale, however, whogive a long acount of this Sir Hugh, believes him to have been Thomas'younger brother rather than his son. [Battle Abbey Roll II:58]
1130 - 1202 Hameline Plantagenet 72 72 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
0715 - UNKNOWN Halfdan I Olafsson Whiteleg King in Vermaland ~1656 Anne Foster Aka: Judith V Foulques Ermengarde du Maine 0960 - 1085 Gundred- Gunereda of St. Omer 125 125 Some records show the wife of William de Warenne as Miss de Tosta.  Also at one time it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William theConqueror. For details see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C.T. Clay or "Etudes surQuelques Points de L'Histoire de Guillame le Conquerant" by H.Prentout described under Surrey in "The Complete Peerage" by G.E. Gibbs.
[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]
1055 - 1088 William I de Warenne 33 33 Acceded: 16 April 1088 1282 - 1316 Elizabeth Plantagenet 33 33 D. UNKNOWN Sophia D. UNKNOWN Jan I de Holland Count de Holland 1283 - 1345 Maud De Chaworth 62 62 ~0970 Adele Princess Of France 0945 - 1019 Frederick Count Of Luxembourg 74 74 0897 Guidenilde Maude Peverel 0893 - 0985 Mieceslas II Prince of Obotrites 92 92 1085 William Peverel ~1093 - 1147 Robert Gloucester 54 54 ~1090 - 1157 Mabel Sibyl Maud FitzHamon Countess Gloucester 67 67 ~1073 - ~1165 Sybilla Corbet 92 92 0934 - 0982 Adelaide Countess De Vermandois 48 48 D. 1097 Odo Earl Of Kent Bishop Of Bayeux D. 0972 Eberhard IV Count Of Luxembourg Robert Count Of Mortain 1066 Constance Of Normandy 0939 - 0996 Hugh Capet King Of France 57 57  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
0868 - UNKNOWN Mistui I of Prince of Obotrites 1064 Agatha Of Normandy 1008 - 1040 Henri Capet I King Of France 32 32 0840 - UNKNOWN Rodigastus Prince of Obotrites 0745 - UNKNOWN Billung I Prince of Obotrites 0752 - UNKNOWN Hildegarde 0720 - UNKNOWN Aribert I Prince of Obotrites D. UNKNOWN Mandana 0962 Gerberga Countess D' Anjou 0958 - 0987 Geoffrey I Grisegonnell D' Anjou 28 28 0909 - 0958 Foulques II Le Bon Count D' Anjou 49 49 0913 - 0952 Gerberge Du Maine 39 39 Ermangarde I D' Anjou 0695 - UNKNOWN Vislas I King of Obotrites 1081 - 1138 William deWarenne 2nd Earl of Warren & Surrey 57 57 By the marriage of William, 2nd Earl Warren and the Countess Isabel,every known European line and also those of the Far East from earliesthistory were united. 0956 - 1040 Foulques III Le Noir Count D' Anjou 84 84 Maurice D' Anjou Adeka (Blanca) D' Anjou Gerberga D' Anjou Hermangarde D' Anjou 0870 - 0938 Foulques I Le Roux Count D' Anjou 68 68 0874 Roscilles De Loche 0972 Adwige(Avoise) Princess Of France 1008 Bertha Countess Of Flanders 0927 Mrs Ordgar Ealdorman 0702 - UNKNOWN Petrussa of the Lombards 0896 - 0961 Edgiva Queen Of England 65 65 0936 - 1031 Gonnor Duchess De Crepon 95 95  aka gunnor of Denmark 0911 - 0987 Herbastu De Crepon 76 76 Poppa Duchess Of Normandy 1012 - 1067 Baldwin V De Lille Count Of Flanders 55 55 Ethelred Duke Of Mercia 1003 Judith Adelais Countess Of Normandy 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert I Of Burgundy 0964 - 1037 Robert Archbishop Of Rouen Of Normandy 73 73 0954 Adalbert Marquis Ivrea 0680 - 0714 Aripert II of the Lombards 34 34 ~0900 - ~0966 Berenger II King Of Italy 66 66  marquis d'ivrea e de gisla Willa Princess Of Tuscany 0932 - 0942 Adelaide Countess Of Burgundy 10 10 0904 - 0938 Bozon Marquis Of Tuscany 34 34 0906 Willa Of Burgundy 0945 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosele Of Italy 0933 - 0996 Richard I Of Normandy 63 63 D. 1027 Richard III Duke Of Normandy 0956 - 1017 Judith Princess Of Brittany 61 61 0927 Conan I Count Of Brittany 0654 - 0682 Godepert of the Lombards 28 28 0952 Ermengarde III D' Anjou Elgiva Princess Of England 0955 William 2nd Count Of Eu ~0911 Adele Of Normandy ~0965 - ~1035 Robert Count D' Evreux 70 70 ~0962 - 21 Feb 1033/1034 Hedwige Hawise Of Normandy 1027 Alice Of Normandy 0925 - 0992 Heribert Count Gleibert 67 67 0986 Ogive De Luxembourg 0980 - 1035 Baldwin IV the Bearded Count Of Flanders 55 55 0630 - 0669 Aripert I Viscount deLombards 39 39 ~1005 Ermengarde De Flandres Of Flanders ~0868 - 0920 Elfrida Princess Of England 52 52 ~0889 - 0964 Arnold I Count Of Flanders 75 75 0915 - 0958 Adela De Vermandois 43 43 0933 - 0962 Baldwin III Count Of Flanders 29 29 0969 - 1008 Matilda Countess Of Flanders 39 39 0941 - 0987 Arnold II Count Of Flanders 46 46 0925 - 0993 Conrad I King Of Burgundy 68 68 BET. 943 - 948 - 26 Jan 0981/0982 Matilde Princess Of The Franks 0852 - 0905 Ethelswida Queen Of England 53 53 0580 Gundwald de Asti 0871 Sigehelm Earl Of Kent D. 1119 William Plantagenet  died in th e white ship 1030 - 1070 Baldwin VI Of Mons Of Flanders 40 40 1033 Robert The Friesian Of Flanders 0962 - ~1010 Bertha Of Burgundy 48 48 0965 - 1016 Gerberga Of Burgundy 51 51 0970 Rudolph III King Of Burgundy 1037 Judith Countess Of Northumberland 0532 - UNKNOWN Walderade De Lombards 0450 - 0490 Claffo King of Lombards 40 40 Jane Agnes le Clerke 0822 - UNKNOWN Emund of Birka King of Birka 1099 - 1137 William X Lejeune Of Aquitaine 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~1123 Eleanor Aenor De Castelherault  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~1079 - 1118 Matilda Edith Of Scotland 39 39  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1120 - 1180 Louis VII King Of France 60 60 1105 - BET. 1165 - 1167 Sibyl Countess D' Anjou 1086 - 1147 Isabel(Elizabeth) Queen Of England De Beaumont 61 61 Isabel Hedwig Of England 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Princess Of England Plantagenet 60 60 0800 Erik Bjornsson 1100 Agnes Maud Of Aquitaine 0778 - 0859 Bjorn Ragnarsson 81 81 1206 - 1241 Maud deLusignan 35 35 1071 - 10 Feb 1126/1127 Guillaume IX Of Aquitaine  Mediaeval troubadour whose songs have come down to us. 1073 Phillipa Matilda Maud Countess Of Toulouse 1058 Emma De Mortaigne Mathilde Duchess D' Anjou Elias Count of Maine D' Anjou 1075 - 1136 Aimer I Viscount Chatellerault 61 61 Alice Princess Of France Petronilla Of Aquitaine D. 1119 William Plantagenet  died in th e white ship 0755 - UNKNOWN Eisten King of Frondheim 1086 - 1125 Henry V Emperor Of Germany 38 38 1134 - 1157 Geoffrey of Anjou Plantagenet 23 23 1145 Marie Princess Of France 1030 - 1098 Robert I De Brus 68 68 D. 1192 Agnes Plantagenet 0830 - 0879 Riurik Prince of Novgorod 49 49 D. 1161 Melisende Of Jerusalem Badouin III King Of Jerusalem D. 1174 Amaury King Of Jerusalem Ingibiorg 0877 II Parkuritan 0882 Unknown de Rennes 0860 Orequen de Rennes 0855 Ingrid de Urman 1145 - 1198 Marie of France 53 53 <1173 - 7 Mar 1225/1226 William Longespee Rosamond de Clifford 1215 - 1275 Eleanor Plantagenet 60 60 de Warenne 1172 - UNKNOWN Agatha de Ferrers It is known that Agatha was a mistress of John, but it is only supposition
that she is the mother of his child.
~1193 - <1254 Nichole d'Aubigny 61 61 ~1232 - 1282 Joan de Somery 50 50 1120 - 1180 Louis VII "The Young" King of France 60 60 D. UNKNOWN Elda of Sweden ~1152 - 1156 William of England 4 4 1155 - 1183 Henry King of England 28 28 1157 - 1199 Richard "The Lion Hearted" King of England 42 42 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey of Brittany 28 28 Isabel of Gloucester Alice of France Isabel la Blanche unknown mistress3 Isabella Plantagenet 1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet 33 33 1014 - 1040 Sibyl Fitzsiward 26 26 1165 - 1199 Joan I Plantagenets 34 34 Amice de Montfort Richard , Earl of Cornwall 1207 - 1272 Henry III King of England 65 65 1167 - 1216 John "Lackland" King of England 48 48 "Lackland" refered to John's status as the youngest son, resulting in nosignificant inherited fiefs from his Father. His titles included King ofIreland 1177, Count of Mortain 1189, Earl of Gloucester. John succeededhis brother Richard I as King in 1199. In 1215 he put his seal on theMagna Carta (Great Charter). The Magna Carta is the foundation of EnglishConstitutional law and liberties and placed the King, like the subjectshe ruled, subject to the rule of law. He is Interred in WorcesterCathedral. "The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor,General Editor.



This is King John of the Magna Charta.

The Magna Charta is recognized today as one of the most important documents in
the history of human freedom. Coming near the end of the Dark Ages, it
challenged the "divine right" of kings to rule arbitrarily.

King John of England was a tyrant who seized the throne in 1199 by imprisoning
and probably murdering young Prince Arthur, the rightful heir. King John threw
people into prison at the drop of a hat, confiscated their property by heavy
taxes and unjust decrees, and despoiled the wives and daughters of his Nobles.
His quarrels with the pope caused the pope to excommunicate all England for a
period of six years.  The King had a tiresome habit of forcing th e peasants to
buildbridges over streams he might wish to cross while hunting, and at one time
he made the whole of England his own private game preserve, so that none of the
starving peasantry could kill even a rabbit for supper.

The King's Nobles finally refused to fight for him abroad, and as a result he
was utterl y defeated at the Battle of Bouvines during the summer of 1214. The
King then turned in fury on his Barons at home, but he underestimated the
powers arrayed against him. The Barons, as sembled in conference by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, each took a solemn oath on the altar that they would
stand united and not relinquish their efforts until they had either compelle d
the King to confirm their liberties or had waged war against him to the death.

During the winter of 1214-15, the Barons prepared and presented to King John a
list of their demands.  When the King saw the Articles, heis supposed to have
sworn by "God's teeth" , his favorite oath, that hewould never agree to such
demands or any part of them.  But the Barons were not to be denied.  They
raised an army and launched a "holy crusade"against the King to recover their
rightful liberties.  The King was finally forced to surrender at Runn emede on
June 15, 1215.  After four days of negotiations, the King's seal was affixed to
all copies of the historic Magna Charta.

The Magna Charta is recognized today as a foundation stone of free government
and has been referred to as "The Mother of Constitutions." It was an important
forerunner of the United States Constitution. Sections39 anbd 40 of the Charter
state: "No free man shall be taken , orimprisoned, or dispossessed, or
outlawed, or banished, or in any waydestroyed...excep t by the legal judgment
of his peers or by the law ofthe land.  To no one will we sell, to n o one will
we deny, or delay,right of justice." The Barons offered to their sub-tenants
the same concessions that they were demanding from the King.

Section 61 authorized the election of 25 Surety Barons to see that the
provisions of th e Charter were enforced.  These Sureties were given the right
to distress and harass the King by any means in their power if he did not keep
his pledges.  Several of these Sureties are included inthis royal line
pedigree: Hugh Bigod,  Robert De Vere,  Roger Bigod, Alan Galloway,  [ Lord]
Gilbert De Clare, William De Albini,  Richard De Clare[Sir] William Marshal
(Marshall) John De Lacy William De Warren Sahar DeQuincy William [Earl Of
Salisbury] etc...

King John was given a interdict by Pope Innocent III.  King John did notrespond
as agreed upon so his excommunication was soon to follow. WhenKing John still
would not agree to live up to his agreements, (such asthe will of the dead King
Richard) the Pope in 1212 absolved all subjectsof John from their oaths of
allegiance, coupling with this declarationthat the ban of excommunication would
thenceforth apply to anyone whocontinued to serve him, who lived in his
household, who sat or served athis table, who held the stirrup when he set orth
to ride or who everspoke a word to him in public or private.

Signer of the Magna Charta.aka: John of England

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists",

7th  ed.

John was the youngest of the 4 sons of King Henry. He first claimed

the crown in 1193 when news broke that his brother, King Richard (theLion
Hearted), was held prisoner "somewhere in Germany." In April 1193Richard was
offered for ransom by the Holy Roman Emperor. (See WinstonChurchill's detailed
account of this  episode in Vol. 1 of "A History ofthe English Speaking

Peoples - The Birth of Britain" at pgs.236-237) Richard reclaimed thecrown in
1194 after his release. Richard was killed by a crossbow in asmall skirmish in
1199. He died on April 6, 1199 from the wound, and John had been declared his
heir before Richard died.

Much is written about King John in Chapter 15 of Churchill's book

(above) because it was he who was king at the signing of the Magna Carta on
June 15, 1215. He died the following summer.

Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition: Crowned at Westminster 27May
1199; signed Magna Charta 15 Jun 1215;
Pedigrees of some Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants - Langston-Buck
The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon andGriffith.
Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition: Crowned at Westminster 27May
1199; signed Magna Charta 15 Jun 1215;

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216


King of England, 1199-1216

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 1199-1216
1188 - 3 Jun 1245/1246 Isabella d'Angouleme 1190 - UNKNOWN Robert deBeauchamp ~0880 Hugues I de Lusignan Alice Burrough 1200 Julia Ann Brett 1219 - 1265 Robert deBeauchamp 46 46 Margaret Keene D. 1094 Judith de Flanders ~1020 - 1055 Siward 35 35 1230 - 1285 Alice deMohun 55 55 ~1009 - 1040 Sibyl fitz Seward 31 31 ~1030 - 1070 Baldwin\ Baudouin VI , Count of Flanders 40 40 D. AFT 1175/1176 Rohese ~1130 - 1202 Hamline Plantagenet 72 72 ~1026 - <1055 Isobel de Montfort 29 29 ~0990 - 1038/1039 Roger I "the Spainiard" de Toni ~1103 - 1151 Adeliza of Louvain 48 48 ~1062 - >1099 Maud de Chateau du Loire 37 37 1206 - 20 Jan 1256/1257 Reginald deMohun II Lord Mohun 1180 - 1247 Alice deEu 67 67 ~1032 John I de la Fleche ~1002 - 1055 Lanzelin I , Seigneur de Baugency 53 53 ~1032 Paula du Maine ~1032 - >1099 Gervase , Seigneur de Chateau de Loire 67 67 ~1032 Erenburg ~1002 Robert , Seigneur de Chateau de Loire ~0973 Doda ~1001 Herluin , Seigneur de Conteville D. 1068 Egbert I , Count of Brunswick ~1092 - 1126 Ermengarde du Maine 34 34 1210 - 1243 Hawise FitzGeoffrey 33 33 1043 - 1109 Fulk IV "Rechin" , Count of Anjou 66 66 ~0983 - >1000 Geoffrey I , Count of the Gatinais 17 17 ~0986 - 1067 Richard , Count d'Evereux 81 81 ~1030 Agnes d'Evereux ~1026 - 1087 Simon I de Montfort 61 61 1045 - 1073 Waltheof II 28 28 ~0984 Bethoc\Beatrice , Princess of Scotland 0978 - 1045 Crinan 67 67 Arthur Swynfen 1114 Agnes deGaunt ~1070 - 1134 Robert II de Normandy 64 64 ~0970 Papia of Normandy Hildegarde de Gastinois D. 1078 Robert de Never ~0970 - 1051 Ralph\ Rodulf II de Toeni 81 81 ~1004 Adela de Toni 1172 - 1225 Aveline deClare 53 53 ~1030 - 1096 Odo , Earl of Kent , Bishop of Bayeux 66 66 ~1062 - 1113 William, "the Elder" Peverel 51 51 Muriel de Conteville ~1026 - <1055 Isabel de Broyes 29 29 ~1005 Ermengarde de Flanders D. 1081 Lancelin II , Sire de Beaugency Papia Adele d'Anjou , Countess de Vendome ~0960 - ~0999 Elizabeth de Vendome 39 39 Emma d'Anjou 1130 - 1176 William deMohun 46 46 He fortified his castle in behalf of Maud and made many incursions intothe neighboring country. For these services he had the honour of beingcreated Earl of Somerset and Dorset during Henry II reign, which title heenjoyed until his death. He was buried in the priory of Brewton of hisown foundation.

William fortified his castle in behalf of Maud and made many incursions into the neighboring country. For these services he had the honour of being created Earl of Somerset and Dorset during Henry II reign, which title he enjoyed until his death. He was buried in the priory of Brewton of his own foundation.
1185 - 1219 Reginald deMohun Lord Mohun 34 34 ~0948 - ~0985 Hugues III de Lusignan 37 37 1092 - 1136 Adeliza Le Meschines 44 44 Anne 1148 Maud deManDerville Holford D. 1397 Maud le Scrope Source: Douglas Richardson
In 1984, Patrick Montague-Smith published an excellent article on the Freville family of Tamworth Castle, Staffordshire in the Genealogists' Magazine, 21 (1984): 185-190. Mr. Montague-Smith correctly delineated the successive generations of men named Baldwin Freville (five in a row) whose dates and marriages have always been a bit of a tangled mess. When he came to Baldwin de Freville IV (died 1401), he had the following to say of his marriages: "He married in 1389, Joan, daughter of Sir Thomas Greene. She died without issue, and he married secondly, Maud, whose surname has not been discovered. When he died in 1401, his son, Baldwin V, was found to have been aged four years." In addition to the son, Baldwin V, Mr. Montague-Smith shows that Baldwin Freville IV and his wife, Maud, also had three daughters, Elizabeth, Joyce, and Margaret. Curiously, the clue to Maud Freville's identity has been in print for a good many years. In a well prepared chart on the Scrope family in Sir N. Harris Nicolas' interesting book, The Controversy between Sir Richard Scrope and Sir Robert Grosvenor, 2 (1832): 136, he states that Sir Stephen le Scrope, 2nd Lord Scrope of Masham, and his wife, Margery Welles, had two daughters as follows: "Maud Scrope, a nun in the Minories in London. Living Aug. 1415." "A daughter, married [Sir Baldwin] Frevyll." Actually, Mr. Nicolas' information on Sir Stephen Scrope's daughters comes from the 1415 will of his son and heir, Henry le Scrope, K.G., 3rd Lord Scrope of Masham, which includes the following bequests: "Item, lego sorori meae Matildi, minorissae Londoniae, unam parvam tabulam eburneam, sculptam cum imaginibus, etc." "Item, lego nepoti meo Frevyl i. bonum nouche, & cuilibet suarem sororum nepotem mearum, aut i. noche, etc." We see here that Sir Henry le Scrope had a sister, Maud, who was a Minoress nun, and a Freville nephew with sisters (plural). Mr. Nicolas was obviously of the impression that Lord Scrope's sister Maud was a different sister than the mother of the Freville nephew and nieces. Elsewhere, in note 5 on pg. 133, however, he clearly indicates he did not know the name of Baldwin Freville IV's second wife (see note 5 on pg. 133), only his first wife, Joan Greene. However, as Mr. Montague-Smith has shown, Baldwin Freville's second wife was in fact named Maud. Inasmuch as it was customary for widows of high station to become Minoress nuns in this period, there is no reason to suppose that Lord Scrope's sister Maud is not the same person as Baldwin Freville's widow, Maud. For another example of a widow becoming a Minoress nun, see my former post on the newsgroup regarding the mother of Elizabeth, wife of John de Beauchamp of Powick. As for Lord Scrope's Freville nephew and nieces, the bequests in his will exactly fits the family structure of Maud Freville's children. As indicated above, Montague-Smith tells us that Baldwin Freville IV and his wife, Maud, had one son, Baldwin V, and three daughters, Elizabeth, Joyce, and Margaret. Hence, if Baldwin Freville V was Lord Scrope's nephew, he would have three sisters and no brothers. Lord Scrope's will indicates his Freville nephew had at least two sisters and mentions no brother. Elsewhere, in his note on pg. 133, Mr. Nicolas claims that Lord Scrope's will also mentions a niece named Elizabeth Freville. But, no such niece appears in the careful transcript of the will which appears on pages 142 to 147 in Mr. Nicolas' book. Quite possibly the niece Elizabeth Freville is instead mentioned in the 1418 will of Lord Scrope's brother, Stephen le Scrope, clerk, Archdeacon of Richmond, which will Mr. Nicolas also transcribed and published. Unfortunately, I failed to copy Stephen's will when I was making copies of Mr. Nicolas' comments on this family. If Elizabeth Freville is mentioned in another family will, it would simply be further evidence for the identification of her mother Maud being a Scrope.

Source: John Ravilious,
The ancestry of Maud le Scrope, wife of Sir Baldwin Freville of Tamworth Castle, Staffs. 1. Maud le Scrope, m. (as 2nd wife) Sir Baldwin Freville of Tamworth Castle, co. Staffs.; d. 1397 [1], [2] 2. Stephen le Scrope, 2nd Lord Scrope (of Masham), b. ca. 1345; m. [as 2nd husband] Margery de Welles, widow of John de Huntingfield; summ to Parliament from 23 Nov 1392 [3]; d. 25 Jan 1405/6 3. Margery [Margaret] de Welles [3] 4. Henry le Scrope, of Masham, co. Yorks.; fought at Sluys (1340), siege of Calais (1347); summ to Parliament from 25 Nov 1350, whereby held to be lst Lord Scrope; d. 31 Jul 1392 [3] 5. __________ 6. John de Welle, 4th Lord Welles; d. 11 Oct 1361 [3] 7. Maud de Ros 8. Geoffrey le Scrope, of Clifton-upon-Ure and Masham, co. Yorks.; 2nd son; supporter of the King against the Earl of Lancaster, 1322; ambassador to Scotland 23 Apr 1327; d. Ghen Dec 1340 [3] 9. Juetta or Yvette de Ros [4] 10. _______ 11. _______ 12. Adam de Welle, of Faxton, co. Northants; 3rd Lord Welle; summ to Parliament from 27 Jan 1332/3; m. bef 1334; d. aft 24 Feb 1344/5 [3] 13. Margaret Bardolf; d. bef 28 Feb 1345/6 [3] 14. William de Ros, of Helmsley, co. York; 2nd Lord Ros; m. bef bef 25 Nov 1326; d. 3 Feb 1342/3 [3] 15. Margery de Badlesmere, eldest daughter; coheiress of brother Giles, 2nd Lord Badlesmere [3] 16. William le Scrope, of Wensley, co. Yorks.; knighted at the Battle of Falkirk, 1298; d. bef 1 Feb 1311/2 [3] 17. [Probable] Constance de Newsom, daughter of Thomas de Newsom, of Newsham on Tees [3] 18. Sir William de Ros, of Ingmanthorpe; b. bef Oct 1268; d. bef 28 May 1310 [3] -MC DESCENDANT; GT GRANDSON OF WILLIAM THE LION [KING OF SCOTS] 19. Eustace FitzHugh, daughter of Ralph FitzHugh, heiress of grandfather Hugh fitz Ralph, of Greasley, co. Notts. [3] 20. _______ 21. _______ 22. _______ 23. _______ 24. Adam de Welle, of Faxton, co. Northants.; fought at Falkirk; summ to Parliament from 6 Feb 1298/9, held thereby to have become lst Lord Welle; d. 1 Sep 1311 [3] - DESCENDANT OF CHARLEMAGNE 25. Joan Engaine, daughter of Sir John Engaine, of Laxton, co. Northants. and Joan de Greinville [3], [5] 26. [probable] Sir Thomas Bardolf, 2nd Lord Bardolf; d. 15 Dec 1328 [3], [6] 27. Agnes [3], [6] 28. William de Ros, of Helmsley, co. Yorks.; Lord Ros; summ to Parliament from 6 Feb 1298/9, held thereby to have become lst Lord Ros; competitor for the Scottish crown, 1292; d. bef 16 Aug 1316 [3] - MC DESCENDANT; GT GT GRANDSON OF WILLIAM THE LION [KING OF SCOTS] 29. Maud de Vaux, younger daughter and coheiress of John de Vaux [Vallibus], of Pentney, Norfolk and Vaux and Wisset, Suffolk [3], [7] 30. Bartholomew de Badlesmere, of Badlesmere and Chilham Castle, Kent; summ to Parliament from 26 Oct 1309, held thereby to be lst Lord Badlesmere; supporter of the Earl of Lancaster at Boroughbridge; exe. 14 April 1322 [3] 31. Margaret de Clare, coheiress of her nephew Thomas; daughter of Thomas de Clare, of Inchiquin and Youghal, Thomond and his wife Juliane FitzMaurice - MC DESCENDANT; DESCENDANT OF HENRY I OF ENGLAND [3], [8] NOTES: [1] Douglas Richardson, 'Maud le Scrope, wife of Baldwin Freville, of Tamworth' [first message in this thread] [2] Weis and Sheppard, The Magna Carta Sureties, 1215 [5th edition] [3] Complete Peerage [incl. but not limited to Vol. XI, Scrope - pp. 554 et seq.; see also articles under Ros; Ros of Ingmanthorpe; Badlesmere; Welle/Welles; & c.] [4] With regard to the identity of Juetta de Ros, see discussion of the evidence at CP Vol. XI, p. 560 and note k on that page. The identification is certain, but not proven. Note: the descent of Juetta de Ros places Stephen le Scrope and Margery [Margaret] de Welles in position of consanguinity in the 4th-5th degrees, by descent from Sir William de Ros (d. 1264) and Lucy fitz Piers. [5] Granddaughter of Sir Viel Engaine, subject of the recent SGM thread <FitzUrse and de Cantelou/Cantilupe> [6] See discussions of Sir Thomas Bardolf, his marriage(s) and issue in the SGM archives. [7] See discussions re: Oliver de Vaux and Petronilla de Craon, the paternal grandparents of Maud de Vaux, in the SGM archives. [8] See discussions re: Thomas de Clare, his identification and descendants, in the SGM archives.
Avery Grazebrook 1070 William deMohun Sir William de Mohun was of a very ancient and eminent family inNormandy, when the Conqueror had announced his intention of visitingEngland in arms, was one of the first of those gentry who engaged in theexpedition, and all of his knights who came over with him were persons ofdistinction, both as to parentage and military enterprise. After theBattle of Hastings, and for good services rendered in that celebratedconflict, he obtained the Castle Dunster, with 55 manors in the County ofSomerset, besides several other lordships in Wiltshire, Devonshire andWarwickshire.

Sir William de Mohun was of a very ancient and eminent family inNormandy, when the Conqueror had announced his intention of visiting England in arms, was one of the first of those gentry who engaged in the expedition, and all of his knights who came over with him were persons of distinction, both as to parentage and military enterprise. After the Battle of Hastings, and for services rendered in that celebrated conflict,William was granted the Castle Dunster, with 55 manors in the County ofSomerset, besides several lordships in Wiltshire, Devonshire and Warwickshire.
1112 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey La Zouche Count dePorhoët ~1024 - 1077 Agnes of Aquitaine 53 53 ~1049 - 1107 Maud de Montgomery 58 58 ~1084 William fitz Robert Emma de Mortain ~1054 Agnes de Mortaigne ~1016 - 1109 Helie of Semur 93 93 ~1035 - 1070/1074 Henry , Duke of Burgundy D. >1104 Hildegarde \Aldegarde of Burgundy Irmgard of Anjou 1060 - 1133 Alice deMontfort 73 73 ~0983 - ~1055 Dalmas I , Count of Semur 72 72 ~0980 Aremburge de Vergy ~1026 - 1086 William IV , Count of Poitou 60 60 ~0937 - 0995 Guillaume II "Fier de Bras" , Count of Poitou 58 58 ~0969 - 1030 William III "The Great" , Count of Poitou 61 61 Stephanie of Barcelona ~0990 - 1057 Renaud I , Count of Burgundy 67 67 ~1024 - 1093 Aimery IV de Thouars 69 69 ~1030 - <1069 Aurengarde de Mauleon 39 39 1245 - 1317 Walter deLa LynDe 72 72 Eleanor de Thouars Hugh de Chastellerault Gerberga de la Rochefoucauld D. 1092 Boso II , Vicount of Chastellerault D. 1136 Aimery I , Vicount of Chastellerault Dangerose ~0995 - 1068 Agnes de Bourgone 73 73 ~0952 - ~1004 Emma de Blois 52 52 1220 - <1273 John deLa LynDe 53 53 Ameline 1520 William Sewell ~1175 Agnes de Grey Amelia Alberic III , Count de la Marche ~0985 - 1020/1023 Gerberge de Bourgone Ermengarde de Toulouse 0958 - 1005 Ermentrude of Rouncy 47 47 ~0940 - 0981/0982 Alberic II , Count d'Macon ~0983 Beatrice d'Macon 1195 - UNKNOWN Thomas deLa LynDe Adda Maria de Valladoild D. ~1075 Pedro Ansurez , Count de Valladolid ~1054 Andre de Vitre' 1187 - UNKNOWN Ralph FitzSimon 1130 Agnes Du Maine 1080 Adenor de Laval 1583/1584 Katherine Davy William Swynfen ~0980 - 1047 Bernard I , Count de la Haute Marche 67 67 1007 - UNKNOWN Ralph III deBeaumont Viscount de Maine ~0980 - 1053/1058 Amelie d'Aulnay ~1026 - 1079 Mabel Talvas d'Alencon 53 53 ~1054 - 19 Jan 1119/1120 Adeliza ~0996 - ~1026 Warin de Domfront 30 30 ~0975 Joscline ~0945 Senfrie ~0943 Cadelon V , Viscount of Aulnay ~0930 - ABT 1030/1033 Cadelon IV , Vicomte of Aulnay ~0950 - 0997 Adalbert I , Count de la Haute Marche 47 47 ~0950 - 1007/1011 Almode of Limoges 1015 - 1058 Emma deMontrevault 43 43 ~0997 Elfgifu PED OF VERN ORVEL CURTIS, 1934; PED AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; DO NOT
TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1240 Maud de Somery 0985 - UNKNOWN Stephen deMontrevault 0780 - 0830 Heilwig of Saxony 50 50 0876 - 0935 Ebles II de Poitier 59 59 DUKE OF ACQUITAINE; COUNT OF POITOU; ES 11:76; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0912 Elgiva FGRA; PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.PEDIGREE OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0910/0915 - 0993 Herbert de Vermandois ES 111:49; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0982 - 1052 Emma Princess Of Normandy 70 70 QUEEN OF ENGLAND AND DENMARK; ROYAL ANCESTORS, CHART 546.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0908 - 0937 Ethile (Eadhilde) 29 29 PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0970 - 1014 Ralph II deBeaumont Viscount de Maine 44 44 0930 - 0996 Ralph I deBeaumont Viscount de Maine 66 66 ~0942 Aethelwold Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0876 Ecgwy (or Ecgwyn) Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0900 - UNKNOWN Rudolf deBeaumont Viscount de Maine 1847 Johanna 1827 Carl Bengtson This name is apparently BENGTSON; "son of BENGT" and is found in variations as BENTSON, BENGSON, BENSON.

1880 Lemont, Cook County, Illinois ED 205 page 58, #515 #529 19 June 1880, Age: Occupation: b.p.   Father: Bengson, Carl head 53 quarry labor Sweden Sweden Sweden Mother: Johanna wife 33 Sweden Sweden Sweden
1585 - 1643 John Jenney 58 58 1050 - UNKNOWN Guy deLaval 1667 Sarah Carey 1560 - 9 Feb 1619/1620 Henry Jenney 1560 Mary Smythe 1535 John Jenney 1535 Mary Spring 1486 Christopher Jenney 1498 Elizabeth Eyre 1444 - 1522 Edmund Jenney 78 78 1446 Katherine Boyse 1420 - 1522 William Jenney 102 102 0934 - UNKNOWN Godebelt de Belleme 1426 Elizabeth Cawse 1398 - 1460 John Jenney 62 62 1400 Maude Bokyll 1610 - 1681 John Cary 71 71 From Somersetshire England. settled in Duxbury Mass. as early as 1639.
Children:
John, at Duxbury, 1645
Frances, 1647
Elizabeth, 1649
James, at Braintree, 1652
Mary, at Braintree, 1652
Jonathan, 1656
David, 1658
Hannah, 1661
Joseph, 1663
Rebecca,1665
Sarah, 1667
Mehitable, 1670


Elizabeth married Decon William Brett, Jr., Rebecca married Samual Allen Jr. 1685,  David went to Bristol and Joseph went to Windham, Ct.
1570 - 1680 Elizabeth Godfrey 110 110 ~1542 - 1676 Francis Godfrey 134 134 ~1545 Elizabeth Hall 1836 - 1896 Abner Lansden Ward 60 60 1811 - 1874 James Odum Ward 62 62 James Odum WArd and Elizabeth Stark's Marriage in 1831 was the 1st marriage in the Wilborn Creek Settlement.  The cermony was performed by E. Squire Thompson.   Came to Shelbyville in 1828 age 17. 1812 - 1870 Elizabeth Stark 58 58 0905 - 0983 Yves I deCreil 78 78 1780 - 1838 William Ward 58 58  Came to Moultrie Co.was Macon Co. then, in Jun 1830 and Settled near Wilburn Creek 1783 Millie Odum 1818 William C. Ward 1832 - 1832 John Stark Ward 1833 - 1833 James Stark Ward 1836 Andrew Ward 1836 - 1905 Margaret Susan Ward 69 69 1840 - 1895 Elizabeth Cammilah Ward 55 55 1844 - 1899 Joseph William Ward 54 54 1846 - 1910 Larkin Stark Ward 63 63 0985 - UNKNOWN Eremburga 1848 - 1934 Franklin Odum Ward 85 85 1756 - 1815 John Odum 59 59 John Odum of Nansemond Co VA and later in Gates Co NC   was a son of William. John died in Gates Co 1815, leaving a will naming sons Ira, Noah, Rodan, Asa, Richard, Jacob, and John, and a daughter Milly. Milly married John Ward and moved to TN. They were later to live in Moultrie Co., Illinois. Many Odum legal records are found in Gates Co.

Children From this union:
Millie ODUM  b: 1783 in NC
Ira ODUM  b: 1794
Noah ODUM  b: 1792
Rodan ODUM  b: 1794
Asa ODUM
Richard ODUM 
Jacob ODUM  b: 1800
John ODUM  b: 1802

1786 Gates County, NC, State Census
Page 2 ODOM, John 1 White Male 21-60 0 White Males under 21 and above 60 0 White Females all ages 7 Blacks 12-50 10 Blacks under 12; above 50

1790 NC Census, Gates County
ODAM, John 1 Male 16 upwards 3 Males under 16 2 Females

1800 Census NC
Gates County, page 174 ODAM, John 5 Males under 10 1 Male 10-16 1 Male 16-26 1 Male 45 + over 1 Female 16-26 1 Female 26-45 1 Female 45 + over

1810 Census NC
ODOM, John……Gates County….pg. 116.…44 slaves ODOM, Winborne…..Northampton County….pg. 74.….13 Slaves 1 Male 26-45 1 Female 45 + over
1760 - 1831/1832 Monica Blanchard Gates County, North Carolina Formed 1779 From Chowan, Hertford, And Perquimans Counties 1802 Millie Ward 1746 - 1826 Jemima Saunders 80 80 1806 Mary Ward 1809 Martha Ward 1813 Lunica Ward 1816 Susan Ward 1829 Louisa Ward 0912 - UNKNOWN Geile William Odum Children from this union:
John ODUM  b: 1756 in Nansemond VA
Uriah ODUM 
William ODUM
Mary ODUM 
Moses ODUM 
Nancy ODUM
Elizabeth ODUM 
Charity ODUM
1782 - <1860 Francis Saunders 78 78 1550 Thomas Davis Elizabeth <1710 - BET. 18 AUG - OCT 1751 John Saunders D. >1751 Mary BET. 1676 - 1683 - <1744 Francis Saunders <1692 - BET. 27 APR 1744 - 10 MAY 1748 Mary ~1645 - <1712 John Saunders 67 67 Refer Book of N.C. US B2 1 V. 1,Page 388; and N.C. Historical Genealogical Register, Vol. 3, Page 394, Published 1903. ~1645 - <1712 Sarah Davis 67 67 Source:  "Adventures of Purse and Person" on Captain James Davis. His son Thomas Davis was the father of Sarah Davis who married John Sanders: 1045 Ermengarde De Nevers D. <1706 John Saunders 1613 - <1683 Thomas Davis 70 70 Source: Isle of Wight County VA - Records; William and Mary College Qrtly, Vol. 7, No. 4, P. 250-296 He was one of the Virginia settlers on HERRING CREEK 1570 - 16 Feb 1622/1623 James Davis James Davis was an original settler of Jamestown, VA.,  Pilot of the "Mary and John" and Raleigh Gilbert's officer during the attempt to establish a colony in Maine. Departed Plymouth, England 31 May 1607; arrieved Sagadahoc, Maine 16 August 1607. Colony abandoned 17 October 1608. "Mary and John"and "Virginia" Rachel Keyes <1645 William Saunders <1660 - <1725 Richard Saunders 65 65 <1655 - UNKNOWN Francis Saunders ~1625 - >1706 Phoebe 81 81 <1691 - >1731 Robert Saunders 40 40 <1675 - BET. 1705 - 1731 Thomas Saunders 1050 Gui II de Tonnerre 0960 Ealdred of Bernica ~1670 - >1751 Phoebe Saunders 81 81 <1710 - <1782 Francis Saunders 72 72 <1750 - UNKNOWN Laban Saunders <1750 - UNKNOWN Jesse Saunders <1750 - UNKNOWN Robert Saunders <1750 Millie Saunders <1750 - UNKNOWN Fereby Saunders <1750 - UNKNOWN Elizabeth Saunders <1765 - UNKNOWN Mary Saunders <1765 - UNKNOWN Zipha Saunders 1125 Ermengarde de Tonnerre <1762 - UNKNOWN Abraham Saunders <1765 - UNKNOWN Jemima Saunders >1766 - UNKNOWN Ann Saunders BET. 1770 - 1780 - >1840 William Saunders Thomas Davis James Davis D. <1744 John Stringer Mary Saunders Martha Saunders ~1725 - <1783 John Saunders 58 58 1055 - UNKNOWN Adela ~1730 Thomas Saunders ~1676 Sarah Dorsey ~1678 Edward Dorsey ~1680 Hannah Dorsey ~1682 Benjamin Dorsey ~1864 Samuel Dorsey 1686 - 1747 Joshua Dorsey 61 61 1688 - 1764 John Dorsey 76 76 1689 Honor Elder 1689 - 1717 Nicholas Dorsey 28 28 1020 Milo III de Tonnerre ~1649 Anne Dorsey Michael Dorsey Ruth Todd Elizabeth ~1615 Charles Stevens ~1620 Susannah Norwood ~1620 - ~1673 Nicholas Wyatt 53 53 Damaris Unknown ~1590 Edward Darcy 1594 - 1638 Haute Hawte Wyatt 44 44 vicar of Boxley, kent England. 1030 Engeltrude de Brienne 1598 - 1626 Barbara Mitford or Milford 28 28 1565 - 1605 Thomas Darcy 40 40 Mary Kitson John D'Archy Frances Rich 1696 Mary Armstrong Noted in the will of Dame Mary Spencer-Hull- Phipps- Sargent, widow of Sir. William Phipps of Boston, New England. States a bequests to her sisters, among who is Margaret Spencer wife of Matthew Armstrong, also noting their daughter Mary Armstrong. Will dated 19 Feb. 1704.  Dame Mary was the daughter of Capt. Roger Spencer.   Source: Page 1142 of Genealogical Gleanings in England by: Waters.

born1664 in London, Middlesex, England
1550 - 1623 Jane Finche 73 73 1520/1521 Sir Thomas Wyatt Lady Jane Hawte ~1657 - 1690 Sarah Wyatt 33 33 1020 - UNKNOWN Raoul Count Of Bar-Sur-Seine ~1646 - 1705 Edward Dorsey 59 59 Margaret Shipley Robert Sloan 1758 Edward Shipley 1758 - 1809 Robert Shipley 51 51 Matthew I Armstrong Noted in the will of Dame Mary Spencer-Hull- Phipps- Sargent,, widow of Sir. William Phipps of Boston, New England. States a bequests to her sisters, among who is Margaret Spencer wife of Matthew Armstrong, also noting their daughter Mary Armstrong. Will dated 19 Feb. 1704. Gen. Gln's in England, pp. 1142. Dame Mary was the daughter of Capt. Roger Spencer.   Source: Page 1142 of Genealogical Gleanings in England by: Waters.



Children
Mary ARMSTRONG  b: 19 May 1696 in Boston, , Massachusetts
Matthew II ARMSTRONG b: 12 Apr 1698 in Boston, , Massachusetts
Thomas ARMSTRONG  b: 12 Mar 1700 in Boston, , Massachusetts
Hannah ARMSTRONG  b: 2 May 1706 in Boston, , Massachusetts
Margaret ARMSTRONG  b: 1709 in
Jane ARMSTRONG  b: 1711 in
Isabella ARMSTRONG  b: ABT 1707 in Boston, Suffolk, Mass.
1678 - 1762 Robert Shipley 84 84 1680 Elizabeth Stevens ~1650 - 1696 Adam Shipley 46 46 1655 - 1725 Lois Howard 70 70 1010 - UNKNOWN Engelbert I Count Of Brienne 1677 - 1725 Richard Shipley 48 48 Susannah Stevens 1675 Adam Shipley 1687 Peter Shipley 1711 - 1767 Charles Shipley 56 56 1715 Ruth Shipley 1717 Keturah Shipley 1721 Sarah Shipley 1723 Lewis Shipley 1726 - 1789 George Shipley 63 63 0990 Gui de Tonnerre 1729 - 1794 William Shipley 65 65 Lois Shipley 1690 Keturah Shipley ~1639 - 1688 Joshua Dorsey 49 49 1619 Anne Howard Sarah Dorsey Margaret Larkin ~1619 - 1659 Edward Darcy 40 40 <1645 - <1703 Charles Stevens 58 58 William Stevens 1000 - UNKNOWN Adele Of Salins 1718 - 1795 Elizabeth Shipley 77 77 Nancy Shipley ~1760 George Shipley James Armstrong 1745 - 1804 Rachel Shipley 59 59 D. 1715 John Dorsey 1713 - 1780 Robert Shipley 67 67 1720 Sarah Dorsey Mary Shipley 1746 - 1825 Ann Shipley 79 79 0987 Eudes Count Of Cambrai 1748 - 1790 Naomi Shipley 42 42 1765 - 1825 Lucy Shipley 60 60 1550 - 1623 George Wyatt 73 73 1503 Thomas Wyatt Elizabeth Brooke 1460 Henry Wyatt Anne Skinner 1435 - 1478 Richard Wyatt 43 43 Owned land at Westminster and at Buscot in Berkshire. 1403 Member of Commission for Defence of the Realm in the Reign of Henry IV. 1406 Appointed to be the Seneschal and Controller of Winchester. 1410 - 26 Represented Buckinghamshire in Parliament at the time of Agincourt. 1410 - 24 High Sheriff of London. 1431 Buried at Langley Marish Church.
A summary of fines included in the past Court Rolls was made in 1640. Unfortunately all are now lost except one covering the period 1440 - 1441 which remained the property of the Earl of Shrewsbury. There are three documents referring to Richard Wyot:
Feudal aids for the Earl of Shrewsbury, referred to as ‘tenure in socage’. Assessment 2/- in £ or 10% in 1441 book: "Beatrice, Wife of Richard Cutbushe, to Richard Wyot and Margaret his wife, third part of a bovet(?) of land in Hallam. Fine 2s.". The same Beatrice gave the aforesaid Richard Wiat and his wife Margaret the third part of a Bovet of Land in Hallam. Fine 18d.
1457 Margaret Bailiffe Clark 1545 - 1622 Mary Boscawen 77 77 0990 - UNKNOWN Odele Of Bois Ferrand 0725 - 0823 Welf deAltdorf 98 98 1700 James I Isham Surname also spelled: Ison. 1710 - 1773 Benjamin H. I Stinnett 63 63 1 Stinnett, William Sr. 1645 .2 Stinnett, William Jr. 1682 ..3 Stinnett, Benjamin H. 1710





Benjamin Stinnett, Sr. Will Amherst Co. VA Book '1', page 245 Dated: 21 Oct 1764 Probated: 5 Jul 1773 Executrix: Elizabeth Stinnett, wife Executor: Benjamin Stinnet, Jr., son Heirs: Elizabeth, wife; William, son; Susanna, daughter, John Childress, son-in-law.

BIOGRAPHY: According to the Lee Marmon manuscript, possibly referring to Alexander Brown's list of early settlers, Benjamin Sr., and Benjamin Jr., Stinnett Jr., all occupied a tract of 627 acres on Tobacco Row Mountain in 1747. According to Lee Marmon manuscript, from 1758 to 1760 Dr. Cabell deeded a total of 2,271 acres to eight planters ... Much of this land had been acquired by Cabell from Benjamin Stinett's lapsed land grant of 1753. Lee Marmon manu- The ... Stinett ... families were heavily represented among the enlisted men of the French and Indian War. From the State Archives in Richmond Land Patent to Benjamin Stennet, 1 June 1750, 400 acres in Albemarle County near the Tobacco Row Mountains on the north branches of Huff's Creek. Patents Microfilm Roll No. 29, 1749-51, p. 172.
George the second by grace of God of Great Britain, France and Ireland, king ...'' Cost- 40 shillings. Beginning at a Chestnut Oak and running thence South 180 poles to pointers northeast 72 degrees 300 poles to a Chestnut northwest 12 degrees 283 poles to a white oak and Chesnut oak near the top of a small mountain. Thence southwest 51 degrees 296 poles to the beginning. Fees/rent/improvements: Yielding and paying to us'' for every 50 acres, fee rent of one shilling yearly to be paid upon the feast of St. Michael the Arch Angel'' and also cultivating and improving three acres part of every fifth ... within three years after the date'' of the patent. If three years of the fee rent shall at anytime be in arrears and unpaid'' or if three acres of every 50 aren't improved withing the next three years, the estate hereby granted shall seacse'' and may be granted to someone else. '' Signed by Thomas Lee, president of our council and commander in cheif of our said colony and Dominion at Williamsburgh, June 1, 1750.

Similiar patent for James Stennett, 1 June 1750, 227 acres on the branches of Huffs Creek, p. 177 25 shillings Beginning at John Wheeler's line southwest 8 degrees 42 poles to a white Oak the same course contineud 200 poles to a chestnut oak northwest 76 and ahalf degress 152 poles to a corner chestnut of Benjamin Stennet's line. Thence along his line northwest 12 degrees 162 poles to John Graves pointers in the said Benjamin Stennet's line. Thence along Graves line northeast 78 degrees 272 poles to the beginning. Same requirements for rent, fees, improvement, etc. Raised five children, three girls and two boys, in a beautiful valley with Tobacco Row Mountain on the north and Stinnett Mountain on the south Granted 150 acres of 400-acre patent to son Benjamin Jr. 3 May 18(7?)62, A-31, stray page from mom's records.

Also from stray page in records, 3 Aug 1761, Benjamin Stinnett to James Isham, 100 acres from 400 acre patent, "promised to James Isham at the time of Benjamin's marriage to his daughter.'' But since Benjamin was married already, to a Saunders perhaps this was meant to refer to Benjamin's daughter, Dorcas, who married James Isham. 

Could have had other children, according to. John Stinnette, born about 1750, served as private in Amherst county militia during the revolution. He died after 2 Feb 1785. Wife's name was Ann. Children were Margaret Stinnette, born Aug 1775; Tabatha Stinnet, born Mar 1787? and Polly Stinnet. Source: Email /  Vanderlip File.
1538 - 1625 Joan Boscawen 87 87 1539 Elizabeth Boscawen 1541 - 1526 Nicholas Boscawen 15 15 1543 - 1609 Alice Boscawen 66 66 1542 - 1605 William Boscawen 63 63 1544 - 1564 John Boscawen 20 20 REFN4952 1547 Petronell Boscawen REFN4950 0970 - UNKNOWN Humbert I Sire Of Salins 1549 - 1619 Edward Boscawen 70 70 REFN4953 1548 George Boscawen REFN4955 1551 - 1608 Hugh Boscawen 57 57 REFN4957 1555 Catherine Boscawen REFN4959 1558 Margaret Boscawen REFN4961 <1500 - 1538 Nicholas Carminowe 38 38 <1510 - 1540 Catherine Wolvedon 30 30 WOLVEDON  Sources state this  line goes back to Richard, Andrew, John, Reginald, Reginald, and Osbert Wolvedon. <1480 John Carminowe 1480 Phillippa Trenwith Sources state this line: TRENOUTH  goes back to John, John, John, Ralphe, John, Ralph, Michael, Stephen, John Trenouth with tie-ins to the BASSET, FLEMING, TREIAGO, CHENDUYT, TREWETHENICK, TREVANIAN, MALLETT, WALLIS, MARTYN, GRENEVILL, FITZLEON, CHAMPERNOWNE, VALLETORT, ROHART families. Walter Carminowe 0980 - UNKNOWN WindelmodeOf Escuens Jane Resprin 1356 - 1407 William Carminowe 51 51 D. 1420 Margaret Kelley Sources state this line goes back KELLY to John, John, Richard, William, Warren, William, Nicholas Kelly) Walter Carminowe Ann Tinten Sources state this line TYNTON goes back to Stephen, John, and Ralph and includes tie-ins with the BLOYOU, NANSCOYK/NANSKEW, BODRUGAN, DURANT, AND RUSSELL/BOSSELL families. ~1290 - 1332 John Carminowe 42 42 D. 1349 Joanna Glyn ~1240 - 1308 Roger Carminowe 68 68 1244 Joanna Dingham Sources state this DINHAM line goes back to Geoffrey, Oliver, Geoffrey, Oliver, Oliver, Geoffrey, Oliver, Geoffrey Dinham) 1278 - >1345 Oliver Carminowe 67 67 0950 Milo II de Tonnerre 1276 Richard Carminowe 1274 Minanus Carminowe 1272 Margaret Carminowe 1271 Matilda Carminowe 1288 Walter Carminowe 1286 Joan Carminowe 1284 Thomas Carminowe 1282 Roger Carminowe 1280 Reginald Carminowe ~1210 Roger Carminowe 0920 Milo I de Tonnerre 1214 Sara Hornocote 1242 Maud Carminowe 1244 Gervis Carminowe 1245 John Carminowe 1185 - >1256 Robert Carminowe 71 71 ~1212 William Carminowe 1469 John Wolvedon John Trenwith Richard Resprin 1300 Stephen Tinten 0930 - UNKNOWN Atila Elizabeth Boyon 1275 - 1323 John Tinten 48 48 Joan Durant D. 1286 Ralph Tinten D. 1305 Alan Boyon D. 1343 Johanna Nanskew ~1250 Peter Nanskew Ralph Boyon Alan Boyon REFN5073 Johanna Bodrugan REFN5074 0950 - UNKNOWN Gui Count Of Escuens Thomas Durant D. 1290 Alice Bossell John Bossell ~1185 John Glyn ~1200 - 1258 Geoffrey Dingham 58 58 1234 - 1298 Oliver Dingham 64 64 REFN5082 ~1170 - <1221 Oliver Dingham 51 51 1188 - ~1208 Gervis Hornocote 20 20 1685 - 1720 Edward II Saunders 34 34 Charles County Circuit Court, Birth, Deaths & Marriage Records, Liber Q Saunders, Edward, s/o Edward and Jane Saunders of the west side of Portobacco Creek, b. 6 Nov 1685 === Saunders, Edward, Chas. Co.,  29th March 1699. To son John, all lands in Va. except 400 A. to son Thomas and hrs., afsd. 400 A. in Va.; he dying without issue to pass in turn to son Charles and dau. Jane, and hrs., son Edward already having his share of real estate. to William Hunter, priest, grandchild. Mary, Thomas and Sarah Saunders, personalty. Wife Jane, extx. and residuary legatee of estate. Overseers: Eld. son John afsd, and Wm. Thompson. Test: Jas. Simmes, Andrew Simpson, Jno. Saunders. MCW 6. 248. === Sander (Saunders), Jane, Chas. Co., 15th Aug., 1700; 3rd Feb., 1701-2. To Jane Keene and William Hunter, personalty. to sons Edward, Thomas, Charles and dau. Jane, residue of estate. In event of son Thomas not getting estate left him by his father in Va., he to have dwelling plantation, Ex.: Wm. Chandler who is to have charge of child. afsd. during minority. Sons to be of age at 18 yrs. and daus. at 16 yrs. of age. Test; Wm. Langham Ann Madden. By note attached to aforegoing will Susanna Blizzard is given 100 A. on which testatrix lived during life. Sd, 100 A, to revert to son Edward afsd. at death of Susanna Blizzard [Caine], 11. 181. === Sanders, Edw., Charles Co., 17th Sept., 1720; 4th Oct., 1720, To bros, Charles and Thomas, land adj. Creek ----. and personal estate, equally. Test: Wm. Hunter., Anthony Neal. 16.213, === Edward Sanders 4.327 CH £233.19,8 Oct 6 1720 Appraisers: John Manning, William Hoskins. Creditors: William Chandler, Thomas Mathews. Next of kin: John Sanders (son). === Jane Sanders 29.249 A CH £410.7.7 £298.5.6 May 1709 Received from: Benjamin Clarke, Payments to: Edward Sanders, Thomas Bordley. Legatees: legacy by Edward Sanders whose widow the said Jane was to the children (unnamed) of John Sanders, Thomas Sanders & Charles Sanders. Executor: William Chandler. === John Elder 35A.359 A CH £13.15.0 #9888 May 7 1714 The amount of the inventory is equivalent to #3300. Received from: Robert Sanders, Edward Williams, Jos. Parker, William Benson, William Stone, Elisabeth Barton, Roger Yop, Francis Robinson. Payments to: John Rogers, Edward Sanders, Capt. Thomas Dent, Jos. Manning. Executor: John Sanders. === John Sanders 16.448 CH £69,0,11 May 11 1732 Jun 6 1732 Appraisers: John Manning, Matthew Stone. Creditors: Gustavus Brown, Francis Ware. Next of kin: Thomas Sanders, Jr., Edward Sanders. Executrix: Virlinda Sanders. === Martha Brent 36B.172 I CH £139.14.8 Jul 20 1715 Appraisers: Edward Sanders, Thomas Sanders. Next of kin: Oswald Neale, Jane Brent D. 1699 Edward I Saunders Father: Mr. John Saunders,Esq., partner of Sir Thomas Cornwalleys, to supervise his twelve servants. But he died en route (his wife and ch, are found in Maryland, 1644).
Charles County Circuit Court, Birth, Deaths & Marriage Records, Liber Q Saunders, Charles, s/o Edward and Jane Saunders of west side of Portobacco Creek, b. 18 Jul 1690 Saunders, Edward, s/o Edward and Jane Saunders of the west side of Portobacco Creek, b. 6 Nov 1685 Saunders, Thomas, s/o Edward and Jane Saunders of west side of Portobacco Creek, b. 30 Mar 1688 === Saunders, Edward, Chas. Co.,  29th March 1699. To son John, all lands in Va. except 400 A. to son Thomas and hrs., afsd. 400 A. in Va.; he dying without issue to pass in turn to son Charles and dau. Jane, and hrs., son Edward already having his share of real estate. to William Hunter, priest, grandchild. Mary, Thomas and Sarah Saunders, personalty. Wife Jane, extx. and residuary legatee of estate. Overseers: Eld. son John afsd, and Wm. Thompson. Test: Jas. Simmes, Andrew Simpson, Jno. Saunders. MCW 6. 248. === Sanders, John, Charles Co., 22nd Oct., 1724; 15th April, 1730. Ex. instructed as to payt. of debts, especially debt to estate of Wm. Hutchison, dec'd. To priest attendant at death, 500 lbs. tob. To wife Mary and hrs., in lieu of dowry, certain designated personalty absolutely (not to include altar or church furniture); and certain personalty for life, to pass to dau, Mary Power for her life, and then to grandson John Power and hrs. To daus. Mary Power and Jane Doyne, 20s. each. To son John and hrs., 100 A. of "Cane's Purchase" at Port tobacco (for desc. see will); and personalty. To son Edward and hrs., pt. of last named tract adj. to land of bro. ----- To dau. Ann, personalty. To son William and hrs., residue of land at "Port-tobacco," being plan. where Thomas Osborn lived; and personalty; to receive estate at death of testator. To eldest son Thomas, ex., and hrs., residue of estate, real and personal (except land in Virginia sold by father) To Edward Sanders to Nicholas Russell, whose rights therein is hereby acknowledged).  Test: Thomas Mudd, Robert Thompson, Joseph Gardner, Benjamin Gardner, Charles Clements. Codicil: 6th July, 1729. Testator states that estate of Ethelbert Doyne, dec'd, with 3 small child. being in his hands, is to be distributed as follows: Grandson Ethelbert Doyne, to care of Clement Gardiner until of age to receive his estate, real and personal, as designated; 2 granddaus. Mary and Jane Doyne, with personalty, to care of Thomas Thompson, Port-tobacco. Test: James Whitgreave, Edward Neale., Edward Magatee, 19.892,
0940 - UNKNOWN Aubri Vicomte Of Narbonne 1662 - 1701 Jane Caine 39 39 Children of this union:
John Saunders  b: ABT 1672 in Charles Co. MD
Edward Jr. Saunders b: 6 NOV 1685 in Port Tobacco Hundred, Charles Co., MD
Jane Saunders  b: ABT 1687 in Charles Co. MD
Thomas Saunders  b: 30 MAR 1688 in Port Tobacco Hundred, Charles Co., MD
Charles Saunders  b: 18 JUL 1690 in Port Tobacco Hundred, Charles Co., MD
Mary Jarboe Robert Saunders John Saunders Margaret Saunders D. 1726 Mathew II Saunders *Charles County Maryland Probate Records, Inventories, Book 1717-1735  190: Matthew Sanders Jr. decd 14 May 1726 - Elizabeth Parander, Mary ? Sanders nearest kin- Wm. Nelson adm. *Mathew Sanders, Jr, 8,509 A CH £80.18.5 £36.1.11 Feb 3 1727 Received from: Thomas Millstead. Payments to: John Henrick, William McDaniel, William Saunders, David Cockran, James Lutwidge,, James Panandeer, Elox. Sanders. Stephen Brown, John Hanby, Patrick Connell, Samuell Hanson. Administrator: William Nellson.
*Sanders, Eleanor, widow, Charles Co., 14thJune, 1732; [Mother to Mathew Jr.] 16thMarch 1736 To son Matthew, 1 shilling. to dau. Margaret Ward and hrs., 1/2 of estate, after debt to William Robertson is paid; wearing apparel to be divided bet. Elizabeth and Anne Ward and Jane Newton. to grandson John, personalty. to grandson William Robertson, 1/2 of present estate equally to be divided between his aunt Margaret Ward, and he, and his own proportional share already above-mentioned, (that is to say what did belong to his father's estate). Exs. William Robertson and dau. Margaret. Test: Ruben Elder, Stanly (Standley) Elder, Thomas Thompson. MCW 214751.
*Sanders, Mathew, Sr., Charles Co., 19th Dec., 1719; 20th Feb., 1719-20. To grandson Robt. Roberson and hrs.., 100 A. dwelling plantation " Prickard". Shd. he die without issue, sd. plantation to pass to 2 sons, John and William. To son John and hrs.., 30 A.., "Sander's Folly." To eldest son Mathew, half a crown and personalty. To dau. Margt. Ward and hrs., 83 A., whereon. they now live. Wife Elinor extx. and residuary legatee. Tests, James Ward, Richard Houldin, James Simson.15.313.
*Sanders, Robt., Charles Co., 22nd Jan., 1717; 4th Feb., 1717. To Ann Coulson, widow, two sets of bills of exchange for £14 sterling drawn by Capt. John Morecraft of Liverpool, mariner, consigned to John Crosby, merchant, in Liverpool, and the money Capt. John Gardiner, Capt. John Ball and Stephen M. Robinson owe testator.  To bro. Mathew and father Mathew, Henry Ward, sister Margaret Ward and to bro. John (Sanders), personalty. To Capt. Samuell Bowman's cabin boy, 100 lbs. tobacco.  To Anthony Smith, 16d. Wm., son of Mary Johns (an orphan bound to Wm. Sanders), 20s. when of age. Mary, dau. of Geo. Ares., 20s. when at age of 16 yrs. To Elizabeth and Chas. Camill, personalty,, they to live with Francis Robinson and Wm. Sanders. Should they not be willing to live with them during minority, their portion to be equally divided between executors. Exs.: Francis Robinson and Wm. Sanders, jointly. Test: Stephen Robinson, Dan. Hopper, Calri: Brown. 14, 445.
D. 1634 John Saunders Sources:
Pogue, Robt. "Yesterday in Old St Mary’s County". By: Pogue, Robt.Bushwood (MD): Privately Published, 1995. Originally published in 1968. 8vo, 464 pages.
"The Early Settlers of Maryland, an Index of Names of Immigrants Compiled from Records of Land Patents, 1633-1689, in the Hall of Records, Annapolis, Maryland". By Gust Skordas. 525 pp. (1968), repr. Balto., 1995.
Settlers of Maryland 679-1700. By Peter Wilson Coldham. 228 pp., indexed. (1995), repr. Balto., 1996
Settlers of Maryland 1701-1730. By Peter Wilson Coldham. 216 pp., indexed. Balto., 1996
Settlers of Maryland 1731-1750. By Peter Wilson Coldham. 306 pp., indexed. Balto., 1996
Marriages, Maryland, 1634-1777. By Robert Barnes. 233 pp., indexed. (1978), repr. Balto., 1995
Maryland Genealogies From the Maryland Historical Magazine. 2 vols. 549 & 548 pp., illus., indexed. (1980), repr. Balto., 1997
Maryland Palatinate, The Flowering of the. By Harry Wright Newman. 359 pp., illus., indexed. (1961), repr. Balto., 1985
Maryland Records--Colonial, Revolutionary, County and Church. By Gaius M. Brumbaugh. 2 vols. 513 and 688 pp., illus., indexed. (1915, 1928), repr. Balto., 1993
Genealogical Gleanings In England, pp. 1160 & 1385.
1633 The Dove
October, 1633 The Ark and the Dove departed London for Maryland by way of Barbados, St. Christopher, and Virginia.
Pinnace;Burthen: 50 tons; The first English planters to Maryland landed on St. Clement's Island March 25, 1634 (New
Year's Day, OS)The ship(s) returned to London in 1634, one month after arrival in Maryland.
Ship and Passenger Information:  Crew of the Ark:
Captain Richard Lowe, Master
John Bowlter, purser
Richard Edwards, Chirurgeon
(About 40 total.)
Crew of the Dove:
Captain Wintour, Commander
Richard Orchard, Master
Samuel Lawson, Mate
John Games, gunner
Richard Kenton, Boatswain
John Curke, crewmember
Nicholas Perrie (or Parrie), crewmember

Leaders of Expedition:

Calvert, Leonard, Lieutenant-Governor (on the Ark)
(representing his brother, Caecilius Calvert, the second Lord Baltimore)
Calvert, George (another, younger brother of Lord Baltimore)
Cornwallis, Thomas, Esq., Commissioner
Hawley, Mr. Jerome, Commissioner
Baxter, John [gentleman adventurer]
Cranfield, Edward [gentleman adventurer]
Dorrell, Thomas [gentleman adventurer]
Fairfax, Nicholas [gentleman adventurer]    [died on the "Ark"]
Gerard, Richard [son of Sir Thomas Gerard, Knight]
Greene, Henry [gentleman adventurer]
Hill, Capt. John [gentleman adventurer]
Metcalf, John [gentleman adventurer] (John Medcalfe, in Caecilius Calvert's "Conditions of Plantations", written 1634)
Saunders, John  [gentleman adventurer]
Saire, William [gentleman adventurer]
Smithson, Robert [a gentleman of quality, on the Ark]
Wintour, Edward [son of Lady Anne Wintour]
Wintour, Frederick [son of Lady Anne Wintour]
Wiseman, Henry [son of Sir Thomas Wiseman]


Other Passengers:

James [killed later at Mattaponi]
Josias [drowned afterwards]
Allen, Thomas
Althem, Mr. John
Andrews, William
Ashmore, John
Ashmore, William
Barefoot, Mr. ----  [died on the "Ark" enroute - Father White, Calvert Papers No. 35]

Beane, Ralph
Beckworth, Thomas
Bonam, Anam
Bradley, Richard
Briscoe, Henry
Browne, William
Bryant, John
Burrowes, Mathew
Carnock, Christopher
Charinton, Thomas
Cole, Richard
Cooper, Thomas
Cox, Mrs. Ann
Draper, Peter
Duke, Richard
Edwards, Robert
Edwin, William
Edwyn, William
Elkin, John
Ffitter, William
Ffremonds, Lewis
Gervais, Thomas
Gilbert, Richard
Gore, Stephen
 
Green, Thomas
Gregson, Thomas
Grigsta, Thomas
Halfhead, John
Hallowes, John
Hays, (Father) Timothy
Heath, Thomas
Heckley, James
Hervey, Nicholas

Hill, John
Hillierd, John
Hills, Richard
Hodges, Benjamin
Hodges, Thomas
Holdern, John
Hollis, John
James, Henry
Jennings, Mary
Loe, Richard
Lusthead, Richard
Marlburgh, John
Middleton, Charles
Mimus, Thomas
Morgan, Roger
Nevill, John
       
Nevill, Richard
Pike, Robert
Price, John [black]
Price, John [white]
Price, Lodowick
Rabnett, Francis
Robinson, John
Rogers, Mr. ----
Sammon, Stephen
Sherly, Robert
Simpson, Robert
Smith [lost by the way]
Smith, Thomas
Smith, William
Statham, Thomas
Thompson, Richard
Thomson, John
Thornton, James
Tousa, Mathias [a mulatto]
Walter, Roger
Ward, John
Watkins, Evan
White, Rev. Andrew

This list gives a total of 99, excluding the crews.

Leonard Calvert's letter of May 30, 1634, he said that
they stopped at Virginia to land some passengers there. 
Those were most likely from amongst the original passengers,
although they could have taken passage from Barbados or
St. Christophers.

Additionally, a letter describing the Christmas celebration
aboard the Ark stated that "30 sickened of fevers and
whereof about a dozen died afterward."
Another mentions "our mades, which we brought along",
indicating that many of the number were household servants,
most of whom the "London Searcher" would likely not have
counted in his report of "about 128" settlers in the party.
John Caine 1715 - 1787 Isaac Vernon 72 72 Index of Deed Books for Charlotte County in the Virginia Archives
1765 - Oct. Deed of sale from Thomas Vernon to Alexander Joyce, D. Bk. #1, p. 58
1766 - Oct. Deed of sale from David Caldwell to Isaac Vernon, D. Bk. #1, p. 143

Thomas Vernon, Sr. took up 501 acres from the Kennon Deed on Cub in 1745. In the 1757, Thomas Vernon, Sr. and Mary went to live with son Isaac and wife Elizabeth. They deeded their homestead and 370 acres of land to Isaac (Lunenburg Deed Book No 6).

Elizabeth was still the wife of Isaac in 1761 and was listed in the Richard Austin will of 1759.
Presumably, Elizabeth was his daughter. The will of James Caldwell, in 1757, lists Nehemiah and Joseph as son of Isaac Vernon. The former will also mentions Thomas Vernon. Although we have  speculated that Isaac's first wife was Elizabeth Austin (he later married Jane Caldwell), there is also a strong possibility that the wife of Thomas Vernon, Sr. was the "Elizabeth" of the Richard Austin will, since "Mary" is nickname of Elizabeth. Further, the Elizabeth who married could have been the daughter of James Caldwell. In other words, Lt. Isaac probably married two Caldwell girls.

***
Will Book A p. 230-231 Isaac Vernon Will  dated 1787
"Bequeath to son Nehemiah Vernon two pounds to him and his heirs.
Bequeath to
son Jonathan two pounds in money to him and his heirs,
son James - twenty pounds in money,
son Richard - twenty pounds in money (another bequest of ? pounds to son that couldn't be read - perhaps
son Patrick or Fredrick - looks like T warick or F warick.)
Son George - ? pounds
Daughter Jane - 10 pounds
Daughter Mary - 2 pounds
Daughter Elizabeth - 10 pounds
Daughter Sarah - one bed and furniture and 5 pounds in money
Daughter Suckey - 1 bed of furniture and 2 pounds
Daughter Hannah - five pounds
Loving sister Rebekah - ten pounds
And if my estate shall amount to more than the sum before bequeaths be equally divided among all my children before named. Appts. son Nehemiah and loving friend Benjamin Gates executors of this last will.
Isaac (his mark) Vernon"

The 1757 deed of the Ole' homestead of Isaac and Elizabeth was witnessed by David Caldwell, James Vernon, Richard Vernon and Robert Vernon. The Richard and Robert were most likely, sons of Thomas Sr. not of sons of Thomas Jr.

1757/8 Isaac was on of the grantes of a deed land from William Caldwell for a gravesite, where I (William Vernon Sr) believe Thomas Vernon, Sr. was buried soon thereafter. Thomas Jr. became Thomas Sr. by 1795, long after his brothers with their families had moved into Carolina Frontier. Richard and Robert Vernon, son of Thomas Jr., m'd Ester and Elizabeth daughters of Alexander Hambleton The last mentioned Robert and Elizabeth was born in Cub Creek in 1769 and removed to Beldsole Co., TN. where he lived to a ripe old age.
Elizabeth Jane Caldwell Isaac Vernon- 1715, d 1787, m 1.) to Elizabeth [?Austin], 2.) Jane Caldwell. Elizabeth Austin is considered to be the mother of most of Isaac's fifteen children; 0950 - UNKNOWN Attela Of Macon ~1582 Anne Hobson ~1556 - 1635 Henry Hobson 79 79 Will of Henry Hobson:
Dated 16 March, 1634 and proved 27 May 1636.
Henry Hodson of Bristol, Glost. To be buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol;
Names his late wife: Alice who was buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol;
Names grandchildren: Henry Cary, Matthew Cary, Richard Cary, Miles Cary, Honor Cary, Alice Cary and Mary Cary the children of my daughter alice Cary wife to John Cary, draper.
Names grandchildren: Margaret and Anne Jackson daughters of my daughter Anne Jackson.
Names kinsmen:  Richard Burrowes, Christopher Raynoldes son of  George Raynoldes, Anne Raynoldes sister of Christopher.
Francis Creswicke, Thomas Hobson.
Names sons: William Hobson.
Son William to be executoir and Francic Creswicke and Thomas Hobson to be overseers.
Pile,52

Will of Alice Cary, of Shadwell in the parish of Stebunheath, otherwise Stepney, Middlesex. Spinster, 24 April 1660,  proved 14 November 1660.
Names: Grandfather John Cary of Bristol, Woolen draper. 
Names: Uncle Myles Cary of Virginia.
Names: Cousin William Hopson.
Names: Uncle Richard Cary and his wife Dorothy Cary.
~1560 - ~1620 Alice Davis 60 60 ~1530 - ~1600 William Davis 70 70 ~1531 Davis Robert Goodhall 1618 - 1720 Henry Cary 102 102 1620 - 1648 Matthew Cary 28 28 0920 - UNKNOWN Raculph Vicomte Of Macon 1621 - >1660 Richard Cary 39 39 1625 Alice Cary 1627 - 1644 Honor Cary 17 17 1630 Mary Cary ~1401 John Chidderleigh ~1402 Mary Jane Salter (Research):DEADEND: ~1376 William Salter (Research):DEADEND: ~1380 Jane Salter (Research):DEADEND: ~1505 Thomas Herle ~1357 Thomasine Stapeldon 0920 - UNKNOWN Raimodis 0847 - 0911 Rudolph I Duke of Burgundy 64 64 ~1328 - 1423 William Hankeford 95 95 ~1379 - 1430 Richard Hankeford 50 50 ~1332 Christina Stapleton ~1332 Richard Stapeldon ~1336 Stapeldon 1324 Gilbert Burton (Research):DEADEND: 1330 Isabel Dunn ~1333 Holway Sir Henry Saint-George, The Visitation of the County of Devon in the year 1620. Ed. by Frederic Thomas Colby. London, 1872. Harleian society. Publications ; v.6. ~1309 William Denebaud ~1310 Agnes Denebaud (Research):DEADEND: 0910 - UNKNOWN Mayeul Vicomte Of Narbonne ~1325 Thomas Denebaud ~1347 Richard Metherose (Research):DEADEND: ~1351 Richard Metherose (Research):DEADEND: ~1466 John Herle ~1379 Alice Trevett (Research):DEADEND: ~1452 Jane Asheldon ~1451 William Fulkeram ~1435 William Foalkray ~1435 Margerie Champernon ~1425 John Herle 0882 - UNKNOWN Lievin Vicomte Of Narbonne ~1434 Elizabeth Salter 1401 John Salter (Research):See attached sources. ~1392 Thomas Herle ~1359 John Herle ~1363 Maud (Research):DEADEND: ~1396 Jane Arvos ~1370 Philip Arvos (Research):DEADEND: ~1328 Thomas Hearle ~1290 John Herle 1360 William Folkray 0940 - UNKNOWN Thibaud Seigneur Of Bois Ferrand ~1390 Joan Folkray (Research):DEADEND: ~1312 John Folkray ~1325 Agnes le Baron 1282 Adam Folkray ? ~1310 Elias le Baron ~1390 William Champernon (Research):DEADEND: ~1390 Katherine Grane ~1365 Ralph Grane (Research):DEADEND: ~1365 Margerie de la Crosse ~1340 Andrew de la Crosse 0970 - 0997 Arnold II The Young Count of Flanders 27 27 ~1340 Agatha Crosse (Research):DEADEND: 1306 - AFT 13 Feb 1370/1371 John l'Arcedekne Baron Le Arcedekne (ArchDeacon)

calculated: (age 25 in 1331)
~1345 Richard Hody (Research):DEADEND: ~1349 Richard Hody (Research):DEADEND: ~1337 Anne Bodrugan ~1357 - >1415 William Cole 58 58 ~1355 John Pilleston (Research):DEADEND: ~1357 Margery Pilleston (Research):DEADEND: ~1294 John Herle ~1332 Hearle (Research):DEADEND: 0990 - UNKNOWN Adelburge ~1457 Hody (Research):DEADEND: ~1286 Adam Folkray (Research):DEADEND: ~1310 Elias le Baron (Research):DEADEND: ~1334 Richard Bosun (Research):DEADEND: 1587 - <1617 Elizabeth Hereford 30 30 Children of JOHN CARY and ELIZABETH HEREFORD are stated to be:
20. i. JOHN16 CARY, b. 1610, Bristol, Somersetshire, England; d. October 31, 1681, Bridgewater, Massachusetts.
21. ii. THOMAS CARY, b. December 1613; d. 1659.
iii. PHILLIP CARY, d. Abt. 1765, Bristol England.
iv. PRUDENCE CARY.
v. ELIZABETH CARY.
1550 - 1632 William Cary 81 81 Lord Mayor of Bristol, Will dated  april 2, 1571, P.C.C. per 19. 1556 - 1623 Elizabeth Goodale 66 66 3 Jan 1576/1577 - 1638 William Cary 1588 - 1633 Walter Cary 45 45 Will of Walter Carye, of Bristol, woolen draper, 28 Sept. 1633, proved Feb. 18 1633.
Names: wife Grace, and the children by her.
staes brothers in law as overseers. William Browne and Thomas Browne.
Seager, 12.
~1190 - ~1254 William Corbet 64 64 1589 - 1628 Robert Cary 39 39 Will of Robert Carye, draper, 11 August 1628, proved 7 Oct. 1628.
Names: daughter Moulde, Lettice and Mary. Sons William and Thomas.
Names: wife Anne, executrix.
Overseers: Mr. William Thomas and brother richard Carye.
Witness: Alice Carye, Mary the wife ofr Richard Carye, and Richard Carye.
Barrington, 90.
1590 - 1632 Anne Cary 42 42 1592 - 1632 Susan Cary 40 40 ~1594 Margery Cary 1596 - 1648 Thomas Cary 52 52 1600 - 1681 James Cary 81 81 ~1384 Mary Delamere 1542 - 1591 Richard Cary 49 49 1543 - >1571 Lettice Cary 28 28 1544/1546 - ABT 1544/1546 Mary Cary 1442 William Besconal 1546 - >1571 Mary Cary 25 25 1548 - ~1548 Elizabeth Cary 1549 - >1571 Francis Cary 22 22 1551 - >1571 Elizabeth Cary 20 20 1555 Agnes Cary ~1447 Joan Hody ~1438 Christian Cary ~1379 Agnes Hankeford 1525 - 1579 Margery Humphrey 54 54 ~1503 - 1558 Nicholas Herle 55 55 ~1600 Mary Llewellyn ~1499 Anne Herle ~1485 - 1570 John Cary 85 85 ~1315 Margaret de Herle 1510 - 1586 Robert Cary 76 76 1406 Margaret Hutchinson ~1497 Letice Herle 1495 - 1567 Thomas Cary 72 72 1520 - <1572 William Cary 52 52 Will of William Carye, of London, clothworker,2 March 1572, proved 13 March 1572.
My body to be buried in the Parish church where I dwell.
Names: wife Elizabeth.
States: my wife to have the 20 marks [L. 13, 6 s.] given to me by my father. [William, 1571]
Witnesses: William Smith and John Hill.
Peter, 9
1492 - 1561 George Humphrey 69 69 1579 - 1644 Richard Cary 65 65 ~1585 Nathaniel Cary ~1372 Johanna Metherose (Research):See attached sources. ~1512 John Cary ~1507 John Herle ~1470 Margaret Herle ~1468 Katherine Herle ~1516 Jane Cary ~1423 Walter Herle ~1390 John Herle 1440 - 1514 Joan Marston 74 74 1138 Beatrix deFaucigny 1063 - 1139 Godfrey deNamur 76 76 ~1330 John Herle ~1476 Edward Herle ~1340 - 1391 John Paulett 51 51 ~1365 - <1400 John Paulett 35 35 ~1371 Dyonisia Paulet ~1366 - 1413 Eleanor Delamare 47 47 1347 - ~1396 Philip Delamare 49 49 (Research):See attached sources. 1351 Matilda Hussey ~1343 Margaret Cartnther ~1341 Elizabeth Creedy 1455 - UNKNOWN Margaret Cowley ~1360 - 1435 William Paulett 75 75 ~1474 William Herle ~1472 Walter Herle ~1514 Gregory Cary 1310 - >1364 Cecily Haccombe 54 54 ~1407 - 11 Jan 1436/1437 John Paulet ~1375 - >1419 Robert Cary 44 44 He was MP for Devon 1407-1425 and the famous jouster of Smithfield. Named as an heir to his grandfather, Robert, in an inquisition 20 Richard II, no. 127 and in Charter 9, September 19 Richard II (1397) Due to his besting a Knight by the title of Arragonois in combat he was  assigned by King Henry V, part of the lands which had been taken from his father and the arms of that knight.
Vol. II, History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland., page 34.
1379 - 4 Feb 1420/1421 Thomas l'Arcedekne Birth date calculated:   (21-1400) 1330 Richard Bosun (Research):DEADEND: ~1445 Elizabeth Paulet 1400 - 3 Mar 1467/1468 William Algore 1515 - 1570 Richard Cary 55 55 Will of Richard Cary, The Elder; [Brother to Richard the Younger]
of Bristol, Merchant, Dated 11 June, 1570 and Proved 3 November 1570. To be buried in St. Nicholas, "Crowde"
Names Son: Richard Carye my eldest son. William Carye, Christopher Carye.
Names daughters: Anne Carye, Francis Carye, Elizabeth Carye, Mary Carye, Lettyce Carye.
Names Father: William Carye.
Names Wife: Johan.
Names Brother: Robert Halton.
States:  he had 6 children.
Names: brother William Carye and brother Robert Halton overseers.
Names: wife Johan, executrix.
Names: witnesses Robert Halton, Christopher Pacey, Prebendary of the Cathedral Church of Bristal.
P.C.C. Lyon, 31

Will of Richard Cary, The Younger. [Brother to Richard the Elder]
draper, dwelling upon the "back" in St. Nicholas parish, Bristol, 8 Aug. 1569, proved 17 September 1569.
Names: father Mr. William Carye, the elder.
Names: brother in law, John Lacy, Thomas Deconson.
Names: wife, Elizabeth [Butler]
Names: brother Richard Caryes, 12 children.
Names: brother Richards children by his first wife: Richard, William, Lettice, Agnes, Frances, Mary and Elizabeth.
Names: sister Deconsons children, William Cowper, Giles Cowper, Judith and Johan.
Names: sister Lacyes children, Jonas, Thomas, Tobey, Christopher and Susanna.
Names: brother William's two children, William and Anne Carye.
Names: Mary Butler my wifes sister.
Names: William Rice, Sherman.
Names: servents, John Walker, Alice Jones.
Names: Christopher Payce, Preacher. John Northbroke, Preacher
States: brothers William and Richard to settle with Mr. Thomas Longe of Beckington and both to be joint executors.
States: overseers, Mr. Robert Saxcye, Alderman, Robert Halton, Chamberlain of the city.
Sheffeld, 20
~1424 Margaret Hody ~1399 Joan Hankeford (Research):See attached sources. 1354 Henry Burton (Research):See attached sources. 1414/1415 - 1497 Elizabeth Denebaud ~1330 - from 25 Jan 1365 to 21 Dec 1377 Ralph l'Arcedekne (Sp) Sine Prole (died without issue) ~1334 - 1400 Richard l'Arcedekne 66 66 ~1336 - >1365 Otes l'Arcedekne 29 29 ~1338 - >1365 John l'Arcedekne 27 27 ~1340 - >1365 Robert l'Arcedekne 25 25 1370 - 1418 William Alger 48 48 ~1342 - >1429 Martin l'Arcedekne 87 87 OCCUPATION: Priest ~1344 - >1365 Reginald l'Arcedekne 21 21 ~1346 - <1431 Michael l'Arcedekne 85 85 ~1348 - 1430 Isabella l'Arcedekne 82 82 ~1358 Johanna Bosun ~1375 Wadham ~1354 Thomas Cary ~1405 - 1488 William Paulet 83 83 ~1406 - 1477 Elizabeth Paulet 71 71 ~1353 - 1419 Richard Hankeford 66 66 (Research):See attached sources. 1370 - 1431 Thomas Fitche 61 61 1384 - <1428 Margaret Burton 44 44 1457 - 1538 Amyas Paulet 81 81 1437 - 1471 William Cary 33 33 1492 - 1550 William Cary 58 58 Will of William Carye, the elder, dwelling upon the "back" in St. Nicholas parish of the City of Bristol, 2 April 1571 proved 10 June 1572.
My body to be buried in the "crowde" of St. Nicholas.
Names: son William Carye, his daughter Anne, son in law John Lacie,
Names: Richard Carye, William Carye, Lettice, Francis and Elizabeth, children by the first wife of my eldest son, Richard Carye.
Names: Mary Carye one of Richards children.
States: money to the children of my son Richard Carye by his last wife.
Names: son in law Thomas Dyckinson.
Names: Mr. Robert Saxie, Mr. Robert Holton Chamberlain of the City. Annes Chiles, kinswoman.
Daper, 19.
1402 Christian Orchard ~1436 Alice Fulford ~1474 Agnes Hody ~1359 Thomasine Bosun ~1328 Robert Holway ~1397 James Portman 1372 - 1437 Cora Worth 65 65 ~1379 Thomas Cary ~1356 Johanna Cary ~1377 John Cary ~1383 - 1407 Thomas Paulett 24 24 (Research):See attached sources. ~1456 - BEF 2 Jan 1524/1525 Alice Paulet 1400 - 1437 Philip Cary 37 37 ~1460 Jane Carew Nicholas CAREW (AFN: 9TC7-L7) & Margaret DINHAM (AFN: 9TC7-MD) ~1480 - 1547 Margaret Fulkeram 67 67 1525 - 1560 Christian Dennis 35 35 ~1400 Robert Burton 1344 Abraham Worth ~1538 Joan Halton Chamberlin Sister to Robert H. Chamberlin of Bristol. ~1502 Joane Herle 1460 - 1540 Robert Cary 80 80 Commoners of Great Britian and Ireland, Vol. II, page 35.
The Visitations of Devon, 1564, p. 44
The Visitations of the County Devon, 1620, p. 47 - 49
The Visitations of the county of Cornwall  1530 - 1620, 1887, Vivian,  Page 70. Jane da. of Nicholas. States Robert Cary is fron Corkington, Somersetshire.
The Visitations of the county of Cornwall 1530 - 1620, 1887  Vivian, Dennys of Orleigh. Page 79, 218-220.
The Visitations of the county of Cornwall, Fedreric Thomas Colby,  p. 94-95. & 31.
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Cary, pp. 150-159
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Dennis of Holcombe Burnell & Orleigh, pp. 279-282
~1380 John Chidderlegh (Research):DEADEND: ~1384 John Dorchester ~1325 Alice Stafford ~1379 Margaret Courtenay ~1453 William Hody (Research):See attached sources. ~1375 William Orchard (Research):DEADEND: ~1453 Christiana Paulet 1420 Joanna Goldsborough ~1332 - <1400 Warin l'Arcedekne 68 68 (Spm) Sine Prole Mascula ("died without surviving male heir") ~1392 Florence l'Arcedekne (Research):See attached sources. ~1370 John Denebaud (Research):See attached sources. 1350 - 1404 John II Cary 54 54 Made Chief Baron of the Exchequer on 5 Nov 1387 by King Richard II.   Was also made a Judge.  Said to be very honest and loyal.  When Henry IV toppled Richard, Sir John took Richard's side, and was stripped of his lands and banished to Waterford, Ireland in 1400, where he died four years later. Named in deed #1387, Rich II. Named in an Inquisition 20 Richard II #127 (1397). Named in a settlement before marriage in 1376.


Sources:
Visitation of the County of Cornwall. p. 79 Cary of Launceston.
Henry Grosvenor Cary, The Cary Family in England,  p. 27
Text: Sir Henry Saint-George, The Visitation of the County of Devon in the year 1620. Ed. by Frederic Thomas Colby. London, 1872. Harleian society. Publications ; v.6.
Text: Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, London
Text: Lieutenant Colonel J. L. Vivian, The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Herald's Visitations of 1531, 1564, & 1620, with Additions
Text: May Folk Webb and Patrick Mann Estes, Cary-Estes Genealogy, Tuttle Publishing, 1939

Burke's "History of the Commoners" 1835, "The Torr Abbey Carys" : "Sir John Cary, knt., who, with his brother Sir William, represented the county of Devon in Parliament, in the 36th and 42nd Edward III. He espoused, first, Agnes, daughter of Lord Stafford, but had no issue. He wedded, secondly, Jane, daughter and co-heir of Sir Guy de Bryen, knt. (by Ann his wife, daughter and heir of William Holwey, esq. of Holwey) and left a son...."

Notes:
2 Edw 1:#76 (1274) - Henry de Tracy; granddaughter and heir, Maud and her spouse, Geoffrey de Camville; daughter Eva and spouse, Guy de Bryane.
35 Edw 1:#428 (1307) - Guy de Briane who with his wife Sibyl held rent from free tenants of Walter de Sully, one of the heirs of the barony Toriton, to hold in free marriage, by service of a rose yearly, with reversion to Walter if Sibyl should die without heir. Guy, son of Guy, aged 24, is his heir begotten of the said Sibyl.
1 Edw II:#64 (1308) - Guy de Brian; his son Guy de Brian, holding Kilwathkilnish; Joan, late the wife of Guy de Brian, grandfather of Guy who now is, has a third part in dower; Guy his son aged 23, is his next heir.
23 Edw III:#333 (1350) - Guy de Brian; died 17 June last; Guy de Brian aged 30- years and more, is his heir. 32 Edw III:#? - Shuppenhull manor held of Guy Bryan and Elizabeth, his wife of the inheritance of Edward le Despenser 9 Rich II:#211 (1386) - Guy de Brienne, knight, the younger; Alice his wife, still living; daus. Phillipa, age 7 and Elizabeth, age 4 are his next heirs. 10 Ric II:352 (1387) - Philip Brien, knght, d.s.p. on Jan 16; Guy de Briene, his father; Phillipa, dau of Guy de Brien and heir; William, aged 9 and more, son of Guy de Brien and heir; another dau, aged 5 years and more, heir. 14 Rich II:#959 (1390) - Guy de Briene, knight; Phillipa, wife of John Devros and Elizabeth, wife of Robert Lovell, daus of Guy de Briene his son; William and Phillip Briene, both d. w/o male heirs.

Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry,  vol.3 (London, 18th ed., 1972) p.169 starts with Sir John Cary's son, Robert. This was a wise and cautious end point for the pedigree.

A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire (London, 1882) by B. Burke, pp.101-102 This work correctly makes Sir John the father of Rober but it says that Robert's mother was 'Margaret, dau. of William Holwell, of Holwell in Devon and widow of Sir Guy de Brian.' BEP also gives Sir John a first wife 'Agnes, dau. of Lord Stafford.' As you you note 'the 1620 Visitation of Devon (p.48) states Sir John Carye [b. ca 1325] m.(2) Jane, dau. & coh. of Sir Guy de Brian.'

History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1386-1421 (HMSO, 1992) 2:495 in its article on Robert gives This information on his pedigree. He was the son of Sir John Cary (d.1395), of Cockington, Devon and chief baron of the exchequer by Margaret, dau. of Robert Holway, of Holway, Devon. This is correct.
1354 Margaret Holway Named in a settlement before marriage in 1376. Sir William Pole calls her Anne, daughter of William Holway of Holway.
Sources:
Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, London
Henry Grosvenor Cary, The Cary Family in England p. 27
Lieutenant Colonel J. L. Vivian, The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Herald's Visitations of 1531, 1564, & 1620, with Additions : p. 150
~1352 Isabell Folkray ~1355 Margaret Folkray ~1424 Joane Folkeroy ~1431 Edward Folkray ~1433 Hugh Folkray 1333 - 1 Jan 1412/1413 John Alger ~1519 Susan Cary ~1537 Aquo Cary ~1517 Agnes Cary ~1379 Jane Hankeford ~1450 Florence Paulet ~1356 Alice de Boys (Research):See attached sources. ~1370 Roger Boys ~1340 Eustace Sandeby 1329 John Boys ~1310 - ABT 1351/1352 Robert IV de Brent 1340 - UNKNOWN William Fitche ~1280 Robert III de Brent ~1285 Claricia de La Ford ~1312 John Brent ~1314 Avice Brent ~1326 Joan Brent 1465 - <1548 Thomas Carey 83 83 ~1352 - >1397 William Cary 45 45 ~1422 William Hody ~1424 Eleanor Mallet (Research):DEADEND: ~1430 Johanna Hody 1310 - UNKNOWN John Fitche 0875 - 0929 Willa Von Swabia 54 54 ~1420 John Hody ~1396 - ~1441 John Hody 45 45 ~1399 - 1473 Elizabeth Jewe 74 74 ~1426 Thomas Hody ~1428 - 1461 Alexander Hody 33 33 ~1432 Mary Hody ~1434 Agnes Hody ~1370 John Hody ~1374 Margareta Cole ~1398 Alexander Hody 1280 - UNKNOWN Roger Fitche ~1373 John Jewe (Research):DEADEND: ~1381 Alice Pilleston ~1331 - >1380 John Cole 49 49 1505 John Dennis Unlinked from William Dennis and Anne Berkley. The research I have done shows this link is in error. Dorothy Monke Known children of this union: Children
Christian DENNYS (DENNIS) b: in Of "Orleigh Court", Buckland Brewer, Devonshire, England
William DENNYS  b: in Of "Orleigh Court", Buckland Brewer, Devonshire, England
Katherine DENNYS b: in Of "Orleigh Court", Buckland Brewer, Devonshire, England
Philip DENNYS  b: in Of "Orleigh Court", Buckland Brewer, Devonshire, England
Jane DENNYS  b: in Of "Orleigh Court", Buckland Brewer, Devonshire, England

Visitation of Devon.
Visitation of Buckingham , p. 180.
Richard Cary 1568 - 1626 Christopher Cary 58 58 Will of Christopher Carye, of the City of Bristol, Merchant, in the parish of St. Stephens. 30 Oct. 1615, proved 31 May, 1626.
Names: son Christopher, William, and daughters Susanne, Bridget, Sible and Lettice Carye.
States: he has 6 children.
Names: brother John Young, gent.
Names: friend John Barker, John Purnell [joiner], Mrs. Ellis [widow], Walter Cope, John Durham.
Names: daughter Francis's  husband James Oliver.
Names: wife Lettice [Young]
Thomas Duning, witness
Hele, 60.
Thomas Asheldon D. 1545 Anthony Monke Will dated 20 Oct 1545 as shown in Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570. Elizabeth Wood 1258 - UNKNOWN Richard Fitche Humphery Monke 1468 Mary Champernowne 3rd. Daughter and coheir. ~1474 - 1529 Margaret Champernoun 55 55 ~1435 - 1468 Richard Champernowne 33 33 Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Champernowne, pp. 160-165
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.  Ancestral roots of sixty colonists who came to New England between 1623 and 1650 : the lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and some of their descendants. Weis, Frederick Lewis, 6th ed. with additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr.; assisted by David Faris. Genealogical Pub. Co., Baltimore, MD,1988. : line 25, pp. 28-31
~1437 Mary Hamlyn ~1461 Margery Champernowne 1465 Elizabeth Champernowne 1466 Joan Champernowne Elizabeth Graunt ~1213 Joan or Jane Valletort NOTE:  From GEDCOM LIST file. NAME: Joan Or Jane De /VALLETORT/ 1225 - UNKNOWN Richard Fitche D. >1487 John Monke Living 1487.  17 Edward IV. Source: Burkes General Armory. p.421. ~1266 Joan I Plantagenet de Cornwall After much research and cost researching this line, I found this posting on Google Groups.
Source: Todd A. Farmerie via: Google.
*** Todd A. Farmerie states:
Modbury was granted by Richard, King of Germany, (a.k.a. Richard "Plantagenet", Earl of Cornwall, younger son of King John) to Joan, widow of Ralph de Valletort, who was his mistress (hereafter Joan I). She later (or perhaps even during) married Alexander de Okestone (Oxton), and had by him an heir James. In 1285, James granted Modbury to Richard Champernowne, who enfeoffed it back to James (for the service of one rose annually), with reversion to Richard C and his right heirs. (A similar transaction transfered Broxton to a third party, and back to James with reversion to Richard and heirs.) Both of these appear to indicate an attempt to ensure that these lands passed from James, at his death, to (his nephew) Richard (Jr) Champernowne, who was son of an earlier Richard (Sr) C by Joan (II), "sister" of James. The question at hand is, who was Joan II's father.
**Source: Devon & Cornwall Notes & Queries**
Col. Prideux and John Benson
***Col Prideux cited two lines of evidence for his conclusion that Joan II was daughter of the King of the Germans.
1) the later heraldic displays of the Champernowne family included the arms of Valletort and of the Earldom of Cornwall directly linked, suggesting a descent from Cornwall that involved a Valletort connection.
2) Pole describes that James granted Modbury to his nephew Richard (Jr) Champernowne (clearly refering to the grant mentioned above) and he (Pole, that is) quoted a deed reporting the transfer of some foodstuffs to Richard (Sr) and Joan (II), in which Edmund, Earl of Cornwall calls Joan II his "sister". Since Edmund was legitimate son of Earl Richard, "it is probable" (Pole's words) that Joan II was Earl Richard's bastard.
***Benson responded:
1) any descent whereby Joan II might descend from the Earls of Cornwall involving Valletort is surely invalid, since Joan I was widow of Valletort and had no right to pass on the arms. Such descents as Risdon's (in which Joan II is shown as daughter of Joan I, daughter of Edmund, Earl of Cornwall) is obviously invented. Instead, Valletort (Vautort) came into the family in the next generation, with the marriage of the nephew Richard (Jr) to Elizabeth Vautort of North Tauton, and the linkage of Cornwall to Valletort supports an independant hypothesis that at the root of Elizabeth's Vautort/Valletort pedigree, a Valletort married the daughter of the earlier royal Earl of Cornwall, the bastard of Henry I. 2) the nugget of information from which Pole was working was that Richard (Jr) was "nephew" of James Oxton, and the rest is simply a gloss to fill out the dialogue, as shown by "it is probable". Pole's use of the word "nephew" shows that Joan II was full sister of James, daughter of Joan I by Alexander de Oxton. Anyhow, even if Pole DID see a document in which Edmund calls Joan II his sister, we underestimate the humor of our ancestors, and in this transaction among friends, Edmund was simply making a joke as to the character of Joan II's mother, his own father's mistress. He compared this to a document quoted by one of the county histories (sorry, I forget which) in which, in a similar humor, Richard Champernowne calls himself "King of Allemaigne."
***Col Prideux responded:
1) there were several of the Vautort coheiresses around, and it should not be hard to find such a Valletort/Cornwall linkage in one of the other families, if this is the nature of the Cornwall link. 2) "nephew", at the time, could as well refer to the son of a half-sister as to the son of a sister, and (quoting a historically oriented dictionary) in the 17th century, when Pole was writing, "it is probable" meant 'it is provable', and since he had the document at hand, he could prove it. Any document calling Richard Champernowne, King of Allemaigne, is bogus, and the historian quoting it is confused, or perhaps Richard was using the seal of his maternal grandfather, the King.
***Benson responded:
1)I  found the seal of Beatrice, sister of Elizabeth de Vautort, which shows the arms of Valletort, Cornwall, and Valletort differenced by a Cornwall bordure. This, he said, proves that the Cornwall arms came to the family through Elizabeth Vautort, and thus Joan was daughter of Alex de Oxton.
***Col. Prideux responded:
1) "This just goes to show that if you look for something long enough, you will find it"  At this point, the death of Col. Prideux ended the discussion.
***Todd A. Farmerie:
1) Benson clearly won this one, but the point was not valid to begin with. There is no way that a bastard daughter of Earl Richard and Joan I(de Valletort) could have brought either of these arms to Champernowne. However, Benson goes too far in his conclusions. The fact that an early Valletort married a daughter of Henry I's bastard in no way addresses the later Earl Richard/Champernowne connection. it only removes this line of argument from consideration.
2) A JOKE? He really thinks the document was a JOKE? Prideux wins that one. I am not familiar enough with the use of argumentative English in the late 17th century, but I know enough not to expect "half-nephew". IF probable meant provable, it is hard to argue with Pole's evidence. Even if it didn't, and Pole was simply being extremely cautious, the tone of the texts suggests that Pole is sitting there looking at a document in which Edmund calls Joan II his sister. It is too bad whatever the document was, we don't still have it. It could be a forgery, I suppose, but it does not involve a land transaction, and there is no particular benefit to the relationship that would make it worth the effort of forging it. (As to the Richard C, King of A quote, I suspect that the historian was reading a document of the King, and mistakenly applying it to the country squire who later held the same land.) Pole, in general, was careful, (many of his "mistakes" are actually those of his readers, who assume his lines of succession to property are actually pedigrees). He uses a narative form for presenting information, and (unfortunately) does not generally quote sources. That he stops to specifically comment on the relationship tells us that he KNEW this was a debated relationship, and his quote is his evidence for his conclusion.
3) The grants of Modbury and Broxton by James de Oxton, which served the sole purpose of establishing a reversion to Richard (Jr) Champernowne, seem to add evidence that Joan II was *not* daughter of Alexander de Oxton. Since James inherited this land from his mother Joan I, and Joan II is the only other known child of Joan I (except perhaps Earl Richard's other bastard, Richard of Cornwall - Alexander de Oxton did have at least one child by another wife, who put forward his claim when James made the Modbury grant), her son Richard (Jr) Champernowne would have been the legal heir. However, this would not have been the case had Joan II been bastard daughter of Joan I, and some sort of grant would have been necessary to prevent the land from falling to the general heirs of James (presumably his half-brother, unless the original grant to Joan I included a reversion). Since there was a fine accompanying these transactions, (they appear in the Feet of Fines (Modbury) and Fine Roll (Broxton)) it is unlikely that James would have gone to the expense had Richard been the legal heir.  Based on this, I take the position that Joan (II), wife of the first Richard Champernowne of the Modbury line, was daughter of Joan (I) de Valletort by Richard, Earl of Cornwall, King of the Germans.
~1260 - >1272 Richard Chambernon 12 12 1394 - >1435 John Champernon 41 41 Source:
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Champernowne, pp. 160-165
1400 Margaret Spriggy Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Champernowne, pp. 160-165 1411 John Hamlyn Sources:
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Champernowne, pp. 160-165
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.
The Visitations of Buckinghamshire, p. 180
State din the Visitations to be a daughter and Heir of Sir. Humphrey Talbot, who bore as arms of Talbot of Devon, Norfolk, Lac and Suffolk, England  "Ar, chevron inter 3 Talbots Sa. as such Sir. John Hamlyn, Knight bore as a coat of arms "Ar. 3 Talbots Hounds B.
~1415 Miss Talbot ~1340 - >1394 Richard Champernon 54 54 1180 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Fitche Nicholas Dennis Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Dennis of Holcombe Burnell & Orleigh, pp. 279-282

Known children from this union:
Children
John DENNYS  b: in Of "Orleigh Court", Buckland Brewer, Devonshire, England
Jane DENNIS
Anne DENNIS
Joan DENNIS
Katherine DENNIS
William DENNIS
~1390 Hugh Champernowne ~1392 - BET. 1418 - 1420 Richard Champernon ~1374 John Spriggy ~1378 Mrs Spriggy ~1314 - >1342 Thomas Champernon 28 28 Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Champernowne, pp. 160-165
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.
The Visitations of Buckinghamshire, p. 180
~1318 Eleanor de Rohart ~1347 Cicely Champernowne ~1349 Henry Champernowne John Sydenham 1150 - UNKNOWN William Fitche ~1343 - 1400 Alianore De Wilington 57 57 ~1310 Richard Champernowne ~1312 John Champernowne Grant, 1469, June 8. 9 Edward IV. 1 item : parchment ; 15 x 25 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by John Champernon, esq., and Elizabeth his wife and James Durneford to Walter Amadas, Joan his wife, and the heirs of the body of Walter of all their messuages, lands, etc., in Clyfton Dertmouth (Devon), that is between the tenement of Nicholas Stybbyng and William Foster to the north, the holding of the heirs of Margaret Melhewysh to the south, the garden of the aforesaid Nicholas Stybbyng to the west, and the King's Highway to the east, to hold the premises for the community of the vill of Derymouth aforesaid de communible ville de Dertmouth for an annual rent of 4s.; paying also 4s. yearly to the grantors; with liberty to the grantors to re-enter if their rent is a year in arrear; in default of heirs of the body of Walter, reversion, on his death, to John and Elizabeth and James, their heirs and assigns forever. Given on 8 June, 9 Edward IV. Signed: "Peperell".
WITNESSES: Richard Lambell, then mayor of Dertmouth, William Herry and John Perche, then bailiff there, Thomas Gale, John Longemede, John Fyssher, William Apole, Alan Holand, Richard Cade, William Grysbyn. With 3 seals (1.2, 1.8 & 1.5 cm.) of red wax, all broken and in portions only; the first seal, a fragment only; the second seal, bearing a device; the third seal, bearing a device: an animal (dog?) and legend (illegible).
NAMES: I. Peperell. II. Champernon, John. III. Champernon, Elizabeth. IV. Damford, James. V. Amadas, Walter. VI. Amadas, Jean. VII. Perche, John. VIII. Longemede, John. IX. Apole, William. X. Grysbyn, William. XI. Stybbyng, Nicholas. XII. Foster, William. XIII. Melhewysh, Margaret. XIV. Stybbyng, Nicholas. XV. Lambell, Richard. XVI. Hervy, William. XVII. Gale, Thomas. XVIII. Fisher, John. XIX. Holand, Alan. XX. Cade, Richard.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England--Devon. 2. Deeds--England--Dartmouth. 3. Devon (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Dartmouth (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQD0616
?? ~1296 Eleanor Lovell ~1316 Margaret Champernon 1241 Lawrence Plantagenet de Cornwall 5 Jan 1208/1209 - 1272 Richard Prince of England 1160 Margaret ~1187 Reginald de Valletort A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Enjoying Territorial Possessions or High Official Rank; But Uninvested with Heritable Honours.  By: John Burke, Publication: 1836, Vols. I - IV
Wadham College Oxford, T.G. Jackson, author.  Its Foundation Architecture and History with an Account of the Family of Wadham and Their Seats in Somerset and Devon.
Visitation of the County of Devon, 1620, By: Vivian, John Lambrick, Published By: Henry S. Eland, Exeter, 1895.
Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564, & 1620. With additions by Lieutenant-Colonel J.L. Vivian.
~1478 Anne Stewkley Known children of this union:

Nicholas DENNIS
George DENNIS
Elizabeth DENNIS (DENNYS) married Thomas Gifford of Yeo.
Alica Davis 1275 - 1319 William De Montagu 44 44 Cokayne's Complete Peerage
BARONY OF MONTAGU II. 2. WILLIAM (DE MONTAGU), LORD MONTAGU, son and heir. During the greater part of his life he was employed in the wars in Scotland and Wales, and abroad. In respect of his Iands in Oxon and Berks he was summoned for military service in 1301, and in March 1302/3, as "King's yeoman," he was under orders for Scotland, being appointed to supervise the shipping for the war. In May 1304 he was with the King at the siege of Stirling. He and his uncle Amauri de St. Amand, governor of Oxford Castle, and others were in this year imprisoned in the Tower for an alleged offence at Oxford, his father Simon being one of William's sureties; but he was soon acquitted. He was ceremoniously knighted, with many others, at the knighting of Prince Edward, 22 May 1306. In Feb. 1306/7 he was with his father on service in Scotland. In 1309 he had a charter of free warren at Aston Clinton, Bucks, which was perhaps settled on him on his marriage; and took part in the tournament at Stepney. In 1311 he was commissioned to survey Hastings and other castles and their defences, and to provide custodians for them, and on 29 September was given charge of Berkhamstead Castle. In 1312 he gave the advowson of Donyat to Medmenham Abbey, and in 1314 had licence to alienate land, to Godstowe nunnery. In May 1313 he accompanied the King and Queen overseas to attend the Coronation of Louis X. He was on service in Scotland again this year and the next, and had very varied duties as captain of the knights of the King's household. Early in 1315 he was abroad again for the King, and in Feb. 1315/6 was a commander in Wales against Llewelyn Bren, and on the submission of the Welsh was one of the commissioners to take fines from Llewelyn's followers. In July 1316 he was in Bristol, on a mission to settle the disputes between Sir Bartholomew de Badlesmere and the burgesses. In recognition of his good services he was granted, in August 1316, the marriage of Joan, daughter and heir of Theobald de Verdun [Lord Verdun], and on 15 January 1316/7, as steward of the King's household, he was awarded 200 marks per annum until the King should provide him with lands or rents of that value. This was done in June, when the manors of Gravesend, Kent, and Kingsbury, Somerset, &c., were granted to him, as the King's bachelor, for life; and on 26 September he had a grant of free warren in Saxlingham, Norfolk, and other of his manors, and licence to crenellate his house at Cassington, Oxon. He was summoned to Parliament 20 November 1317 and later, and was one of the majores barones of the King's party. In August 1318 he was made keeper of Abingdon Abbey, which was voluntarily under the King's protection on account of its debts, and on 20 November was appointed Seneschal of Gascony, where he died in the following year. He married, circa 1292, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Piers DE MONTFORT, of Beaudesert, co. Warwick, by Maud, his wife, daughter and heir of Matthew de la Mare. He died 18 October 1319, in Gascony. In May 1320 his widow renounced her dower in certain lands. She married, 8 June 1322, Sir Thomas DE FURNIVALLE, of Sheffield, Worksop, &c. (LORD FURNIVALLE], who died shortly before 18 April 1332. She died in August 1354, and was buried in the Prior of St. Frideswide (now Christ Church), Oxford, where her tomb is still to be seen in the Latin Chapel. See FURNIVALLE. [CP 9 :80-2, 14:482]
1275 - 1354 Elizabeth de Montfort 79 79 1st husband Sir William De Montagu,  2nd husband Sir Thomas De Furnivalle
Visitations of Warwickshire
D. >1424 William Le Moncke Christian (Alice) Creckhorn Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Gold/Gould, pp. 418-432
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.
John Creckhorn Alice Gold William Graunt 1110 - UNKNOWN Robert Fitche Edward Wood Bares the arms of Wood of Warwick. Stevenson William Le Moncke Alice Hyll Robert Hyll Visitation of Cornwall, Viv ed. p. 229 Isabella Wadham John Wadham Elizabeth Shilston William Shilston Thomas Monke 1220 John Deincourt Elizabeth Powell co heir to her father. Catherine Hawks Frances Plantagenet Mary Hantley Esq. Stevenson 1200 - 12 Jan 1238/1239 Isabel Marshall 1223 - 1291 Eleanor of Provence 68 68 1167 - 1216 I King of England John 49 49 Reigned 1199-1216 1189 - 1246 Isabella of Angaouleme 57 57 Other children of this marriage were Guy and Geoffrey de Lusignan who both lived to maturity - cf CP VII, p. 547 note (a). 5 Mar 1131/1132 - 1189 II King of England Henry Reign 1154-1189 1278 - 1322 Bartholomew deBadlesmere V Lord Badlesmere 44 44  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1122 - 1204 Eleanore 82 82 Hugh Lusignan 5 Jan 1207/1208 - 1272 Richard Plantagenet de Cornwall Had 5 sons but none had male issue.
1st wife Countess Isabella Marshall 2nd wife Sanchia Berenger De Provence 3rd wife Beatrix Van Falkenburg Associated with the widow of Sir Alexander Okeston, namely Joan De Valletort.
A History of the Plantagenets, Vol I, The Conquering Family, Thomas B Costain, 1949, Doubleday & Co, p248: Another son called Richard who became the richest man in the world and was elected Holy Roman Emperor.
A History of the English Speaking People, Winston S Churchill, Vol I, The Birth of Britain, Dodd Mead & Co, p271: At the Imperial election 1257 the King's brother, Richard of Cornwall, offered himself as Emperor, and Henry spent lavishly to secure his election.
The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England, Antonia Fraser, Alfred A Knopf, 1975, p25: Richard of Cornwall King of the Romans 1209-72
1210 - 4 Mar 1237/1238 Joan Plantagenet 1214 - 1241 Isabella Plantagenet 27 27 ~1215 - 1275 Eleanor Plantagenet 60 60 [TIMS FILE.FTW]

16 at Wm Marshal's death in 1231
1153 - 1156 William Plantagenet 3 3 28 Feb 1153/1154 - 1183 Henry Plantagenet 1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet 33 33 1157 - 1199 I Richard 41 41 Reigned 1189-1199 1 Mar 1260/1261 - 1326 Hugh Le Despencer Hugh de Spencer, Sr., so called to distinguish him from his son Hugh, whobore the designation of Hugh, Jr., both so well known in history as thefavorites of the unfortunate Edward II. Of Hugh, Sr., we shall firsttreat, although as father and son ran almost the same course at the sametime, and shared a similar fate, it is not easy to sever their deeds.Hugh, Sr., paid a fine of 2000 marks to the king, in the 15th of Edward I(1287), for marrying without license Isabel, daughter of William deBeauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and widow of Patrick de Chaworth (you descendfrom her and Patrick also), and by this Isabel he had this only son Hugh.

In the 22nd year of Edward I, 1294, he was made governor of OldhamCastle, Co. Southampton, and the same year had summons to attend the kingat Portsmouth, prepared with horse and arms for an expedition intoGascany. In two years afterwards he was in the battle of Dunbar inScotland, where the English arms triumphed (this was the time when EdwardI took the Stone of Scone away from the Scotch). The next year Hugh, Sr.,was one of the commissioners accredited to treat of peace between theEnglish king and the kings of the Romans and France. To the very close ofEdward I's reign his lordship seems to have enjoyed the favour of thatgreat prince and had summons to Parliament from June 23, 1295, to March14, 1322; but it was after the accession of Edward's unhappy son, EdwardII, that the Spencers attained that extraordinary eminence, from which,with their feeble minded master, they were eventually hurled into thegulf of irretrievable ruin. In the first years of Edward II's reign wefind the father and son engaged in the Scottish wars. In the 14th ofEdward II, 1221, the king having heard of great animosities between theyounger Despenser or Spencer, as they were now known, and Humphrey deBohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, and learning they were collectingtheir followers in order to come to open combat, interfered and strictlycommanded Lord Hereford to forbear. About the same time, a disputearising between Hereford and John de Moebray, regarding some lands inWales, young Despencer seized possession of the estate and kept it fromboth litigants. This conduct and similar proceedings on the part of theElder Despencer, exciting the indignation of the barons, they formed aleague against the favorites and placing the king's cousin, ThomasPlantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, at their head marched with banners flyingfrom Sherbourne to St. Albans, whence they despatched the Bishops ofSalisbury, Hereford and Chichester to the king with a demand that theSpencers be banished; to which the king, however, giving an imperiousanswer in the negative, the irritated barons continued on their route toLondon, when Edward at the instance of the Queen acquiesced; whereuponthe barons summoned a Parliament in which the Spencers were banished fromEngland and the sentence was proclaimed in Westminster Hall. To thisdecision, Hugh, the Elder, submitted and retired, but Hugh, the Younger,lurked in divers places, sometimes on land and sometimes at sea, and wasfortunate enough to capture during his exile two vessels near Sandwichladen with merchandise to the value of œ40,000, after which beingrecalled by the king an army was raised, which encountered and defeatedthe baronial forces at Boroughbridge, in Yorkshire. In this action wherenumbers were slain, the Earl of Lancaster was taken prisoner and carriedto his own Castle of Pontefract, and there after a summary trial (theElder Spencer being one of the judges) beheaded. The Spencers now becamemore powerful than ever, the Elder was immediately created Earl ofWinchester, the king loading him with grants of forfeited estates. YoungSpencer obtained like his father immense grants, from the lands forfeitedafter the battle of Boroughbridge, but not satisfied with these, and theywere incredibly numerous, he extorted by force whatsoever else hepleased. Amongst other acts of lawless oppression, it is related that heseized upon the person of Elizabeth Comyn, a great heiress, the wife ofRichard Talbot, in her house in Kennington in Surrey and detained her 12months in prison, until he compelled her to assign to him the manor ofPainswike in Gloucestershire, and the Castle and manor of Goderick in theMarches of Wales; but these ill-obtained and ill-exercised powers werenot formed for permanent endurance, and a brief space only was necessaryto bring it to a termination. The Queen (Isabel, Daughter of Philip IV,the Fair, King of France, and sister of Lewis X, Philip V, and Chas. IV,through whom Edward III, of England, claimed the French crown) and herparamour Roger de Mortimer had fied to France, and through the influenceof the Despencers had been proclaimed traitors, ascertaining the feelingsof the people, ventured to return, and landed at Harwich, with thenoblemen and persons of eminence who had been exiled after the defeat atBoroughbridge, raised the royal standard, and soon found themselves atthe head of a considerable force; when marching upon Bristol, where theking and his favorites then were, they were received in that city withacclamation, and the Elder Spencer being seized, was brought in chainsbefore the prince and the barons and received judgment of death, whichwas accordingly executed, by hanging the culprit upon a gallows in sightof the king and his son, upon St. Dennis Day in Oct., 1326. It is said bysome writers that the body was hung up with two strong cords for fourdays, and then cut to pieces and given to the dogs. Isabel, his wife, haddied shortly before May 30, 1306.

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of Winchester
0902 - 0937 Rudolph II King of Burgundy 35 35 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet 27 27 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet 52 52 1165 - 1199 Joan Plantagenet 34 34 1155 - 1214 VIII Alfonso 58 58 D. 1264 Hugh Lusignan Yolande Braine ~1162 - <1217 Richard Clare 55 55 [TIMS FILE.FTW]

Played a leading part in the negotiations for Magna Carta and was one ofthe 25 Barons guardians thereof - CP.
~1191 - 2 Feb 1236/1237 Joan D. 1217 Isabel FitzRobert D. 1261 Sancha Berenger 1196 - 24 Mar 1253/1254 William deFerrers VII Earl of Derby William de Ferrers, 7th Earl of Derby, who upon doing homage for hislands in 32 of Henry III (1248) had livery of Chartley Castle and theother lands of his mother's inheritance; and the same year he sat in theparliament held in London, wherein the king made so stout an answer tohis impetuous barons. He married 1st Sybil, one of daughters and co-heirsof William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, and by her had 7 daughters. 1235 - 1271 Henry Plantagenet 35 35 1158 - 1186 Duke of Brittany Geoffrey 27 27 1122 - 1204 Eleanor 82 82 ~1186 - ~1246 Richard FitzRoy 60 60 Rose ~1120 - 1190 Maurice FitzRobert 70 70 ~1166 Suzanne Warenne 1206 - 1272 III King of England Henry 66 66 Reign 1216-1272, started at the age of nine, October 28, 1216 ~1217 - 1291 Eleanor Provence 74 74 D. <1256 Hawise Lovayne 1155 Rohaise Hanselyn ~1231 - ~1304 John Warenne 73 73 ~1190 - 1231 William Marshal 41 41 >1225 - <1296 William Valence 71 71 [TIMS FILE.FTW]

His death date does not square with his daughter's birth date...
D. <1307 Johanna Munchensy [TIMS FILE.FTW]

Ancestor of barons of Hastings.
Mar 1154/1155 - 1183 Henry 1157 - 1199 Richard 42 42 1161 Eleanor 1165 Joan 1156 Matilda 1160 - 1 Jan 1224/1225 Amice FitzRobert 1109 - 1174 William Bardolf 65 65 The first of this family upon record, William Bardolf, was sheriff ofNorfolk and Suffolk, from the 16th to 21st of Henry II [1170-1175],inclusive, and after him came his son and heir, Thomas Bardolf. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 22, Bardolf, Barons Bardolf]

________________________

Speculative connection to parents. However, the family ties to Normandyare clear in the grants bestowed by William's son Thomas on the Abbey ofBec-Herlouin, the chronology involved, and the fact that the name Hughappears repeatedly in the Bardolf line in England, give this credence.
D. 1240 Llewelyn Fawr ap Iowerth ~1173 - 7 Mar 1225/1226 William Longespee [TIMS FILE.FTW]

From the DNB article on Rosamund de Clifford:  Rosamond is commonlyreported to have had two sons by Henry II, viz. Geoffrey, archbishop ofYork, and William Longsword, earl of Salisbury. This statement does notseem to reach further back than the end of the sixteenth or beginning ofthe seventeenth century. Apparently it is unknown to any Englishchronicler or historian before the publication of Speed's History ofGreat Britain in 1611. It has since been accepted by both Carte andEyton. That Geoffrey and William cannot both have been sons of FairRosamond is plain from the fact that the former was born in 1151-2 (Gir.Cambr. iv. 384), whereas Rosamond is spoken of as a girl (puellam) morethan twenty years later (Gir. Cambr. De Instit. Princ. p. 91). We alsoknow from Walter Map that Geoffrey's mother was called Ykenai or Hikenai(De Nug. Curial. pp. 228, 235); and it is worth notice that, according toDr. Stubbs, William Longsword laid claim to the inheritance of a SirRoger de Akeny, a name which bears a close resemblance to Walter Map'sYkenai (Gir. Cambr., ed. Dimock, vii. p. xxxvii). There is moreover nopositive evidence in favour of William Longsword's being the son ofRosamond. In 1607, when Margaret, wife of George Clifford, third earl ofCumberland [q.v.], claimed the Clifford estates for her daughter Anne,and instituted proceedings against her brother-in-law Francis, anotherclaimant, the Clifford genealogy was investigated, and the theory thatWilliam Longsword was the son of Rosamond Clifford was adopted. It istrue that William Longsword first appears in history in 1196, when a sonof Henry by Rosamond would come of age. The manor of Appleby inLincolnshire was granted to one William Longsword (who proves to be thebrother, and not the son, of Henry II) before 1200; the manor of Applebyin Westmoreland belonged to the Cliffords of the fourteenth century. Aconfusion between these two properties may well have led the suitors of1607 to associate Longsword with the Clifford genealogy, and to supportthe former's suggested parentage.
Ida [TIMS FILE.FTW]

Apparently the Bradenstoke Cartulary has some deeds that include areference to Countess Ida, mother of William Longspee.  In the past thislady was thought to be "Fair Rosamund" (Clifford) but this has beendiscredited for at least two centuries.  College of Arms thought it wasRosamund in 1926 odd, but then they were always a bit behind the times...
D. <1216 Drew Montacute Aline Basset D. <1260 Isabel Ferrers Hawise Basset D. 1271 Philip Basset [TIMS FILE.FTW]

CP has 2 daus not in DNB: Margery who m, John Ld FitzJohn & Phillippe whom. Henry Newburgh 5th earl of Warwick. Weird...  His 2nd wife was "Ela,dau of William Longspee".  But which William?
D. 1241 Gilbert Basset 1187 - 1266 Hamon Peche 79 79 D. 1259 Fulk Basset D. 9 Feb 1255/1256 Alice Brun D. 1249 Hugh Brun Aimar Taillefer D. <1234 Richard Talbot Basset D. 9 Feb 1296/1297 Ela Longespee Humphrey Talbot Margaret Monke Thomas Gifforde 1145 Gilbert Peche 1249 - 1300 Edmund Plantagenet 50 50 Died in the 19th year of the reign of King Edward the 1st.
Sources:
Burke's Peerage & Baronetage 104th Edition, 1967,  Burke's, London, England English Baronies: A Study of Their Origin and Descent 1086 - 1327, Author: I. J. Sanders,  Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1960, pp. 8-9, 93
Wadham College Oxford Its Foundation Architecture and History with an Account of the Family of Wadham and their Seats in Somerset and Devon. Various Pedigree Charts, Jackson, T.G., Clarendon Press, Oxford, England, 1893.
Burke's Guide to the Royal Family. Burke's Peerage Limited, 1st Ed., Herald Printers (Westminster Press Ltd.), London, 1973: The Anglo=Saxon Kingdoms, pp. 187-209: The Kings of Wessex, pp. 187-188; Kings of all England, pp. 189-209; The Dukes of Normandy, p. 310; The House of Anjou, p. 311; Kings and Queens of Scotland, pp. 312-320; The Kings and Princes of Wales, pp. 321-326: their works consulted "H.M. Lane's The Royal Daughters of England (1910)"; "Professor F.M. Powicke's Handbook of British Chronology (1939)"; G.E. Cokayne's "Complete Peerage"; "The Dictionary of National Biography"; "Sir John Edward Lloyd's History of Wales"; "The Dictionary of Welsh Biography"; A.C. Addington's "The Royal House of Stuart"; C.A. Starke's "Series of Genealogical Handbooks"
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Monk of Potheridge, pp. 568-570.
The Visitation of Shropshire, 1569,1584 and1623, By Robert Tesswell, Augustine Vincent and William Camden. Published London,1889
The Visitation of Shropshire, Held in the Wales National Library, By: Robert Trefell, Augustine Vincent, William Camden, Richard Lee, and Robert Cooke.  1569, 1584,1623 and 1637.
The Visitation of the County of Devon, 1620, edited by Thomas Colby, London, 1872
The Visitation of Devon, 1531 and 1564, edited by Thomas Colby, London, 1881
The Visitation of the county of Buckingham, 1634 by: John Philipot, William Ryley, Sir. Richard St. George, Sir. John Borough and William Harvey.
being a transcript of MS. Eng. Mics. C. 17 in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.
The Royal Families of England Scotland and Wales. By: John Burke and John Bernard Burke. London, 1848
Margaret de Clare Elizabeth Brampton Joan de Valletort Sources:

Genealogicel History of the Kings and Queens of England. By: Francic Sandford. editor: Samuel Stebbing, ob. cit. page 99-100 lists only Richard, walter and Isabell.
The House of Cornwall, by: Cecil George Savile Foljamb, Earl of Liverpool, and Compton Read. P. 31-43.
Complete Peerage rev. ed. London 1910-1959Vol. 11, page 431, note G.
On son Richard see "The Barons of Burford" in " The Genealogist, 1879, Vol. 3, Pages 225-230.
Dictionary of National Biography, Vol.48, Page 174.

Known children from this union.
Richard de Cornwall
Walter de Cornwall
Lawrence de Cornwall  b: ABT. 1241
Isabella de Cornwall  b: ABT. 1258
Joan de Cornwall  b: ABT. 1260
Philip de Cornwallys  b: ABT. 1262
1258 Isabella Plantagenet de Cornwall 1262 Philip Plantagenet de Cornwall Richard Plantagenet de Cornwall >1103 - 1120 Richard Of England 17 17 <1103 - 1120 William IV 'Atheling' 17 17 1101 - BET 1101 AND 1102 Son Prince Of England 1054 Avelina Goth ~1095 Elizabeth Of England ~1103 - 1120 William Of England 17 17 ~1114 - >1130 Gundred (Rohesia) Of England 16 16 ~1114 - >1175 Rohese Fitzroy 61 61 BET 1110 AND 1115 - 1175 Rainald De Dunstanville BET 1095 AND 1100 - 1122 Sibyl Elizabeth Of Scotland ~1090 - 1147 Robert De Caen 57 57 Illegitimate child of Henry I. ~1069 Ansfride (Concubine) ~1102 Fulk Of England ~1102 Juliane Of England 1100 - 1185 Hamon Pecche 85 85 ~1091 Matilda (Maud) Fitzhenry ~1095 Miss Princess Of England ~1099 - 1141 Alice (Aline) 42 42 ~1098 Constance FitzHenry 1096 Maud Montvillers ~1120 Isabel Hedwig Of England 1096 - >1157 Emma Bastard Of England 61 61 ~1085 - ~1152 Edith (Eda) Fitzforne 67 67 Edith was a mistress of Henry I King of England. ~1093 - 1172 Robert Plantagenet 79 79 ~1073 - ~1136 Nest verch Rhys Of Wales 63 63 1110 - UNKNOWN Alice Peverell ~1105 - 1157 Henry Fitzhenry 52 52 ~1068 - >1090 Gleva De Tracy 22 22 ~1097 - 1136 William II De Tracy 39 39 ~1062 Sibyl De Montgomery ~1094 - 1157 Maud (Mabel) (Sibyl) Fitzhammon 63 63 ~1112 - 1179 Roger Fitzrobert 67 67 ~1116 - BET 1159 AND 1160 Hamon Fitzrobert ~1118 Mabel Fitzrobert ~1120 - 1183 William Of Gloucester Fitzrobert 63 63 ~1122 - >1147 Philip Fitzrobert De Gay 25 25 0400 - UNKNOWN Coel Hen ~1128 - >1159 Robert Fitzrobert 31 31 ~1050 - 10 Mar 1106/1107 Robert Fitzhammon Lord of Lamora <1101 - 1119 Richard Of Lincoln 18 18 Drowned in the White Ship ~1068 - 1135 Henry I England 67 67 Henry I, King of England

Henry I, (b. 1069), one of the greatest kings of England, ascended thethrone on 5 Aug. 1100 , and ruled until his death on 1 Dec. 1135. Thethird son of William I, he succeeded his oldest brother, William II, whodied under suspicious circumstances while hunting with Henry. Henry'soldier brother Robert I (c.1054-1134), duke of Normandy, invaded(1101)England but was defeated at Tinchebrai, France and was forced torecognize Henry as king. Subsequently, Henry seized (1106) Normandy aswell. Henry imprisoned Robert and he remained in prison until his deathin 1134

In his coronation charter (1100) Henry promised to remedy the allegedmisrule of William II; this document was the first English royal charterof liberties, the ancestor of Magna Carta (12 15). The king exploited hisresources as feudal suzerain; yet in his reign occurred the beginning ofthe transformation of feudalism by the commutation of personal tofinancial service. The creation of the office of justiciar and of theroyal exchequer also constituted the first appearance of specializationin English government. Royal justice was brought to the local level byitinerant judges, and control over the kingdom was strengthened.

He once issued a charter of liberties of great importance, conciliatinghis English subjects in order to gain their support in his struggle withthe Norman nobles, whose power he steadily opposed. This charter laterserved as the basis for the Magna Carta.

Although many barons objected to the severity of his rule, Henry gavepeace, security, and stability to his country. He quarreled with thechurch over the lay investiture of clergy, forcing the archbishop ofCanterbury, Saint Anselm, into exile for a time. This issue wassettled(1107), however, by a compromise that served as the pattern forlater resolution of the Investiture Controversy in Europe. During Henry'sreign England participated increasingly in Continent al intellectuallife. His was also the first post-Conquest reign noted for patronage oflearning and of secular officials.
BET 1086 AND 1096 - ~1147 Isabel (Elizabeth) De Beaumont ~1079 - 1118 Matilda (Edith) Of Scotland 38 38 BET 1103 AND 1105 - 1151 Adeliza Of Louvain ~1120 - 1189 Maud Fitzrobert De Gloucester 69 69 1370 - 1403 Giles Daubeney 32 32 ~1311 Henry De Willington Inq for Henry de Wylingtone
at Yate, 6th June 1349, Edward III.
Names son and heir, aged 7 years, John de Wylyngtone.
Chan. Inq. p.m. Ser. I, 23 Edward III, Pt. I, No. 74.
Chan. Inq. p.m. Edward III, File 96.
1328 - 1378 Thomas de Wingfield 50 50 Thomas acquired by his marriage with Margaret, daughter and heir ofWilliam Bovile, and widow of William Carbonel, the lands of Letheringham,in Suffolk, in the church of which place, himself and several of hisdescendants lie interred.

from the internet:
Sir, Knt of Letheringham Thomas7 DE WINGFIELD (5022) (John6Wingfield, John5de Wingfield, Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born circa 1328 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He married Margaret de Boville (5023), daughter of Sir John de Boville (54403) and Petronella Scales (54404), before 1345. He died in August 1378 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON SIR THOMAS WINGFIELD KNT OF LETHERINGHAM (RN 5022):

Inherited Badingham.

Lanky, Monkish Looking, His Monument Is in Wingfield Church.

1346 Fought at Crecy [Salt Xvi,96] (Edward Iii Defeated the French). In the Retinue of Earl of Arundel.

Left 12 Silver Spoons and 6 Pieces of Plate and De Brews' Armour Which Was "Never to Leave the Family."

Held Metton and Hasketon.

1347 Keeper of Bromfield for the Black Prince

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg, England.

Margaret DE BOVILLE (5023) was born at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. She married Sir William Carbonell (142302). She died at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. Her married name was Wingfield. SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON MARGARET BOVILLE WINGFIELD (RN 5023):

Miserere of Margaret and Her Husband, North Choir, Norwich Cathedral (Carved Wooden Busts)


Held Falcons Hall, Rickinghall.

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg, England.

The two known children of Sir, Knt of Letheringham Thomas7 de Wingfield (5022) and Margaret de Boville (5023) were as follows:

    * 14. i. Elenor8 WINGFIELD (5028) was born at Suffolk, England. She married Sir Knt William Hoo (5925).

* + 15. ii. Sir, Knt of Letherigham John WINGFIELD (5029), born circa 1345 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England; married Marg
1282 Letha ~1315 Isabel Whalesboro 1289 - >1353 John Whalesburgh 64 64 ~1293 Lamellen Cornwall ~1090 - 1120 Maud Of England 30 30 Drowned in the White Ship. 7 Feb 1101/1102 - 1169 Matilda (Maud) 'The Empress' Of Germany [13143.ftw] Unknown Mistress Elizabeth ~1097 Sibyl Elizabeth De Falsise Dau 2 Of Henry I 1105 - <1141 Alix Fitzhenry 36 36 1305 - 1376 John de Wingfield 71 71 Sir Lord of Wingfield John6 WINGFIELD (5012) (John5de Wingfield, Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born circa 1305 at England. He married Elizabeth Honypott (5016), daughter of John Honypott Esq (54532) and Juliana Unknown (54533). He died circa 1358.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON SIR JOHN WINGFIELD LORD OF WINGFIELD (RN 5012):

Sir John Wingfield Held Lands in:

Yorks (Nettons,balne, 8 Miles East of Pontefract, of John of Warren, Earl of Surrey) 220 Acres

Hants (Crondall, near Farnham)

Norfolk (Maidestone, near Frettenham)

Suffolk (Hurts Hall, Saxmundham; Saxlingham).

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg, England.

Elizabeth HONYPOTT (5016) was born circa 1309 at England. She died CA 1298-1388. She Honypott Arms: 8 Torreauxes, 3,2,2 And 1.[Vis. Norfolk 1563] There IS Still A Honeypot Farm AT Wingfield Today.

The two known children of Sir Lord of Wingfield John6 Wingfield (5012) and Elizabeth Honypott (5016) were as follows:

    * + 10. i. Sir, Lord of Wingfield John7 WINGFIELD (5020), born at Saxmundham, Suffolk, England; married Elenor or Alianore de Glanvyle (5021).

* + 11. ii. Sir, Knt of Letheringham Thomas DE WINGFIELD (5022), born circa 1328 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England; married Margaret de Boville (5023).
1130 - ~1204 Herbert II Fitzherbert 74 74 ~1365 Katherine Daubeney Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Champernowne, pp. 160-165 1320 - 1412 Margaret Whalesburgh 92 92 ~1105 - >1172 Jordan De Camberon 67 67 ~1115 - >1190 Mabira de Caen 75 75 ~1135 - 1203 Henry De Champernon 68 68 ~1368 Thomas Daubeney ~1365 William Daubeney 1105 - ~1155 Herbert Fitzherbert 50 50 Eustacia Of England 1310 Elizabeth Honypot ~1100 - >1162 Hasculf De Soligny 62 62 ~1070 Othoer De Soligneio ~1110 Philip De Soligny ~1140 Mabel De Soligny ~1138 - <1214 Jordan De Champernowne 76 76 ~1170 Richard De Champernowne ~1260 Ralph De Willington Inp of Ralph de Wylynton, Chivaler
8th of May 1348, 22 Edward III.
Names uncle and next heir to as Reginald de Wylynton, aged 70 years.
Names his wife Eleanor.
Names Henry de Wilynton as a heir.
Chan.Ipq. p.m. Ser. I, 22 Edward III, 1st. notes., No. 29.
Chan. Inq.p.m. Edward III, file 89.
~1265 Eleanor De Lomen ~1235 John De Willington IPM. 13 Jan. 1339, 12 edward .
IPM taken at Frompton Cotel. Gloucestershire, England.
Names son and heir  Ralph de Wylington, aged 30 and more.
Chan.Imp. 12 Edward III, 1st, Nos. 36
New reference, Chan. Ipm. Edward III, file 54.
~1235 Joan Champernowne Ipm of Joan wife of John de Wylynton
19 Edward III, 1345.
Names son and heir, Ralph.
Glouc. Inq. Vol. 30.
Chan.Inq. p.m., Ser.I, 19 Edward III, 1st. Nos., No. 17.
Chan. Inq. p.m., Edward III, file 76.
1278 - 1337 John de Wingfield 59 59  Sir Lord of Wingfield & Dennington John5 DE WINGFIELD (5009) (Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born circa 1279 at England. He married Ann "Peach" Peche (5010), daughter of Sir John of Peche's Manor Peche (54530) and Female Unknown (54531), before 1305.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON SIR JOHN WINGFIELD LORD OF WINGFIELD (RN5009):

25th April 1279 Going Beyond the Seas with Edward I Was William De Brews, of Stowlangtoft, Suffolk Who

Nominated John Wingfield and Richard De Brews as His Attorneys until Christmas. (Reyce 257)


1290-1302: Alice Wingfield Sister of Ada, of next Manor to Holt, Norfolk Widow of Walter De Wingfield Was

Heiress of Robert De Bringhurst (Near Rockingham Castle). (Vch Leics 82; Iro De 221-4).

1308 & 1310 Letitia De Wingfield, of Darsham and Syleham Presented to Hulverton Church by the Countess of

Norfolk (Alice De Hemnonia. (F of F, Suffolk, 1189-1482, Rye 1900). Letitia De Wingfield's Daughter Married

Sir Hugh Hercy of Grove, Yorks. [Vis-Yorks 1584/5].

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg England.

Ann "Peach" PECHE (5010) Ref: Blomfd V, 8. SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON ANNE PECHE WINGFIELD (RN 5010):

Sir John Peche of Peche's Manor, Diss (Blomford V18) Had Sir Ralph's or Curple's Manor, Helmenham and

Flixton (Blomford V, 185)

1302 Hugo Peche Was One of Two Knights (MPs) for Suffolk. [Reyce 257]

1310-12 John Botetourt, Governor of Framlingham Castle. [Hawes 36]

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg England.

The four known children of Sir Lord of Wingfield & Dennington John5 de Wingfield (5009) and Ann "Peach" Peche (5010) were as follows:

    * 6. i. Lord of Stradbroke "The Poaching Parson" Giles Egidius6 WINGFIELD (5014) was born at England.

      He died without issue. SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON GILES EGIDIUS WINGFIELD, THE POACHING PARSON (RN 5014):

      1272 PARSON OF WINGFIELD. PATRON WAS GILES LE RUS. [ALDWELL 55]

      1299 PARSON OF CHICKERING [BM AD 7260 CHARTERS]

      1321-1338, or later. RECTOR & PARSON OF EARSHAM. PRESENTED 1321 BY THOMAS DE BROTHERTON, MARSHAL OF ENGLAND

      [ROT. ORIG I, 184 V7; BM 33247 ORIG 669]

      1338 HAD UP BY HIS NEPHEW FOR POACHING RABBITS.

      COMPILER: JOCELYN WINGFILED, 18 CHIDDINGSTONE STREET, LONDON SW6 3TG, ENGLAND.

    * + 7. ii. Sir Lord of Wingfield John WINGFIELD (5012), born circa 1305 at England; married Elizabeth Honypott (5016).

    * + 8. iii. Lord of Dennington Richard WINGFIELD (5011), born 1305 at Suffolk, England; married Female Unknown (5015).

    * 9. iv. Roger WINGFIELD (5013) was born after 1306 at England. He died at Brinston/Badingham/Weighton.

      SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON ROGER WINGFIELD (RN5013):

      HE WAS EDWARD I'S CLERK OF THE WARDROBE, WHICH MEANT EFFECTIVELY THE MINISTER IN CHARGE OF THE WAR OFFICE, THE FOREIGN OFFICE AND THE TREASURY, AND ONE OF THE EIGHT MOST POWERFUL MEN IN THE COUNTRY. HE LIVED AT BRINSTON, NEAR ALTHORP, AND AT BADINGHAM, SUFFOLK, AND AT WEIGHTON, YORKS.

      1306 - 1314 CLERK OF THE WARDROBE

      1308 - 1310 HIGH STEWART OF ALL KNIGHTS TEMPLARS LANDS IN ENGLAND

      1310 TOOK ALL TEMPLARS IN LINCOLN CASTLE TO THE TOWER OF LONDON

      ROGER W. OF BISHAM, BERKS, WHERE ROBERT DE BRUCE'S WIFE WAS HELD CAPTIVE.

      1312 DELIVERED UP ORFORD CASTLE.

      1313 RECEIVED FARMS OF KING'S FAVOURITE, PIERS GAVESTON

      1314 OVERSEAS WITH EDWARD I AND IN DUNGANNON, IRELAND. WAS THEN THE KEEPER OF THE

      PRIVY SEAL, WHICH HE WAS CARRYING WITH HIM WHEN HE WAS CAPTURED AT THE BATTLE OF BANNOCKBURN IN 1314

      T.F.TOUT: CHAPTERS IN MEDIAEVAL ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY VOLS I & V (OF VI), LONDON (1928-30).

      COMPILER: JOCELYN WINGFIELD, 18 CHIDDINGSTONE STREET, LONDON SW6 3TG ENGLAND.
1203 William Oliver Champernowne ~1205 Eva De Whitchurch ~1205 Ralph Willington ~1210 Olympias Franc Nicholas Willington John Willington William Franc Franc Humphrey Franc ~1180 Rainald De Whitchurch 1287 - UNKNOWN Anne Peche ~1121 Juliana Canu ~1000 - >1041 Thurstan Le Goz 41 41 ~1015 - ~1071 Robert Le Bigod 56 56 ~1017 Humphrey De Tillieul Or Bigod ~0968 <Unnamed> D. >1466 William Dennis Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Stucley (Stewkley, Stukley, Stucly) of Affeton, pp. 721-723
Vivian's Visitations of Devon 1620, 1895 edition - Dennis of Holcombe Burnell & Orleigh, pp. 279-282
~1155 - >1193 Gunnora D' Aubigny 38 38 1138 Matilda (Maud) De Valoines ~1025 - >1082 Richard Of Goz 57 57 ~1004 Judith De Monterolier 1249 John Peche John was in the King's service in Scotland almost continuously from Jan.1297/8 till 1304. He served in various capacities in County Warwick from1317 to 1321. He was summoned to Parliament 1321-1335, by writs directedto Johanni Pecche, whereby he is said to have become Lord Pecche. Heserved as Keeper of the town and castle of Warwick, in 1321, and laterwas ordered to raise forces in County Warwick and lend them to the King.He fought at Boroughbridge as a banneret, on the King's side, and inScotland in 1322/3, and in Gascony in person 1324/5. In 1323 he wasConstable of Dover Castle and Warden of the Cinque Ports. As a knight ofCounties Warwick and Gloucester he was summoned to the Great Council atWestminster 30 May, 1324, and in June, 1328, he was summoned to Councilat York, and in 1329 to a conference at Windsor. He married 1st Unknown,and 2nd Eleanor, widow of Ralph de Gorges. ~1337 Giles Daubeney BET 1261 AND 1264 - <1305 Elias D' Aubeney ~1270 - ~1311 Joan 41 41 ~1214 - BEF 25 Jan 1291/1292 Ralph De Albini ~1222 - >1294 Isabel Mawley 72 72 ~1040 St. Sauveur ~0970 - >1035 Ansfried II Le Goz 65 65 Katherine De Thweng ~1173 - ~1220 Ralph De Aubigne 47 47 ~1185 Mahet Montsorel 1250 Thomas de Wingfield Lord of Wingfield and Westerfield Thomas4 DE WINGFIELD (5007) (Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born in 1280 at England. He married Alice Weyland (5008), daughter of Sir Nicholas Weyland (54399) and Female Unknown (54400). He died circa 1322.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON THOMAS DE WINGFIELD LORD OF WINGFIELD AND WESTERFIELD (RN 5007):

R and A Buried at Priory Church, Woodbridge, Suffolk [Copinger II,369]

Wife's uncle was Thomas Weyland, Chief Justice, 1257, Was accused of taking fines for Breaking Assize of bread and ale at Middleton, near Dunwish, Suffolk. Sacked 1289. Banished to Tower. (Parker III).

1248 and 1256 Henry III visited Framlingham Castle disguised as a monk.

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg England.

Alice WEYLAND (5008) was born CA 1189-1248 at Cromer, Norfolk, England. She died CA 1220-1329. Her married name was Wingfield. SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON ALICE WEYLAND WINGFIELD (RN 5008):

In 1248, 1254, 1256 and 1257 Henry Iii [1216-72] Called on Those Holding œ15 Worth of Land to Take Order of

Knighthood and Accompany Him to Wars in Gascony, France. 60 Included Sir Nicholas, Sir William and Sir John

De Weyland, Sir William and John De Bovile; Sir William, Robert, -, Hugh Peachie [Reyce 63-66]

1257 Famine and Pestilence

1270-1288 Nicholas De Weyland Held Garboldisham, Norfolk and Lands near Sudbury, Suffolk and Shipham and

Cromer. [Blomfield's Norfolk Iii, 478; 1, 172; Copinger Ii, 369;1,96

1275 Alice Held Cromer for a Pair of White Gloves a Year [Blomfd Iii,478].

COMPILER: Jocely Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg, England.

The only known child of Lord of Wingfield and Westerfield Thomas4 de Wingfield (5007) and Alice Weyland (5008) was:

    * + 5. i. Sir Lord of Wingfield & Dennington John5 DE WINGFIELD (5009), born circa 1279 at England; married Ann "Peach" Peche (5010).
~1138 - >1218 Sibilla De Valoignes 80 80 ~1185 John Paynel ~1159 William De Montsorel ~1211 - <1224 Philip De Aubigne 13 13 ~1134 - ~1192 Ralph De Albini 58 58 ~1196 Mawley 1104 Theobald De Valoignes 1129 Bertha De Valoignes 1073 Theobald De Valoignes 1046 Hamon De Valoignes 1255 Alice Weyland 1018 Philip De Valoignes Beatrice De Goz ~1192 Alice De Albini ~1134 Hamo De Valoines ~1120 - 1178 Ada De Warenne 58 58 BET 1080 AND 1082 - 1153 David I Scotland ~1122 Adelian De Warenne ~1117 - >1167 Gundred De Warenne 50 50 ~1115 Ralph (Warren) De Warenne 1230 Nicholas de Weyland ~1031 - 1093 Malcolm III Caennmor Of Scotland 62 62 Died at siege of Alnwick Castle. BET 1077 AND 1078 - 1124 Alexander I Scotland Alexander was wed to the illegitimate daughter of Henry I, King ofEngland, son of William the Conqueror. Alexander was described as adevout and scholarly man, humble and polite before the monks whosecompany he enjoyed. To the rest of his subjects, according to AbbotAilred of Rievaulx, he was 'beyond measure terrible, a man of greatheart, applying himself in all things beyond his strength'. When the menof Moray and the Mearns, pulling one of Lulach's descendents fromobscurity, rebelled against this unwelcome Normanization, King Alexandersuppressed them so violently that thereafter they called him Alexanderthe Fierce. More peacefully, and following the example of his mother, hebrought the Church closer to Rome, but he was also stubborn in thedefence of the Scottish Church and resisted English attempts to place itunder the authority of the archbishops of York. He reigned in Scotlandfrom 1107 to 1124, although he shared the kingdom with his youngerbrother David. ~1070 - >1097 Edmund I Of Scotland 27 27 ~1068 - 1093 Edward Of Scotland 25 25 ~1062 - 1093 Heth Ethelred Of Fife 31 31 ~1080 - 1116 Mary Of Scotland 36 36 BET 1074 AND 1075 - 8 Jan 1106/1107 Edgar Of Scotland ~1074 Prince Of Scotland ~1120 - >1190 Maud Le Meschines 70 70 ~1110 - >1154 Alice Le Meschines 44 44 1220 Robert de Wingfield Robert3 DE WINGFIELD (5005) (John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born CA 1146-1216 at England. He married Joan Falstaff/Falstolf (5006), daughter of Sir John Fastolfe (54397) and Female Unknown (54398), CA 1172-1248. He died CA 1183-1292.

He He was styled "Of Wingfield Castle" [Reyce'S Breviary], Although The Castle was not built of stone until 1385.

Joan FALSTAFF/FALSTOLF (5006) was born CA 1152-1219 at England. She died CA 1183-1298. Her married name was De Wingfield. SOURCES OF INFOMRMATION ON JOAN FALSTAFF WINGFIELD (RN 5006):

Father's Descendant (?) Married to Sir John Falstolfe 1398, Squire to Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk.

Kirkley Falstolfe's Hall Believed Part of the Dowry Passed in 1552 from Descendant, Anthony Wingfield, K.G.

To Daughter Mary. [Copinger V, 83]

Ancient Seat of the Falstolfes Was at Kimberley, Norfolk.

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg England.

The only known child of Robert3 de Wingfield (5005) and Joan Falstaff/Falstolf (5006) was:

    * + 4. i. Lord of Wingfield and Westerfield Thomas4 DE WINGFIELD (5007), born 1280 at England; married Alice Weyland (5008).
~1040 Ramfray De Rumilly ~1096 - BET 1151 AND 1155 Cecily De Rumilly ~1067 Muriel De Normandie ~1072 - ~1096 Robert De Rumilly 24 24 ~1106 Hugh De Beaumont ~1110 Havoise De Beaumont ~1112 Amicade De Beaumont Agnes De Beaumont ~1099 Auberie De Beaumont ~1114 Adeline De Beaumont 1230 Joan Falstaff 0885 - 0926 Burkhard Duke of Swabia 41 41 1104 Miss De Beaumont ~1104 - 1168 Robert De Beaumont 64 64 Robert was a twin. ~1030 - BET 1101 AND 1103 Hugh De Clermont ~1066 Ermentrude De Clermont ~1010 Ermengardis Of Clermont Isabel <1103 - 1120 William IV 'Atheling' 17 17 BET 1095 AND 1100 - 1122 Sibyl Elizabeth Of Scotland ~1069 Ansfride (Concubine) ~1099 - 1141 Alice (Aline) 42 42 1200 John Falstaff 1096 Maud Montvillers 1096 - >1157 Emma Bastard Of England 61 61 ~1093 - 1172 Robert Plantagenet 79 79 ~1068 - >1090 Gleva De Tracy 22 22 ~1097 - 1136 William II De Tracy 39 39 ~1055 - 1126 Cecilia de England 71 71 ~1064 - <1079 Agatha 15 15 BET 1056 AND 1060 - 1100 William II 'Rufus' Of England Killed while hunting. BET 1055 AND 1056 - ~1065 Adeliza 1190 John de Wingfield  John de2 WINGFIELD (5003) (Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born at England. He married Female Unknown (5004).

Female UNKNOWN (5004) was born at England.

The only known child of John de2 Wingfield (5003) and Female Unknown (5004) was:

* + 3. i. Robert3 DE WINGFIELD (5005), born CA 1146-1216 at England; married Joan Falstaff/Falstolf (5006).
1054 - 10 Feb 1133/1134 Robert II Curthose In 1096 he pawned Normandy to William so he could join the crusades of Pope Urban II. He was captured by his younger brother Henry in 1106 and held until he died.  Defeated at the battle of Tenchebrai. Married on his way to Palestine. BET 1054 AND 1057 - ~1081 Duke of Bernay Richard ~1064 - <1112 Princess of England Matilda 48 48 ~1063 - 1085 Gundred De Normandie 22 22 ~1070 - 1137 Amaury III De Montfort 67 67 1022 - 1094 Roger De Montgomery 72 72 ~1064 Mabel Montgomery ~1056 - 1099 Phillip Montgomery 43 43 ~1060 Emma Montgomery ~1050 Robert Montgomery 1280 John Honypot ~1062 Sibyl De Montgomery ~1052 - 1103 Hugues De Montgomery 51 51 ~1053 - 1131 Robert II (De Belleme) De Montgomery 78 78 ~1180 - >1241 Hawise De Keveliock 61 61 ~1180 Daughter De Meschines ~1182 Nichola De Meschines ~1149 - 1212 Petronille De Grentmesnil 63 63 ~1161 Geoffrey De Beaumont ~1156 - BET 20 AND 21 OCT 1205 Robert 'Fitz-Parnell' Harcourt 1290 Juliana ~1158 - 1202 Roger Harcourt 44 44 ~1160 Amicia Harcourt ~1162 Mabel De Beaumont ~1164 Hawise De Beaumont ~1166 Pernel De Harcourt ~1143 Richard De Meschines ~1145 Joanna De Meschines ~1146 Beatrice De Meschines BET 1117 AND 1121 - 12 Mar 1180/1181 Simon III De Montfort ~1126 - 1215 Amice De Beaumont 89 89 1218 - 1291 Gilbert Peche 73 73 ~1151 - 31 Jan 1228/1229 Guy (Amaury) De Montfort ~1095 - ~1143 Agnes De Garlende 48 48 BET 1122 AND 1125 - 1140 Amaury (Almaricus) De Montfort ~1094 - 1157 Maud Fitz hammon 63 63 ~1112 - 1179 Roger Fitzrobert 67 67 ~1116 - BET 1159 AND 1160 Hamon Fitzrobert ~1122 - >1147 Philip Fitzrobert De Grey 25 25 ~1114 - 1175 Richard Fitzrobert 61 61 ~1050 - 10 Mar 1106/1107 Robert Fitzhammon Lord of Lamora ~1070 - Jan 1128/1129 Randolph III Le Meschines 1222 Margery Maud de Eu ~1097 Agnes Le Meschines ~1094 - 1128 Alice Of Chester 34 34 ~1050 - >1089 Ranulph II Of Bayeux 39 39 ~1070 - ~1132 William Le Meschines 62 62 ~1074 Geoffrey De Meschines ~1076 Robert De Meschines ~1021 Alice (Alix) Of Normandy ~1045 Albreda D' Avranches BET 1047 AND 1050 - 1101 Hugh 'The Fat' D' Avranches Hodson als Barnett ~1055 Arbella Loup D' Avranches ~1054 Judith (le Goz) D' Avranches ~1121 - >1137 Eustace II De Fiennes 16 16 ~1036 - BET 1059 AND 1060 Igor Yaroslavich 1020 - 1052 Vladimir Yaroslavich Of Novgorod 32 32 ~1025 - 1078 Izyaslav I Dmitrij Of Kiev 53 53 1027 - 1076 Svyatopolk I (II) Yaroslavich 49 49 ~1032 Elizabeth Jaroslawna 1089 Robert II Corbet ~1062 - ~1085 Malcolm Of Scotland 23 23 1192 - 1266 Eve 74 74 ~1060 - 1094 Duncan II Of Scotland 34 34 ~1062 - 8 Mar 1137/1138 Adela Of England Rohesia (Rose) De Grentmesnil ~1136 Alice De Grentmesnil ~1035 - 1091 Adeliza Or Alice De Beaumont 56 56 ~1052 - 1122 Robert De Grentemesnil 70 70 ~1054 William De Grentemesnil ~1056 - 1111 Adeline De Grentemesnil 55 55 ~1058 Halewise De Grentemesnil ~1060 - 1087 Hugh De Grentemesnil 27 27 1082 - UNKNOWN Robert Peverell ~1062 Rohese De Grentemesnil ~1066 - 1119 Alberic De Grentemesnil 53 53 ~1068 Matilda (Maud) De Grentemesnil ~1070 Agnes De Grentemesnil ~1072 Hawise De Grentemesnil BET 1100 AND 1108 - ~1168 Amice De Gael ~1146 Geoffrey De Beaumont ~1128 Roger De Beaumont ~1140 Lade (Elizabeth) De Beaumont BET 1125 AND 1135 - >1185 Margaret De Beaumont 1058 - 1138 William Pecche 80 80 D. UNKNOWN Reginlinde De Nullenberg ~1138 Gervace De Beaumont ~1142 William De Beaumont ~1144 John De Beaumont ~1148 Henry De Beaumont 1075 Avise De Vermandois ~1078 - 1143 Ralph II De Gael 65 65 ~1068 - <1113 Simon (De St. Liz) De Senlis 45 45 BET 1220 AND 1225 - ~1276 James De Aldithley ~1035 - ~1103 Hugh II De Dammartin 68 68 ~1165 - ~1238 Juliane De Dammartin 73 73 1072 - UNKNOWN Isilia Bourges ~1138 Alice De Meschines BET 1160 AND 1176 - 1217 Isabella Of Gloucester ~1155 - 1198 Mabel Fitzrobert 43 43 ~1148 Hawise Fitzrobert ~1151 - ~1166 Robert Fitzwilliam 15 15 ~1107 Hugh I Von Vaudemont ~1078 - ~1118 Heilwig Von Egisheim 40 40 1313 Mary De Montagu 1299 - ~1317 John Montacute 18 18 1303 - 1336 Simon Montacute 33 33 1110 - UNKNOWN Thurston deBannaster 1307 Maud Montacute 1309 - 1342 Edward Montacute 33 33 1311 Alice Montacute 1315 Katherine Montacute 1317 Hawise Montacute 1319 Isabel Montacute ~1085 - >1147 Robert Fitzharold De Ewyas 62 62 ~1068 - >1115 Harold De Ewias De Sudeley 47 47 ~1054 - >1084 Maud (Margaret) D' Avranches 30 30 ~1240 - 4 Mar 1286/1287 Peter De Montford 1105 - UNKNOWN Hugh deHastings Lord of Fillongley ~1242 Matilda De La Warr ~1256 - <1296 John De Montfort 40 40 ~1265 - 1318 Simon Montfort 53 53 ~1220 - 1265 Peter De Montfort 45 45 ~1224 - >1265 Alice De Aldithley 41 41 ~1246 Robert De Montfort ~1242 William De Montfort ~1190 - 1217 Thurstan De Montfort 27 27 ~1195 Miss ~1147 - 1199 Henry De Montfort 52 52 1090 - UNKNOWN Ernburga deFlamville ~1159 Emma Corbuceo ~1119 Thurstan De Montfort Juliana Murdac ~1155 Juliana De Montfort ~1164 Thurstane De Charlecote ~1133 Peter Corbuceo ~1137 Miss ~1089 Thurstane De Montfort ~1093 <Unnamed> ~1062 Hugh De Montfort 1060 Hugh deFlamville ~1060 Adeline De Beaumont ~1098 - ~1170 Robert De Montfort 72 72 ~1102 Adeline De Montfort ~1104 Miss De Montfort ~1252 - 1287 Hawaise De St. Amand 35 35 1271 Simon De Montagu ~1278 John De Montagu ~1124 Bethoc Of Galloway ~1117 Ragnhild Of Man ~1097 Ingebiorg Of Orkney 1080 - UNKNOWN William deHastings Count of Eu ~1124 Gudrod Olafsson ~1021 - ~1066 Ingeborg Of Holland Finnsdottir 45 45 ~0995 - 1030 Olaf II 'The Holy King' Haraldsson 35 35 OCCUPATION: 1st Christian King of Norway, Patron saint of Norway, withAethelred II fought Danes in England, tore down London Bridge(commemorated in nursery rhyme "London Bridge is falling down"), foughtin western Europe, became sole ruler of Norway and forcibly Christianizedinhabitants, slain during eclipse of 31 Aug 1030. He was born abt 995,posthumously Patron Saint of Norway.

MISC: Age at death: About 35.

In his early youth, he was a viking. Then he was in the service of theexiled King Ethelred II of England, and, at that time, became a Christianin Rouen. He returned to Norway in 1015 where, recognized as a descendantof King Harald I, he displaced the ruling earls and became king. Hecreated a strong central government. He promoted Christianity, buildingchurches throughout Norway. By 1025, he was more powerful than anyprevious Norwegian king.

In 1028, Canute II, King of Denmark and England, invaded Norway. Manylocal Norwegian chieftains, who were against Olav because of his forcefulrule, sided with Canute II. Olav was forced to take refuge, and went toRussia. In 1030, he returned to Norway with an army, but was defeated bya peasant army, and was killed at the Battle of Stiklestad.

One source says that he Jumped into Baltic Sea near Rugen Island, Germany.
~0952 - ~0995 Harald Granske 'Greenlander' 43 43 1077 Richardus Forestaius 1100 Emeline Le Spencer ~1090 - 1161 Fergus Of Galloway 71 71 ~1126 - 1 Jan 1184/1185 Gilbert (Carrick) Of Galloway ~1128 Aufrick De Galloway ~1130 Margaret De Galloway 1058 - UNKNOWN Richard deMortaigne BET 1062 AND 1067 - ~1085 Donald Of Scotland ~1054 - >1123 Roger II De Montgomery 69 69 ~1175 - <1246 Henry De Aldithley 71 71 ~1197 - >1249 Bertrada De Mainwaring 52 52 ~1218 Emma D' Aldithley ~1222 - 1275 Henry Of Aldithley 53 53 ~1218 - <1240 Ralf Of Aldithley 22 22 ~1147 - >1203 Adam (Audley) De Aldithley 56 56 ~1179 James Of Aldithley ~1177 - >1248 William Of Aldithley 71 71 1060 - UNKNOWN Beatrice Countess of Eu ~1180 - >1210 Lucas Of Aldithley 30 30 ~1184 Isabella Of Aldithley ~1173 - ~1212 Adam Of Aldithley 39 39 1155 Rafe De Mainwaring ~1158 Amica De Meschines The earl had another dau., whose legitimacy is questionable, namely,Amicia,* m. to Ralph de Mesnilwarin, justice of Chester, "a person," saysDugdale, "of very ancient family," from which union the Mainwarings, ofOver Peover, in the co. Chester, derive. Dugdale considers Amicia to be adau. of the earl by a former wife. But Sir Peter Leicester, in hisAntiquities of Chester, totally denies her legitimacy. "I cannot butmislike," says he, "the boldness and ignorance of that herald who gave toMainwaring (late of Peover), the elder, the quartering of the Earl ofChester's arms; for if he ought of right to quarter that coat, then musthe be descended from a co-heir to the Earl of Chester; but he was not;for the co-heirs of Earl Hugh married four of the greatest peers in thekingdom."

* Upon the question of this lady's legitimacy there was a long paper warbetween Sir Peter Leicester and Sir Thomas Mainwaring---and eventmacllythe matter was referred to the judges, of whose decision Wood says, "atan assize held at Chester, 1675, the controversy was decided by thejustices itinerant, who, as I have heard, adjudged the right of thematter to Mainwaring." [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages,Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, pp. 365-6, Meschines, Earls ofChester]
~1179 Roger De Mainwaring ~1154 - ~1202 Gilbert Bassett 48 48 ~1140 Fulco Basset ~1150 - ~1220 Thomas Basset 70 70 1085 - UNKNOWN Beatrice deBuilly ~1057 - ~1120 Gerhard I Of Vaudemont 63 63 ~1065 Godfrey De Bouillon ~1204 Miss De Fiennes ~1207 Baldwin De Fiennes ~1212 Maud De Fiennes ~1214 Michel De Fiennes ~1175 Ingelram De Fiennes ~1175 John De Fiennes ~1177 Thomas De Fiennes ~1179 Eustache De Fiennes 1050 Roger deBuilly 0800 - 0850 Adalbert I Count Of Hegau 50 50 ~1102 - BET 1135 AND 1146 Richard Basset ~1080 Alice De Buci ~1114 William Basset ~1106 Thurstine Basset ~1110 Nicholas Basset ~1108 Gilbert Thurstine Basset ~1104 Osmund Bassett ~1069 John De Berkeley ~1044 Rissa 1116 - 1151 Adaliza of Louvain 35 35 ~1065 - 1094 Eustace De Berkeley 29 29 ~1067 - 1091 Miss De Berkeley 24 24 ~1073 - <1131 Roger De Berkeley 58 58 ~1130 Roger De Mainwaring ~1133 Ellen ~1147 Petronella De Gresley ~1112 - ~1160 Liulf Of Aldithley 48 48 ~1117 Miss ~1146 - >1202 Roger Of Aldithley 56 56 1170 - 1234 Sybilla deTorrington 64 64 ~1147 Margery Of Aldithley ~1150 - >1179 Liulf Of Aldithley 29 29 ~1083 Liulf (Adam) Of Aldithley ~1087 Mabel Stanley ~1116 - >1130 Ralf Of Aldithley 14 14 ~1113 - >1178 Reginald De Warrenne 65 65 1216 - >1277 John Mathew De La Warr 61 61 ~1178 - <1216 Drew Dru De Montagu 38 38 ~1189 Aline Alicia De Basset 1178 Richard Talbot 1142 William deTorrington ~1145 - ~1217 William De Montagu 72 72 ~1149 Isabel 1160 Alice De Gray ~1110 - ~1164 Richard De Montagu 54 54 ~1120 Alice ~1147 Richard De Montagu ~1190 - 1259 Fulk Bassett 69 69 ~1192 Alice Basset ~1184 - 1271 Philip Basset 87 87 ~1194 - 1235 William Basset 41 41 1166 - 1233 Richard deUmfreville 67 67 ~1198 Katherine Basset ~1202 Thomas Basset ~1188 - 1241 Gilbert Bassett 53 53 ~1260 - >1290 Isabel Montagu 30 30 ~1185 Petronella De Derleston ~1207 - <1238 Alice Of Aldithley 31 31 ~1114 Miss ~1138 - ~1167 Drew De Montagu 29 29 ~1073 - ~1125 William De Montacute 52 52 Miss 1046 - 1131 Robert II deBelleme De Montgomery 85 85 Robert de Montgomery, eldest son, sometimes called "Robert of Belesme,"the town in Perche in Normandy where he had great possessions. He had thegreat inheritance of his father and mother in Normandy, was Count ofBelesme and Alencon and in England was Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury andother manors of his father. It is impossible to do full justice to thecharacter and life of Robert in these notes. He was knighted by KingWilliam at the seige of Fresney in 1073 in recognition of his valorousand chivalrous conduct during the seige. He was between 45 and 50 in1098, when at his brother's death he succeeded to the inheritance. He wasthe oldest, but for some reason his brother Hugh succeeded. He took thepart of Robert of Normandy, eldest son of William I, against King HenryI, and because of his rebellion against Henry he was forced to forfeithis possessions in England when retiring into Normandy, and continuinghis turbulent practices there he was seized, imprisoned, and the nextyear brought over to England, where he was confined at the Castle ofWarham in the County of Dorset and starved himself to death. He wasaccounted the richest and most wicked man of the age he lived in. Ifwanting in the wisdom and prudence of his father, he probably surpassedhim in boldness and valour. A true soldier, he was everready to facedanger and adventure and apparently never happy unless in the turmoil andhorrors of war. This ended the House of Montgomery in England as a powerit had been earlier. ~1040 - >1086 Drogo De Montagu 46 46 Miss ~1080 Richard (Montacute) De Montagu ~1120 Ralph Fitzorm ~1120 Lettice De Montgomery ~1105 - >1130 Orme Le Gulden 25 25 Emma De Beauchamp ~1100 - >1139 Robert De Montgomery 39 39 Miss <1101 - 1119 Richard Of Lincoln 18 18 Drowned in the White Ship 1200 - <29 1280 Juliana de Wath 1070 - 1136 Lucy Taillebois 66 66 1024 - BET 9 AND 10 SEP 1087 William I de Normandy William I (of England), called The Conqueror (1027-87), first Norman kingof England (1066-87) , who has been called one of the first modern kingsand is generally regarded as one of the outstanding figures in westernEuropean history.

Born in Falaise, France, William was the illegitimate son of Robert I,Duke of Normandy (die d 1035), and Arletta, a tanner's daughter, and istherefore sometimes called William the Bastard. Upon the death of hisfather, the Norman nobles, honoring their promise to Robert, acceptedWilliam as his successor. Rebellion against the young duke broke outalmost immediately, however, and his position did not become secure until1047 when, with the aid of Henry I, King of France, he won a decisivevictory over a rebel force near Caen.

During a visit in 1051 to his childless cousin, Edward the Confessor,King of England, William is said to have obtained Edward's agreement thathe should succeed to the English throne. In 1053, defying a papal ban,William married Matilda of Flanders (died 1083), daughter of Baldwin V,count of Flanders (died 1067) and a descendant of King Alfred the Great,thereby strengthening his claim to the crown of England. Henry I, fearingthe strong bond between Normandy and Flanders resulting from themarriage, attempted in 1054 and again in 1058 to crush the powerful duke,but on both occasions William defeated the French king's forces.

Conquest of England

About 1064, the powerful English noble, Harold, earl of Wessex, wasshipwrecked on the Norman coast and taken prisoner by William. He securedhis release by swearing to support William's claim to the English throne.When King Edward died, however, the witenagemot (royal council ) electedHarold king. Determined to make good his claim, William secured thesanction of Pope Alexander II (died 1073) for a Norman invasion ofEngland. The duke and his army landed at Pevensey on September 28,1066.On October 14, the Normans defeated the English forces at thecelebrated Battle of Hastings, in which Harold was slain. William thenproceeded to London, crushing the resistance he encountered on the way.On Christmas Day he was crowned King of England in Westminster Abbey.

The English did not accept foreign rule without a struggle. William metthe opposition, which was particularly violent in the north and west,with strong measures; he was responsible for the devastation of greatareas of the country, particularly in Yorkshire, where Danish forces hadarrived to aid the Saxon rebels. By 1070 the Norman conquest of Englandwas complete.

William invaded Scotland in 1072 and forced the Scottish king Malcolm IIIMacDuncan (died 1093 ) to pay him homage. During the succeeding years theConqueror crushed insurrections among his Norman followers, includingthat incited in 1075 by Ralph de Guader, 1st earl of Norfolk, and RogerFitzwilliam, Earl of Hereford, and a series of uprisings in Normandy ledby his eldest son Robert (1054?-1134), who later became Robert II, Dukeof Normandy.

His Achievements

One feature of William's reign as king was his reorganization of theEnglish feudal and administrative systems. He dissolved the greatearldoms, which had enjoyed virtual independence under his Anglo-Saxonpredecessors, and distributed the lands confiscated from the English tohis trusted Norman followers. He introduced the Continental system offeudalism; by the Oath of Salisbury of 1086 all landlords sworeallegiance to William, thus establishing the precedent that a vassal'sloyalty to the king overrode his fealty to his immediate lord. The feudallords were compelled to acknowledge the jurisdiction of the local courts,which William retained along with many other Anglo-Saxon institutions.The ecclesiastical and secular courts were separated, and the power ofthe papacy in English affairs was greatly curtailed. Another outstandingaccomplishment was the economic survey undertaken and incorporated in theDomesday Book in 1086 .

In 1087, during a campaign against King Philip I of France, Williamburned the town of Mantes (now Mantes-la-Jolie). William's horse fell inthe vicinity of Mantes, fatally injuring him. He died in Rouen onSeptember 7 and was buried at Caen in Saint Stephen's, one of the abbeyshe and Matilda had founded at the time of their marriage as penance fortheir defiance of the pope. William was succeeded by his third-born son,William II.

Biographic entry: B1581

"William I (of England)," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c)1993Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation
~1084 Aelis De Dammartin BET 1029 AND 1033 Emma De Conteville Maud Peveral Henry Stanley BET 1040 AND 1053 - BET 5 FEB 1112/13 AND 17 APR 11 William 'The Elder' Of Nottingham Peverel 1058 - >1117 Adelaide (Adeliz) De Clermont 59 59 ~1035 - ~1110 Marguerite De Roucy 75 75 1170 - 1208 Filbert deDouvres 38 38 ~1045 - 1093 Margaret Of Scotland 48 48 ~1156 - 12 Jan 1235/1236 Margaret De Beaumont 1104 - 1166 Waleran De Beaumont 62 62 ~1105 - 1191 Alice Beaumont 86 86 ~1077 - >1157 Sibilla Corbet 80 80 ~1147 - 1181 Hugh De Kevelioc De Meschines 34 34 EARLDOM OF CHESTER (VI, 3)

Hugh, styled "OF KEVELIOC," EARL OF CHESTER, also VICOMTE D'AVRANCHES,&c., in Normandy, son and heir born at Kevelioc [?Machynlleth], co.Merioneth. He joined in the rebellion against King Henry II, set on footby Henry, the son of that King, and was taken prisoner at Alnwick, 13July 1174. He was deprived of his Earldom, and was again in rebellionboth in England and Normandy, but, in January 1177, was restored. Hemarried, in 1169, Bertrade, then aged 14 (the King giving her away inmarriage "because she was his own cousin "), daughter of Simon deMontfort, Count D'EVREUX by his 1st wife, Maud. He died at Leek, co.Stafford, 30 June 1181, aged about 34 and was buried at St. Werburg's,Chester. His widow died 1227, aged about 7I. [Complete Peerage III:167,XIV:170, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

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This nobleman, Hugh (Keveliok), 3rd Earl of Chester, joined in the rebellion of the Earl of Lancaster and the King of Scots against King Henry II, and in support of that monarch's son, Prince Henry's pretensions to the crown. In which proceeding he was taken prisoner withthe Earl of Leicester at Alnwick, but obtained his freedom soona fterwards upon the king's reconciliation with the young prince. Again,however, hoisting the standard of revolt both in England and Normandy,with as little success, he was again seized and then detained a prisonerfor some years. He eventmaclly, however, obtained his liberty andrestoration of his lands when public tranquility became completelyreestablished some time about the 23rd year of the king's reign. Hislordship m. Bertred, dau. of Simon, Earl of Evereux, in Normandy, and hadissue, I. Ranulph, his successor; I. Maud, m. to David, Earl ofHuntingdon, brother of William, King of Scotland, and had one son andfour daus., viz., 1. John, surnamed le Scot, who s. to the Earldom ofChester, d. s. p. 7 June, 1237; 1. Margaret, m. to Alan de Galloway, andhad a dau., Devorguilla, m. to John de Baliol, and was mother of John deBaliol, declared King of Scotland in the reign of Edward I; 2. Isabel, m.to Robert de Brus, and was mother of Robert de Brus, who contended forthe crown of Scotland, temp. Edward I; 3. Maud, d. unm.; Ada, m. to Henryde Hastings, one of the competitors for the Scottish crown, temp. EdwardI; II. Mabill, m. to William de Albini, Earl of Arundel; III. Agnes, m.to William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby; IV. Hawise, m. to Robert, son ofSayer de Quincy, Earl of Winchester.

The earl had another dau., whose legitimacy is questionable, namely,Amicia,* m. to Ralph de Mesnilwarin, justice of Chester, "a person," saysDugdale, "of very ancient family," from which union the Mainwarings, ofOver Peover, in the co. Chester, derive. Dugdale considers Amicia to be adau. of the earl by a former wife. But Sir Peter Leicester, in hisAntiquities of Chester, totally denies her legitimacy. "I cannot butmislike," says he, "the boldness and ignorance of that herald who gave toMainwaring (late of Peover), the elder, the quartering of the Earl ofChester's arms; for if he ought of right to quarter that coat, then musthe be descended from a co-heir to the Earl of Chester; but he was not;for the co-heirs of Earl Hugh married four of the greatest peers in thekingdom."

The earl d. at Leeke, in Staffordshire, in 1181, and was s. by his onlyson, Ranulph, surnamed Blundevil (or rather Blandevil) from the place ofhis birth, the town of Album Monasterium, modern Oswestry, in Powys), as4th Earl of Chester.

* Upon the question of this lady's legitimacy there was a long paper warbetween Sir Peter Leicester and Sir Thomas Mainwaring---and eventmacllythe matter was referred to the judges, of whose decision Wood says, "atan assize held at Chester, 1675, the controversy was decided by thejustices itinerant, who, as I have heard, adjudged the right of thematter to Mainwaring." [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages,Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, pp. 365-6, Meschines, Earls ofChester]

__________________________

Hugh (d 1181), called Hugh of Cyveiliog, palatine Earl of Chester, wasthe son of Ranulf II, earl of Chester, and of his wife Matilda, daughterof Earl Robert of Gloucester, the illegitamate son of Henry I.  He issometime called Hugh of Cyveiliog, because, according to a late writer,he was born in that district of Wales.  His father died on 16 Dec 1153,whereupon, being probably still under age, he succeeded to hispossessions on both sides of the Channel.  These included the hereditaryviscountics of Avranches and Bayeux.  Hugh was present at the council ofClarendon in January 1164 which drew up the assize of Clarendon.  In 1171he was in Normandy.

Hugh joined the great feudal revolt against Henry II in 1173.  Aided byRalph of Fougeres, he utilised his great influence on the north-easternmarches of Brittany to exicte the Bretons to revolt.  Henry II despatchedan army of Brabant mercenaries against them.  The rebels were defeated ina battle, and on 20 Aug were shut up in the castle of Dol, which they hadcaptured by fraud not long before.  On 23 Aug Henry II arrived to conductthe siege in person.  Hugh and his comrades nad no provisions.  They weretherefore forced to surrender on 26 Aug on a promise that their lives andlimbs would be saved.  Fourscore knights surrendered with them.  Hugh wastreated very leniently by Henry, and was confined at Falaise, whither theEarl and Countess of Leicester were also soon brought as prsioners.  WhenHenry II returned to England, he took the two earls with him.  They wereconveyed from Barfleur to Southampton on 8 July 1174.  Hugh was probablyafterwars imprisoned at Devizes.  On 8 Aug, however, he was taken backfrom Portsmouth to Bafleur, when Henry II went back to Normandy.  He wasno imprisoned at Caen, whence he was removed to Falaise.  He was admittedto terms with Henry before the general peace, and witnessed the peace ofFalaise on 11 Oct.

Hugh seems to have remained some time longer without completerestoration.  At last, at the council of Northampton on 13 Jan 1177, hereceived grant of the lands on both sides of the sea which he had heldfifteen days before the war broke out.  In March he witnessed the Spanishaward.  In May, at the council at Windsor, Henry II restored him hiscastles, and required him to go to Ireland, alson wiht WilliamFitzAldhelm and others, to prepare the way for the king's son John.  Butno great grants of Irish land were conferred on him, and he took noprominent part in the Irish campaigns.  He died at Leek in Staffordshireon 30 June 1181.  He was buried next his father on the south side of thechapter-house of St Werburgh;s, Chester, now the cathedral.

Hugh's liberality to the church was not so great as that of hispredecessors.  He granted some lands in Wirral to St Werburgh's and fourcharters to his, to Stanlaw, St Mary's, Coventry, the nuns of Bullingtonand Greenfield, are printed by Ormerod.  he also confirmed his mother'sgrants to her foundation of Austin Canons at Calke, Derbyshire, and thoseof his father to his convent of the Benedictine nuns of St Mary'sChester.  In 1171 he had confirmed the grants of Ranulf to the abbey ofSt Stephen's in the diocese of Bayeux.  More substantial were his grantsof Bettesford Church to Trentham Priory, and of Combe in Gloucestershireto the abbey of Bordesley, Warwickshire.

Hugh married before 1171 Bertrada, the daughter of Simon III, surnamedthe Bald, count of Evreux and Montfort.  He was therefore brother-in-lawto Simon of Montfort, the conqueror of the Albigenses, and uncle of theEarl of Leicester.  His only legitimate son, Ranulf III, succeeded him asEarl of Cester.  He also left four daughters by his wife, who became, ontheir brother's death, coheiresses of the Chester earldom.  They were:(1) Maud, who married David, earl of Huntingdon, and became the mother ofJohn the Scot, earl of Chester from 1232 to 1237, on whose death the lineof Hugh of Avranches became extinct; (2) Mabel, who married William ofAlbini, earl of Arundel (d. 1221); (3) Agnes, the wife of William, earlFerrers Derby; and (4) Hawise, who married Robert de Quincy, son of Saerde Quincy, earl of Winchester.  Hugh was also father of several bastards,including Pagan, lord of Milton; Roger; Amice, who married RalphMainwaring, justice of Chester; and another daughter who married R.Bacon, the founder of Roucester.  A great controversy was carried onbetween Sir Peter Leycester and Sir Thomas Mainwaring, Amice's reputeddescendent, as to whether that lady was legitimate or not. Fifteenpamphlets and small treatises on the subject, published between 1673 and1679, were reprinted in the publications of the Chetham Society, vols.Ixxiii, Ixxix, and Ixxx.  Mainwaring was the champion of her legitimacy,which Leycester had denied in his 'Historical Antiquities.' Dugdalebelieved that Amice was the daughter of a former wife of Hugh, of whoseexistence, however, there is no record.  A fine seal of Earl Hugh's isengraved in Ormerod's 'Cheshire,' i 32. [Dictionary of National BiographyX:164-5]
~1155 - 1189 Bertrade D'Evereaux De Montfort 34 34 He [Hugh of Kevelioc" married, in 1169, Bertrade, then aged 14 (the Kinggiving her away in marriage "because she was his own cousin "), daughterof Simon de Montfort, Count D'EVREUX by his 1st wife, Maud. He died atLeek, co. Stafford, 30 June 1181, aged about 34 and was buried at St.Werburg's, Chester. His widow died 1227, aged about 7I. [Complete PeerageIII:167, XIV:170, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 0935 - 0990 Hildegardeof Flanders 55 55 ~1105 Pharamus De Boloin De Tingrie ~1081 - 13 Feb 1130/1131 Isabel (Elizabeth) Of Vermandois De Crepi ~1080 William Of Buckingham ~1104 - 1181 Agnes d'Evreux De Montfort 77 77 ~1010 - >1098 Renaud De Clermont 88 88 ~1064 - 1118 Ivo (Ives) De Grentmesnil 54 54 ~1032 - 1083 Matilda de Flanders 51 51 ~1030 - 22 Feb 1093/1094 Hugh De Grentmesnil ~1115 - 1170 Renaud II Of Bar 55 55 0890 - UNKNOWN Gerberge ~1066 - ~1119 Arnulph De Montgomery 53 53 BET 1014 AND 1015 - 1079 Mabel Talvas Murdered. ~1174 - 1247 Agnes De Meschines 73 73 <1100 - 1153 Ranulph IV De Meschines De Gernons 53 53 ~1093 Richilde De Hainault ~1080 - <1112 Aubrey De Mello 32 32 ~1134 - >1186 Alice De Dunstanville 52 52 ~1104 - 1156 Alan Reinald De Dunstanville 52 52 BET 987 AND 995 - <1047 Halfdan Sigurdsson ~1180 - 1239 Simon II Of Aumale De Dammartin 59 59 0820 - 0881 Eberhard II Wichman 61 61 0933 - 0982 MatildePrincess of France 49 49 1153 Emma Fitzorm Philippa Sydenham 3 Mar 1304/1305 - >1378 Ralph De Daubeney Burke's Landed Gentry
Cokayne's Complete Peerage - Thweng, Vol. 5-XII/1, pp. 735-744; XIV-Thweng
Burke's Dormant & Extinct, 1883; reprinted 1969 - Barons Thweng, p. 532
Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Author: George E. Cokayne, Publication: 1887, 1910-1959, 1984
1070 - >1138 Robert II De Stuteville 68 68 ~1069 Matilda Le Meschines ~1060 Richilds De Clermont ~1060 - 1136 Dreux II De Mouchy 76 76 ~1102 - ~1167 Robert De Dunstanville 65 65 ~1044 - <1104 Reginald Robert De Dunstanville 60 60 0840 - UNKNOWN II Meginhard ~1110 - ~1183 Alberic (Aubrey) I De Dammartin 73 73 1110 - AFT 20 Jan 1182/1183 Clemence De Bar-Le-Duc ~1135 - 1200 Alberic (Aubrey) II Of Dammartin 65 65 ~1046 - >1081 Rohais (Roaide) De Bulles 35 35 ~1103 - ~1140 John De Sudeley 37 37 ~1300 Maud De Montfort Foulk D' Oilly 1074 Roger D' Oilly ~1102 Marguerite De Clermont 0821 - UNKNOWN Evesna BET 1150 AND 1165 - 1218 Simon IV De Montfort ~1055 - 1130 Forne De Greystoke 75 75 ~1080 - <1156 Ives (Ivo) De Greystoke 76 76 ~1094 - 1163 Henry D' Oilly 69 69 ~1096 Gilbert D' Oyley ~1058 Miss ~1090 - ~1150 Robert II D' Oyley 60 60 ~1106 Robert Doyley ~1110 - >1165 Edith D' Oilly 55 55 ~1048 - ~1115 Nigel D' Oilly 67 67 0775 - 0844 I Meginhard 69 69 ~1048 Agnes D. ~1097 Godchilde De Toeny ~1192 - BET 1265 AND 1270 Enguerrand II De Fiennes ~1166 Agnes De Dammartin 1185 - ~1241 William De Fiennes 56 56 ~1123 Anne De Dreux 1035 Adelle De Selvesle- Furnes ~1088 - >1102 Conan De Fiennes 14 14 <1015 Eustache I De Fiennes ~1151 - ~1225 Sibyl De Boulogne 74 74 0730 - 0779 I Eberhard 49 49 1147 - ~1189 Enguerrand I De Fiennes 42 42 ~1160 Maud Fitzharding De Berkeley ~0978 - 20 Feb 1053/1054 Yaroslav I 'The Wise' Of Kiev Wladimirowwitsch Yaroslav the Wise
Upon the death of Vladimir in 1015, his dominions were divided among hissons, and strife immediately developed. Vladimir's eldest son,Svyatopolk, called The Accursed (reigned 1015, 1018-1019), held thesupreme power and, to secure his position, murdered his brothers Borisand Gleb. Svyatopolk was, in turn, defeated and deposed by his brotherYaroslav the Wise, prince of Novgorod. Yaroslav attempted to recreate theempire of his grandfather, Svyatoslav, and by 1036 had succeeded inmaking himself ruler of all Russia. With him, the Kievan Rus statereached its greatest power. Yaroslav made Kiev an imperial capital withmagnificent buildings, including the notable Hagia Sophia of Kiev(Cathedral of the Holy Wisdom). Schools were opened, and the grand dukerevised the first Russian law code, the Russkaya Pravda (Russian Truth).To consolidate the position of his heirs, Yaroslav devised a system ofprecedence, grading the various principalities from the smallest to Kiev,the most powerful, so that, as a grand duke of Kiev died, each vassalbelow him was moved to a larger principality, ending with the throne ofKiev.
Source: "Russia," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1001 - 10 Feb 1049/1050 Ingigerd (Anna) Olafsdottir ~1030 - 1093 Wsewolod I Of Perejaslaw 63 63 ~1114 - >1189 Maude De Beaumont 75 75 ~1080 Ralph De Montgomery 1080 - >1126 Louis De Bournonville 46 46 1080 - ~1126 Silvie 46 46 1098 Alice De Bournonville 0691 - 0735 Alberich 44 44 ~1125 Matilda Alan Esse ~1045 - 2 Jan 1104/1105 Thierry II (Dietrich I) De Bar-Le-Duc BET 1055 AND 1060 - AFT 8 Mar 1104/1105 Ermentrude Of Burgundy 1085 Mechtild Of Bar ~1080 - ~1163 Thierry III De Montbelliard 83 83 ~1090 - 1150 Renaud I Of Bar-Le-Duc 60 60 ~1090 - <1127 Gisela Von Vaudemont 37 37 1085 - ~1162 Renaud II De Clermont 77 77 ~1138 - >1200 Matilda (Maud Mahaut) Of Ponthieu 62 62 0969 Adele of Holland D. ~1160 Stephanie Von Vaudemont ~1085 - ~1160 Friedrich I Von Mompelgard 75 75 ~1144 Maude De Meschines Nn (concubine) ~1162 Tanghurst Of Chester ~1273 Peter De Montfort ~1222 Olympia De Folkington ~1245 Alice De Plaunche 1050 - 1093 Olaf III 'The Gentle' Haraldsson 43 43 Ingegerd Of Norway 0960 - 1046 Enguerrand deMontreuil 86 86 Magnus II Of Norway BET 1061 AND 1066 - 1090 Princess of England Constance 1122 - >1188 Isabel De Beaumont 66 66 ~1172 - 1232 Randolph Chester De Blunderville 60 60  Of Chester Unknown Mistress Dau 2 Of Henry I 1014 - BET 1062 AND 1063 Hildouin IV De Roucy 1014 - 1063 Adelaide De Rheims 49 49 1032 Hildouin V De Roucy ~1050 Andre De Roucy 0995 - UNKNOWN Hugh II deMontreuil ~1045 Adele De Roucy ~1072 Agnes Of Bayeux BET 1121 AND 1130 - 1190 Robert III De Beaumont ~1175 William De Hamilton 1015 - 1066 Harald III Haardraada Sigurdsson 51 51 <1150 - >1182 Thibaut III De Crepi 32 32 ~1276 William De Montford ~1170 - 1243 Thomas De Berkeley 73 73 ~1135 - >1190 Sedzilla Alice De Berkeley 55 55 ~1105 - >1165 Roger III De Berkeley 60 60 1005 - UNKNOWN Bertha D'Aumale ~1105 - 1197 Hawise De Beaumont 92 92 ~1137 Philip De Berkeley ~1141 Oliver De Berkeley ~1145 Letitia De Berkeley ~1097 Wido De William Mainwaring ~1190 - 1231 Jordon De La Warr 41 41 1092 Nicholas De Beauchamp 0970 - UNKNOWN Guenfroi D'Aumale 0750 - UNKNOWN Isembard Dau Fitzranulf De Bessin ~1132 Ralph De Montgomery ~1023 - >1074 Anastasia Jaroslawna 51 51 Fergus De Courci D. 1219 John De Courci D. >1219 Aufricka ~1130 - 1176 William De Courci 46 46 Robert De Courci Avice De Meschines 1025 - 1101 Guy I deMontreuil 76 76 D. 1131 Robert De Courci ~1040 - 1098 Richard De Courci 58 58 ~1045 Wandelmode ~1006 - 1026 Robert De Courci 20 20 ~1007 Hebrea Godfred III Finnguala O'Niell ~1080 - 1153 Olaf II Godredson 73 73 ~1054 - 1092 Godfred II Of Isle Of Man 38 38 ~1000 Harold 'The Black' Of Isle Of Man D. UNKNOWN Ada of Amiens D. 0989 Godfred I Of Isle Of Man Niall MacMuirchertaig 1076 Nigel D' Oilly ~1085 Lucy De Rumilly >1100 - 1174 Uchtred Of Galloway 74 74 ~1040 - ~1090 Robert De Stuteville 50 50 ~1190 Hawise Basset 1115 Eleanor De Beaumont 1166 Beatrix De Keveliock Beatrix le Meschin ~1078 Helga De Keveliock 1005 - 1094 Roger II de Montgomery 89 89 Roger de Montgomerie, Count of Montgomerie and Viscount d'Exmes inNormandy, and subsequently Earl of Shrewsbury, Arundel and Chichester inEngland and Montgomery in Wales, was one of the most powerful andinfluential nobles at the court of William the Conqueror. This Rogeraccompanied William to England and led the main forces in the attack atHastings. He is said to have been the man who conceived the idea, and whomainly helped to carry it out, of the Conquest of England. He headed hisown vassals and provided a vast contingent of ships, no less than sixty,to carry out the expedition. His was the master mind of Normandy, andafter William I was firmly established Roger Montgomery was made Viceroyto govern Normandy in connection with Queen Matilda, but later when newsof the conspiracies reached them he took Roger back to England with himwhere he was given nearly the whole of County Salop, with the Earldom ofShrewsbury, he had been made Earl of Arundel also, and had 28 manors inDorset and also in Somerset, 77 in Sussex, besides the City of Chichesterand the Castle of Arundel and many others in different counties. Bry, agreat Antiquarian, summarizes the collective evidence of historicalmanuscripts into the fact that Roger Montgomery, the first Earl ofArundel and Count de Exmes or Hiemes in Normandy, was a descendant of theancient House of Hiemes, who had held that county at least 300 yearsprior to the reign of William the Conqueror. He asserts positively thathe has seen the manuscripts that prove this long line in France. Rogermarried 1st Mabel de Belesme or Belleme, daughter of William II, Count ofBelesme and Alencon of France, about 1044. She died 1086 and he married2nd Adeliza, daughter of Everard de Pusay, standard bearer of Robert,Duke of Normandy, the Crusader. Roger's first wife was the daughter ofWilliam of Belesme, surnamed "de Talvas," a name derived from a speciesof buckler he wore, or as some say a nickname denoting his great cruelty.He married Hildeburga, a daughter of Arnulph, a chevalier, a very nobleman. William was a man of savage and violent temper. On his wife'sprotesting against his enormities and condemning them openly, he causedher to be strangled. Roger greatly increased his wealth and his influenceby his marriage with Mabel, whose grandfather, Ivers de Criel, hadAlencon and Belesme in France from Richard II, Duke of Normandy. We havetold above how Roger's brother Gilbert was killed by Mabel in the attemptto kill Arnold or Ernauld, like a second Lucrezia Borgia. Gilbert wasthen in the flower of his youth, but she evidently had no remorse, andnot satisfied with the contratempts, then poisoned three noblemen,including Arnold, to make things sure. The other two recovered butArnold, having no one to nurse him, died. In revenge for this Hugh Bonel,a son of Arnold's uncle, forced entry by night into the chamber of theCountess and cut off her head as she lay in bed. He and his accomplicesescaped by destroying the bridges behind them. Mabel had possessedEschafour and Montreuil for 26 years, keeping him out of his inheritance.(Ordericus, the historian, who lived at this time, tells these grewsometales, but he was a monk in the Abbey of St. Everoult, which was foundedby the family of Arnulph Giroie, and was prejudiced against theMontgomeries and Belesmes and perhaps they were not as bad as he paintedthem.) Mabel seems to be a wicked and cruel woman, haughty, worldlyminded, crafty and a babler, but Roger's 2nd wife was the opposite, beingof the highest French nobility, remarkable for her good sense and piety.He had five sons and four daughters by Mabel: Hugh, Robert, Arnold, Rogerand Philip, Emma, Maud, Mabel and Sybil. (Sybil married WilliamFitz-Hamon and their daughter Mabel married Robert, called the Consul, afamous hero, and son of Henry I, King of England, by Elizabeth deBellomont, from whom you also deseend through the d'Audleys and Touchets.) 1105 - ~1155 Herbert Fitzherbert 50 50 ~1100 Gilbert D' Oyley 1317 - 1375 Baldwin II De Freville 58 58 1297 - 1343 Baldwin I De Freville 46 46 1116 Emma De Langetot 1060 Adelaide De Lisle ~1032 - 1086 Humphrey De Lisle 54 54 ~1215 William De La Plaunche 1301 - 30 Jan 1343/1344 William De Montague 1250 - 1316 Simon De Montacute 66 66 1069 - 1103 Agnes deMontreuil 34 34 ~1240 Ausrick De Courci ~1210 - 1270 William De Montague 60 60 ~1220 Bertha ~1190 Hugh De Folkington Margaret ~1160 - 1214 Hugh De Folkington 54 54 ~1164 Egeline D. 1213 John De La Warr Emma ~1065 Ermentrude D. UNKNOWN Arviragus 1006 Hamon De Crevecouer ~1065 - AFT 25 Feb 1083/1084 Gilbert II De Mello 1225 - 1274 Gilbert II Talbot 49 49 ~0920 Ragnfred Eiriksson Ragnfredsdotter ~1064 Maria Hardraada Haroldsdatter ~0970 - ~1018 Sigurd Sow Halfdansson 48 48 ~0970 Asta Gudbrandsdottir ~1157 Robert Mainwaring ~1071 - >1119 Roger Mesnilwaring 48 48 1005 Balderic "a Great Saxon of Thane" ~1028 Gamel De Tettesworth ~1183 - ~1225 Alice De Curcy 42 42 ~1130 Gundreda De Warenne ~1041 - 1107 Maude De Montgomery 66 66 ~1131 - ~1191 Roger IV De Berkeley 60 60 ~1126 Maud William De La Plaunche ~1065 Albert De Grelle ~1017 Thora Thorbergsdotter ~1132 Isabel D. UNKNOWN Francus King of the West Franks ~1154 Cecilia De Dunstanville ~1155 William De Dunstanville 1065 Ebles II De Roucy David De Warenne Matilda St. Liz 1028 Hugh De Dunstanville ~1062 Beatrice De Mandeville Cecilia ~1080 Ralph II De Langetot Ralph III De Langetot D. UNKNOWN Antharius last King of Sicambri Emma De Langetot ~1055 Hamon De Crevecoeur ~1321 Joan Furnival ~1092 - 10 Feb 1197/1198 Hugh II De Grentmesnil ~1152 Isabel Basset ~1170 - 1237 Olaf Of Isle Of Man 67 67 ~1160 - ~1207 William De Beaumont 47 47 ~1095 Agnes Von Mompelgard ~1053 Turstin Of Creully & Presles D. UNKNOWN Cassander ~1103 William De St. Pierre ~1134 - 1187 Simon I De Clermont 53 53 <1412 Alice Ugworthy <1408 - 1483 Stephen Thomas Giffard 75 75 <1420> Joan Spencer <1408 John Giffard <1382 John Ugworthy ~1369 Andrew Giffard ~1373 Ingaret Esse ~1435 - 1533 Thomas Giffard 98 98 D. UNKNOWN Merodachus 0883 - 0924 Adelbert I Count of Italy 41 41 ~1440 Avis Dennis ~1410 John Dennis ~1429 Eleanor Giffard ~1389 Agnes Churchill ~1359 John Churchill ~1363 Jane Dawney <1380> John Dennis <1385> Joan Thorne <1355> Thomas Thorne <1355> John Dennis D. UNKNOWN Godwulf <1359> Joan Esse <1329> William Esse <1325> Richard Dennis <1329> Elizabeth Bowhay ~1443 - 24 Feb 1511/1512 Alice Giffard ~1339 Joan Deuclive Richard Deuclive ~1365 Thomas Giffard ~1335 John Giffard ~1281 John Giffard 0378 - UNKNOWN Angus MacErca of the Scots <1308> Walter Gifford ~1260 Baldwin Gifford Joan <1310> Isabel ~1285 Sybel ~1448 Thomas Budockshide Randle Bamville <1466 - 6/4/1559 & 7/5/1575 (Betw) Richard Pomeroy/ Sir MISC:  Sheriff of Devon 13 Edward IV.  Knighted at the Bath on the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, wife of Henry VII.; d. 24 May 1496; will 24 Aug.; pro. 20 Oct 1496. P.C.C. (Horne 1.)

DOCUMENTS:  WILL

  On the 5th of July (1575) commission issued to Richard POMEROYE, natural and lawful son of Henry POMEROYE, late of Totnes in the County of Devon, deceased, having (goods rights and credits of the same deceased, sworn well (to administer) &c., with revocation of the letters of administration of the goods of the said deceased formerly granted to one Richard POMEROYE, now or late of Totnes aforesaid, in consequence of suppression of the truth & false statement and fraudulently by him obtained in the month of June, 1559, and the annulling thereof as appears by the acts of this court drawn up on this present day.  INVENTORY exhibited on the 4th.MISC:  2nd son. Heir to his brother, Sir Seintclere Pomeroy

DOCUMENTS:  WILL proved 20 Oct 1496
~1467 - 1493 Thomas Pomeroy 26 26 MISC:  Held lands in Cheriton, Fitzpaine, etc., which were settled upon him and Agnes, his wife, by her father, 20 Sep 1478.MISC:  3rd son. Held lands in Cheriton Fitzpaine plus others, which were settled upon by him and Agnes, his wife, by her father 20 Sep 1478. Betw 1413 & 1416 - 1481 Henry de La Pomeray MISC:  Aged thirty and more at his father's death, and forty and more at his mother's death.  Settled Stokeley Pomeray on Sinclere (Seint Clere) POMERAY, his son, and Katharine (COURTENAY), his wife, and their heirs, 27 Sept. 1462.~(from the Century Magazine, December, 1883.) 0404 - UNKNOWN Eochaid of the Scots ~1378 - 1446 Edward de La Pomeray 68 68 MISC:  Son and heir; succeeded by Bery POMERARY on the death of Sir Thomas POMERARY, 1426.  Sheriff of Devon 10 Henry VI.  Died 3 May 1446; seized of Bery POMERAY, Stokeley Pomerary, one-half of the manor Harberton, one-third of the manor of Brixton, by virtue of entail; ped. fin. 3 Edward III.  Inquest p. m. 24 Henry VI.

MARRIAGE:  Married Margaret, dau. of John BEVILE.  Settlement before marriage 5 Henry IV.; settlement after marriage, 12 Sept. 13 Henry VI.; she d. 10 Sept 1461. Inquest p. m. 1 Edward IV.
D. 1426 Thomas de La Pomeray MARRIAGE:  Married, but authorities do not give the name of his wife.  In accordance with ent entail of his father, by fine, 3 Edward III., his son and heir Edward succeeded to the manors of Stokeley, Byrye, Harberton, etc., the heir of his (Thomas's) brother Sir Henry having died without male issue, and his other elder brothers also having died with male issue. 1291 - 1361 Henry VIII de La Pomeray 70 70 MISC:  Son and heir, aged fourteen years 27 Sept. 33 Edward I., 1305, calming as son of Henry, son of Henry, son of Henry, son of Johanna, eldest of the two sisters and coheirs of Rober de VALLETORT, renewed the suit commened by his father for a moiety of the Castle and land of Roger de VALLETORT, 9 Edward II., 1316.  By the name of Henry, son of Henry de la POMERAY, Knight, and Amicia, dau. of Geoffrey de CAMVILLE, Confirmed the grant made by his grandfather Henry, son of Henry de la POMERAY and Margery de VERNON, in the manor of Tale. Had license to entail the manors of Stokeley, Byrye, Harberton, etc., on himself and Johanna his wife, for life, with remainder to his sons, Henry, William, Nicholas, John and Thomas, successively in tail male 1 May 2 Edward II., and entailed them by fine 3 Edward III., 1328.  Presented to the Church of Whitston, Devon, in right of Elizabeth, his wife 16 April 1359.  Died 22 Oct. 1367; inq. p. m. 41 Edward I. 1265 - 1304 Henry VII de La Pomeray 39 39 MISC:  Son and heir, born at Tregoney, County Cornwall, and bapt. in the church there 23 April 1265; sixteen years old and married at the Feast of Pentecost, I June 1281.  Inquest 9 Edward I.;  Proved his age as twenty-two years on the Friday after the Feast of Pentecost, 1287.  Inq. 15 Edward I.  Claimed a moiety of the manor of Trematon and the fifty-eight Knight's fees in Cornwall and Devon as coheir of Roger de VALLETORT, 33 Edward I.  This Henry was in ward to Sir Geoffrey de CAMVILE, his wife's father.

MARRIAGE:  Married, Amicia dau. of Sir Geoffrey de CAMVILE; held the manor of Stokeley Pomeray in dower, 1 May 2 Edward III.
D. <1481 Anna Cammel ~1380 Margaret Bevile MARRIAGE:  Margaret, dau. of John BEVILE.  Settlement before marriage 5 Henry IV.; settlement after marriage, 12 Sept. 13 Henry VI.; d. 10 Sept 1461. Inquest p. m. 1 Edward IV. John Bevile MARRIAGE:  Dau., Margaret, of John BEVILE.  Settlement before marriage 5 Henry IV.; settlement after marriage, 12 Sept. 13 Henry VI.; she d. 10 Sept 1461. Inquest p. m. 1 Edward IV. Elizabeth de Powderham ~1269 - >1328 Amicia de Camville 59 59 MARRIAGE:  Amicia dau. of Sir Geoffrey de CAMVILE; held the manor of Stokeley Pomeray in dower, 1 May 2 Edward III. William Cary William was a member of Parliament in the reign of Edward III (1363 or 1369). Researcher Fairfax Harrison shows his brother John as the ancestor of this line. 0452 Erca Marca William de La Pomeray MISC:  He was Captain of Castle Cornet, at St. Peter Port, Isle of Guernsey <1319 - 1373 Henry IX de La Pomeray 54 54 Nicholas de La Pomeray MISC:  Sheriff of County Devon, 50 Edward III; arms, or a lion rampant gules within a bordure engrailed sable. John de La Pomeray D. ~1353 Elizabeth de La Pomeray ~1352 - 1383 John De SainT Aubyn 31 31 1335 - 1420 Johanna de La Pomeray 85 85 John Pomeray <1466 - 1471 Saint Clare Pomeroy 5 5 BIRTH:  Eldest son and heir D. >1496 John Pomeroy MISC:  At least 4th son 0359 - UNKNOWN Niall Mor of the Nine D. >1496 Agnes Pomeroy Elizabeth Pomeroy D. 1416 John de La Pomeray MARRIAGE:  NO children D. <1416 Margaret de La Pomeray Philip de Brione ~1297 - <1337 John de Moels/ Sir/4th Lord 40 40 1289 - BEF 29 Jan 1315/1316 Nicholas de Moeles/ 2nd Lord Amy Trevitt 1333 - ~1418 James I Chudleigh 85 85 OCCUPATION:  Held Ashton as a minor 1358, of age 1361 D. >1433 Agnes Champernoun 0325 - UNKNOWN Eoch Moyvone D. 8 Feb 1456/1457 James II Chudleigh DOCUMENTS:  INQ. 36 Henry VI 1418 John Chudleigh Henry Hobson ~1430 - >1479 Anne Pomeroy 49 49 ~1417 - <1479 Robert Budockshide 62 62 ~1299 - <1359 Joan de Moels 60 60 MISC:  Also spelled MULESMISC:  Descended from Richard the Fearless and Gunnora. ~1295 - <1316 Roger de Moels 21 21 John Rawleigh MISC:  Also spelled RALEIGH D. 1478 Alice Raleigh MISC:  Also spelled RAWLEIGH Matilda Ferrers 0336 - UNKNOWN Inne William Ferrers Peter Rawleigh Mary Dawney Walter Rawleigh John Rawleigh Elizabeth Bamville Henry Rawleigh Isabell Beaumond ~1380 - 1418 John Saint Aubyn 38 38 ~1429 Alice Stukeley 0298 Murdeach Tireach ~1365 Thomas Bratton ~1367 Joan De Sydenham ~1299 Roger De Sydenham ~1302 Anges Boye ~1337 - 1403 Richard De Sydenham 66 66 ~1340 Joane Delingrige ~1316 Miss Delalynda ~1314 Robert Delingrige 1314 - 1360 Thomas I de Holand/ Sir Kt of the Garter 46 46 OCCUPATION:  Knt of the Garter, who assumed Earldom of Kent , j. u., Captain-General of Brittany, France and Normandy. D. 1349 Margaret de Holand 0305 - UNKNOWN Muiron 1289 - 1349 Maud La Zouche 60 60 D. 1328 Robert II de Holand/ Sir OCCUPATION:  Member Parliment 1314-1321 <1345 - 1411 Elizabeth Le Boteler 66 66 MISC:  Also spelled BOTILLER

DOCUMENTS:  WILL dated 1 June 1410/1,proved Jun 1411
Alianore de Holand 1319 - 1361 Maud (Matilda) de Holand 42 42 1318 - 1369 William IV Le Boteler 51 51 MISC:  Also spelled BOTILLER

OCCUPATION:  Member Parliment 1368/9OCCUPATION: 3rd Baron le Boteler, of Wemme; Knight
1309/1320 - 1387 Elizabeth de Holand BIRTH:  UNSURE parentsCONFLICT:  Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650, Frederick Lewis Weis, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1992 (not Robert Holand & Maud la Zouche)

MARRIAGE:  This Elizabeth is not the same Elizabeth who married William le Botiller.  Inq.p.m. states lady of the manor of Glen Magna, co. Leicester, is specifically called Elizabeth de Holand, dau. of Robert de Holand.
1318 - 1352 Henry Fitz Roger 33 33 BIRTH:  Eldest son

OCCUPATION:  Held manors of Chewton, Somerset, West Kington, co. Wilts, Sturminster Marshall, co. Dorset, Merston, Sussex (which he held jointly with his wife Elizabeth), Glen Magna, co. Leicester, Selling, Kent, Hinton Martel and Broadmayne (Mayne Martell), co. Dorset.
1412 - 1471 William III Bourchier/ Sir 59 59 ~1382 John de Affeton D. UNKNOWN Fiacha Srabhteine 0955 - 1048 Humbert I 'Bianca Mano' Count of Aosta 93 93 1123 - 1144 William deSaye 21 21 William died during the siege of Burnwell Castle. ~1385 Joan Bratton MISC:  Also spelled BRACTON D. 1467 Katherine de Affeton D. <1457 Hugh Stukeley MISC:  Also spelled STUCKLEY

BIRTH:  Youngest son

OCCUPATION:  Sheriff of Devon 1448-9, held manors of Affeton, East and West
Wolrington, Bradford Tracy, Bridgerule, Meshaw and Thelbridge, co. Devon, in right of this wife.

DOCUMENTS: ESTATE Adm. date 13 Dec 1457
1330 - 1407/1408 William Bonville/ Sir/Sheriff Somerset/Dorset OCCUPATION:  Large landowner in west of England, property including Shute, co. Devon, and Sock Dennis, Somerset; member Parliment 8 times fro Somerset and 12 times for Devon; sheriff of Somerset and Dorset, 1380-1; sheriff of Devon 1389, 1400 ~1352 - <1372 John Fitz Roger 20 20 D. 1426 Alice Chedder D. 16 Jan 1375/1376 Edmund de Clyvedon D. 1386 Ralph Carminow D. 1400 John Rodeney 1370 - 1414 Elizabeth Fitz Roger 43 43 BIRTH:  Only child

MARRIAGE:  He 1st husband was 8 or 9 when married.

OCCUPATION:  Held the manors of Chewton, co. Somerset, Glen Magna, co. Leicester, Merston, Sussex, 1/4 of Sturminster Marshall, co. Dorset.
0350 - UNKNOWN Romaich 1371 - 1396 John Bonville 25 25 MARRIAGE:  He 1st husband was 8 or 9 when married.

DOCUMENTS:  DEATH=INQ P.M. 20 Rich
D. <1441 Richard Stukeley MISC:  Also spelled STUCLE

BIRTH:  UNSURE father

OCCUPATION:  King's Esquire of Ridgewell, Essex, escheator of Somerset and Dorset, 1412/3, (prob. son of Geoffrey de STYUECLE, King's Esquire, of co. Bucks, London & Ireland, seen 1348-1380).  He and wife made settlement (1410) of the manors of Great Glen, co. Leicester, and Merston, Sussex, on themselves and heirs.
Geoffrey de Styuecle OCCUPATION:  King's Esquire, of co. Bucks, Londdon & Ireland, seen 1348-1380. 1393 - 18 Feb 1460/1461 William Bonville/ Sir Kt of the Garter/Lord Bonville OCCUPATION:  Lord Bonville, sheriff of Devonshire, senescal of Aquitaine 1312 - 16 Mar 1372/1373 Robert III de Holand/ Sir OCCUPATION:  Guardian of Garendon Abbey 1360 ~1295 - 1322 Roger Fitz Peter 27 27 BIRTH:  Eldest son (w. Roger Fitz Peter) de Urtiaco (Aka Del Ortiay) De Lorty 1475 - 30 Jan 1541/1542 Thomas Stukeley/ Sir knight MISC:  Also spelled STUCKLEY

OCCUPATION:  Held manors of Affeton, East and West Wolrington (both with
advowsons), Mewshaw (with advoson), Bridgerule, Drayfor, Huntshaw, Thelbridge (with advowson), Studlegh, Bradford Tracy, and Pyllaven, all in co. Devon, ENG.  Sheriff od Devon 1520-1.

DOCUMENTS:  INQ. 34 Henry VIII
1451 - 1488 Nicholas Stukeley 37 37 MISC:  Also spelled STUCKLEY

OCCUPATION:  Held manors of Affeton, East and West Wolrington, Bradford Tracy, Huntshaw, and Meshaw, co. Devon, Trent and Chilton Cantelowe, Somerset, and Preston, Halfhyde, and St. Mary Blanford, Dorset
D. 1477 Thomasine Cockworthy 0260 Aiofe Princess of Britian Test Cary Joane de Holand ~1340 Alice Le Boteler MISC:  Also spelled BOTILLER ~1156 - ~1176 Hugh Bardolf 20 20 The Elder ~1152 Unknown ~1161 - 1224 Henry De Grey 63 63 Henry de Grey; bought the Manor of Thurrock, Essex (later called ThurrockGrey) from Isaac the Jew and his son Josce; held the Manor of Codnor,Derbys by 1201; granted by Henry III 1216 the Manor of Grimston, Notts.[Burke's Peerage]

Sir Henry de Gray was in great favor with Richard I, Coeur de Lion, as is manifested from the grant which that prince made to him of the Manor ofTurrock, or Turroc, in Essex, afterwards called Thurrock Grey; whereofalso he had a confirmation by King John, with whom he continued in greatestimation. In the 8th of Richard I, William de Brewere, Sheriff, gaveaccount of 100s of Henry de Grey scutage for five knights' fees, becausehe was in the King's service beyond the sea. In 13th of King John, Henryde Grey held six knights' fees of the honour of Peveral. In 1st of HenryIII he had a grant of the Manor of Grimstone, County Notts, from RobertBardolph, for his support in the King's service. This Robert Bardolph died 9th of Henry I (1225), when the said Henry de Gray married Isolda,daughter of Hugh, and niece and heir of the said Robert, brother of Hugh,shared with Maud Bardolph and others. all the lands of said Robert. They had six sons: Richard, whose principal seat was at Codnor, County Derby;John, Justice of Chester; William; Walter, Archbishop of York, and Henry.

Complete Peerage: Volume 6: Grey of Codnor
Volume 6, page 123: SIR HENRY DE GREY [d.1308] ... was a minor at his father's death.(b) Note b: Cal. Inq. p. m., Hen. III, no. 810. His age as given in the inquisitions varies from 14 to 17.
The writs for the inquisitions after the death of Henry's father were dated 5 and 25 January 56 Henry III [1271/2], and the inquisitions were taken in January and February. Most give Henry's age as 13, 14 or 15, and one as 17.
Page 124, note e: [In his will] he [Sir Henry de Grey (d.1308)] mentioned his da. Luce de Somery [who m. a son of Roger de Somery (Anc. Corresp., 26/36), of the marriage of whose heirs he had had a grant (Cal. Patent Rolls, 27 Dec. 1292)]
The marriage was granted to John de Bretagne, 27 December 1291, and an additional note records a subsequent grant to Henry de Grey [Cal. Patent Rolls, 1281-1292, p.464]. Sir Henry's daughter, Lucy de Somery, was evidently the wife of John de Somery (d.1322) [see Somery  vol.12, part 1, p.115].

---------------------

In the 6th year of King Richard I [1195], that monarch conferred themanor of Thurrock, co. Essex (afterwards called Thurrock Grey), uponHenry de Grey, which grant was confirmed by King John, who vouchsafed, byspecial charter, to permit the said Henry de Grey to hunt the hare andfox in any land belonging to the crown, save the king's owndemesne-parks. In the 1st Henry III [1216], he had also a grant of themanor of Grimston, co. Nottingham, and having afterwards m. Isolda, nieceand heiress of Robert Bardolf, shared in the inheritance of his lands. Bythis lady Henry de Grey had issue, Richard, John, William, Robert,Walter, and Henry. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p.247-248, Grey, Baron Grey, of Codnor, co. Derby]
~1182 - <1246 Isolda Bardolf 64 64 Complete Peerage: Volume 6: Grey of Codnor
Volume 6, page 133 (note): He [Henry de Grey (d. 1219)] m. Iseude, da. of Hugh Bardolf (by his wife Isabel), and one of the 5 sisters and coheirs of Robert Bardolf, of Great Carlton, co. Lincoln, and Hoo, Kent, which Robert Bardolf (parson of 30 churches) succeeded his brother the said Hugh Bardolf. Richard de Grey, s. and h. of Henry de Grey, confirmed a grant of pasture made by Robert Bardolf to the Abbey of Barlings. "Dominus Robertus Bardolfus qui dedit nobis ... habuit quinque sorores quae successerunt ei in hereditate ... De secunda Dominus Ricardus de Grey, de quo Johannes, de quo Henricus ..." (B.M. Cott. MS., Faust., B 1, Cartulary of Barlings, fol. 106 and passim).
~1205 - 1231 John Segrave 26 26 ~1180 Roger De Cauz 1268 - 1323 John De Grey 55 55 0326 - UNKNOWN Fincormach ~1235 - 1308 Reynold De Grey 73 73 ~1245 - <1302 Maud De Longchamp 57 57 ~1243 Hawise (Joan) De Grey ~1159 - 1239 William Cantilupe 80 80 ~1128 - 1182 William Cantilupe 54 54 1129 Unknown ~1161 Fuld Cantilupe ~1163 Roger Cantilupe ~1165 Sibilla Cantilupe ~1205 - 1265 John De Grey 60 60 John (Sir) [2nd son], of Shirland, Derbys; Justice of Chester.  [Burke'sPeerage]
Chief Justice of Chester, Governor of Dover Castle, Constable of Gannock Castle, Sheriff of Buckingham.
0304 - UNKNOWN Thrinklind ~1210 - <1264 Henry De Longchamp 54 54 ~1213 Joan ~1180 - <1205 John De Braose 25 25 ~1185 Nichole De Leigh ~1154 - >1198 Roger De Cauz 44 44 ~1158 Unknown ~1156 - ~1217 Bartholomew De Leigh 61 61 ~1161 - >1241 Emma Ruffus 80 80 ~1126 Hugh De Leigh ~1130 Beatrice De Glanville 0239 - UNKNOWN Corbred ~1132 William Ruffus ~1182 - 1227 Geoffrey De Cauz 45 45 ~1184 James De Cauz ~1199 - <1271 Richard De Grey 72 72 ~1148 Richard De Grey ~1212 - <1251 Emma De Cauz 39 39 ~1177 Hugh De Longchamp ~1185 - 1253 Georgia Columbaris 68 68 1158 - 1212 Henry De Longchamp 54 54 ~1138 - ~1194 Hugh De Longchamp 56 56 0280 Athirco ~1138 - 1196 Emma De St. Leger 58 58 1155 Henry Columbaris D. <1186 Philip I Columbieres ~1126 - >1213 Maud De Candos 87 87 ~1155 Isabel de Condet ~1115 Hugo Bardolf ~1130 Amabilia De Lindsay Reynold De Meudre ~1211 - 1256 Joan 45 45 ~1203 Hugh De Grey 0255 - UNKNOWN Eochaid ~1204 William De Grey ~1206 Robert De Grey 1581 - 1640 Elizabeth Eccleston 59 59 ~1210 Henry De Grey ~1213 - 1256 Joan De Grey 43 43 ~1155 Margaret De Longchamp ~1182 Juliana Bardolf ~1172 Hugh Bardolf ~1174 Robert Bardolf ~1178 Cecilia Bardolf 0214 - UNKNOWN II Conaire ~1180 Matilda Bardolf ~1182 Unknown ~1198 Beatrice Bardolf ~1154 Robert Bardolf ~1130 Roger De Cauz ~1132 Agnes ~1156 William De Cauz ~1154 - ~1242 Eva De Grey 88 88 ~1130 Anchitel Grey ~1256 Hawise De Longchamp 0495 - UNKNOWN deuteria ~1130 Eva Redvers ~1150 - >1192 John De Grey 42 42 ~1152 Alice De Grey ~1155 Maud Cantilupe ~1178 - <1205 William De Longchamp 27 27 1108 - ~1141 Robert de Condet 33 33 Lord of Thorngate Castle 1110 - 1128 Alice De Meschines 18 18 Aka: Alice Le Meschine Margaret Sewell ~1297 - 1337 John II De Moels 40 40 <1093 - >1143 Sybil de Neufmarche 50 50 He [Miles of Gloucester] married, as aforesaid, about April or May 1121,Sibyl, daughter of Bernard DE NEUFMARCHE, lord of Brecknock. He died 24December 1143, and was buried in the chapter house of Llanthony Prioryoutside Gloucester, which he had founded. His widow, who is stated tohave entered into religion after his death, was also buried atLlanthony.  [Complete Peerage VI:452-4, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 0450 - UNKNOWN Afranius Syagrius Gallo-Roman Consul 0810 - 0877 Constantine King of Scotland 67 67 ~1070 Emma de Ballon ~1050 - 1093 Bernard de Neufmarche 43 43 ~1077 Nesta verch Osborn 1018 Geoffrey Sire de Neufmarche 1027 Ada de Hugleville ~1230 - <1271 Agnes de Moels 41 41 <1304 - <1337 John 4th Baron de Moels 33 33 John Moels, 4th Lord (Baron) Moles (dspm 21 Aug 1337), since when bylater doctrine the Barony is deemed to have fallen into abeyance betweenhis daughters and their representatives), of North Cadbury, Somerset andEast Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire.  [Burke's Peerage]

---------------------------

BARONY OF MOELS (IV)

JOHN (DE MOELS), LORD MOELS, brother and heir. On 18 July 1316 RichardLovel was granted the wardship of two parts of the lands late ofNicholas, John's brother, until the full age of John. Having proved hisage and done homage, he had livery of the lands of Roger de Moels, hisbrother, 17 September 1325. He was ceremoniously knighted January 1326/7.On 5 May 1328 he had licence to grant to Margaret de Moels (his brother'swidow), for life, a moiety of the manor of Diptford and the hundred ofStanborough, Devon, in exchange for a grant of her interest in the manorof Little Berkhampstead. He was a justice of the peace in 1329. On 7 May1331 the escheator was ordered to take the lands of John de Moels,knight, into the King's hand because he had gone outside the realmwithout licence, contrary to the proclamation. He was granted themarriage of Elizabeth, late the wife of Edmund de Mortimer, 7 July 1333,but did not marry her. On 21 November 1335 he had protection, being aboutto go beyond seas. He was never summoned to Parliament. He married Joan,daughter of Richard [LOVEL] 1st Lord Lovel [of Castle Cary] by Muriel,daughter and heir of Sir John de Soules. He died s..p.m., before 21August 1337. On 1 September 1337 custody of his lands was granted toThomas de Ferrars and Thcobald de Mounteney. At his death the Barony ofMoels is held, according to modern doctrine, to have fallen into abeyancebetween his two daughters and coheirs, who were both born in Dorset:

(i) Muriel, aged 15 in 1337, who married, without licence, after herfather's death and before the inquisition on his lands, Sir Thomas deCourtenay, for which they received pardon 27 August 1337. On 6 October1337, Thomas de Courtenay having done fealty, he and Muriel receivedtheir pourparty of her father's lands, and on 3 March 1337/8 theirpourparty of knights' fees. In 1349, on the death of her aunt Margaret,late wife of Nicholas de Moels, Muriel received her share of the dowerlands. Muriel and Thomas had one son, Hugh, who died s.p. and twodaughters, (a) Muriel, who m. Sir John de Dinham (see DINHAM), and (b)Margaret, who margaret Sir Thomas Peverel, and had two daughters (i)Eleanor, who m. Sir William Talbot and died s.p., and (ii) Catherine, whomarried Sir Walter Hungerford (see HUNGERFORD).

(ii) Isabel, born at Marnhull, Dorset, 31 May 1376, but said to be aged"13 years and more" in September 1337, and 25 and more in April 1349.Having married, without licence, William de Botreaux, her lands wereforfeited 30 August 1337, but they received pardon 6 October 1337. Isabelhaving proved her age on 18 June 1347, and William's fealty and homagebeing respited until the King's return to England, they received theirpourparty of her father's lands 6 July 1347, and in 1349, on the death ofher aunt Margaret, late wife of Nicholas de Moels, Isabel received hershare of the dower lands. Isabel and William had a son William, who wassummoned to Parliament in 1368 (see BOTREAUX). Isabel'sgreatgreat-granddaughter, Margaret, Baroness Botreaux, married Robert,Lord Hungerford, great-grandson of Isabel's sister Muriel, and thusunited one moiety and half of the other moiety of the Barony of Moels.See HASTINGS and HUNGERFORD.

[Complete Peerage IX:7-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
3 Jan 1268/1269 - 1310 John 1st Baron de Moels Complete Peerage: Volume 9: Moels
Volume 9, page 6: He [John de Moels (d. 1310)] m., in or before 1302, Maud.(b)  Note b: 1311 John, Lord Grey of Wilton, (d. 1323) settled by fines lands on his younger son Roger, with successive remainders to Roger, son of John de Moels and John and Ralph, sons of Ralph Basset of Drayton [Complete Peerage, vol. 6, p. 153, note a]. Ralph Basset of Drayton had married a daughter of John, Lord Grey, so this evidence supports the statement of Dugdale [Baronage, p. 620] that John de Moels married a daughter of Lord Grey of Ruthin (which was held, with Wilton, by John de Grey). The Roger de Moels mentioned in the fines was born "about 11 June 1295" [p. 6]. Note that neither his elder brother Nicholas (b. 1289), nor his younger brother John (presumably born in 1304, as he proved his age in 1325) are mentioned, which may imply that they were children of different marriages.
Cal. Patent Rolls, 1301-7, p. 53. Her parentage has not been ascertained.

Marshall of the Army - fought in Scottish Wars.  [Ancestral Roots]

BARONY OF MOELS

JOHN DF MOELS, of Cadbury and Mapperton, co. Somerset; King's Carswell,Diptford, and Langford, co. Devon; Little Berkhampstead, co. Hertford;Over Orton and Stoke Basset, co. Oxford, &c., son and heir of Roger deMoels, of Cadbury, &c.. He was aged 26 and more at his father's death,and on 6 August 1295 did homage and had livery of his father's lands. Hewas summoned for military service against the Scots, and also inFlanders, frorn 1 March 1295/6 to 30 July 1309; to attend the King atSalisbury, 24 February 1296/7; and to a Military Council at Rochester, 8September 1297. He was summoned to Parliament from 6 February 1298/9 to16 June 1311, by writs directed Johanni de Moeles, whereby he is held tohave become LORD MOELS. In 1297 the sheriff of Dorset was ordered todeliver to John houses within the castle of Sherborne sufficient forhimself and his wife to live in during the King's pleasure. He joined inthe Barons' letter to the Pope, 12 February 1300/1. In the Parliament atWestminster, 28 February 1304/5, he with others mainperned William deMontagu, who, with Amauri de St. Amand, had been committed to the Towerof London for certain misdeeds. He married, in or before 1302, Maud. Hedied 20 May 1310.  [Complete Peerage IX:5-6, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]

Also spelled MULES
~1279 Maud de Grey Following copied from "Some Corrections and Additions to CompletePeerage" website:

MOELS or MOELES
Volume 9, page 6:
He [John de Moels (d. 1310)] m., in or before 1302, Maud.(b)

Note b: Cal. Patent Rolls, 1301-7, p. 53. Her parentage has not beenascertained.

John P. Ravilious, in January 2002, pointed out that in 1311 John, LordGrey of Wilton, (d. 1323) settled by fines lands on his younger sonRoger, with successive remainders to Roger, son of John de Moels and Johnand Ralph, sons of Ralph Basset of Drayton [Complete Peerage, vol. 6, p.153, note a]. Ralph Basset of Drayton had married a daughter of John,Lord Grey, so this evidence supports the statement of Dugdale [Baronage,p. 620] that John de Moels married a daughter of Lord Grey of Ruthin(which was held, with Wilton, by John de Grey).

The Roger de Moels mentioned in the fines was born "about 11 June 1295"[p. 6]. Note that neither his elder brother Nicholas (b. 1289), nor hisyounger brother John (presumably born in 1304, as he proved his age in1325) are mentioned, which may imply that they were children of differentmarriages.

[This problem was also discussed by Douglas Richardson.]

MISC:  Also spelled GRAY
D. UNKNOWN Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus >1232 - BEF 17 Jan 1294/1295 Roger de Moels Keeper of Isle of Wight 1267 and Keeper of Forest of Braden 1292.[Ancestral Roots]

---------------------------

Roger de Moels, 2nd but 1st surviving son and heir of Nicholas, was underage in 1253. He was an adherent of the King in the Barons' War. In 1267he was one of the keepers of the Isle of Wight. On 2 March 1267/8 he hada grant of a weekly market and yearly fair at his manor of King'sCarswell, co. Devon. In 1277 he took part in the Welsh campaign, and wasone of the barons of West Wales guaranteeing the peace with Rhys apMeredith. The castle and honour of Lampadervaur, with all the King'slands in co. Cardigan, were committed to him in March 1277/8. In 1282 hewas again in the Welsh wars. On 6 October 1283 he obtained a pardon forthe arrears in his account when he was bailiff in Wales, and in January1284/5 he had a protection on going beyond the seas. He was appointed onvarious commissions. In 1293 he was keeper of the forest of Braden. Thefollowing year he was appointed marshal of the army sent against theWelsh, for that expedition, during pleasure. The name of his wife isunknown. He died before 17 June 1295.  [Complete Peerage IX:4-5,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
<1186 - >1264 Nicholas de Moels 78 78 NICHOLAS DE MOELS, whose parentage is unknown, appears to have been froman early age in the court of King John, and was an official activelyemployed in the King's service both in embassies and the field. In 1217the manor of Watlington was granted to him "for his sustenance in theking's service," and similar gifts followed. In April 1223, he was sentto Poitou on an embassy from the King, and again in the followingJanuary. In the summer of 1223 he served in the King's expedition intoWales, and in the following year at the siege of Bedford. In January1224/5 he was one of the ambassadors sent. to Cologne to treat of aproposed marriage between Henry III and a daughter of Leopold VI, Duke ofAustria. In July 1226 the land of Little Berkhampstead was granted tohim, and this and other estates were later confirmed in fee. He also, byhis marriage with a wealthy heiress, Hawise, one of the daughters andheirs of James de Newmarch, acquired Cadbury and other manors in Somersetand the neighbouring counties, thus becoming one of the greaterlandowners. In 1227 he was in Gascony on the King's service, and a jointambassador to the Count of Flanders; in March 1228 was charged withnegotiations as to the truce with France, and in November of that year,at Westminster, witnessed Henry's grant to the Bishop of Chichester ofland in." New Street," now the site of Lincoln's Inn. In April of thefollowing year, as miles noster familiaris, he was a plenipotentiary totreat of peace with Louis IX of France, and was again going to Gascony inthe King's service. He was sheriff of Hants and custos of WinchesterCastle from July 1228 to March 1231/2, sheriff of Devon, 1234-1236, ofYork, Easter 1239 to Michaelma 1241, and of Kent, March to October 1258.He was granted the custody of the Channel Islands in 1234, and was keeperthe bishopric of Durham during part of the vacancy after the translationof Bishop Richard le Poer, 1237. At the Coronation of Queen EIeanor, in1236, he and Richard Siward, milites strenui, carried the two royalsceptres. In 1242 he was ambassador to the King of France with RalphFitzNicholas, and later in the year joined the English King in Bordeaux.In September 1243 Henry III, returning to England, left Nicholas de Moelsas seneschal of Gascony. In the following year he inflicted a defcat onthe King of Navarre. In 1245 he was appointed keeper of the castles ofCardigan and Carmarthen, and in the same year was constable of Pembroke,Haverford, Kilgarran and Tenby. In 1246 and 1247 he was in the wars ofWales and was seneschal of Carmarthen, and in February 1248/9 was addedto the commissioners to deal with the King of Navarre. As "Nicholas deMolis, king's clerk," he had a grant of free warren in his demesne landsin Cadbury and Mapperton in January 1250/1. On 16 June 1252 he was sentinto Gascony with Roscelin de Fos, Master of the Templars in England, asconservator of the truce between Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester,and Gaston, Viscount de Bearn. He was engaged in Wales in connection withHenry's futile expedition in 1257, and in 1263 received his last militarysummons to the muster at Hereford against Llewelyn. In January 1257/8 hewas appointed constable of Dover Castle and Warden of the Cinque Ports.He was constable of the castles of Rochester, Canterbury, and Winchesterin 1258, of Sherborne in 1261, and of Corfe in 1263, and one of theKing's serjeants in Windsor Castle 1263-64. He was on the King's side inthe Barons' War, and was ordered, 4 July 1264, to deliver Windsor Castleto John, son of John, the custodian appointed by the Barons.

He married, in or after 1230, Hawise, widow of John DE BOTREAUX (whom shemarried in 1218), and younger daughter and coheir of James DE NEWMARCH(de Neufmarché), of Cadbury, &c. Somerset. She apparently was living in1244. He probably died in or shortly after 1264, and was certainly deadbefore Easter 1271.  [Complete Peerage IX:1-4, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]
~1205 - >1244 Hawise de Newmarch 39 39 He [Nicholas de Moels] married, in or after 1230, Hawise, widow of JohnDE BOTREAUX (whom she married in 1218), and younger daughter and coheirof James DE NEWMARCH (de Neufmarché), of Cadbury, &c. Somerset. Sheapparently was living in 1244. He probably died in or shortly after 1264,and was certainly dead before Easter 1271.  [Complete Peerage IX:1-4,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] ~1180 - 1232 James de Newmarch 52 52 CP does not give an ancestry for James.  John Ravilious states that he isson of William & heir of his brother Henry in 1206.  I have him as son ofHenry.  Rosie Bevan, citing Sanders, p. 68, says that James succeeded hisbrother William in 1204 and their father was Henry de Newmarche, d.1186.  John Ravilious states that DD (Domesday Descendants) also hasJames as son of Henry, but that DD is wrong.  @check ancestry ~1155 Robert de Moels ~1160 - >1219 Roese 59 59 In 1219 Roese de Moles quitclaimed to William de Lege all her rights inRisdon, Whiteley and Dorneford, Devon.  [Complete Peerage IX:1 note (b)] ~1125 - >1166 Joel de Moels 41 41 In 1166 Joel de Moles held 4 knights fees in Devon under Robert theKing's son.  [Complete Peerage IX:1 note (b)] ~1095 Nicholas de Moels <1065 - >1100 Roger de Moels 35 35 In 1086 Roger de Moles was undertenant of Baldwin FitzGilbert C. Brionne,Sheriff of Devon.  Meules was the caput of Baldwin's Norman barony,whence he himself was often known as Baldwin de Meulles.  Roger de Molesmay well have been the ancestor of the later family of Moels, of which anaccount is given in The Complete Peerage, new edition, vol ix, p. 1.[Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families]

----------------------

In 1086 Roger de Moles held Lew Trenchard, Teigin in Ashton, Waddlescotand Pennycot, of Baldwin the sheriff, which lands, with others held byRoger, were held by John de Molis in 1242 of John de Curtenay of themanor of Okehampton.  [Complete Peerage IX:1 note (b)]
~1156 - <1206 Henry de Newmarch 50 50 John Ravilious has Henry as brother of James, while Rosie Bevan, citingSanders, p. 68, indicates that Henry, d. 1186, was father of James.  AlsoJohn Ravilious has the wife of Ralph Lovel, Maud (who I have as daughterof this Henry), as daughter of this Henry's grandfather (also a Henry).I believe that the grandfather is far too old to be father of Maud. D. UNKNOWN Antonia Minor ~1130 - <1189 William de Newmarch 59 59 ~1105 - >1165 Henry de Newmarch 60 60 ~1278 Vincent de Moleyns Note: I have not published source on Vincent's parents.  Many people onWorld Connect have Vincent has son of Roger (d. 1295).  However many ofthose people state that his mother was Alice Prouz.  This is wrong:Alice, who was not born until 1285/6, married the son of the Roger who d.in 1295. <1280 - 1323 Roger de Moels 43 43 (c) Roger de Moels of Lustleigh, Devon, was perhaps a younger son of his[Roger de Moels, d. 1295].  This Roger was a King's yeoman in 1301, andm. Alice, aged 30 and more in 1316, daughter and heir of William la Prouzby Alice, coheir of William de Reyny.  This Roger's son William ismentioned in 1318, possibly son by an earlier wife and dsp & vp.  Hiswidow Alice, d. in 1335, her heirs being three daughters, apparently byan earlier husband, who were all over 30 years of age at their mother'sdeath.  This Alice has been mistakenly called the wife of Roger de Moels(d. 1295) and of Roger his grandson (d. 1316).  [Complete Peerage, IX:5note (c), XIV:5]

Note: Volume XIV states that the "younger son" about should be replacedwith "younger brother", which I am not doing.  This would make Roger ayounger brother of another Roger, which while possible, is extremelyrare.  I will go with Ancestral Roots on this one.
~1200 - <1230 John de Botreaux 30 30 ~1295 - <1316 Roger 3rd Baron de Moels 21 21 BARONY OF MOELS (III)

ROGER (DE MOELS), LORD MOELS, brother and heir, born about 11 June 1295.On 5 March 1316 he was holding, either in part or as a whole, thetownships of Throwley, Chagford, Sbilston, Sprayton, Whitchurch,Buckland, and Bickleigh, co. Devon; and Over, and Nether Worton, co.Oxford; the King holding the hundred of Stanborough, and the townships ofLangford, Lister, Boterford and Aveton Giffard, by reason of Roger'sminority. He did homage 29 June 1316, and had livery of his brother'slands, although he had not proved his age. He was not summoned toParliament. He died unmarried, before 13 July 1316.  [Complete PeerageIX:6-7, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
~1270 Unknown First Wife 1289 - BEF 29 Jan 1315/1316 Nicholas 2nd Baron de Moels BARONY OF MOELS (II)

NICHOLAS (DE MOELS), LORD MOELS, son and heir, born 10 August 1289. On 24August 1310 he did homage and had livery of his father's lands. He wassummoned for military service against the Scots from 14 July 1311 to 30June 1314, and ordered to remain in Northern parts during the winter 30August 1315. He was summoned to Parliament from 19 December 1311 to 16October 1315.

He married, before February 1312/3, Margaret, sister of Hugh, EARL OFDEVON, and daughter of Sir Hugh DE COURTENAY, by Eleanor, daughter ofHugh LE DESPENSER, Justiciar of England. He died s.p., before 29 January1315/6. His widow had dower assigned 1 April 1316. On 4 June 1320 she hadlicence to marry anyone she would of the King's allegiance. She died 18March 1348/9.  [Complete Peerage IX:6, XIV:478, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]
~1065 - AFT 5 Mar 1103/1104 Hamelin de Ballon OWNERS of the LORDSHIP of ABERGAVENNY (I) temp. William II

Hamelin de Ballon (c), received the lordship of Over Gwent, including thecastle of Abergavenny (d), from William Rufus.  He m. Agnes, and had twosons, William and Matthew.  He was living in 1103, and d. 5 Mar 11--(a).  [Complete Peerage I:20-21]

(c) For the earliest lord of Abergavenny see the paper on 'The family ofBallon', in JH Round's 'Studies in Peerage and Family History', whereDugdale's errors are corrected.  It is there shown that Hamelin, who tookhis name from his birthplace, Ballon in Maine, received his lands inEngland from William Rufus.  He founded a Priory in Abergavenny.

(d) The Castle "taketh his name from the river of Gevenny, whereon it issituate, and the British word Abher which signifieth a mouth", beingbuilt where the "Gevenny doth open itself to the end of the Uske".

(a) The 'fundatoris genalogia of Abergavenny' says that he was son of Drude Baladun, and that he dsp. and gave Abergavenny and Over Gwent toBrien, son of his sister Lucy.  But JH Round has proved that he left adaughter, Emmeline, who m. Reynold, son of Roger, Earl of Hereford [seeRoger FitzMiles of Gloucester Earl of Hereford in my files], and wasmother of William, who, in 1166, entered a claim to Abergavenny.  The'genealogia', which, however, as Round elsewhere remarks, breaks downcompletely on being tested, states that Earl Miles was son of Emma,another sister of Hamelin.
~1060 Lucy de Ballon Marc Anthony Triumvir ~1177 - <1249 Maud de Neufmarche 72 72 ~1160 Isabel ~1234 Maud de Moels He [Richard del Ortlay/Uriaco/Lorty] m. Maud, daughter of Nicholas deMoels, by Hawise, daughter and coheir of James de Newmarch, andpredeceased his mother.  [Complete Peerage, X:183] ~1183 Maud ~1080 William de Newmarch John Ravilious does not give an ancestry or place of origin for William,but I believe him to have the same parents as Adam, who I originally hadas progenitor of this line, except that the dates would indicate anearlier wife. ~1083 Mabilia de Ballon ~1058 - >1125 Winebald de Ballon 67 67 John Ravilious does not give Winebald any parents, but Doug Smithindicates he is brother of Hamelin, which indicates that his father isDru. ~1055 Unknown First Wife ~1092 Adam de Neufmarche ~1248 John de Beauchamp Governor of Cardigan Castle. D. UNKNOWN Octavia 1356 - 1423 Joan Chudleigh 67 67 MISC:  Also spelled CHEDLEIGH Richard Bozune Margaret Bozune Richard Stapleton Adam de Cary The town of Castle Cary has no recorded history prior to the Normans, although a Saxon charter mentioned Cari in 725 AD. According to the Somerset Domesday Book, Castle Cary was held before 1066 by the Saxon Alfsi. The subsequent Norman holder of Castle Cary was Walter de Douai, son of Urso of Douai near Lille in Normandy. He was at the Battle of Hastings with William the Conqueror. He held 37 manors and extensive lands in Devonshire and a great barony. His chief domain was at Bampton, and from him descended the Barons of Bampton. He was noted as an under-tenant of Roger de Courcelle. In 1086 Douai is mentioned in the Somerset Domesday book as holding Castle Cary which was his richest property in Somerset. Castle Cary or Kari in 1086 was a prosperous manor of 2,400  acres of plowland, of which 960 were held by the lord, 100 acres of meadow and woodland measuring one league by one half. It had three gristmills, 23 villagers, 20 smallholders, 17 plows, six slaves, eight swineherds, 50 swine 16 cattle and 117 sheep.

It is likely that early fortifications were built either by the Romans, Britons or the Saxons. At the time of the Norman Conquest (1066AD) the population of Cary was about 300 souls. By 1138 AD the Normans had built a castle at the foot of Lodge Hill, giving the town part of its name. By 1107, Castle Cary was held by Ralph Lovell whose father was probably Geoffrey de Douai, son of Walter de Douai, Baron Bampton who held Castle Cary at the time of Domesday. He was succeeded in 1121 by his son Baldwin Lovell, was succedded by Ralph II, a rebel against King Stephen. In 1138 King Stephen "beseiged Castle Cary with vigour and determination, and since his engine scattered fire and showers of stones among the beseiged and the pressure went on until their rations ran short, he at last compelled them to surrender." Later in the war in 1147, the king was fortifying Castle Cary and was set upon by the Earl of Glocester who routed him from the place. In 1166, Castle Cary was held once again by Henry Lovell, son of Ralph II. Although nearby earthworks can still be seen on the side of Lodge Hill, no trace of the original castle remains.

Archealogical examination of the site indicates that the keep was 78 feet square and of early Norman construction. The presence of many burnt stones suggest it was destroyed mainly by fire, probably about 1155. It may be that the Horse Pond is part of the ancient moat.Baron Lovel eventually became a supporter of King Stephen and continued as baron of Castle Cary after the end of the civil war. His son Henry Lovel who was tenant in chief at Castle Cary in 1166, married a certain Alice de Cary who may have been a co-heiress of the Bramptons. The relation between Allice de Cary and Adam de Cary is not known yet. According to Cary family history, Adam was a lord at Castle Kari in Somersetshire in 1198, forty years after the destruction of the castle fortifications, according to Sir William Pole. It may be that Adam held a portion of Castle Cary as sub-tenant of Ralph Lovel, son of Henry.

Castle Kari was four miles north of Cadbury Castle, the legendary Camelot of the of King Arthur. The town of Castle Cary now lies about 30 miles south of Bristol and springs near the town are the source of the River Cary. A certain Baron Dekari particpated in the Crusades in 1095, but his relation to Adam de Kary is not known.
Sources for this information:
Henry Grosvenor Cary, The Cary Family in England  p. 25
Sir Henry Saint-George, The Visitation of the County of Devon in the year 1620. Ed. by Frederic Thomas Colby. London, 1872. Harleian society. Publications ; v.6.
William Page, ed., The Victoria History of the Counties of England, (London, Constable, 1906- ). Somerset, vol. 2 p. 181-3
John Moris, ed. and Caroline Thorne, trans., Domesday Book, Chicester, 1980; volume 8, Somerset 24:17
William Page, ed., The Victoria History of the Counties of England, (London, Constable, 1906- ).  Somerset, vol. 2, p. 181
William Page, ed., The Victoria History of the Counties of England, (London, Constable, 1906- ). Somerset, vol.2, p 181-183
K.B.S. Keats-Rohan, Domesday Descendants, A Prosopography of People Ocurring in English Documents 1066 - 1166, II Pipe Rolls to Cartae Baronum (Boydell Press, 2002).  p. 1016 Text: K. R. Potter, editor & translator, Gesta Stephani, Oxford, 1976 p. 67-69 Text: K. R. Potter, editor & translator, Gesta Stephani, Oxford, 1976 p. 211-12 Text: K.B.S. Keats-Rohan, Domesday Descendants, A Prosopography of People Ocurring in English Documents 1066 - 1166, II Pipe Rolls to Cartae Baronum (Boydell Press, 2002). p. 1017 George Edward Cokayne, 1825-1911; The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant; London, (1910)  "Lovel" Text: George Edward Cokayne, 1825-1911; The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant; London, (1910) vol. 7, p. Text:
Brian J. L. Berry; The Ancestry of Elizabeth Yanconish Berry, (McKinney, Texas, 1989).
1250 - 1320 Humphrey de Beauchamp 70 70 1253 Alice de Beauchamp 1255 Sybil Oliver 1230 Walter Oliver 1307 - <1358 John Chudleigh 51 51 D. UNKNOWN Julia 1279 Alice de Beauchamp 1285 - 1337 John de Beauchamp 52 52 1292 - 1344 Alice de Nonant 52 52 ~1270 Roger de Nonant 1311 - 1420 Joan de Beauchamp 109 109 1315 - 1349 John Beauchamp 34 34 1282 John Chudleigh 1287 Thomasine Prowse 1260 - >1340 Richard Prouse 80 80 2nd son ~1270 Margarita D. UNKNOWN Antonius Creticus 1257 John Chudleigh ~1244 Mary de Beauchamp ~1150 - 1236 Walter de Beauchamp 86 86 ~1248 John de Beauchamp Governor of Cardigan Castle. ~1080 - 1155 Philip de Braose 75 75 Philip returned from the 1st Crusade in 1103.  His lands were confiscated by Henry I in 1110, due to his traitorous support of William, son of Robert Curthose, but they were returned in 1112.  Philip de Braose possibly went on the 2nd Crusade and died in Palestine. Elizabeth Stapleton 1219 - 1265 Robert de Beauchamp 46 46 1190 Robert de Beauchamp 1250 - 1320 Humphrey de Beauchamp 70 70 D. UNKNOWN Luscius Julius Caeser Consul 1253 Alice de Beauchamp 1175 Geoffrey de Beauchamp ~1122 Emma de Beauchamp ~1150 - <1217 Maud de Beauchamp 67 67 ~1244 Mary de Beauchamp ~1112 - ~1180 William II de Braose 68 68 3rd Lord of Bramber, Sheriff of Herefordshire 1105 - <1201 Maud de Braose 96 96 ~1072 - 1131 Walter de Beauchamp 59 59 ~1134 Joane Waleries <1106> Thomas Waleries D. UNKNOWN Luscius Julius Caeser ~1076 Emeline d'Abitot ~1084 - >1123 Aenor de Toteneis 39 39 ~1130 - 1211 William de Beauchamp 81 81 Alt Death: 1211 ~1105 - 1170 William de Beauchamp 65 65 Sheriff of Worcester, Warwick, Gloucester, & Hereford ~1220 - <1260 Isabel de Ferrers 40 40 He [Reynold de Mohun] married, 2ndly, in or before 1243, Isabel, the childless widow of Sir Gilbert BASSET, and daughter of William (DE FERRERS), EARL OF DERBY, by his 1st wife (to whom she was coheir), Sibyl, daughter and eventually coheir of William (MARSHAL), EARL OF PEMBROKE. He died 20 January 1257/8, at Tor Mohun in Devon, and was buried at Newenham in front of the high altar, on the left-hand side. His widow died before 26 November 1260, when the writ to the escheator issued. [Complete Peerage IX:20, XIV:478, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 1235 John de Mohun 1215 - 1258 John FitzGeoffrey 43 43 1170 - ~1225 Aveline de Clare 55 55 1160 - 1202 Warin de Munchensy 42 42 ~1144 Piers de Lutegareshale D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser Consul 1156 James de Clare 1170 John de Clare 1172 Henry de Clare 1186 - 1228 Richard de Clare 42 42 ~1158 William FitzRobert 1155 - 1203 Mabel de Clare 48 48 1158 - 1241 Roger de Clare 83 83 ~1248 John de Beauchamp Governor of Cardigan Castle. ~1164 Julienne FitzPiers ~1160 - 1185/1186 Robert FitzPiers D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser Consul 0782 - 13 Feb 0858/0859 Kenneth MacAlpin King of Scotland Kenneth ruled from 840-858. He was able to defeat the Picts, alreadyweakened by Viking raids, and permanently united the kingdom of Scotland(Alba or Albany). ~1229 - >1282 Lucy de Mohun 53 53 ~1206 - 1258 Reynold II de Mohun 52 52 REYNOLD DE MOHUN, son and heir, a minor at his father's death. His wardship was granted in 1213 to Henry FitzCount, and on Henry's death in 1227 to William Briwere, his own grandfather. He had livery
by 1227, when he was made a knight. He accompanied the King on his French expedition in 1230, and to Wales in 123i. He was in debt to the Jews in 1234, and made a justice of the Common Pleas. In 1242 he was to have two good ships provided for him to follow the King across the sea to Gascony, and in April of that year was a Chief Justice of the Forests South of Trent. He served in the expedition into Wales in 1245, and in 1246 refounded the abbey of Newenham at Axminster. He was also a benefactor of the houses of Bruton, Barlinch and Cleeve. In 1252 he was appointed keeper of the royal forests South of Trent, with 100 marks per annum for maintenance, and keeper during pleasure of Sauvey Castle, co. Leicester. In 1253 he had grants of free warren at Dunster, Whichford and Ottery, and licence to hunt hare, fox, cat and badger in Somerset and one other county.

He married, 1stly, Hawise (h). He married, 2ndly, in or before 1243, Isabel, the childless widow of Sir Gilbert BASSET, and daughter of William (DE FERRERS), EARL OF DERBY, by his 1st wife (to whom she was coheir), Sibyl, daughter and eventually coheir of William (MARSHAL), EARL OF PEMBROKE. He died 20 January 1257/8, at Tor Mohun in Devon, and was buried at Newenham in front of the high altar, on the left-hand side. His widow died before 26 November 1260, when the writ to the escheator issued. [Complete Peerage IX:20, XIV:478, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(h) She was apparently daughter of Geoffrey FitzPiers, Earl of Essex. The author of "Dunster" suggested that she was daughter, and possibly heir, of William Fleming, but after examination of documents cited in the account of Streatley given in VCH, Berkshire, he now inclines to credit the older view as above. A deed executed by her as Domina Hawise de Mohun is copied in the Pole MS.

Note: At least for one daughter, Burke's Peerage has Hawise, daughter of William Fleming, as the mother. It may be incorrect, but maybe there were two Hawises as his first wives.
~1206 - <1243 Hawise FitzGeoffrey 37 37 Hawise, daughter of Geoffrey Fitz Piers, Earl of Essex, by his (2) wife, Aveline de Clare (Hawise received as her maritagium the manor of Streatley, Berkshire from her half-brother, William de Mandeville, Earl of Essex). [Ancestral Roots]

-------------------------------

He married, 1stly, Hawise (h). [Complete Peerage IX:20, XIV:478, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(h) She was apparently daughter of Geoffrey FitzPiers, Earl of Essex. The author of "Dunster" suggested that she was daughter, and possibly heir, of William Fleming, but after examination of documents cited in the account of Streatley given in VCH, Berkshire, he now inclines to credit the older view as above. A deed executed by her as Domina Hawise de Mohun is copied in the Pole MS.
1230 - 1285 Alice de Mohun 55 55 John de Cary 1250 - 1320 Humphrey de Beauchamp 70 70 1253 Alice de Beauchamp <1183 - 1213 Reynold I de Mohun 30 30 REYNOLD DE MOHUN, presumably younger and only surviving son and apparently heir, his brother William probably having died v.p. He had livery of the greater part of his inheritance in 1204, but in that year, on the loss of Normandy, by adhering to John, he lost his estates there. He took a prominent part in the invasion of France in 1206, and accompanied King John to Ireland in 1210. He married Alice, daughter of Sir William BRIWERE, and (in 1233) coheir of her brother WiIliam Briwere the younger. He died in 1213. His widow married William PAYNEL, of Bampton, Devon, who died in 1228. [Complete Peerage IX:19, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] ~1187 - >1223 Alice de Briwere 36 36 After 1233, Genealogy of the Presidents of the USA, Weebers. 1153 - 1193 William IV de Mohun 40 40 Enroute to Jerusalem, Palestine

WILLIAM DE MOHUN, son and heir, was a minor at his father's death and in ward to the King. For his maintenance the sum of £18 was allowed for eighteen months, presumably until he came of age, for he had livery of his lands in 1177. He was a benfactor of Bruton, and confirmed the gifts of his father and grandfather, and granted the tithe of certain of his mills in Normandy to the abbey of the Holy Trinity of La Luzerne. He apparently went to Jerusalem on pilgrimage. He married Lucy. He died in October 1193, possibly abroad. His widow had for dower seven of his fees in England. [Complete Peerage IX:19, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
D. UNKNOWN Sextus Julius Caeser 1164 - >1201 Lucy 37 37 <1121 - 1176 William III de Mohun 55 55 WILLIAM DE MOHUN, 2nd but 1st surviving son and heir. He comes into notice first circa 1142, when he attested his father's charter to Bruton. The Empress Maud's grant of an earldom to his father apparently was not recognised by Stephen, for William is never styled Earl. He was a benefactor to his father's foundation at Bruton and confirmed the gifts of his father and grandfather to Bath. He married Godehold, sometimes called Godeheut. He died in 1176. His widow appears to have been dead in 1186. [Complete Peerage IX:18, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 1170 - >1229 Robert de Ferrers 59 59 <1130> Robert 1158 Henry de Neauborg de Beaumont ~1135 Andeline de Beauchamp 1160 Elena de Clare ~1244 Mary de Beauchamp ~1180 Joan de Clare ~1248 - <1280 Isabel de Mohun 32 32 D. UNKNOWN Lucius Julius Caeser ~1176 - 1223 Grace de Briwere 47 47 ~1160 - 1217 Beatrice de Vaux 57 57 1184 - 1233 Isabel de Briwere 49 49 ~1150 - ~1226 William de Briwere 76 76 1114 Henry de Briwere ~1173 - 1221 William d'Aubigny 48 48 Earl of Arundel, named in the Magna Charta, 1215; succ. as 3rd Earl of Arundel, Dec. 24, 1196; Chief Butler of England; Privy Councillor; Judge in the King's Court, [1198]; [1200]; Joint Envoy to treat with the Barons, July 15, 1215 and Nov. 9, 1215; took the Cross; Judge in the King's Court, 1218; Crusader, 1218-1221. ~1178 Maud FitzGeoffrey 1170 - 1217 Isabella de Clare 47 47 ~1162 Mabel FitzRobert 1183 - 1230 Gilbert de Clare 47 47 7th Earl of Clare, Earl of Hertford and Gloucester died in the fighting for the King`s French possessions. D. UNKNOWN Numerius Julius Caeser 1150 - 1218 Richard de Clare 68 68 ~1154 - 1 Jan 1224/1225 Amice FitzRobert 1115 - 1173 Roger de Clare 58 58 1130 - 1193 Maud de St. Hilary de Harcourt 63 63 1116 - 1183 William FitzRobert 67 67 Spms, Keynsham

Earl of Gloucester.
An undoubted Earl of Gloucester, perhaps the first authentic one, at any rate after the Conquest, is Robert FitzHamon's son-in-law, another Robert, who was an illegitimate son of Henry I and was so created 1122. The Earldom passed to his eldest son, William FitzRobert, and from him to John, later King John and husband from 1189 to 1199 (when he divorced her) of Isabel, the youngest of William FitzRobert's three daughters. On John's coming to the throne the title did not merge in the Crown for it was not his in his own right but in right of his wife. [Burke's Peerage]
~1136 - 1197 Hawise de Beaumont 61 61 ~1148 Maud de Mandeville Others has the place as Pleshy, Essex, England. ~1172 - 1237 Margaret de Briwere 65 65 ~1138 - 1193 William d'Aubigny 55 55 succ. as 2nd Earl of Arundel, Oct. 12, 1176; Chief Butler of England; cr. Earl of Sussex, Jan. 1177; Assessor in the Royal Court (to arbitrate between the Kings of Castille and Navarre) March 1177; Joint Commander of the Royal Army (Normandy), 1177; took the Cross; Crusader (three years); Privy Councillor [June 24, 1190]; Constable of Windsor Castle 1191-1193; a Commissioner for ransom of King Richard I, 1193. 1160 Isabel de Ferrers D. 43 Edward III Isabel ~1138 William de Ferrers ~1135 - <1186 Godehuet de Toëny 51 51 <1153> - 1197 Beatrix de Say 1175 - 1213 Maud de Clare 38 38 ~1187 Joan de Briwere 1100 - 1144 Geoffrey de Mandeville 44 44 1166 - 1213 Geoffrey FitzPiers 47 47 ~1120 Beatrice de Beauchamp Alt Birth: 1135 Bedford, , England 1129 Joan de Vernon de Reviers <1111> Alice de Beauchamp 1370 Matilda deArderne <1133 - <1207 Simon II de Beauchamp 74 74 ~1085 - 1157 Pagan de Beauchamp 72 72 Alt Birth: 1082 ~1089 - ~1166 Rohese de Vere 77 77 1194 - 1255 Warine de Munchensy 61 61 ~1066 Ermentrude de Clermont Ermentrude, daughter of Hugues, COUNT OF CLERMONT in Beauvaisis, byMargaret, daughter of Hilduin, COUNT OF Rouci and MONTDIDIER.  [CompletePeerage] ~1050 Various Mistresses ~1106 - 1167 Josce de Dinan 61 61 1065 - 1138 Geoffrey Sire de Dinan 73 73 John Leigh Slaine at Bloreheath Ao 1459 ~1069 - 1147 Radegonde Nerondes 78 78 ~1100 - 1150 Alan de Dinan 50 50 ~1076 Geva d' Avranches The legitimacy of this lady is maintained from the circumstances of herfather having bestowed upon her the manor of Drayton, in free marriage,which the lawyers say could not be granted to a bastard; but had she beenlegitimate, she would surely have succeeded to the earldom before heraunt. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage,Ltd., London, 1883, p. 1, Abrincis, Earl of Chester] 1138 Mabella FitzHugh 1110 Robert II FitzHugh ~1072 - 1120 Robert I FitzHugh 48 48 ~1175 - <1224 Peter de Prouz 49 49 ~1155 William de Prouz 1136 Peter de Prouz 1230 Alice FitzGilbert de Ferrers 1220 Wakelin de Arderne 1210 Fulk FitzGilbert de Ferrers 1214 Alice de Helion ~1180 Hervey de Helion 1183 Gilbert FitzGilbert de Ferrers 1153 Robert FitzGilbert de Corbeil 1161 Arabella le Goz 1134 Robert III FitzHugh 1130 Gilbert Count de Corbeil 1098 Richard de Corbeil 1062 William de Corbeil 1212 Agnes de Orreby ~1033 - 1079 Regnault de Corbeil 46 46 ~1205 - <1258 Geoffrey de Dinham 53 53 ~1169 - <1221 Oliver de Dinham 52 52 ~1145 - 1204 Geoffrey de Dinham 59 59 ~1121 - >1173 Oliver III Lord of Dinan 52 52 ~1088 - ~1150 Oliver II Vicomte de Dinan 62 62 1100 - 1164 Gunnor 64 64 ~1118 Robert de Peshale 1166 John FitzHugh I can find nothing on John FitzHugh, named in the preamble of the MagnaCharta as a witness and advisor to King John.  The name and date of thisJohn would fit with the Magna Charta. ~1074 - 1094 Helga de Kevelioc 20 20 1190 Philip de Orreby ~1170 Elizabeth ~1150 Sarah 1126 Elizabeth ~1203 Robert de Helion ~1245 - <1316 William le Prouz 71 71 ~1225 - <1270 William le Prouz 45 45 1269 - Sheriff of Devonshire  [Ancestral Roots] ~1225 - <1250 Alice de Widworthy 25 25 ~1205 William le Prouz ~1205 Miss de Gidley ~1180 Giles de Gidley 1196 - UNKNOWN Leuca deMontalt D. 0924 Berenger I King of Italy Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in 917. ~1181 Walter le Prouz ~1187 Sarah de Dinham 1270 John William Cary Administered the estate of William de Cary in 1307. He is also called William by Burke. Alice Beaumonde Henry Grosvenor Cary, The Cary Family in England:
Sir Henry Saint-George, The Visitation of the County of Devon in the year 1620. Ed. by Frederic Thomas Colby. London, 1872. Harleian society. Publications ; v.6.
William Beaumonde 1230 - 1303 William Cary 73 73 William held the manor of West Polworth, Devon at his death in 31 Edward I. He is also reputed to have held Panston and Cary before 1303.
Sources:
Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, London, 1883  p. 102
Fairfax Harrison, The Devon Carys, DeVinne Press, 1920
Phillipa Archdecon Burke calls her the daughter of John Archdeacon, Kt.
Sources:Lieutenant Colonel J. L. Vivian, The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Herald's Visitations of 1531, 1564, & 1620, with Additions  p. 150
~1094 - 1120 Richard d' Avranches 26 26 EARLDOM OF CHESTER (III, 2)

RICHARD) EARL OF CHESTER, also VICOMTE D'AVRANCHFS &C., in Normandy, onlyson and heir, aged 7 years at his father's death. He married, in 1115,Maud, daughter of Stephen, COUNT OF BLOIS, by Adelaide, daughter ofWILLIAM 1. He died s.p. legit., 25 November 1120, being drowned, togetherhis wife, her cousin William (the only son and heir apparent of theKing), and a vast number of the nobility, by the shipwreck of the"Blanche Nef," off Barfleur. [Complete Peerage III:165-6, (transcribed byDave Utzinger)]
~1007 - <1099 Eve de Boessey 92 92 1325 John Carey Researcher Harrison Fairax, states a Robert Cary was the father of Sir John Cary, Baron of the Exchequer, citing inq. p.m. and de banco pleas. Named in an Inquisition 20 Rich II #127 (1397). The inquistion calls him Robert de Cary Armiger.


Sources:
Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the United States Who Were Themselves Notable or Left Descendants Notable in American History, Genealogical Publishing Co., 1993 p. 409.  Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700, 7th ed, Genealogical Publishing Co., 1992 line 125. Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charter Sureties, 4th ed. Genealogical Publishing Co., 1991 line 129. Sanders, English Baronies, A Study of Their Origin and Descent 1086-1327, Oxford University Press, 1960. p. 2. Inquisition post mortem 12 Edward I, #545. Ibid. 55 Henry II, #779; 5 Edward II, #310. George Norbury MacKensie, Colonial families of the United States, Genealogical Publishing Co. 1966, p. 150 Inquisition post mortem 35 Edward I, #428. Sanders, English Baronies, A Study of Their Origin and Descent 1086-1327, Oxford University Press, 1960. p. 49. Sir Henry Saint-George, The Visitation of the County of Devon in the year 1620. Ed. by Frederic Thomas Colby. London, 1872. Harleian society. Publications ; v.6. John Burke; A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain, 1835-38. Henry Grosvenor Cary, The Cary Family in England p. 26.
1310 Agnes deLegh Agnes de Legh, daughter of Richard Legh, Lord of the Moiety of High Legh,had three husbands: Richard de Limme; William de Hawarden; WilliamVenables. ~1325 Jane de Bryan ~1289 - ~1347 Guy de Bryan 58 58 ~1293 - >1343 Anne Holwey 50 50 ~1311 - 1390 Guy de Bryan 79 79 ~1321 Elizabeth de Bryan ~1254 - ~1349 Guy de Bryan 95 95 ~1254 - <1316 Sibil de Sully 62 62 ~1238 - 1285 Walter de Sully 47 47 ~1228 - ~1307 Guy de Bryan 79 79 ~1229 Eva de Tracy 1278 - 1360 William deVenables 82 82 ~1206 - >1284 Henry de Tracy 78 78 ~1208 Maude de Braose 1242 Maude de Bryan ~1202 - >1228 Guy de Brienne 26 26 The earliest reference (12??) to a representative of the de Briennefamily in England is Guy de Brienne VI of
Brienne-le-Chateau, Champagne, France, styled Sir Guy de Bryen I ofEngland, who settled in South Wales on the Bay of Carmarthen. Accordingto the compilationof David C. McMurtry and Michael L. Kallan, Sir FrancisBryan et
Compagne[sic]: Avant et Apres Son Temps (Lexington, KY: Mil-MacPublishers, 1994) pp. 26- : "Guy de Brienne (IV), who may properly becalled in the English records of this family, Guy de Brien (I), wasprobably born in France in about 1200. He is known to have been acontemporary of Henry de Tracy (1202-1274). He was reared for a militarycareer, which was befitting to his status of being a "lackland knightadventurer," or a knight without inherited lands or title. He was thefirst of the de Brienne lineage to be identified by name in the recordsof England. The primary seat of residence of the early de Brien/Bryanfamily in the British Isles appears to have been in southern Walesaccording to Burke (1883). They are connected for 5 generations toPembrokeshire and Devonshire. "This family is especially associated withthat of Tor Brian, a place named for the Brienne (Brien) family.Torrebriene, as it is alternately called, is a geographic place name inDevon in southwest England. According to Abstracts of English Records(1929), "Torbryan" was a "parish, rural deanery o Moreton, archdeaconryof Totnes and diocese of Exeter." Also connected with this site is"Talacharn" or Talagharne Castle. "'How?' and 'Why?' Guy de Brienventured to and settled in England and Wales cannot be stated at thistime with any certainty. It is known that at about this time there wereother Norman baronial families that settled in this territory that wasoften hotly contested over by these newcomers, who fought with the Welshinhabitants. King William Rufus, son of William ‘the Conqueror,’ set inmotion during his reign (1087-1100) a 'System of Lord Marcher'sConquest.’ In this feudal system of government, the King consideredhimself the owner of all the land and gave authority to any ‘adventurerknight,' who had the 'enterprise' to seize any ‘obnoxious district' inthe King's name and possess it as a fiefdom of his own. As speculated,this willingness to resettle and claim the region by force of arms andwith the consent of the monarch was one way that landless younger sonscould retain their accustomed life style. The district surrounding themanor or castle of 'Talacharn' was probably acquired in just this manner"Nichols (1892) provides the following additional information: ‘A NormanLord Marcher of an inferior grade, De Brian by name, afterward took it[Talacham (Talagharn) Castle up as his stronghold, and seems to havebecome an established resident of the place.’ "This Guy de Brienne,Sometimes called ‘Guydo de Brian,’ was married in about 1221/2, toJohanne/Jane de la Pole, the daughter of William de la Pole. She isreferred to in certain Latin documents as ‘D'na Johanna de Pola,’ thedaughter of 'Dn's Willm's de Pola' as found in The Genealogist of 1920.The first mention of 'Guy de Brion’ [subsequent scribal miscopy forBrien?] – in the court records is found in 1248/9. As stated in TheCalendar of Charter Rolls (1247-1258), on '15 December, in the 32nd yearof Henry III,' a grant was made to:

'Guy de Brion [sic] and his heirs of a yearly fair of his manor ofTalacharn on the vigil the feast and the morrow of St. Michael.’
"This would mean that he was given permission by the crown to hold a fairand market that generally occurred from the 28th through the. 30th ofevery September, a lucrative venture that coincided with the Autumnharvest."
"Guy de Brienne/Brien is reported to have fought in the wars betweenEngland and France that occurred between 1244 and 1266, during the reignof.King Henry III. This is documented by a record in The Close Rolls(1256-1300), Volume 10, which states that in 1258/1259, ’during the 42ndyear of the reign of Henry III,' a mandate was issued to ‘Guidoni Briano’for service to the king. It is not clear at this time whether thismandate refers to this Guy or to his son. A nobleman, who had beenknighted, would be subject to service for the King.

"Sir Guy de Brian was referred to in the Calendar of the Charter Rolls(1257-1300), according to the pronunciation of the time, ‘Wydo de Brian'…From the Visitation of County Devon it is found that his arms were:
'Or three piles azure’…

"The exact dates of the birth, marriage, and death of Guy de Brien (I)are unknown at this time… "In the Visitation of County Devon mention isalso made of a 'Maud de Briane,’ who is noted to have served as theAbbess of Tarrant on 26 June, 1280. She is believed to have been adaughter of this Guy de Brien…

"Guy de Brienne (V), also known in records of the time as Guy de Brien(II), was probably bom about 1221, in southern Wales to Sir Guy deBrienne (I) and his wife, Jane de la Pole. This Guy de Brienne wassometimes styled as ‘Guy de Brian, baron of Talacharn’ (Talagharn) inWales…"

This historic data sets the stage for the entrance of the first Knight deBryan into Ireland. He would have been a cadet brother of Guy de BrienII, and possibly of the Abbess of Tarrant, Maud de Briane, the secondgeneration of the English line.
~1202 - >1228 Jane de la Pole 26 26 ~1166 Oliver de Tracy ~1170 Eve ~1175 - 1210 William de Braose 35 35 William was starved to death by King John. 1175 - 1213 Maude de Clare 38 38 ~1153 - 1211 William de Braose 58 58 1274 - UNKNOWN Richard deLegh 1155 - 1210 Maud de Saint Valery 55 55 ~1192 - >1202 Alphonse de Brienne 10 10 ~1176 - >1202 Mary de Lusignan 26 26 ~1170 - 21 Mar 1236/1237 Jean de Brienne Regent of Jerusalem 1212-1225, Emperor of Constantinople 1228 - 1237. >1197 - 1237 Berengaria of Castile and Leon 39 39 1171 - 1230 Alfonso IX of Castile and Leon 59 59 8 Jan 1180/1181 - 1246 Berengaria Alfonsez Sanchez ~1225 - 1296 Jean de Brienne 71 71 ~1235 - >1297 Louis de Brienne 62 62 D. ~1287 Margaret de Brienne 1250 - UNKNOWN Richard deLegh D. >1275 Marie de Brienne Ralph de Lusignan ~1133 - ~1224 William de Tracy 91 91 1103 - 1140 John de Sudeley 37 37 ~1105 - <1140 Grace de Tracy 35 35 ~1137 Hawise de Borne ~1167 - <1230 Henry Tracy 63 63 ~1170 Eva de Tracy ~1172 Alard de Tracy ~1185 William de Tracy 1226 - UNKNOWN William deLegh 1126 - 1192 William de Braose 66 66 Died about 1180


William was very fortunate in his marriage to Berta. All of her brothersdied young without heirs so she brought a number of important lordshipsto the de Braoses in 1166. These included Brecon and Abergavenny. Williambecame Sheriff of Hereford in 1174. His interest in Sussex was maintainedas he confirmed the grants of his father and grandfather for themaintenance of Sele Priory and extended St. Mary's, Shoreham. (right)

Father: Philip de Braose

Mother: Aanor

Married to Bertha de Pîtres, dau of Miles of Gloucester, Earl of Hereford



Child 1: William de Braose, 4th Lord of Bramber
Child 2: Maud = John de Brompton
Child 3: Sibilla = (1)William de Ferrers =(2)Adam de Port
Child 4: Berta = William de Beauchamp
Child 5: Roger
1130 Bertha de Pitres of Gloucester <1150 - 8 Feb 1190/1191 Erard de Brienne <1150 Agnes de Montbelliar Fernando of Leon Urraca of Leon 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII Sanchez 58 58 1162 - 1216 Eleanor Plantagenet 54 54 Eleanor (Eleanora) Plantaganet of Castile, born in 1162, died in 1214,promised initially by her father to marry French royalty, but eventuallymarried Afonso VIII. of Castile., King of Castile (1158-1214). He was theson of Sancho III., the Desired, King of Castile (1157-1158). See thislineage in the Kings of Spain Line in Volume I. Eleanor and Afonso VIII.had the following children (Note: Some differences are seen between thislist and the one in the Kings of Spain Line):


1. Sancho of Castile.

2. Bergenuela (Berengaria) of Castile, married Afonso IX, King of Leon.They had a son, Ferdinand III, who married Joanna Dammartin. See thecontinuation of this lineage in the Spanish Kings Line of Volume I.

3. Uracca of Castile, had been promised to Louis VIII., the heir ofFrance, but eventually married Afonso II. the Fat, King of Portugal,1211-1223. She was rejected by the French because of her unusual name.Her younger sister, Blanche was deemed to be more suitable for the Frenchtastes.

4. Blanche of Castile, born on March 4, 1188, in the palace of Placentia,in Castile, where she spent most of her childhood years, married on May23, 1200, Louis VIII. of France., prince and heir of France andeventually King of France. Blanche received as her dowry, the town ofEvreux with its surrounding land, always a bone of contention betweenFrance and England, but nevertheless given to her by her father-in-law,King Philip. Her uncle, King John of England, gave her the fiefs ofIssoudun and Grapay in Berry. See the continuation of this lineageelsewhere in Volume I. See Pernoud, "Blanche of Castile," for details onher life and times. Their son was King Louis IX of France.

5. Constancia of Castile

6. Matilda of Castile

7. Sancha of Castile

8. Enrique of Castile
1133 - 1189 Henry II Plantagenet 56 56 Henry II (1154-1189)

Born: 5th March 1133 at Le Mans, Maine

Died: 6th July 1189 at Chinon Castle, Anjou

Buried: Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou

Parents: Geoffrey, Count of Anjou and the Empress Matilda

Siblings: Geoffrey, Count of Nantes & William, Count of Poitou

Crowned: 19th December 1154 at Westminster Abbey, Middlesex

Married: 18th May 1152 at Bordeaux Cathedral, Gascony

Spouse: Eleanor daughter of William X, Duke of Aquitane & divorcee ofLouis VII, King of France

Offspring: William, Henry, Matilda, Richard, Geoffrey, Eleanor, Joan &John

Contemporaries: Louis VII (King of France, 1137-1180), Thomas Beckett(Archbishop of Canterbury), Pope Adrian IV, Frederick I (FrederickBarbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor, 1152-1190)
Henry II, first of the Angevin kings, was one of the most effective ofall England's monarchs. He came to the throne amid the anarchy ofStephen's reign and promptly collared his errant barons. He refinedNorman government and created a capable, self-standing bureaucracy. Hisenergy was equaled only by his ambition and intelligence. Henry survivedwars, rebellion, and controversy to successfully rule one of the MiddleAges' most powerful kingdoms.

Henry was raised in the French province of Anjou and first visitedEngland in 1142 to defend his mother's claim to the disputed throne ofStephen. His continental possessions were already vast before hiscoronation: He acquired Normandy and Anjou upon the death of his fatherin September 1151, and his French holdings more than doubled with hismarriage to Eleanor of Aquitane (ex-wife of King Louis VII of France). Inaccordance with the Treaty of Wallingford, a succession agreement signedby Stephen and Matilda in 1153, Henry was crowned in October 1154. Thecontinental empire ruled by Henry and his sons included the Frenchcounties of Brittany, Maine, Poitou, Touraine, Gascony, Anjou, Aquitane,and Normandy. Henry was technically a feudal vassal of the king of Francebut, in reality, owned more territory and was more powerful than hisFrench lord. Although King John (Henry's son) lost most of the Englishholdings in France, English kings laid claim to the French throne untilthe fifteenth century. Henry also extended his territory in the BritishIsles in two significant ways. First, he retrieved Cumbria andNorthumbria form Malcom IV of Scotland and settled the Anglo-Scot borderin the North. Secondly, although his success with Welsh campaigns waslimited, Henry invaded Ireland and secured an English presence on theisland.

English and Norman barons in Stephen's reign manipulated feudal law toundermine royal authority; Henry instituted many reforms to weakentraditional feudal ties and strengthen his position. Unauthorized castlesbuilt during the previous reign were razed. Monetary payments replacedmilitary service as the primary duty of vassals. The Exchequer wasrevitalized to enforce accurate record keeping and tax collection.Incompetent sheriffs were replaced and the authority of royal courts wasexpanded. Henry empowered a new social class of government clerks thatstabilized procedure - the government could operate effectively in theking's absence and would subsequently prove sufficiently tenacious tosurvive the reign of incompetent kings. Henry's reforms allowed theemergence of a body of common law to replace the disparate customs offeudal and county courts. Jury trials were initiated to end the oldGermanic trials by ordeal or battle. Henry's systematic approach to lawprovided a common basis for development of royal institutions throughoutthe entire realm.

The process of strengthening the royal courts, however, yielded anunexpected controversy. The church courts instituted by William theConqueror became a safe haven for criminals of varying degree andability, for one in fifty of the English population qualified as clerics.Henry wished to transfer sentencing in such cases to the royal courts, aschurch courts merely demoted clerics to laymen. Thomas Beckett, Henry'sclose friend and chancellor since 1155, was named Archbishop ofCanterbury in June 1162 but distanced himself from Henry and vehementlyopposed the weakening of church courts. Beckett fled England in 1164, butthrough the intervention of Pope Adrian IV (the lone English pope),returned in 1170.He greatly angered Henry by opposing to the coronationof Prince Henry. Exasperated, Henry hastily and publicly conveyed hisdesire to be rid of the contentious Archbishop - four ambitious knightstook the king at his word and murdered Beckett in his own cathedral onDecember 29, 1170. Henry endured a rather limited storm of protest overthe incident and the controversy passed.

Henry's plans of dividing his myriad lands and titles evoked treacheryfrom his sons. At the encouragement - and sometimes because of thetreatment - of their mother, they rebelled against their father severaltimes, often with Louis VII of France as their accomplice. The deaths ofHenry the Young King in 1183 and Geoffrey in 1186 gave no respite fromhis children's rebellious nature; Richard, with the assistance of PhilipII Augustus of France, attacked and defeated Henry on July 4, 1189 andforced him to accept a humiliating peace. Henry II died two days later,on July 6, 1189.

A few quotes from historic manuscripts shed a unique light on Henry,Eleanor, and their sons.

From Sir Winston Churchill Kt, 1675: "Henry II Plantagenet, the veryfirst of that name and race, and the very greatest King that England everknew, but withal the most unfortunate . . . his death being imputed tothose only to whom himself had given life, his ungracious sons. . ."

From Sir Richard Baker, A Chronicle of the Kings of England: Concerningendowments of mind, he was of a spirit in the highest degree generous . .. His custom was to be always in action; for which cause, if he had noreal wars, he would have feigned . . . To his children he was bothindulgent and hard; for out of indulgence he caused his son henry to becrowned King in his own time; and out of hardness he caused his youngersons to rebel against him . . . He married Eleanor, daughter of WilliamDuke of Guienne, late wife of Lewis the Seventh of France. Some say KingLewis carried her into the Holy Land, where she carried herself not veryholily, but led a licentious life; and, which is the worst kind oflicentiousness, in carnal familiarity with a Turk."

Henry II. Plantaganet, first Plantaganet King of England (1154-1189),known as Curt Mantel, was born at Le Mans, France, on March 15, 1133. Ateighteen in 1151 he was invested with the Duchy of Normandy, his mother'sheritage, and within a year became also, by his father's death, Count ofAnjou; while in 1152 he married Eleanor of Aquitaine, the daughter ofWilliam X, Duke of Aquitaine (see his ancestral lineage elsewhere in Vol.I.), and divorced wife of King Louis VII. of France, added Poitou andGuienne to his dominions. In January 1153 he landed in England, and inNovember a treaty was agreed to whereby Henry was declared successor toKing Stephen; he was crowned in 1154 and ruled until his death in 1189.He confirmed the laws of his grandfather, King Henry I, reestablished theexchequer, banished the foreign mercenaries, demolished the hundreds ofcastles erected in Stephen's reign, and recovered the royal estates. Thewhole of 1156 he spent in France, reducing his brother, Geoffrey ofNantes, who died in 1158, and having secured his territories, he spentthe next five years warring and organizing his possessions on theContinent. Henry's objective was that of all Norman kings, to build upthe royal power at the expense of the barons and the church. From thebarons his reforms met with little serious opposition; with the clergy hewas less successful. To aid him in reducing the church to subjection, heappointed his chancellor, Thomas a Becket to the see of Canterbury. Henrycompelled him and the other prelates to agree to the 'Constitution ofClarendon', but Bechet proved a sturdy churchman, and the strugglebetween him and the monarch terminated only by his murder. In 1174 Henrydid penance at Bechet's tomb, but he ended by bringing the church tosubordination in civil matters. Meanwhile he organized an expedition toIreland. The English Pope, Adrian IV, had in 1155 given Henry authorityover the entire island of Ireland; and a number of Norman-Welsh knightshad gained a footing in the country, among them Richard de Clare, Earl ofPembroke, styled Strongbow, who in 1155 married the heiress of Leinsterand assumed rule as the Earl of Leinster. Henry was jealous at the riseof a powerful feudal baronage in Ireland, and during his stay there(1171-1172) he broke the power of Richard Strongbow and the other nobles.Henry and Eleanor had many children as follows:


1. William Plantaganet, the eldest son, was born in 1153, but died inchildhood in 1156.

2. Henry Plantaganet, Associate King of England, born February 28, 1155,known as Henry "the Young King," was crowned as his father's successor in1170. Henry married Margaret, daughter of Louis VII., King of France. In1173, incited by their jealous mother, Queen Eleanor, this prince and hisbrother Richard rebelled against their father, and their cause wasespoused by the King of France and the King of Scotland. The latter, KingWilliam the Lion, was ravaging the north of England when he was takenprisoner at Alnwick in 1174, and to obtain his liberty he submitted to dohomage to Henry II. In a few months King Henry II. had reestablished hisauthority in all his domains. During a second rebellion, Prince Henrydied June 11, 1183. He married Margaret, daughter of Louis VII., King ofFrance.

3. Matilda Plantaganet, born in 1156, died in 1189, married Henry theLion, Duke of Saxony and Duke of Bavaria. They had a son, Otto IV. ofBrunswick, Emperor (1208-1215).

4. Richard Plantaganet, the Lion-Hearted, born in 1157, marriedBerengaria of Navarre, daughter of Sancho VI. of Navarre. Richard d.s.p.April 6, 1199. He reigned as King Richard I. of England and Duke ofNormandy, 1189-1199. Richard was imprisoned by the Emperor Henry VI in1192, while returning from a Crusade. His freedom was obtained by ransomin 1194. After his release he was in constant battle with PhilipAugustus, King of France. Berengaria died in 1230.

5. Geoffrey Plantaganet, Duke of Brittany, 1171-1186, died in 1158,married Constance of Brittany, daughter of Conan IV. of Brittany. Shedied in 1201. In 1186, he was killed in a tournament. He and his wife hadtwo children:


1. Eleanor, who died in 1240.

2. Arthur, Duke of Brittany, born in 1187 and murdered in 1204, while inconflict with his uncle, King John I. King John saw him as a rival to thethrone.
1122 - 1204 Eleanore of Aquitaine 82 82 1203 - UNKNOWN Hamon deLegh Hamon Legh of West-Hall in High Legh, in Cheshire, about the time ofHenry II. It is incontrovertibly clear from Domesday Book that the Saxonlords of High Legh were ejected at the Conquest, and that a new lord wasthen introduced, Gilbert Venables, Lord of Kinderton, from whose grants,or from those of his descendants, all subsequent proprietors must havederived their possession. In or about the time of Henry II (1154-1189)the Manor of High Legh had been granted out in moieties to two families,who assumed the local name, the earliest known ancestor of which areHamon de Legh, Progenitor of the West-Hall family, and Edward de Legh,progenitor of the East-Hall family. Both of these were as nearlycontemporaries as possible, as can be gathered by marriages and dates oftheir immediate descendants, and both were most probably originalgrantees from the Venables family. There is not, however, anything whichcan induce a belief in Hamon and Efward being common stock. The origin ofHamon de Legh is referred to the Venables family by strong probabilities.Dr. Williamson, historian, who quotes a deed in his possession, for Hamonbeing original grantee, expressly states him to be descended from GilbertVenables. Of the Moiety of West-Hall, later one moiety was given byThomas Legh to his half brother, Ralph Hawarden.
Arms of Venables: Azure, two barrs argent.
Crest: On a wreath. A wyvern Argent, pierced by an arrow, heador Or andfeathered Argent, devouring a child proper, crined Or, and standing on awier Argent banded Azure.
Sources: Ormerod's History of Cheshire, Vol. 1, pp. 352, 526, 381-383,354;
                Vol. 2, p. 93; Vol. 3, pp. 306, 332, 336-338, 343, 393,106.
                Betham's Baronetage of England, Vol. 1, pp. 99-105.
                Foster's County Families, Lancashire.
                Browning's Magna Charta Barons, pp. 265 and 301.
                Burke's Landed Gentry (1939), Vol. 3, pp. 2759-60.
1102 - 1169 Matilda Empress of Germany Queen of England 67 67 Empress Matilda (1141 AD)
Matilda is the Latin form of Maud, and the name of the only survivinglegitimate child of King Henry I. She was born in 1101, generally it issaid at Winchester, but recent research indicates that she was actuallyborn at the Royal Palace in Sutton Courtenay (Berkshire).

In something of a political coup for her father, Matilda was betrothed tothe German Emperor, Henry V, when she was only eight. They were marriedon 7th January 1114. She was twelve and he was thirty-two. Unfortunatelythere were no children and on the Emperor's death in 1125, Matilda wasrecalled to her father's court.

Matilda's only legitimate brother had been killed in the disastrous Wreckof the White Ship in late 1120 and she was now her father's only hope forthe continuation of his dynasty. The barons swore allegiance to the youngPrincess and promised to make her queen after her father's death. Sheherself needed heirs though and in April 1127, Matilda found herselfobliged to marry Prince Geoffrey of Anjou and Maine (the future GeoffreyV, Count of those Regions). He was thirteen, she twenty-three. It isthought that the two never got on. However, despite this unhappysituation they had had three sons in four years.

Being absent in Anjou at the time of her father's death on 1st December1135, possibly due to pregnancy, Matilda was not in much of a position totake up the throne which had been promised her and she quickly lost outto her fast-moving cousin, Stephen. With her husband, she attempted totake Normandy. With encouragement from supporters in England though, itwas not long before Matilda invaded her rightful English domain and sobegan a long-standing Civil War from the powerbase of her half-brother,Robert of Gloucester, in the West Country.

After three years of armed struggle, she at last gained the upper hand atthe Battle of Lincoln, in February 1141, where King Stephen was captured.However, despite being declared Queen or "Lady of the English" atWinchester and winning over Stephen's brother, Henry of Blois, thepowerful Bishop of Winchester, Matilda alienated the citizens of Londonwith her arrogant manner. She failed to secure her coronation and theLondoners joined a renewed push from Stephen's Queen and laid siege tothe Empress in Winchester. She managed to escape to the West, but whilecommanding her rearguard, her brother was captured by the enemy.

Matilda was obliged to swap Stephen for Robert on 1st November 1141. Thusthe King soon reimposed his Royal authority. In 1148, after the death ofher half-brother, Matilda finally returned to Normandy, leaving her son,who, in 1154, would become Henry II, to fight on in England. She died atRouen on 10th September 1169 and was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, thoughsome of her entrails may possibly have been later interred in herfather's foundation at Reading Abbey

. Matilda (Maud the Empress). See below.

In addition to these legitimate births, Henry is reported to have hadnineteen or twenty illegitimate children, the highest number of spuriousoffspring for a King of England to have acknowledged. The best known ofthem all is Robert the Consul, Earl of Gloucester, father of Maud, wifeof Ranulph de Meschines, 2nd Earl of Chester. Another was Reginald, anatural son from a relationship between Henry I. of England and hismistress, Elizabeth Beaumont, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Count ofMeulent and Earl of Leicester, (son of Roger de Beaumont and his wife,Adelina, Countess of Meulent) and his wife Elizabeth Vermandois, youngerdaughter of Hugh Magnus, the Great, of France, Count of Vermandois.Reginald, married Beatrix, daughter of William Fitz Richard, a potentlord in Cornwall. They had a daughter, Matilda, who married Robert, Countof Meulent, son of Waleran II., Count of Meulent, who married Agnes deMontfort. Waleran II. was a son of the aforementioned Robert Beaumont,and his wife, Elizabeth Vermandois. Robert and Matilda had two children:Waleran III. and Mabel de Beaumont, who married William de Vernon, Earlof Devon, who had three children: Baldwin, Mary Vernon and Joan. Theirdescendants are not identified.


Henry I. also married (2) Adeliza of Lorraine, daughter of GeoffreyBarbatus, Duke of Lorraine and Count of Barbant. Adeliza of Lorraine,upon the death of Henry I., married (2) William de Albini. See thecontinuation of that lineage under the Albini Line in Volume II.


12. Matilda (Maud the Empress) of England (1102-1167), was left the solelegitimate child of Henry I. by the loss of his son in the White Ship(1120). She married (1) Emperor Henry V, Emperor of Rome, and was crownedat Mainz (1114), but was widowed in 1125 and married (2) Geoffrey IV. leBel, Plantaganet, 10th Count of Anjou and Maine, Duke of Normandy, havingwon the Duchy from Stephen, son of Fulk V. the Younger, 9th Count ofAnjou, King of Jerusalem, and his wife, Ermengarde. See their ancestrallineage elsewhere in Vol. I. Her first husband was thirty years older,her second husband, ten years younger than herself. Henry made the baronsrecognize the Empress as his heir (1126, 1131, and 1133), but when hedied Stephen ignored her claim to rule England by hereditary right. TheNormans preferred his chivalrous geniality to her haughtiness and theydisliked the House of Anjou as much as they did the House of Blois, intowhich Stephen's mother, the Conqueror's daughter Adela, had married. TheEmpress appealed to the Pope in vain (1136) and Archbishop Thurstan ofYork defeated her uncle and champion, David I., King of Scotland(1084-1153) at the Battle of the Standard (1138); but at last she landedin England. Geoffrey was the original Plantaganet, so named by hiscompanions for the broom corn he wore on his person. Matilda and Geoffreyhad two sons as follows:


1. Henry II. See below.

2. Geoffrey, died in 1158.

It is through Geoffrey that the Plantaganet line from France was broughtinto the British royalty (see the lineage of the Counts of Anjouelsewhere). He died in 1151. After Geoffrey's death Matilda lived inNormandy, charitable and respected. Matilda died in 1167. Geoffrey wassucceeded by his eldest son, Henry.
1070 - 1157 Sibyl Adela Lucy Corbert 87 87 1079 - 1118 Matilda Dunkeld of Scotland 38 38 Neice of Edgar the Atheling, bringing together the pre conquest Saxonroyalty and the Norman royalty upon her marriage to Henry.

Edith - Margaret (Matilda) of Scotland, born in 1080 and died in 1118,married Henry I. Beauclerc, King of England, son of William I TheConqueror (ruler from 1066 to 1087) and his wife, Matilda of Flanders,who died in 1083.  Matilda was educated at Wilton and Romsey Abbey whereshe said that her aunt, Christina, forced her to wear a black veil. Shethrew it on the ground whenever left alone, in spite of beatings. Whenher mother died she came to England to Edgar Atheling, her uncle. She wasa sister of King David of Scotland; she was a correspondent of Anselm andHildebert, Bishop of Le Mans, who wrote poetry about her. She was asymbol of the union of Saxon and Norman. She was Henry's Queen forseventeen years and six months, and died in her prime like most of herfamily. Henry and Matilda had a son and a daughter as follows:


1. William, Duke of Normandy, died in a shipwreck in 1119.

2. Matilda (Maud the Empress). See below.
1157 - 1199 Richard I Plantagenet 42 42 1155 - 1183 Henry Plantagenet 28 28 1135 - ~1158 III Sancho 23 23 ~1139 - 1158 Blanche Garcia 19 19 Johanna Cary John de Bryan Joan de Bryan 1300 - 1292 William deVenables 8 8 Sir William Venables died 20 of Edward I (1292). His name appears onseveral deeds, the first of which bears the date of 1267. He marriedMargaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Dutton. He restored to the monks ofChester the advowson of Astbury, of which his father had despoiled them,and died the year following. He was married in 1253 and had Hugh, SirWilliam and a daughter, Cecelia. Reginald de Bryan ? de Bryan ? de Bryan ~1240 - 1312 Mabel de Somery 72 72 1172 - 1242 Raymond de Sully 70 70 1208 - 1273 Roger Dudley de Somery 65 65 Roger2 De Somery (Ralph1) was born in Dudley, Worcestershire, Englandabt. 1200. Roger died bef. Aug. 26, 1273 in Dudley, Worcestershire,England, at age 73.

He married Nichole de Aubigny date unknown. Nichole was born abt. 1205 inBelvoir, Leicestershire, England. Nichole was the daughter of Williamd'Aubigny and Mabel de Meschines. When Nichole was age unknown and RogerDe Somery was age unknown they became the parents of Joan De Somery abt.1225 in England. When Nichole was age unknown and Roger De Somery was ageunknown they became the parents of Margaret (Margery) De Somery abt. 1229in Dudley, Worchestershire, England.

When Roger was age unknown and Nichole de Aubigny was age unknown theybecame the parents of Joan De Somery abt. 1225 in England. When Roger wasage unknown and Nichole de Aubigny was age unknown they became theparents of Margaret (Margery) De Somery abt. 1229 in Dudley,Worchestershire, England.
~1210 - ~1240 Nichola D'Aubigny 30 30 1272 - 1317 Raymond de Sully 45 45 1145 Walter de Sully ~1150 Mabel de Torrington 1118 - UNKNOWN Robert deMontalt Robert was the second baron by tenure, had four sons, Roger his heir,Ralph, Adam and John. 1151 - 1211 Ralph de Somery 60 60 He married Margaret Marshal date unknown. When Margaret was age unknownand Ralph De Somery was age unknown they became the parents of Roger DeSomery abt. 1200 in Dudley, Worcestershire, England.

When Ralph was age unknown and Margaret Marshal was age unknown theybecame the parents of Roger De Somery abt. 1200 in Dudley,Worcestershire, England.

Ralph De Somery and Margaret Marshal had the following child:

+ 2 i. Roger2 De Somery was born abt. 1200.
1150 - 1242 Margaret Fitzgilbert Marshall 92 92 1229 - 1293 Margaret de Somery 64 64 Margaret (Margery) De Somery was born in Dudley, Worchestershire, Englandabt. 1229. Margaret died June 18, 1293 at age 63. She married RalphBassett date unknown. Ralph was born 1215 in Drayton, Staffordshire,England. Ralph died Aug. 4, 1265 in Evesham, Worchester, England, at age50. When Ralph was age unknown and Margaret (Margery) De Somery was ageunknown they became the parents of Ralph Bassett abt. 1242 in Stafford,England. When Ralph was age unknown and Margaret (Margery) De Somery wasage unknown they became the parents of Roger Bassett abt. 1246 inDrayton, Staffordshire, England. When Ralph was age unknown and Margaret(Margery) De Somery was age unknown they became the parents of MaudBassett abt. 1264 in Drayton, Staffordshire, England. (See Ralph Bassettfor the continuation of this line.)

When Margaret was age unknown and Ralph Bassett was age unknown theybecame the parents of Ralph Bassett abt. 1242 in Stafford, England. WhenMargaret was age unknown and Ralph Bassett was age unknown they becamethe parents of Roger Bassett abt. 1246 in Drayton, Staffordshire,England. When Margaret was age unknown and Ralph Bassett was age unknownthey became the parents of Maud Bassett abt. 1264 in Drayton,Staffordshire, England.
1232 - 1282 Joan de Somery 50 50 Joan De Somery was born in England abt. 1225. Joan died 1282 at age 57.She married John Le Strange date unknown. John was born abt. 1226 inChesawardine, Shropshire, England. John was the son of John Le Strangeand Lucy De Tregoz. John died 1276 in Knockin, Warwickshire, England, atage 50. When John was age 28 and Joan De Somery was age 29 they becamethe parents of John Le Strange 1254 in Ellesmere, Shropshire, England.(See John Le Strange for the continuation of this line.) ~1225 Maud de Somery >1165 - 1 Feb 1220/1221 William D'Aubigny William de Pola Nicholas de Pola Hawisia de la Pole Matilda de la Pole 1171 - UNKNOWN Emma deCoventre 1125 - 1195 John de Somery 70 70 1129 - 1208 Hawise de Paynell 79 79 1105 - ~1165 John Fitzgilbert Marshall 60 60 John fitz Gilbert was the father of William Marshal Earl of Pembroke.John was the son of Gilbert, the marshal of the royal household of KingHenry I. The office of the marshal was part of the Curia, with a deputyin the Exchequer and one in the King's Bench, as well as one in the Courtof the Marshalsea of the King's household. The office was subordinate tothe office of constable of the royal household.. The office wasresponsible for everything connected to the horses of the royalhousehold, the hawks and the hounds as well. He had the general duty ofkeeping order in the royal court/household, arranging for the billetingof members of the court, keeping tallies and other vouchers of theexpenditures of the household, keeping rolls of all who performed theirmilitary service there, and being responsible for the imprisonment ofdebtors. The "Constitutio Domus Regis" gives the duties of the mastermarshal for King Henry I.

Both John and his father are found in the king’s court before 1130 wherethey maintained [probably by trial by battle] their office of master ofthe king’s marshalsea against William de Hastings and Robert de Venoiz.On the pipe roll of 1130 John is found paying twenty-two pounds forseisin to his father’s lands and ministerium and forty marks for theoffice of marshal of the court. In this same year John married thedaughter and heiress of Walter Pipard, a minor Wiltshire landholder. Johnwas a loyal and trusted royal official and attested to at least twelveroyal acts of Henry I between 1129-1135, most of them in England but somein Normandy.


When Stephen (depicted right) took the English throne on the death ofHenry I in 1135, John continued to serve in the office of marshal andaccompanied Stephen to Normandy in 1137. In 1138 John took possession ofthe castles of Marlborough and Ludgershall in Wiltshire as castellan andproceeded to strengthen both. During the early years of the war betweenKing Stephen and the Empress Mathilda, John was more or less content towait and watch, increasing the number of knights bound to him andfortifying his castles. He used his position in Wiltshire to attack andravage the lands of those opposing King Stephen, though according to someof the chronicles of the times, John was not too particular about whom he attacked.




In February 1141, King Stephen was captured at the battle of Lincoln byRobert of Gloucester, natural brother to the Empress. This eventapparently convinced John that he should be on the Empress’s side in thecivil war, and he actively supported her from this time forward. John waswith the Empress at Reading in May, Oxford in July, and at the siege ofWinchester in August 1141. When Henry of Blois, bishop of Winchester andbrother to King Stephen, brought troops to relieve the siege ofWinchester, it was decided that the Empress would flee to John’s castleof Ludgershall with John while Robert of Gloucester continued the battle.At the village of Wherwell, John sent the Empress on to his castle withBrian fitz Count, and he stayed with some men to defend her retreat atthe River Test. At the end of this struggle at the river, only John andone of his knights were left standing. They retreated to the church ofWherwell Abbey, and the enemy set fire to it. The enemy departed fromWherwell thinking that John had perished, but he survived and made it tohis castle of Marlborough, losing one eye from melting iron in the fire.

The rising and falling fortunes of neither side in this civil war greatlyeffected fitz Gilbert’s prosperity; he used his position and his castlesin Wiltshire to continue to attack the lands of Stephen’s supporters. Oneof his frequent victims was Patrick constable of Salisbury, who was KingStephen’s man. After several years of this warfare, both men had hadenough of the deprivations resulting from their attacks on each other.They worked out a compromise in 1141; John fitz Gilbert would put asidehis first wife and marry Patrick’s sister Sibile [Sibyl], and Patrickcame over to the Empress’s side. This compromise gave Patrick peace andrelief as well as the later title and lands of the earldom of Salisbury.John nullified his most dangerous enemy and definitely increased his ownsocial position by marrying into one of the great feudal families ofEngland. It hurt neither man that they could both now raid the lands ofStephen’s supporters in Wiltshire, Berkshire and Hampshire.

John was in high favor with the Empress, and she appointed his brotherWilliam as her chancellor. John himself witnessed at least four chartersof the Empress, and there are two writs addressed to John in Wiltshire byher. He also witnessed five charters of Duke Henry in Normandy. October25, 1154, King Stephen died and on December 19, 1154, Henry was crownedKing Henry II of England. Henry II gave to John the manors ofMarlborough, Wexcombe, and Cherhill in Wiltshire; they yielded eight-twopounds annually in revenues. He retained the office of marshal of theroyal household. Along with these lands and the lands of his father, Johnheld seven other knights’ fees: land of the bishop of Winchester, of thebishop of Exeter, of the bishop of Winchester, of the abbot of Abingdon,of Richard de Candos[Chandos], of Manasser de Arsic, and of Geoffrey deMandeville. He held Tidworth in Wiltshire by serjeanty of his office asmarshal and possibly Hampstead in Berkshire. The "Cartae Baronnum" showshim holding Wigan in Oxfordshire, and Inkberrow in Worcestershire mayhave been originally John fitz Gilbert’s. John was still a minor baron incomparison to the great magnates, but he had increased the inheritanceleft to him by his father by a great deal.

John fitz Gilbert was a clever and ruthless baron who had more than hisshare of daring, energy, and ambition. He was known for his ability as asoldier/knight and for his cunning and love of military stratagems. The"Gesta Stephani" describes him as "a limb of hell and the root of allevil." It accuses John of building adulterine castles [probably Newburyin Berkshire], taking the lands of both laity and clergy, and of forcingpayments from the church. He put aside his first wife without a qualm inorder to better himself and his position. In "L’Historie de Guillaume leMarechal", the chanson de geste written as a history of the life ofJohn’s son William, there is a story told of the siege of John’s castleof Newbury by King Stephen in 1152. King Stephen held John’s son Williamas hostage for his father’s good behavior during a granted truce. Johnignored the truce; he used the time to re-fortify and supply his castle.When King Stephen called John to the castle’s walls and reminded Johnthat his son’s life was forfeit for John’s own actions, John said that,"he had the anvils and the hammer to forge still better sons." This was aruthless warrior and only the gentle nature of King Stephen protected thelife of the five-year old William.

John fitz Gilbert died 1164/1165 while his son William was in Normandybeing trained as a squire by his cousin William de TancarvilleChamberlain of Normandy. Of the two sons by John’s first marriage, theoldest, Gilbert, died within a year of John’s own death, and theyoungest, Walter, died before John. By the lady Sibile [Sibyl], John hadfour sons and two daughters; John as the eldest son inherited hisfather’s lands and the office of marshal. John fitz Gilbert’s second son,William Marshal, would inherit nothing tangible from his father, but hewould be heir to his father’s standing in respect to the confidence andfavor of King Henry II. John fitz Gilbert, unlike others in the warsbetween King Stephen and the Empress, changed his allegiance only once.When he joined the Empress’ side in the war, he not only served her andher son loyally and faithfully, but he placed his own life in jeopardyprotecting and defending her. This was a debt that Henry II rememberedand paid. John’s son William would do the same for King Henry’s wifeEleanor near the castle of de lusignan in Poitou at the end of 1167. Twoof the de lusignan brothers attacked and killed William’s unarmed uncle,Patrick earl of Salisbury, while Patrick, Queen Eleanor, and William wereriding near the castle of de lusignan. William was wounded and takenprisoner while defending the Queen’s retreat into the castle and tryingto avenge his uncle’s murder. William might have inherited some of thephysical strength and knowledge of military strategy from his father, butas a second son, he would become in his own right and by his ownabilities, skills, and sense of honour the best of chivalric knighthood,a "familiaris Regis," the Earl of Pembroke and regent of England
1120 Sybil de Salisbury ~1225 - >1281 Anabel de Chaucombe 56 56 >1181 Stephen de Somery ~1090 - 1176 William D'Aubigny 86 86 William de Albini (d'Aubigny), III, surnamed "William with the stronghand," from the following circumstance, as related by William Dugdale:

"It happened that the Queen of France, being then a widow, and a verybeautiful woman, became much in love with a knight from an other country,who was a comely person, and in the flower of his youth; and because shethought that no man excelled him in valor, she caused a tournament to beproclaimed throughout her dominions, promising to reward those who shouldexercise themselves therein, according to their respective abilities; andconcluded that if the person whom she so well affected should act hispart better than others in those military exercises, she might marry himwithout any dishonor to herself. Hereupon divers gallant men, fromforeign parts hasting to Paris, amongst others came this our William deAlbini, bravely accoutered, and in the tournament excelled all others,overcoming many, and wounding one mortally with his lance, which beingobserved by the queen, she became exceedingly enamored of him, andforthwith invited him to a costly banquet, and afterwards bestowingcertain jewels upon him, offered him marriage; but, having plighted histroth to the Queen of England, then a widow, he refused her, whereat shegrew so discontented that she consulted with her maids how she might takeaway his life; and in pursuance of that design, enticed him into agarden, where there was a secret cave, and in it a fierce lion, untowhich she descended by divers steps, under color of showing him thebeast; and when she told him of its fierceness, he answered, that it wasa womanish and not a manly quality to be afraid thereof. But having himthere, by the advantage of a folding door, thrust him to the lion; beingtherefore in this danger, he rolled his mantle about his arm, and puttinghis hand into the mouth of the beast, pulled out his tongue by the root;which done, he followed the queen to her palace, and gave it to one ofher maids to present her. Returning thereupon to England, with the fameof this glorious exploit, he was forthwith advanced to the Earldom ofArundel, and for his arms the Lion given him."

He subsequently married Adeliza of Lorraine, Queen of England, widow ofKing Henry I., and the daughter of Godfrey, Duke of Lorraine. Adeliza hadthe castle of Arundel in dowry from her deceased husband, the monarch,and thus her new lord became its feudal earl, 1st Earl of Arundel in thisfamily. The earl was one of those who solicited the Empress Maud to cometo England, and received her and her brother Robert, Earl of Gloucester,at the port of Arundel, in August 1139, and in three years afterwards(1142), in the report made of King Stephen's taking William de Mandevilleat St. Albans, it is stated "that before he could be laid hold on, heunderwent a sharp skirmish with the king's party, wherein the Earl ofArundel, though a stout and expert soldier, was unhorsed in the midst ofthe water by Walceline de Oxeai, and almost drowned."

In 1150, he wrote himself Earl of Chichester, but we find him styledagain Earl of Arundel, upon a very memorable occasion, namely, thereconciliation of Henry, Duke of Normandy, afterwards King Henry II., andKing Stephen at the siege of Wallingford Castle in 1152. "It was scarcepossible," says Rapin, "for the armies to part without fighting.Accordingly the two leaders were preparing for battle with equal ardor,when, by the prudent advice of the Earl of Arundel, who was on the king'sside, they were prevented from coming to blows." A truce and peacefollowed this interference of the earl's, which led to the subsequentaccession of Henry after Stephen's decease, in whose favor the earl stoodso high that he not only obtained for himself and his heirs the castleand honor of Arundel, but a confirmation of the Earldom of Sussex, ofwhich county he was really earl, by a grant of the Tertium Denarium ofthe pleas of the shire.
In 1164, we find the Earl of Arundel deputed with Gilbert Foliot, Bishopof London, to remonstrate with Louis, King of France, upon according anasylum to Thomas a Becket within his dominions, and on the failure ofthat mission, dispatched with the archbishop of York, the Bishops ofWinchester, London, Chichester, and Exeter, Wido Rufus, Richard deInvecestre, John de Oxford (priests), Hugh de Gundevile, Bernard de St.Valerie, and Henry Fitzgerald, to lay the whole affair of Becket at thefoot of the pontifical throne. Upon levying the aid for the marriage ofthe king's daughter, in the 12th year of Henry II., the knight's fees ofthe honor of Arundel were certified to be ninety-seven, and those inNorfolk, belonging to the earl, forty-two. In 1173, we find the Earl ofArundel commanding, in conjunction with William, Earl of Mandeville, theking's army in Normandy, and compelling the French monarch to abandonVerneuil after a long siege, and in the next year, with Richard de Lucy,Justice of England, defeating Robert, Earl of Leicester, then inrebellion at St. Edmundbury. This potent nobleman, after founding andendowing several religious houses, died at Waverley, in Surrey, onOctober 3, 1176, and was buried in the Abbey of Wymondham.
1100 - <1153 Ralph Paynel 53 53 1100 - 1147 Walter Fitzedward de Salisbury 47 47 1102 - 1147 Sibyl de Chaworth 45 45 1140 - UNKNOWN Roger deMontalt 0744 - 0785 Alpin Kintyre King of Scotland 41 41 Tradition credits Alpin with a victory over the Picts who killed himthree months later, displaying his severed head at their camp. Kennethsucceeded him in Dalriada and ruled in Pictavia also, ruling for 16years. This period is obscure but the gradual union of the two kingdomsfrom 843 is no doubt due to much intermarriage. By the Pictish marriagecustom, inheritance passed through the female. 1060 Fulk Paynel 1074 Beatrice Fitzwilliam 1060 - BET. 1119 - 1130 Edward de Evereaux Salisbury ~1075 Maud Fitzhurbert ~1052 - >1086 Patrick de Chaworth 34 34 ~1057 Matilda de Hesden 1020 William Paynel William Fitzansculf 1033 Walter de Ewrus ~1066 - ~1116 Gilbert Fitzrichard de Clare 50 50 1145 Walter deCoventre ~1070 - >1117 Adelaide de Clermont 47 47 1146 - 1219 William Marshall 73 73 In a room of the Tower of London in August 1189, two people who wereabout to be married met for the first time. This twist of fate or act ofdestiny would have a far-reaching effect on English history. The younglady was Isabel de Clare, sole heiress of Richard Strongbow de Clare,Earl of Pembroke and Striguil, and Aoife, daughter of Dermot MacMurrough,King of Leinster. The man was William Marshal, the second son of John theMarshal and Sibyl, sister of Patrick, Earl of Salisbury. There are noaccounts of this first meeting nor of their marriage ceremony, but thiswas the final step in the making of one of the greatest knights andmagnates of medieval English history.

William Marshal's life is well documented because less than a year afterhis death in 1219, his eldest son William II commissioned a record of hisfather's life. "L' Historie de Guillaume le Marechal," is a metricalhistory of a man and of the knightly class in the late twelfth and earlythirteenth century. Little is known about the writer of "L' Historie"except that his first name was Jean, that he personally witnessed some ofthe events in Marshal's later life, and that he had access to Marshal'ssquire John D'Erley. The point of view is that of the secular knightlyclass and not of the ecclesiastical class. The events recorded in "L'Historie" can be verified in most instances by the official records inthe Pipe Rolls, Charter Rolls, Close Rolls, Patent Rolls, Oblatis Rolls,and chronicles of the times.

William Marshal was born c 1146, and as a younger son, becoming a knightwas his natural choice of a path to success and survival. Marshal wassent to his father's cousin William of Tancarville, hereditaryChamberlain of Normandy, to be trained as a knight in c1159. He wasknighted, probably by his uncle, in 1167.

Below right: William Marshal's Great Tower at Pembroke Castle.


In 1170 William Marshal was appointed head of the mesnie (military)household of the young Prince Henry by King Henry II. From this timeuntil young Henry's death in June of 1183, Marshal was responsible forprotecting, training and running the military household of the heir. In1173, William Marshal knighted the young Henry, and thereby becameHenry's lord in chivalry. We know that Marshal led young Henry and hismesnie to many victories on the tournament fields of Normandy. It isduring the years from 1170 to 1183 that William Marshal established hisstatus as an undefeated knight in tournaments. It is here that Marshalbegan to establish his friendships with the powerful and influential menof his day. His reputation and his character were built through his ownactions and abilities. In this age of feudalism, Marshal was a landlessknight. He had no lord from whom he could gain advantages or status.

On the death of the young Henry, Marshal obtained permission from HenryII to take the young Henry's cross to Jerusalem. Marshal spent two yearsin the Holy Land fighting for King Guy of Jerusalem and the Knights'Templar. There are no known records of his time in the east, but we knowthat some of the castle building techniques he later used at Pembrokewere probably learned here.

Henry II granted Marshal his first fief, Cartmel in Lancashire, in 1187.With this fief Marshal became a vassal of King Henry II and swore fealtyto him as his lord and his king. Until Henry II's death in 1188, WilliamMarshal served as his knight, his counselor, and his ambassador. WhenRichard I came to the throne, he recognized Marshal as a brother andequal in chivalry. Fulfilling the promise made by his father, Richardgave Marshal the heiress Isabel de Clare and all her lands in marriage.

With this marriage, William Marshal became "in right of his wife" one ofthe greatest lords and magnates in the Plantagenet kingdom. Isabelbrought to Marshal the palatine lordships of Pembroke and Striguil inWales and the lordship of Leinster in Ireland. These were large fiefs ofland where the lord held as tenant-in-chief of the Crown. A palatinelord's word was law within his lands. He had the right to appoint his ownofficials, courts and sheriffs, and collect and keep the proceeds of hiscourts and governments. Except for ecclesiastical cases, the king's writdid not run in the palatinates. King Richard also allowed Marshal to have1/2 of the barony of Giffard for 2000 marks. This barony was split withRichard de Clare, Earl of Clare and Hertford, who held the barony inEngland as lord while Marshal held the land in Normandy as lord. Thisgave Marshal the demesne manors of Crendon in Buckinghamshire andCaversham in Oxfordshire, for 43 knights' fees, and the fief ofLongueville in Normandy with the castles of Longueville and Mueller andMoulineaux, for about 40 knights' fees.

Below right: Chepstow Castle in south Wales.


Marshal considered the lands that he held to be one unit, not separateunits of English, Irish, Welsh, and Norman lands. They were a compactwhole to be preserved and improved for the inheritance of his children.Marshal used what he had learned fighting in Normandy and in the HolyLand to improve these fiefs. The great Tower, the Horseshoe Gatehouse,and the fighting gallery in the outer curtain wall at Pembroke were builtunder his guidance. At Chepstow (Striguil), he was responsible for thegate in the middle bailey, the rebuilding of the upper level of the keep,the west barbican, and the upper and lower bailey. Marshal was alsoresponsible for the building of the castle at Kilkenny, the new castle atEmlyn, and for taking and improving Cilgerran. From a list of castles byR. A. Brown for the period from 1153 to 1214, Marshal held Chepstow,Cilgerran, Emlyn, Goodrich, Haverford, Inkberrow, Pembroke, Tenby, andUsk in England and Wales. Just these castles would have produced morethan two hundred knights' fees owed by Marshal to the Crown. Withoutincluding his lands in Normandy and Ireland, as feudal lord Marshalcontrolled a vast amount of land, wealth, and knights/vassals in theAngevin kingdom.

William Marshal served King Richard faithfully as knight, vassal,ambassador, itinerant justice, associate justiciar, counselor, andfriend. On Richard I's untimely death in 1199, William Marshal supportedJohn as heir to the throne rather than John's nephew, Arthur of Brittany.It was King John who belted William Marshal and created him Earl ofPembroke on the same day that John was crowned King, May 27, 1199. It isduring King John's reign that the character of William Marshal is clearlyrevealed. John's character has been drawn by countless historians, andnone have been able to erase the ineptitude that King John displayed whendealing with his English barons. Whatever his motives were, Johninevitably alienated his greatest barons despite the fact that he neededtheir support and loyalty to rule England. William Marshal was apowerful, respected, wise and loyal knight and baron who had alreadyserved two Angevin kings. King John, however, accused Marshal of being atraitor, took all of Marshal's English and Welsh castles, took Marshal'stwo older sons as hostages, tried to take Marshal's lands in Leinster,and even tried to get his own household knights to challenge Marshal totrial by combat. Despite all of this, William Marshal remained loyal tohis feudal lord. He did not rebel when John took his castles; he gave uphis two sons as hostages; he supported John against the Papal Interdict;and he supported John in the baronial rebellion. Of all the bonds offeudalism, the greatest and the most important bond was the one offealty, of loyalty to one's lord. To break this bond and oath wastreason, and this was the greatest of crimes. William Marshal was theepitome of knighthood and chivalry. He did not simply espouse it.Marshal's entire life was governed by his oaths of fealty and by his owninnate sense of honour. If Marshal had taken his lands, castles, andknights to the side of the rebellion, King John would have lost his crownand perhaps his life.

On the death of John, October 19,1216, William Marshal was chosen by hispeers in England as regent for the nine year old Henry III. Henry wasknighted and then crowned under the seal of the Earl of Pembroke. WilliamMarshal was the main force and impetus for the defeat of Philip II ofFrance, even leading the attack to relieve Lincoln castle in May 1217though he was seventy years old. On September 11, 1217, Marshalnegotiated the Treaty of Lambeth that ended the war. By his wisetreatment of those English barons who had supported Philip II againstKing John, Marshal ensured the restoration of peace and order in England.This undefeated knight had become a great statesman in the last years ofhis life. William Marshal died May 14, 1219 at Caversham and was buriedas a Knight Templar in the Temple Church in London.

William Marshal and Isabel de Clare were married in August 1189. He wasabout forty-three and she was seventeen years old. They had ten children;five sons and five daughters, and all of the children lived. The birthdates of these children are not known, but it is known that William andRichard were the first two born. They are both mentioned in a marriagecontract dated November 6, 1203, that was a contract to marry William theyounger to Baldwin de Bethune’s daughter Alice, and if William should notlive to fulfill the contract, then Richard would be married to her. It isknown that William the younger was born in Normandy, but this is the onlyknown fact of the birth of any of these children.
1100 Ralph de Somery Agnes Ferrers ~1035 - ~1090 Richard Fitzgilbert de Clare 55 55 ~1035 - >1113 Rohese Giffard 78 78 Hervy de Clare Walter de Clare ~1093 - 1163 Adeliza de Clare 70 70 Agnes de Clare 1212 - UNKNOWN Thomas deDutton VI Lord Dutton Sir Thomas Dutton lived 1249, in the time of Henry III, and was stillliving in 1268. He purchaser Clatterwigh, a hamlet in Little Legh. Hebuilt the chapel at the manor of Dutton towards the end of Henry IIIreign. He married Phillipa, daughter and heiress of Vivian Sandon orStandon, by whom he had lands in Staffordshire. They had Hugh. Thomas,Robert, Katherine and Margaret, who married William Venables. References:
    Ormerod's History of Cheshire County, England, Vol. 1, pp. 426-430,
      475-477 and 398.
    Sir Peter Leycester's Antiquities of Cheshire (quoted in Ormerod).
    Collins Peerage of England, Vol. 8.
~1092 Balwin Fitzgilbert de Clare ~1090 - 1149 Rohese de Clare 59 59 ~1040 Lesceline BET. 979 - 990 - BET. 1040 - 1054 Gilbert of Brionne ~0994 Gunmora de Aunou Roger Fitzrichard de Clare Walter de Clare ~1075 - 1134 Robert Fitzrichard de Clare 59 59 ~1030 - ~1101 Hugh de Clermont 71 71 ~1035 Margaret de Roucy 1232 - UNKNOWN Phillipa deStandon Renard de Clermont ~1010 Hildwin ~1014 Alice de Roucy ~1038 Ernulf de Hesden ~1022 Ilbert Payn <1057 Harold Ewias ~1071 Matilda Lupus ~1085 - 1135 William de Tracy 50 50 ~1023 - 1057 Earl of Hereford Ralph 34 34 Hugh Lupus 1220 - 1262 Roger deVenables 42 42 Sir Roger Venables, Knight, Baron of Kinderton, son and heir of Hugh,died about 1261. He married Alice, daughter of Alan de Peninton ofPeniton, County Lancaster, about 1240. He had issue Sir William, heir,and Roesia, wife of Alex de Bamville, and probably Roger, parson ofRosthorne. In 1261 he recovered possession of the church of Astburyagainst the Abbot of Werburgh, but it was shortly afterwards regained bythe Abbot, and the monks had the opportunity of recording his deathwithin a year after the ultimate decision, as the decision of Heaven intheir favor. The words of the chronicle are strong, "Miserabiliter Obiit." ~1070 Concubine 2 ~1120 John de Tarrington ~1090 Walter Fitzrobert 1092 - 1143 Miles de Pitres 51 51 1096 - >1143 Sybil de Neufmarche 47 47 1073 - 1135 Philip de Braose 62 62 A Crusader.
Born c1070
Died between 1131 and 1139

Philip confirmed his father's gifts to the abbey of St. Florent in 1096.He was the first Braose Lord of Builth and Radnor, their initial holdingin the Welsh Marches. Philip seems to have gone on the 1st Crusade andreturned in 1103. He built the Norman church of St Nicolas (right) at OldShoreham and founded the port of New Shoreham. His lands were confiscatedby Henry I in 1110, due to his traitrous support of William, son ofRobert Curthose but they were returned in 1112.

Between 1125 and 1130 Philip confirmed the gifts of his nephew, Philip deHarcourt, to the newly established Knights Templar.

Father: William de Braose, 1st Lord of Bramber

Mother: Eve de Boissey (probably)

There are charters where Robert de Harcourt's sons, Philip and Richard,refer to Philip de Braose as "patruus" - paternal uncle. This lendsweight to the theory that Robert de Harcourt and Philip de Braose wereboth sons of Eve de Boissey. In another record dated 1103 (Pipe Roll Soc.Vol 71 no 544) it is stated that Philip de Braose was represented by "hisbrother Robert, the son of Anketill".



Married to Aanor dau of Judael (Johel) of Totnes

Child 1: William de Braose, 3rd Lord of Bramber
Child 2: Philip
Child 3: Basilia
Child 4: dau = Ralph de Gernon
(ref: Collins' Peerage, 1761)
- unlikely
1084 Aenor de Totnais 1150 - AFT. 5 FEB 1227/28 Sybil de Braose Born 1150 ;   Died 1227

Father: William de Braose, Sheriff of Herefordshire


Mother: Bertha de Pîtres

Married (1) William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby (b1136 d1190 at Acre)

Child 1?: Agatha

Child 2: William de Ferrers, 4th Earl of Derby (1168 - 1247) = Agnes ofChester, Lady of Chartley (1174-1247)

Child 3: Petronill de Ferrers (1175-) = Hervey de Stafford (-1237)

Married (2) Adam de Port
1151 - 1235 Bertha de Braose 84 84 1117 Bernald IV de Saint Valery 1225 - 1306 Alice dePeninton 81 81 1094 - 1166 Reginald II de Saint Valery 72 72 1128 Matilda ~1045 - 1087 William de Braose 42 42 died 1093-6

Guillaume de Briouze is recorded in lists of those present at the Battleof Hastings. He became the first Lord of Bramber Rape by 1073 and builtBramber Castle. (Right - remains of the gatehouse) William madeconsiderable grants to the abbey of Saint Florent, Saumur to endow thefoundation of Sele Priory near Bramber and a priory at Briouze. Hecontinued to fight alongside King William in the campaigns in Britain,Normandy and Maine.

The latest evidence for William is his presence at the consecration ofhis church at Briouze in 1093. In 1096 his son Philip was isuingcharters. From this we can deduce that William died between 1093 and 1096.

Father: Uncertain.

Mother: Gunnor (See Round, Cal. Doc. Fra. p148)

Brydges edition of Collins' Peerage claims he was first married to Agnes,dau of Waldron de Saint Clare but no evidence for this can be found. Itmay be an example of Bruce - Braose confusion.

According to L C Perfect, a 13th century genealogy in the Bibliothèque deParis gives the name of his wife as Eve de Boissey, widow of Anchetil deHarcourt. There is a lot of evidence from contemporary charters whichsupports this view.
~1047 Agnes de St Clair 1029 Judeal Jobel de Totenais 1034 ? de Pecguifny 1065 - 1127 Walter FitzRoger de Pitres 62 62 1070 Bernard de Neufmarche 1079 Nest verch Osborn 1065 Bernard de Saint Valery 1197 - 1269 Hugh deVenables 72 72 Sir Hugh Venables, eldest son, grants to his son Roger by deed withoutdate his lands in Eccleston and the advowson of the church to the intentthat he should endow with ten pounds worth of lands. To this same Rogerhe grants the manor of Wittin and the advowson of Routherstone. To thisdeed he affixed a seal charged with the present coat of Venables andcircumscribed "Sigillum Hugo de Venables." He married Agnes, daughter ofRanulph de Oxton. He also had a first wife, Wentilian, whom he divorcedafter having had numerous issue by her. ~1193 - ~1240 Isabella D'Aubigny 47 47 ~1056 Adeliza de Grentesmesmil <1100 - 1153 Randulph de Meschines 53 53 <1193 Ada of Huntingdon 1147 - 1181 Hugh Keveliok de Meschines 34 34 ~1144 - 1219 David Huntingdon 75 75 David of Huntingdon, Earl of Huntingdon 9th

Born: ABT 1144
Acceded: 1185
Died: 17 JUN 1219, Yardley, Northants
Interred: Sawtrey Abbey, Hunts.
Notes:
and Earl of Northumberland, Earl of Lennox, Earl of Carlise, Earl ofDoncaster
See Europäisch Stammtafeln Band II tafel 68.
Earl of Garioch, Earl of Cambridge.
The Complete Peerage vol.V,pp.646-7.

Father: , Henry of Huntingdon, Earl of Huntingdon, b. ABT 1114


Mother: de Warren, Adelaide


Married 26 AUG 1190 to de Keveliock, Matilda of Chester


Child 1: , Robert
Child 2: , Margaret
Child 3: Scot, Isobella le, b. 1206
Child 4: Scot, John of Chester le, Earl of Chester, b. 1207
Child 5: , Maud
Child 6: , Ada
Child 7: , Henry
Child 8: , Henry of Stirling
Child 9: , Henry of Brechin
Child 10: , Ada
Child 11: , David
~1150 Bertred of Evereaux ~1190 - 1228 Margaret of Huntingdon 38 38 Margaret

Died: 1228

Father: , David of Huntingdon, Earl of Huntingdon 9th, b. ABT 1144


Mother: de Keveliock, Matilda of Chester, b. 1171


Married 1209 to de Galloway, Alan, Lord of Galloway


Child 1: de Galloway, Devorguilla
Child 2: de Galloway, Christina
~1095 Elizabeth Beauclerc Henry I was not a Plantagenet, either this Elizabeth's last name is wrongor Henry is not her father. D. 1189 Maud de Gloucester 1200 - 1277 Alice deOxton 77 77 <1130 Earl of Evereaux Simon <1130 Maud 1192 - 1246 Agnes de Meschines 54 54 1180 - 1241 Hawise de Meschines 61 61 >1170 Ranulph de Meschines D. BET. 1128 - 1129 Ranulph de Meschines 1074 - 1140 Lucia de Taillibois 66 66 >1086 Matilda Beauclerc D. 1157 Mabel Fitz- Hamon 1200 - UNKNOWN Alan dePeninton Beatrix de Meschines Beatrix de Meschines 1090 - 1147 Robert de Gloucester 57 57 Concubine 1 Ralph de Meschines Maud <1055 Earl of Mercia Algar <1055 Aelfgifu ~1088 Alice de Meschines 1084 - 1136 Richard Fitzgilbert de Clare 52 52 1187 Ranulph deOxton Robert Fitz- Hamon Sibyl de Montgomery 1110 - 1183 William de Gloucester 73 73 1103 - 1120 William Beauclerc 17 17 Died at sea on the wreck of the White Ship with two of Henry's illegimatechildren.  He was 17 and left Henry with no male heir. 1103 - 1151 Adelicia de Brabant 48 48 Born: circa 1103 in Louvain, Leeuwen, Brabant, Belgium, daughter ofGodefroy I, Duke de Lorraine and Ide de Namur. Married on 29 Jan 1121:Henry I, King of England, son of Guillaume, Duke de Normandie andMathilde-Maud de Flandre. Adelaide was Henri I’s second wife and he washer first husband. At 15 years of age, she therefore married this 50-yearold widower. Perhaps understandably, her true passion was said to beneedlework. Married before 1128: Guillaume d’Aubigny, son of Williamd’Aubigny and Cecily Bigod (source- a pedigree purchased at ArundelCastle). Married before 1149: Gilbert de Ville. It is unclear whetherGilbert was Adelaide’s second or third husband. Some sources indicate shebore her second husband some 7 children, and his name was Albini. Died:on 23 Apr 1151 in Afflighem, Flandre, Belgium. Adelaide was 48 years ofage when she died. Some sources indicate Adeliza de Louvain, who was thewidow of Henri I and married Guillaume d’Aubigny/de Albini, died in 1176.

In hopes of further legitimate issue King Henry married again after theloss of his only son William. His bride, whose age is uncertain but whowas certainly younger than his daughter Matilda, was Adeliza, thedaughter of Godfrey the Bearded, Duke of Lower Lorraine, Marquess ofAntwerp, and Count of Louvain. The marriage took place at Windsor on 29January 1122.
The coronation of the new Queen at Westminster Abbey on 3 February 1122gave rise to an amusing incident. The King, wearing his crown, had takenhis seat on the throne to await his consort’s crowning when the agedArchbishop Ralph d’Escures, verging on senility, entered. Seeing the Kinghe flew into a rage, thinking that his right to place the crown on thesovereign’s head had been infringed. He at once snatched the crown fromthe King’s head (one version has it that he knocked it off with hispastoral staff) and insisted on reimposing it with his own hands. Henry’ssecond marriage remained childless; the once potent sire of manyillegitimate children was potent no longer.
In 1138 the young widowed Queen married William d’Aubigny, 1st Earl ofArundel, to whom she bore a large family before, wearied by married life,she retired to the convent of Afflighem in Flanders, where she died andwas buried in March or April 1151.
Alfonso VII of Castile I Alfonso Matilda of Savoy ~1175 Agnes Beaumont 1170 - UNKNOWN William deVenables Sir William Venables, Knight, eldest son, appears in a grant to hisbrother Hugh about 1188. To this deed he affixes a seal, representing aLion Rampant sinister. He had license for a domestic chapel at Merstonfor himself and wife from Andrew, Prior of Newton. He lived in the 12thyear of Henry III, 1228. He had issue Hugh, Robert, parson of Rosthorne,Hamon and William. 0722 - 0837 Eochy- Annuine King of Scotland 115 115 Mary la Marquise Isabel II de Brienne ~1075 II Conrad 1199 Ferdinard III of Castile and Leon ~1077 Matilda de Braose >1070 Maud de Braose ~1177 - 1200 Magery de Braose 23 23 Reginald de Braose D. 1209 Maud de Braose ~1197 - 1232 John de Braose 35 35 1146 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deVenables Gilbert Venables, grandson of the first Baron, married Margery, daughterof Walthew Fitz-Wolfric, with whom he had half of Marton in frankmarriage, and by whom he had issue 6 sons and 2 daughters. His seal was afalcon sinister, regardant, which is appended to a charter, witnessed byOrmus de Davenport, and others whereby he grants lands. Their childrenwere: William, eldest son, Hugh, Gilbert, Michael, Robert, Hamon,Amabilia and Maud. ~1195 - >1221 John de Brampton 26 26 1136 - ~1176 Rosalind Clifford 40 40 1158 - 1186 Geoffrey Plantagenet 28 28 ~1192 - 1252 Isabella le Scot of Huntingdon 60 60 1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet 33 33 1152 - 1156 William Plantagenet 3 3 1150 - 1197 Alix Capet 47 47 1119 - 1180 Louis VII Capet 61 61 ~1142 Agnes Capet ~1150 - >1210 Matilda Albini 60 60 1153 - UNKNOWN Margery deHatton ~1078 Maud Bigod ~1064 - 1099 William D'Aubigny 35 35 ~1060 Adelise de Toeni ~1147 Agnes Albini ~1145 Alice Albini Annebel Balliol ~1145 Matilda de Braose ~1105 Richard Beauclerc <1193 John le Scot Huntingdon 1100 - 6 Jan 1147/1148 Gilbert de Clare 1123 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deVenables 1090 - 1189 Joscelyn de Louvain Brabant 99 99 The birth and ancestry of Josceline was as splendid as his estates wereslender. He was a younger son by a 2nd wife of Godfrey, Count of Brabantand Louvain, and was descended through Louis IV, King of France, and hiswife Geberga, daughter of the King of Germany; son of Charles Il, King ofFrance, and Edgina, daughter of Edward, the Elder, King of England; sonof Louis II, King of France; son of Charles II, King of France; son ofLouis I, son of Charlemagne.

Jocelyn wedded Agnes upon condition that he should be called JocelynPercy, or else, that he should bear the arms of Lord Percy. He tookcounsel of his sister, the Queen, and chose to be called Jocelyn Percyrather than forsake his own arms, for so he should have no right of titleto his father's inheritance. The date of this marriage is not certain,but it was probably about 1150, when Agnes Percy was in her 17th year.Queen Adeliza conferred on her brother, by way of a wedding present, fiveand a half knights' fees in Yorkshire, and the honour of Petworth inSussex. He lived for the remainder of his life in great splendour; and ischiefly remembered for the many rich gifts which he made to abbeys andreligious houses.
[91502.ftw]
~1064 - 25 Jan 1139/1140 Godrey Lorraine ~1085 Clementia de Namur ~1141 Olivia D'Aubigny ~1143 Godfrey D'Aubigny ~1010 - 1084 Walter I Giffard 74 74 Companion of William the Conqueor's invasion of England. 1015 Agnes Flaitel ~1036 - >1084 Roger D'Aubigny 48 48 ~1040 Avitia de Montbrai 1130 William deHatton Richard Albini ~1066 Nigel Albini Humphrey Albini ~1062 Raufon Albini ~1095 Hugh Bigod ? le Scot ~1163 - 6 Jan 1232/1233 Maud de Meschines The Lady Maud de Meschines, eldest dau. of Hugh (surnamed Keveliok), 3rdEarl of Chester, m. David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William theLion, King of Scotland, and had, with four daus., an only son, John leScot. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 478, Scot, Earl ofChester] Concubine 3 Edith 1090 - 1120 Matilda Beauclerc 30 30 1080 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deVenables Venables, a baronial name from Venables near Evereux in Normandy, France.The family does not appear under this name in Normandy, its proper namebeing le Venour or Venatori, so named from the office of Veneur orVenator derived from Vanabulum, a hunting spear, or more properly a boarspear, which reflects his origin. Being from a line of hereditaryhuntsmen or Venero of the Norman Dukes. In Normandy there was Arnulph,Gislebert, Gaufridus, Hugh and Richard Venator in Normandy in 1180-1195.Waller de Veneur was eminently distinguished in 960 at the battle of theFords between Lothair, King of France, and the Normans, where he rescuedDuke Robert I of Normandy.
Gislebert Venator or de Venables was one of three brothers who came toEngland with Hugh Lupus, first Earl of Cheshire, Eng. He was ancestor ofthe Barons of Kinderton, of whom Gislebert Venables of Cheshire ismentioned in 1180 as Gislebert Venator of Normandy, proving theconnection between the English and French Venables, His Frenchdescendants bore argent a bend azure fretty or for difference. He waswith William the Conqueror and his name is on the Roll of Battle Abbey.Showing still further the proof of his French origin, Gislebert deVenables, on the division of the spoils after the battle of Hastings, hereceived his share under the name of Venator, and many English recordsrefer to him under this name. He received extensive estates and was oneof the English Barons attached to the Earldom of Chester under HughLupus, Earl of Chester.
1110 Reginald de Cornwall 1105 William 1092 Sybilla Gundrada Rohese Berengaria of Barcelona D. 1160 Constance of Castile 1183 - 1253 Blanche of Castile 70 70 1165 - 1199 Joanna Plantagenet 34 34 1145 - 1198 Marie Capet 53 53 1176 - UNKNOWN Hugh deDutton V Lord Dutton Hugh de Dutton married Muriel, daughter of Thomas de Spencer, and hadissue also Hugh, Thomas, John and Adam. Besides his inheritance he boughtPreston, the town of Little Legh and the moiety of Barnton.
Sources:
    Ormerod's History of Cheshire County, England, Vol. 1, pp. 426-430,
      475-477 and 398.
    Sir Peter Leycester's Antiquities of Cheshire (quoted in Ormerod).
    Collins Peerage of England, Vol. 8.
<1193 Majory of Huntingdon 1167 - 1216 John I Plantagenet 48 48 1060 Fulk de Somery ~1195 - 1276 Joan de Somery 81 81 1255 Roger de Somery 1055 - 1102 Walter II Giffard 47 47 Adaide de Giffard William de Giffard 1085 Maude de Pitres 1067 Berta de Baalun 1155 - UNKNOWN Hugh deDutton IV Lord Dutton Hugh de Dutton married a daughter of Hamon Massy III, who was grandson ofHamon I, Baron of Dunham Massy, and held the towns of Dunham, Bowden,Hale, Ashley and half of Owlarton under Hugh Lupus, 1st Earl of Chesterin the reign of William the Conqueror. The Barons of Dunham Massy borearms: Quarterly gules and or in the first quarter a lion passant argent.(Illustrated, not colored in Ormerod's Hist. of Cheshire Co., Eng., Vol.I, p. 398.) They lived in time of Henry II and Hamon Massy gave hisdaughter Sutterby in Chester and Lindsey in Lincolnshire. They had Hugh,Thomas, John and Adam.
Sources:
    Ormerod's History of Cheshire County, England, Vol. 1, pp. 426-430,
      475-477 and 398.
    Sir Peter Leycester's Antiquities of Cheshire (quoted in Ormerod).
    Collins Peerage of England, Vol. 8.
1107 James St Hillary 1109 Aveline ~1196 Maud D'Aubigny 1200 William D'Aubigny ~1208 Cecily D'Aubigny ~1211 Colette D'Aubigny 1215 Hugh D'Aubigny 1122 Isabel de Beaumont 1169 Thomas Le despencer 1  DEAT
2  DATE BEF. 1250
~1070 Rohese de Clare Joan de Stafford http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jamesdow/s043/f662009.htm
http://www.uk-genealogy.org.uk/Database/D0031/I3556.html
Jane de Brereton <1373 - 1399 William de Ipstones 26 26 ~1396 Alice Ipstones She was her father's heiress. D. >1436 Randle Brereton He was the ancestor of the Breretons of Malpas and Shocklach. Margaret Done She was his second wife, and widow of John de Davenport, of Henbury, who died after Henry Done William Brereton He was a younger son.  He is the ancestor of the Breretons of Shotwick Park, Cheshire. Richard Pole 1190 - UNKNOWN Muriel Le despenser Alice Savage She is possibly the daughter of John Savage and Maud Swinnerton. D. <1336 Thomas de Vernon He was the youngest legitimate son of Sir Ralph de Vernon "the Old."  He held land in Lostock Gralam in the time of Edward I. D. BEF 1396/1397 Richard de Vernon He was the remainderman of Shipbrook in 1325 - 1326. Maud le Grosvenor She was sister of Robert le Grosvenor of Budworth, Cheshire.  She is described sometimes as Ralph "the Old's" concubine and sometimes as his second wife.  She may have been both, although her son, Richard, was illegitimate.  She appears to have been of the family of the Grosvenors of Hulme in Allostock. Maud de Brereton D. >1450 Margaret Savage D. >1398 Margaret de Brereton D. 1394 John de Ipstones He was murdered by Roger de Swinnerton, the uncle of Maud, whom Sir John had kidnapped and forced to marry his son.  He was waylaid on his way to Parliament. ~1357 - >1423 Elizabeth Corbet 66 66 Her maritageum included the manors of Besseford and Ballesley, Shropshire.  She had full seisin of them after her husband's death. John de Ipstones 1128 - UNKNOWN Hugh deDutton III Lord Dutton Hugh de Dutton had the lands which his father held of the Baron ofHalton, confirmed unto him by William, son of Nigel, Constable to RandleII, Earl of Chester. On that day when the said William and his sonWilliam did visit Hugh, son of Hudard, on his death bed at Kekwick, atwhich time Hugh gave unto William his coat of mail and his charginghorse,and Hugh, son of that Hugh, gave to William, the son, a palfrey and asparrow hawk. This Hugh de Dutton had three sons--Hugh, who kept the nameof Dutton; Adam, whose descendants took the name of Warburton, andGeoffrey, from whom the branch that took the name of Chedill werepropagated. 0694 - 0788 Ed-Fin King of Scotland 94 94 ?? de Cresswell D. <1363 Thomas Corbet 1304 - 1375 Robert Corbet 70 70 He had inherited Moreton Corbet by 1316, when he was still under 12 years old. Elizabeth le Strange in or bef 1342 - 1386 Hugh de Stafford 2nd Earl of Stafford, 3rd Lord Stafford, Lord Audley.  On his mother's death in 1348 he succeeded as lord Audley.  In 1359 he joined the Prince of Wales in Aquitaine and served there for several years.  He was summoned to Parliament on January 8, 1370/71, as Hugh de Stafford; from October 6, 1372 as Hugh, Earl of Stafford.  He was made Knight of the Garter between November 11, 1375, and April, 1376.  After April 30, 1376, he was appointed one of the earls to consult with the Commons, and  one of the Kings "Continual Councillors."  In 1378 he was rebuked for arrogant language towards the Commons by John Philpot.  On August 11, 1378, he slew Robert Hawksley in the quire of Westminster Abbey.  On March 27, 1386, he was licensed to voyage overseas to Jerusalem and died on the trip. ~1158 - <1217 Richard de Clare 59 59 Richard de Clare, Magna Charta Surety 1215, d. bet. 30 Oct & 28 Nov 1217,Earl of Hertford, son of Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford, and Maud,daughter of James de St Hilary; m. Amice, Countess of Gloucester, d. 1Jan 1224/5, daughter & heir of Williamd fitz Robert, Earl of Gloucester,and Hawise de Beaumont. [Magna Charta Sureties}

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Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford, who in the 7th Richard I gave1000 pounds to the king for livery of the lands of his mother'sinheritance with his proportion of those sometime belonging to Giffard,Earl of Buckingham.  His lordship m. Amicia, 2nd dau, and co-heiress(with her sisters Mabell, wife of the Earl of Evereux, in Normandy, andIsabel, the divorced wife of King John) of William, Earl of Gloucester,by who he had issue, Gilbert, his successor, and Joan, m. to Rhys-Grig,Prince of South Wales.  This earl, who was one of the twenty-five baronsappointed to enforce the Magna Carta, d. in 1218, and was s. by his son,Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford. [Sir Bernard Burke, "Dormant andExtinct Peerages", Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p 119, Clare, Lords ofClare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

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From the National Society Magna Chart Dames and Barons; Magna ChartaBaron Page for Richard De Clare, Earl of Hertford:

Richard de Clare, the Surety, was the fourth Earl of Hertford but, likehis father and uncle, was more generally known as Earl of Clare.  He waspresent at the Coronation of King Richard I at Westminster, 3 September1189, and of King John, 27 May 1199.  He sided with the Barons againstKing John, and his Castle at Tonbridge was taken.  On 9 November 1215 hewas one of the commissioners who, on the part of the Barons, was to treatof peace with the King.  On 4 March 1215/6 his lands in countiesCambridge, Norfolk, Suffolk; and Essex were granted to Robert de Betun;he and his son were among the Barons excommunicated by the Pope in 1215.He died between 3 October and 28 November 1217.  He married Amicia,Countess of Gloucester, second daughter of William FitzRobert, Earl ofGloucester, and his wife Hawise, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Earl ofLeicester.  She died 1 January 1224/5.
~1324 - 1348 Margaret de Audley 24 24 Baroness Audley suo jure.  She was her father's heiress.  She was 12 years old when Ralph de Stafford, accompanied by relatives, allegedly broke into Hugh de Audley's close, carried away his goods, abducted Margaret, and married her against her will.  King Edward III intervened to protect Ralph, and, after making his peace, Ralph and Margaret were given the reversion to a large part of the Gloucester inheritance. D. <1336 Katherine de Hastang 1331 Margaret de Stafford D. 1450 John Savage He was probably knighted at Agincourt. 1134 - UNKNOWN Alice Prescott ~1410 - 1463 John Savage 53 53 1367 - 1415 Maud de Swinnerton 48 48 The manor of Barrow was her maritageum.  She was the widow of Sir Ralph Peshall. 14 Feb 1348/1349 - 10 Jan 1425/1426 William de Brereton Lord of Egerton and Brereton, lord of half of Malpas.  He was a knight in 1385.  He was a commissioner of array in 1404, and sheriff of Cheshire from 1408 to 1411.  He was constantly employed and actively engaged on the Welsh border during this period when Owen Glendower was threatening.  He was governor of Calais in 1418.  He likely died of wounds received at the battle of Pontorson in 1425.  His son died at Harfleur in 1415. 1341 - <1396 Robert de Swinnerton 55 55 4th Baron Swynnerton.  He received pardon for outlawry in 1370.  In 1378 he was  knight of the shire for Staffordshire. Elizabeth de Beke D. 1361 Thomas de Swynnerton 3rd Lord Swinnerton.  He inherited from his brother.  He was in the King's service overseas in 1340.  On February 18, 1341/42, he was sheriff of Shropshire and Staffordshire.  He was knight of the shire for Staffordshire in 1343.  In December, 1345, the sheriff of Staffordshsire was ordered to take into the King's hands all his lands and goods.  There is no further mention of this incident; possibly it was the result of a default in some legal proceedings due to his absence abroad.  He served in the King's retinue from the passage to La Hogue in 1346, and at the battle of Crecy, at Calais, and elsewhere.  In 1347-1349, as Sir Thomas de Swynnerton, knight, doorkeeper of the king's hall, he was paid for the hangings provided for the hall.  On October 14, 1357, the King gave 100 marks towards his ransom, he having been taken prisoner in Scotland. ~1319 Maud de Holand Her identity as daughter of Robert de Holand and sister of Thomas de Holand is not certain.  There does not seem to be any documentary evidence for this marriage. ~1329 - ~1369 Nicholas de Beke 40 40 He served in the Crecy campaign and took part in the seige of Calais in 1347.  He was a knight in the retinue of Ralph de Stafford, earl of Stafford, who accompained Lionel of Clarence to Ireland in 1361, when Lionel was appointed lieutenant of Ireland. ~1290 - 1349 Maud la Zouche 59 59 She was the second daughter and coheiress.  She was age 24 in 1314. D. 1415 Beatrice de Stafford A gown was provided for her for Henry IV's coronation. 1133 - UNKNOWN Hammond deMassey D. >1348 Joan de Stafford She is "said to be daughter of Ralph de Stafford, 1st earl of Stafford."  The 1580 Visitation of Cheshire identifes her as Ralph's daughter, but the identification has not been confirmed by contemporary records.  Contemporary records do confirm that the given name of Nicholas Beke's wife was Joan. ~1337 - 1375 Elizabeth de Stafford 38 38 1270 - 1328 Robert de Holand 58 58 1st Lord Holand of Up holland.  He became a favorite official of Thomas, earl of Lancaster, and thus grew in importance and wealth.  He was a knight in 1307.  He had licence to crenellate his manor house of Upholland in 1308, and that of Bagworth, Leicesterchsire, in 1318.  He was justice of Chester several times between 1307 and 1320; sheriff of Flintshire, Wales, 1307; and governor of Beeston Castle, Cheshire.  He founded a college of priests in the Chapel of St. Thomas at Upholland in 1310.  It was later altered to a priory of Benedictine monks.  He was summoned to Parliament from July 29, 1314, to May 15, 1321, by writs directed Roberto de Holand, whereby he is held to have become lord Holand.  He lost his lands for insurrection with the duke of Lancaster against the King.  In 1313 he was pardoned for his complicity in the death of Piers de Gaveston.  In 1315 he assisted in suppressing the rising of Adam Banastre in Lancashire, and in 1318 was again pardoned for adherence to the earl of Lancaster.  In the earl's final rising in February and March, 1321/22, he is said to have played a ciouwardly or treacherous part.  A story says that he collected 500 men in Lancashire for the earl but brought them to the King instead.  On the earl's flight northward, before the battle of Boroughbridge, he surrendered to the King at Derby, and was sent to Dover Castle, "being hateful to all for having deceived his lord, who had loved him exceedingly and raised him from nothing to be a great man."  He appears, however, to have fought at Boroughbridge, surrendering after the battle.  He was certainly treated as a rebel, all his lands being taken into the King's hands.  At the accession of Edward III he petitioned for restoration, which was granted on December 23, 1327.  On Octgober 7, 1328, he was captured in Boreham Wood, Elstree, Hertfordshire, by some adherents of his patron, Thomas, earl of Lancaster, who, for his treachery, cut off his head.  His head was sent to Henry, earl of Lancaster, at Waltham Cross.  He was a notable benefactor to the church in which he was buried after he was beheaded. ~1298 - on or bef 3 Mar 1337/38 Roger de Swynnerton 1st Lord Swynnerton.  On September 19, 1310, he was of those whose duty it was to perform knight service for the earl of Lancaster's fees.  On October 16, 1313, he was pardoned for his share in the execution of Gaveston.  On October 6, 1315, he was granted licence to crenellate his house of Swinnerton.  On August 30, 1321, he was appointed keeper of the Tower of London.  He was summoned to Parliament on December 20, 1337, as Rogero de Swynn'ton, whereby he is held to have become lord Swynnerton. D. 1357 Margaret Haughton D. <1346 Robert de Beke He was summoned on Christmas Eve, 1334, from Roxburgh to attend there on February 2 for military service. Mariota ?? D. bet 20 - 22 Aug 1349 Margaret de Holand ~1319 - >1390 William de Brereton 71 71 Lord of Brereton.  He was his grandfather's heir.  He took part in the crusade, under the Black Prince, which restored Peter the Cruel to the throne of Castile, 1367.  He had a grant of free warren in his demesne lands, 1368,  and was a witness before the case of Scrope v. Grosvenor at the court of chivalry, 1369.  The Brereton family, lords of the manor of Brereton, and later joint tenure barons of Malpas, in Cheshire is said to have been founded by a younger son of Gilbert de Venables, from whom they are descended through a later connection with that family - this supposition is supported by the similarity of the arms that they bore, which differ on in tincture. A full pedigree is given in George Ormerod's Cheshire (1817, 1888) and also in Burke's Extinct and Dormant Peerage. The family was raised to the peerage in the seventeenth century, but is now extinct in the senior line. 1140 - UNKNOWN Agathea deTheray Ellen de Egerton Lady of Egerton.  She was her brother's coheiress, and reacquired a portion of the barony of Malpas that had gone after the death of William de Malpas to his illegitimate son David instead of to the rightful heir, his brother Philip de Egerton.  The Egerton family was one of the most notable in Cheshire. In the early years after the conquest they were barons of Malpas.  Malpas was one of the palatinate baronies created, along with Shipbrook, Kinderton, and others, by Hugh Lupus, the first Norman earl of Cheshire.  The idiosyncratic descent of this barony, which found its way down an illegitimate line and was divided and subdivided, is lengthy.  A full account is given in Ormerod's Cheshire.  The Brereton family in the fourteenth century were able to wrest various moieties of the barony from their cousins, and Sir William Brereton, grandson of Ellen de Egerton, was in possession of half the barony. D. AFT 1341/1342 William de Brereton He died before his father. Margaret de Bosley Richard de Bosley D. AFT 1341/1342 William de Brereton Lord of Brereton. D. AFT 1321/1322 Rohese de Vernon William de Brereton Lord of Brereton.  Sir Richard de Sandbach had the grant of his wardship to marry him, or, if he died, his younger brother Gilbert, to one of his legitimate daughters. Cecily de Sandbach Mary de Holand Agatha de Vernon 1104 - UNKNOWN Richard Prescott D. >1326 Ralph "the Old" de Vernon Lord of Shipbrook, Cheshire.  He was an illegitimate son.  He was said to have lived 150 years.  He may well have lived into his 100s.  He succeeded to his father's interest in the barony by grants from his father and sister. Mary de Dacre Maud Brereton 1106 - UNKNOWN Alice Pichard 1096 - 1140 Hugh Fitzodard II Lord Dutton 44 44 Hugh, son of Hodard, had those lands which he held in capite orimmediately of the Earl of Chester, confirmed to by Randle, 2nd Earl ofChester, about the latter end of the reign of Henry I (1135). 1060 - UNKNOWN Odard Lord of Dutton Odard or Hudard came into England with William the Conqueror and wasseated at Dutton, a greater part of which Hugh Lupus, 1st Earl ofChester, gave to him. This Hudard's sword has been preserved and passedover from heirs as an heirloom by name of Hodard's sword. The town ofDutton, Cheshire Co., Eng., is mentioned three times in the DomesdayBook, written Duntyne, as held by three persons, of whom one Odard orHudard seemed to own the greatest part, and the other parts at last cameto the posterity of Odard. Dun in the Saxon language signifies hill, forwhich the English now use down, so that Duntune signified a town on ahill, now Dutton. From this town did the ancient family of Dutton assumetheir surname and the posterity of Odard have continued to the present.
Sources:
    Ormerod's History of Cheshire County, England, Vol. 1, pp. 426-430,
      475-477 and 398.
    Sir Peter Leycester's Antiquities of Cheshire (quoted in Ormerod).
    Collins Peerage of England, Vol. 8.
1080 - UNKNOWN Alice Dutton 1020 - UNKNOWN Ivo Viscount Of Cotentin 1028 Emma de Bretagne 0667 - 0700 Eochy II Rinnavel King of Scotland 33 33 0994 - UNKNOWN Niel II de St. Sauveur 1202 - UNKNOWN Vivian deStandon 1100 - 1140 Hamon Massey 40 40 1115 - UNKNOWN Eleanor deBeaumont 1076 - UNKNOWN Hamon Massey 1182 - UNKNOWN Margaret Sacie 1150 - 1197 Hawise deBeaumont 47 47 The Complete Peerage vol.V,p688 is clear her mother was Amice of Montfort. 1040 - UNKNOWN Muriel deMortaigne 1200 - UNKNOWN Margaret Aldford 1176 - UNKNOWN Richard Aldford 0639 - 0703 Domangart King of Scotland 64 64 1195 - 1245 Oliver II Deincourt 50 50 1160 Oliver I Deincourt 1135 John Deincourt 1140 - UNKNOWN Alice Murdach 1110 - UNKNOWN Ralph Murdach 1105 Walter Deincourt 1075 Ralph Deincourt 1045 - UNKNOWN Walter D'Eincourt 1073 Robert de La Haye 1095 Roger deChesney 0590 - 0642 Donald I Breck King of Scots 52 52 1100 - UNKNOWN Alice Langetot 1066 Matilda 1076 - UNKNOWN Ralph Langetot 1125 Maud de Verdon 1090 - UNKNOWN Muriel of Lincoln 1050 - UNKNOWN Colswein of Lincoln D. UNKNOWN Olivia D'Aubigny 1026 - UNKNOWN Richard Thurstin Haldup 1110 - 1129 William deTancarville 19 19 1083 - UNKNOWN Maud of Arques 0530 - 0629 Aidan King of Scots 99 99 1146 - 1202 Gruffydd ap Rhys deheubarth 56 56 1040 - UNKNOWN Ralph deTancarville 1040 - UNKNOWN William of Arques ~1233 - 1301 Isabel de Albini 68 68 Isabel de Albini m. Robert de Ros, Lord Ros of Hamlake, and conveyed tohim the feudal barony and castle of Belvoir, which eventually passed fromthe family of Ros to that of Manners, by which they are now enjoyed inthe person of the Duke of Rutland.  [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England,1883, p. 160, Daubeney, Barons Daubeney, Earl of Bridgewater] 1020 - UNKNOWN Eudes Stigand 1160 - UNKNOWN Nichola deLa Haye 1145 - 1197 Nigel deMowbray II Baron De Mowbray 52 52 1155 - 1203 Mabel de Clare 48 48 1178 - 1224 William III deMowbray 46 46 William de Mowbray, Surety for the Magna Charta, 3rd Baron by tenure,eldest son, who was of age in 1194. He was early embittered against KingJohn by being compelled by him to surrender the Barony of Front-Beouf(which Henry I had conferred upon his grandfather, Sir Nigel d'Albini) toa descendant of the original owner. This was probably because Mowbray,upon the accession of King John, was tardy in pledging his allegiance,and at length only swore fealty upon condition that the "King shouldrender every man his right." At the outbreak of the Baronial War he wasGovernor of York Castle, and it is not surprising that he at once sidedwith the barons against King John, and was one of the most forward ofthem. He was selected one of the Sureties for the Magna Charta and was aparty to the "Covenant for holding the City and Tower of London" and oneof those whom the Pope Innocent III excommunicated by name. He died in1223-4 at his castle in the Isle of Axlholme and was buried in the Abbeyof Newburgh in Yorkshire. He married Agnes d'Albini, daughter of Williamd'Albini. 1120 - 1188 Roger D'Aubigny Baron deMowbray 68 68 His name was changed to de Montbray by royal command, presumably that ofHenry I. He acquired from his father vast areas of land, the Montbrayestates in Normandy plus others in the English midlands and Yorkshire. Inthe centre was Axholme in Lincolnshire, ultimately the base of Mowbraypower. Roger's own life was on his Yorkshire lands at Thirsk castle inthe area still known as the Vale of Mowbray. Under the guidance of hismother he became a generous benefactor to the church. In 1146 he was inNormandy defending his title to the castle of Bayeaux. Induced to joinKing Louis VII of France to the Holy Land. His services to the crusadingmovement were valued by the Knights Hospitallers so highly that later, in1335, they proclaimed the Mowbrays should be treated 'beyond the seas' asthose to whom they were most obliged, discounting the king himself.
In 1186 Roger crusaded for a second and final time. When the extension ofthe truce between Saladin and Guy de Lusignan allowed the crusaders toreturn home, Roger and Hugh de Beauchamp chose to remain in Jerusalem 'inthe services of God'. In Saladin's great victory on 6 July 1187 he wastaken prisoner with King Guy, was redeemed in the following year by theKnights Templar, but did not long survive his liberation. Tradition hasit that he was buried at Tyre, an old warrior of nearly seventy years.Burke's states he was buried at Sures, with 'some authorities say hereurned to England and after living fifteen years longer, was buried inthe abbey of Byland.
Source: David Mowbray  http://www.mowfam.freeserve.co.uk/index.htm
1120 Alice deGaunt 1  NAME Alice /Gaunt/ 0567 Eochy I Buide Scots 1090 - 1132 Matilda deBrittany 42 42 1004 - 1064 Judith deNantes 60 60 1030 Hugh deMontfort Hugh de Montfort, is the first on record of this family in England. Hewas commonly called Hugh with a beard. (The Normans at that time beingusually shaved.) He accompanied William, the Conqueror, into England, andaided that Prince's triumph at Hastings, acting the part of an expert andvaliant soldier, for which great service he afterwards obtained diverslordships in various counties in England; but at length lost his life ina duel with Wacheline de Ferrers. At the time of the General Survey hewas possessed of the following lordships: 28 in Kent, with a largeportion of Romney Marsh; 16 in Essex; 51 in Suffolk, and 19 in Norfolk.This Hugh de Bastenbrege, Dominus of Montfort in Normandy, married Alice,daughter of Henry Beaumond of County Warwick. 1303 - 1349 John deLegh 46 46 1269 - 1325 John deLegh 56 56 Took his mothers surname
John De Venables aka Leigh, purchased Norbury Booths, 28 Edward, I.
1254 - 1344 Margaret deDutton 90 90 1039 - 1090 Baldwin Fitz- Gilbert 51 51 Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert, of Brionis or Moels, 2nd son, a follower of theConqueror, called Vicecomes, and Baldwin of Exetor. He was Seigneur deMeules and du Sap, in Normandy. After the death of his father, who wasmurdered by the son of Giroie, he and his brother Richard, who wasancestor of the de Clares, took refuge at the court of the Duke ofFlanders. Duke William afterwards restored to Baldwin his estates ofMeules and Sap, and to Richard FitzGilbert his estates of Bienfaite andOrbec, portions of their father's lands. Baldwin received from theConqueror some 150 lordships in Devonshire, Hemington and Parlock andApley in Somerset, and Iwerne in Dorset. Okehampton was the capital seatof his barony. He was Sheriff of Dorset 1080-1086 probably until hisdeath. (After the Conquest the sheriffs were still the King'srepresentatives in the county. As the King was nearly absolute, thesheriff was very powerful. The sheriff had important duties: 1. Finance.He farmed the shire at a fixed sum a year. 2. Justice. He was the King'srepresentative in the shire court, and he sat there as president, or as aroyal judge. 3. War. It was the duty of the sheriff to summon the forcesof the county. The great lords led their own retainers, but the sheriffled all the rest of the troops.--Montague's Elements of EnglishConstitutional History. E. E. W. Very different from modern sheriffs.This was from a textbook at Washington University.) In Domesday Book heis called Baldwin of Exeter, or Baldwin, the Sheriff. He married Emma orAlbreda, niece of the Conqueror. He died 1090. They had Robert, Richardand William. 1059 Emma Aldreda of Ivry 1075 - 1117 Richard de Redvers 42 42 1560 - 1621 Anne Rogers 61 61 0499 - 0560 Gavran King of Scots 61 61 1230 - UNKNOWN Randle Le Roter Lord of Thornton 0945 - UNKNOWN William dePercie William, Sieur de Percie, Governor of South Normandy, Comte of Caux;slain by Hugh Capet, King of France. 0912 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey dePercie Geoffrey, associate of Rollo, baptized at Artois A. D. 912. Rollo becamea Christian, but still held to many of his pagan customs. 0884 - UNKNOWN Mainfred dePercie There was, perhaps, no more illustrious house of English nobility thanthat of Percy. Both in the age of chivalry, and in the so-called"Renaissance"  or Reformation period, the house of Northumberlandoccupied a position of great, if not paramount, importance. The Percieswere Catholic, but not Ultramontane; Monarchial, but steadfast opponentsof tyrants; they contributed more than their share to the development ofthe National Church and Constitution. Heroes in war, pioneers oflearning, martyrs for religion, are all represented by Percies; whilefrom the earliest period there has been no grander title than that ofKing or Earl of Northumbria.
Tradition bestows upon these lords of Percie a remote Scandinavianorigin, and monkish historians afterwards traced the house from those oldDanish sea-rovers who harried every European shore from Shannon to themouth of the Tiber. In the words of Dugdale: This ancient and right noblefamily do derive their descent from Mainfred de Percy, which Mainfredcame out of Denmark into Normandy before the advent of the famous Rollothere. And another chronicler of the 15th century tells us that a son ofthis Mainfred, the Viking, was one of those who fought side by side withRollo, 1st Duke of Normandy.  Mainfred, who came out of Denmark intoNormandy before the advent of Duke Rollo, who gained possession ofNormandy in 911. Sources for Percy Family:
     History of House of Percy, by Brenan; author's preface, p. XVII;
     Introduction.  Charts pp. 6 and 168, pages 1 to 93;
     Edmondson Baronagium Genealogicum, Vol. 3, pp. 269-270. ;
     Collins Peerage of England, Vol. 2, p. 240; Vol. 3, pp. 217-273;
     Clay's Dormant and Extinct Peerage, pp. 21-24;
     Harleian Society Publications, Visitation of Cheshire, Vol. 18, p.140;
     Ormerod's History of Cheshire, Vol. 3, pp. 306, 363, 394;
     Burke's Landed Gentry (1939), Americans of British Ancestry,
     Vol. 3, pp. 2759-60.
1112 - 1168 William dePercy IV Baron De Percy 56 56 William was the last of the direct male line. 1094 - UNKNOWN Alice deRos 1233 - 1285 Robert IV "1st Baron" de Ros 52 52 Sir Robert de Ros, of Belvoir, summoned 24 Dec 1264 to "a Parliament"convened by Simon de Montfort, an event which prompted the legal decisionof 1616 (also accepted 1806) assigning precedence in the barony of de Rosof Helmsley to 1264, although the "Parliament" in question was convokednot by the King but by a noble in opposition to him; by subsequentevolutions in peerage law doctrine no sitting in what can only be termeda council of that date could be held to confer peerage; ChiefCommissioner to investigate excesses in Herefs 1258; sided with Simon deMontfort in the Barons' War, surrendering Northampton to Henry III April1264 and Gloucester to Prince Edward (later Edward I) June 1265; pardoned14 Aug 1265 for his opposition to Henry III; Commissioner in North ofEngland 1268 to ensure Aid (a tax) was yielded up to the King.  [Burke'sPeerage]

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Robert de Ros m. in the lifetime of his father, Isabel, dau. and heiressof William de Albini, feudal lord of Belvoir, in Leicestershire, by whomhe acquired Belvoir Castle, co. Lincoln, and other extensive landedpossessions. This great heiress was in ward to the king and a mandateupon her marriage, bearing date at Windsor, 17 May, 1244, was directed toBernard de Savoy and Hugh Giffard, to deliver her to her husband, thesaid Robert: "but not," says Dugdale, "without a round composition, forit appears that both he and his wife, in the 32nd Henry III [1248], weredebtors to the king in no less than the sum of £3,285 13s. 4d., and apalfrey; of which sum the king was then pleased to accept by 200 marks ayear until it should all be paid." In the 42nd of the same reign [1258],he had two military summonses with his father to march against the Scotchand Welsh--but afterward rearing, with the other barons, the standard ofrevolt, he had a chief command at the battle of Lewes, so disastrous tothe royalists; and to his custody in the castle of Hereford wasespecially committed the person of Prince Edward. He was at the same timesummoned 24 December, 1264, as Baron de Ros, to the parliament thencalled in the king's name by the victorious lords. But the fortune of warchanging at the subsequent battle of Evesham, his lands were all seizedby the crown and held until redeemed by his lordship under the Dictum ofKenilworth. In two years after this he must, however, have regainedsomewhat of royal favour for he had then permission to raise a newembattled wall around the castle of Belvoir. He d. 16 June, 1285, leavingissue by the heiress of Belvoir, William, his successor;

Robert (Sir), knighted 1296; and Isabel, m. to Walter de Fauconberge. Hislordship was s. by his elder son, William de Ros, 2nd Baron. [Sir BernardBurke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage,London, 1883, p. 458, Ros, or Roos, Barons Ros]
1100 - UNKNOWN Thomas deMulton D. UNKNOWN Alice deRumelli D. UNKNOWN Robert deRumelli Lord of Skipton 0476 - 0560 Domangart King of Scots 84 84 0417 Weldelphus 1040 - 1115 Alice deBeauffou 75 75 1016 - 1081 Richard deBeauffou 65 65 1082 - UNKNOWN Hue d'Amboise 0832 - 0923 Robert I King of France 91 91 Also the Count of Paris and Count of Potiers.

ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PED OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.; COUNT
OF ORLEANS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1028 - UNKNOWN Le Sire d'Arouges 0818 - UNKNOWN Alpaidia Princess of France 0703 - UNKNOWN Wernicke King of Saxons 0667 - UNKNOWN Dieterick King of Saxons 0630 - UNKNOWN Sighard King of Saxons 0477 - UNKNOWN Fedelmia Princess of Ireland 0592 - UNKNOWN Berthold King of Saxons 0565 - UNKNOWN Bodicus Prince of Saxons 0530 - UNKNOWN Hulderic King of Saxons 0495 - UNKNOWN Hathwigate Prince of Saxons 0460 - UNKNOWN Hartwake Prince of Saxons 0426 - 0488 Hengest Prince of Saxons 62 62 Hengest and Horsa, who led the Saxon bands who invaded England in 446.William of Malmesbury says that they were grandsons of the ancient Woden,from whom almost all the royal families of these barbarous nations deducetheir origin, and to whom the nations of the Angles, fondly deifying him,have consecrated the fourth day of the week Wodens-day, and the sixth dayunto his wife Frea. For the fatherland of the English race we must lookfar away from England itself. Three tribes of Germany, Angles, Saxons andJutes, by whom Britain was subdued, seem originally to have constitutedbut one nation, speaking the same language, and ruled by monarchs who allclaimed descent from the deified monarch of the Teutons, Woden or Odin.Jutes with their neighbors the Angles dwelt in the peninsula of Jutland,which parts the Baltic from the North Sea. In the adjoining Holsteinthere is still a district called Anglen. Hengest and Horsa had gone toEngland at the request of the British King Vortigern to help him in hisbattles with the Picts. They were at first given the Island of Thanet asa home, but soon quarreled with their British allies, and graduallypossessed themselves of what became the Kingdom of Kent. In 455 the SaxonChronicle records a battle between Hengest and Horsa and Vortigen, inwhich Horsa was killed, and thenceforth Hengest reigned in Kent until hisdeath in 488. 0400 - UNKNOWN Witegeslus King of Saxony 0376 - UNKNOWN Witte King of Saxony 0340 - UNKNOWN Witte King of Saxony 0306 - UNKNOWN BodeKing of Saxony D. UNKNOWN Eochy Mogmedon King of Ireland 0279 - UNKNOWN Marbed of Saxony 0249 - UNKNOWN Wilke of Saxony 0217 - UNKNOWN Witekind King of Saxony 0193 - UNKNOWN Sigward of Saxony 0166 - UNKNOWN Swarticke of Saxony 0130 - UNKNOWN Swarticke Prince of Saxony 0104 - UNKNOWN Wilke Prince of Saxony D. 0120 Harderick King of Saxony 1118 - UNKNOWN Simon Corbet 1062 - 1134 Roger Corbet 72 72 Roger the second son of Corbet, and elder of the two brothers who served under the Norman, William the Conqueror, held twenty four manors inShropshire, and one in Montgomeryshire, from his kinsman, Earl Roger de Montgomery, and was also highly in the confidence of Robert de Belesme,the third Earl of Shrewsbury. This Roger Corbet, the progenitor of all the Shropshire Corbets and their various branches, had three sons,William, Ebraid, and Simon. 0445 - 0529 Fergus The Great King of Scots 84 84 The 131st monarch of Ireland. In 498 AD he went to Scotland with his fivebrothers and an army to assist their grandfather Loran, King of Dalriadain overcoming the Picts. After the King's death Fergus was unanimouslyelected King and became the first absolute King of all Scotland and theMilesian Race. (Womack Family History). 1164 - UNKNOWN Nicholas deStuteville 1170 Gunnora Gunnora was the widow of Robert de Gant. 1133 - UNKNOWN William deStuteville William was a man of great account in the time of Richard I, theLionhearted, and King John. He married Berta, niece of Ranulph deGlanville, the Chief Justice. 1146 - UNKNOWN Berta deGlanville 1105 - ~1183 Robert de Stuteville 78 78 Robert de Stuteville, the eldest son, succeeded his father and married1st Helewise, by whom he had a son William, his successor, and also twodaughters; married 2nd Sybilla de Valoins, by whom he had a son Eustace. 1114 - UNKNOWN Helewise 1080 - 1119 Robert de Stuteville 39 39 Robert de Stuteville, who in temp. Henry II laid claim to the Barony ofRoger de Mowbray, which, on the rebellion of his father, had been given,as before stated, to Nigel de Albini, father of the said Roger deMowbray; and coming to arbitrament, recovered some part thereof. Hemarried Erneburga, daughter and heir to Hugh, son of Baldric, a greatSaxon Thane, by whom he had issue 3 sons: Robert, Osmond and Patrick.
Sheriff of Yorkshire
1054 - UNKNOWN Robert deStuteville Robert de Stuteville or D'Estuteville, called Grundeboef or Fronteboe, in7th of Henry I was made prisoner by the king at the Battle ofTenerchbray, where he was taken fighting on the part of Robert Curthose(Robert of Normandy, Crusader, son of William, the Conqueror, and olderbrother of Henry I) against that king, for which his lands were seizedand given to Nigel de Albini. 0918 - 0987 Harald Bluetooth Gormsson II King of denmark 69 69 Harald refused to accept the crown until he had first performed hisfather's obsequies with all the magnificence becoming his high rank. Oneof his earliest was the conquest of Norway, which became a province ofDenmark. Styrbear, King of Sweden, solicited the aid of King Harold inone of his wars, and to enforce his request he brought along with himGyntha, his sister, a lady of admirable beauty. The stratagem had theintended effect; Harold Bluetooth became enamored and married her. Theprogress of Christianity gained some headway during his reign, and theKing received baptism, and erected a splendid church. His daughterGunilda married Richard I, Duke of Normandy.
Sources:
     Harrison's History of Yorkshire; Preface and Charts.
     Britannica Encyclopedia, Vol. 26, p. 224; Vol. 12, p. 179; Vol. 20,p.
     4; Vol. 28, p. 767.
     Williams' Historians History of the World, Vol. 16, pp. 37-49.
     Edward S. Lewis Manuscripts, pp. 164, 162, 226, 274.
     The Plantagenet Ancestry, by Lt. Col. W. H. Turton, pp. 26-7.
0603 - UNKNOWN Halfdan III King of denmark 0416 - 0499 Eric Muireadhach 83 83 0640 - UNKNOWN Ivar Vidfadmus King of denmark & Sweden His name meaning "the Far-Famed." These ancient Scandinavian peoples,speaking the same language as their brethren the Angles, began at a veryearly period, as might naturally be expected, to settle amongst theAngles in the North of England. About the beginning of the 7th centurythe celebrated Ivar conquered the northern parts of England, havingpreviously conquered Sweden and Saxland (Germany) and other parts ofEurope. He is called King of Denmark, Sweden, Saxland and Northumberland. D. UNKNOWN Valentine II Roman Emperor 0540 - UNKNOWN Eudoxia D. UNKNOWN Emperor Theodosius 0865 - UNKNOWN Turstan deBastenburg 0540 - UNKNOWN FrodeVI King of Denmark 0513 - UNKNOWN Roe King of denmark 0570 - UNKNOWN FrodeVII King of Denmark 0450 - UNKNOWN FrodeIV King of Denmark 0422 - UNKNOWN Fridlief III King of denmark 0387 - 0439 Eochy Munrevar King of Dalrieda 52 52 0390 - UNKNOWN Halfdan King of denmark 0364 - UNKNOWN FrodeIII the Pacific King of Denmark 0340 Olufa Zealand 0328 - UNKNOWN Danus MyKillati King of Scandia & denmark Dan or Danus MyKillati, who was King of Scania and Denmark, died 270 A.D. He married Olufa, Queen of Jutland and Zealand in 205 A. D. when herfather died. She was descended in the sixth generation from Skiold, sonof Odin. Dan reduced the whole country to subjection and is alleged tohave given his name to the new kingdom. The union of his sister withDyggve of Sweden is reckoned the earliest matrimonial alliance that wasformed between two countries. Wars and other events of no importance fillup the history of his successors for ten or twelve generations. D. UNKNOWN Alfgifu Gunnarsson 1104 - UNKNOWN Theobald deValoignes 1112 - UNKNOWN Henry Walter D. UNKNOWN Hubert Walter 1147 Roesia 1183 - UNKNOWN Joan FitzPiers 0865 - 0935 Cinaed King of Kinsale & Cheinselaig 70 70 1112 - ~1193 Lasceline deClinton 81 81 1  NAME Lesceline /De Clinton/ 1184 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deClinton Geoffrey was Lord-Chamberlain and Treasurer to King Henry I. 1030 - UNKNOWN Godfrey Count of Verdun Godfrey, Count of Verdun or Verdon in France, was surnamed "le Caplif." 1086 Robert deWaer Earl of Norfolk 1087 Adeliza Lady of Middleton 1078 Hugh deGrentmesnil Lord Grentmesnil Hugh de Grentmaisnil, the first owner of the Manor of Ware, after theConquest was a potent Norman, who accompanied William in his fortunateexpedition into England, and had an ample reward for his services bygrants of land in seven counties, besides the Manor of Ware in Hertford.He was a great benefactor to the monks at Utica in Normandy, to whom hegave, amongst many other things, much of his land in Ware. He marriedAdeliza, Lady of Middleton, in Warwick. They had many children, amongwhom were Robert, William, Hugh and Yvo or Ivo. 1263 - 1326 Richard Foliot 63 63 0985 - 1035 Sanche The Great King of Navarre & Pamlona 50 50 Sancho III the Great, born 985, died 1035. Title of Emperor of Spain1028-1035. King of Navarre 1001-1035. Married Dona Majora Munia Elvira, asister of Garcia, Count of Castile. At this time the Kingdom of Navarreincluded the three countries--Sobrado, Aragon and Ribagorza--and on hisdeath Sancho bequeathed them to his sons Gonzales and Ramiro. Sancho hadthe following children: Garcias III, King of Galicia and Portugal;Ferdinando I, King of Castile and Leon; Gonzales killed 1035; Roderige,called "The Cid'; and by his wife, Dona Elvira. By Gaya he had a naturalson, Ramirez. 0997 - UNKNOWN Dona Muna Elvira Dona Muna Elvira was the eldest sister of the Queen of Leon, and daughterof the Count of Castile. 1015 - 1054 Garcias III King of Galicia and Portugal 39 39 1250 - 1283 Patrick deChaworth 33 33 Mauduit and Chaworth Family Sources:
   Harleian Society Pub., Vol. 4, p. 123.
   Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerage of England, p. 111.
   Wells and Allied Families, pp. 142, 160.

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

of Wales

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

of Wales
1142 - 1177 William deSaye 35 35 1017 - UNKNOWN Ferdinando I King of Castile and Leon 1702 Benoni Merritt 1005 Hughes de Gournay Hugues I, dividing with his brother, took Gournay and the parishes inBeauvais, conquered on the right bank of the River Epte. In 1026 he builta priory at Ferte, the monks to raise or repair the old religiousedifices in the localities, and to direct or replace the secular priests.So began the movements of donations to abbeys. By 1036 Hugue and hispeople were definitely feudatories of the Duchy of Normandy. With Giffardde Longueville, Nigel, le Compte, Tallifer and others, he went with DukeGuillaume, in about sixty vessels, to the aide of King Edward theConfessor of England to help against the Danes. He was helpful at theConquest at Hastings. In the Cadastre of the Conquest, called by thevanquished the Book of the Last Judgement, or Domesday Book, wererecorded to him a manoir in the Hundred of Hidingford, one in Tendringand one in Lessenden, all in Essex. He and his sons returned to Normandy.His sons were Hugues and Nigel. 0982 Raynwald de Gournay Raynwald, escaped the massacre of Wodansfield. By 812 the Council ofTours had ordered the bishops to translate the homilies into commondialects. It is probable that Norsemen accepted baptism and renounced it,equally with little compunction. Raynwald established himself and hispeople in the bourg of Gournay, principal town of a region of rivers,marshes, forests and "workable land" after the laws and usagesScandanavian. In 922 and 925 the Norwegians were assailed on all sides,from Anjou, Vwemandois and Bourgoyne, but were not defeated. The Jarl deRouen had already become for the French, and for all Europe, the Comtedes Normans, and Richard, son of Rolf, was baptized. Raynwald had theaudacity, with his band, to sleep in the ruins of the Abbey of St.Benoist, which had been despoiled. When asleep St. Benoit appeared,brandishing his staff. Awakened in horror, and with loud cries, he andhis men ran into Rouen, where he died in mental torture. He had two sons,Gautier and Hugues. 0953 - 1039 Ottar Jarl of Norway 86 86 Based on "Histoire d'Ottar Jarl, Pirate Norvegien, Conquerant du Pays duBray, in Normandie, et de sa Descendince, by le Compte de Babineau,1879." This being a line as illustrious as that of the Conqueror, thoughnot so powerful, deserves some description. It was in 843 that theNorwegian Vikings established a settlement with a palisade defense inFrance and slew practically everybody in Nantes. Later their leader wascalled Ottar, Jarl or Earl, who came from the southern part of Norway. Hevisited King Alfred of England, told him of that far away land anddomain, of which he was proud to be the Jarl, or Yarl, also that he hadsailed far north to the North Cape. He served King Alfred occasionallyfrom 870, when he was probably baptized, to 901, when King Alfred died.Ottar was soon after warring with King Edward, Alfred's son, with his ownson, now a chief, with him. Men of Hereford and Gloucester defeated them.They took refuge on an island at Bristol, where they were isolated by theSaxons, but finally got away and gained the shore of France, entering theSeine to Pont de l'Arche. A dozen years later they got to the forests ofBeauvais, called Bray. But no Viking could lead a sedentary life. In 911,in concert with other chiefs of bands, landing on the east coast, theywere again defeated by the Saxons at Wodansfield, near the Severn, andOttar died on the battlefield, surrounded by his chiefs, and then agedprobably 86 years. 1139 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deRos 1134 - 1191 William Le Vasasour 57 57 Sir William Vavasour, eldest son, Knight and Lord of Haslewood. He was ajudge in the 30th of Henry II, 1184, and one of the witnesses to thecharter of the Abbey of Sawley, County York, refounded by Matilda dePercy, Countess of Warwick. He held two knights fees of Sir William dePercy in 1187.

Name Prefix:<NPFX> Sir
1105 William Le Vavasour 1079 - UNKNOWN Mauger Le Vasasour Sir Mauger Vavasour gave to the monks of Salley the mill of Hinslet. 1052 - UNKNOWN Mauger Le Vavasour 1110 Reginald deCourtenay 1154 - Jun 1221/1222 Robert deMauduit Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord of Hanslope 1130 - 1199 William deMauduit 69 69 1098 William deMauduit William was Chamberlain to Henry II. 1074 - 1157 William deMauduit 83 83 William was Chamberlain to Henry I, and was granted by Henry I the Baronyof Hameslape, together with the office of Exchequer to the King, and alllands belonging thereto in Normandy and England, particularly the Castleand Honour of Porchester. He married Maud de Mameslape, whose family nameoriginated from a parish on the border of Buckinghamshire, extending toNorthampton, later called Hameslape. There was a William de Hameslape onthe Humdred rolls of County Bucks, 1273 A. D. Maud's father Michael deHameslape is addressed by King Henry I, in a charter made at Rockinghamabout the year 1101 in favor of the See of Lincoln. He is also mentionedas once lord of the fief which Henry I bestowed on William Malduit; butBank's Dormant and Extinct Baronetcies says, "Mauduit marrying Maude,daughter of Michael de Hameslape, acquired with her the barony ofHameslape in County Buckingham," she being the sole daughter and heir.There seems to be no earlier history of the Hameslape family than themention of the charter in 1101. 1180 Maud deHanslape 1153 - UNKNOWN Michael deHameslape 1048 - UNKNOWN William deMauduit William de Mauduit or Malduith was living 1086, the year the survey wasrecorded in the Domesday Book, and at that time possessed seven lordshipsin Southampton. He also is styled by Dugdale in his "Baronage" asChamberlain to Henry I. The two baronial houses of Mauduit were Mauduitof Hanslape, County Bucks, hereditary Chamberlains of the Exchequer; andMauduit of Warminster, County Wilts, and of Castle Holgate, County Salop,sometimes Chamberlains Royal. These were closely related byintermarriages. 1165 - UNKNOWN William de La Ferte 1180 - <1237 Margaret deBrewere 57 57 D. UNKNOWN William deBrewere 1208 - 1245 Helen MacDonald deGalloway 37 37 1104 - UNKNOWN Peter deBermingham Peter was Steward to Gervase Paganell, Baron of Dudley, held of thatnobleman in 12 of Henry II, 1165, no less than nine knights' fees deveteri feoffment. This Peter had a Castle at Bermingham, which stoodscarcely a bow-shot from the church to the westward and by a charter fromthe crown held a weekly market Thursday there. By this charter he had theliberties of Thol, Theam, Sock, Sack and Infangethef to him and his heirsforever. (Footnote. These liberties were the power of punishing offenderswithin his own bounds; a power of obliging all that live in hisjurisdiction to plead in his courts; a cognizance of all courts; a powerto punish natives for theft.) 1080 - UNKNOWN William deBermingham 1104 - 1180 Ivo deHarcourt 76 76 William was Lord of Harcourt, Carleville and Beaufldel in France, andlord of the manor of Stanton-under-Bardon, in Leicestershire, England. Hehad issue Robert, Seignor and Baron Harcourt, Ivo, the 2nd son, Simon andBeatrix, who married Robert de Bassett. 1039 - >1100 Robert The Strong deHarcourt 61 61 Robert built the castle of Harcourt in Normandy, A. D. 1100. He had,besides 3 younger sons, William, his heir, Richard, a Knight Templar, andPhillip, Dean of Lincoln, who assisted in the coronation of Henry II,1154. 1014 - UNKNOWN Anchetel Sire deHarcourt Anchetel. being lord of the place, was the first to assume the surname ofHarcourt. Of his seven sons, the eldest, Anguerrand, or Errand deHarcourt, attended William, Duke of Normandy, at the Conquest, andreturned to Normandy in 1078. Agnes 1108 - UNKNOWN Petronilla Queen of Aragon 0994 - UNKNOWN Gaya 0904 - UNKNOWN Hugo Count of Dagsburg and Egisheim 1046 - 1135 Stephen Etienne of Brittany 89 89 D. UNKNOWN Constance of Castile 1056 - 1094 Josceline I dePorhoet 38 38 1098 - UNKNOWN Bertha of Brittany 1036 - UNKNOWN Hawise of Brittany 1060 - 14 Feb 1116/1117 Bertrade De Montfort 1070 - 1148 Conan III Le Gross Duke of Brittany 78 78 1030 - UNKNOWN Hoel V deCornuaille Count of Brittany 1072 - 1119 Alan IV Fergen Duke of Brittany 47 47 1078 Ermengarde D'Anjou 1003 - 1048 Alan Cornouaille Count Of Brittany 45 45 D. UNKNOWN Guinodeon Countess Of Pornoet 1085 - 1141 Ingelbret II Duke of Carinthia 56 56 0960 - UNKNOWN Judicael Count deNantes 0903 - UNKNOWN Alain II le Barbetorte Count of Brittany 0970 - UNKNOWN Melisende Du Maine 0870 - UNKNOWN Matuedo I dePoher Duke of Brittany 0885 - UNKNOWN Daughter of Alain 0840 - UNKNOWN Alain I The Great Duke of Brittany 0855 - UNKNOWN Oreguen 0810 - UNKNOWN Ridoredh Count of Nantes 0825 - UNKNOWN Gaerwant D. UNKNOWN Budic II Cornouaille Count Of Brittany 1042 - UNKNOWN Le Sire deTregoz "Le Sire de Tregoze" of a noble family of Norman extraction was atHastings in 1066, and his name appears in John Foxe's copy of BattleAbbey Roll. (This copy is claimed to be best because John Foxe, theeminent antiquary, saw and transcribed the original Roll.) This is a listof noble Normans who settled in England at the time of the Conquest. Sirede Tregoze was unquestionably the father of William de Tregoze. D. UNKNOWN Budic I Cornouaille Count Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Diles Cornouaille Count Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Alava of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Ulfret Cornouaille Count Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Louvenam of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Judael Cornouaille Count Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Argant Prince of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Constantine Cornouaille Count Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Judon Cornouaille D. UNKNOWN Urbon Cornouaille Count of Brittany 0870 - UNKNOWN Uracca of Aragon D. UNKNOWN Urbien Cornouaille D. 0685 Judicael St. Domnonee King Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Judhael Domnonee King Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Judual Domnonee King Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Jonas Domnonee King Of Brittany D. 0530 deroch Domnonee King Of Brittany D. 0520 Riwal II Domnonee King Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Alfrond Cornouaille Count Of Brittany D. UNKNOWN Justin Cornouaille Count Of Brittany 0863 Daughter of Brittany 0844 - UNKNOWN Theida of Biscay 0839 Erispoe King of Brittany 0815 Nominoe King of Brittany 1092 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deRadcliffe IV Baron Kendal Algitha 1022 - 1072 Ivo FitzRichard deTaillebois 50 50 1060 Lucy of Mercia 1115 - 1169 Hugh VIII Sire deLusignan 54 54 1118 - 1170 John Count deEu 52 52 1091 - 1140 Henry deEu 49 49 0917 - UNKNOWN Sancha Goncalez Count of Castile 1099 - 1145 Margaret deChampagne 46 46 1076 - 1150 William deChampagne Count of Chartes 74 74 1080 Agnes de Soleio 1072 - UNKNOWN Beatrice deBusli 1055 - 1096 William deEu 41 41 1053 Muriel Chappell 1030 - 1093 Robert Count of Eu 63 63 1032 - 1085 Beatrice deFalaise 53 53 1012 - UNKNOWN Alice Lesseline deHarcourt 0993 - UNKNOWN Adeline de Montfort 1151 - 1222 Robert II de Corbet 71 71 0968 - 1036 Turchetil deHarcourt 68 68 Turchetil, Seigneur de Turqueville and Turquerange, in France, wasgovernor to William, 2nd Duke of Normandy. 1032 - UNKNOWN Margaret deEu 0936 - UNKNOWN Anslec deBertrand Seigneur De Briquebec 0962 - 1023 Toussaint deBertrand De Bastembourg 61 61 1550 - 1576 James Gorham 26 26 1018 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deNeufmarche 1144 - UNKNOWN Ida deEu 1100 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey deRancon 0985 - 1043 Geoffroi II deThoaurs 58 58 0955 - 1010 Savery III Viscount deThouars 55 55 0865 - UNKNOWN Garcian Indigo 1084 - 1130 William deManDeville 46 46 0925 - 0988 Herbert I deThouars 63 63 0933 - UNKNOWN Aldearde D'Aunay 0904 - 0967 Cadelon III D'Aunay 63 63 0914 - UNKNOWN SenegundeOf Marcillac 0880 - UNKNOWN Cadelon II D'Aunay 0886 - UNKNOWN Gisella Of Melle 0853 - UNKNOWN Cadelon I D'Aunay 0955 - 0998 Adelbert Count de La Haute Marche 43 43 0996 - 1047 Bernard I Count deLa Haute Marche 51 51 1002 Amelie Countess D'Aubigny 0889 - 0925 Sancho Garces I King of Pamlona 36 36 0966 - UNKNOWN Raoul I Viscount deThouras 0972 - 1011 AlmodeAisceline Of Limoges 39 39 0920 - UNKNOWN Ademar Vicomte de Brosse 0930 - UNKNOWN Boso de La Marche 0914 - 0958 Hildegar Vicomte Of Limoges 44 44 0926 - UNKNOWN TietbergaTetrisca Of Bourges 0900 - UNKNOWN Geraud Of Bourges Count Of Bourges 0886 - UNKNOWN Hildebert Vicomte Of Limoges 0806 - UNKNOWN Fulgaud Count Of Rouergue 0857 - UNKNOWN Fulk of Limoges 0958 - 1018 William I Count of Provence 60 60 0855 Hildegarde of Auverge 0779 - UNKNOWN Childebrand I Lord Of Perracy 0873 - UNKNOWN Boso Of Parthois 1219 - 1274 Henry deTracy 55 55 Lord of /Barnstaple/ 1080 - 1135 Philip de Braose 55 55 At Council of Oxford 1177, Henry II granted to Philip, already lord of Brecknock in Wales, the kingdom of Limerick, although Philip failed to occupy Limerick. 1112 - UNKNOWN Julianna Corbet 1100 Robert Corbet 1024 - UNKNOWN Mary Verch Gruffydd 1070 - UNKNOWN Ameria Montgomery 1044 - UNKNOWN Agatha of Mercia 0998 - UNKNOWN Muldivana (Maud) of Atholl 1044 - 1101 Alan Seneschal of Dal & Dinan 57 57 1316 - UNKNOWN Marbella Hausket 1292 - UNKNOWN James Hausket 1258 - 1326 William deStanley 68 68 William de Stanleigh, Stanley, in County Stafford, in the time of EdwardII, 1307-1326, married Jane or Joan, daughter of Sir Philip Bamville, ofStoreton, and his wife Agnes, daughter and heir of Alexander Stourton. Bythis marriage he became hereditary ranger of the Forest of Wirral, andacquired one-third of the manor of Stourton (later acquiring all of it),and migrated to their newly acquired home in Cheshire. 1270 - UNKNOWN Jane deBaumville 1234 Walter deStanley 1244 - 4 Feb 1282/1283 Phillip deBaumville 1248 - UNKNOWN Agnes deStourton 1223 - UNKNOWN Alexander de Stourton 0883 - 0928 Louis III 45 45 1228 - UNKNOWN Amabilis deSylvester 1204 Alan deSylvester 1210 - UNKNOWN Adam deStanley 1186 William deStanlegh  2nd Lord of Stoneley. Sir Willizm Stanley de Stoneley obtained by marriage the manor of Stourton and Bailiwick of Wyrrel Forest in Cheshire.

2nd Lord of Stoneley. Sir Willizm Stanley de Stoneley obtained by marriage the manor of Stourton and Bailiwick of Wyrrel Forest in Cheshire.

2nd Lord of Stoneley. Sir Willizm Stanley de Stoneley obtained by marriage the manor of Stourton and Bailiwick of Wyrrel Forest in Cheshire.
1144 William deStanley 1114 - UNKNOWN William deStanley 1087 - UNKNOWN William deAldithley William de Aldithley, Lord of the Manor of Talck, in County Stafford,married Joan, daughter and sole heir of Thomas de Stanley or Stoneley,and with her received the manor of Talck, which he exchanged with hiscousin Adam de Audleigh (ancestor of the D'Audleys), who had marriedMabelle, daughter of Henry de Stonleigh, for Stonleigh and half ofBalterly, and thereby assumed the name of Stonleigh or Stanley, andbecame the immediate founder of the Stanleys, a race associated with themost stirring events in English history. 1093 - UNKNOWN Joan deStanley 1068 - UNKNOWN Thomas deStanley 1064 Adam de Aldithley 0920 - 0965 Bozon Count of Provence 45 45 1039 Adam de Aldithley The first known ancestor of this line was Adam de Aldithley, Audlegh orAldithlega, so named from the paternal estate of Aldithlegh, in Normandy,who came over with William, the Conqueror, acquitting himself bravely onthe field of Hastings, he was rewarded with large estates. His son Adamde Aldithley  accompanied his father to England. 1276 Ralph de Brereton Sir Ralph Brereton of Brereton, Knight, through marriage to Ada deHuntington, gives the Breretons Royal Descent because she was decended ofDavid, King of Scotland, and maternally the Earls of Chester were RoyalEarls, who possessed jura regalis in the Palatinate of Chester. They alsolaid claim to royal descent from the Venables, who was a relation ofStephen of Blois and William, the Conqueror. At first the descent of theBreretons from the royal blood of Scotland was mentioned as a mere claim,which was found in Collins' Peerage and in Dugdale's British Peers, but acopy of the patent or grant of creation to Sir William Brereton, of theBarony of Brereton, has since been procured and in that instrument suchroyal descent in Scotland is expressly recited and recognized in thefollowing terms: "We, considering with mature deliberation the free andtrue services of Sir William Brereton, and that he is sprung from anancient, noble and most renowned family, inasmuch as he is descended,through many illustrious ancestors, from Ada, sister of John, surnamed leScot, 7th Earl of Chester, and daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon,Lord of Galloway, within our kingdom of Scotland." (This quotation isfound in Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity,Vol. 33, p. 59.) 1280 Ada de Huntington 1251 William deBrereton Sir William de Brereton, heir to his father, by deed without date,receives from Randle de Torhaunt, later called Thornton, in frankmarriage with his daughter Margery, all the rents which Thomas de Warinheld from Peter de Torhaunt, father of the said Randle, in MiddlewichHundred. This Randle de Torhaunt must have been Randle le Roter, Lord ofThornton, who became possessed of the Manor of Thornton and is stated byCollins to have been a son of David le Clerk, Secretary to RandleBlundeville, Earl of Chester. Randle assumed the name of le
Roter, and also of Thornton from his place of residence, and is sometimesdesignated by both. Randle Thornton died before the 28th of Henry III,having married Amicia, daughter of Richard Kingsley and his wife Joan,daughter and co-heiress of Alexander Sylvester, Lord of Stourton andForester of Wirral, and had a son Ranulph, who died sine prole, and 5daughters: Amicia, Emma, Agnes, Joan and Margaret, of whom Amicia, theeldest, was mother of Margery Thornton, wife of William.
1256 - UNKNOWN Margery deThorton 1238 - UNKNOWN Amicia deKingsley 1204 - UNKNOWN Peter deThorton 1220 - UNKNOWN Joan deSylvester 1196 Alexander de Sylvester 1228 - UNKNOWN Ralph deBrereton 1031 - 1063 Geoffry I Arles 32 32 1204 - UNKNOWN William deBrereton 1176 - UNKNOWN William deBrereton 1150 - UNKNOWN Ralph deBrereton Ralph de Brereton, joins with Orme de Davenport in witnessing a deed ofGilbert Venables in the time of William II, called Rufus, the Red. 1186 Ranulph deKingsley 1081 Adeliza 1164 Lucy 1246 - 1292 Peter de Arderne 46 46 1252 Margaret 1272 John de Arderne 1282 - UNKNOWN Margaret verch Glyndwrdwy 1033 - 1095 Stephanie of Provence 62 62 1154 - UNKNOWN Osbert deClinton Osbert de Clinton, eldest son, had a grant of the lordship of Coleshill,from his kinsman Geoffrey de Clinton, and thereupon was denominated ofColeshill, in the 8th of Henry II, 1162, and in 1164/5 also on payment ofscutage collected in those parts. He had to wife Margaret, daughter ofWilliam de Hatton, son of Hugh, founder of the priory of Wroxhall and byher (who afterwards married Richard de Beauchamp and John de Abelot) hadOsbert de Clinton, who bore the name in 1207. 1163 - UNKNOWN Margaret deHatton 1098 - UNKNOWN Renalbus deTancarville Renebalus came into England with William the Conqueror, and being seatedat Clinton, now Glimpton, in County Oxen. His issue took the surname ofClinton. He had three sons--Geoffrey, Osbert and William. 1122 - UNKNOWN Osbert deClinton Osbert de Clinton had sons Osbert, Robert, Hugh and Maurice. 1010 - UNKNOWN Ralph FitzHerlewin ~0782 Engeltrudeof Paris 1020 - UNKNOWN Eve deBoissary Le Chapel 0846 - 0931 Robert (Rollo) Duke of Normandy 85 85 Rollo the Dane, 1st Duke of Normandy. The Normans, Men of the North, werea mixed nation of the fiercest Norwegians, Swedes and Danes, and becamesettled in Neustria in France at the beginning of the 10th Century whenCharles the Simple, King of France, conferred the Duchy, since calledNormandy, on Rollo the Dane, one of the most celebrated of the Normanleaders. This renowed chieftain married 1st Poppae, daughter ofBerengarius, Count of Bayeux, 2nd Gisela, daughter of Charles, King ofFrance. By the first wife he left at his death, in 931, two sons and twodaughters: William, Robert, Count of Corbell, Crespina and Gerletta. 0887 Hugh Barbatus 1052 - UNKNOWN Colede d'Argouges 1057 - UNKNOWN Gerberge Countess of Provence 1070 - UNKNOWN William deHarcourt Lord Harcourt William de Harcourt was Lord of Harcourt, Carleville and Beaufldel inFrance, and lord of the manor of Stanton-under-Bardon, in Leicestershire,England. He had issue Robert, Seignor and Baron Harcourt, Ivo, the 2ndson, Simon and Beatrix, who married Robert de Bassett. 1150 - 1202 Robert deHarcourt 52 52 Sir Robert de Harcourt, Knight, Sheriff of Warwick and Leicester in1199-1201 and 1202, in which last year he died. He married Isabel, onlychild and heir of Richard de Camville, by Millicent, his wife, who wascousin to Adeliza or Adelaide, daughter of Godfrey, Count of Louvain, inFrance, and 2nd wife of Henry I, King of England. By this lady Sir Roberthad issue: William, his heir; Oliver, who joined Louis, Prince of France,and his party against King John, but was made a prisoner at the battle ofLincoln; John, seated at Rodeley, County Lancaster; Robert marriedDionysia, daughter of Henry Pipard; and a daughter, Alice de Harcourt,who married 1st John de Limesi, and 2nd Waleran de Newburgh, 4th Earl ofWarwick. 1020 - UNKNOWN Emma deBayeux 0990 Raoul deBeauffou 1181 - UNKNOWN Mary deManDeville 1122 - UNKNOWN Robert deStrouton 1076 - UNKNOWN Bartholomew deStrouton 1145 William deStrouton 1169 - UNKNOWN Michael deStrouton 1200 - UNKNOWN Guy deStrouton 1055 - 1107 Gilbert Viscount of Milhaud 52 52 1212/1214 Richard deKingsley 1131 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deNeville 1136 - UNKNOWN Johanna deClare 1114 - UNKNOWN Matilda deSt. Liz of Northhampton 1075 - 1128 Uchtred Fitz Maldred Lord of Raby 53 53 0350 Urban 1109 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deNeville 1113 - UNKNOWN Philicia deDamoys 1091 - UNKNOWN Count of Damoys 1084 - UNKNOWN Richard deNovavilla D. UNKNOWN Berenger deRoDes ~1280 Isabel de Vipont This family connection is unclear at this time and further research will be done to confirm or reject. 1060 - UNKNOWN Baldricus Teutonicus 1180 - UNKNOWN John deLongvillers 1156 - UNKNOWN John deLongvillers D. UNKNOWN Eudo deLongvillers D. UNKNOWN Clemetia Malhert D. UNKNOWN John Malhert D. UNKNOWN Matilda Fitz Swein 1017 Hamon FitzHamon 0990 - 1047 Hamon dentatus 57 57 1546 - 1614 Ellen or Helen Babbs 68 68 D. UNKNOWN Adyle deCarlat 1167 - UNKNOWN Alice Whitney 1163 - UNKNOWN Hamon deMassey D. UNKNOWN Adele de Eu 1182 - UNKNOWN Thomas deLegh 1157 - UNKNOWN Richard Lymm 1123 - UNKNOWN Hugh Lymm 1164 - UNKNOWN Agnes deLegh 1140 - UNKNOWN Richard deLegh 1120 - UNKNOWN Hamon deLegh 1100 - UNKNOWN Wolfric deHatton 1012 - UNKNOWN Ramirez King of Aragon 1326 Nicholas de Goushill 1297 Nicholas deGoushill 1269 Thomas deGoushill Agnes 1240 Walter deGoushill 1250 Margery 1213 - UNKNOWN John deGoushill 1180 - UNKNOWN Walter deGoushill 1195 - UNKNOWN Matilda deHathersage 1170 - UNKNOWN Matthew deHathersage 0997 - UNKNOWN Bernard Count of Bigorre and Carcasonne 1177 - UNKNOWN Emma deMeynell 1152 - UNKNOWN Ralph deGoushill 1146 - UNKNOWN Robert deMeynell 1144 - UNKNOWN Matthew deHathersage 1150 - UNKNOWN Matilda Musard 1378 - UNKNOWN Richard Bulkeley Richard, second son of Robert, Lord of Eaton and Alstanton, and brotherof Peter of Haughton, our ancestor, married Agnes, daughter and coheiressof Roger Cheadle, of Cheadle in Cheshire, and had that estate, in whichhe was succeeded by his son Richard, who married Alice, daughter of SirRalph Bostock. Their son and heir, William, married Ellen, daughter ofGuillim ap Griffith, of Petrie. Being Constable of Beaumaris in the reignof Henry VI., he was fortunate enough to be able to render the King anessential service by preventing the landing there of the Duke of York onhis return from Ireland to join the Earl of Warwick against the King. 1253 Alice deBeauchamp 1248 Ralph de Arderne 1223 Thomas de Arderne 1229 Lucia de Say 1020 - UNKNOWN Gerberga 1198 Ralph de Arderne 1204 - UNKNOWN Amabel deGlanville 1170 Thomas de Arderne 1178 - UNKNOWN Ellen deBohun 1158 Muriel deBohun 1152 - UNKNOWN Savaric Fitz-Cana deBeaumont 1026 - 1062 Raoul IV deBeaumont 36 36 1134 Cana de Chaumont 1002 Raoul III deBeaumont 0978 - UNKNOWN Hubert I Vicomte Du Mans 0959 Gerberga Princess of Burgundy 0950 - UNKNOWN Raoul deBeaumont 1123 Richard deBohun 1054 - UNKNOWN Humphrey deBohun D. UNKNOWN Henry deBohun 1212 Lucia de Clifford 1200 Hugh Fitz-Hugh de Say 1170 Eustachia de Say 1080 Jordan de Say 1082 - UNKNOWN Hugh FitzOsborn 1162 Hugh FitzOsbern 1583 - >1621 Hugh Vernon 38 38 Aka: Hugo

Katerina Vernon was born 1602 in Cheshire Co., ENG.
James Vernon
Ellena Vernon was born  Nov 1608 in Davenham, Cheshire, ENG.
George Vernon was born Oct 1610 in Davenham, Cheshire, ENG.
Anna Vernon was born Jul 1614 in Davenham, Cheshire, ENG.
Hugh Vernon was born Feb 1615/1616 in Davenham, Cheshire, ENG.
Marie Vernon was born Aug 1618 in Davenham, Cheshire, ENG.
Robert Vernon was born 6 Feb 1620/1621 in Davenham, Cheshire, ENG.
1160 - UNKNOWN Robert deWingfield Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1 WINGFIELD (5001) was born at England. He married Female Unknown (5002). He died at England. He was buried at England.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON ROBERT DE (ROBERTUS DE CAMPO VENTI) WINGFIELD (RN5001):

He Was Living C. 1087, 1100; and Was Witness to Deed of the Nedhams, Temp. Henry I (1100-35). (Source: Norris' Collections)

Main Wingfield Manor 1087: the Extent of the Land Was 3 and a Half Miles by Half a Mile = 240 Acres. This Was Held by a Freeman and Worked by 7 Bordars.

24 Acres of Glebe : Manor Enfeoffed 1086 by the Abbot of Ely to Roger Bigod (Father of the Earl of Norfolk) of Framlingham Castle, 1101.

Domesday Book: 1086 "In Wighafelda a Freeman by Commendation and Soche [Held] 10 Acres Valued at 20 Pence.

Landholders Summoned to Salisbury to Pay Homage to William the Conqueror."

Gough's "Sepulchral Monuments", Vol Ii, Mentions a "John Wingfield, Two Generations Before 1087".

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg England.

The only known child of Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1 Wingfield (5001) and Female Unknown (5002) was:

* + 2. i. John de2 WINGFIELD (5003), born at England; married Female Unknown (5004).
1392 Elizabeth Goushill 1330 Margaret Bovile 1347 - 1389 John de Wingfield 42 42 John was M.P. for Suffolk, he received the honor of knighthood, andpresented to the Free Chapel of Stradbroke, in 1389. He m. Margaret,daughter of Sir Hugh Hastings, knt. of Elsing, in Norfolk, and had a son,Robert and a daughter Margaret.

From Internet:
Sir, Knt of Letherigham John8 WINGFIELD (5029) (Thomas7de Wingfield, John6Wingfield, John5de Wingfield, Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born circa 1345 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He married Margaret Hastings (5030), daughter of Sir Hugh de Hastings (54407) and Anne Le Despenser (54408). He died in 1389 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

He MP For Suffolk. He Knighted 1389. SOURCES OF INFORMATON ON SIR JOHN WINGFIELD KNT OF LETHERINGHAM (RN5029):

Slim, Droopy Moustache.

1383-89 Member of Parliament for Suffolk.

Held Cleervands Manor, Framlingham; Lee, Cheshire; Gisloham, Lowestoft, Stamford.

For Which One Quarter and One Sixth of a Knight's Fee, Commanded When Required

Guards at Framlingham Castle.

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg, England.

Margaret HASTINGS (5030) was born circa 1355 at Elsing, Norfolk, England. She married Sir John Russell Knt (142305). She married Sir John Russell (54495), son of Robert Russell (144207). She died in 1397 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. She was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON MARGARET HASTINGS WINGFIELD (RN 5030):

Father's Brass at Elsing Church. Moated House Still Extant.

The Hugh Hastings Brass Is the Most Famous in England

COMPILER: Jocelyn Wingfield, 18 Chiddingstone Street, London Sw6 3tg, England.

The two known children of Sir, Knt of Letherigham John8 Wingfield (5029) and Margaret Hastings (5030) were as follows:

    * 20. i. John9 WINGFIELD (5031) was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

      He Summoned AS A Graduate Before Richard II[Proc. 47/127/1]. He Died Without Issue.

* + 21. ii. Sir Robert WINGFIELD (5032), born circa 1370 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England; married Elizabeth Russell (5033).
1350 Margaret Hastings 1326 Hugh de Hastings 1330 - 1375 Margaret de Evringham 45 45 1368 - 1409 Robert de Wingfield 41 41 Sir Robert9 WINGFIELD (5032) (John8, Thomas7de Wingfield, John6Wingfield, John5de Wingfield, Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born circa 1370 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He married Elizabeth Russell (5033), daughter of Sir John Russell (54495) and Anne/Agnes Planches (54496), at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He died on 3 May 1409 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

He Held Bacon's at Wingfield Manor. He Tomb at Wingfield Church.

Elizabeth RUSSELL (5033) was born at Worcester,,, England. She was born circa 1374 at Strensham, Worcester,, ENG. She died at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. She was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

The four known children of Sir Robert9 Wingfield (5032) and Elizabeth Russell (5033) were as follows:

    * + 24. i. Sir MP Robert10 WINGFIELD (5034), born 1403 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England; married Lady Elizabeth Goushill (5035).

    * 25. ii. William WINGFIELD (5036) was born circa 1405. He married Elizabeth Barnake (5037), daughter of Sir Nicholas Barnake Knt (142306).

    * 26. iii. Anne WINGFIELD (5038) was born circa 1407.

    * 27. iv. Margaret WINGFIELD (5039) was born circa 1409.

She A Nun.
1368 Elizabeth Russell 1340 - 1405 John Russell 65 65 Visitation of Oxford, The Gatherings of Oxfordshire page 7. D. UNKNOWN Konrad Rheingau 1346 Anne Planches 1389 Robert de Wingfield Robert was M.P. for Suffolk, in the 6th HENRY VI. from which monarch hehad received two years before, the honor of knighthood, at Hereford. SirRobert became steward to John de Mowbray, DUKE OF NORFOLK. He m.Elizabeth, daughter and co-heir of Sir Robert Gousell,(+) of Hoveringham.


From the internet:
Sir MP Robert10 WINGFIELD (5034) (Robert9, John8, Thomas7de Wingfield, John6Wingfield, John5de Wingfield, Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born in 1403 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He married Lady Elizabeth Goushill (5035), daughter of Sir Lord of Hault-Hucknall Derby Robert Goushill (27653) and Duchess Elizabeth Fitzalan (44415), circa 1430. He died on 21 November 1451 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON SIR ROBERT WINGFIELD (RN5034):

1454

This is the last Will of Sir Roberd Wingefeld Knight made a Cambridge the 6th day of October the

reign of king henry the vi after the conquest xxxi. In the beginning he prayeth his Feffees that they would

make astate after his decease to Elizabeth his wife of the Manor of Lederingham with all the lands tenements

Rents and services with all the appurtenances lying in divers Towns to the said Elizabeth term of her life

with her dower of all my other Manors lands tenements Rents and services Being in the Shire of Suffolk

outsept Caldwaller. And also he prayeth his Feffees that they will make astate to John his Son to him and to

his Heirs male of his body lawfully begotten of the Manors towns and with the Reversion of the Manor of

Lydringham with all the lands tenements Rents and services in foresaid which the said Elizabeth holdeth term

of Life to him and to his Heirs male of his body lawfully begotten. And in case the said John die without

issue male of his body coming that then all the sid Manors lands tenements Rents and services with the

appurtenances Remain to Robard the son of said Sir Robard to him and to his Heirs male of his body coming.

And for Default of Issue male of his body coming that then all the said Manors lands tenements Rents and

services remain to Thomas the son of the said Sir Robard to him and to his Heirs male of his body coming:

And for Default of issue male of his body coming that then all the said Manors lands tenements Rents and

services Remain to William the son of the said Sir Robard to him and to his Heirs male of his body coming

and for Default of issue male of his body coming that then all the said Rents tenements and services Remain

to Havy the son of the said Sir Robard to him and to his heirs male of his body coming. And for default of

issue male of his body that then all the said Manors lands tenements Rents and services Remain to Elizabeth

and Ann and Katherine daughters of the said Sir Robard to have and to her Heirs male of her body coming. And

for Default of issue male of her body coming to Remain to the Right Heirs of said Sir Robard Wingefeld.

page 2 missing

profits of the Manor of Westale the first year after his death shall all go to pay his Debts and to

reform his apperstiences (?). And after this Done he prayeth his Feffees to make astate to John his son to

him and to his Heirs male of his body coming the Remainder of the said Manors As the Manor been aforesaid.

Also the said Sir Robert Will that John his Son a Relic of the holy Cross and a piece of Silver with a

[tonerkill] to him and to his Heirs male of his body coming as the Manor been aforesaid. Also I will that

John my Son nought attempt nor be about to break my Will upon pain of my Curse. And the Residue of all my

goods without or left my Will performed then I Will It be done for me and mine [Annatere] by the Advice of

my Executors. In Witness whereof to this present Writing I have put to my Seal the Day and year abovesaid.

Probate granted 21 of the month of Novermber AD 1454.

Right hand Margin - Last Wish(es) pf

Sir Robert Wing [felde]

Knight.

COMPILER: Hugh Wingfield-Hayes, West Sussex, England.

Books: Dormant and Abeyant Peerages, by Sir Bernard Burke, P.71 (Brandon). Nehgr, Vol. Ciii, P. 295.

Visitations of Norfolk 1653, 1589 and 1613, P. 313. Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Who Came to New

England Between 1623 and 1650, by Frederick Lewis Weis, P. 21.

COMPILER: Paula P. Mortensen, 363 S. Park Victoria Dr., Milpitas, CA 95035.

Sources: David Faris, "Plantagent Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists" (Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co.,

1996), p. 163; Peter Townend, Ed., "Burke's Peerage", 104th ed. (London: Burke's Peerage, Ltd., 1967), pp. 2033

2034

COMPILER: Thomas Katheder, P. O. Box 22671, Lake Buena Vista, FL 32830.

Lady Elizabeth GOUSHILL (5035) was born in 1404 at England or Heveringham, Notts, England. She died after 1443.

The 12 known children of Sir MP Robert10 Wingfield (5034) and Lady Elizabeth Goushill (5035) were as follows:

    * + 31. i. Sir Knt of the Bath John11 WINGFIELD (5040), born circa 1428 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England; married Elizabeth Fitz Lewis (5041).

    * 32. ii. Sir Robert WINGFIELD (5050) was born circa 1431. He married Anne Harling (5049), daughter of Sir Robert Harling Knt (142312) and Jane Gonville (142313). He died before 23 November 1481 at Rushforth, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Rushforth, Suffolk, England.

    * + 33. iii. Sir Henry WINGFIELD (5052), born circa 1434 at Orford, Suffolk, England; married Alice Harte (5051); married Elizabeth Rookes (5053).

    * 34. iv. Sir Richard WINGFIELD (5047) was born circa 1435. He died at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

    * 35. v. Sir Thomas WINGFIELD (5043) was born circa 1438. He married Mary Clifford (5042), daughter of Sir Roger Clifford (142307) and Joan Courtenay (142308). He married Phillipa Tiptoft (5044), daughter of Sir John Tiptoft (142309). He died at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

    * + 36. vi. Elizabeth WINGFIELD (5058), born circa 1438; married Lord Male Paulet (5939); married Sir William Brandon (12840).

    * 37. vii. William WINGFIELD (5048) was born circa 1440. He died in 1510 at Letheringham, Suffolk, England. He was buried at Letheringham, Suffolk, England.

      He Died without issue - Served in France.

    * 38. viii. Katherine WINGFIELD (5056) was born circa 1444. She married John Bonville (5846).

    * + 39. ix. Anthony WINGFIELD (5045), born circa 1446; married Mary Duke (5046).

    * + 40. x. Agnes WINGFIELD (5057), born 1448 at Orford, Suffolk, England; married John de Fremingham (5196).

    * 41. xi. Alice WINGFIELD (5054) was born circa 1450 at Orford,, Suffolk, England.

    * 42. xii. Margaret WINGFIELD (5055) was born circa 1452.

She Never married.
1314 - 1376 Robert Russell 62 62 1319 Catherine Vampage 1287 - 1338 Nicholas Russell 51 51 1294 Agnes Grindon 1258 - UNKNOWN James Russell 1266 Jane 1230 - UNKNOWN Robert Russell 1202 - UNKNOWN Thomas Russell D. UNKNOWN Judith Swabia 1174 - 1224 John Russell 50 50 1180 - UNKNOWN Rose Bardolf 1141 Thomas Bardolf 1160 Alice Corbet 1150 - UNKNOWN Eudo Russell 1125 - UNKNOWN Robert Russell 1302 William de Bovile 1270 William de Bovile 1298 - 1347 Hugh de Hastings 49 49 1305 Margaret Foliot 0929 - 1013 Alix Countess of Equish 84 84 1262 - 1313 John deHastings I Lord of Hastings 51 51 1281 - 1334 Isabel Le despencer 53 53 1284 - 1324 Joan deBraose 40 40 1244 - 1330 Margery deNeumarche 86 86 1239 - 1299 Jordan Foliot 60 60 1220 - UNKNOWN Adam deNeumarche 1216 Margery de Stuteville 1189 - UNKNOWN William deStuteville 1290 Adam deEveringham 1310 Joan deDeiville 0990 - UNKNOWN Ode de Lorraine 1210 - 1270 Alan La Zouche 60 60 Alan had a military summons in 1242 to attend the King into France, andin ten years had the whole of County of Cheshire and all North Walesplaced under his government. In 45th of Henry III, 1261, he obtained acharter for a weekly market at Ashby La Zouche in Leicestershire, and fortwo fairs in the year at Swavesley. About this time he was made Justiceitinerant for Counties Southampton, Buckinghamshire and Northampton andWarden of all the King's forests south of the Trent and Sheriff ofNorthampton. Upon the arbitration made by Louis, King of France, betweenHenry III and the barons, he was made one of the sureties on behalf ofthe King. In three years he was constituted Constable of the Tower ofLondon and Governor of the Castle of Northampton. Sir Alan la Zouche wasviolently assaulted in Westminster Hall in 1268 by John, Earl of Warrenand Surrey, upon a dispute between them regarding some landed property,and with his son Roger, who happened to be with him, was severelywounded. He married Elena, daughter and heir of Roger de Quincey, Earl ofWinchester, and his wife Helena, daughter of Alan MacDonald and his wife,Margaret of Scotland, daughter of Prince David of Scotland, son of PrinceHenry of Scotland and Ada de Warren, son of King David of Scotland andMaud, Countess of Huntington and Northumberland, son of Malcolm Conmore,King of Scotland, and Margaret, heiress of the Saxon Line. Roger deQuincey was son of Saire de Quincey, Surety for the Magna Charta, and hiswife, Margaret de Bellomont, daughter of  Robert de Bellomont and Isabelde Vermandois, daughter of Hugh the Great Crusader, son of Henry I, Kingof France. 1249 Adam deEveringham 1270 Clarice 1280 John deDeiville 1290 Margaret 1245 - 1290 John deDeiville 45 45 1258 Maud 1215 - 1272 Robert deDeiville 57 57 1226 - UNKNOWN denise FitzWilliam 1184 - UNKNOWN John deDeiville 1195 - UNKNOWN Maud deLouvain 0955 - 1013 Rainer IV Count of Hainault 58 58 Rainer or Reginar IV, Count of Hainault, succeeded to his father's titleafter a long struggle to assert his claims. When Rainer III was sent intoexile Duke Bruno gave Hainault to Garmer and Renaud, and after Otto diedRainer and his brother Lambert attacked the two counts and slew them inbattle. Whereupon Otto II took Hainault away from them, but Rainer andLambert reappeared with new forces, but were defeated in 976, and it wasnot until much later that Rainer established himself as first proprietaryCount of Hainault, and ruled in peace after establishing himself at Mons,capital of Hainault. He married Hedwige, daughter of Hugh Capet, King ofFrance, and had Rainer V, and a daughter Beatrix married Count Rouci. 1151 William de Columbers 1240 Joan deCreye 1070 - 1129 Ligulf Lord of Bulmer and Ferlington 59 59 Sources:      Harrison's History of Yorkshire, Vol. 1, p. 200.
         Burke's Dormant, Extinct and Abeyant Peerages, p. 88.
         Bank's Dormant Baronage, Vol. 1, p. 248, p. 47.
         Harleian Society Publications, Vol. 16, p. 43.
William Baguley Vist. Cheshire "miles"
2nd. Husband of Lucy De Cornona.
1230 Mary deBeauchamp 1371 Alice 1347 - UNKNOWN William deHulse Hulse Perigree Sources:

     Bulkeley Genealogy, by Donald Lines Jacobus, pp. 4/5.
     History of Chester Co., England, by Ormerod, Vol. 2, pp. 362/3.
     Harleian Soc. Pub., Visitation of Cheshire, Vol. 18, pp. 54/5.
1349 - UNKNOWN Sibyl deNorbury 1335 - UNKNOWN William deStanley 1340 - UNKNOWN Alice deMassey ~1298 Eleanor de Bavant 1320 Margery Timperley 1292 - UNKNOWN John deStanley John Stanley, 2nd Lord of Storeton, inherited in right of his mother thebailywick of the Forest of Wirrall, and a share in the manor of Storrton.He married Mabella, daughter of Sir James Hausket. 1313 - UNKNOWN Hamon deMassey 1114 - UNKNOWN Maria Comnenus 1091 - UNKNOWN Manuel I Comnenus Emperor of Byzantine 1275 - UNKNOWN Richard deMassey 1251 - UNKNOWN Robert deMassey 1212 - 1275 Hamon deMassey 63 63 1087 - UNKNOWN Robert deMontalt Robert, the first baron by tenure, erected Montalt (now Mold or Mould)Castle, in Flintshire. This Robert, who was steward of the palatine tothe Earl of Chester, espoused Emma, daughter of Sir Robert Delaval, andhad issue, Robert, second baron by tenure and Ralph. 1096 - UNKNOWN Emma deDelaval 0972 - UNKNOWN Adwige Princess of France 1065 - UNKNOWN Robert deDelaval 1060 - UNKNOWN Andomar deMontalt Lineage Source:    "A Genealogy and Heraldic History of the Commoners ofGreat Britain and Ireland", Vol II, Page 84. 1212 Phillip de Orreby Vist. Ches. 1588, Wife: Alice de Bamvile 1218 Alice deBamville 1180 Herbert de Orreby 1156 - UNKNOWN Alard deOrreby 1303 Jane Butler 1274 William Butler 1300 Robert de Bulkeley Robert was heir to his father, and had bovates in Bickerton and lands inMilnehurst, by deed, without date, from William, son of John Laverdon. Hemarried Jane, daughter of Sir William Butler, Lord of Warrington, inCounty Lancaster. The Butlers of Beusy in Lancaster were an importantfamily. Robert and Jane Bulkeley had three sons, William, Thomas andPeter. 1349 Robert de Bulkeley Robert was the second son of William and Maud Davenport Bulkeley, Lord ofthe Manors of Eaton and Alstanton which he had from his father, settledat Eaton and married Agnes. 0936 - 0961 Constance of Provence 25 25 1352 Agnes Bulkeley 1324 William de Bulkeley William Bulkeley, first son of Robert, married Maud, daughter of Sir JohnDavenport. They had six sons, who varied their names and arms and werethe founders of many subdivisions of the family. 1332 Maude De Davenport Sources for Bulkeley, Davenport and related families:
     Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerages of England, pp. 74, 85.
     Ormerod's Hist. of Cheshire, Vol. 3, pp. 34-39, 356; Vol. 2, p. 362.
1310 Margery de Brereton 1306 John de Davenport John founded the chapel of Marton. He married Margery, his father'sstepdaughter, the daughter of Sir William Brereton and Roesia de Vernon.Issue of Sir John and Margery were numerous. Sons Ralph, Richard, Roger,Urian, Arthur, John, and a daughter Maude and possibly other daughters. 1287 Agnes de Macclesfield 1276 Thomas de Davenport Thomas was a knight.  By his first wife Agnes he had: John, Thomas,Roger, Sr.,
Peter, Roger, Jr., Millicent and Roesia.
1262 Thomas de Macclesfield 1256 Roger deDavenport Roger married Mary, daughter of Robert Salemon of Withington, and theyhad Peter, Henry, Thomas, John and Ellen. Robert Salmon gives to RogerDavenport, in frank marriage with Mary, his daughter, one-half ofWithington, with homages, relief and wardships, half of Tunstede, Lundresand Wardshaw, half of Hewood and Witrok, subject to foreign service andsuit to the court of Weverham. 1260 - UNKNOWN Mary Salemon Warinus Troyes 1230 - UNKNOWN Robert Salemon 1230 - UNKNOWN Vivian deDavenport 1237 - UNKNOWN Beatrix deHulme 1213 - UNKNOWN Bertrand deHulme 1204 - UNKNOWN Richard deDavenport Richard was exempted, by Randle, Earl of Chester, and granted acquittancefrom a suit to the shire court of Chester, and the Hundred Courts ofNantwich and Middlewich. 1179 - UNKNOWN Thomas deDavenport 1155 - UNKNOWN Richard deDavenport Richard, to whom Hugh, Earl of Chester, gave the chief forestership ofthe forests of Leek and Macclesfield about 1166, and who had a moiety ofMarton, in franc marriage with Amabilia Venables about 1176. She was thedaughter of the 2nd Gilbert Venables, Baron of Kinderton, grandson ofGilbert, grantee of Kinderton, Davenport, etc., before 1086. 1159 - UNKNOWN Amabilia deVenables 1130 - UNKNOWN Orme deDavenport Orme de Davenport assumed the local name of Davenport when the villagewas granted to him by Gilbert Venables, who had received a grant of itfrom William, the Conqueror, in 1086. He was witness to a charter ofenfranchisement by Gilbert Venables in the time of William II (calledRufus, the Red) and Henry I, both sons of the Conqueror. The manorialhistory of the present township of Davenport, in Cheshire, involves asubject of rare occurrence even in Cheshire, the descent of a family inthe male line from the Norman Conquest of the Palatinate, possessing atthe present day the feudal powers which the local sovereign of thatPalatinate invested it. And preserving its own archives, in a series oforiginal documents, the proof of its ancient importance and its unbrokendescent. 1250 James Butler D. UNKNOWN Teutberga of Arles 1272 William de Bulkeley 1280 - UNKNOWN Felice Butler 1246 Robert de Bulkeley The Bulkeley family is of great antiquity in England and derives its namefrom the town of Bulkeley, where as early as 1200 they were lords of themanor. The term "lord" in the sense of feudal owner of a manor is oftenignorantly interpreted as baron. Lords of the manor were not ordinarilyand never ipso facto barons. Robert Bulkeley or Bulklileh was theearliest Lord of the Manor of Bulkeley. His four daughters, Felicia,Leuka, Letitia and Emma, quitclaimed lands in Prestland to their brotherWilliam, for one mark of silver.

Bulkeley Pedigree Sources:
    NEHG Register, vol. 23, Pp. 299-304, H.A. Bainbridge, London.
    Bulkeley Genealogy, by Donald Lines Jacobus, pp. 4/5.
    History of Chester Co., England, by Ormerod, Vol. 2, pp. 362/3.
    Harleian Soc. Pub., Visitation of Cheshire, Vol. 18, pp. 54/5.
1330 - 1382 Thomas deLathom 52 52 1410 - 1459 William Troutbeck 49 49 Lord of Mobberley and Cheshire, Lord of  Dunham. 1074 - UNKNOWN Maud deFerrers 1295 - BEF. 11 FEB 1348/49 Joan Foliot 1040 - 1115 Nigel D'Oyly II Baron Hock Norton 75 75 This family is of great antiquity, both in England and France, fromwhence the first one in England, who came with William the Conqueror, wasRobert de Oilly and Nigel, his brother, who succeeded him.
Sources:
     Nichols Topographer and Genealogist, Vol. 1, pp. 368-373.
     Bank's Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 1, p. 67.The name D'Oylywas also D'Oilly, de Oilly and later Doyley before it became the D'Oylyspelling.  Nigel was the Constable of Oxford Castle
Agnes D. UNKNOWN Sire deOilleia La RibauDe 0742 - 0840 N Von Kent 98 98 1082 - UNKNOWN Sybil Morel 1100 - UNKNOWN Gospatrick III Dunbar Earl of Dunbar & March 1073 - 1138 Gospatrick II Dunbar Earl of Dunbar 65 65 1060 - UNKNOWN Arkil Morel 0300 - UNKNOWN Olaf The Mild King of denmark 0270 - UNKNOWN Vermund The Sage King of denmark Vermund became King of Denmark, A. D. 87, and died A. D. 140. 0240 - UNKNOWN FrodeII King of Denmark 0210 - UNKNOWN FrodeFredigod King of Denmark 0185 - UNKNOWN Fridleif King of denmark 0155 Skiold Zealand 0770 - 0858 Redburga deToulouse 88 88 0125 - UNKNOWN Odin King of Scandinavia Odin was supreme ruler of the Scythians, in Asaland, or Asaheim,Turkestan, between the Euxine and Caspian Seas, in Asia. He reigned atAsgard, whence he removed in the year B. C. 70, and became the first Kingof Scandinavia. He died in the year B. C. 50, and was succeeded by hissons, who reigned in different parts of Scandinavia. 0100 - UNKNOWN Fridulf Supreme Ruler of the Scythians 0730 - UNKNOWN Throud King of Frodheim 0709 - 0790 Sigurd Hring 81 81 0802 - UNKNOWN Eisten Glumru King of Thrandia 0477 - UNKNOWN Halfdan II King of denmark 0619 - UNKNOWN Alof Queen of Sweden 1245 - 4 Mar 1304/1305 Hugh FitzHugh 1258 Albreda deBrumpton 1230 William deBrumpton Oslac Von Wessex 1250 - UNKNOWN John deBulmer 1254 - 1315 Theophania deMorwick 61 61 1230 - UNKNOWN Hugh deMorwick 1235 - UNKNOWN Agnes deHeyford 1224 John deBulmer 1193 - 1232 John deBulmer 39 39 1230 - UNKNOWN Katherine Salvayn 1203 - UNKNOWN Alice dePercy 1095 - UNKNOWN Stephen Fossard Lord of Wilton-in-Cleveland 1156 - UNKNOWN Stephen deBulmer 0983 - 9 Mar 1042/1043 Otehilde 1040 - 1100 Adele Adela de Vexin 60 60 Countess of Vermandois.

PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1164 - UNKNOWN Cicily deMuschamp 1115 - UNKNOWN Ralph deBulmer 1216 - UNKNOWN Margaret Gobin 1210 Roger deHeyford 1196 - 1251 Hugh deMorwick 55 55 1206 - UNKNOWN Sybil deUmfreville 1178 - 1239 Aline deBertram 61 61 1154 - UNKNOWN Richard deBertram 1170 - UNKNOWN Hugh deMorwick 1140 - UNKNOWN Ernulf deMorwick 0968 - 1017 EmnildePrincess Of The Western Slavs-Slovenia 49 49 0720 - UNKNOWN Warinus Lord of Altorf 0725 - UNKNOWN Ara 0744 - UNKNOWN Isenbart of Saxony 0816 - UNKNOWN Carolmanus King of Bavaria 0754 Ermentrudeof Allemania 0795 - UNKNOWN Louis The German 0798 - UNKNOWN Emma of Spain 0778 - 0840 Louis I Le debonnaire 61 61 0775 - UNKNOWN Judith of Saxony 1190 Agnes 0815 - UNKNOWN Gerard deAuvergne Count de Auvergne 1385 Agnes de Cheadle 1407 - UNKNOWN Richard Bulkeley 1416 - UNKNOWN Alice Bostock 1412 - UNKNOWN William Ap Griffith 1380 - 1427 Ralph de Bostock 47 47 1357 Roger de Cheadle Roger is a descendent of the Cheadle or Chedill branch of the CheshireDutton family. 1450 Jane Troutbeck Lady of Penrhyn and Caernarvon John Troutbeck Marjery Hulse 1365 - UNKNOWN Thomas deHulse 0795 - 0843 Renaud Count dePoitiers 48 48 1359 William Troutbeck 1364 - UNKNOWN Joan Rixton 1340 - UNKNOWN William Rixton 1007 - UNKNOWN Aaron Ap Paen 0997 - UNKNOWN Cadwgon Ap Elystan 1010 - UNKNOWN Efa Verch Gwrgan 0973 - UNKNOWN Gwrgan Ap Ithel 0990 - UNKNOWN Daughter Verch Cynfyn 0967 - UNKNOWN Cynfyn Ap Gwerystan 0954 - UNKNOWN Gwerystan Ap Gwaithfoed Baron Powys 1015 - 1067 Sancha of Leon 52 52 0948 - UNKNOWN Nest Verch Cadell 0949 - UNKNOWN Ithel Ap Idwallon 0968 - UNKNOWN Elystan Glodrydd Ap Cuhelyn 0936 - UNKNOWN Cuhelyn Ap Ifor 0970 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian Verch Einion 0948 - UNKNOWN Gwen Verch Gronwy 0903 - UNKNOWN Ifor Ap Seferws 0914 Isabel Verch Tryffin 0930 - UNKNOWN Tangwystl Verch Dyfnwal 0927 Gronwy Ap Tudur 1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert Capet I Duke of Burgundy 0897 - UNKNOWN Tudur Trefor Ap Ynyr 0867 - UNKNOWN Llywarch Ap Hymeid 0840 - UNKNOWN Hyfaidd Ap Bleiddig 0821 - UNKNOWN Tangwystl Verch Owain 0814 - UNKNOWN Bleddig 1116 - UNKNOWN Cynwrig Ap Iorwerth 1127 - UNKNOWN Llywarch Ap Bran 1090 - UNKNOWN Iorwerth Ap Gwgon 1097 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian Verch Rhirid 1151 - UNKNOWN Ednyfed Fychan Ap Cynwrig 0970 - UNKNOWN II Hildouin 1173 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian Verch Rhys 1195 - UNKNOWN Gronwy Ap Edynfed 1199 - UNKNOWN Morfudd Verch Meurig 1223 - UNKNOWN Gronwy Fychan Ap Gronwy 1237 - UNKNOWN Generys Verch Hwfa 1262 - UNKNOWN Madog Ap Gronwy 1270 - UNKNOWN Margred Verch Robert 1293 - UNKNOWN Generys Verch Madog 1286 - UNKNOWN Gruffydd Ap Gwilym 1250 - UNKNOWN Gwilym Ap Gruffydd 1066 - UNKNOWN Henry of Burgundy 1268 - UNKNOWN Gwenhwyfar Verch Ieuan 1224 - UNKNOWN Gruffudd Ap Heilin 1230 - UNKNOWN Efa Verch Gruffydd 1198 Heilin Ap Tudor 1205 - UNKNOWN Annes Verch Owain 1173 - UNKNOWN Tudur Ap Ednyfed 1180 - UNKNOWN Adles Verch Richard 1154 - UNKNOWN Tangwystl Verch Llywarch 1120 - UNKNOWN Angharad Verch Hwfa 1100 - UNKNOWN Hwfa 1070 - 1130 Teresa of Castile 60 60 1130 - UNKNOWN Rhael Verch Gronwy 1100 - UNKNOWN Bran Ap Dinawal 1211 - <1287 Henry de la Wade 76 76 The King's cook (Edward I?).  Held a caructate of land in Bletchingdon,by the service of bringing before the king a roast, 4 1/2 pounds, "unamLoynam porci", whenever the king shall hunt in Cornbury. 1046 - UNKNOWN Tudwal Ap Einudd 1078 - UNKNOWN Gronwy Ap Owain 1110 - UNKNOWN Genilles Verch Hoedlyw 1020 - UNKNOWN Owain Ap Edwin Lord Tegaingl 1011 Ednywain Bendew I Ap Neiniad 0994 - UNKNOWN Iwerydd Verch Cynfyn 0970 - UNKNOWN Ethelfleda Verch Edwin 1100 - UNKNOWN Matilda of Vienne 1022 Gwerful Verch Lluddica 1  NAME Gwerful Verch /Lludica/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 1002
2  PLAC Flintshire, Wales
1  DEAT
2  DATE UNKNOWN
0966 Gronwy Ap Einion 0978 Neiniad Ap Gwaethfoed 0950 - UNKNOWN Gwaithfoed Ap Gwrydr 0924 - UNKNOWN Gwrydr Hir Ap Caradog 0900 - UNKNOWN Caradog Ap Lles 0998 - UNKNOWN Angharad Verch Iago 0990 Lluddica Ap Tudur 1154 Annes Verch Gwyn 1140 - UNKNOWN Richard Ap Cadwaladr 1100 - UNKNOWN Amadeus de Maurienne III Count of Savoy 1276 - 1321 Humphrey VIII de Bohun 45 45 Earl of Hereford and Essex and Lord High Constable. In the 30th of EdwardI, this nobleman gave and granted to the King, by a formal conversance,the inheritance of all his lands and lordships, as also of his Earldoms of Hereford and Essex, which upon his marriage with Elizabeth Plantagenet, widow of John, Earl of Holland, and daughter of Edward I, King of England, and his 1st wife Eleanor,  daughter of Ferdinand III, King of Castile, were regranted to him, and entailed upon his issue lawfully begotten by that lady: in default thereof, and from and after the death of himself and wife, then the lordship of Plessets and certain other lordships in Essex and elsewhere, together with the Constableship, should remain wholly to the King and his heirs forever. After this his lordship was in the wars of Scotland, and was taken prisoner in 7th of Edward II, 1313-14, at the disastrous battle of Stryvelin. But he was exchanged for the wife of Robert Bruce, who had been held captive in England. He lost his life, being run through the body by a soldier at the battle of Boroughbridge, in Yorkshire, where his party received a signal defeat on March 16, 1321. The Earl had issue four surviving sons and two daughters, John, Humphrey and Edward successors primogeniturely, and William, Alinore and Margaret.

Earl of Hereford and Essex and Lord High Constable. In the 30th of EdwardI, this nobleman gave and granted to the King, by a formal conversance,the inheritance of all his lands and lordships, as also of his Earldomsof Hereford and Essex, which upon his marriage with ElizabethPlantagenet, widow of John, Earl of Holland, and daughter of Edward I,King of England, and his 1st wife Eleanor,  daughter of Ferdinand III,King of Castile, were regranted to him, and entailed upon his issuelawfully begotten by that lady: in default thereof, and from and afterthe death of himself and wife, then the lordship of Plessets and certainother lordships in Essex and elsewhere, together with the Constableship,should remain wholly to the King and his heirs forever. After this hislordship was in the wars of Scotland, and was taken prisoner in 7th ofEdward II, 1313-14, at the disastrous battle of Stryvelin. But he wasexchanged for the wife of Robert Bruce, who had been held captive inEngland. He lost his life, being run through the body by a soldier at thebattle of Boroughbridge, in Yorkshire, where his party received a signaldefeat on March 16, 1321. The Earl had issue four surviving sons and twodaughters, John, Humphrey and Edward successors primogeniturely, andWilliam, Alinore and Margaret.

Earl of Hereford and Essex and Lord High Constable. In the 30th of EdwardI, this nobleman gave and granted to the King, by a formal conversance,the inheritance of all his lands and lordships, as also of his Earldomsof Hereford and Essex, which upon his marriage with ElizabethPlantagenet, widow of John, Earl of Holland, and daughter of Edward I,King of England, and his 1st wife Eleanor,  daughter of Ferdinand III,King of Castile, were regranted to him, and entailed upon his issuelawfully begotten by that lady: in default thereof, and from and afterthe death of himself and wife, then the lordship of Plessets and certainother lordships in Essex and elsewhere, together with the Constableship,should remain wholly to the King and his heirs forever. After this his lordship was in the wars of Scotland, and was taken prisoner in 7th ofEdward II, 1313-14, at the disastrous battle of Stryvelin. But he was exchanged for the wife of Robert Bruce, who had been held captive in England. He lost his life, being run through the body by a soldier at the battle of Boroughbridge, in Yorkshire, where his party received a signal defeat on March 16, 1321. The Earl had issue four surviving sons and twodaughters, John, Humphrey and Edward successors primogeniturely, and William, Alinore and Margaret.
1006 - 1038 Liudolf deBrunswick 32 32 1096 - 1172 Cadwaladr Ap Gruffudd 76 76 1204 Gruffyd Ap Tudor 1176 - UNKNOWN Tudor Ap Madoc 1250 - UNKNOWN Angharad Verch Cynwrig 1241 - UNKNOWN Ieuan Ap Gruffudd 1210 - UNKNOWN Gruffudd Ap Hywel 1224 - UNKNOWN Jonet Verch Gronwy 1183 - UNKNOWN Hywel Ap Arthen 1189 - UNKNOWN Joan Verch Gronwy 1160 - UNKNOWN Gronwy Ap Llywarch 1035 - UNKNOWN Henry of Burgundy 1160 - UNKNOWN Arthen Ap Cynfyn 1164 - UNKNOWN Elen Verch Meurig 1132 - UNKNOWN Cynfyn Ap Genllin 1136 - UNKNOWN Gwladus Verch Seisyll 1106 - 1177 Seisyll Ap Dyfnwal 71 71 1113 - UNKNOWN Dyddgu Verch Owain 1083 - UNKNOWN Dyfnwal Ap Caradog 1086 - UNKNOWN Joyce deBalladon 1060 - UNKNOWN Caradog Ap Ynyr 1067 Hamelin deBalladon 1035 - UNKNOWN Sibylle of Barcelona 1033 - UNKNOWN Ynyr Fychan Ap Meurig 1011 - UNKNOWN Elen Verch Ednyfed 1004 - UNKNOWN Meurig Ap Ynyr 1040 - UNKNOWN Gwladus Verch Rhys 1022 - UNKNOWN Joan Verch Cadwgan 1017 - UNKNOWN Rhys Ap Maenarch 0990 - UNKNOWN Maenyrch Ap Dryffin 0998 - UNKNOWN Elen Verch Einion 0970 - UNKNOWN Einion Ap Selyf 0944 - UNKNOWN Selyf Ap Gruffudd 1016 Helie deSemur-en- Brionnais 1085 - UNKNOWN Owain Wan Ap Caradog 1066 - UNKNOWN Nesta Le Goz 1047 - UNKNOWN Caradog Ap Gruffudd 1065 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian Verch Bleddyn 1020 - UNKNOWN Gruffudd Ap Rhydderch 1030 - 1075 Bleddyn Ap Cynfyn 45 45 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Prince of Powys
[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: Llantarnam Abbey; Young; Kraentzler 1408; Dictionary of National
Biography.
Young: Bleddynap Cynfyn, prince of Powys, died 1075.
K: Bleddyn ap Cynvyn, Prince of Powis,"A wise and gentle ruler."
************
SOURCES:
1.  _Dictionary of NationalBiography_.  Gives many of his descendants on
page 308.
2.  Bartrum, Peter C.  _Welsh Genealogies, AD 300-1400_.  University of
Wales Press, 1978; "Bleddyn ap Cynfyn 1", page 28.
1140 - UNKNOWN Meurig Ap Ieuan 1145 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian Verch Madog 1168 - UNKNOWN Daughter Verch Bledri 1330 - UNKNOWN Gwilym Ap Gruffydd 1033 - 1093 Robert I Count of Flanders & Artois 60 60 1380 - UNKNOWN William Fychan Ap Gwilym 1360 - UNKNOWN Jane deStanley 1390 Alice Dalton 1363 - UNKNOWN Richard Dalton 1418 - UNKNOWN Elizabeth Lloyd 1382 - UNKNOWN Griffith Lloyd 1370 - UNKNOWN Alice deClifford 1395 Isabel de Lawton 1353 Adam de Bostock 1307 Agnes de Arderne ~1323 - >1373 Joan de Percy 50 50 1295 John Whetenhall 1328 - UNKNOWN Margaret Whetenhall 1322 Adam de Bostock 1369 William de Lawton 1362 Jonet de Bradshaw 1337 Henry de Bradshaw 1314 Robert de Bradshaw 1286 - UNKNOWN Ughtred deBradshaw 1296 William de Bostock 1300 - UNKNOWN Maude De Multon 0890 - 0934 Ebalus Manzer the Bastard Count of Poitou 44 44 Ebalus was also the Duke of Aquitaine. 1270 - UNKNOWN William deMulton 1274 - UNKNOWN Joan deBrereton 1243 - UNKNOWN Edward deBostock 1270 - UNKNOWN Adam deBostock 1220 William deBostock 1226 - UNKNOWN Elizabeth deAudley 1185 - UNKNOWN Henry deBostock 1198 - UNKNOWN Elinor Poole 1170 - UNKNOWN Robert Poole D. 1997 Thomas Cary 0896 Emiliane de Poitou 1142 - UNKNOWN Margaret deVerdon 1136 - UNKNOWN Ranulph deBostock 1109 - UNKNOWN Gilbert deBostock 1080 - UNKNOWN Osmer deBostock 1118 - UNKNOWN Warine deVerdon 1250 Robert de Lathom 1277 - UNKNOWN Joan deLathom 1258 Katherine de Knowselegh 1230 Thomas deKnowselegh 1227 - UNKNOWN Robert deLathom 0855 - 0890 Ramnulf II Count of Poitou 35 35 1231 - UNKNOWN Amicia deAlferton 1204 - UNKNOWN Robert deAlferton 1180 - UNKNOWN Robert FitzRalph 1150 - UNKNOWN Robert FitzRalph 1202 - UNKNOWN Richard deLathom 1174 Robert de Lathom 1181 - UNKNOWN Emma Magnus 1154 - UNKNOWN Orme Magnus 1148 - UNKNOWN Henry deLathom 1160 - 1202 Warin deMunchensy 42 42 0882 Irmgard de Poitou 1098 Hugh deHastings 1130 - UNKNOWN William deHastings 1113 - UNKNOWN Erneburgh deFlamville 1066 - UNKNOWN Walter deHastings 1038 - UNKNOWN Robert deHastings 1087 - UNKNOWN Hugh Erneburgh 1190 - 1258 Matthew deLouvaine 68 68 1195 Muriel 1135 - 1190 Godfrey deLorraine 55 55 1164 - 1226 Godfrey deLouvaine 62 62 0956 - 0991 Theophano Skleros of Byzantine 35 35 Theophano had great influence at court, introducing much of therefinement of Constantinople, and, after Otto's death, ruled (983-991)for her son Otto III as co-regent with the boy's grandmother Adelaide. 24 Mar 1310/1311 - 1360 William deBohun Earl of Northhampton. 1170 - UNKNOWN Alice deHastings 1142 - UNKNOWN Imagina von Loos 1114 Ludwig von Loos 1120 Agnes von Metz 1110 - UNKNOWN Godfrey deLorraine 1116 Luitgarde Von Moha 1086 Albert Von Moha 1095 Ermisende De Luxemburg 1094 - UNKNOWN Folmar deMetz 1099 - 1157 Mathilda Von Egisheim 58 58 0934 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde D'Anjou 1072 - 1098 Albrecht deDagsburg 26 26 1078 - 1143 Ermisende De Luxemburg 65 65 1240 - 1278 Gerard deFurnival Lord Hallamshire 38 38 William I de Duston Richard I de Rollos 1376 John Bruley 1380 Matilda Quartermain See Littleton Pedigree in The Visitation of Shropshire. 1338 - 1396 Thomas Quartermain 58 58 1363 Joan Russell Brass of Joan Quartermain C1420 Thame Churce  Oxfordshire
Height in inches: 14.5 Width in inches: 7.5
Joan was the wife of Thomas Quartermain, the son of Thomas and Katherine Quartermain, rich landowners in North Weston, near Thame. The original memorial is one of four bracket brasses to be found in Thame Church. It shows Joan in widow's dress together with her husband (unfortunately only the upper half of his effigy remains) and her husband's parents. It is probable that she commissioned these four brasses after the death of her husband in 1396 which would account for Katheraine Quartermain being shown wearing the fashionable dress of the early 15th Century, when she actually lived in the mid 14th Century.
1313 - 1342 Thomas Quartermain 29 29 St Marys Church guide it states that the other tomb stone, that of Thomas Quatermain died 1342 and his wife Katherine, their son Thomas died 1396 and his wife Joan was formerly known as the 'poor stone' because charitable gifts were placed on it before distribution.
The Visitation of Oxford

The Brass ofThomas Quartermain C1420 Thame, Oxfordshire
Height in inches: 14.5 Width in inches: 7.5
Thomas Quartermain was a large landowner in North Weston near Thame. One of four bracket brasses commemorating him and his immediate family, they include a very pleasing brass to his wife Katherine, their son Thomas (unfortunately only the upper half of which remains) and his wife Joan. Their tomb was formerly known as the "Poor Stone" because the various charitable gifts were placed on it before distribution. Both Thomas and his wife Katherine died in 1342 but their memorial brass was not engraved until about 1420, four years after the death of their son Thomas. The brass was probably commissioned by Thomas's widow Joan. The brasses to Thomas and Katherine, though well worn, make a very pleasing pair.
1050 - UNKNOWN Hildegard of Burgundy 1317 Katherine de Bretton 'Dr Lee from Cottonian MS. Cleoptra C iii, folio 3b ' as follows:
'Hic jacent Thomas Quatremayn de Notrh Westene (et) Kath'r'na uxor eius quee fuit filia Roberti d'ni de Grey Rotherfeld' qui obierunt vi die Junii Anno d'ni millesimo cccxlij. Similiterque hic jacent Thomas filius precicti Thome Quatremayn et Johanna uxor eius qui quidem Thomas obiit vi die Maii Millesimo ccclxxxxvi quorum animabus p'picietur Deus. Amen.'

Brass of Katherine Quartermain C. 1420 Thame Church, Oxfordshire, England
Height in inches: 14.5 Width in inches: 7.5
Katherine was the wife of Thomas and daughter of Guy and Joan Breton, grand-daughter of Sir Robert Grey Lord of Rotherfield. One of four bracket brasses which include her husband, her son Thomas and his wife Joan, the original brass was engraved around 1420, some eighty years after Katherine and her husband died in 1342. This would account for Katherine wearing the Crespine headdress in the brass which did not come into fashion until the early 15th Century. The brass was probably commissioned by Katherine's daughter-in-law Joan after the death of her own husband Thomas in 1396.
1285 Guy de Bretton 1293 Joan de Grey 1253 Thomas de Grey 1253 William de Bretton 1231 Avicia de Chetwode 1282 William Quartermain 1294 Maude 1250 William Quartermain 1260 Agnes 0970 - 1040 Fulk III Count of Anjou 70 70 1348 William de Bruley 1357 Agnes de Bruley 1318 Henry de Bruley 1283 William de Bruley 1240 Henry de Bruley 1257 Katherine Foliot V- Devon 1564, p. 98//V-Wors'shire. p. 52 1315 John de Bruley 1280 John de Bruley 1456 - 1486 Richard Coffin 30 30 Unknown 0752 - UNKNOWN Ingram Count of Hasbania 1337 John deBrancestre 1352 - UNKNOWN Margaret Mille 1320 - UNKNOWN Henry Mille 1335 - UNKNOWN John Danvers 1349 - UNKNOWN Isabel de La Lee 1320 - UNKNOWN William de La Lee 1307 - 1341 Simon Danvers 34 34 1316 Alice 1274 - UNKNOWN Robert Danvers 1246 - UNKNOWN William Danvers D. UNKNOWN Hedwig of Bavaria 1251 - UNKNOWN Matilda Talemasche 1275 - 28 Feb 1335/1336 William deMortimer La Zouche 1277 - UNKNOWN Catrin Verch Madog 1197 - UNKNOWN John Botterell 1116 William deBeauchamp 1035 Urso deAbitot 1120 - UNKNOWN Maud deBraose 1089 Ann Godwin 1130 - UNKNOWN Rohese deClare 1198 - UNKNOWN William deWarenne 6th Earl of Warren & Surrey 0777 - 0871 Queen of Italy Bertha 94 94 ~1456 Joan Langton ~1344 - <1413 Henry Vavasour 69 69 ~1452 - <1452 William Henry Vavasour ~1360 - <1415 Margaret Skipwith 55 55 1362 - 1414 John deStanley 52 52 Sir John Stanley was Constable of Carnarvon, Justice of Chester andSheriff of Anglesey. ~1336 - 2 Jan 1405/1406 Isabella Pilkington 1311 - UNKNOWN Roger Pilkington 1301 - 1370 Thomas deLathom 69 69 1275 - <1375 Eleanor deFerrers 100 100 1192 - UNKNOWN William FitzHugh William de Toulouse 1306 - 1370 Robert de Leigh 64 64 1317 Sybil de Honford 1244 - UNKNOWN Alan FitzBrian 1251 - UNKNOWN Agnes FitzRandolph 1194 - UNKNOWN Adam deStaveley 1205 - >1241 Brian FitzAlan 36 36 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Lord Of Bedale 1223 Alice Hansard 1198 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Hansard 1224 - UNKNOWN Alice deStaveley 1158 - UNKNOWN Alan FitzAlan 0797 - 0835 Cunigunde 38 38 1120 - UNKNOWN Brian FitzAlan 1126 - UNKNOWN Henry FitzHenry 1190 - UNKNOWN Randolph FitzHenry 1201 - UNKNOWN Alice dePercy 1178 - UNKNOWN Agnes Haget 1137 - UNKNOWN Bertram Haget 1090 - UNKNOWN Alan III deBrittany Earl of Richmond ~1176 - 1213 Maud de Clare 37 37 Maude (or Mathilde) de Clare; m. William de Braose, b. perhaps c 1175, died Corfe or Windsor Castle, 1210, of starvation by order of King John, son of William de Braose, d. 1211, Lord of Bramber, Sussex, by his wife Maud de St. Valery.  [Magna Charta Sureties line 28a-2]

Note: MCS line 54-1 refers to Maud de Clare m. Roger de Lacy, without giving Maud's parents.  The above (which indicates her parents in the prior generation 28a-1) references her m. William de Braose.  I assume that the two Maud(e)s are the same person; but MCS doesn't say.
1072 - UNKNOWN Maud Margaret Princess of England 1068 Hawise deGuingamps 0720 - 0783 Bertha Princess of Hungary 63 63 1024 Agnes deCornouaille John I Deane Joane Selwood 1304 Henry Vavasour 1273 - >1346 Henry Vavasour 73 73 1310 Annabell FitzHugh 1280 Constance deMowbray ~1251 William deMowbray Younger son.
Roger de Mowbrey the eldest son became Baron Mowbrey
1240 - UNKNOWN William Le Vasasour 1252 Nichola Wallis 0710 - 0788 Gerold I Vinzgau Count Linzgau Duke Allemania 78 78 ~1690 Mary Hill 1190 Robert deCockfield 1139 - UNKNOWN Julian deMulton 1196 - UNKNOWN John Le Vavasour 1220 Stephen Wallis 1220 Alice Cockfield 1319 William Stapleton 1340 - UNKNOWN William Skipwith 1353 - UNKNOWN Alice Hiltoft ~1165 Isabel 1317 - UNKNOWN Margaret FitzSimon 0652 - UNKNOWN Regine of Bavaria 1278 - UNKNOWN John Skipwith 1286 Margaret Flinton 1240 - UNKNOWN John Skipwith 1258 - UNKNOWN Isabella deArches 1206 - UNKNOWN William Skipwith 1219 - UNKNOWN Alice Thorpe 1187 John Thorpe 1173 Reginald Skipwith 1145 Geoffrey Skipwith 1152 Marina de Manithorp 0690 - 0742 Sunnichild Swanchilda Agilolfinges 52 52 1125 Beatrix de Langton 1111 Patrick de Stuteville 1194 Pagan de Langton 1128 - UNKNOWN Robert deArches 1260 - UNKNOWN Herbert Flinton 1266 - UNKNOWN Cecelia deLa LynDe 1250 - UNKNOWN Joan deNeville 1180 - UNKNOWN Hugh deNeville 1219 Hugh deNeville 1226 - >1283 Clarica deHartley 57 57 0650 - UNKNOWN Grimaldo Agilolfinges II Duke of Bavaria 1197 Adam deHartley 1296 - UNKNOWN Margaret FitzRalph 1323 - UNKNOWN William Hiltoft 1334 - UNKNOWN Alice Muer 1290 - UNKNOWN William Hiltoft 1304 - UNKNOWN Agnes Willoughby 1274 - UNKNOWN Thomas deWilloughby 1282 - UNKNOWN Margaret deMunby 1248 - UNKNOWN William deWilloughby 1256 - UNKNOWN Margaret deDeincourt 0505 - UNKNOWN Siegbert "The Lame" King of Cologne 1220 - UNKNOWN Ralph FitzHugh 1160 - 1206 Isabel deBolbec 46 46 1166 - UNKNOWN William deArches 1196 Robert de Arches 1306 John deCamoys 1192 - UNKNOWN Agnes deBeaumont 1278 - UNKNOWN Roesia deVernon 1224 Isabel deFerrers 1060 Muriel 1053 Hawyse 0597 - UNKNOWN Bodegisel II Governor of Aquitaine Governor of Aquitaine Murdered at Carthage returning from an Embassy toConstantinople. 1112 Adelicia de Senilis St. Liz 0970 - UNKNOWN Dryffin ap Cudd 0973 - UNKNOWN Crisli ferch Iago 0943 - UNKNOWN Cudd 0947 - UNKNOWN Iago Ap Idwal D. UNKNOWN Afandreg Ferch Gwair 0926 - 0996 Idwal Ap Meurig 70 70 0896 - UNKNOWN Meurig ap Idwal 0868 - 0942 Idwal "Foel" ap Anarawd 74 74 0874 - UNKNOWN Mereddon Ferch Cadwr 0592 - 0636 Oda Suevian 44 44 0830 - UNKNOWN Cadwr "Wenwyn" ap Idnerth 0857 - UNKNOWN Cadwr Ap Cadwr 0802 - UNKNOWN Idnerth Ap Iorwerth 0774 - UNKNOWN Iorwerth "Hirflawdd" ap Tegonwy 0781 - UNKNOWN Arianwen Ferch Brychan 0743 - UNKNOWN Tegonwy ap Teon 0700 - UNKNOWN Teon ap Gwineu 0670 - UNKNOWN Gwineu "deufreuddwyd" ap Bywyr 0640 - UNKNOWN Bywyr "Lew" ap Bywdeg 0610 - UNKNOWN Bywdeg Ap Rhun 0575 - UNKNOWN I Bodegisel 0580 - UNKNOWN Rhun "Rhudd Baladr" ap Llary 0550 - UNKNOWN Llary Ap Casnar 0520 - UNKNOWN Casnar Wledig Prawst Ferch Tudwal 0753 Brychan Ap Anlach 1020 - UNKNOWN Angharad Verch Llawr 1148 - UNKNOWN Gwladus verch Gruffudd ~1519 Helen Parkhurst 1266 - 1300 Thomas deLeybourne 34 34 1073 - UNKNOWN Theobald deValoignes 0550 Munderic 1046 - UNKNOWN Hamon deValoignes 1018 - UNKNOWN Philip deValoignes 1003 - UNKNOWN Ralph deTorta 0979 - UNKNOWN Gilbert de St. Valery 0947 Bernard de St. Valery 0956 - UNKNOWN Emma de St. Valery 0929 - UNKNOWN Renaud de St. Valery 1011 - UNKNOWN Ada deHugleville 1011 - UNKNOWN Dommart de Saint Valery 1604 - 1690 Edward Starbuck 86 86 "He came from Derbyshire, England to Dover, New Hampshire, wit 0517 - 0567 Charibert I King of Paris 50 50 ~1460 Alice Gambon 1421 William I Brandon Source: Sydneys State Papers, By Arthur Collins, 1746, Page 78, Vol. 1, : Married Elizabeth,  dau. of Sir Robert Wingfield, of Letheringham, by Elizabeth his wife, dau. and co-heir of Sir Robert Goushill, by Elizabeth, his wife, The Duchess of Norfolk. Sir William Brandon died 22 August 1485 Bosworth (in battle) married before 4 November 1475 61. Elizabeth Bruyn died circa March 1494, V.Essex Vol. 2, p. 555. 1375 John Manning Unlinked from 4334 as a wife of John Manning until further research is done that confirms this link. 1344 Simon Manning Took up the cross and went to the Holy Wars. Companion of King Richard, Couer de Lion, and was Knighted on the battlefield. 1358 Katherine Chaucer 1365/6 Simon Manning and his wife Katherine conveyed to Robert atte Wode property in Greenwich which was the inheritance of Katherine from John Fisher upon the death of Alice, John Fisher's wife . One or both may have been Katherine's parents. However, in the Kent Visitation of 1619, it states that she was a sister of Geoffrey Chaucer, who was the son of John and Agnes (Copton) Chaucer. No Fishers are identified with the Chaucer family. No Chaucer arms have ever been quartered with the Manning arms in the registrations, nor on family monuments. However, that Simon Manning knew Geoffrey Chaucer is a matter of record, so kinship is possible.
Source: John Brooks Threlfall, Ancestry of the Children of John Brooks Threlfall, privately printed, 1970
1309 - 1367 John Chaucer 58 58 1317 Agnes de Copton 1282 Robert Malyn Chaucer William Humphrey 1250 Andrew de Dennington 0520 - 0593 Ingoberge Queen of Paris 73 73 0979 - 1043 Otho deVermandois 64 64 1259 Isabella de Tilney 1223 - UNKNOWN Robert Le Traverner 1234 Dulcia 1301 William Manning 1318 Johanna de Chyrfold 1270 Stephen Manning 1235 Simon Manning 1289 Richard de Chyrfold 1293 Johanna 1380 Richard Brockhill 0484 - 0561 I Childebert 77 77 1465 - 1518 John Petley 53 53 ~1695 Abigail Hill 17 Jan 1637/1638 Hannah Hill 1392 James Brampton 1404 Alice Arden Source: Harl. Mss. 1432. ~0846 - ~0931 Rollo Rognvaldsson 85 85 1515 John Stronge ~1226 - <1315 Joan 89 89 1066 Adelheid Von Bottenstien D. UNKNOWN Odalrico Manfredo li Suza 0499 - 0563 IngondeQueen of the Franks 64 64 1015 - UNKNOWN Irmgarde Susa 1006 Otto III Von Schweinfurt 1037 Jutte Von Schweinfurt 22 Mar 1279/1280 - >1355 Roger 1st Baron de Bavant 0965 - 1017 Heinrich Nordgau 52 52 ~1189 - 1265 Ralph Basset 76 76 RALPH BASSET, son and heir of Ralph Basset, of Drayton, co. Stafford, andof Colston Basset, Notts (b). [Complete Peerage II:1]

(b) This Ralph, who d. 1254-61, was son of Ralph, who d. 1211, son ofRalph who d. 1160, son of Richard Basset, Justiciar temp. Henry I, whoheld Drayton through his marriage with Maud Ridel, and d. 1144.
~1160 - 1211 Ralph Basset 51 51 1317 - UNKNOWN Ralph Arden 1290 - UNKNOWN Thomas Shelley 1366 William Brampton 0460 - 0511 Clovis I King of the Franks 51 51 Clovis was known as the "Riparian King". He was the Frankish King ofCologne of the Merovingian family, kinsman of Clovis I the King of theSalic Franks.

Clovis was known as the "Riparian King". He was the Frankish King of Cologne of the Merovingian family, kinsman of Clovis I the King of theSalic Franks.
1370 - UNKNOWN Alice Shelley ~1170 John de Clinton 1375 Nicholas Arden 1319 - UNKNOWN John Shelley 1324 Isabel Bromwich 1278 - UNKNOWN Ralph Arden 1286 Alice deBeauchamp 1298 - UNKNOWN Anselme Bromwich 1290 William de Copton 1352 Philipa Roet 0465 - 0543 Chrotechildeof Burgundy 78 78 John Hoyt 1222 - UNKNOWN Walter deTilney 1524 - 1556 Johan or Joan Waters 32 32 1290 - 1364 Miles Stapleton 74 74 Handsome and extravagant, excelling in all knightly accomplishments, anda personal friend of the Prince of Wales, Sir Miles died too soon todevelop those domestic qualities which distinguished his cousin ofHaddlesey and his younger brother Sir Brian. Nevertheless he had alreadycommenced carrying out a project which he had long had in mind, ofinstituting a College of Trinitarians or Mathurins at Ingham, and on the26th June, 1360, he obtained the King's licence to set it aside, orsuspend, the Statute of Mortmain, which prohibited all such piouspurposes. The Order of Mathurins had been in-stituted in France at theend of the 12th century, for the Redemption of Captives taken by theTurks; and a house was first established in England, at Mottenden inKent. Ingham is said to have become their principal house in later years.The author of a little story published at the restoration of InghamChurch in 1875, finds a motive for his work of charity in an incident inthe life of Sir Oliver Ingham. He tells how Sir Oliver went to Spainabout 1340, and offered his services to King Alphonso of Castile. After asevere battle with the Saracens in the Sierra Morena, he was missing, andwandered in the mountains for several days. He was on the point of beingtaken by a party of the enemy, "as he lay in peaceful slumber on a rock,"when he was found by some of his own men. For this providential delivery,he vowed to give half his lands to found a House for the Redemption ofCaptives, and Sir Miles was therefore only carrying out the wishes of hisfather-in-law. We are not aware story rests that this interesting littleon any evidence whatever. The "peaceful slumber" on the rock, may havebeen suggested by the monument at Ingham and the large round pebbles onwhich the figure rests. But whatever the Founder's design, sometraditions of the Crusades evi-dently hang about the church. The patronSaint of the Sta-peltons was honoured at Ingham as well as North Morton,for in 1782, a quantity of panel-painting of the 14th century wasdiscovered, representing the common legends of the life of St. Nicholas.Although it no longer exists, drawings have fortunately been preserved byMr. Dawson Turner, which are now in the British Museum.
Source:   "The Stapletons of Bedale and Norfolk"http://members.nbci.com/StapletonGC/book/sy/chptr2.html
1298 Joan deIngram 1265 - UNKNOWN Gilbert Stapleton Sir Gilbert Stapelton, of Cotherstone, second son of Sir Miles the firstBaron, married Agnes, one of the daughters and co-heirs of BrianFitzAlan, Lord of Bedale, and from this match the Stapeltons of Bedaleand Norfolk, Carlton, Wighill, and Myton are all descended. Gilbert'swife, like his brother Sir Nicholas, came of the noble family of Brittanyand Richmond, the FitzAlans deriving from a younger son of Alan FergauntCount of Brittany, who came over with the Conqueror.
Source:   "The Stapletons of Bedale and Norfolk"http://members.nbci.com/StapletonGC/book/sy/chptr2.html
1270 - UNKNOWN Agnes FitzAlan 1240 - UNKNOWN Miles Stapleton 1245 - UNKNOWN Diana deBeaulieu 1216 Nicholas Stapleton 0436 - 0481 Childeric I King of the Franks 45 45 Surnamed Crinitius, or Longhair, because he made the Franks wear longbeards and long hair in opposition to the Romans and for a sign ofliberty. He married Basina, daughter of Weldelphus, King of theThuringians. 1221 Margery Basset 1190 - UNKNOWN Miles Stapleton 1196 - UNKNOWN Barbara Darrell 1168 - UNKNOWN John Stapleton 1140 - UNKNOWN Brian Stapleton 1260 - UNKNOWN John Darrell 1194 Milo Basset 1202 Agnes de Lascelles 1176 John de Lascelles 1148 Simon de Lascelles 0438 - 0499 Basina deThuringia 61 61 1155 Agnes de Ottringham 1128 Richard de Ottringham 1220 John deBeaulieu 1227 - UNKNOWN Ladrina deBrus 1241 - UNKNOWN John deIngham Lord Of Steeple Langford 1269 - UNKNOWN Oliver deIngram 1213 Oliver de Lngham 1190 - UNKNOWN Walter deIngram 1164 - UNKNOWN John deIngram 1170 Albreda de Waleran 0822 - 0900 Aethelred "Mucel" Ealdorman of the Gainai 78 78 1143 Walter Waleran 1116 Waleran Fitzwilliam 1090 William Fitzwaleran 1063 Waleran 1525 - 1550 Nicholas Babbs 25 25 0790 - 0850 Ragnvald of Agder Olafsson 60 60 1129 Daughter de Walton 1058 William de Briwere 1026 Ranulf de Briwere 1112 - UNKNOWN Allan Stapleton 0822 - 0904 Eadburh of Mercia 82 82 1176 - UNKNOWN Catherine Hansard 1148 - UNKNOWN Miles Hansard 1068 - UNKNOWN King of Cyprus 1147 - UNKNOWN Gladys FitzHenry 1120 - UNKNOWN Ann deNeville 1094 - UNKNOWN Robert deNeville 1086 Miles deStapleton 1094 - UNKNOWN Penrodas of Cyprus 1060 - UNKNOWN John deStapleton 1065 - UNKNOWN Joan Mallory 0411 - 0502 Esla King of Saxony 91 91 1034 Allan deStapleton 1014 - UNKNOWN Herman deStapleton On the south side of the river Tees stands an inconsiderable villagecalled STAPYLTON, whence this ancient family hath obtained its surname.Tradition states that, in the year 450, Octa, brother of Hengist, andEbusa arrived, with their followers, on the banks of the Tees, to defendthe adjacent country from the ravages of the Picts, and that beingAngles, and some from that part of the Cimbrica Chersonesus, which isstill called Stapelholm, situated between Sleswick and Frederickstall,they preserved the name of their original residence by calling the newsettlement Stapyltun.
Source:     "A Genealogy and Heraldic History of the Commoners of GreatBritain and Ireland", Vol II, Pp. 207-8,
        John Burke, Call Number: R929.725 B95 v.2.
1067 - UNKNOWN Richard deNeville 1039 - UNKNOWN Balderic de Neville 1228 Margaret deFurnival BET. 1233 - 1235 - >1285 Isabel Magna Charta Sureties gives Isabel's birth date as 1233/5.  Since herhusband William Daubigny died in 1242, any offspring would have beenconceived while Isabel was only 7 to 9 years old.  Coincidentally theirdaughter Isabel is listed in rootsweb as being born in 1233.  I thinkthat Magna Charta Sureties is confusing the dates of the daughter andmother. 1055 - UNKNOWN Heinrich Count Of Berg 1066 - UNKNOWN AdelaideCountess Of Monchenthal 0954 Maud De Chalons 0912 - UNKNOWN Arlebaud Count Of Semur 0383 - 0474 Gewis King of Saxony 91 91 D. UNKNOWN Maud deFinnes 1085 - 1138 Boleslaw III "Crooked Mouth" Prince Of Poland 53 53 1096 - UNKNOWN Salome Countess Of Berg-Schelklingen 1009 - UNKNOWN Azo II Marquis of Este 1015 - 1044 CunigundePrincess Of Bavaria 29 29 0978 - UNKNOWN Azo I Marquis Of Este 0985 - UNKNOWN Valdrada Of Venice 0950 - UNKNOWN Oberto II of Este 0958 - UNKNOWN Railende 0925 - UNKNOWN Oberto of Este 0930 - UNKNOWN Guilla of Spoleto 0355 - 0446 Wig King of Saxony 91 91 0897 - UNKNOWN Adalberto II of Este 0998 - UNKNOWN Irmtrud Countess Of Luxemburg 0978 Guelph II Duke Of Bavaria 0950 - UNKNOWN Rudolf II Count Of Altdorf 0959 Itha Von Oeningen 0938 - UNKNOWN RichildePrincess Of The Holy Roman Empire 0930 - UNKNOWN Cuno Count Of Oeningen 0925 - UNKNOWN Rudolf I Count Of Altdorf 0930 - UNKNOWN Siburgis 0924 - UNKNOWN Heribert Count In Kinziggau 0327 - 0418 Freawine King of Saxony 91 91 0940 Irmintrud Countess Of Avalgau 0874 - UNKNOWN Bertha deVermandois 0860 Udo deWetterau 0830 Gebhard deWetterau 0800 - UNKNOWN Gebhard Count Of Lower Lahngau 0912 Megingoz Count Of Avalgau 1021 - UNKNOWN Otto I Count of Maurienne 1029 - UNKNOWN Adelheid Margravine Of Susa 0995 Meginfred Marchese deSusa 1609 - 1675 Hester Brown. 66 66 0299 - 0390 Frithogar 91 91 1202 - 1255 Walter De Grey 53 53 D. UNKNOWN Don Ferch Mathonwy D. UNKNOWN Eurgen D. UNKNOWN Marius D. UNKNOWN Anyn D. UNKNOWN Dingad Alafon D. UNKNOWN Brywlais D. UNKNOWN Ceraint Feddw An irreclaimable drunkard, deposed by his subjects for setting fire justbefore harvest to the cornfields of Siluria, now County Monmouthshire,England.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 159
D. UNKNOWN Berwyn 0271 - 0360 Brand 89 89 D. UNKNOWN Morgan D. UNKNOWN Bleddyn D. UNKNOWN Rhun D. UNKNOWN Idwal D. UNKNOWN Llywarch D. UNKNOWN Calchwynydd D. UNKNOWN Enir Fardd D. UNKNOWN Ithel D. UNKNOWN Llarian D. UNKNOWN Teuged 0243 - 0330 Beldeg of Asgard 87 87 D. UNKNOWN Llyfeinydd D. UNKNOWN Peredur D. UNKNOWN Gweyrydd D. UNKNOWN Ithon D. UNKNOWN Cymryw D. UNKNOWN Brwt D. UNKNOWN Selys Hen Annyn Tro D. UNKNOWN Brydain He settled the island at an early date and being a great legislator aswell as warrior, according to tradition gave his name to the entireisland, which has since been corrupted into Britain.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 158
D. UNKNOWN Aedd Mawr Aedd Mawr "King Edward The Great", who appears to have lived ca. 1300 BC.
Source:   Magna Charta, Parts I & II, (1945) John S. Wurts, page 158
     http://home.gvi.net/~rlmann2/admwr.htm
0248 - 0341 Nanna 93 93 D. UNKNOWN Fausta D. UNKNOWN Heli Matthatsson D. UNKNOWN Eutropious 1112 - UNKNOWN derdere of Dunbar 0499 Radegunde De Thuringe 1040 - UNKNOWN Robert deQuincy 1100 - UNKNOWN Philip deMontgomerie Philip was born about the year 1101, at Pembroke, and appears to havebeen named after his uncle, who died in the Holy Land during the firstcrusade. When his father was banished the kingdom, he was but an infant.The next we hear of him is his arrival in Scotland; which was at an earlyage, as he came over with the Earl of Huntingdon, afterwards David I ofScotland, on his return from his visit to the monastery of Tiron. One ofthe first acts of David, as Prince of Cumbria, "was taking a colony ofBenedictine monks from the newly-founded monastery of Tiron, and to plantthem beside his forest castle of Selkirk. This was in 1113; and even thusearly he had gathered round him, as his charters show, many Anglo-Normanknights, through whose help he was to effect such a momentous change inScotland." During this visit David must have made the acquaintance of thehouse of Perche and that of Montgomerie their relatives. Rotrou II.,Count of Perche, had founded, in 1109, the abbey to which David was nowon a visit, and this will account for the introduction of Philip deMontgomerie to the Scottish prince, and his accompanying him, with otherNormans, on his return to Scotland. This arrangement could not but besatisfactory to Arnulph, his father, not only from the enmity his housebore to the English king, but also from the fact that the boy's futurelife, if spent in Normandy, would be devoid of material prospects. Thefather never had a share in his paternal estates, and from thevicissitudes of his family, had not been able to retain those he hadacquired. Philip's chances for advancement in Normandy were doubtful,compared to the promises held out if he should cross the sea intoScotland.
On settling in Scotland, he appears to have been called the Welshman, orCymbricus, an evidence of his birthplace having been in Wales. "Heobtained a fair inheritance in Renfrewshire," and married Lady MargaretDunbar, daughter of Cospatric, second Earl of Dunbar and March. Computingfrom the age of his grandchildren, this marriage could not have takenplace later than the year 1120. As the manor and castle of Thorntoun cameinto the possession of the family at this period, it came, in allprobability, as Lady Margaret's dower. It is situated about three and ahalf miles from Dunbar, and immediately opposite Innerwick Castle,divided from it only by a ravine, through which a stream flows, where theMontgomeries had early possessions, the latter holding of the Stewarts,who obtained the greater part of Renfrewshire.
Source:   "Genealogical History and Pedigree of the family of Montgomery"Thomas Harrison Montgomery  Call Number: R929.2 M788
1060 - UNKNOWN Arnulph deMontgomerie Earl of Pembroke Arnulph was the fifth son of Roger de Montgomerie, Earl of Shrewsbury andArundel. He was probably named after his uncle Arnulph de Belˆsme. Afterhis father's death, and the assumption of the crown on the death ofWilliam Rufus by Henry I., he joined his brothers in resistance to theusurpation, and, as is more fully stated in the account given of Robertde Belˆsme, his brother, shared in his ill success, and was banished thekingdom. Arnulph crossed into Ireland in the year 1100 to obtain succorsfor Duke Robert's cause, and was successful in his mission. Hesubsequently "sent Gerald, his steward, to Murckhart, or Murtagh O'Brien,King of Munster, desiring his daughter Lafracoth in marriage, which waseasily granted." In right of his wife, however, he subsequently aspiredto get possession of her father's kingdom. During the invasion of Irelandby Magnus, King of Norway, the Irish, struck with terror, called on theNormans, and Arnulph, who was at Pembroke, collected his auxiliaries andhastened to them. Magnus was repulsed; but the Irish, tasting blood,became more savage and made a sudden attempt to murder the Normans. Theirking also carried off his daughter, Arnulph's wife, and resolved to killArnulph himself as the reward of his alliance; but he discovered thefraud and made his escape. Of his life he subsequently spent in Normandy,we have but slight account. Ordericus Vitalis states that Arnulph and hisbrothers Roger, Philip and Everard, "had no share in their father'sinheritance, their two elder brothers, Robert and Hugh, having dividedbetween themselves the whole on both sides of the sea." Arnulph hadtherefore but little if any territory of his own to defend from Henry'sanger against the family; and his exertions were all given on hisbrother's behalf. But "after many thankless enterprises for his brotherRobert, he became indignant, and went over to the duke, to whom he cededthe castle of AlmenŠches which he had taken by surprise." And duringRobert's oppressions in S‚es, many of the provincials left him to joinArnulph. This was within two or three years from the time of theirleaving England. The next we find of him is in the year 1118, when theAlen‡ais, desiring to free themselves from the oppressions of Stephen,Count of Mortain, their new master, they, in concert with Arnulph,secretly called to their succor the Count of Anjou, who finally conqueredthe city and castle. The count held them until the year following, whenby treaty remitting them to Henry I. for that purpose, the latterreinstated Arnulph's nephew William in their possession. About a yearlater than this, we find he had returned to Ireland, was reconciled tohis father-in-law to outward appearances at least, and was reunited tohis wife; but on the morrow of his new nuptials fell asleep after abanquet, from which he never awoke. The castle of Pembroke had been builtby him, probably before his father's death; and in the year 1095 it wasstrong enough to resist all the attempts of the Welsh. The first onebuilt at Pembroke is described as "a poor, slight castle of stakes andturf, which afterwards, on his return to England, he left to the care ofa discreet man, Giraldus de Windesor, his constable and chief officer,with a small garrison, who were presently besieged by the whole force ofSouth Wales. But Giraldus made such a vigorous defence, rather by couragethan strength, that they were obliged to retire without success."  "Thatthis powerful and proud Norman found a fortress there of the characterthus ascribed to it is probable, but it is not possible that he shouldhave long suffered the capital of his newly-acquired possessions tocontinue so slenderly protected. . . . . The superior grandeur thatcharacterizes the ruins of the castle and town of Pembroke, with itsvarious magnificent appendages, enable us to form an estimate of theimportance Arnulph de Montgomerie attached to his new conquest."
Source:   "Genealogical History and Pedigree of the family of Montgomery"Thomas Harrison Montgomery  Call Number: R929.2 M788
1104 - UNKNOWN Margaret Dunbar 1087 - UNKNOWN Lafracoth O'Brien The O'Brien and the MacCarthy families had been warring with each otherin southwestern Ireland for many years prior to the Norman invasion ofIreland. Iafracoth or Lafeacott was apparently a persuasive woman. Whenher son-in-law, Maurice fitzGerald, invaded Ireland in 1171, he took byconquest part of the MacCarthy territory. Initially at least, Maurice didnot seize any O'Brien territory.
Most people named O'Brien are descended from Brian mac Cennéidigh, theArd-Righ (High King) of Ireland usually known as Brian Bóru. SinceLafeacott O'Brien was born only about 150 years after the army of BrianBóru defeated the Vikings at Clontarf in A.D. 1014, she was undoubtedlyaware of her famous ancestor and careful about the spelling of her name.In later generations, the families of (O) Byrne, O'Broin, and Bryansometimes changed the spelling of their name to O'Brien.
0195 Cadwalladr 1020 Jeanne de Tallbot 0990 Robert deVerdun 1025 - UNKNOWN Albreda deRhie 1145 - UNKNOWN Roger deQuincy 1095 - UNKNOWN Aschetil deBulmer Lord Ferlington 1124 - UNKNOWN Agnes Fossard 1130 Robert deMuschamp 1097 - UNKNOWN Robert deMuschamp 1120 - UNKNOWN Bertram deBulmer 1044 - UNKNOWN Ivon deHatton 0190 - 0280 Frithuwald 90 90 1070 - UNKNOWN Wolfaith deHatton ~1326 - ~1350 Robert Bulkeley 24 24 ~1328 Agnes ~1270 - ~1320 William I Bulkeley 50 50 ~1280 - ~1330 Matilda Davenport 50 50 ~1480 Jane Stradling 1478 William Griffith Chmberlain of North Wales 1468 - 1485 Janet Mathew 17 17 1454 - 1480 Thomas Stradling 26 26 ~1427 Elizabeth Herbert Lady of St Donar's Castle 0194 - 0288 Beltsa 94 94 1430 - ~1469 Henry Stradling 39 39 Lord of St Donats Castle D. >1482 William Griffith Second Chamberlain of North Wales, Lord of Penrhyn and Caernarvon. D. >1461 Griffith III Williams Esquire of Llanrhaldadr ~1398 - 1453 Edward Stradling 55 55 Lord of St Donar's Castle 1401 - 1446 William ap Thomas Herbert 45 45 D. >1439 Robin Williams D. >1439 Griffith Ap Gwilim Ap Gruffydd Ap Heilyn D. >1389 Gwillym Williams D. >1353 Griffith I Williams 1417 Richard Bulkeley 0160 - 0245 Freothalaf 85 85 1165 - 1241 William deFiennes 76 76 1399 Gwladys Gam Mallt Verch Gruffydd derwas ~1400 - 1468 Dafydd Ap Ifan Ap Einion 68 68  Constable of Harlech Castle; 1461; the gallant defender of the castle during the wars fo the roses; will dated may 9 1546 Evan Ap Griffith Angharad Verch Rhys Ap Gruffydd Ap Goronwy Rhys Ap Gruffydd Ap Grono Gryffydd Ap Grono Greno 1376 - 1431 Gwillim Ap Griffith Ap Gwilim Ap Gruffydd 55 55 Generys Vychan Verch Madog Ap Grono Vychan 0130 - 0220 Finn 90 90 Madog of Penrhyn Ap Grono Vychan Gwenhwyfer Verch Evan Ap Gruffydd Ap Madog Ddu D. 1367 Tudor Vychan Ap Grono  of trecastell penmynydd and tregayan; he assumed knighthood and changed his arms from englishmans heads to three closed helmets argent he lived most part at trecastell  and was buried in friars chapel bangor Margaret Of South Wales D. 1331 Gorono Ap Tudor Hen Ap Goronwy  had trecastell Penmynydd Ddraenog and tregayan; and the l;ands of his brother Howel who died without issue Gwervil Verch Madog 1419 Alice Bostock 1443 - 1490 William Bulkeley 47 47  the first of the bulkeleys to come to anglesey;
he prevented richard duke of york from landing in anglesey on his return from Ireland to join the earl Of Warwick

William was named Constable of Beaumaris in 1484.
Constable Of Beaumaris Castle
1445 Ellen Verch Gwilym Griffith ~1380 Ralph Bostock Grant, 1461, Aug. 10. 1 Edward IV. 1 item : parchment ; 10.5 x 30.5 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Robert Boghay to Sir Henry Stafford, knight, son of Humfrey, duke of Buckingham, Hugh Eggerton, John Harecourte, John Leegh of Bothes, Hugh Davenport, Hugh Erdeswyk, and Ralph Bostok, esquires, of all his lands, etce., in Annesley, Dorlaston, and Bokenall, or elsewhere in the county of Stafford. Given at Bokenall on the feast of St. Laurence the Martyr, 1 Edward IV.
WITNESSES: Robert Cuny, Thomas Wode of Mere, Richard Aleok of Hanley, John Cradok of Bokenall, Thomas Wode of Botteslowe. With 1 seal (1.2 cm.) of red wax, bearing a deuce.
NAMES: I. Boghay, Robert. II. Buckingham, Henry Stafford, Duke of, 1454?-1483. III. Buckingham, Humphrey Stafford, Duke of, 1402-1460. IV. Eggerton, Hugh. V. Harecourte, John. VI. Legh, John. VII. Cradok, John. VIII. De Davenport, Hugh. IX. De Erdeswyk, Hugh. X. Bostok, Ralph. XI. Cuny, Robert. XII. Wode, Thomas. XIII. Alcok, Richard.
SUBJECTS: 1. Deeds--England-- Staffordshire. 2. Deeds--England--Anslow. 3. Deeds--England--Darlaston. 4. Deeds-- England--Bucknall. 5. Staffordshire (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 6. Anslow (England)--Charters, grants, privileges. 7. Darlaston (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges. 8. Bucknall (England)--Charters, grants, privileges.
HOLLIS number: -AQD0644
~0100 - 0179 Flocwald 79 79 John Done Margred Verch Jenkin D. 1400 Henry Salusbury Agnes Curteis Rowling Ralph Salusbury Margred Verch Ieuan D. >1332 William Salusbury John Pikemere ~1400 - 1483 William Griffith Vychan 83 83  1st chamberlain of North Wales, Chamberlain of North. ~1309 - <1343 Thomas Ap Llewellyn Ap Owen 34 34 D. UNKNOWN Gewar King of Norway Ellen Verch Thomas Ap Llewellyn Ap Owain 1330 Gruffydd Vychan Ap Gruffydd Sources state Gruffydd was of Rhudall. Eleanor Goch Verch Philip Ap Ivor 1438 - 1470 Thomas I Mathew 32 32 1436 Catrin Verch Llewellyn 1398 Morgan Llewellyn 1411 - 1494 David Mathew 83 83 1411 Gwenllian Dayford Nest Verch Cynwrig Ap Meredydd Ddu Robert Parris  Chamberlain of Chester and North Wales in the time of Henry IV

Chamberlain of Chester and North Wales in the time of Henry IV

Chamberlain of Chester and North Wales in the time of Henry IV
0630 - 0679 Dagobert II King of Austrasia 49 49 Ellen Bulkeley Ieuan Ap Cadwgan Jan 1594/1595 - 1505 Thomas Salusbury D. 1471 Thomas Salusbury Elizabeth Done Jonet Verch William Griffith Elinor Griffith ~1382 Alice Dalton Sir Richard Dalton Elizabeth Salusbury 0592 - 0652 Itte of Landen 60 60 Hugh Conway D. 23 Mar 1382/1383 Goronwy Vychan Tudor  He was forester of Snowdon, and constable of Beaumaris castle Catherine Verch Glyn Cyngar Gwenllian Verch Iorwerth Ddu Ap David Goronwy Ap Einion Ap Evan Ap Iorwerth Goch John de Mowbray ~1359 Lowry Verch Gryfydd Vychan Ap Gruffydd Richard Puleston Lleuki Verch Madog Foel Ap Llewellyn Ap Cynrig Roger Puleston 0530 - UNKNOWN Cloderic The ParricideKing of Cologne The Riparian, Frankish Kings of Cologne, of the Mergovinigian family,kinsman of Clovis I King of the Salic Franks. Cloderic was murdered byagents of Clovis I. Angharad Verch Llewellyn Ap Ynyr Llewellyn Ap Hwlkin Ap Howel Ap Iorwerth Ddu <1137 - >1169 Hwlkin Ap Howel 32 32 Eurddyled Verch Dafydd Ap Iorwerth Ap Dafydd Ll Dafydd Ap Iorwerth Ap Daffydd Llwyd Ceinfryd Verch Ednowain Bendew Myfanwy Morfydd Verch Grono Vychan Meyrick Ap Llewellyn Ap Hwlkin Ap Howel Margaret Verch Evan Vychan ap Evan 0415 - 0468 Childeric I King of the Franks 53 53 Clodius was known as Clodius "Long Hair" King of Franks. Evan Vychan Ap Evan Ap Adda Ap Iorwerth Ddu Angharad Verch Gruffydd Ap Cynwrig ap Goronwy Meredydd Ap Hwlkin Llwyd  Had the charge of the town of Caerbnarvon during Owen GlynDowers revolt. Hwlkin Lloyd Gwenhwyfer Lloyd Glyn Cyngar  one of the council in Ireland Reinallt Reginald Conway Maude Verch William Ap Gruffydd Ap Robin D. ~1540 Hugh Vychan Conway 1530 Jonet Conway 0422 - 0470 Basinna Queen of the Franks 48 48 1526 Meredydd Lloyd Ystryth Ap Marchwystl Ap Marchweithian Eurddydled Verch Llewellyn Ap Tudur Lowry Verch Tudur Ap Griffith Vychan Llewellyn Ap Tudur Ap Dafydd Vychan Tudur Ap Dafydd Vychan Ap Dafydd Ap Einion Dafydd Vychan Ap Dafydd Ap Einion Dafydd Ap Einion Eva Verch Ifan Ap Einion Ap Llowarch Dafydd Ap Madog D. UNKNOWN Genebald Magog Ap Meurig Howel Ap Gruffydd Goch Ap Gruffydd Angharad Verch Rhys Ap Tudur Ap Goronwy Mallt Pickhill  [Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged] BET. 1355 - 1385 - <1444 John Puleston BET. 1355 - 1385 - BET. 1370 - 1485 Angharad Hanmer Angharad Verch Dafydd Ap Ifan Ap Einion Elizabeth de Grey Grono Vychan Lowry Verch Grono Ap Ifan Ap Einion Merovee King of Franks 1169 - UNKNOWN Agnes deDammartin Hwlkin Ap Howel Ap Iorwerth Ddu Iorwerth Ap Dafydd Llwyd ~1398 - BET. 1455 - 1540 Margaret Puleston ~1591 - 1659 Anne Lloyd 68 68 Anne Lloyd's royal descent from King John of England is detailed by Henry B. Hoff in "Lloyd-Yale-Eaton Royal Descent," TAG 52(1976), pages. 142-144. Anne and Thomas Yale were both descended from from siblings of the Welsh hero, Owen Glendower - Anne, from Lowri verch Griffith, sister of Owen. 1560 - 1615 George Lloyd 55 55 6th Son, Rector of Llanrwst 1596, Bishop of the Isle of Man 1559, Bishop of Chester 1604
George Lloyd was the Lord Bishop of Chester, England.  George Lloyd, Bishop of Chester, was the fifth son of MEREDYDD (LLOYD) AP JOHN AP MEREDYDD LLWYD of Beaumaris, he was born at Bryn Euryn, Llandrillo yn Rhos, which his mother JANET CONWY, inherited through her father, HUGH CONWY FYCHAN, a descendant of MARCHUDD, founder of one of the fifteen tribes of North Wales. He was a scholar of King's School, Chester, from 1575-9, entering Jesus College, Cambridge, in 1579, and graduating B.A. in 1583, M.A. 1586, B.D. 1593, D.D. 1598. He became a Fellow of Magdalene ca. 1586, sinecure rector of Llanrwst, 1597, of Heswall, 1579-1613, and of Bangor Iscoed, 1612-15. In 1600 he was consecrated bishop of Sodor and Man, exchanging the see in Dec. 1604 for that of Chester, where he reversed the anti-Puritan policy of his Welsh predecessor Richard Vaughn (q.v.), formerly bishop of Bangor. He died 1 August 1615 and was buried in Chester cathedral, where he is commemorated by a mural inscription (text in Ormerod, "Cheshire", 1882 ed., i, 192). In the year of his death he bought Pant Iocyn, near Wrexham (formerly the residence of the Almers (q.v.) which remained the home of his family until 1634.  SOURCES: 1. Dictionary of National Biography, page 579.

George Lloyd was graduated from Jesus College, Cambridge and received his final D.D. degree in 1598. In 1600 he was consecrated Bishop of Sodor and Mann, removing to the see of Chester in Dec., 1604 where he was Bishop 1604-1615. During his time there he reversed the anti-Puritan policy of his Welch predecessor, Richard Vaughn. He is buried in the Chester Cathedral, under the choir.  "In Lloyd's time, the Bishop's Palace at Chester was in a building extending from the west end of the cathedral, but in addition to this, Bishop Lloyd also owned a finely timbered, private town house on Watergate Street, still standing and called 'Bishop Lloyd's House.' Its elaborate facade contains carvings of Biblical scenes, and, long an architectual landmark, it is even mentioned in the Encyclopedia Britannica. Once used as a school for girls, it now belongs to the Chester Corporation." (Robert Joseph Curfman, "The Yale Descent from Braiose & Clare Through Pigott of Buckinghamshire," The American Genealogist, Vol 56," 1980: pg. 103.)  In 1615 Bishop Lloyd purchased Pant Locyn in Denbighshire near Wrexham, a residence built by the Almer family about 1554-58 and held by Lloyd's descendants until 1634.  His memorial tablet at Chester Cathedral, missing before 1727, is translated as follows: "Untimely death sealed within this tomb the heart of George Lloyd, whose memory Chester holds in reverence. A native of Wales, he became a Doctor of Theology at Cambridge University and a leader of theologians...He died greatly lamented. Neither in his life nor in his death was there any shame." (Robert Joseph Curfman, "The Yale Descent from Braiose & Clare Through Pigott of Buckinghamshire," The American Genealogist, Vol 56," 1980: pg. 104.) Also see NEHGSR 53:82.
1564 - 8 Jan 1648/1649 Ann Wilkinson D. >1440 Robert Ap Meredydd Ap Hwlkin Lloyd Jane Puleston Gwenhwyfer Verch Llewellyn Ap Edmund Gwenhwrfar  [Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged] 0380 - 0429 Pharamond King of the Franks 49 49 Pharamond, Duke of the East Franks in 404 A. D., was elected King of theWest Franks 419, and is reckoned by historians as the first King ofFrance. He married Argotta. D. BET. 1485 - 1509 Owen Ap Meyrick Ap Llewellyn Ap Hwlk, Of Bodeon Annes Verch Owen Ap Meyrick ~1391 Richard Bulkeley ~1393 Agnes Cheadle Roger Cheadle Grono Ap Meredydd Ap Iowerth Ap Llowarch Adles Verch Grono Ap Ednyfed Vychan D. >1300 Meredydd Ddu Ap Grono Ap Meredydd D. >1500 William Ap Griffith Ap Robin  brought a trop of horse to Bosworth to assist Henry Tudor against Richard III Cynwrig Ap Meredydd Ddu Ap Grono 0390 - 0459 Argotta Queen of Franks 69 69 Argotta was descended from Heli, first King of the Britons, one of whosedescendants had married one of the Kings of France, a daughter Althildiswho married Marconier IV, King of France A. D. 128, from whom Argotta was14th in line. Thus she was 22nd in line from Heli, King of the Britons,and was called the mother of all the Kings of France. Gruffydd Ap Owen Ap Bleddyn Ap Owen Brogontyn Gruffyd dervas D. >1380 Einion Ap Gruffydd Ap Llewellyn D. 1399 Gruffydd Ap Llewellyn Ap Cynwrig Llewellyn Ap Cynwrig Ap Osborn Wyddel Nest Verch Griffith Ap Adda  whose tomb is still to be seen in Towyn Church Eva Verch Madog Ap Ellis Madog Ap Ellis Tanglwst Verch Rhydderch Ap Evan Llwyd Ap Evan Rhydderch Ap Evan Llwyd Ap Evan 0350 - 0404 Marcomir Duke of the Franks 54 54 Evan Llwyd Ap Evan Einion Ap Evan Ap Iorwerth Goch D. >1427 Ifan Ap Einion Ap Gruffydd Angharad Verch David Ap Gwion Lloyd David Ap Gwion Lloyd Gwion Lloyd Howel Ap Cynwrig Ap Iorwerth Ap Iarddur Robert Ap Meredydd Tudur Goch Ap Goronwy Ap Einion Morfydd Verch Howel Ap Iorwerth Vychan 0330 - 0389 Clodius Duke of Franks 59 59 Morfydd Verch Tudur Ap Gwilim Ap Dafydd Elin Ingram Ynyr Vychan Ap Ynyr Ap Meurig Ap Madog  [Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged] Meurig Vychan Ap Ynyr Vychan Ap Ynyr  [Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged] Meyrick Lloyd Ap Meyrick Vychan Ap Ynyr Vychan Howel Ap Iorwerth Vychan Ap Iorwerth Gwefyl Verch Ieuan Ap Tegwared Bais Wen Llewellyn Ap Edmund Ap Gruffydd Edmund Ap Gruffydd Ap Ednyfed Ap Gruffydd <Living> 0300 - 0379 Dagobert Duke of Franks 79 79 Howel 1298 Gruffydd Llwyd Ap Madog Vychan 1284 Elizabeth Strange Robin Ap Gruffydd Goch Elin Verch Robert Ap Meredydd Ap Hwlkin Lloyd Goronwy Ap Howel Ap Cynwrig Gruffydd Ap Goronwy Ap Howel Ap Cynwrig Evan Lloyd Ap Gruffydd Ap Goronwy Ap Howel Tangwystl Verch Gwrgenau Ap Meurig Gwrgenau Ap Meurig Ap Gwilim Ap Rhys 0272 - 0350 Genebald Duke of Franks 78 78 Margaret Verch Gruffydd Vychan Ap Gruffydd Angharad Verch Gruffydd Ap Owen Ap Bleddyn Margaret Verch Madog Crypl Ap Gruffydd Howel Pickhill Dafydd Ap Goronwy Ap Iorwerth Ap Howel Mallt Verch Evan Lloyd Ap Gruffydd Meurig Ap Gwilim Ap Rhys Gadwynog John Gerrish 1353 - 1404 Robert Goushill 51 51  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]


[daddy2.FTW]
Isaac Appleton 0250 - 0317 Dagobert Kind of Franks 67 67 1312 - 1360 William Earl Of Northampton deBohun 48 48  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

2nd son
Married elizabeth De Badlesmere in Bohun Castle, 1335
2nd son

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

2nd son
Married elizabeth De Badlesmere in Bohun Castle, 1335
2nd son
1313 - 1356 Elizabeth de Badlesmere 43 43  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

pg 72 & 93, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 19, 57 & 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1276 - 16 Mar 1320/1321 Humphrey Eighth Earl Of Hereford deBohun  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1282 - 1316 Elizabeth Plantagenet 34 34  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of King Edward I
married Novemebr 14 1302

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of King Edward I
married Novemebr 14 1302
~1180 - 1249 Hugh X de Lusignan 69 69 Hugh X de Lusignan, d. 1246 c. 6 June, Count of la Marche and of Angouleme, son of Hugh IX de Lusignan but by another wife, not Matilda, daughter of Wulgrim III, Count of Angouleme and la Marche. 1176 - 1220 Henry de Bohun 44 44 Andrew Caldwell Alice 1223 - <1267 John II FitzAlan 44 44 pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
John married Matilda or Maud, daughter of Theobald le Botelar or Butlerand Rohese de Verdun. In the partition of the estate of his mother'sbrother, Hugh d'Albini, Arundel Castle fell to John Fitz Alan, and it wasgiven into his hands by patent dated 1244. He died 1267 and his will,still preserved, is dated at Wroxeter October, 1267. He was 5th Earl ofArundel, and in consideration of a fine of 100 pounds he had livery ofhis own Castles of Clun, Blancminster and Schrawurthen. In 42nd of HenryIII (1258) his lordship was made Captain-General of all the forcesdesigned for guarding the Welsh Marches, and in the baronial war heappears to have first sided with the barons and afterward with King John.
~1225 - 1283 Matilda Maud Butler 58 58 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 548, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
aka: de Botiller
0223 - 0306 Walter King of the Franks 83 83 ~1164 - 1240 John I FitzAlan 76 76 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 1871, Burke's "Extant  Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition
pg 3, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

John Fitz Alan, Lord of Clun and Oswestry, County Salop, became Earl ofArundel by marrying Isabel, daughter of William d'Albini, Earl ofArundel, and sister and co-heir of Hugh d'Albini, last Earl of Arundel ofthat family. He took arms with the other barons temp. of King John, butupon the accession of Henry III, having had letters of safe conduct tocome in and make his peace, he had livery of his lands of his inheritanceupon paying a fine of 10,000 marks.  J. P. Yeatman's Early History of theHouse of Arundel, FitzAlan.
~1163 - 1243 Isabel de Aubigny 80 80 pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 3, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Isabel d'Albini had the Castle of Arundel in dowry, and her new Lordbecame its feudal Earl. Henry II, by a grant undated, but supposed tohave been in 1155, the year after his succession, confirmed to him asWilliam d'Albini, Earl of Arundel, the Castle of Arundel with all itsappurtenances, and by the same instrument confirmed to him the Earldom ofSussex. Arundel Castle was built by Alfred the Great and is mentioned inhis will. From him all the later Earls of Arundel are descended. CastleArundel is the present seat of the Earl of Norfolk, the premiere Duke ofGreat Britain. Many of the Earls are buried in Fitz Alan Chapel. Theoriginal Keep of the Castle remains and it is 100 feet high and issituated in a beautiful park.
~1165 - 1221 William D' Aubigny 56 56 pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

William de Albini, 4th earl, m. Mabel, second of the four sisters andco-heiresses of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, with whom he obtained greatlanded property. At he, however, died issueless in 1224, or, by somestatements, in 1233, his honours devolved upon his only brother, then inminority, Hugh de Albini, 5th earl. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.3, Albini, Earls of Arundel]

William (d'AUBIGNY), EARL OF ARUNDEL, by Mabel, 2nd daughter of Hugh (LE MESCHIN, styled also DE KEVELIOC), EARL OF CHESTER.   [Complete Peerage]

William de Albini, 4th earl, m. Mabel, second of the four sisters and co-heiresses of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, with whom he obtained great landed property. At he, however, died issueless in 1224, or, by some statements, in 1233, his honours devolved upon his only brother, then in minority, Hugh de Albini, 5th earl. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 3, Albini, Earls of Arundel]
~1160 - 1202 Aymer Taillefer 42 42 BET. 1160 - 1165 - 1245 Alix de Courtenay ~1130 - ~1180 Pierre France 50 50 1131 - ~1181 Orabella deQuincy 50 50 Conan IV Duke Of Brittany 1237 - 1298 William de Beauchamp 61 61 9th Earl of Warwick1268-1298 1120 - 1194 Aubrey deVere 74 74 Name Suffix:<NSFX> 1st Earl of Oxford ~0199 - 0298 Clodius III King of the Franks 99 99 1227 Isabel Maudit  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
D. 1268 William Maudit, Baron Maudit  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Baron Maudit; Earl of Warwick 1263 - 1268

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Baron Maudit; Earl of Warwick 1263 - 1268
Alice deNewburgh  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1140 - 1204 Waleran deNewburgh 64 64 Earl W Alice deHarcourt  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1134 - 1212 Petronilla Grentmesnil 78 78 1081 - 13 Feb 1130/1131 Isabel de Vermandois Thomas, Count of Savoy deMaurienne 1086 - ~1147 Isabel de Beaumont 61 61 Isabel? 1234 - 1310 Joan FitzBernard 76 76 ~0175 - 0272 Partherus King of the Franks 97 97 1164 Reginald deFonia 1138 - 1184 Beatrix Of Vienne 46 46 ~1380 - ~1430 Elizabeth FitzAlan 50 50 Married Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel, Sept 28 1359, Elizabeth Fitz Alan was a Knight of the Garter, being elected to that noble order in 1386. She was aged upwards of 50 in 1415, born ca. 1375,and died July 8, 1425. She married 1st in 1378 William de Montecute, Earl of Salisbury, who d. s. p. 1383; 2nd 1386 Thomas de Mowbray, who died1399; 3rd Robert Goushill, Knight, Lord of Hault Hucknall Manor in Derbyshire and Hoveringham in Notts; 4th Gerald Ufflete. ~1331 Isabel Eland 1249 - 1298 Humphrey Seventh Earl Of Hereford deBohun 49 49  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Married Maud de Fiennes in Pleshy Castle 1275

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Married Maud de Fiennes in Pleshy Castle 1275

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Married Maud de Fiennes in Pleshy Castle 1275

Humphrey de Bohun succeeded his grandfather as Earl of Hereford andEssex, and Lord High Constable of England. This nobleman, inheriting thehigh and daring spirit of his predecessors, often strenuously opposedmeasures of the court, and was therefore often in disgrace, but heappears at the close of his career to have regained royal favour, for wefind him attending the King into Scotland when that monarch, Edward I,obtained a great victory at Roxburgh. He married Maud, daughter of SirIngelram Fiennes.

Humphrey de Bohun succeeded his grandfather as Earl of Hereford andEssex, and Lord High Constable of England. This nobleman, inheriting thehigh and daring spirit of his predecessors, often strenuously opposedmeasures of the court, and was therefore often in disgrace, but heappears at the close of his career to have regained royal favour, for wefind him attending the King into Scotland when that monarch, Edward I,obtained a great victory at Roxburgh. He married Maud, daughter of SirIngelram Fiennes.
1154 - 12 Jan 1233/1234 Margaret de Beaumont pg 62, 65 & 70, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1239, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 42, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Margery Umfreville Alive 1272 16 Jan 1243/1244 - 1296 Edmund Crouchback Earl Of Lancaster Plantagenet 1281 - 1345 Henry Plantagenet 64 64 1282 - 19 Feb 1316/1317 Maud deChaworth 1215 - 1298 William deBeauchamp 83 83 Earl of Warwick 1268 -1298

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Earl of Warwick 1268 -1298
~0158 - 0253 Hilderic King of the Franks 95 95 1130 - 1190 Robert III Earl Of Leicester deBeaumont 60 60 Earl of Leicester 1125 Agnes Of Essex 1223 - 1272 Hawise deLondres 49 49 Eva deTracy Mrs Payne deChaworth Benedicta deBabington 1174 Alfonso II Count Of Provence 1279 - 1317 Margaret Princess Of France 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1140 - 1187 Walter Bolebec 47 47 pg 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1188 - 1246 Isabella de Taillefer 58 58  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

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T

T

DEAT PLAC Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-et-Loire, France

BURI PLAC Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-et-Loire, France
!BIR-MARR-DEATH: ROYAL ANCESTORS 10/88
!NAME-PARENTS-SPOUSE-CHILD:Gary Boyd Roberts, THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF 500
IMMIGRANTS;884-1952; publ 1993,Baltimore, Md. p 378
!NAME: Frederick Lewis Weis, MAGNA CHARTA SURETY; 1215; Third Edition;line
151-2. Jack Davis

Countess of Gloucester
Isabella was crowned Queen at Westminster Abby. Her first husband KingJohn of England was 3 2 and she was only 15. King John divorced his wife,Avisa, the granddaughter of the great Knig ht of the bend sinster, Robertof Gloucester, in order to marry Isabella.  Isabella was ofte n called theHelen of the Middle Ages.[FIX.ged]

Isabella was betrothed to Hugh before she married John, King of England.After John's death she retired to her native city and eventually marriedHugh after about 3 years.

pg 80, 106 & 132,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg lii, Burke's "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 4, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.H. Turton, published 1928

pg 545, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~0137 - 0213 Sunno King of the Franks 76 76 ~1206 Gilbert deLacey 1208 - 1258 John Justiciar Of Ireland FitzGeoffrey 50 50  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]


Sherriff Of yorkshire

Of shere and salford surrey; farnbridge essex, steeple claydon, quarrendon and aylesbury buckinhamshire; cherhill and winterslow wilts; potterpury and moulton northamption; moreton hampstead devon england

see weiss ancestral roots
cokayne complet peerage butkler p449

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]


Sherriff Of yorkshire

Of shere and salford surrey; farnbridge essex, steeple claydon, quarrendon and aylesbury buckinhamshire; cherhill and winterslow wilts; potterpury and moulton northamption; moreton hampstead devon england

see weiss ancestral roots
cokayne complet peerage butkler p449
1172 Aveline deClare  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
D. 1213 Geoffrey FitzPiers  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]


Justice Of the forest 1185-1189
In 1198 defeated the welsh at Castle Maud
With Archbishop Hubert and William Marshal he persuaded the magnates to swar feal;ty to king john

Sherriff at various times of northants essex herts staffordshire yorkshire bedford and bucks.

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]


Justice Of the forest 1185-1189
In 1198 defeated the welsh at Castle Maud
With Archbishop Hubert and William Marshal he persuaded the magnates to swar feal;ty to king john

Sherriff at various times of northants essex herts staffordshire yorkshire bedford and bucks.
D. <1198 Piers Lutesgarshale  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1194 Walter Walcheline deBeauchamp  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
William D' Estratlinges 1138 - ~1176 Maud deManDeville 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1137 - 1193 Maud (Matilde) de Saint Hilary 56 56  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~0120 - 0186 Farabert King of the Franks 66 66 1200 William de Chetwode 1186 - Feb 1223/1224 Hugh Le Bigod  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Earl of Norfolk

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Earl of Norfolk
de Beauchamp Hugh Bostoc 1676 Margaret Train Maude Basset 1099 - 1137 William X Lejeune Of Aquitaine 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~1255 - ~1305 Maud de Fiennes 50 50  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

married Humphrey de Bohun pleshy 1275

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

married Humphrey de Bohun pleshy 1275
1143 - 1182 Humphrey IV de Bohun 39 39 1190 - ~1237 Gundred deLa Ferte 47 47  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~0104 - 0166 Clodmir IV King of the Franks 62 62 1164 William deLa Ferte  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1166 Margaret deBriwere  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1183 - 1237 Payne deChaworth 54 54  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
Henry I, Duke Brabant 1158 Mrs Patrick deChaworth  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1155 Patrick deChaworth 1123 Payne deChaworth 1245 - 1302 Blanch Princess D' Artois 57 57 1216 - 8 Feb 1249/1250 Robert I Comte D' Artois  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1216 Mahout (Maud) Of Brabant  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~0106 - 0179 Hafilda Princess of the Rugij 73 73 1224 - 1288 Maud Mahaut Of Brabant 64 64  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1201 - 1235 Marie Princess Of Swabia 34 34  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~1207 - 1 Feb 1247/1248 Henry II Duke Of Brabant  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
23 Mar 1187/1188 - 1252 Blanca Princess Of Castile  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1187 - 1226 Louis VIII King Of France 39 39  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1244 - 1301 Guncelin de Badlesmere 57 57 Maurice FitzMaurice 1378 - 1415 Alice II Fitz Alan 37 37 Bet. 1280 - 1286 - 1333 Margaret deClare 1223 - 1291 Berenger Eleanor Countess Of Provence 68 68  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
<0100 - 0149 Marcomir IV King of the Franks 49 49 1198 - 1245 Raymond V Count Of Provence Berenger 47 47  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1201 - 1266 Beatrice Countess Of Savoy 65 65  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1165 - 1223 Phillip II Augustus King Of France 57 57 1170 - 15 Mar 1189/1190 Isabelle deHainault 1120 - 1180 Louis VII 60 60 1140 - 1206 Alix Adela Countess Of Champagne 66 66 1150 - 1195 Baldwin VIII Count Of Hainault 45 45 1135 - 1194 Marguerite Countess Of France 59 59 1214 - 1270 Louis IX King Of France 56 56 0858 Ludmilla Ragnhildus Von Friesland <0100 - 0128 Odomir King of the Franks 28 28 1014 - 1081 Adeliza Countess Meulent 67 67 1050 - 1102 Hugh The Great Crepi Of France 52 52 ~1208 - 1288 Henry de Trafford 80 80 1140 - 1179 Guillaume de Taillefer 39 39 1117 Margaret Turenne 1148 - 1205 Isabelle Elizabeth de Courtenay 57 57 1150 - 1221 Roger Bigod 71 71 Was a Magna Carta Surety in 1215

Roger Bigod, 2nd earl of Norfolk, who, in the 1st year of Richard I, had a charter dated at Westminster, 27 November, reconstituting him Earl of Norfolk and steward of the household, his lordship obtaining at the same time restitution of some manors, with grants of others, and confirmation of all his wide-spreading demesnes. In the same year he was made one of the ambassadors from the English monarch to Philip of France, for obtaining aid towards the recovery of the Holy Land. Upon return of King Richard from his captivity, the Earl of Norfolk assisted at the great council held by the king at Nottingham; and at his second coronation, his lordship was one of the four earls that carried the silken canopy over the monarch's head. In the reign of King John he was one of the barons that extorted the great Charters of Freedom from that prince, and was amongst the twenty-five lords appointed to enforce their fulfillment. His lordship m. Isabel, dau. of Hamelyn, Earl of Warrenne and Surrey, and had issue,



The earl d. in 1220 and was s. by his eldest son, Hugh Bigod, 3rd earl.

[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 53, Bigod, Earls of Norfolk]

----------

The Bigods held the hereditary office of steward (dapifer) of the royal household, and their chief castle was at Framlingham in Suffolk. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed, Vol. 3, pages 556/557, article Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk.)
1154 Ida(Isabel) Countess Plantagenet ~1150 - 1202 Hamelin deWarrenne Plantagenet 52 52 ~1145 - 1199 Isabel deWarenne 54 54 <0100 - 0114 Richemer King of the Franks 14 14 Adelia de Talvas 1144 - 1219 William Marshall 75 75 1171 - 1220 Isabel de Clare 49 49 Sara Selbey ~1136 - 1177 Aoife Eve Mc Murrough 41 41 0780 Waldrat D'orleans deHornbach Eleanor deChastellerault 1230 - BEF. 20 MAR 1300/01 Maud Matilda deBraose 28 Feb 1154/1155 - 1182 Henry Plantagenet England 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet 52 52 <0100 - UNKNOWN Ratherius King of the Franks 1155 - 1214 Alfonso VIII King Of Castile&Leon 58 58 1197 - 1253 Amadeo IV Count Of Savoy 56 56 Emmeline deLongespee ~1223 - 1276 Emmeline deRiDesford 53 53 pg 39, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1248 Thomas deClare ~1249 Julian FitzMaurice Bet. 1084 - 1090 - 1136 Richard FitzGilbert de Clare Lord of Clare

Richard de Clare, 3rd Earl of Clare, was born before 1105. He was createdEarl of Hertford about 1136 for his miltary services, and being one ofthose who lived by the power of his sword, entered Wales, there plantedhimself and became lord of vast territories, but was finally slain in askirmish with a few Welsh noblemen on April 15, 1136. He married Alice,daughter of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, who died in 1128, and marriedLucia, daughter of Algar, Earl of Mercia, son of Leofric and   "LadyGodiva." His lordship died 1139 and was succeeded by his eldest son,Gilbert, 2nd Earl of Hertford, who died in 1151, and having no issue wassucceeded by his brother,  Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford.
~1670 John Devou 1590 - 1665 Susanna Cranniwell 75 75 Thomas deLondres <0100 - UNKNOWN Antenor IV King of the Franks 1184 Maude de Clare De Fay Beatrice deSaye ~1145 - 1201 Margaret de Huntingdon 56 56 Enguerrand Segneur de Fiennes 1136 - 4 Mar 1187/1188 Humbert III Count Of Savoy 1244 - 1290 Eleanor Castile & Leon 46 46 1201 - 1252 Fernando III Alfonsez King Of Castile & Leon 50 50 1216 - 1279 Jeanne deDammartin 63 63 1180 - 1239 Simon II Count Of Aumale Dammartin 59 59 1180 GersindeII Countess Of Forcalquier 1152 - 1196 Alfonso I King Of Aragon 43 43 <0100 - UNKNOWN Clodemir III King of the Franks 20 Mar 1176/1177 Thomas I Count Of Savoy 1180 Beatrix Margaret Of Geneva 1130 William I Count Of Geneva Bauto of Franks 1231 - 1305 John I de Warenne 74 74 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1256 - 1285 William VI deWarenne 29 29 William was killed in a tournament December 15, 1285. 1264 - 1293 Joan deVere 29 29 Sources:  Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Desc., by M. R. D. vonRedlich.
     Foreword by Prof. Arthur Adams, Phd., pp. 120-1.

     Browning,  M. E. B., pp. 127, 227, 257.

     J. B. Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages,
     pp. 549 and 569.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1230 - 1296 Robert deVere 66 66 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Name Suffix:<NSFX> 5th Earl Of Oxford
1231 - 1317 Alica deSanford 86 86 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1184 - 1263 Hugh deVere 79 79 <0100 - UNKNOWN Marcomir III King of the Franks 1200 - ~1249 Gilbert deSanford 49 49 1164 - 1221 Robert deVere 57 57 1164 Isabel Bolebec 1185 - <1246 Rodger de Stapleton 61 61 BET. 1313 - 1314 - 1393 Nicholas de Goushill Robert Ryecc 1104 - 1157 Alfonso VII Piere Raymond King Of Castile&Leon 53 53 ~1131 - 1176 Richilda Of Poland 45 45 1210 - 1239 Isabel Bigod 29 29 daughter of Earl of Norfolk

pg 75, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 76, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 77, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 78, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 151, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1157 - 1219 Hugh IX de Lusignan 62 62 <0100 - UNKNOWN Clodius II King of the Franks 1159 Mathilde de Angouleme 1108 Berenguela Raimondo deBarcelona 1135 Sancho III Alfonsez King Of Castile&Leon 1139 - 1156 Blanche Garcia Princess Of Navarre 17 17 Marguerite Countess Of Savoy 22 Mar 1364/1365 - 1399 Thomas Mowbray Tompsett: and Lord Segrave, Earl of Nottingham, Lord Mowbray 6th. The two daughters eventually became the two co-heirs of the Dukedom of
Norfolk. The Complete Peerage conflicts with itself on which was the elder daughter. Under Ferrers Vol.V, p357 it says that Isabel was the eldest, but under Norfolk Vol.IX,p.610 note c it says that Margaret was probably older as her son inherited the title. Knight of the Garter. Lord Mowbray, Seagrave, and Stourtan.  Created Lord Nottingham 1383.  Lord Marshall of England 1384.  Duke of Norfolk.
1133 - 1394 Constance Of Castile 261 261 1158 - BET. 1194 - 1198 Margaret Princess Of France 1159 Alice AdelaidePrincess Of France 1179 William III Count Of Ponthieu 0919 - UNKNOWN Gautier I Count deVexin 1086 - 1125 Henry V Emperor Of Germany 38 38 1171 - 1230 Alfonso IX King Of Leon 59 59 ~1231 - 1282 Roger I Mortimer 51 51 Roger de Mortimer received all his father's lands (except those where hismother Gladuse was endowed). He was Captain General of all the king'sforces in Wales, but was overpowered by Llewelin, but owning toconsanguinity--he being Lewellin's nephew he was allowed to return to hiscastle. After accession of Edward I, he continued in royal favor. Hemarried Maud, daughter and heir of William de Braose of Brecknock. He hadseveral sons and when he died in 1282 was succeeded by his eldestsurviving son, Edmund. 1176 - 1224 Isabel Bassett 48 48 Unknown 1289 Thomas Goushill ~1291 Agnes Goushill 1265 - 1326 Walter Goushill 61 61 ~1267 Margery 1241 - >1268 John Goushill 27 27 Queen of the Franks Verica Adils Ottarsson 1239 - 1274 Henry I The Fat King Of Navarre 35 35 1145 Marie Princess Of France ~1200 - 1267 MathildePrincess Of Brabant 67 67 1165 - 1235 Henry I Duke Of Brabant 70 70 1163 - 1211 Maud D' Alsace 48 48 1190 - 1260 Marie Of Brabant 70 70 1142 - 1190 Godfrey III Duke Of Lorraine 48 48 1135 - 1172 Margaret Duchess Of Lorraine 37 37 ~1137 - 1214 Matthieu D' Alsace 77 77 0817 - 0850 Pepin Seigneur II Count of Perrone 33 33 ~1137 - 1182 Marie de Mortain 45 45 1125 MatildeCountess Of Savoy 1106 Alfonso I Henry King Of Portugal 1137 - 1188 Ferdinand II Alfonso King Of Leon 51 51 1234 Beatrix Of Provence 21 Mar 1226/1227 - 7 Jan 1284/1285 Charles I King Of Sicily 1148 Hugh III Duke Of Burgundy Alix Of Lorraine 1135 - 1191 John I Count Of Ponthieu 56 56 Annabella Selby 0797 - 0818 Bernard King of Italy 21 21 1141 Maud Mathilde Of Ponthieu ~1160 - 1200 Alberic II Count Dammartin 40 40 GarsindeCountess Of Forcalquier Raimon I deSabran Imaine Of Loos 1123 - 1190 Frederick I Barbarossa Emperor Of Germany 67 67 ~1124 Beatrix Countess Palatine Of Burgundy 1147 Philip II Emperor Of Germany BET. 1170 - 1185 Irene Maria Angelica ~1200 Beatrice Of Swabia 0500 - 0571 Ausbert the Senator of Moselle 71 71 1174 - 1213 Pedro II The Catholic King Of Aragon 39 39 1162 Beatrix Princess Of Vennois Bonifacio deSaluzzo ~1185 Daughter deSaluzzo Robert Corbet 1145 - 1197 Guglielmo I Marquis deCeva 52 52 ~0635 - ~0712 Idwal Iwrch ap Cadalladr of Anglessy 77 77 pg 434, Wurtz   Magna Charte Beatrice Princess Of Savoy 0714 - 0768 Pepin III of Neustria 54 54 Beatrice deSay James Holmes Robert D' Estratlinges Comonly called Stradling John D' Estratlinges Grecia Alice Briwere 1490 Robert Stronge Robert Ogle 1213 Walter Goushill ~1214 Matilda Hathersage 1168 Ralph Goushill 1150 Beatrice Sancha Princess Of Castile&Leon 1155 - 28 Jan 1199/1200 Isaac II Angelus Emperor Of The Byzantine Empire 0476 - 0506 Tonatius 30 30 1038 - 1081 Adeline Meulan 43 43 1144 - <1185 Irene 41 41 D. 1679 Faith Broun Gilbert D' Estratlinges ~1585 - 1633 William Warner 48 48 Inquest held 3 Sept. 1633, Ralph FitzBarnard ~1210 Joan Aquillon 1234 - 1296 Thomaso Marquis deSaluzzo 62 62 1180 Maria deTorres Comita II Justice deTorres Spella deArborea 0440 - UNKNOWN Tonatius Ferreolus Praetorian Perfect of Gaul Isabelle Princess of Aragon Elisa deEste Albert deEste ~1210 - 1268 Giorgio Marquis deCeva 58 58 Daughter deVento 1162 - 1203 Robert Goushill 41 41 Adele Ingram ~1135 Ernels de Goushill Agnes Goushill Avelina deFortibus 0410 - 0476 Ferreolus Tonatius 66 66 ~0640 - >0678 Chrodobertus II of Neustria 38 38 Bourgogne de Fontenay Wullgrin III Ponce de Angouleme ~1193 Berengria Alfonsez Walter Selby ~1170 - <1243 Walter Percy 73 73 ~1290 - ~1355 Mabel Hausket 65 65 1250 - ~1325 William I de Stanley 75 75 5th Lord of Stoneley, Knight of Forrest or Hooten. Married Joan de Bamville, eldest daughter of Sir Philip de Bamville, heiress of Stourton, by which alliance he became possessed of the manor and bailiwick of Wyrral Forest, near Chester, and thereupon assumed the armorial bearings used since by all branches of the family, viz., three stags' heads, or, on a bend, az. ~1261 - ~1330 Joan deBaumville 69 69 0454 - 0525 Dode 71 71 ~1245 - ~1295 Adam deStanlegh 50 50  Sir Adam Stanley was the 4th Lord of Stoneley. Name may have been Adam Walter or Walter Adam Stanley. John Wilkinson ~1145 - ~1194 William deStonelegh 49 49  Wiliam de Alditheley married Joan, daughter of Thomas de Stoneley, a kinsman of Sir Henry, and received with her as a dowry the manor of Thalk, in the same county. Afterwards he exchanged this estate with his cousin Adam for Stoneley and half of Balterly, and made Stoneley his family residence; and in honor of his lady, and the great antiquity of her family, of noble Saxon descent, who flourished many years before the conquest, he assumed the surname of Stanley, and became the recognized founder of the Stanley family. This was in the reign of Henry I, A.D. 1100-1135.

Wiliam de Alditheley married Joan, daughter of Thomas de Stoneley, a kinsman of Sir Henry, and received with her as a dowry the manor of Thalk, in the same county. Afterwards he exchanged this estate with his cousin Adam for Stoneley and half of Balterly, and made Stoneley his family residence; and in honor of his lady, and the great antiquity of her family, of noble Saxon descent, who flourished many years before the conquest, he assumed the surname of Stanley, and became the recognized founder of the Stanley family. This was in the reign of Henry I, A.D. 1100-1135.

Wiliam de Alditheley married Joan, daughter of Thomas de Stoneley, a kinsman of Sir Henry, and received with her as a dowry the manor of Thalk, in the same county. Afterwards he exchanged this estate with his cousin Adam for Stoneley and half of Balterly, and made Stoneley his family residence; and in honor of his lady, and the great antiquity of her family, of noble Saxon descent, who flourished many years before the conquest, he assumed the surname of Stanley, and became the recognized founder of the Stanley family. This was in the reign of Henry I, A.D. 1100-1135.
~1155 - ~1205 Joan deStonelegh 50 50 Herbert FitzPeter 23 Feb 1268/1269 - 1370 Thomas II deLathom  [Five Generations.FTW]

Note by Don Latham 1/1/99
Notes for Thomas Lemar de Latham. WFT CD 8 Ed., Tree #3563 estimates his birth as 1226-1267.

WFT CD 8, Ed 1, Tree #3563 lists death as September 14, 1370 and then lists him again with estimates of his death 1249-1346.

Note by Merv.S. Latham April 14,1999
"The Earls of Derby" by John J. Bagley says Sir Thomas Lemar, after serving as M.P. for Lancashire in 1324, fought with Edward III at Crecy as a knight-banneret.

Notes from Karen Fraser May 12, 1999.
From Lancashire Inquisitions, Henry VI - Charles I and Towneley's Abstracts. Inquisition preserved in the Duchy archives which is given in the Coucher Book of Whalley, vol. ii. p. 554, Chet. Soc. Vol. XI. The date of Sir Thomas de Lathom's death is there stated to have been 44 Edw. III viz., 17th September 1370.

Another reference- 24 years of age 18 Ed. 2, died 15 September 40 Ed. 3, 1366, according to Towneley's abstract of the Inq. of 8 Ric. 2, [ but probably September 17, 44 Ed. 3, 1370 vide Note to No 2116].

A copy of the Latin transcript from Lancashire Inquisitions from Karen Fraser May 17, 1999.
THOMAS DE LATHOM: 8 Ric. II (22nd February, 1385). (T. p.482, No. 2116 D. fo. 11)
Inquisitio capta apud Lanc: die Mercurii in 2a 7a 40me anno 8 R. II.
Juratores dicunt quod THOMAS filius ROBERTI DE LATHOME Chivaler tenuit die quo obiit manerium de Knowesley in hunc modum videlicet quod quidam Henricus de Bankwell Capellanus fuit seisitus de predicto manerio de dono predicti Roberti et predictum manerium dedit predicto ROBERTO DE LATHOM et KATHERINE uxori ejus ad vitam rem: predicto THOME filio predicti ROBERTI et heridebus de corpore suo ramanere JOHANNE sorori predicti Thome et heredibus de corpore &c: rem: rectis heredibus predicti ROBERTI DE LATHOM militis de D'no Duce Lancr: in capite ut de feodo Lyncoln per feod: unius militis et per servic: 15s per Annum et sectam cur: de Wy(d)nes de tribus septimanis in tres Item dicunt quod idem THOMAS filius ROBERTI tenuit predicto die quo obit Maner: de Childwall Anglesargh et quartam p'tem de Wrightington in feodo talliato (in margin, tent: de Johanne le Warre per servic: mil: et 14s6d per Annum) sibi et heredibus de corpore suo et Elianor: uxoris sue Idem THOMAS filius ROBERTI tenuit homagium et servitium Henrici Scaresbreck et homagium Roberti filii Anani de Parr pro tenementis in Parr &c: Et dicunt quod distus THOMAS filius ROBERTI obit die M'tis prox: post festum Exaltationis S'te Crucis Anno 40 E. 3 Et quod idem THOMAS filius ROBERTI non obit intestat: sed fecit Executor: Et dicunt quod ELLENA FILIA ET HERES thome filii THOME DE LATHOM mil: filii predicti THOME filii ROBERTI chivaler est consanguinea et propinquior heres predicti THOME filii ROBERTI DE LATHOM virtute taliac'onu predictorum et etatis unius Anni et unius mensis Et dicunt quod THOMAS DE LATHOM chivaler filius predicti THOME FILII PREDICTI roberti post decessum ipsius THOME patris sui in predicto manerio &c: intravit occupavit et proficua inde percepit per 12 Annos elaps: lunc prox: videlicet usq: ad obitum suum virtute talliac'onum predict: except: predicta quarta parte de Wrightington quam idem THOMAS filius THOME DE LATHOME miles non occupavit per tempus predict: pro eo quod idem THOMAS dedit dictam quartam p'tem manerii de Wrightington Edmundo (sis in MS.) fratri sua et heredibus  suis imperpetuum quiquidem EDWARDUS DE LATHOME occuupavit et modo occupat quartam p'tem supradictam Et post mortem predicti THOME DE LATHOME Chivaler venit THOMAS filius predicti THOME DE LATHOM mil: et intravit &c: except quarta parte &c: Et post mortem predicti THOME filii THOME mil: omni predicta &c: excepta quarta parte &c: seit. fuerunt in manu predicti Regis et Ducis causa minor: etat. ELLENE filie THOME DE LATHOM etpostquam seizinam venit ROGERUS FAZAKERLEGH et intravit predict Manerium et proficua recepit pro dimidio unius Anni a quo tempore predictus Johannes Rex et Dux seize: fecit.
-----------------
Author's note:
The foregoing may be compared with an abstract made from a copy of the same Inquisition preserved in the
duchy archives, which is given in the Coucher book of Whalley, vol. ii. p 554, Chet. Soc. Vol. XI. The date of Sir thomas de Lathom's death is there stated to have been 44 Edw. III., viz 17th September, 1370.
----------------
Townley's Abstracts of (Lancashire Inquisitions).

THOMAS DE LATHOM: 8 rIC. II (6th March 1385)
[T. p. 480, No. 2114. D. fo. 10]

Inquisitio capta apud Lancr: die Lune in 3a 7a 40e anno 8 R. 2 per sacramentum Willi'mi de Atherton Chivaler Rogeri de Pilkington Chivaler Ricardi de Torbocke Chgivaler Roberti de Eccleston Ade de Bickersteth Edwardi de Lathome Henrici de Scaresbrice Roberti de Dalton Willi'mi de Slene Thome filii Ricardi de Latham Nicholai de Atherton et Ade de Leaver Jur: Qui dicunt super sacramentum suum quod THOMAS filius THOME DE LATHOME miles defunct: langiudus fuit et decreptius per spatium quart: unius anbni ante obitum suum Et quod JOHANNA uxor predicti THOME filii THOME jucuent (sic, read jacuit) cum ROGERO DE FAZAKERLEGH adultero suo apud Knoweslegh in alta camera in lecto predicti THOME mariti sui et in aliis locis secrete et aperte ad voluntatem ipsius JOHANNE per spatiam dicti quart: Anni predict: THOMA marit: dicte JOHANNE in aula et cam'a continue jacente per predictum spatium Anni Et dicunt quod eadem Johanna recusav: venire attendens esse predicto Thome marito suo quando ipa 1 (sic in MS) placuit prout deberet esse secundum formam et ordinationem lib'i mariti (sic, maritagii) per spatium dicti quart: anni sed jacuit cum predicto Adultero suo ut predictum est per temp: predict: in magnum dispectum dicti THOME mariti sui que quidem JOHANNA nunquam reconciliata fuit vivente dicto THOMA marito suo post dictum adulterium et dicunt quod imediate post mortem predicti THOME filii THOME eadem JOHANNA misit corpus dicti THOME marit sui ad prioratum de Burscough ad sepelind: sine presentia sacerdot: vel aliquorum generosorum et seipsam existen: prignat: (sic in MS) cum predict adultero suo maritavit predicto Rogero adultero suo imediate post sepultur: dicti mariti sui factam in cujus rei testimoniu present: predicti Jur: sigilla sua apposuerunt.
1 Dodsworth has "ipsam".

Author's note. [not mine.]
Although these inquisitions afford no direct evidence as to which of Sir Thomas de Lathom's wives.......... [previously sent.]
After the tree, was the following;-
{T.p.89, No.254.}

Rex et Dux &c. Sciatis quod Johannes de Walton chivaler ...... p'donavimus eidem Johanni transgressionem quam fecit ducendo in uxorem Isabellam que fuit uxor Thome de Lathum filii Thome de Lathum militis defuncti et eidem Isabelle transgressionem quam fecit maritando se prefato Johanni Licentia nostra super hoc non obtenta. T. apud Lancr. vicesimo tertio die Septembris. [Anno 9 Rega. 1835.]

[T. p. 114, No. 363. D. fo. 75.]

Johannes Dux &c. Omnibus ad quos &c. Sciatis quod commisimus Johanni de Adelem et Ricardo de Longbarowe custodiam omnium terrarum et tenementorum que nuper in manum nostram post mortem thome de Lathum defuncti qui de nobis tenuit in Capite et ratione minoria etatis Ellene filie et heredis ejusdem Thome nuper infra etatem et in custodia nostra existent capta fuerunt et in manu nostra occasione predicta et post mortem ejusdem Ellene jam existent habendum a tempore mortis ejusdem Ellene quamdiu nobis placuerit reddendo inde annuatim nobis et heredibus nostris omnimodas redditus qui nobis de terris et tenementis predictis antequam in manum nostram ut premittitur capta et seisita fuerunt debiti extiterunt et reddi consueverunt et faciendo omnia onera eisdem terris et tenementis incumbentia et juste utando domos edificia et clausuras terrarum et tenementorum predictorum ac terras et tenementa predicta sine vasto et destructione custodiando quandiu custodiam habuerint predictam. In cujus &c. Teste Duce apud Lanc. 5 die Decembris.

A document quoted from the Rot. ..... [previously sent.]

[T. p. 86. No. 236.]

Rex et Dux &c. Sciatis quod per mancupationem Galfridi de Workesley chivaler Gilberti de Halsale Will'mi de Aghton Johannis de Holand de Sutton et Thome de Fasacreley Comissimus Rogero de Fasacreley ey Johanne uxori ejus Custodian tertie partis manerii de Huyton. T. apud Lancastr. vicesimo die Augusti. [Anno 8 Regal., 1384.]
~1176 - ~1250 Hamon IV Massey 74 74 ~1212 - ~1278 Hamon V Massey 66 66 ~1125 - ~1250 Agatha deTheray 125 125 D. 3 Mar 1605/1606 Anthony Paine Lord of The Manor of Nowton.
Anthony Paine son of William , married Martha Castell, who died June 28, 1603. He lived at Bury St. Edmunds, gentleman, and had the Manor of Nowton, settled upon him by his brother Henry . He died and was buried at Nowton, March 3, 1606. He left a will dated Feb.16 previous, in which he directed his body to be buried in the chancel of Nowton church, near his late wife-gave his house to his son William, also his nest of “bolls with cover all glit having the arms of the Countess of Oxford upon it,” etc. His wife’s wedding  ring he gave to Mary, daughter of Walter Paine; all the remainder of his estate he gave to his son William, whom he appointed sole executor. He had four children:

John, who married Frances Spring
Thomas, bap. Jan 16, 1563
William bap. Dec 2, 1565, married
Anne, bap  Jan 13,1560 married William Weston.

The manor of Nowton which Anthony had received by devise fron his brother Henry, was by him left to young Anthony, son of John, who had died before his father. This, young Anthony conveyed to his uncle William, who thereby  became, as he is described in the Visitation, “Lord of the Manor of Nowton.”
D. 0895 Horda- Knut Sigurdsson ~1240 - 1280 Philip Bamville 40 40 ~1210 - ~1260 Thomas Bamville 50 50 ~1210 - ~1260 Agnes Magister 50 50 ~1150 - ~1212 Alexander Magister 62 62 ~1180 - ~1230 Annabella Sylvester 50 50 ~1237 - 1283 Joan deQuincy 46 46 ~1250 - ~1310 Pulford 60 60 ~1251 Robert Massey 1245 - 20 Feb 1313/1314 Alianore de Bohun ~1276 Richard II Massey 0890 - 0941 Gorm del Gammel 51 51 Gorm, the Old, so called from the length of his reign. He married the beautiful Thyra Dannebod (Ornament of Denmark), daughter of Harold Klak.They had twin sons, Knud and Harold, rivals in glory. Knud was thefavorite of his father, and had been absent sometime, and the Kingfearing his death had vowed to kill the one that brought the news of hisdeath. Finally the notice of his death was given and the Queen, notrisking to tell it to the King, made all the courtiers observe an unusualsilence at the table and had the apartment covered with black. Guessingthe reason, Gorm cried out: "Surely Knud, my dear son, is dead as all Denmark is mourning." "Thou sayest so, not I." answered the Queen; upon which the King sickened with grief and died in a good old age, in 941.

Gorm, the Old, so called from the length of his reign. He married thebeautiful Thyra Dannebod (Ornament of Denmark), daughter of Harold Klak.They had twin sons, Knud and Harold, rivals in glory. Knud was thefavorite of his father, and had been absent sometime, and the Kingfearing his death had vowed to kill the one that brought the news of hisdeath. Finally the notice of his death was given and the Queen, notrisking to tell it to the King, made all the courtiers observe an unusualsilence at the table and had the apartment covered with black. Guessingthe reason, Gorm cried out: "Surely Knud, my dear son, is dead as allDenmark is mourning." "Thou sayest so, not I." answered the Queen; uponwhich the King sickened with grief and died in a good old age, in 941.
1220 - 1265 Humphrey de Bohun 45 45 Humphrey de Bohun was a very distinguished person among the rebellious barons in the reign of Henry III. In the 41st of that monarch, 1263, hewas excommunicated with Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, and othersfor plundering divers churches and committing sacrilege. He was after wards one of the commanders at Lewes, where the King was made prisoner, and was constituted Governor of Goodrich and Winchester Castles. In the year following he commanded the infantry at the Battle of Evesham, where he fell into the hands of the Royalists, and was sent prisoner to Beeston Castle in Cheshire, where he soon afterwards died,leaving issue by his wife Eleanor, daughter of William de Braose, of Brecknock, and co-heir of her mother Eve, one of five daughters of William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke. Source: Burkes Peerage 1200 - 1275 Humphrey de Bohun 75 75 1174 - 1264 Roger deQuincy 90 90  2nd Earl of Winchester ~1166 Isabel de Ferrers  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1230 - 1246 Eleanor de Braose 16 16 1208 - 1241 Maud de Lusignan 33 33 James Hawsket 1279 - 1375 Hawise Muscegros 96 96 ~1610 Anne Ayers Anne was noted in the will of Thomas Ayres of the Parish of Froome in Somersetshire, England. Extract: Testamentum nuncupativum Thome Ayers, Parish of Froome in the County of Somersetshire, broadweaver, 14 january 1638. To the church.., to the poor...,dept due from Nathan Doale of Brooke in Wilts..., Symon Ayers will have dept for his own use..... goods to Simon Ayers and William Ayers..., a moiety to Simon Ayres children...., a cupboard to Anne ayers, daughter of Simon Ayers..., Witness John Lacie and Richard Eyers... Commission issued forth 20 March 1638 to Mary Ayers the relict.  Source: Gen. Glen. in England page 77.

Came to New England on the ship " Increase", 15 April 1635.  Simon Ayers 48, Dorothy Ayers 38, Marie Ayers 15, Thomas Ayers 13, Simon Ayers jr. 11, Rabecca Ayers 9, Christian Ayers 7, Anna Ayers 5, Beniamin Ayers 3, Sara Ayers 3 months. Source: Hottens Original Lista of Persons of Quality 1600 - 1700 pages 65-66., Result of some researches among the British Archives for information relative to the founders of New England made in the years 1858, 1859, 1860. By. Samuel Drake. Pages 26-27., Passengers to America, By. Michael Tepper, Pages 24-25.
Simon Ayers Found in Banks Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England, 1620 - 1650.,
Page 157.
~1206 - ~1246 Eva Marshall 40 40 1127 Millicent de Marla 1271 - 1324 John deFerrers 53 53 ~1307 - 1349 Hugh Hamon Massey 42 42 ~1230 - ~1280 Alice de Lusignan 50 50 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1178 - 1260 Hawise deQuincy 82 82 ~1246 - >1296 James Shirley 50 50 James de Shirley; married 1st well before 1280 Agnes and had a daughter(Isabella married c1296 William de Yeaveley); married 2nd by 1280Isabella, widow of John de Brunston, and died in or after 1296 leaving byher [Sir Ralph].  [Burke's Peerage]

Note: All 40 other lineages in World Connect have Agnes as mother of SirRalph and do not even mention the 2nd wife Isabella, widow of John deBrunston.  I will doggedly follow Burke's lead until better evidencesurfaces.
~1174 - 1247 Alice Agnes deMeschines 73 73 1225 - 1258 Margaret deQuincy 33 33 1239 - 1279 Robert deFerrers 40 40 Robert was the 8th and last Earl of Derby, who was totally disinheritedof Derby by Parliament for his activities with other barons against KingHenry III. Robert died 1279. ~1252 - 1280 Robert deMuscegros 28 28 1232 - 1275 John de Muscegros 42 42 1038 - 1094 Sancho Ramirez V King of Aragon 56 56 ~1234 - <1301 Cecily Dulcia Avenal 67 67 Robert deMuscegros D. BEF. 29 JAN 1253/54 Hawise Malet Sir William Avenal D. ~1216 Sir William II Malet  Lord Of Curry,Malet Somerset Alice Basset 1196 - 1245 Helen MacDonald 49 49 1170 Alan Lord Galloway MacDonald 1174 Helen deL'Isle ~1347 - ~1380 Alice Massey 33 33 1145 - 1215 Robert deTregoz I Sheriff Of Wiltshire 70 70 Robert became prominent because he acquired immense wealth by hismarriage. He took to wife Sibilla, daughter and heiress of Robert deEwyas, Lord Ewyas of Harold Ewyas in Hertfordshire, and in 9th of RichardI, had a suit with Herminus de Braton for the advowson of Braton churchin Norfolk, part of her vast inheritance. But it appears, though dulymarried, a strange contest arose in the 11th of King John regarding her;when William de Newmarket was summoned to show by what right he claimedto wife her who was Robert Tregoze's wife; for it appears that Richard Ihad given her to Tregoze in marriage. Whereupon Newmarket came and saidthat he had married her in the time of Richard I by gift of Robert deEwyas, her father. It is very certain, however, that Tregoze hadsufficient power to retain the heiress, for in 14 of King John theyrecovered lands in Somerset, in the right of Sibella. Meanwhile SirRobert de Tregoze was High Sheriff of Wiltshire, 3rd of Richard I, and inthree years afterwards was engaged in the expedition made into Normady.In first of John 1200 he gave the King 200 marks in silver to havegranted to him the wardship of the heir and lands of Geoffrey Hose, andin the 7th of John, 1206, on collecting scutage of that King's reign,answered 38 marks for 19 knight's fees, belonging to the honour of Robertde Ewyas, his father-in-law. He died about 1212. Sibilla, his wife,survived him and married 2nd Roger de Clifford and died 1236. They hadtwo sons, daughter. Hugh Meschines Margred Verch Dafydd Henry Salusbury Nest Verch Cynwrig D. 7 Mar 1288/1289 John Salusbury Catrin Seymour Thomas Salusbury  Knight of the Holy Sepulchre Cecily Joyce Mandeville Dafydd Ap Cynwrid Ap Philip Pheidan Cynrig Vychan Ap Cynwrig Ap Ithel Vychan D. UNKNOWN Maurette deSalins Cynwrig Ap Ithel Vychan Ithel Vychan Lord Of Montyn Lord Of St Maur Seymour Sir William Mandeville Alexander de Salusbury Adam deSalzburgh Joyce dePontefract William dePontefract Adam deSalzburgh  Came to England with William the Conkerer X deSalzburgh 1132 - 1184 Gerard I Count of Macon & Vienne 52 52 1176 - 1275 Henry V deBohun 99 99 Henry de Bohun, Surety for the Magna Charta, was in reality the first Earl of Hereford of this family, being so created by charter of King John dated April 28, 1199, but the Constableship he inherited from his father.His lordship, taking part with the barons against King John, had his land sequestered, but it was restored to him at the signing of the Magna Charta at Runnemede, the earl being one of the 25 lords appointed thereto enforce the observance of the celebrated charters. His lordship was subsequently excommunicated by the Pope, and he became a prisoner at theBattle of Lincoln, 1st of Henry III, 1216. He married Maud, daughter ofGeoffrey Fitzpiers. The Complete Peerage vol.V,p134. 1090 - 1147 Frederick II Hohenstaufen de Swabia 57 57 Eberhard Duke Of Eastern Bavaria  Deposed duke of Eastern Bavaria Maria deWarrington Meurig Ap Dafydd Dafydd Ap Llowarch Llowarch Ap Iorwerth Gam Iorwerth Gam Ap Cynddelw Cynddelw Ap Rhys Rhys Ap Edryd Ap Nathan Ap Japheth Edryd Ap Nathan Ap Japheth Ap Carwed Nathan Ap Japheth Ap Carwed 1136 - UNKNOWN Humbert deMaurienne III Count of Savoy Jepheth Ap Carwed Ap Marchudd Carwed Ap Marchudd ~1240 Hawise Corbet ~1310 - ~1360 Henry deHoton 50 50 ~1280 - ~1330 William deHoton 50 50 ~1250 - ~1300 William deHoton 50 50 ~1129 - ~1216 Hamon III Massey 87 87 ~1140 - ~1225 Hamon II Massey 85 85 ~1135 - ~1185 Ralph FitzAlan Sylvester 50 50 ~1110 - ~1170 Alan Sylvester 60 60 0953 - 0999 Vermundo II King of Leon 46 46 ~1350 Katherine Margery Leftwich ~1340 - ~1400 William deHooton 60 60 ~1140 Eleanor Beaumont 1364 - ~1430 Margery deHooton 66 66 ~1200 Joanna de Clinton ~1218 Sewallis de Shirley Sewallis de Shirley; Coroner of Derby 1242, as which is recorded as being"insufficiens" (i.e. Not up to the job? or perhaps overworked with toomany cases).  [Burke's Peerage] 1095 Susannah Verch Gryffydd Ap Cynan Eva Verch Betrws Ap Ednowain Bendew 1091 - 1160 Madog Ap Meredydd Ap Bleddyn Ap Cynfyn 69 69 D. >1281 Heilwyn Ap Tudur Ap Ednyfed Vychan 1180 - 1209 GersindeII De Sabran Countess Of Castelrad 29 29 Adles Verch Richard Ap Cadwalladr Ap Griffith D. >1281 Tudor Ap Ednyfed Vychan Richard Ap Cadwalladr Ap Griffith Ap Cynan D. 1172 Cadwalladr Ap Griffith Ap Cynan Evan Ap Gruffydd Ap Madog Ddu Gryffydd Ap Madog Dhu Madog Dhu Eva Verch Gruffydd Ap Dafydd Ap Tudur Gruffydd Ap Dafydd Ap Tudur Ap Madog Madog Ap Iarddur 1152 - 1196 Alfonso II "The Chaste" King of Aragon 44 44 Annes Verch Bleddyn Ap Owen Brogontyn D. >1218 Bleddyn Ap Owen Brogyntyn Owen Brogyntyn Ap Madog Ap Meredydd Gwenllian Verch Lord Rhys Ap Gruffydd Ap Rhys <1439> Elizabeth Bosvile ~1493 - 1575 Joan Aune (Anne) 82 82 <1435> Thomas Anne Morfydd Verch Rhys Ap Meredydd Ap Tewdwr Mawr Eva Verch Rhys Ap Gruffudd Ap Rhys Ap Tudur Mawr of Penrhyn Lord Of Llechwedd Uchaf Iarddur 1106 - UNKNOWN Raimond Berenger IV Count of Provence Angaharad Verch Meredydd Ap Maelgwn ~1426 Peter Middleton ~1458 Joan Harrington Gwenllian Verch Conan Ap Owen Gwynedd Gryffydd Ap Cynan ~1457 Richard Peck Margaret Verch Gwyn Ap Griffith Bran Lord of Menai Dafydd Ap Tudur Ap Madog Ap Iarddur Margaret Verch Einion Ap Siessylt 1130 - 1185 Richilda Silesia of Poland 55 55 Einion Ap Siessylt Lord of Mathafarn Siessylt Eva Verch Madog Ap Urien Ap Les Ap Idnerth Benfr Jonet Verch Howel Ap Madog Ap Iorwerth Gwenhwyfer Verch Gruffydd Maelor Nest Verch Iorwerth Ap Llewellyn Ap Gwilim Llowarch Ap Bran, Lord Of Menai Tudur Ap Madog Ap Iarddur 1047 - 1132 Meredydd Ap Bleddyn Ap Cynfyn, Prince Of Powys 85 85 ~1025 Haer Verch Cynillin 1134 - 1158 Sancho III King of Castile 24 24 0982 Angharad Verch Maredydd Queen Of Wales 0738 - 0825 Gwriad Ap Elidir 87 87  King Of Gwynedd Of Man 0770 - BET. 771 - 855 Esyllt Verch Cynan 0745 - 0818 Cynan Dindaethwy Ap Rhodri 73 73 0742 Nest Verch Cadell 0740 - ~0809 Cadell II Ap Brodwell King Of Powys 69 69 0690 - BET. 715 - 815 Rhodri Molwynog Ap Idwal 0938 - 0999 Meurig Ap Dyfarwallon Ap Arthen Ap Seisyllt 61 61 0943 Mrs Maredudd Ap Owain 0764 - 0843/0844 Merfyn Ap Gwriad King Of Powys
Frych the Freckl
1105 - 1159 Wladislav II 54 54 >0800 - 0877 Rhodri Mawr Ap Mervyn 77 77 The Great Prince Of Wales

Also known as Roderick the Great

[Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged]

Also known as Roderick the Great
0890 Llewellyn Ap Merfyn Ap Rhodri Mawr Elidir Ap SanddeAp Alewyn Ap Tegig Matilda Of Flint 0865 Rheingar Verch Unknown 0887 - 0950 Hywel Ap Cadell Llewellyn 63 63 Prince of Wales 0890 - 0913/0987 Elen verch Llywarch Cadell Ap Brochwell Ysgythrog 0978 - 1023 Cynvyn Brenin Ap Gwerystan 45 45 1025 - 1075 Bleddyn Ap Cynfyn, Prince of Powys 50 50  [Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged]

[Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged]
1087 - 1113 Sbyslava- Svyatopolkovna Princess Of Kiev 26 26 2nd Wife 0825 Angharad Verch Meurig  [Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged]

[Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged]

[Lloyd 1885 Pedigree.ged]
0857 - 0942 Anarawd Ap Rhodri Mawr 85 85 Prince Of Gwynedd 0847 - 0910 Cadell Ap Rhodri Mawr 63 63 King Of South Wales D. 0900 Merfyn Ap Rhodri Mawr King Of Powys ~0917 Angharad verch Llewelyn 0950 Gwerystan Ap Gwaithfoed Fawr 0920 Gwaithfoed ap Gwrhydyr  Lord of Powys 0925 Morfydd Verch Ynyr Ddu Ynyr Ddu King of Gwent 0989 - 1033 Gizella of Bavaria 44 44 1235 - 1294 Alice deBohun 59 59 Brochwell Ysgythrog ~0954 Nest verch Cadell Ap Brochwell Ysgythrog 1062 Almodis Countess La Marche Adam deStaveley 1062 - 1139 Robert de Ferrers 77 77 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Robert de Ferrers, having contributed, at the head of the Derbyshire men,to King Stephen's victory over King David of Scotland at Northallerton(commonly called the battle of the Standard), was created by that monarchEarl of Derby. By Hawise his wife, he had William who d. s. p.; Roberthis successor; Walcheline, of Okeham; Isolda, m. to Stephen de Beauchamp;and Maud, m. to Bertram de Verdon. The earl d. in 1139 and was s. by hisson, Robert de Ferrers, as 2nd Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 196, Verdon, Earls of Derby]
1603 - 19th of February 1639 John Caldwell John Caldwell who married Mary Sweetenham, the archive in public records office (NI) ref T808 15073 reads."John Calwell of Enniskillen in the county of Fermanagh born in Preston in Ayr Scotlandson of William of Straiton.
First wife daughter of Greer....in.....by whom he had issue: John Caldwell his eldest son and yet unmarried.
He took a second wife, Mary daughter of Anthony Sweetenham of Shadwicks in Cheshire, England, gentleman and his wife Elizabeth daughter of John Hocknell of Hocknell Plott in Cheshire by which Mary he had four sons James, Roger, John and Robert and a daughter Judith all young and unmarried in 1640. The first mentioned John died at Dublin on Ash Wednesday 19th of February 1639 and was interred at St Audeons in Dublin."
1080 - 1155 William Peverel 75 75 The Younger de Nottingham 1088 - 1149 Avice de Lancaster 61 61 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1058 - 1102 Roger The Poitevin La Marche 44 44 1030 Unknown La Marche 1124 - UNKNOWN Bourgogne deRancon Countess Fontenay 1030 - 1072 Ranulph dePeverel 42 42 1073 Ingelrica Maud 1006 Ingelric Of England 1036 - 1088 Henry de Ferrers 52 52 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Henry Ferrers, son of Walchelin, assumed the name from Ferriers, a small town of Gastinois, in France, otherwise called Ferrieres, from the iron mines with which that country abounded, and, in allusion to the circumstance, he bore for his arms "six horses' shoes," either from the similitude of his cognomen to the French Ferrier, or because the seigneurie produced iron, so essential to the soldier and cavalier in those rude times when war was esteemed the chief business of life, and the adroit management of the steed, even amongst the nobility, the first of accomplishments. Henry de Ferrers came into England with the Conqueror and obtained a grant of Tutbury Castle, in the county of Stafford. According to Stapleton, he was ancestor of the Oakham house of Ferrers,whose memory is preserved by the horseshoes hanging in the hall of their castle. He m. Bertha, and had issue, Robert, his heir; Eugenulph,who d. s. p.; and Walkelin, of Radbourne. Source: John Burke, Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. III, R. Bentley, London, 1834-1838, p. 127, Ferrers, of Baddesley Clinton Source: Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p.196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby

Custom Field:<_FA#> SIR
1054 - Bet. 193 - 1149 Agnes deMortaigne 1037 - 1090 Robert deMortaigne 53 53 1039 Maude De Montgomery Roger deMontgomery Mabel deAlencon 0893 - 0931 Hildebrante Princess Of France 38 38 0900 - 0951 Ramiro II King of Leon 51 51 1044 Paula Of Maine LiegardePrincess Of France  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

daughter of Robert I of France
Herbert II Count Of Vermandois  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

succeeded 902 AD
~1120 - ~1170 Margaret deGloucester 50 50 0993 - 1016 Edmund Ironside King Of England 23 23  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England 1016

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England 1016

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England 1016
0943 - 0975 Edgar The Peaceable King Of England 32 32  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

King of England, 959-975
~0920 - 0996 Richard II The Good Duke Of Normandy 76 76  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Duke of Normandy

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Duke of Normandy

D

D
~0900 - 0942 Wiiliam I Longsword Of Normandy 42 42  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Ricahrd I, Duke of Normandy

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

Ricahrd I, Duke of Normandy
Bertha deBraose  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
Joyce deBaladon Elizabeth Hulston Gwrhydyr ap Caradoc Edward D' Estratlinges Sir. Edward Esterling was one of the thirteen knights who in the time of King Willm Rufus went into Wales for the subdoing of Glanorganshire and for his good service had St.Donates castle and Mannor given him, where Knightly and noble family hath hithtofor continued and bare for their Armes: Paly of Six, Argent and Azure on a bend Gules, three Cinquefoiles Or. 1150 Eunice deBaalun 1035 Roger dePitres 1125 Drew deBaalun 1125 Mrs Drew deBaalun 0990 Thureyitel Neufmarche 1055 - 1080 Osbern FitzRichard 25 25 1030 - 1067 Richard Fitz Scrob 37 37 1030 Wife Of Richard FitzScrob 1140 - 16 Mar 1181/1182 Henry deEu 1011 - 1063 Grufydd Ap Llewellyn 52 52 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 0980 - 1021/1023 Llywellyn Ap Seisyllt 0938 Seissyllt Ap Ednywain 0913 Ednowain 0940 Trawst verch Eliseg 0885 - 0942 Eliseg Ap Anarawd Ap Rhodri Mawr 57 57 0900 Mrs Elise Ap Anarawd 0861 Mrs Anarawd Ap Rhodri 0917 Adele Princess Of Normandy ~0870 - 0932 Rollo Duke Of Normandy 62 62 1088 - UNKNOWN Emma of Blois Thorold I Of Lincoln 0947 - 1000 Elfrida(Elfthryth) Queen Of England 53 53 0922 - 0944 Elgiva Queen Of England 22 22 0922 Ordgar Ealdorman Thored Ealdermann Gunnarsson Gunnor 0927 Mrs Ordgar Ealdorman Ralph Bracebridge 0911 - 0987 Herbastu deCrepon 76 76 0916 Cyrid Herbastus deCrepon 0975 - UNKNOWN Damas I deSemur-en- Brionnais 0878 Sporte Liutgarda deBretagne Poppa Duchess Of Normandy Hubert Count Of Senlis 0933 - 0996 Richard I Of Normandy 63 63 Allan III Count Of Brittany 0915 - 0958 Adela de Vermandois 43 43 0969 - 1008 Matilda Countess Of Flanders 39 39 0925 - 0993 Conrad I King Of Burgundy 68 68 BET. 943 - 948 - 26 Jan 0981/0982 MatildePrincess Of The Franks 0921 - 0954 Louis IV King Of The Franks 33 33 0990 Aremburge deBourgogne 0890 Gilbert Duke Of Lorraine 0990 - 1037 Eudes Otto II Count Of Blois 47 47 BET. 973 - 997 - 10 Mar 1039/1040 Ermengarde Of Auvergne 0945 - 0995 Eudes Odo I Count Of Blois 50 50 0962 - ~1010 Bertha Of Burgundy 48 48 BET. 1010 - 1029 - 1085 Bertha Of Blois <0904 Theobald II Count Of Blois ~0915 Luitgarde De Vermandois ~0860 - 0904 Theobald Viscount Of Troyes 44 44 0888 Richilde Of Bourges 12 Jan 1254/1255 - 1285 William deWarenne William was killed in a tournament December 15, 1285. 0965 - 1016 Gerberga Of Burgundy 51 51 D. 1036 Herbert I Count Of Maine ~0883 - 0942 Idwal ap Anarawd 59 59 0994 Uchtred Earl Of Northumberland 0885 - 0931 Gorm del Gammel 46 46 ~1290 - 1324 Nicholas de Percy 34 34 ~0913 - 0987/0988 Owen Ap Howel Ddu  King Of South Wales 0938 - 0998/0999 Meredydd Ap Owen Ap Howel Ddu Prince of Deheubarth
Sources: A. Roots 176; Young; Kraentzler 1408; Dictionary of National Biography. Anst. Roots 7th Ed.: Maredudd ap Owain. Young: Maredudd, prince of Gwynedd and Deheubarth, died 999.
~0966 Boso Count Of Provence 0942 - 1026 Adela Blanca D' Anjou 84 84 1120 - 1194 Aubrey deVere III Earl of Oxford 74 74 D. 1032 Robert I Count Of Auvergne Ermengarde Of Arles D. ~1016 William IV Count Of Auvergne Humberge D. 0989 Robert II Viscount Of Auvergne Angelberg Dame deBeaumont 0955 - 0994 William I Count Of Provence 39 39 Constance Of Vienne Rudolph II King Of Burgundy Bertha Queen Of Swabia 1757 - 1826 Philip Heustis 69 69 1143 - 1220 Humphrey IV deBohun 77 77 Humphrey was Earl Hereford and Constable of England in right of hismother, if the chronicles of Lathony be correct. His lordship marriedMargaret of Scotland (daughter of Henry, Earl of Huntingdon, and Ada deWarren; son of David I, King of Scotland, and Maud; daughter of Waltheofand Judith; daughter of Adelaide; sister of William, the Conqueror).David I of Scotland was son of Malcolm III, King of Scotland, andMargaret, princess and heiress of the Saxon royal line. Thus bringing into the de Bohun family the royal English, Saxon, Scottish, French and Dukes of Normandy. ~1228 Isabelle deArches 1375 - 1412 William Stradling 37 37 1377 - 1429 Isabel Saint Barbe 52 52 1345 - 1394 Edward Stradling 49 49 1342 - 1401 Gwenllian Berkerolles 59 59 1318 - 1381 Edward Stradling 63 63 1322 - 1385 Eleanor Strongbow Stradling 63 63 1299 - 1357 Peter Stradling 58 58 1302 - 1363 Joan deHalweia 61 61 John D' Estratlinges 1055 - 1088 William deWarenne Ist Earl of Surrey 33 33 William de Warren married Gundred, 4th daughter of William, theConqueror, and his wife Matilda of Flanders. (It has been said thatGundred was not the daughter of William, the Conqueror, but that she wasthe daughter of Matilda of Flanders by, perhaps, a previous marriage. TheInvincible Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 5, p. 26, says that the inseription onGundred's tombstone describes her as wife of William de Warren anddaughter of Wm., the Conqueror. Also in Burke's Dormant and ExtinctPeerage, pp. 154, 568 and 588, she is called daughter by Wm., theConqueror, in a charter signed by Wm., William de Warren and Henry I, sonof William, the Conqueror. Thus proving this much discussed question. E.E. W.) For the important part that William de Warren took in the Conquestof England he received 300 lordships in the counties of Salop, Essex,Suffolk, Oxford, Hants, Cambridge, Bucks, Norfolk, Lincoln and York.

Ancestry shown differs from that shown by Cokayne in "The CompletePeerage",
and follows "Aspects of Robert of Torigny's genealogies revisted";"Nottingham
Medieval Studies,xxxvii,1993,pp.21-27; as cited by A.B.Wilson andS.Baldwin
<abwilson@uclink2.berkeley.edu>. The Complete Peerage vol.XIIpI,p.493-495.
Thomas Hawey Esqr. 1298 - 1367 Gilbert Stradling 69 69 Esqr. 1299 - 1366 Alice Elizabeth Garnon 67 67 Aka:Garmon Richard Garnon 1340 John Saint Barbe Esqr. 1334 - 1401 Margaret Longland 67 67 1298 Hugh Longland 1302 Margaret deFurneaux 1264 - 1316 Matthew deFurneaux 52 52 1266 Matilda Maud deRalegh 1240 - UNKNOWN Hugh deLusignan Xii Count of Marche 1245 - 1294 Warin deRaleigh 49 49 1245 Joanna Boteler 1195 Simon deRalegh 1200 Ela deRegny 1170 Miles deRegny 1234 Albert deFurneaux 1211 - 1293 Matthew deFurneaux 82 82 1174 - 1216 Henry deFurneaux 42 42 1182 Joan FitzWilliam 1150 Henry deFurneaux D. UNKNOWN William Taillefer IV Count of Angouleme 1152 Elizabeth FitzWilliam ~1180 - 1236 Maud Fitz Geoffrey 56 56 1239 - 1307 Edward I England 67 67 1207 - 1272 King Of England Henry III Plantagenet 65 65 Was 9 years old when he was made King by the death of his father KingJohn.

October 28, 1216 crowned King of England.

Henry was crowned King at the age of nine after the death of his FatherKing John in 1216. The kingdom was ruled by William Marshall, Earl ofPembroke, the regent while Henry was growing up. When Marshall died in1219, Hubert de Burgh ruled until 1232, when Henry assumed the throne."The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.

Henry III was born in 1207 and succeeded his father John on the throne of England in 1216. It was a ravaged inheritance, the scene of civil war and anarchy, and much of the east and south eastern England was under the control of the French Dauphin Louis. But Henry had two great protectors---his liege lord the Pope, and the aged William Marshal.



Trouble soon came, as Hubert attempted to re-asert royal authority. Barons, who had kept their castles undistrubed and exercised their powers without supervison, were now called to account to the haughty justiciar, and the party of Peter des Roches did not fail to underline the annoyances involved. The years 1223-4 were taken up with quelling rebellions.

Meanwhile the situation abroad was even more disturbing: the French king Philip Augustus was eating up English lands in Gascony, and Henry's mother Isabella made a bad situation worse by her marriage with Count Hugh of Lusignan. It was only in 1230 that a badly prepared English force set out for France and, after much squabbling, all it was able to do was make a demonstration march through Gascony.

Hubert had already had one dismal failure in Wales in 1228, and his arrogant attempts to build up a personal base in the Marches provoked a Welsh raid in 1231 which did more harm to his good name. Hubert was thrust out of power, to be replaced by Peter des Roches' Poitevins. But by 1234 they had upset the baronage of England, who had never taken kindly to foreigners other than the Normans, and Richard Marshal combined with Edmund of Abington, Archbishop of Canterbury, to force the King to replace them.

Henry now began his period of personal rule, and the world was to see what sort of king he would make. He was a simple, direct man, trustful on first impression, but bearing a life-long grudge when people let him down. At times lavish and life-loving, he could show another side of his nature, that wicked Angevin temper and streak of vindictive cruelty. He had a very refined taste, and enjoyed building and restoration work more than anything else. Surrounded by barons who had been proved in the hardest schools of war, the King had the spirit of an interior decorator; the nation could have born the expense of his artistic tastes, could have forgiven the eccentricity of it all, but Henry showed time and again that he was timorous as well as artistic. He feared thunderstorms, and battle was beyond him.

The Crown had some 60 castles in England, and these were in a bad state after the troubles of John's reign and the minority. Henry travelled about tirelessly rebuilding them and making them more comfortable, spending at least ten per cent of his income on building works. He personally instructed his architects in great detail, and could not wait for them to finish---it must be ready for his return 'even if a thousand workmen are required every day' and the job must be 'properly done, beautiful and fine.' In addition he built or restored twenty royal houses, decorating them sumptiously. The painted chamber at Westminster was 80 ft. long, 26 ft. wide, and 31 ft. high. The walls were all wainscotted (at Winchester even the pantry and cellar were wainscotted) and painted with pictures and proverbs. The subjects of the pictures varied according to the royal moods---in May 1250 the Queen borrowed a book about the crusades, and a year later the walls at Clarendon showed Richard the Lionheart duelling with Saladin. Wherever there were no pictures, there was the King's favourite decor---green curtains spangled with gold stars. The floors were tiled, the windows glazed (and barred after 1238 when an attempted assassination scared Henry out of his wits---he even had the vent of the royal privy into the Thames barred over) and fireplaces provided the ultimate in luxury. Special rooms sprouted everywhere, including the room where the royal head was washed.

If his private comfort bulked large in Henry's mind, his public display of piety came a close second: these were neatly combined in the royal bedroom where a window was fitted to look into the chapel. His greatest project was the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey, on which he spent nearly £50,000---the equivalent of £4,000,000 today. He had been so thrilled with St. Louis' Sainte Chapelle that he had wanted to put it on a cart and roll it back to England. That was impossible, so he had to build his own. He finished it in 1269, and proudly put up the inscription 'As the rose is the flower of all flowers, so this is the house of houses.'

For a while Henry had reason for pride: he married Eleanor, daughter of the Count of Savoy, and sister of the Queen of France, the finest match in Europe; his sister Isabella was married to the Emperor Frederick II, and his son Edward to Eleanor of Castille. He persuaded the Germans to elect his brother, Richard of Cornwall, King of the Romans.

On the other hand, his foreign policy was leading him into dangers. In 1242 he foolishly allowed himself to be led into supporting his mother's ambitions in Poitou, and the enmity with France was to continue needlessly until the settlement of 1259. Louis IX had no desire to be his enemy---in 1254 all England was amazed at the French King's generous gift of an elephant, which the historian Matthew Paris went to draw in the Tower of London.

In 1246 Henry's mother died (to almost universal relief) and he generously invited his four Lusignan half-brothers to live out their orphanage under his roof. He gave them large incomes, but they took more, milking the land as hard as they could in the last moments before bankruptcy. The English hated them for their avarice, price, and foreign-ness.

In ecclesiastical affairs Henry's hands were hopelessly tied---the Pope had always been his chief prop, and the King could not afford to lose his aid. There was a strong movement for reform, but the papacy's desparate need for money to prosecute its war against the Hohenstauffen made reform a secondary consideration, and indeed frequently blocked it. But Henry may justly be criticised for his foolishness in accepting the papal offer of the crown of Sicily for his son Edmund in 1250. The payment was to meet the astonomical debts of the Pope, and Richard of Cornwall had already wisely turned down this bad bargain, commenting that he had been offered the moon, if he could reach it.

Henry's need for money dominated most of his domestic policy. During the period of his personal government he obtained what he needed by getting legalists and professional civil servants to manipulate the complex chaos of the feudal government he had inherited. Government became a secret and centralised affair, excluding the barons, great and small. There are many comparisons here with the tyranny of Chales I.

In 1258 came the explosion: Parliament refused a grant unless Henry should exile his grasping half-brothers, and allow a commission of enquiry. A committee was set up to control the appointment of Crown officials, examine and reform local government, and supervise the affairs of the realm in general.

This was a revolt, but it had many obscure roots. One cannot assess how deeply felt were the demands for just and equal government voiced by Simon de Montfort, but certainly there were other elements in the baronial party which were reactionary rather than revolutionary, wanting to return to baronial government for its own sake. On this issue the reformers spilt, Gloucester leading the conservatives, and de Montfort the radicals. Henry saw his chance, and deftly using the ever valuable support of the Pope, shook off the Committee's control.

Now came war, and the stunning defeat of the royal party at Lewes in 1264. From this point onwards Henry was very much a broken man, though prone to bouts of vicious anger. The initiative was passed to his son, the Lord Edward, who defeated de Montfort at Evesham, where Henry was rescued, scratched and shouting 'Do not hurt me.'

Henry longed for revenge, and disinherited the rebels, who fled to hideouts in the fens to continue the war. The papal legate Ottobono persuaded the King to go so far, in the Dictum of Kenilworth of 1266, as to allow the rebels to buy back their estates. Still not satisfied, the disinherited, under Gloucester's leadership, took London, and Richard of Cornwall negotiated an easier peace. In 1267 the Statute of Marlborough embodied much of what de Montfort had fought for, and the long years of trouble were over.

Henry had at least survived, and his last years were happy in that he fininshed building his patron saint's Abbey of Westminster. The wheel of fortune that decorated so many of his palaces' walls had come round, and all the rage and terror were done with. Henry died in 1272. [Source: Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York, 1995]

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King 1216 -1272

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King 1216 -1272

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King 1216 -1272
5 Mar 1132/1133 - 1189 Henry II of England King 1154 -1189

pg 3,103 & 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The
Birth of Britain", Vol. 1 at pgs 199-225. Henry II became king in 1154 and
reigned until his death in 1189. For a more detailed account of King Henry's
reign see chapter 12 of Sir  Winston's book (above). He conquered Normandy in
September 1106

FitzEmpress, Henry II Curtmantle, King of England : Henry II was King ofEngland from 1135-1154. His titles included Duke of Normandy, Count ofBrittany, Count of Anjou, Duke of Aquitaine. He ruled an empire thatstretched from the Tweed to the
Pyrenees. In spite of frequent hostitilties with the French King his own
family and rebellious Barons (culminating in the great revolt of 1173-74)and
his quarrel with Thomas Becket, Henry maintained control over hispossessions
until shortly before his death. His judicial and administrative reformswhich
increased Royal control and influence at the expense of the Barons were of
great constitutional importance. Introduced trial by Jury. During his 35year rule he created the Angevin empire which covered much of France andthe British Isles. His success made him one of the most powerful rulersof medieval English kings and European monarchs. "The Encyclopedia of theMiddle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.

Henry II was born at Le Mans in 1133. He was the eldest son of theEmpress Matilda, daughter of Henry I, by her second marriage to Geoffreythe Fair of Anjou. His parents' marriage was tempestous, and both partieswere glad when politics brought a separation, with Matilda going toEngland to fight King Stephen, and Geoffrey of Normandy to win a heritagefor young Henry. He first came to England at the age of nine when his mother made herdramatic escape from Oxford where she was besieged by Stephen, across theice and snow, dressed all in white, to welcome him at Wallingford. Hisnext visit, when he was fourteen, showed his character: he recruited asmall army of mercenaries to cross over and fight Stephen in England, butfailed so miserably in the execution of his plans that he ended upborrowing money from Stephen to get back home. A third expedition, twoyears later, was almost as great a failure. Henry was not a soldier, hiswere skills of administration and diplomacy; warfare bored and sometimesfrightened him. For the meanwhile he now concentrated on Normandy, ofwhich his father had made him joint ruler. In 1151, the year of hisfather's death, he went to Paris to do homage to Louis VII for his duchy.There he met Queen Eleanor, and she fell in love with him. Henry was by no means averse. To steal a king's wife does a great deal for the ego of a young duke; he was as lusty as she, and late in their lives he was still ardently wenching with 'the fair Rosamund' Clifford,and less salubrious girls with names like 'Bellebelle'; finally, she would bring with her the rich Duchy of Aquitaine, which she held in he rown right. With this territory added to those he hoped to inherit and win, his boundaries would be Scotland in the north, and the Pyrenees inthe south.

Source: Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & NobleBooks, New York, 1995
Joan 1284 - 1327 King Of England Edward II Plantagenet 43 43  [daddy5.FTW]

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King 1307-1327

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King 1307-1327
~1081 Vivian de Molyneux 1312 - 1377 King Of England Edward III Plantagenet 64 64  [daddy5.FTW]

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King of England 1327 - 1377
Mar 1339/1340 - 3 Feb 1398/1399 John Of Gaunt Plantagenet  [daddy5.FTW]

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1120 - UNKNOWN Margurite deTurenne Symon Ayers ~1136 - ~1176 Rosamund de Clifford 40 40 Rosamond; mistress of Henry II, known as "Fair Rosamond" and quitepossibly mother of William Longespee, Earl of Salisbury.  [Burke'sPeerage] ~1165 Maude Morvill Brother, Sir Hugh Morvill was one of the assassins who slew Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Cant erbury in 1171 Hugo Malbank 1146 - AFT. 11 JAN 1203/04 Ada Princess Of Scotland >1402 Jane Beaufort Lady of St Donars Castle 1376 - 1447 Henry Beaufort 71 71 1350 - 1403 Katherine Swynford deRoelt 53 53 Payn deRoelt 1314 - 1369 Phillippa deHainault 55 55  [daddy5.FTW]

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1172 - 1259 William Marshall Earl of Pembroke 87 87 The Marshal of England. Pembroke, Netherwent, Leinster, Orbec, Bienfaite,
half Giffard.
BET. 1206 - 1233 - BET. 1259 - 1320 Marguerite Countess Of Provence Queen Of France ~1196 - 1264 William I de Ros 68 68 William de Ros, of Hamlake, upon giving security for the payment of £100for his relief, had livery of his lands. This feudal lord, in thelifetime of his father, was an active supporter of the baronial cause andwas made prisoner at the battle of Lincoln (1st Henry III) [1216] by theroyalists but soon after released and delivered up to his father uponbail. He was subsequently engaged in the wars of Gascony and he had twomilitary summonses in the 42nd Henry III [1258] to march against theScots and Welsh. By the deaths of his two great aunts, the sisters of hisgrandmother, Rose Trusbut, s. p., he became sole heir of the baronialestate of Trusbut and Watre. He m. Lucia, dau. of Reginald Fitz-Piers, ofBlewleveny, in Wales, and d. in 1258. He was s. by his son, Robert deRos. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's PeerageLtd, London, England, 1883, p. 458, Ros, or Roos, Baron Ros] 1282 - BET. 1315 - 1330 Isabella Princess Of France  [daddy5.FTW]

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1188 Marie Ponthieu 1154 - 1208 Sanchia Castile Queen Of Aragon 54 54 Anna Gerrish ~1220 Henry II Count Of Luxembourg 1220 - 1275 Marguerire deBar Mousson 55 55 1245 - 1285 Philip III The Bold King Of France 40 40 1268 - 1314 Philip IV The Fair King Of France 46 46  Ruled Navaree 1285-1314
knoigthted when 16 and married to Joan of Navarre

war with england began 1294
1174 - 1261 Elizabeth deClare Countess of Strigoil 87 87 Also called Isabel FitzGilbert De Clare. BET. JAN 1270/71 - 1273 - 1305 Joan Queen Of Navarre 12 Mar 1269/1270 - 1325 Charles de Valois 1280 - 1337 William III Count Of Holland D' Avesnes 57 57 1295 - 1352 Jeanne deValois 57 57 1247 - 1304 Jean II Count Of Holland D' Avesnes 57 57 ~1252 Phillipine Countess Of Luxembourg 1243 Isabel Princess Of Aragon ~1273 - 1299 Marguerite Princess Of Sicily 26 26 2 Feb 1207/1208 - 1276 Jaimie I The Conqueror King Of Aragon 1219 Jolan Princess Of Hungary 1026 - 1086 William Duke of Aquitaine 60 60 William Founded the Priory of St. Gemma in Xaintonge. 1178 Maria Countess Of Montpellier 1158 William VIII Count Of Montpellier 1162 Eudoxia Princess Of The Byzantine Empire 1254 - 1305 Charles II King Of Naples 51 51 Thomas de Antrobus 1180 - 1246 Berenguela Alfonsez Queen Of Castile 66 66 1218 - 1257 Jean I Count Of Holland D' Avesnes 39 39 1226 Adela Countess Of Holland 1210 - 1234 Floris IV Count Of Holland 24 24 1182 Bouchard D' Avesnes 1112 - UNKNOWN Adelaideof Angers ~1155 - 1191 Jacques D' Avesnes 36 36 1159 Adelphie de Guise 1129 Nicholas D' Avesnes 1133 Mathildede Lange Roche 1133 Bernard deGuise 1137 Alix deGuise 1202 - 10 Feb 1279/1280 Marguerite Countess Of Flanders And Hainault 1171 - 1205 Baldwin IX Count Of Flanders and Hainault 33 33 1174 - 1204 Marie deChampagne 30 30 1127 - 16 Mar 1180/1181 Henry Count Of Champagne D. UNKNOWN Helias Count of Maine 1187 - 4 Feb 1217/1218 Aleid Van Gelre ~1141 - 1190 Floris III Crusader Count Of Holland 49 49 1167 - 4 Feb 1221/1222 William I Count Of Holland 1180 - 1226 Waleran IV Duke Of Limburg 46 46 1186 - 17 Feb 1246/1247 ErmensideCountess Of Namur and Luxembourg 1201 - 1253 Thibault King Of Navarre 52 52 1211 - 1256 Marguerite Of Bourbon 45 45 1189 - 1242 Archambaud VIII Of Bourbon 53 53 1148 - 1196 Bela III King Of Hungary 48 48 1177 - 1201 Theobald Count Of Champagne 24 24 D. UNKNOWN Pedro deAragon 1183 - 1236 Maud deManDeville 53 53 Other sources state her birth place was La Marche, Poictou, France. Countess of Essex. 1179 - 1256 Blanche Of Navarre 77 77 YolandeDe Courtenay 1176 - 1235 Andrew II King Of Hungary 59 59 1135 Beatrice Of St Pol Manfredo Marquis Saluzzo 1258 - 1323 Maria Princess Of Hungary 65 65 1239 - 1272 Stephen V King Of Hungary 32 32 1240 Elizabeth deKumanien 1206 - 1270 Bela IV King Of Hungary 64 64 ~1210 Maria Laskaris 1069 - 1114 Pedro Sanchez I King of Aragon 45 45 ~1175 - 1222 Theodore I Laskaris Emperor Of The Byzantine E 47 47 1156 - 1212 Anna Comnenus Angelus 56 56 D. 1213 Gertrude Of Meran D. 1226 Henry III Duke Of Limburg Sophie Von Saarbrucken D. 1194 Sancho V King Of Navarre Guigone Of Forez D. 18 Jan 1215/1216 Guy II Seigneur Of Dampierre ~1165 - 1228 Mathilde Of Bourbon 63 63 ~1240 Joan Multon 0945 - 1004 Adelaideof Poitou 59 59 ~1301 - ~1340 William VI Brereton 39 39 ~1300 - ~1350 Margery deBosley 50 50 ~1275 - ~1340 William V Brereton 65 65 ~1279 - ~1340 Rose Vernon 61 61 ~1240 - ~1290 William IV Brereton 50 50 ~1370 Thomas Basset Visitation of the county of Nottingham, pg.170 / 42 / 13 / ~1210 - ~1280 Ralph Brereton 70 70 ~1215 - >1241 Ada de Huntingdon 26 26 ~1180 - ~1230 William III de Brereton 50 50 ~1190 - ~1240 Margery Thornton 50 50 0937 - 0995 William II "Ironarm" Count of Poitou 58 58 ~1130 - ~1180 Ralph Brereton 50 50 ~1114 - 1152 Henry Earl Of Huntingdon 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

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2nd Son
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2nd Son
~1147 - 1219 David de Huntingdon 72 72 Son of Henry, Earl of Huntingdon ~1369 - ~1420 Adam Bostock 51 51 ~1369 - ~1415 Jonet Bradshaw 46 46 ~1350 - ~1400 Adam Bostock 50 50 ~1344 - ~1400 Margaret Wetenhall 56 56 ~1334 - ~1385 William Bostock 51 51 ~1334 - ~1353 Daughter Multon 19 19 ~1300 - ~1345 Adam Bostock 45 45 0950 Emma of Blois ~1318 - ~1365 Joan Brereton 47 47 ~1255 - ~1305 Philip Bostock 50 50 ~1227 - ~1265 William Bostock 38 38 ~1235 - ~1285 Elizabeth Audley 50 50 ~1206 - ~1245 Gilbert Bostoc 39 39 Concubine #1 0893 - 0943 William I Longspee 50 50 ~1140 - ~1190 Randle Bostoc 50 50 ~1110 - ~1160 Gilbert Bostoc 50 50 ~1310 - ~1348 John Wetenhall 38 38 0846 - 0895 Pepin I deVermandois Count of Senlis 49 49 ~1325 - ~1375 Agnes Arderne 50 50 ~1250 - 1315 John Wetenhall 65 65 Agnes?? ~1220 - ~1270 Wetenhall 50 50 ~1190 - ~1240 Gilbert Wetenhall 50 50 BET. 1249 - 1251 - ~1346 Ralph Vernon ~1240 Randolph Darce ~1210 - ~1270 Ralph Vernon 60 60 ~1160 - ~1210 Warin Vernon 50 50 ~1180 - ~1210 Auda Malbank 30 30 Almondis von Gévaudan ~1140 - ~1190 Richard Vernon 50 50 ~1260 - ~1292 Matilda Hatton 32 32 ~1255 - ~1305 Maud Grosvenor 50 50 ~1172 - 1231 Mabel de Meschines 59 59 Mabel, 2nd daughter of Hugh (LE MESCHIN, styled also DE KEVELIOC), EARL OF CHESTER.   [Complete Peerage]

vol 1, pg 27, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 113 & 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 3, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Samuel Appleton 0690 Unknown Eberhardus John Walsh 1270 William Darce 1173 - 1252 Roger Gernet 79 79 ~1270 - ~1289 Mary Darce 19 19 D. 23 Jan 1114/1115 Thierry II Duke of Lorraine ~1181 Quenilde Verch Richa ~1270 Joan Garnett 1215 Benet Benedict Gernet 1200 - <1250 Henry de Hastings 50 50 1175 - <1246 Henry deAldithley 71 71  Sherriff Of Shropshire

pg 15 & 377, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~1197 - >1249 Bertred Mainwaring 52 52 vol 3, pg 229, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"

pg 15, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
1149 - >1203 Adam I deAldithley 54 54 1153 Emma FitzRalph 1123 Randulphus deDerleveston Fitzorme ~1222 - 1272 Henry James deAldithey 50 50 pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

vol 3, pg 757, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 15, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire", published 1887
0926 - 0955 Ordo III King of Leon 29 29 Petronella deBerleston 1112 - 1160 Lidulph deAldithley 48 48 1083 Liulph deAldithley Orme Le Gulden Miss Beauchamp ~1060 Richardus Forestaiuso ~1060 Miss deWhitern Robert Ogle Helen deBertram 0945 - 1019 Frederick Count Of Luxembourg 74 74 Martha Appleton 0897 Guidenilde Maude Peverel 1042 John I deBeaugency De La Fleche Nutter ~1073 - ~1165 Sybilla Corbet 92 92 pg 641, Burke's "Extant Peerage & Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 161, 196 & 232, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

vol 4, pg 728, Burke's "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"

pg 132, Burke's "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland"  2nd edition, published in 1841
0934 - 0982 AdelaideCountess De Vermandois 48 48 ~1553 - BEF 19 Jan 1633/1634 Edmund Nutter Hildeswinde Of Croatia D. 0972 Eberhard IV Count Of Luxembourg 1018 - BET. 1048 - 1115 Agatha Of Hungary 1148 Roger Fredville 1254 - 1294 Mary Clarissa 40 40 0939 - 0996 Hugh Capet King Of France 57 57  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1008 - 1035 Ludolphe Margrave Of Saxony 27 27 1060 - 1110 Elias Helie Count Du Maine 50 50 1092 - 1143 Foulques V Le Jeune Count D' Anjou 51 51 1018 - 18 Mar 1075/1076 ErmengardeII Countess D' Anjou 1030 Agnes D' Evreux 1000 - 1046 Geoffrey IV Count Gastinois 46 46 Herleva Harlette De Falaise 1007 - 1040 Duncan I Scotland 33 33 1055 - 1099 Matilde Du Chateau Du Loire 44 44 1030 - 1060 William Rudolf II deWarenne 30 30 William de Gareme (Garenne, Warrenne) who took his name from a smallriver in the old county of Calais or Caux, in Normandy, where on the westside of the river stood the ancient baronial seat of the de Warrennes,some of the ruins of which were still standing in 1832. 1031 - 1093 Malcolm III Canmore Scotland 62 62 b 1031 King 1058-1093 1045 - 1093 Saint Margaret Queen Of Scotland 48 48  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1024 - 1087 William I The Conqueror 62 62 0980 - 1043 Crinan Hereditary Abbot Of Dunkeld 63 63 D. 1035 Duke Robert I Of Normandy  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1016 - 1057 Edward Atheling The Outlaw King Of England 41 41  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1121 - 1204 Eleanor deAquitaine 83 83  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

pg 99 & 104, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg li, Burkes'e "Peerage etc", 1970 edition

pg 4 & 7, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"  by W.H. Turton, published 1928
~1186 Eastacia Basset pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 100, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~0925 Judith Of Bavaria William Malbedeng 1030 - 1076 Emma deTorta 46 46 ~1079 - 1118 Matilda Edith Of Scotland 39 39  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1030 Gervase Seigneur Du Chateau Du Loire 0933 Siegfried Comte deLuxembourg 0937 Hedwig Comtesse deLuxembourg Adelicia 0972 - 1031 Robert II France 59 59 0974 - 1032 Constance deToulouse Queen Of France 58 58 Hugh The Great Count Of Paris Hedwige(Hartwige) Princess Of Germany 0915 William I Of Aquitaine 0998 - 1059 Rudolf I deWarenne 61 61 0947 William III Count Taillefer 0948 Arsinde(Blanche) Countess D' Anjou ~1279 - 25 Feb 1342/1343 Ralph Basset RALPH (BASSET), LORD BASSET OF DRAYTON son and heir. On 14 March1299/1300, though still a miinor, he had livery of all his lands, andlicence to marry whom he would. From 29 December 1299 to 25 February1342, he was summoned to Parliament. He received knighthood with thePrince of Wales, 22 May 1306. He was a Banneret in 1341. He wassubsequently Steward of the Duchy of Aquitaine, and distinguished himselrby his proud defiance of the King of France. He was Constable of DoverCastle, Warden of the Cinque Ports, March to September 1326; Seneschal ofGascony &c.

He married (settlement 27 March 1304) Joan, daughter of John DE GREY,[LORD GREY] Of Wilton and Ruthin, by his 1st wife, Anne, daughter ofWilliam DE FERRERS, of Groby, co. Leicester. He died 25 February 1342/3.His widow had dower 13 Jan. 1343/4. She died 1353, before 5 April.[Complete Peerage II:2-3, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
Garsinde 0882 - 0921 Richard Duke Of Burgundy 39 39 0890 - 0956 Gilbert Gislebert Duke Of Burgundy 66 66 1014 - ~1040 Aelflead Sybil FitzSiward Of Northumbria 26 26 1009 - 1079 Adele Alix Princess Of France 70 70 1031 - 1083 Matilda Of Flanders 52 52 Herluin Viscount Of Conteville 1010 Beatrice deVascoeuil 1025 - 1087 Simon I deMontfort 62 62 1096 - 1126 Ermengarde(Ermentrude) Countess Du Maine 30 30 1105 - 1151 Adeliza Of Louvain 46 46 0952 AdelaidePrincess Of Aquitaine 1030 Erenburg Mrs Du Chateau Du Loire 1325 - 1370 Elizabeth Streche 45 45 D. 1006 Brunon I Margrave Of Saxony Finnsdottir Ingibiorg Earls Mother 0895 Raymond II Count Of Toulouse D. UNKNOWN Tesselin Vicomte of Rouen 0908 - 0935 Ermengarde Of Burgundy 27 27 0874 Roscilles deLoche 0884 Adelheid Of Burgundy D. 0920 Monassas I Count Of Chalons Petronilla 1012 - 1067 Baldwin V deLille Count Of FlanDers 55 55 0940 - 1026 Osbern II de Bolbec 86 86 0990 - 1039 Conrad II Duke Of Burgundy 49 49 0985 Giselle Duchess Of Swabia Robert Seigneur Du Chateau 0986 - 1067 Richard Count D' Evreux 81 81 1004 Toni Countess Of Adele 0993 - 4 Feb 1030/1031 Amauri de Montfort 0995 Bertrade De Montfort Aubri II Count Gatinais 0964 - 1046 HildegardeCountess D' Anjou 82 82 0970 - 1000 Geoffroy III Count Gastinois 30 30 0928 - 1002 Torfe deHarcourt 74 74 Torf, called "the Rich," had three sons. The eldest, Tourade, is said tobe the ancestor of the Beaumont or Bellomont family, Counts of Meullentin France, and Earls of Leicester in England, Turchetil was the secondson. Beatrice Countess Gastinois 0964 - 1037 Robert Archbishop Of Rouen Of Normandy 73 73 0968 - Bet. 990 - 1062 Havlive deRouen Geoffrey II Count Gatinais ~0984 Bethoc Beatrix Princess Of Scotland 0958 - 1034 Malcolm II King Of Scotland 76 76 0932 - 0995 Kenneth II King Of Scotland 63 63 0897 - 0954 Malcolm I King Of Scotland 57 57 ~0900 - ~0966 Berenger II King Of Italy 66 66  marquis d'ivrea e de gisla Willa Princess Of Tuscany 1109 - 19 Jan 1147/1148 William deWarenne 3rd Earl of Warren & Surrey A crusader who died in the Holy Land. The Complete Peeragevol.XIIpI,p.496-7. Ebles Duke Of Aquitaine 0904 - 0938 Bozon Marquis Of Tuscany 34 34 0906 Willa Of Burgundy 0945 - 26 Jan 1002/1003 Rosele Of Italy D. 1027 Richard III Duke Of Normandy 0956 - 1017 Judith Princess Of Brittany 61 61 0927 Conan I Count Of Brittany 0952 ErmengardeIII D' Anjou Elgiva Princess Of England 0964 ErmentrudeCountess De Luxembourg 1030 - 1094 Robert deBeaumont 64 64 0925 - 0992 Heribert Count Gleibert 67 67 0986 Ogive De Luxembourg 0980 - 1035 Baldwin IV the Bearded Count Of Flanders 55 55 ~0889 - 0964 Arnold I Count Of Flanders 75 75 0933 - 0962 Baldwin III Count Of Flanders 29 29 0941 - 0987 Arnold II Count Of Flanders 46 46 Ealdgyth Ogle BET. 943 - 971 - 1003 Herman II Of Swabia 0960 - BET. JAN - DEC Brunon II Margrave Of Saxony 1060 - 1128 Robert I de Beaumont 68 68 Robert de Bellomont came into England with the Conqueror, and contributedmainly to the Norman triumph at Hastings. This Robert inherited theEarldom of Meullent in Normandy, from his mother Adeliza de Waleran. Ofhis conduct at Hastings it is said: "A certain Norman young soldier,making his first onset in that fight, did what deserved lasting fame,boldly charging and breaking in upon the enemy, with that regiment whichhe commanded in the right wing of the army." For these gallant serviceshe obtained sixty-four lordships in Warwickshire, and many others inLeicester, Wilts, Northampton, Gloucester, in all ninety-one. Hislordship did not, however, arrive at the dignity of the English peeragebefore the reign of Henry I, when that monarch created him Earl ofLeicester. 0990 - 1069 Waleran deMeulan 79 79 The Complete Peerage v.XIIpII,p358,note a. 0988 - 1077 Gertrude Of Egisheim 89 89 0974 - 1015 Ernst 41 41 ~1005 Eleanore Princess Of Normandy William Malbank Ethelfreda Princess Of England Duncan Marmor of Atholl Siward Earl Of Northumberland Elfleda Of Northumberland Aldred Earl Of Northumberland ~1182 - ~1226 Richard deCamville 44 44 pg 111, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 100, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1057 - 1102 Hugh Capet de Crépi 45 45 Hugh was one of the illustrious seven leaders of the first crusade. Hewas Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquise of Orleans, Count of Valois andVermandois.
Sources:  Browning's Colonial Dames of Royal Descent, pp. 28, 277-8.
     Families Descended from All Royal Families, by Elizabeth Leach
     Rexford, pp. 154-7.
     Americans of Royal Descent--Browning, pp. 28-9.
     Magna Charta, by John S. Wurts. Part 3, pp. 566-572. Parts 1 and 2,
     pp. 213-219--English Kings Edwards I, II, III.
     Lines of Mellcene Thurman Smith.  genealogylibrary.com
Ecgfrid Alduine Bishop Of Durham D. 1161 MelisendeOf Jerusalem 0806 Oda Of Saxony ~0855 Hedwige BET. 913 - 914 - 0984 Gerberge Queen Of The Franks 0892 - 0968 St-Matilda Of Ringleheim 76 76 Bruno Suana Of Montfort ~0876 - 0936 Henry The Fowler Emperor Of Hre 60 60 1060 - 1120 Adelai de Vermandois 60 60 ~0836 - 0912 Otto The Illustrious Of Saxony 76 76 ~0806 - 0866 Liudolf Of Saxony 60 60 0918 - 0955 Henry I The Quarellsome Dule Of Bavaria 37 37 Elizabeth Machelfield ~1587 - 1619 Thomas Yale 32 32 1591 - 7 Jan 1657/1658 Theophilus Eaton Theophilus Eaton was born about 1591 at  England. He was the eldest son of the Rev. Richard Eaton.  Later a wealthy London merchant, he married the widow of Thomas Yale in about 1625. Together with her 3 children, David, Anne and Thomas, they sailed for America in 1637 in the company of Rev. John Davenport, a London clergyman. They landed at Boston; Eaton and several other men explored the coast of the sound and, finding a desirable place, spent the winter. The following spring they sailed from Boston to their wintering place where, in April, 1638, Rev. Davenport preached his first sermon under a large tree. They subsequently formed a government and thus the settlement of New Haven, CT was formed. They purchased land from the Quinipiak Indians and Eaton was elected first governor of the colony in October, 1639. He held that office until his death 7 January 1658.   On 4 Jan. 1640 the General Court of New Haven agreed to make a division of certain lands in the town, according to the proportion of the personal property possessed by each planter. At the head of the list is Theophilus Eaton's name, with a family of 6 and a personal estate of 3,000 pounds, three times as large as that of any other planter and almost 10% of the whole amount listed.  He was prominent in the organization of the New England Confederation in 1643 and, in 1655, assisted by Rev. Davenport, he drew up the so-called "Blue Laws" of Connecticut. He died in New Haven 7 Jan 1658. His will was proved 30 May 1658 and the estate was valued at 1,515 pounds, 12s, 6d. Living Warner Felice Constantine 1893 - 1965 Owen Warner 72 72 Information extracted from Form SS-5, Treasury Department, IRS, U.S. Social Security Act, Application for Account Number & Birth Cert. and family interviews.
Form SS-5
SSI Number: 344-03-4675
Name: Owen Warner
Address: RFD Sullivan, Ill.
Employer: Masonic Home, Sullivan Ill.
Age at last birthday: 39
Birth date: Jan. 27, 1897
Birth place: Mercer County, Ky.
Fathers name: Vincent Warner
Mother name: Bettie A. Wickershame
Signed: Dec. 7, 1936
Owen Warner
William de Antrobus 1024 Anna Yaroslavana 1920 - 1986 James Hanly Warner 66 66 Information from Form SS-5, Treasury Department, IRS, U.S. Social Security Act, Application for Account Number and birth cert. and family interviews.
Form SS-5
SSI Number: 355-10-3059
Name: James Hanly Warner
Address: General Delivery, Rochelle, Ill.
Employer: None
Age at last birthday: 17
Date of birth: April 15, 1920
Birth Place: Harrodsburg, Ky.
Fathers full name: Owen Warner
Mothers full name: Clara Sal[l]ee
Signed: 6-21-37
James H. Warner
Thomas Constantine Visitation of Shropshire. 1858 - 1935 Vincent Warner 76 76 1854 - 1933 Elzabeth Bettie A. Wickersham 79 79 1804 Vincent Warner 1]  Marriages of Rowen County, N.C.: Vinson Warner & Sally Michael,  Oct. 11, 1821,   John Warner jr. Bondsman.
2] 1850 Davidson Co., NC Census/ HH/759/ Warner, Vincent 45,Sally 45,May 18,Britain 16,Lettitia 13,
3] 1860 Davidson Co., NC Census/ HH/759/ Warner, Vince 54/ Brittain 20/ Polly 18/ Letty 17
4] The Civil War Roster of Davidson County, North Carolina,  Christopher M. Watford//   Page 254
Richard Fitz- Walter 1771 - 1848 John Warner 77 77 1) Rowan/Davison Co., NC 1810; age 26-45
2) Rowan/Davison Co., NC 1820; age 45 and up, 1810 and 1820 records indicate that John had at least 7 sons, possibly 2 more, a William &  Daniel who had left home by 1810 and started families.
3) Rowan/Davison Co., NC 1830; age 60-70, John has only 2 children living home, a male born 1800-1810  Britten Varner Warner, born 1-1-1806 and a daughter b, 1810-1815 Sarah Warner b. 7-1-1813.
4) Rowan/Davison Co., NC 1840; age 70-80, No sons, wife is 70-80 years old, a young girl, ages 5-10, possibly a granddaughter.

NC court case in 1855 spells out John Warner’s family.  John was the father of Martin Warner. In the original records, there’s a claim that John Warner Sr. had only "seven legitimate children" - that John’s eldest son William Warner "was not born in lawful wedlock but was born previous to the marriage of his father and mother." [Mothers name NOT noted] It was also claimed that John’s granddaughter Elmira daughter and heir of Sarah Warner who married George Sullivan was of "unsound mind." Neither claim seems to have been proven. The case went on to state that John’s children were "eight in number" and included William, Martin, Brittain, Vincent, Anderson, and John Jr. as well as Sarah Sullivan and Polly Younts wife of Phillip who was "not in the state of North Carolina". Martin Warner has "removed to the western states" as well. Two of John’s children Sarah and Anderson had died before their father.
1734 - 1806 William Warner 72 72 1790 Rowan Co. NC, Heads of Families - North Carolina printed p175, Salisbury District Rowan County: Warner, William, 2 m of 16 years and upwards, 4 f

Last Will & Testament of William Warner, 1804, Proved 1806. Dated 10-1-1804, witnessed by Martin Trantham and George Snider
Copy of Willliam Warner's will. dated 1 Oct 1804.
" In the name of God Amen I William Warner of the County of Rowan and the State of North Carolina planter, Being very Sick and Weak in Body, but in or of perfect mind and memory: Thanks be unto God Calling unto mind the mortallity of any body,
Knowing that it is apointed for all men once to die, do therefore ordain this my Last Will and Testament in first of all I give and recommend my Soul Into the Hands of Almighty God that gave it and my Body to be Buried in Decent Christian Burial, and of such worth by, Estate as it has pleased God to bless one with in this world, I give and Bequeath of the Same in the following Jininsais and form---
First I give and Bequeath unto my beloved wife Elizabeth Warner my plantation whereon I now live, for her the P. Elizabeth Warner to live on, and to have the benefit of P. plantation hir lifetime, & further I give and Bequeath unto my Beloved wife Elizabeth Warner all my household furniture and working tools of what ever Denomination and two Hors Creatures viz one mare one hors, and two cows and calfs all of: Which in Case of property heretofore mentioned I leave to hir the said Elizabeth Warner event Dispossal
Further I give and Bequeath unto my beloved sons John Warner & Wiliam Warner my plantation with all my Land Belonging to it being about Three Hundred acres to be Eaqually Devided to them, after the above named Elizabeth Warner Deceasse further I give and Bequeath unto my eldest Daughter Lethire Morefield the sum of five shillings to be Levied out of my Estate further I give and Bequeath unto my youngest Daughter thereof Nancy Cooper the sum of five shillings to be Levied out of my Estate.
My will is further that out of my other property not heretofor mentioned there Shall be money T.nissed to pay all Lawfulll Debts that I may have heretofore Created, & the remainder Eaqually Devided to them hereafter named viz, to my beloved wife Elizabeth Warner & my beloved sons John Warner & William Warner & to my beloved daughters Maria Wilson and Sarah Lannon Further I give and Bequeath unto my Beloved Grandson Daniel Warner my young Bay Hors"
Exrs wife Elizabeth, son William wit George Snider Martin X Trantham

Will abstract: "William Warner. WB E: 6. Rowan Co. NC. Oct. 1, 1804. prb. 1806. Wife: Elizabeth Sons: John and William Warner
Daus: Fathire (eldest), Maria Wilson, Sarah Lannon, Nancy Cooper (youngest). Dau: Fathire Morefield Grandson: Daniel Warner
Exrs. wife Elizabeth, son William. Wit: George Snider, Martin Trantham"
Elizabeth West ~1506 Ralph Antrobus 1052 - 1108 Philip Capet I "The Fair" King of France 56 56 John Machelfield Living Warner Living Van Wart 1919 - 1988 Rose Marie Troy 69 69 1699 - ~1765 Daniel Warner 66 66 1897 - 1989 Clara Sallee 91 91 Lived in Sullivan Il. Memberships: First Christian Church, Sullivan; Order of the Eastern Star, Crystal Chapter # 39. Her fathers Obit has her married name as "Waters". Mary Fitz- Walter 1804 Sally Michael Some records spell her name as Sarah. 1850 Davidson Co., NC Census//HH/759//Warner, Vincent 45//Sally 45//May 18//Britain 16//Lettitia 13 ~1700 - ~1770 Sarah Hill 70 70 Granddaughter to Governor Theophilus Eaton of Connecticut. 1611 - 1660 Valentine Hill 49 49 Valentine Hill was extensively engaged in real estate and other transactions in Boston, Lynn, Rumney Marsh, Dover, Oyster River and the Pascataqua River area between the years 1637 when he was of Boston and 1660. In 1651 he conveyed to Mr. Thomas Cobbett, of Lynn, styled "Clarke,": afterwards minister of Ipswich, and others, all grants of land made to him, the said Hill, by the town of Dover, at Oyster River, and the saw mills erected therein. Suffolk Deeds, Lib. I. 182., NEHGR, vii, 49 and the Wenthworth Genealogy, i. 138.

The will of John Hill, of London, Merchant, 14 December, 1665, proved 8 feb. 1687. Extract:   Wife: Sarah. Daughter: Sarah.Daughter: Elizabeth.Daughter: Hannah. Wife with child. Bother Valentine Hill late of New England, deceased.Brother in law: Mr. Thomas Cobbet, Niece: Bridget Cobbet.Cousin: Garrett. Cousin: Thomas Browne. Cousin: John Browne. Brother: Hutchinson. Cousin: Elizabeth Meridith. Brothers: Nathaniel and Richard Hunt. Brother in law: John Miles and his son John Miles, jr. Maid: Prudence. Cousins: Charles, Margaret and Katherine Watkins. Friends; Mr. William Allen, Mr. William Sawyer and Mr. Robert Wakeling.  Geneal. Gleanings, by Waters.

Heraldric Pedigrees:
The Visitation of Norfolk, 1563, 1613., Hill
The Visitation of Norfolk, 1664., Hill
London Visitation Pedigrees, 1664., Hill
The Visitation of London, 1568.,  Browne, Myles.
The Visitation of London, 1633-1635, Garrett, Watkins.

James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England
VALENTINE, Boston 1636, a mercer from London, I think, ar. co. 1638, freem. 13 May 1640, and on Sunday foll. was, with Jacob Eliot, ord. deae. by w. Frances, wh. d. 17 Feb. 1646, had Hannah, bapt. 17 Mar. 1639; John, b. 1 Sept. 1640, d. soon; Eliz. 12, bapt. 19 Dec. 1641, d. young; Joseph, and Benjamin, tw. 19, bapt. 23 June 1644, both d. soon; by sec. w. Mary, d. of Gov. Eaton, adm. of our ch. 15 May 1647, he had John, bapt. 22 Aug. 1647; and Nathaniel, b. 31 Mar. 1660. He was of great public spirit, grantee in 1641, with others, of the town, or Bendall's dock, and the week foll. was made a selectman, rechos. 1642, 3, 4, 5 and 6; interest in the Ids. at Dover, and prob. liv. some time there, was rep. 1652-5 and 7, and d. 1662. His wid. m. perhaps John Lovering of Dover, and next, Ezekiel Knight of Wells. Hannah m. 24 Jan. 1660, Antipas Boyce.

Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire,  Sybil Noyes, Charles Thornton Libby, and Walter Goodwin Davis Portland, ME 1928-1939; Reprint, Baltimore, MD, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.Page: p. 330



Notes found via: Rootsweb World connect: An early settler of Boston, MA. Admitted to Church 6/12/1636. Freeman 5/13/1640. Selectman 1643-44-45-46 Deputy to the general court 1652-53-54-55-57

Valentine Hill was born on March 23, 1611 in Winthorpe Parish, Lincolnshire, England. He was the fifth child of William and Elizabeth Hill who married about 1600. Valentines father, William, was the son of Thomas Hill (born abt. 1550) and his wife Ann. Valentine Hill's brothers were William, Christopher, Thomas and John. His sisters were Ann, Elizabeth and Mary. Socially, the family were "Gentry" or "Squires" and were listed in "Lincolnshire Gentry" in 1625.

Valentine Hill moved from London, where he and his brother John were merchants, to Boston in early 1636. During 1636-1649, Valentine acquired a good deal of land in central Boston including land along the waterfront which is close to the area which presently occupies Fanuel Hall and Quincy Market. In 1641, he was elected as one of the "Selectmen" for Boston, the equivalent of a modern-day city council. His main business appears to have been as a trader -- exporting and importing products such as tobacco, indian corn, sugar, cattle, etc.

He was a very prosperous and entrepreneurial sort and apparently quite well-to-do. In 1644, while a prosperous businessman and politician in Boston, Valentine acquired the Governors Mansion of Massachusetts. Governor John Winthop owed Valentine 500 pounds and settled his indebtedness by giving Mr. Hill the mansion. Valentine and his first wife, Frances Freestone, lived in the mansion for five years as did the first nine of his eleven children. Frances died in 1645 six months following the death of their twin sons Benjamin and Joseph. Valentine Hill re-married in 1645. He married Mary Eaton, daughter of the Governor of Connecticut, Theophilus Eaton. They had six children born between 1646 and 1659, the last of whom was Nathaniel Hill.

Valentine and Mary Hill left Boston in 1649 and settled on a large 500 acre farm in Dover, Massachusetts at a site known as Oyster River Plantation (currently Durham, New Hampshire). Mr. Hill developed a lumber mill business and brought great prosperity to the Oyster River community. He became active in town politics and built the first town meeting house on land that now is part of the University of New Hampshire. Valentine Hill died unexpectedly and early in his life in 1661 at Oyster River. His estate was vast and carried many legal problems such that his estate was not finally settled until 1697, thirty six years after his death.

Valentine's youngest son, Nathaniel, was the only heir to survive the lengthy legal entanglement of the Hill estate. In 1797 he renounced his ownership of the 500 acre farm that his father had left him in order to clear the estate. He had married Sarah Nutter in about 1680 and they had five children (Valentine, Samuel, Sarah, Abigail and Mary). Captain Nathaniel Hill was a deacon in the church at Oyster River and was prominent as an official of the town of Durham as well. Nathaniel died in Durham in 1741 and was said to have "lost his reason" during the final months of his long life.

Samuel Hill was born in 1685 at Oyster River and married Sarah Thompsonin 1718.  He died in 1767 after which witnesses testified in court thathe appeared to be "benumbed in his senses and not capable of actingrationable upon any business".  They had eleven children including Valentine Hill(2) who was born in 1730 at  Durham (Oyster River) andlater moved to Lyman, Maine about 1780 after marrying Sarah Burley in1762.  Lt. Valentine Hill was commissioned in 1765 by Governor BenningWentworth.

Lt. Valentine Hill(2) and Sarah Burley  had thirteen children including Nathaniel Hill(2) who wasborn in 1776 at Lyman, Maine.  Lt. Valentine Hill died in 1825.

From the Kennebunk Gazette, March 5, 1825:
"  Died in Lyman, Me., 18 Feb., Mr. Valentine Hill, aged 94.   He lived in a married state 64 years and left a numerous   posterity, children, grandchildren and great grandchildren   to number about 130.  His health and bodily activity, till   within a short period before his death, were unexampled.   He retained all his faculties to an astounding degree.   A long life of honest industry--of conjugal attachment--of
  parental care and general benevolence, speak louder encomiums  than the most elaborate eulogies, etc."

From "Daughters of the American Revolution Lineage Book", Vol. C 11:
Valentine's youngest son, Nathaniel, was the only heir to survive thelengthy legal entanglement of the Hill estate.  In 1797 he renounced hisownership of the 500 acre farm that his father had left him in order toclear the estate.  He had married Sarah Nutter in about 1680 and they hadfive children (Valentine, Samuel, Sarah, Abigail and Mary).  CaptainNathaniel Hill was a deacon in the church at Oyster River and wasprominent as an official of the town of Durham as well.  Nathaniel diedin Durham in 1741 and was said to have "lost his reason" during the finalmonths of his long life.

"Valentine Hill served as a patriot and pledged his allegiance to theColonies.  He was born in  Durham,NH and died in 1825 in Lyman, Maine."

1610 (Abt.) Valentine Hill Born   Lincolnshire, England  1636 (Abt.) Valentine Hill Arrives Colonies  Boston, Massachusetts  1649  Valentine Hill Moves to Oyster River Durham, New Hampshire, 1659   Nathaniel Hill (1) Born   Durham, New Hampshire 1696  Samuel Hill Born    Durham, New Hampshire  1730 (Abt.) Valentine Hill (2) Born   Durham, New Hampshire  1765  Lt.  Valentine Hill Commissioned Nottingham, New Hampshire  1780  Lt. Valentine Hill Moves to Lyman Lyman, Maine  1776  Nathaniel Hill (2) Born   Lyman, Maine 1804
Valentine Hill was born on March 23, 1611 in Winthorpe Parish,Lincolnshire, England.  He was the fifth child of William and ElizabethHill who married about 1600.  Valentines father, William, was the son ofThomas Hill (born abt. 1550) and his wife Ann.  Valentine Hill's brotherswere William, Christopher, Thomas and John.  His sisters were Ann,Elizabeth and Mary.  Socially, the family were "Gentry" or "Squires" andwere listed in "Lincolnshire Gentry" in 1625.
D. UNKNOWN Isabella of Hainault 1675 - 1741 Philemon Warner 65 65 1673 - 1756 Abigail Tuttle 82 82 1639 - 1696 Daniel Warner 57 57 1645 - 1701 Sarah Dane 56 56 10 Jan 1629/1630 - 11 Jan 1690/1691 Simon Tuttle 1631 - 24 Jan 1732/1733 Sarah Cogswell 1618 - 1688 Daniel Warner 70 70 ~1303 William Hiltoft 1612 - 1689 Elleanor (Ellen) Pell 77 77 Full Name on records: Ellen Jewett Boynton Pell.
This is from her marriages.
D. 1683 John Dane John came to America in 1636 from England 0870 - 0931 Beatrice deVermandois 61 61 1640 Eleanor Clark 1587 - 1658 John Dane 71 71 1590 Frances or Briget Bowyer ~1614 Clark ~1618 Clark 1561 - UNKNOWN William Dane ~1535 Dane ~1564 Thomas Bowyer 1568 Margaret ~1538 Bowyer 0810 - 0866 Robert "The Strong" Duke of Neustria 56 56 ~1542 Mrs. Bowyer 1606 - 1656 John Tuthill 50 50 AUTH Mercer(dealer in silk, etc.). 1592 - 1659 Joane Antrobus 67 67 Joan Antrobus' children were all baptized in St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England and came to America on the ship "Planter". (I didn't know of her mother Joan Antrobuss being on the ship also.) John and William migrated to Queens County, NY and some say were joined by a brother Thomas others say Thomas was the son of William. John and William migrated to Queens County, NY and some say were joined by a brother Thomas others say Thomas was the son of William.

There was another William Lawrence in Queens County at this time whose family migrated to Monmouth County,New Jersey. The Lawrence 's who came on the ship Planter were the St. Albans Lawrence 's. There was also a Henry Lawrence in MA who was an original immigrant not connected to the St. Albans Lawrence 's. Also a George Lawrence in MA. A John Lawrence from Wisset, England. A Robert Lawrence in Virginia of Ashton Hall, England. Numerous "Laurens" whose name
transposed to Lawrence over the years and a Johannes Lorentz from Germany whose descendants changed there names to Lowrance and Lawrence .There are quite a few more who could be original immigrants and not connected to any of the above.

In was in the year 1635 that the first of the Lawrence s came to America. Although most Lawrence histories talk about 'two brothers' who arrived to settle in the Plymouth area, it was actually an entire family. Boarding the "Planter" in England, Joan Tuttle (nee Antrobus) with her second husband, John
Tuttel of Ireland, came to the United States with her three Lawrence children by her first husband, and her three Tuttle children. They were Jo: Tuttell, a mercer, age 39, Joan Tuttell, age 42, John Lawrence age 17, William Lawrence age 12, Marie Lawrence age 9, Abigall Tuttell, age 6, Symon Tuttell age 4, and Jo: Tuttell, age 1. Some say she was widowed and had married a Thomas Tuttell,
but the ship's record give his true name as John Tuttell. Also accompanying them was Joan Antrobuss, age 65, evidently, Joan's (ae 42) widowed mother.

Joan ANTROBUS was born before Jun 25 1592 in St Albans, Hertfordshire, England.  She was christened on Jun 25 1592 in Saint Albans, Hertfordshire, EN.8  She died in 1659 in MA.  She died on Jan 29 1661 in Ireland.9  Approximately 67 years at death according to Crocker.  This is inconsistent with a 1592 birth date and a 1661 death date. _

Jane    Antrobus.  Thomas and Joan (Anterbus) Lawrence had the following
children; Joan, Jane,   John,William, Marie (or Mary) and Thomas. After the
death of Thomas Lawrence , his   widow Joan married John Tuttell (Sometimes
written Tuttle and sometimes Tuthill). Tuttell  was a widower, and had four
children: Abigail, Symon, Sara, and John.  John Tuttell was     a Mercer (a
dealer in silk, etc.).
     John and Joan Tuttell, with all four of their children, and with three
of hers, John, William and Marie (Thomas seems to have come later), also
Joan's mother; were listed on April 2nd 1635, as sailing for America on the
ship "Planter, Richolas Trarice, Master, and which landed at Plymouth,
Mass., some weeks later.  This family came from great St.Albans, England.
There will be further reference to this item later.

Please send any corrections or additions to Jesse M. Lawrence Jr.
&lt;jmljr@flash.net&gt; This data is updated continuously, so please revisit
to make sure you have latest information. This file represents my entire
data base, I do not have any other information! Please use the reference
number so I can get to the correct person in my data base.
NOTE:  Please use this data with the knowledge that you must do your own
research  to validate data. It contains theories and facts
from many sources and is only a starting point for your own research.
1535 - 1583 John Arnolde 48 48 1560 - 1630 Simon Symon Tuttle 70 70 1565 - >1607 Isabel Welles 42 42 Howden, Yorkshire, England Parish Recprds 1537 - 1618 John Welles 81 81 Living Allen ~1555 - 1614 Walter Antrobus 59 59 Walter ANTROBUS was born about 1555 in St Albans, Hertfortshire, England. He died on Apr 5 1614 in St Albans, Hertfortshire, England. He was buried on Apr 5 1616.    He was married to Joane ARNOLDE on Feb 8 1586 in St Albans, Hertfordshire, England. 1530 - 11 Mar 1588/1589 Richard Tuttle Toothill 1120 - 1178 Ela Talvas D'Alencon 58 58 1543 - Mar 1570/1571 Jannett Lawtie 1575 - >1635 Jane Arnold 60 60 Joane ARNOLDE was born on Jun 3 1571 in St Albans, Hertfordshire, England.  She died on Jul 29 1581.

The will of John Arnolde, of St. Albans, Herts., dated 31 Oct. 1583, was proved 21 Nov. 1583 in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury (15 Butts, FHL film 91965). In it he gives to eldest son George Arnold, seven houses in Dunstable; to younger son John Arnold his house in the Vintrye of St. Albans, and to John two silver spoons which his Uncles gave him at his christening, at 21; he gave legacies to elder daughter Mary Arnold, daughter Sara Arnold; to Emme Mannyngham "my late wyves mother"; to my brother Hugh Arnolde; to my sister Joane 13s., 4d.; he mentioned "cossen" Edward Gladwin, and his wife. Witnesses were Mr. Thomas Walley, Mr. Richarde Manningham, Thomas Appowell, Richard Graye and John Daye; Roger Williams was writer. The codicil says that Barnabie Lawrence shall keep the portion of my younger son John until he is 21, and that Lawrence was to bring up John. The St. Albans Abbey parish register shows the last child of Walter and Joan Antrobus as Henry, baptized 25 April 1600. The same parish register gives the baptisms of Marie, dau. of John and Elizabeth Arnold, 5 May 1560; Sara, 7 Sept. 1567; Joan; and John, 6 Feb. 1574.
D. >1589 Elizabeth 1506 Thomas Totahyll 1585 - 1592 John Coggswell 7 7 1594 - 1676 Elizabeth Thompson 82 82 1572 - 1608 Phillis 36 36 Jan 1575/1576 - 1623 William Thompson 1554 - 12 Jan 1615/1616 Edward Coggswell 1570 - 1616 Alice 46 46 1129 - 1202 Hamelin deWarenne 4th Earl of Surrey 73 73 Hamelin Plantagenet married Isabel, daughter of William de Warren, 3rdEarl of Warren and Surrey. She brought to her 2nd husband not only theEarldom, but all the other honors and possessions of her father, inEngland and Normandy, possessions so great that, without alarmingjealousy of the crown, they could not have been added to the wealth ofany other noble family; especially as the lady to whom they descended wasvery nearly allied to the Kings of France and Scotland. It was,therefore, not only from affection for his brother, but from the maximsof good policy and reasons of state, that Henry II interested himself inthe match. Hameline assumed the name of Warren and became the Earl ofSurrey Vicomte of Touraine. (See Early Yorkshire Charters Vol viiipp20-24 for
daughters details). The Complete Peerage vol.XIIpI,p.499-500.
1510 - 1581 Robert Coggswell 71 71 1518 - 1603 Alicia 85 85 ~1484 Robert Cogswell ~1488 Alice 1643 - 1716 Mary Eaton 73 73 1538 Marie 1534 William Antrobus ~1100 Robert (Pincerna) le Boteler Henry de Antrobus 2 Feb 1588/1589 - 20 Mar 1624/1625 Thomas Lawrence Thomas Lawrence was christened on Feb 2 1588/89 in Saint Albans,
Hertfordshire, EN.5  He was born about 1589 in St. Albans, Hertfordshire,
ENG.6  He was christened on Feb 2 1590 in St. Albans, Hertfordshire, ENG.7
He died on Mar 20 1624/25 in Saint Albans, Hertfordshire, EN.  He has
reference number FQ10-78.  He was married to Joan ANTROBUS on Oct 23 1609
in Saint Albans, Hertfordshire, EN.

Sources:  Unpublished, copyrighted research by David L. Greene, co-editor
of based in part on AR7, line 148, the Pecche article in.. CP (vol. 10,
pp. 333-38), Joan Corder, ed., Visitation of Suffolk,1561  Part I (HSPVS. new
ser., vol. 2, 1981), pp. 78, 86, 88 esp. (Pecche to Knighton) and Walter C.
Metcalfe, ed., Visitation of Hertfordshire, 1634 HSPVS vol. 22, 1896), p.
34 (Bull).  Mr. Greene's Lawrence monograph, to incorporate research in
numerous English record sources, will appear in a future issue of TG; see also
Consuelo Furman.  "St. Albans Origin of John Lawrence of New Amsterdam,
Thomas Lawrence of Newtown, L.I., William Lawrence of Flushing, L.J."
(typescript, revised 1955), pp. 2-4 (but ignore her identification of John
Lawrence 's wife, paternal grandmother of the immigrants), 9-41.
___________________________________________________________
The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants, pp. 455-7

1.      Louis IV, King of France, d. 954 (probable grandson maternally of
Edward
the Elder, King of England. d. 924)= Gerberga, daughter of Henry I the
Fowler, German Emperor, d. 936
2. Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine = Adelaide ----
3.      Gerberga of Lower Lorraine = Lambert, Count of Louvain
4. Maud of Louvain = Eustace I, Count of Boulogne
5. Lambert, Count of Lens = Adeliza of Normandy. sister of William I, the
Conqueror, King of England, and widow of Enguerrand II Count of Ponthieu,
for
whose ancestry see G. A. Moriarty, The Plantagenet.Ancestry of Edward III
and
Queen Philippa). mss. widely available on microfilm, pp. 113-14, etc.,
Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners. 2nd ed. (1992), lines 131, 244,
and H.M. West Winter, The Descendants of Charlemagne (800-1400).  Part 1,
"Brandenburg Updated," Generations I-XIV (1987), XII 75a, etc.  Enguerrand
II
was a son of Hugh III, Count of Ponthieu (and Bertha of Aumale), son of
Enguerrand 1, Count of Ponthieu (and Adela, possibly of Westfriesland), son
of Hugh I, Count of Ponthieu and (almost certainly) Gisela, daughter of
Hugh
Capet, King of France, and Adelaide of Poitou.  Adeliza's own descent from
Charlemagne, and that of William the Conqueror, her brother, is also fully
covered by H. M. West Winter and outlined in AR7, lines 130, 121, 118, 50.
6.      Judith of Lens (paternity uncertain , possibly a daughter of
Enguerrand 11;
see Sir A. R. Wagner, Pedigree and Progress [1975], p. 253, and sources
cited
therein) = Waltheof II, Earl of Huntingdon, Northampton, and Northumberland
7.      Matilda of Northumberland = Simon de St. Liz, Earl of Huntingdon
and
Northampton
8.      Matilda de St. Liz Robert de Clare
9.      Walter FitzRobert Maud de Lucy
10.     Alice FitzWalter (sister of Robert FitzWalter, Leader of the Magna
Charta barons) = Gilbert Pecche
11.  Hamon Pecche     Eve ----
12.  Gilbert Pecche = Joan de Creye
13.     Gilbert Pecche, 1st Baron Pecche = Iseult ---
14.     Gilbert Pecche, 2nd Baron Pecche = Joan --
15.     Katherine Pecche = Thomas Notbeam
16.     Margaret Notbeam = John Hinkley
17. Cecily Hinkley = Henry Caldebeck
18. Thomasine Caldebeck = Thomas Underhill
19.     Anne Underhill = Thomas Knighton
20.     Joan Knighton = Charles Bull
21. Richard Bull = Alice Hunt
22. Elizabeth Bull = John Lawrence
23. Thomas Lawrence = Joan Antrobus of Massachusetts, who m. (2) John Tuttle

Chief Burgess of St.Albans
D. UNKNOWN Baldwin V Count of Flanders 1150 - 11 Feb 1232/1233 Ermengarde De Beaumont ~1168 John deThorpe ~1336 - 1403 Hugh Shirley 67 67 Sir Hugh Shirley, inherited Basset estates; Grand Falconer to Henry IV1400; killed 1403 at Battle of Shrewsbury, being one of those who weredressed as the King and mistaken for him by the enemy.  [Burke's Peerage] 1400-1403 Master of King's Hawks. Mar 1608/1609 - 1681 Dionis Stevens She is said to have been from Brixton, Devonshire, England. 23 Jan 1702/1703 Jane Peckham 0787 - 0818 II Welf 31 31 Joan Thurgood 1251 - 1288 Sir Roger 37 37 19 Jan 1640/1641 - 3 Feb 1697/1698 Mary Adams 1580 - 1650 Marie Le Mahieu 70 70 1859 - 1937 Julia Ann Perryman 77 77 Will of Juia Ann Duhem
Nov. 3, 1936
of San Francisco, Ca.
Names:
Daughter, Elaine Duhem Kline
Son, Victor Duhem
Son, Harold
Son, Raymind

Witness: Bertha Curzon and John Diggett,
700 Hays Street, S.F. Ca.
D. UNKNOWN Margaret of Flanders 1829 Nelson Owen Perryman Nelson O. Peryman b. Sept 17, 1829 to Jacob Perryman and Nancy Ward Perryman. Nelson m. Eliz. M. Knight April 10, 1851 in Shelbyville, IL. They had 8 children, one of them being Julia Ann who married Victor Marie Duhem. Jacob was b. Sept 14, 1803 in NC. m. Nancy Ward Mar 3, 1823 in Wilson Co., TN. Jacob's parents were Joseph Perryman and Nancy Gates.

Joel Jacob Perryman, born 14 Sep 1803 in Rockingham Co, NC and died 12 Feb 1870 in Shelby Co, IL. He was the son of Nancy Gates and Joseph Perryman. Joel married Nancy Ann Ward on 13 Mar 1823 in Wilson Co, TN. Nancy was born 14 May 1804 in Wilson Co, TN and died 12 Jan 1887 in Shelby Co, IL. They had 11 children; of which John William Perryman was born abt 1821

Nelson Owen Perryman was the second child out of the 11. He was born 17 Sep 1829 in Shelby Co, IL. He married 1st to Elizabeth Jane Knight on 10 Apr 1851 in Shelby Co, IL. A second marriage to Ella M. Sunderland on 11 Jul 1872 by Joseph Gordon was never recorded in the state records.

Julia Ann Perryman was the fourth out of eight children to Elizabeth Jane and Nelson Owen Perryman.
Listed in the 1880 Federal Census for Oconee Township, IL, page 219 #142/145 is Nelson O. Perryman, born 1879 in Shelby Co, IL.
He was stated to be the fourth child born out of four children to Francis Marion Perryman, born 20 Apr 1835 in Lakewood Township, Shelby Co, IL and died 6 Mar 1930 in Oconee Township, IL. Francis was married to Emily Hulsey, born 1842 at Fort Smith, AR.
1830 - 1872 Elisabeth Jane Knight 41 41 Olympe Combalot Marianne Cheron Pelagie Angelique Joseph Olivier 1580/1585 Robert Stevens He was said to be from Brixton, near Plymouth, county of Devon 1810 - 1893 Maria Antonia Natalia Elijia Carrillo 82 82 George Fitch ~1140 Simon de Morvill Had livery of all Engaine's lands in 1157 William II Bassett D. 1171 Baldwin IV of Mons Count of Flanders 1630 - 1671 William I Bassett 41 41 James Armstrong Roger Spencer "Directory of the Ancestral Heads of New England Families 1620-1700", Frank R. Holmes, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, 1923, pg. ccxxiv SPENCER, Roger, mariner, at Saco, Maine,1652, removed Charlestown, Massachusetts, 1653. 1590 - 1635 Alice Hobson 45 45 Children of JOHN CARY and ALICE HOBSON are stated to be:
vi. HENRY16 CARY, b. 1618, Bristol, England; d. Aft. 1634.
vii. MATHEW CARY, b. 1619, Bristol, England; d. Bef. August 12, 1648, Stepney Mariner, England.
22. viii. MILES (MYLLES) CARY, b. July 1621, Bristol, Gloucester, England; d. June 10, 1667, Windmill Point, Warwick, Virginia.
ix. RICHARD CARY, b. 1620, Bristol, England; d. June 10, 1667, Warwick, VA.
x. ALICE CARY, b. 1625; m. (1) THOMAS HAYMEN; m. (2) WILLIAM PAYNE.
xi. HONOR CARY, b. 1627; d. November 06, 1644, All Saints, Bristol, England.
xii. MARY CARY, b. 1630, Bristol, England.

Will of Alice Cary, of Shadwell in the parish of Stebunheath, otherwise Stepney, Middlesex. Spinster, 24 April 1660,  proved 14 November 1660.
Names: Grandfather John Cary of Bristol, Woolen draper. 
Names: Uncle Myles Cary of Virginia.
Names: Cousin William Hopson.
Names: Uncle Richard Cary and his wife Dorothy Cary.
Nabbs, 206

Will of Henry Hobson:
Dated 16 March, 1634 and proved 27 May 1636.
Henry Hodson of Bristol, Glost. To be buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol;
Names his late wife: Alice who was buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol;
Names grandchildren: Henry Cary, Matthew Cary, Richard Cary, Miles Cary, Honor Cary, Alice Cary and Mary Cary the children of my daughter alice Cary wife to John Cary, draper.
Names grandchildren: Margaret and Anne Jackson daughters of my daughter Anne Jackson.
Names kinsmen:  Richard Burrowes, Christopher Raynoldes son of  George Raynoldes, Anne Raynoldes sister of Christopher.
Francis Creswicke, Thomas Hobson.
Names sons: William Hobson.
Son William to be executoir and Francic Creswicke and Thomas Hobson to be overseers.
Pile,52
Thomas Tayler 1621 - 1667 Miles Cary 45 45 SURVEYOR GENERAL
By the provisions of its Charter in 1692, William and Mary College was given the office of Surveyor General, and those who filled the place after that date were appointees of the College.
MILES CARY 1692-1708

Militia Officers in Virginia, June 1699, Warwick County, Lt.-Col. Miles Cary - Commander in Chief, Major William Cary

REGISTER CONTAINING THE BAPTISMS MADE IN THE CHURCH OF THE FRENCH REFUGEES AT MANNIKIN-TOWN IN VIRGINIA, IN THE PARISH OF KING WILLIAM, IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD, 1721, THE 25TH MARCH.82-DONE BY JAMES SOBLET,CLERK.
Colonel Miles Cary (fifth in descent from William Cary, Mayor of Bristol, England in 1546, born in Bristol, 1620, and son of Colonel Myles Cary, emigrated to Virginia, 1650; first collector of James River; burgess ftom Warwick county, 1659; member of the Council; Colonel in time of the Dutch incursions, 1665-7; died June 10, 1667), was born about 1655; married twice, first, Mary, daughter of Thomas Milner (born August 6, 1667, died October 27, 1700); second, Mary, daughter of Colonel William Wilson (died, 1708); died, 1708; clerk of the Assembly.  62. William Cary, of Warwick county, a younger son of Colonel Miles Cary, the emigrant; Burgess in 1710; married Martha Seabrook; will dated 1711. Had issue: I. Harwood; died 1720; ii. Miles; died 1766; (among his sons was Richard, Judge of the Court of Appeals of Virginia; died 1785); iii. Elizabeth married Edward Jacquelin. 
On 7 Feb 1645, Peter Wraxall, mariner, of Bristol, England, gave the following testimony: "He is of the company of the David [a ship] of Bristol, 200 tons, John Elson, master. On their last voyage to Virginia, there was a bill made by Miles Cary, a Bristol man, at Elizabeth City in Virginia, for delivery of 250 lbs of Virginia tobacco leaf to John Jones in Virginia on 10 November last; the tobacco was not delivered." This information appears in the Deposition Books of Bristol, 1643-1647, Abstracted by the Virginia COlonial Records Project Survey Report No. B. 1, The Virginia Library.

Records of Taunton Castle, Somerset, England, Somerset Arch. Soc. Deeds, Various, Box no. 2., 1666, Aug. 10., Cary, Col. Miles: L3 17s. for Virginia import and cocquett money for 37 hogsheds Virginia tobacco, 6 May, 1666, pay to Hery Daniell or order, Signed: Miles Cary.


Will of Alice Cary, of Shadwell in the parish of Stebunheath, otherwise Stepney, Middlesex. Spinster, 24 April 1660,  proved 14 November 1660. , Names: Grandfather John Cary of Bristol, Woolen draper. , Names: Uncle Myles Cary of Virginia., Names: Cousin William Hopson.
Names: Uncle Richard Cary and his wife Dorothy Cary., Nabbs, 206

Will of Henry Hobson:, Dated 16 March, 1634 and proved 27 May 1636., Henry Hodson of Bristol, Glost. To be buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol; Names his late wife: Alice who was buried in the church of All Saints in Bristol; Names grandchildren: Henry Cary, Matthew Cary, Richard Cary, Miles Cary, Honor Cary, Alice Cary and Mary Cary the children of my daughter alice Cary wife to John Cary, draper.
Names grandchildren: Margaret and Anne Jackson daughters of my daughter Anne Jackson.Names kinsmen:  Richard Burrowes, Christopher Raynoldes son of  George Raynoldes, Anne Raynoldes sister of Christopher. Francis Creswicke, Thomas Hobson.
Names sons: William Hobson. Son William to be executoir and Francic Creswicke and Thomas Hobson to be overseers. Pile,52


The will of the immigrant Mylles Cary, as transcribed by Guilford D. Eggleston from Warwick Co. records in 1851 and reported by Fairfax Harrison in his book The Virginia Carys; An Essay in Genealogy (New York: The Divinne Press, 1919), pp. 164-168. It was dated 9 June 1667 and proved 21 June 1667 in Warwick Co., Virginia (Will Book A, 448).  I, MYLLES CARY of Warwick County, in Virginia, being of sound and perfect memory (praysed bee God), doe make and ordain this my last will and testament, hereby renouncing all other will or testaments formerly by me made whatsoever. Imp s: I give and bequeath my soul into the hands of Almighty God, hoping through the meritte of Jesus Christ to have free remission of all my sinns; and my body to the earth with Xtian buriall to be decently interred by my Loving Wife; and for that temporall estate which it hath pleased God to endow mee withall, I give and bequeath in manner and form following:-- I doe give and bequeath unto my sonn THOMAS CARY all that tract or parcell of land which I now reside upon, containing by the old pattent, taken by my father-in-law, Thomas Taylor, deceased, three hundred and fifty acres of land, but since surveighed and received by me 688 acres more or less, with all that tract or parcell of land, commonly knowne and called by the name of the "Magpy Swampe," according to a destrict pattent thereof taken by my father-in-law, Thomas Taylor, deceased, containing by said pattent two hundred and fifty acres of land, which quantity of two hundred and fifty acres of land is since joyned by mee unto another parcell of land bought by mee of Zacheriah Cripps, the son of Zacheriah Cripps, deceased; yet notwithstanding my will is that the said two hundred and fifty acres, more commonly knowne by the name of the "Magpy Swampe," according to the bounds of the first pattent taken up as aforesaid, be set apart and divided from the parcel of land which I bought of Zacheriah Cripps, and be and remain with the tract or parcell of land I now live upon with all the houses, aedifices, buildings, gardens, orchards, pastures, woods and underwoods, and trees growing and to bee growing, with all the rents and profits of all leases and conveighances made out of the several tracts of land with all the hereditaments and appurtenances to any or either of the aforesaid parcells of land belonging or any way thereto appertaining, unto him the said THOMAS CARY and the heyres of his body to [be] lawfully begotten. I doe also give and bequeath unto my sonn HENRY CARY and unto my sonn MYLLES CARY all that tract or parcell of land which I bought of Zacheriah Cripps, being according to the Ancient Pattent taken out by Zacheriah Cripps, one thousand and fifty acres, with all that tract or parcell of land taken up by mee, adjoining to that taken out of Zacheriah Cripps, but all taken into one pattent (always excepting and reserving that two hundred and fifty acres commonly knowne and called by the name of the "Magpy Swampe" to the use and purpose before expressed) which said tract of land according to the last surveigh and pattent (the said "Magpy Swampe" excepted) I give unto my sonn HENRY CARY and unto my sonn MYLLES, to be divided between them, by the runne of water which is by the great poplar in Andrew Farmers field, being the first course marked tree of the said dividend which runne of water upwards as the main runne goeth up to the dams or ponds, and so to my outward line, which runne and dams or ponds my will is shall be the dividing line between them. That is to say, I give and bequeath unto my sonn HENRY CARY all that tract or parcell of land, bee it more or less of this side of the ponds or dams, adjoining upon the lands of Capt. Thomas Bernard, deceased, with the plantation commonly knowne and called by the name of the "Forest," with all the houses, aedifices, buildings, gardens, orchards, pastures, woods, underwoods and trees growing and to be growing, with all the rents and profits of all leases and conveighances made out of the said tract or dividend of land, with all the hereditaments and appurtenances to the said parcell of land any way appertaining, unto him the said HENRY CARY and to the heyers of his body lawfully to bee begotten. And I give and bequeath unto my sonne MYLLES CARY all that tract or parcell of land, bee it more or less, of the other side of the runnes or dams soe farr as my outward line extendeth, and along the said line, adjoyning upon the lands of one Calvert, and adjoyning upon the lands of John Lewis, and soe along the outward line to the heade of Potash Creek, and adjoining upon the lands of Capt: Samuell Stephens (excepting and reserving the two hundred and fifty acres of land, commonly knowne by the name of the "Magpy Swampe," for the use and purpose afore expressed) with all the woods, underwoods, trees growing and to bee growing, with all the hereditaments and appurtenances to the said tract or parcell of land (bee it more or less) belonging or in any way thereto appertaining, unto him the said MYLLES CARY, and to the heyers of his body lawfully to bee begotten. I doe give and bequeath unto my sonne WILLIAM CARY all that tract or parcell of land which lyeth up Warwick River formerly belonging unto Capt: Thomas Flint, and since purchased by mee, with all the houses, aedifices, buildings, gardens, orchards, pastures, woods and underwoods, trees growing and to bee growing, with all the rents and profits of all leases or conveighances, made out of the said tract of lands, with all the hereditaments and appurtenances to the said tract or parcell thereunto belonging or in any way appertaining, unto him the said WILLIAM CARY, and the heyers of his body to bee lawfully begotten. I give unto ROGER DANIELL that parcell or tract of land that Goodman Heskins now lives on, and the land called "Gaole," with all the rents and profits, hereditaments and appurtenances whatsoever, whether by lease or otherwise, to all intents and purposes whatsoever in full and ample manner as I myself now enjoy it, may, might, or ever may enjoy it. My desire is that Mr. William Beaty may have the education and bringing up of my sonne WILLIAM, and Mr. Hurle of my son MYLLES in England. My will is that my two houses in England, the one in Baldwin Street, the other in St. Nicholas Street, bee sold by Mr. Hurle and Mr. Richard Deans, and the money in Mr. Hurle hands already and the money of the said two houses soe sold to be equally divided between my three daughters, ANNE, BRIDGETT and ELIZABETH, and to continue in Mr. Hurle his hands untill their dayes of marriage; and my will is that my tobacco that goes for England this year, and the bills of Exchange, I now send home, bee also in Mr. Hurle hands towards my sonne MYLLES his education. My Plate and Rings to be equally divided between my children. The goods in the store to be sold by my Executors, and also the houseing at Towne (which I bought of Mr. Randolph and have paid him for, as by his receipt it may appear) to be sold by my Executors, and the remainder thereof, after my debts are paid, to bee equally divided amongst my children. I give unto ANNE CARY a negro girl called Nan, and one boy called Harry. I give unto BRIDGETT CARY one negro girl called Bridgett. To ELIZABETH CARY one negro girl called Sarah. The rest of my negroes to be equally divided between my four sonns THOMAS, HENRY, MYLLES and WILLIAM; and what English servants I have I give unto my four sonns THOMAS, HENRY, MYLLES and WILLIAM. My will is further that my stock of sheep be equally divided between my children; as also my stock of cattle be equally divided between my said children: my horses and mares--my will is that they be equally divided between my children. My grey mare [name illegible] I give and bequeath unto Roger Daniell. As for my Tobacco [debts] my will is they bee equally divided between my children; as also household Stuffs. And my will further is that (whereas I have given and bequeathed unto my four sonnes, THOMAS, HENRY, MYLLES and WILLIAM, several tracts and parcells of land, as, by foregoing clause in this Will, may and doth appear) if any of the said Thomas, Henry, Mylles and William Cary shall happen to depart this natural life without heyers of his body lawfully begotten, that then his land goe and pass unto the next heire or brother, viz: if Thomas Cary shall happen to dy without issue of his body lawfully begotten, then his land to descend to the next brother Henry; and if Henry dy without issue of his body lawfully begotten, his land to descend to Mylles Cary; and if Mylles Cary dy without issue of his body lawfully begotten, his land to descend to William Cary; and if William Cary dy without issue of his body lawfully begotten, then his lands, and the other tracts soe falling to him, pass and descend to my three daughters, Anne, Bridgett & Elizabeth. My will is that my debts be equally paid by my Executors, hereafter to be named, before any division or diminution of my Estate, and that no division be made but by the joynt consent of my Executors hereafter to be named, provided that my Executors be all alive at the time of division, and [in] the Colony of Virginia--that is to say, so many of Executors as are to be had [but] that no division be made untill my eldest sonne come of age. My will further is that when division is made, that my Loving friend Mr. William Beaty have and keep in his possession my sonne William's Estate, and keep it for my said sonne William's use, untill he shall accomplish the age of one and twenty. My said sonne's maintenance for his education only to be deducted. And that the said Mr. William Beaty have my sonne Mylles Cary's part also of my Estate to possess and keep for the said Mylles Cary his use and behoof untill the said Mylles Cary shall accomplish the age of one and twenty. My will is that Henry Cary, when the Estate is divided, have his part and share of my Estate in his own possession, as also his land, formerly bequeathed to him in his own possession notwithstanding he bee not of full age. As for my three daughters' parts or shares of my Estate (when divided) my will is, that those guardians (whom my said daughters shall then choose) with the consent of Executors, shall take it into their care and custody for the proper and sole use of my said daughters until they or any of them shall accomplish the age of one and twenty, or dayes of marriage (their maintenance only excepted); that is each or any one of the said daughters to have her part or share as she accomplish the age of one and twenty or marryeth. I do hereby nominate and appoint my four sonnes THOMAS, HENRY, MYLLES and WILLIAM CARY, and my three daughters, ANNE, BRIDGETT and ELIZABETH CARY my joynt Executors and Executrices of this my last Will and Testament, with strict charge that they agree and act with mutual love and amity. I doe also hereby nominate and appoint my well-beloved friends Mr. Thomas Ludwell, Col_o: Nath: Bacon, Major Edward Grifith and Mr. William Beaty my Executors of this my last Will and Testament, earnestly requesting them to take the said charge and care upon them. And in token of my love to my said Executors I doe hereby give and bequeath to each of the five pounds sterling. IN WITNESS whereof I have set my hand and seal to each syde and part of this my last Will and Testament, this ninth day of June, 1667.  MYLLES CARY [His seal]  Signed and Sealed in the presence of us: FRANCIS HADDEN THOMAS J. KEN WILLIAM X TANDY. his marke Probat. in Curia XXI die Junij 1667 Pr. Testament: THOMAS J. KEN & GULIELMUS TANDY Test: WM. WOYDEN, Sub. Cler. Recordat: XXIX die Junij 1667 WM. WOYDEN, Sub. Cler."


Colonial Families in the U.S.
COLONEL MILES CARY, b. 1620; d. 10th June, 1667. He and his brother James emigrated to America in 1640. Miles Cary settled in Warwick County, Va., and James in New England; was Mayor in 1654; Lieutenant Colonel of Warwick County, 1657; Colonel and County Lieutenant, 1659-67; Burgess, 1659-63; Member of Council, 1663-67; “Shott by ye Dutch” in defending fort at Old Point [p.81] Comfort, Va., and d. 10th June, 1667; m. Anne TAYLOR, dau. of Thomas TAYLOR.

COLONIAL FAMILIES OF THE Southern States of America CARY FAMILY page 128 COL. MILES CARY, (3--1), of "Magpie Swamp," Warwick Co., Va., b. 1620, in Bristol, England; d. 1667, in Virginia; came to the Colony in 1640; served as Justice, 1652; Mayor, 1654; Lieut. Col. of Warwick, 1657; Col. and County Lieut., 1659-67; a Burgess, 1659-63; Eseheator-General of Virginia, 1665; Collector of the Lower James River, and member of the King's Council, 1663-67; died from wounds received in the attack by the Dutch fleet upon Old Point Comfort; his tomb is at "Cary's (Quarter," and the inscription thereon, gives the names of his father, mother and maternal grandfather, and his coat of arms. He m. about 1645, Anne Taylor, dau. of Capt. Thomas Taylor.

Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume I III--Colonial Councillors of State
Name: Miles Cary
Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume I III--Colonial Councillors of State
son of John Cary, a merchant of Bristol, England, was born about 1620, and came to Virginia, it is believed, about 1645. He settled in Warwick county and lived at a place called "Magpie Swamp." His landed estate embraced about 2,000 acres, well stocked and having upon it numerous slaves, a store, mill etc. Cary was a collector of customs in March, 1658-59 and in 1663, and as "Col. Miles Cary," he was a member of the house of burgesses from Warwick county in March 1659-60. He was afterwards added to the council and was present at the meetings of that body June 21, 1665, and March 28 and July 10, 1666. He was doubtless still a councillor at the time of his death, June 11, 1667, when he is said to have been killed while defending the fort at Old Point against the Dutch. Lieut.-Col. Miles Cary married Anne, daughter of Thomas Taylor, a burgess from Warwick county. Many persons in Virginia and the south are descended from him.


Full Context of Virginia, Prominent Families, Vol. 1-4
Volume I Chapter III Third Generation.
Our Virginia ancestor, Col. Miles Cary, never possessed any land in London, though in his will of 1669, he left certain houses in Bristol (whence he emigrated about 1640) to his three daughters, which long since legally passed out of their and their heirs' hands. But even had there been anything in the "Cary Fortune," of course your great grandfather, Col. John Ambler, could never have inherited such fabulous amount as eighty-two millions, even though he had two streams of Cary blood, for he certainly had no primogenital rights, being the great grandson of one of the daughters of William Cary, who certainly had no land in England; the fourth son of the emigrant; and his mother, Mary Cary, being one of the daughters of Col. Wilson Cary, eldest son of the third son of the emigrant.
1652 Bridget Cary 1667 - 1724 Stephen Peckham 57 57 D. 1475 John deLancaster  Durham Visitation Pedigrees page 241. Sarah Archer Name: Sarah Archer Given Name: Sara, Father: John Archer Mother: Sarah Odell, Marriage 1 Moses Fowler b: 1684 in Eastchester, Westchester, NY,Children:1. Elijah Fowler 2. Solomon Fowler3. Sarah Fowler4. Elizabeth Fowler5. Abigail Fowler6. Marianne Fowler7. Phebe Fowler8. Charity Fowler9. Stephen Fowler b: Abt 1710 in Eastchester, Westchester, RI, 10 Mary Fowler 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet Princess of England 52 52 ~1306 - 1331 Edmund Mortimer 25 25 ~1563 Jeanne 1667 - 1750 Shubael Gorham 82 82 Joaquin I Carrillo Sr. ~1330 - ~1370 Loretta Barton 40 40 ~0695 Bertrada ~0690 Claribert I 1797 - 1853 Louise Jenkins 55 55 Edward Cartwright The Cartwright-Northrip Ancestors, by N. Almeda Boulton and Lloyd J. Cartwright, Saginaw Mich 198

With Susanna's stated  birth date, her fathers birth date should be no later than1661. Researchers state he may have been born in Devonshire, England
"The Great Migration Begins"  "Oliver Callow"  Suffolk Deeds, Volumes 1 through 14 (Boston 1880-1906). Vol. 6, pg106 Edward Cartwright of Boston makes a gift and the deed is witnessed by Oliver Callow.
1731 - 1808 Leya Acker 77 77 Some sources show the surname as: Ecker 1088 - 1120 Baldwin III Count of Hainault 32 32 Baldwin was recognized as Count of Hainault after his mother's returnfrom Rome. He died 1120. Robert le Jeune, Count of Flanders, found whenhe returned from the Crusade that his father had given to Baldwin III theChateau of Douai with its dependencies. Not daring to retrieve it byforce, he proposed to give Baldwin in marriage to a niece of his wife,and exacted as surety the possession of the Chateau of Douai. When thisniece Adelaide of Savoy, later Queen of France, was presented to Baldwinhe found her so ugly that he refused to marry her, and thus forfeitedDouai. He married Yolande, daughter of Gerald, Count of Guelders, and hadBaldwin IV, Count of Hainault, Yolande, Gertrude and Richilda. George Bunker 1698 - 1771 Siber Acker 73 73 Old Dutch Burying Ground, Sleepy Hollow, Old Post Road, Tarrytown,Westchester County, N.Y.  Inscription:  Siber ( Sybout, Sibert ) Acker Died July 26, 1771 Born March 8, 1698 Aeltie de Ronda 1180 - 1205 John Braose 25 25 Richbold 0773 - 0810 Pepin Carloman 37 37  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Son of Charlemagne King, Holy Roman Empr.[FIX.ged]

Son of Charlemagne King, Holy Roman Empr.
~1194 - 1185 Albert de Gresley 9 9 pg 245, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 51, Burkes Landed Gentry

pg 19, Burke's "Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies"
1303 - 1377 Hugh Courtenay 73 73 (inv 1348) Sir Hugh Courtenay. One of the Founders of the Order. Knights of the Garter,  Served with the King in France.
Grant, 1362, April 19. 36 Edward III. 1 item : parchment ; 11 x 28 cm.
SUMMARY: Grant by Hugh de Courteney, earl of Devenech' and lord of Okampton, to Maude, widow of Richard atte Worthe, of all the goods and chattels which the said Richard on another occasion gave to the grantor. Given at the manor of Exmoor, Tuesday in Easter week, 36 Edward III. 1 seal (3 cm.) of red wax, pendant on a tag, bearing a device.
NAMES: I. Devon, Hugh de Courtenay, Earl of, 1303-77. II. Worth, Maude. III. Worth, Richard.
SUBJECTS: 1. Worth family. 2. Deeds-- England--Devon. 3. Devon (England)-- Charters, grants, privileges. 4. Exmoor (England).
HOLLIS number: -BBJ4328
0819 - 0866 Adelaide de Tours 47 47 John Russell 1056 - 1098 Baldwin II Count of Hainault 42 42 At the time of his succession he was a minor, and Robert, the Frisian,Duke of Flanders, seized Hainault, but Emperor Henry IV finally forcedRobert to return Hainault to the legitimate heir. Baldwin II embarked onthe pilgrimage of the Crusade in 1096, and at the Siege of Antioch, 1098,he was sent with Hugh Magnus to announce the news to Emperor AlexisCommenens, and to invite him to aid the crusaders in taking Jerusalem. Onthe road near Nicea, however, the party fell into the hands of the Turks.Hugh Magnus, leader of the First Crusade, escaped, but Baldwin wascaptured and never heard of again. Baldwin II married 1084 Ida or Alex,daughter of Henry II, Count of Louvain. In 1099 she went to Rome to tryto obtain news of her husband; the Pope, who could tell her nothing,tried to console her, and sent her back to Hainault, where she died 1139.
Children: Baldwin III, Arnould, Ida, Richilde and Alix.
1200 - 1234 Beatrice (Elizabeth) of Hohenstaufen 34 34 1237 - 1300 Yolande of Aragon 63 63 1205 - 1276 James I of Aragon 71 71 1181 - 1244 Berengaria of Castile 63 63 Abigail I Starbuck 1339 - 1381 Juana deVillena 42 42 1391 - 1438 Edward I of Portugal 46 46 Great - Grandson of Edward III, King of England, Founder of the MilitaryOrder of the Garter. ~1523 Jeanne Ligne deBarbancon 1489 - 14 Jan 1510/1511 Marguerite Madeleine deBurgundy De Bourgogne means " Of Burgundy " in French.  Also called
Marguerite,Margareta, Madeline & Marie. Dame ( Lady) de Falaise.  She is the
daughter of Baudouin batard de Bourgogne & de Lille. ( who is the recognised
natural son of Philippe III " le bon " or  ( The Good ) deBourgogne, Duke of
Burgandy )   Seigneur ( Lord ) de Falais, de Bredam,de Sommerdick& de Manilly &
Baron de Bangnuolo
20 Feb 1657/1658 - 1727 Mercy Warren 1032 - 1098 Baldwin VI Count of Flanders & Artois 66 66 <1439 - 1501 Baudouin deLannoy 62 62 Lord de Molembais & de Solre le Chateau. He was Knighted by Maximilienthe
Emperor ( 1493-1519).  He was Chevalier de la Toison d'Or LXXXXIX, (Order of
the Golden Fleece ) Chamberlain & Premier Maitrew ( Master )d'Hotel de Marie de
Bourgogne & Maximilien arch duke d'Austria(1459-1519)  after 1477. Gouverneur
de Zutphen.  Armorial Bearings: BoreLannoy in full differenced en surtout an
ecusson with the armes deBerlaymont, Barry of 6 vair and gules. Crest, mantling
& motto the sameas borne by his father Baudouin of Molembais.
D. 1511 Michelle d'Esne de Conroy ~1488 - 1543 Philliporte deLannoy 55 55 Lord de Molembais de Solre le Chateau & de Conroy. Created in 1531 achevalier
de la Toison d'Or ( Order of the Golden Fleece) CLXXXII, andalso a Knight of
the Golden Cross by the Emperor Charles V, between 1519- 1543.

Councillor & Chamberlain of the Emperor Chief of the Finances, Brand Master
d'Hotel of the Queen of Hungary & Bohemia & the Lord ( Seigneur)de Tourcoing.
D. 1474 Baudouin Le Bergue deLannoy Baldwin 3rd son of Guillebert ( Gilbert ) Lord  de Molembais Gouverneurde Lille
( L'Isle )  In 1429 he became a Founder Chevalier de l'ordre dela Toison d'Or(
XIX) The Order of the  Golden Fleece.  His motto was: " Good Tidings"or News.
The Knights of the Golden Fleece surrounded their shields with chain and fleece
of gold.
D. 1439 Adrienne deBerlaymont Some records from 1500-1600 show the name: De Berlaymont

spelled as: de Derlaymont.
D. 1433 Marie deMelles Guillbert deLannoy Lord de Santes, Lord de Willerval, de Rollancourt & de Beaumont.  Coat -armor:

Lannoy argent, 3 lions sinople differenced by Filet en Bordure engrailedgules.
This is a very narrow border - a diminutive of the bordure,proving the bearer
to be a younger son of Hugues de Lannoy,  who bore the bordure and left it to
his eldest son Robert, who left it to the next eldest son, his brother Hugues
II.
1635 - 1718 Stephen Hussey 82 82 Grandson of Rev. Stephen Bachiler born in England. Catherine deMolembais Lady and sole family heiress. 1270 - 1325 Charles deFrance 55 55 1033 - 15 Mar 1086/1087 Richilda Countess of Hainault & Namur With her husband she ruled the countship of Valenciennes as well asHainault, and received Pope Leo IX in her chateau at Mons in 1049. Thefollowing  year, as a widow, she took over the governing of Hainault, butdid not hold it long in peace. Baldwin de Lille, Count of Flanders, madewar on her and forced her to marry his son. The younger Baldwin beingrelated to Richilde, however, the marriage was declared illicit, and hewas excommunicated by the Bishop of Cambrai. Pope Leo also declared themarriage dissolved, but apparently changed his mind, as it continued tobe recognized. She married 1st Herman, Count of Valenciennes; 2ndBaldwin, called I, of Hainault; 3rd William Osbern, Earl of Hereford. 1268 - 1314 Philip IV of France 46 46 ~1311 - 1349 Hugues deLannoy 38 38  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Succeeded as seigneur or Lord de Lannoy & de Lys.  His official seal: Ashield
bearing 3 lions within a bordure engrelee - engrailed. Hue was a Lord from his
father Jean and inherited his coat - armor differenced witha bordure. Proving
that Jean bore as a younger son the bordure for abrisure or difference. This
being a charge used to denote youngerbranches of families.
Marguerite deMingoval  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Died age 70 years and was buried beside her husband in the entry to thechoir of
the church at Lys. Upon her toomb is the Maingoval coat armor,color unknown,
being a shield or ecusson charged with a bande or bend.
1730 Hilario Carrillo 1267 - 1314 Jean deFranchimont 47 47  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Jean de Franchimont married Mahienne de Lannoy daughter and sole heiress of the
last seigneur ( Lord ) de Lannoy and de Lys, from whom her husband( Jean )
assumed the seigneurie ( Lordship ) de Lannoy and their issuebore the surname
de Lannoy ever after. See History and Genealogy ofDelano de Lannoy 1096-1899,
pp. 27-63,  Jean preserved the armes ofFranchimont - arg. 3 lions des sinople.
Thus  his descendants inherited the Franchimont coat-armor and assumed the
heiress surname of Lannoy as their own.
1246 - 1271 Hellin II deFranchimont 25 25  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Hellin II.  held this Marquisate of the Holy Roman Empire,  under Prince
Richard Plantagenet ( 3rd son of John, King of England ) Earl of Cornwall,
German-Roman Emperor 1257 d. 2 April, 1272.
Agnis deDuras <1700 - 1743 Juan Carrillo 43 43 1225 - 1256 Hellin I deFranchmont 31 31 >1229 - >1260 Agnes of Bavaria 31 31  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Agnes, the daughter of Otto II ( Othon I of this line ) or Otho Duke ofBavaria
and Count Palatine, founded the monastery or convent of SaintAgnes.
1012 - 1067 Baldwin V Count of Flanders 55 55 Entered into hostilities with Emporer Otho II and aquired from that monarch Valenciennes and the Isles of Zealand. He subseqently further increased his territories by another rich accession, that of the citadel of Ghent.

Entered into hostilities with Emporer Otho II and aquired from thatmonarch
Valenciennes and the Isles of Zealand. He subseqently further increasedhis
territories by another rich accession, that of the citadel of Ghent.

Entered into hostilities with Emporer Otho II and aquired from thatmonarch
Valenciennes and the Isles of Zealand. He subseqently further increasedhis
territories by another rich accession, that of the citadel of Ghent.
1207 - 1253 II Otto 46 46  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Otto II., " The Illustrious" , Duke of Bavaria 1231- 1253 and Count Palatine of
the Rhine 1227-1253.
1208 - 1267 Agnes deWelf 59 59  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Countess Palatine of the Rhine. Countess of the Rhein. Countess ofBavaria.
1173 - 1227 VI Heinrich 54 54  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

In the line of Brunswick, called " le Beau"  or " The Long" . Duke of Brunswick
1195- 1227, Count of Palatine of the Rhine, the latter title and estates
acquired through his marriage to Agnes.[FIX.ged]

In the line of Brunswick, called " le Beau"  or " The Long" . Duke of Brunswick 1195- 1227, C ount of Palatine of the Rhine, the latter title and estates acquired through his marriage t o Agnes.
1129 - 1195 Henry V "The Lion" 66 66  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duke of Brunswick, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Saxony

Aka: Henry X.[FIX.ged]

Duke of Brunswick, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Saxony
Aka: Henry X.
Annabel Balliol 1545 - 1596 Gysbert Gillbert deLannoye 51 51 Some records show his name as "G. Lano" But, in all my research I have found NO
Record of a family "Lano". in or around the place Gysbert was born.

Some Books say: " Gysbert or Gillbert was born at Tourcoing in Flanders,
records show he was baptised in the Roman Catholic Church, but became a
Protestant after the Siege of Tourcoing by the Huguenots ( meaning Confederate )
He married in 1558 the Protestant Heiress, Lady Marguerite de Ligne, and moved
to Tournai in Hainault,where the public records show that he and his son Jean
were residing in 1599.  Gysbert's marriage with the Protestant Heiress and
subsequent alliance with the Huguenots caused a very serious family feud, he
being the first Protestant in any branch of the family, and he was then
disinherited by his father. Upon his fathers death, his sister Marie inherited
the estates in 1560 and upon her death 22nd May, 1567 she left  them to her
aunt Marie, who in turn left them to another niece Yolanda". Some records show
Gysbert or Gillbert used the coat - armor of Barbancon, inherited from his
mother, and the Lannoy armes of his "paternal ancestors".
D. 1299 Margaret deAnjou Isabeau deClery 1559 - 5 Feb 1615/1616 Joanna 1291 - 1357 Alfonso IV of Portugal 66 66 1010 - 1079 Adela Capet Princess of France 69 69 1310 - 1356 Marie of Portugal 46 46 1166 - 1230 Alfonso IX of Leon And Castile 64 64 1293 - 1359 Beatrice of Castile 66 66 Susanna Cartwright 1302 - 1336 Alphonso IV of Aragon 34 34 1188 - 1252 Blanche deCastile 64 64 ~0939 - 0996 Hugues deCapet 57 57  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Sovereign of all France, lineal decendant in the 6th generation fromCharlemagne
and first King of the Capetian Dynasty. he was crowned , theunanimous choice of
the great feudal Barons, 3rd of July, 987 at Noyon.This reign marks the
beginning of modern history. Though Duke of France,Hugh, before his accession,
had also been Abbott of St. Martin de Tours.Hence, the surname, Capet, from
Capetus a monks hood.[FIX.ged]

Sovereign of all France, lineal decendant in the 6th generation fromCharlemagne and first Kin g of the Capetian Dynasty. he was crowned , theunanimous choice of the great feudal Barons, 3 rd of July, 987 at Noyon.This reign marks the beginning of modern history. Though Duke of Fra nce,Hugh, before his accession, had also been Abbott of St. Martin de Tours.Hence, the surnam e, Capet, from Capetus a monks hood.
D. 1445 Eleanor of Aragon And Sicily 1380 - 1416 Ferdinand I of Aragon And Sicily 35 35 1374 - 1435 Eleanor of Albuquerque 61 61  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Of Castile and Leon, Of Albuquerque.
1070 - UNKNOWN Gertrudeof Flanders 1116 - 1187 Humphrey III deBohun 71 71 Humphrey was Steward and Sewer to King Henry I. This feudal lord marriedMargery, daughter of Milo de Gloucester, Earl of Hereford, Lord HighConstable of England, last Lord Hereford of that family. She was co-heirwith her sister Mabel. At the instigation of which Milo he espoused thecause of the Empress Maud and her son, afterwards Henry II, against theKing Stephen, and so faithfully maintained his allegiance that theEmpress, by her especial charter, granted him the office of steward andsewer, both in Normandy and England. In the 20th of Henry II thisHumphrey accompanied Richard de Lacy, Justice of England, into Scotlandwith a powerful army to waste that country, and was one of the witnessesto the accord made by William,  King of Scots, and King Henry as to thesubjection of that kingdom to the crown of England. 1559 - 1603 Jacques Le Mahieu 44 44 1418 - 1456 Jeanne Manuel deLa Cerda 38 38 Of lineal descendant of Louis IX, (the Saint), King of France, through aline of Spanish Monar chs. ~1465 - 1500 Marie Manuel deLa Cerda 35 35 1177 - 1204 Agnes of Hohenstanfen 27 27  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Countess of Lorraine.

.[FIX.ged]

Countess of Lorraine.

.
1622 - 1700 Sarah Walker 78 78 1373 - 1418 Catherine Plantagenet 45 45 1312 - 1377 Edward III 64 64  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Founder of the "Order of the Garter"  in 1350, that exceeds in majesty, honour
and fame all chivalrous orders of the world.[FIX.ged]

Founder of the "Order of the Garter"  in 1350, that exceeds in majesty, honour and fame all c hivalrous orders of the world.
D. 1351 Eleanor Guzman 1307 - 1359 Eleanor of Castile 52 52 0952 - 1004 Adaelaeide de Poitou 52 52 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1023 - 1061 Floris I of Holland 38 38 Alice de Stavele 1729 - 1799 Thomas Delano 70 70 0917 Heloys (Adele) deNormandy  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Aka: Adaele (Gerloc) of Normandy.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Aka: Adaele (Gerloc) of Normandy.
Robert  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

The first Duke of Normandy, 911-927.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

The first Duke of Normandy, 911-927.
D. 0890 Reguvald  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Count Reguvald  "the Rich" of Norway, d. 890[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Count Reguvald  "the Rich" of Norway, d. 890
0897 - 0932 Gisele de France 35 35 Charles III de France  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France 898-922 who was the 3rd son of Louis II., King of Franceand
Italy, 877-879.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France 898-922 who was the 3rd son of Louis II., King of Franceand Italy, 877-879.
Louis II de France  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France and Italy 877-879.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France and Italy 877-879.
Lothaire de France  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of Italy, German-Roman Emperor, 840-855. Eldest son of Louis I.,King of
France and Italy, 818. German-Roman Emperor, 814-840. Son of theEmperor
Charlemagne.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of Italy, German-Roman Emperor, 840-855. Eldest son of Louis I.,King of France and Italy , 818. German-Roman Emperor, 814-840. Son of theEmperor Charlemagne.
Louis I de France  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France and Italy, 818, German-Roman Emperor, 814-940, son of theEmperor
Charlemagne.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

King of France and Italy, 818, German-Roman Emperor, 814-940, son of theEmperor Charlemagne.
0921 - 0988 Dirk II Count of Holland 67 67 1793 - 1849 Maria Ygnacia de la Candelaria Lopez y Arballo 56 56 Buried in the Mission of San Francisco, Solanno in Sonoma, Alta California, under the Holy Water  Font. ~0880 - Mar 0930/0931 Princess Beatrix  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Beatrix and her husband, King Robert I., were 4 daughters and one son,Hugh the
Great.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Beatrix and her husband, King Robert I., were 4 daughters and one son,Hugh the Great.
0860 - 0923 I Robert 63 63  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Count of Paris,Duke of France and Count of Anjou, King of France, 922.Robert
was crowned King of France at Rheims, 29 June 922. He was killedin the Battle
of Soissons, 16, June 923. after accomplishing prodigies ofvalor. Robert was
the son of Robert the Strong, brother of Eudes, King ofFrance, 887-898.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Count of Paris,Duke of France and Count of Anjou, King of France, 922.Robert was crowned Kin g of France at Rheims, 29 June 922. He was killedin the Battle of Soissons, 16, June 923. aft er accomplishing prodigies ofvalor. Robert was the son of Robert the Strong, brother of Eudes , King ofFrance, 887-898.
Robert The Strong  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of France, 861, Count of Blois, Champagne and Anjou, 864-866 by hiswife
Alpaida, daughteer of Louis I. (3rd son of Charlemagne)[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Duke of France, 861, Count of Blois, Champagne and Anjou, 864-866 by hiswife Alpaida, daughte er of Louis I. (3rd son of Charlemagne)
<0840 - 0902 I Heribert 62 62  [FIX.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Killed 902, Duke of Vermandois, Senlis, Berengarius and Bayeaux.

Aka: Herbert I., Count of Vermandois[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Killed 902, Duke of Vermandois, Senlis, Berengarius and Bayeaux.
Aka: Herbert I., Count of Vermandois
~0862 Princess Richilde Lady Alpaida  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Daughter of Louis I.,[FIX.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Daughter of Louis I.,
0778 I Louis  [FIX.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

German-Roman Emperor, 814-840, King of France and Italy 818.[FIX.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

German-Roman Emperor, 814-840, King of France and Italy 818.
~0818 - 0840 II Pepin 22 22  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Count Palatine of Vermandois and Valois and Lord of Peronne and St.Quentin.

Aka: Paepin II Quentin, Count of Vermandois.

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Count Palatine of Vermandois and Valois and Lord of Peronne and St.Quentin.
Aka: Paepin II Quentin, Count of Vermandois.
~0820 Alice de Valois 0870 - 0929 Dirk I Count of Holland 59 59 1736 - 1800 Juan Francisco de Lopez 64 64 Noted as a soldier in the Census of Alta California, 1775,  Presido San Diego. ~0797 - ~0835 Queen Cunigunde 38 38 1333 - 1379 Henry II of Castile 46 46  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Poisoned 1379.
0797 - 0818 King Bernard 21 21  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Grandson of Charlemagne[FIX.ged]

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[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Grandson of Charlemagne
~0777 Mrs. Pepin 1358 - 1382 Leonore II of Sicily 24 24 1358 - 1390 John I of Castile 32 32 1293 - 1350 Philip VI deFrance 57 57 1311 - 1350 Alfonso Xi of Castile 39 39 0972 - 1031 Robert II de Capet 59 59  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Acceded: 996"the Pious" , Duke of Burgundy, King of France. Robert
wasconsecrated and crowned King of France and Co-Regent during the life-timeof
his father, to settle the succession beyond question, and more solidly to
establish the dynasty.[FIX.ged]

Acceded: 996"the Pious" , Duke of Burgundy, King of France. Robert wasconsecrated and crowne d King of France and Co-Regent during the life-timeof his father, to settle the succession be yond question, and more solidly to establish the dynasty.
0840 - UNKNOWN Gerulf of Holland ~0986 - 1032 Constance de Toulouse 46 46  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Stammtafeln shows Constance as the daughter of William of Provence.[FIX.ged]

Stammtafeln shows Constance as the daughter of William of Provence.
William III Taillefer de Toulouse 1445 - 1508 Baudouin deBurgundy 63 63 D. 1369 Philippa of Hainault 1440 - 1487 Aldonce deFigueroa 47 47 Listed in GHAAHD as:  Aldonce de Figuera who m. Jean Manuel de Villena.

Some records show her as: Jeanne de Figueroa.
1396 - 1467 Philip III deBurgundy 71 71 le Bon,  The Good ~1424 Catherine deTiesferies 1363 - 23 Jan 1422/1423 Margarethe of Bavaria 1342 - 1404 Philippe II deBurgundy 62 62 1350 - 16 Mar 1404/1405 Marguerite de Bavaria 1095 - 1154 Stephen King of England 59 59 Reigned 1135-1154. He siezed the throne from Matilda who invaded Englandin
1139. The civil war that followed proved him a brave soldier but revealedhis
lack of political sense. In 1152, after much of the country had beenravaged in factional fighting and the royal administration had brokendown, Stephen recognized Matilda's son Henry as heir to the throne. Dukeof Normandy 1135-1144, deposed. Duke of Blois, Count of Mortain, Count ofBoulogne.
~1637 Helena Michelle Princess of France D. 1425 Bona of Artois Catherine Scaers Caelie Isabelle deLa Vigne Jacoba Avan Steenbergen Jeanne dePresles Margarethe Post Margarethe Scupelins 1013 Elika von Schweinfurt Mercatel Nicolette deBosquiel ~1565 Ann Bate 1319 - 1364 John II deFrance 45 45 ~1110 Patrick deEstoteville V Foulques Ermengarde du Maine 1558 - 1632 John Hussey 74 74 Source:  The Genealogical and Family History of the State of Maine, 1907.  The first authentic account we have of the current family is the record of John Hussey and Mary Wood, December 5, 1593, when they both were of Dorking, Surrey, England, and were persons of good position and of moderate estate in lands. John Hussey died in England, leaving a widow and children.  Of the latter the records are meagre, but there is known to have been a son John, who died young, a son Christopher and one or more daughters of whom we have no authentic account. According to the Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, it is not unlikely that John was the early voyager Hussey cast away upon Cape Florida and there devoured by the native cannibals, a fate attributed to Christopher by his gr. gr. son Joseph Marshall of Nantucket, in his signed 'Genealogy of the Husseys.' Another source, a Hussey genealogy chart provided  by a Hussey descendant, Dorothy Carter of Waynesville, OH, in 1992, John Hussey died in Dorking on 5 Feb 1630.

Source: "Historic Nantucket", volume 27, Oct. 1979, No. 2, J. William Bardoe, Director of Research, English Genealogical Research, Guildford, Surrey, furnished the entries below, some of which he re-checked for accuracy, and stated that the registers of the adjacent parishes of Abinger and Sheir (Shera) do not contain Hussey entries prior to 5th 12. 1593. Neither do the Richmond Parish Registers reveal anything pertinent to the ancestry of Christopher Hussey.

DORKING PARISH REGISTERS, CO. SURREY, ENGLAND
1503-178_
MARRIAGES
25th 9. 1569.  John Wood    Joane Taylor
5th 12. 1593*  John Hussey  Marie Wood
BAPTISMS
28th 6. 1562.  John Wood, son of John Wood (senior) and Audrey, his wife
5th 5. 1581    Sara Wood, daughter of John Wood (junior)
9th 7. 1581    Marie Wood, granddaughter of John Wood (senior)
30th 8. 1584   Elias Wood, son of John Wood (junior)
3rd 10. 1588   Martha Wood, daughter fo John Wood (junior)
29th 4. 1596   John Hussey, first child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
18th 2. 1598   Christopher Hussey, second child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
31st 1. 1601   Marie Hussey, third child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
BURIALS
1581           Marie Wood, daughter of John Wood (senior)
1586           Joane Wood, daughter fo John Wood (senior)
8th 11. 1597   John Hussey, son of John Hussey and Marie Wood
18th 2. 1603   Audrey, wife of John Wood (senior)
5th 4. 1612    John Wood (senior)
24th 5. 1632   John Hussey, aged 74
*Between 1582 and 1752, March was the first month of the year. The 12th month, therefore, was February, which brought about double dating. 5th 12. 1593, for example, should  read 5th February 1593 4 or February 5, 1593 /4.  The baptismal register of Dorking from 1550 through 1610, though there is a gap 1572-1578.  John Hussey did indeed marry Mary Wood at Dorking on 5 Dec. 1593.  A son John was baptized 29 Apr. 1596, and was buried 8 Nov. 1597.  Christopher was baptized 18 Feb. 1598/9.  A daughter named Marie was baptized 31 Mar. 1602.  No other Hussey baptisms recorded before 1610.
Ykenai or Hikenai Sarah* Thornhill 0960 - 9 Feb 1010/1011 Bernhard Billung II Duke of Saxony D. 1358 Isabella of France 1284 - 1327 Edward II 43 43 1596 - 1649 Theodata Batchilor 53 53 ~0898 - 0956 Hughes Magnus deCapet 58 58  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duke and King of Burgundy, Duke of France, Count of Vermandois, Count ofParis
and Marquis of Orleans.[FIX.ged]

Duke and King of Burgundy, Duke of France, Count of Vermandois, Count ofParis and Marquis o f Orleans.
D. 1452 Maria of Castile And Leon Mary deMolina 1153 - 1211 William III de Braose 58 58 5th Baron// William de Braose inherited the large estates of his grandmother, Bertade Gloucester, and besides possessed the Honour of Braose, in Normandy.This feudal lord was a personage of great power and influence during thereigns of Henry II and Richard I, from the former of whom he obtained agrant of the "whole kingdom of Limeric, in Ireland," for the service ofsixty knight's fees, to be held of the king and his younger son, John.For several years after this period, he appears to have enjoyed thefavour of King John and his power and possessions were augmented bydivers grants from the crown. In the 10th of the king's reign [1209],when the kingdom laboured under an interdiction and John deemed itexpedient to demand hostages from his barons to ensure their allegianceshould the Pope proceed to the length of absolving them from obedience tothe crown, his officers who came upon the mission to the Baron de Braosewere met by Maud, his wife, and peremptorily informed that she would notentrust any of her children to the king, who had so basely murdered hisown nephew, Prince Arthur. de Braose rebuked her for speaking thus,however, and said that if he had in anything offended the king, he wasready to make satisfaction according to the judgment of the court and thebarons, his peers, upon an appointed day and at any fixed place without,however, giving hostages. This answer being communicated to the king, an order was immediately transmitted to seize upon the baron's person, but Braose having notice thereof fled with his family into Ireland.

This quarrel between de Braose and King John is, however, differently related by other authorities. The monk of Llanthony stated that King John disinherited and banished him for his cruelty to the Welsh in his war with Gwenwynwyn, and that his wife Maud and William, his son and heir,died prisoners in Corfe Castle. Another writer relates, "that thisWilliam de Braose, son of Philip de Braose, Lord of Buelt, held the landsof Brecknock and Went for the whole time of King Henry II, Richard I, andKing John without any disturbance until he took to wife the Lady Maud deSt. Walerie, who, in revenge of Henry de Hereford, cause divers Welshmento be murthered in the castle of Bergavenny as they sat at meat; and thatfor this, and for some other pickt quarrel, King John banished him andall his out of England. Likewise, that in his exile, Maud his wife, withWilliam, galled, Gam, his son, were taken and put into prison where shedied the 10th year after her husband fought with Gwenwynwyn and slewthree thousand Welch." From these various relations, says Dugdale, it isno easy matter to discover what his demerits were, but what usage he hadat last, take here the credit of these two historians who lived near thattime. "This year, viz. anno 1240," quoth Matthew of Westminster, "thenoble lady Maud, wife of William de Braose, with William, their son andheir, were miserably famished at Windsor by the command of King John; andWilliam, her husband, escaping from Scorham, put himself into the habitof a beggar and, privately getting beyond sea, died soon after at Paris,where he had burial in the abbey of St. Victor." And Matthew Paris,putting his death in anno 1212 (which differs a little in time), says,"That he fled from Ireland to France and, dying at Ebula, his body wascarried to Paris and there honourably buried in the abbey of St. Victor.""But after these great troubles in his later days," continues Dugdale, "Ishall now say something of his pious works. Being by inheritance from hismother, Lord of Bergavenny, he made great grants to the monks of thatpriory, conditionally, that the abbot and convent of St. Vincent, inMaine (to which this priory of Bergavenny was a cell) should daily prayfor the soul of him, the said William, and the soul of Maud, his wife."

This great but unfortunate personage had issue by his wife, Maud de St.Walerie, I. William; II. Giles: III. Reginald; IV. Sir John; I. Joane;II. Loretta; III. Margaret; IV. Maud.

When the contest between King John and the barons broke out, Giles deBraose, bishop of Hereford, arraying himself under the baronial banner,was put in possession by the people of Bergavenny and the other castlesof the deceased lord, and eventually King John, in the last year of hisreign, his wrath then being assuaged, granted part of those lands to thebishop's younger brother and heir. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]

At his peak Lord of Bramber, Gower, Abergavenny, Brecknock, Builth,Radnor, Kington, Limerick, and the three castles of Skenfrith, Grosmont,and Whitecastle. William inherited Bramber, Builth, and Radnor from his father, Brecknockand Abergavenny through his mother.  He was the strongest of the MarcherLords involved in constant war with the Welsh and other lords.  He wasparticularly hated by the Welsh for the massacre of three Welsh princes,their families and their men which took place during a feast at hiscastle of Abergavenny in 1175.  He was sometimes known as the "Ogre ofAbergavenny".  One of the Normans' foremost warriors, he fought alongsideKing Richard at Chalus in 1199 (where Richard was killed). William received Limerick in 1201 from King John.  He was also givencustody of Glamorgan, Monmouth, and Gwynllwg in return for large payments. William captured Arthur, Count of Brittany at Mirebeau in 1202 and was incharge of his imprisonment for King John.  He was rewarded in February1203 with the grant of Gower.  He may have had knowledge of the murderPrince Arthur and been bribed to silence by John with the city ofLimerick in July.  His honors reached their peak when he was made Sheriffof Herefordshire by John in 1206-7.  He had held this office underRichard from 1192-1199. His fall began almost immediately.  William was stripped of his office asbailiff of Glamorgan and other custodies in 1206-7.  Later he wasdeprived of all his lands and, sought by John in Ireland, he returned toWales and joined the Welsh Prince Llewelyn in rebellion.  He fled toFrance in 1210 via Shoreham "in the habit of a beggar" and died in exilenear Paris.  Despite intending to be interred at St John's, Brecon, hewas buried in the Abbey of St Victorie, Paris by Stephen Langton, theArchbishop of Canterbury, another of John's chief opponents who was alsotaking refuge there. His wife and son were murdered by King John-starved to death at WindsorCastle.

pg 75 & 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

From "A Baronial Family in Medieval England: The Clares, 1217-1314", by Michael Altschul, Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins press, 1965.
The Clares came to England with the Conqueror. Like many other great families which settled in England after the Conquest, they were related to the dukes of Normandy and had established themselves as important members of the Norman feudal aristocracy in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries. The origin of the family can be traced to Godfrey, eldest of the illegitimate children of Duke Richard I (the Fearless), the Conqueror's great-grandfather. While the Duke granted Godfrey Brionne, he did not make him a count. Godfrey's comital title derives from the grant of the county of Eu made to him after 996 by his half-brother, Duke Richard II. After Godfrey's death, Eu was given to William, another of Duke Richard I's bastard sons, and Gilbert, Godfrey's son, was left with only the lordship of Brionne. However, under Duke Robert I, father of William the Conqueror, Gilbert assumed the title of count of Brionne while not relinquishing his claim to Eu. When Count William of Eu died shortly before 1040, Gilbert assumed the land and title, but he was assassinated in 1040 and his young sons, Richard and Baldwin, were forced to flee Normandy, finding safety at the court of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders. When William the Conqueror married Count Baldwin's daughter, he restored Gilbert's sons to Normandy, although he did not invest them with either Brionne or Eu or a comital title. William granted the lordships of Bienfaite and Orbec to Richard fitz Gilbert, and Le Sap and Meules to Baldwin. While Gilbert's descendants later pressed a claim for Brionne, it was never restored.
Richard and Baldwin fitz Gilbert took part in the Norman conquest of England, and both assumed important positions in the Conqueror's reign. Baldwin was made guardian of Exeter in 1068, and appears in the Domesday Book as sheriff of Devon, lord of Okehampton and numerous other estates in Devon, Dorset, and Somerset. His sons William and Richard were also sheriffs of Devon and participated in the abortive Norman penetration of Carmarthen in the early twelfth century.
However, the lasting position of the family in England must be credited to Baldwin's brother, Richard fitz Gilbert I. He was regent of England jointly with William de Warenne during the Conqueror's absence in 1075, and he served in various other important capacities for the King. King William rewarded his cousin well, granting him one of the largest fiefs in the territorial settlement. The lordship centered on Clare (obviously the origin of the Clare family name), Suffolk, which had been an important stronghold in Anglo-Saxon times. The bulk of Richard fitz Gilbert's estates lay in Suffolk, Essex, Surrey, and Kent, but comprised holdings in various other counties in the southern and eastern parts of the kingdom as well. In addition, King William arranged for Richard's marriage to Rohese, sister of Walter Giffard, later Earl of Buckingham, and her dowry, consisting of lands in Huntingdon and Hertford, became absorbed in the family inheritance.
After Richard's death, his extensive properties in Normandy and England were divided between his two eldest sons. The Norman fiefs of Bienfaite and Orbec passed to Roger, while Gilbert, inherited the English honors of Clare and Tonbridge.
- the players -
Richard I, Duke of Normandy, died 996  :  Godfrey of Brionne and Eu died ca 1015  :  Gilbert, count of Brionne died 1040
:  -Richard fitz Gilbert (1035-1090) = Rohese de Giffard
:  Roger d.s.p. 1130  Gilbert fitz Richard I(ca1066-1117 ) = Adeliz daughter of Hugh Claremont  Walter d.s.p.1138  Richard, abbot of Ely 1100  Robert d.1136  Adelice = Walter Tirel  Rohese = Eudo Dapifer
-Baldwin fitz Gilbert died 1095
:  William d.s.p. 1096  Robert d.s.p.1101  Richard d.s.p.1137
While Gilbert fitz Richard I found himself at odds with the Conqueror's successor, William Rufus, he and other members of the family enjoyed great favor with Rufus' successor King Henry I. Some have suggested that Henry's largesse was due to the fact that Walter Tirel, husband of Richard's daughter Adelize, shot the arrow which slew Rufus. Proof of this is lacking, but with certainty the wealth and position of the Clare family increased rapidly during Henry's reign. One of Rohese Giffards brothers (Walter) was made Earl of Buckingham and another Bishop of Winchester. Gilbert fitz Richard's brothers were also rewarded: Richard, a monk at Bec, was made abbot of Ely in 1100; Robert was granted the forfeited manors of Ralph Baynard in East Anglia; Walter, who founded Tintern Abbey in 1131, was given the great lordship of Netherwent with the castle of Striguil in the southern march, territories previously held by Roger, son of William fitz Osborn, Earl of Hereford, who had forfeited them in 1075. In 1110 Gilbert was granted the lordship of Ceredigion (Cardigan) in southwestern Wales, and immediately embarked upon an intensive campaign to subjagate the area.
- the players -
Gilbert fitz Richard I (ca1066-1117)=Adeliz d/o Hugh Claremont
:  Richard fitz Gilbert II (ante 1100-1136)=Adelize de Chester  Gilbert b. 1100  Baldwin d. 1154  Hervey  Walter  Margaret=William de Montifichet  Alice=Aubrey de Vere  Rohese=Baderon de Monmouth
After Gilbert fitz Richard I died in 1117, his children continued to profit from royal generosity and favorable connections. His daughters were all married to important barons; William de Montfichet, Lord of Stansted in Essex, the marcher Lord Baderon de Monmouth, and Aubrey de Vere, Lord of Hedingham in Essex and father of the first Vere Earl of Oxford. Of the five sons, little is known of two: Hervey, whom King Stephen sent on an expedition to Cardigan abt 1140, and Walter, who participated in the Second Crusade of 1147. Baldwin established himself as an important member of the lesser baronage by obtaining the Lincolnshire barony of Bourne through marriage. Richard fitz Gilbert II, the eldest and heir, was allowed to marry Adeliz, sister of Ranulf des Gernons, Earl of Chester, thus acquiring lands in Lincoln and Northampton as her marriage portion. He tried to consolidate the gains made by his father in Cardigan, but was killed in an ambush in 1136 and the lordship was soon recovered by the Welsh.
Of Gilbert fitz Richard I' sons, Gilbert was the only one to achieve any great prominence, being the founder of the great cadet branch of the family and the father of one of the most famous men in English history. Gilbert fitz Gilbert de Clare was high in the favor of Henry I, perhaps because his wife Isabell, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Count of Meulan and Earl of Leicester, was one of Henry's favourite mistresses. When Gilbert's uncle Roger died without heirs, Henry granted Gilbert the lordships of Bienfaite and Orbec in Normandy. When another uncle, Walter, Lord of Netherwent in South Wales, died without issue in 1138, King Richard? gave Gilbert this lordship in addition to the lordship of Pembroke, which had been forfeited by Arnulf of Montgomery in 1102. Gilbert was also created Earl of Pembroke in 1138. At his death in 1148, he was succeeded by his son Richard fitz Gilbert, aka "Strongbow" who led the Norman invasion of Ireland and obtained the great lordship of Leinster in 1171.
Thus, in just two generations, the cadet branch of the Clares became one of the most important families in England. Strongbow was Earl of Pembroke, Lord of Netherwent, and Lord of Leinster being the most powerful of the marcher and Anglo-Irish magnates under King Henry II. Strongbow d. in 1176 and son Gilbert d. abt. 1185, ending the male line. In 1189, the inheritance passed to Strongbow's daugther Isabel and her husband, William Marshal.
Meanwhile, the senior side prospered. After Richard fitz Gilbert II died in 1136, Clare, Tonbridge, and other estates passed to the eldest son Gilbert fitz Richard II, who was created Earl of Hertford by King Stephen. Gilbert died probably unmarried in 1152, when his younger brother Roger inherited the estates and comital title. Roger resumed the the campaign against the Welsh in Cardigan where, after 8 years, he was defeated in 1165. However, Roger did add some lands and nine knights' fees through his marriage to Maud, daughter and heir of the Norfolk baron James de St. Hillary. Roger died in 1173 and his widow, Maud, conveyed the remainder of the inheritance to her next husband, William de Aubigny, Earl of Arundel. The Clare estates along with the earldom passed to Roger's son, Richard, who for the next 4 decades until he died in 1217, was the head of the great house of CLARE, adding immensely to the wealth, prestige, and landed endowment of his line.
Roger's son Richard, hereinafter Richard de CLARE acquired half of the former honor of Giffard in 1189 when King Richard I, in need of money for the Third Crusade, agreed to divide the Giffard estates between Richard de CLARE and his cousin Isabel, Strongbow's daughter based on their claims of descendancy to Rohese Giffard. Richard de CLARE obtained Long Crendon in Buckingham, the caput of the Giffard honor in England, associated manors in Buckingham, Cambridge, and Bedfordshire, and 43 knights' fees, in addition to some former Giffard lands in Normandy. When Richard de CLARE's mother Maud died in 1195, he obtained the honor of St. Hilary. Maud's 2nd husband, William de Aubigny, Earl of Arundel, who had held St. Hilary jure uxoris, d. in 1193, and despite the fact he had a son and heir, the honor reverted to Maud and after her death escheated to the crown. Richard de CLARE offered 360 and acquired it. The honor later became absorbed into the honor of CLARE and lost its separate identity.
Richard de CLARE's most important act, however, was his marriage to Amicia, 2nd daughter and eventual sole heir to William Earl of Gloucester. The Gloucester inheritance included the earldom and honor of Gloucester with over 260 knights' fees in England, along with the important marcher lordships of Glamorgan and Gwynllwg. It was not easy though!! William died 1183, leaving 3 daughters. The eldest, Mabel, married Amaury de Montfort, Count of Evreux, while the second, Amicia married Richard de CLARE. King Henry II meanwhile arranged the marriage of the youngest Isabel, to his son John, Count of Mortain, in 1189. When John became King in 1199, he divorced Isabel to marry Isabelle of Angoulªme, but, he kept the 1st Isabel in his custody. Then in 1200, John created Mabel's son Amaury Earl of Gloucester. In addition, Richard de CLARE and his son Gilbert were given a few estates and 10 fees of the honor of Gloucester of Kent; otherwise, John kept the bulk of the honor, with the great lordships of Glamorgan and Gwynllwg. Mabel's son Amaury died without issue in 1213. Shortly thereafter, John gave the 1st Isabel in marriage to Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, who was also created Earl of Gloucester. When Geoffrey died, the inheritance was assigned to Hubert de Burgh, the justiciar. Hubert married Countess Isabel shortly before her death in Oct. 1217, however, he did not retain the estates, since they passed to Amicia, now recognized as Countess of Gloucesthire, and her husband Richard de CLARE, despite the fact Richard and Amicia had been separated since 1200.
Richard outlived Isabel by several weeks and by 28 Nov 1217, he was dead, leaving Gilbert, aged 38, as the sole heir to the Clare and Gloucester estates and title. Gilbert de CLARE assumed the title of Earl of Gloucester and Hertford and was charged £350 relief for the honors of Clare, Gloucester, St. Hilary and his half of the old Giffard barony. He controlled some 456 knights fees, far more than any other, and it did not include some 50 fees in Glamorgan and Gwynllwg.
By a remarkable series of fortuitous marriages and quick deaths, the CLARES were left in 1217 in possession of an inheritance which in terms of social prestige, potential revenues, knights' fees, and a lasting position of great importance among the marcher lords of Wales. They were probably the most successful family in developing their lands and power during the 12th century and in many ways the most powerful noble family in 13th century England. By 1317, however, the male line of Clares became extinct and the inheritance was partitioned. Between 1217 and 1317 there were four Clare generations.
Gilbert de CLARE, born abt. 1180 had a brother Richard/Roger and a sister Matilda. Richard accompanied Henry III's brother, Richard of Cornwall, to Gascony in 1225-26 and was never heard from again. Matilda was married to William de Braose (died 1210 when he and his mother were starved to death by King John), eldest son of the great marcher baron William de Braose (died 1211), Lord of Brecknock, Abergavenny, Builth, Radnor, and Gower, who was exiled by King John. Matilda returned to her father and later (1219) sued Reginald de Braose, second son of William, for the family lands, succeeding only in recovering Gower and the Sussex baronry of Bramber.
Gilbert de CLARE, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford from 1217 to 1230, married Oct. 1214 his cousin Isabel, daughter and eventual co-heiress of William Marshal (died 1219), earl of Pembroke. Gilbert and Isabel had three sons and two daughters, with the eldest son and heir Richard, born 4 Aug 1222, thus only 8, when his father died. In 1243, Richard de CLARE came of age and assumed the estates and titles of his father until he d. 15 July 1262. His brother William, b. 1228 held lands of Earl Richard in Hampshire and Norfolk for the service of a knight's fee. In June 1258, during a baronial reform program, William was granted custody of Winchester castle. A month later he died, reportedly by poison administered by the Earl Richard's seneschal (an official in a medieval noble household in charge of domestic arrangements and the administration of servants; a steward or major- domo. Middle English, from Old French, of Germanic origin), Walter de Scoteny, in supposed collaboration with Henry III's Poitevin half-brothers, who strongly opposed the baronial program and Earl Richard's participation in it. (Why didn't they poison Richard??)
Earl Gilbert's daughters were very well placed. Amicia, born 1220, was betrothed (promised to be given in marriage) in 1226 to Baldwin de Reviers, grandson and heir to William de Reviers, Earl of Devon (died 1217). Baldwin was only a year or two older than Amicia and Earl Gilbert offered 2,000 marks to the King for the marriage and custody of some Reviers estates during Baldwin's minority. The marriage must have been consummated around 1235, since Baldwin's son and heir (Baldwin) was born the next year. After Baldwin died in 1245, Amicia (died 1283) controlled the lands of her son (died 1262) and was given permission to marry a minor English baron, Robert de Guines/Gynes, uncle of Arnold III, Count of Guines.
Earl Gilbert's other daughter, Isabel born 1226, married 1240 the Scots baron Robert Bruce, lord of Annandale (d 1295), and by him was the grandmother of the hero of Bannockburn. Her marriage was probably arranged by her mother Isabel and uncle, Gilbert Marshal who gave her the Sussex manor of Ripe as a marriage portion.
Isabel Marshal outlived Earl Gilbert de CLARE by ten years, during which time she was busy. In 1231 she married Richard of Cornwall, to the displeasure of Richard's brother King Henry III, who was trying to arrange another match for Richard. She died 1240, after 4 children by Richard, only one of which lived past infancy. According to the Tewkesbury chronicle, she wished to be buried next to her 1st husband, but Richard of Cornwall had her buried at Beaulieu Abbey in Hampshire, although as a pious gesture he allowed her heart to be sent to Tewkesbury.
- the players -
Richard de CLARE, Earl of Hertford d. 1217
Richard/Roger d.s.p. 1228
Matilda = (1) William de Braose
(2) ?? 1219 Rhys Gryg died 1233
Gilbert de CLARE (1180-1230) = 1214 Isabel =1231 Richard of Cornwall died 1272
William (1228-d.s.p. 1258)
Gilbert born 1229
Amicia (1220-1283) = (1) 1226 Baldwin de Reviers
(2) 1247 Robert de Guines died 1283
Isabel born 1226 = 1240 Robert Bruce died 1295
Richard de CLARE (1222-1262) = (1) Margaret de Burgh died 1237
(2) Maud de Lacy d. 1289
Thomas (124?-1287) = Juliana of Offaly d. 1300
Bogo (1248-d.s.p. 1294)
Isabel (1240-1271) = 1258 William,Marquis de Montferrat
Margaret (1249-1312) = 1272 Edmund of Cornwall died 130
Rohese (1252-1299+) = 1270 Roger deMowbray died 1297
Eglentina (1257-1257)
Gilbert de CLARE (1243-1295) = 1254 (1) Alice de Lusignan (annulled)
Joan (1264/71-1322+ = 1284 (1) Duncan died 1289, 1302
(2) Gervase Avenel died 1322+
Isabella (1263-1358) = 1316 Maurice de Berkley
= 1290 (2)
Joan of Acredid died1307
Eleanor (1292-1337)=(1) 1306 Hugh Despenser died1326
(2) 1327
William la Zouche died 1337
Margaret (1293-1342)= (1) 1307 Peter Gaveston d.s.p. 1312
(2) 1317
Hugh D'Audley died 1347
Elizabeth (1295-1360)= (1) 1308 John de Burgh died 1313
(2) 1316 Theobald Verdun d.s.p. 1316
(3) 1317 Roger Damory d.s.p. 1322
1581 - 1660 Marie Wood 79 79 DORKING PARISH REGISTERS, CO. ‘SURREY, ENGLAND  1503-178_

MARRIAGES:
25th 9. 1569. John Wood  Joane Taylor
5th 12. 1593*  John Hussey Marie Wood

BAPTISMS
28th 6. 1562. John Wood, son of John Wood (senior) and Audrey, his
wife
5th 5. 1581  Sara Wood, daughter of John Wood (junior)
9th 7. 1581  Marie Wood, granddaughter of John Wood (senior)
30th 8. 1584  Elias Wood, son of John Wood (junior)
3rd 10. 1588  Martha Wood, daughter fo John Wood (junior)
29th 4. 1596  John Hussey, first child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
18th 2. 1598  Christopher Hussey, second child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
31st 1. 1601  Marie Hussey, third child of John Hussey and Marie Wood.

BURIALS
1581 Marie Wood, daughter of John Wood (senior)
1586 JoaneWood, daughter of John Wood (senior)
8th 11. 1597   John Hussey, son of John Hussey and Marie Wood
18th 2. 1603    Audrey, wife of John Wood (senior)
5th 4. 1612     John Wood (senior)
24th 5. 1632    John Hussey, aged 74


*Between 1582 and 1752, March was the first month of the year. The 12th
month, therefore, was February, which brought about double dating. 5th 12.
1593, for example, should  read 5th February 1593/ 4 or February 5, 1593 4.
Walter Weston Folger ,  He married 16.Marie Wood 5 Dec 1593.

16. Marie Wood was christened 9 Sep 1581 in Dorking, Surrey, England, the
daughter of 24.Henry Wood and 25.Marthey Bull.
The ancestry of Mary is taken from Ancestors and Descendants of Jehu Cox
by Wayne D. Stout.  Stout provided it without any references.
Mary Wood Hussey emigrated to the New England Colony 1630 according to
one historical record, and in 1632 according to others.
Having been persecuted in England for their religious views in opposition
the the Church of England, they, along with hundreds of other
non-conformists or Puritans, had resided in Holland for a period before
emigrating to America.

She was an 'Original Grantee' of Hampton, N.H. and a 'Proprietor" there
1638-1640.  Her home was near but not with son, Christopher.  Even though
there was no official "Friends" or Quaker Meetings at that time, her
family was of the faith that later became known as 'Friends'.  She was a
forceful individual.

Source:  Historic Nantucket, Vol. 27, Oct 1979, No. 2, quotes Dorking Parish Register.  This is a more authentic reference for Mary (Marie) Wood's birth and marriage.
~0697 Gerold 1396 - 1458 Alfonso V of Aragon And Sicily 62 62  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

King of Aragon and Sicily 1416, King of Naples 1435-1458.[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

King of Aragon and Sicily 1416, King of Naples 1435-1458.
0975 - 1011 Hildeburg Von Stade 36 36 1199 - 1252 Ferdinand III of Castile 53 53 King of Castile 1217-1252, King of Leon 1230-1252 D. 1278 Joan of Aumale ~1080 Robert d'Strivers 1221 - 1295 Margaret deProvence 74 74 1258 - 1296 Sancho IV of Castile 38 38 0665 Bertha The Merovingian <1530 Thomas Fowler Eleanor of Castile 1187 - 1226 Louis VIII de France 39 39 1221 - 1284 Alfonso X of Castile 63 63  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

King of Castile and Leon, 1252-1284, German Roman Emperor, Holy RomanEmperor,
1257-1284

King of Castile and Leon, 1252-1284, German Roman Emperor, Holy RomanEmperor,
1257-1284[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

King of Castile and Leon, 1252-1284, German Roman Emperor, Holy RomanEmperor, 1257-1284

King of Castile and Leon, 1252-1284, German Roman Emperor, Holy RomanEmperor, 1257-1284
~1185 John Esquire 1502 Anthony Fowler 1285 - 1312 Ferdinand IV of Castile 27 27 1285 - 1313 Constance of Portugal 28 28 1338 - 1361 Blanche of Bourbon 23 23 ~1460 - 1528 Richard Fowler 68 68 Find for research: A.H. Lloyd, "Two Monumental Brasses in the Chapel of Christ's College," Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, 33 (1931/32): 61-82,  fold-out charts between pages 72 and 73.


Sir. Richard Le Fowler was born about 1460.  Richard died 1528 at 68 years of age. He married twice. He married Elizabeth Windsor.   Elizabeth was born about 1465  the daughter of Sir.Thomas Windsor of Stanwell, Co. Middlesex. He married Juliana Shaw [2] .   Juliana is the daughter of Sir. John Shaw.   See the Visitation of London and Shropshire.  Sir Richard inherited Rycote, Foxley and most of the other Manors; Richard was called  "Sir Richard the Foolish," as he was unwise with money & a fool, thereby  losing nearly all of his estates.
In 1520, Sir Richard received from Henry VIII a grant of the following arms: Azure, on a chevron, argent, between three lions passant, guardant,or, as many crosses moline, sable. These arms can be seen on his tomb inTrinity Church, London. In the Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica,Vol.3, New Series, p.345, it is stated that prior to this time the Fowlers used the Arms of Barton, having none of their own. The Visitation of Oxfordshire and the notes contained within  would seen to refute this claim.
Richard Fowler Sir. and Elizabeth Windsor had the following family:

i. Edmund FOWLER SIR..
ii. Bridget FOWLER
iii. George FOWLER  was born 1498 and died before 1540.  Unmarried.
iv. Anthony FOWLER was born about 1502.


Richard FOWLER Sir. and Juliana SHAA had the following family:

v. John FOWLER
vi. Christopher FOWLER
vii. William FOWLER   William died date unknown. Died unmarried
viii. Thomas FOWLER
ix. Margaret FOWLER
x. Elizabeth FOWLER
D. 1361 Mary dePadilla 1354 - 1394 Constance of Castile 40 40 1340 - 3 Feb 1397/1398 John Plantagenet deEngland  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duke of Lancaster. " of Gaunt, France"

Duke of Lancaster. " of Gaunt, France"
1379 - 1406 Henry III of Castile 27 27 Margaret 0880 - 0967 Billung deSaxony 87 87 ~1126 Mabel de Limes 1465 - 1480 Elizabeth de Windsor 15 15 Other sources state a birth date of 1462, in Stanwell, Middlesex, England 1339 - 1374 Sancho of Albuquerque 35 35 D. 1374 Beatrix of Portugal D. 1374 Joan deCastro 1440 - 1485 Thomas de Windsor 45 45 ~1444 - ~1485 Elizabeth Andrews 41 41 1372 Beatrice of Portugal 1215 - 1270 Louis IX Capet 55 55 ~1410 - 1451 Miles de Windsor 41 41 Some sources state place of death as St. Bartholomew, Ferrara, Italy. D. 1327 Agnes of France 0928 - 0976 Henry Von Stade 48 48 ~1414 - <30 1451 Joane Greene 1234 - 1271 Isabel deAragon 37 37 1326 - 1360 Joan I of Auvergne 34 34 1294 - 1348 Joan deBurgundy 54 54 ~1395 - 1428 Richard de Windsor 33 33 Other birth place found: Stanwell, Middlesex, England. D. 1398 Blanche of Navarre 1315 - 1349 Judith deBohemia 34 34 Gwenllian Ichon 1398/1399 Christian Faulkner 1245 - 1285 Philip III France 40 40 1601 - 1629 Agnes Franklin 28 28 D. 1321 Mary deBrabant ~1384 Walter Greene See: Visitation of Essex, 1558, p.57 ~1414 - 1456 John Andrews 42 42 1279 - 1318 Margaret France 39 39 ~1410 - >1485 Elizabeth Stratton 75 75 1271 - 1305 Joan I of Navarre 34 34 D. 1358 Matilda of St. Pol Howel Ichon ~1380 James Andrews D. 1305 Robert II of Burgundy 0975 - 1017 Henry Count of Schweinfurt 42 42 ~1385 Alice Weyland ~1427 - 1477 Joan Danvers 50 50 1420 - 1477 Richard Fowler 57 57 Knighted by King Edward IV in 1467. Burkes General Armory, Page 372, Under "Fowler" (Windlesham House, Bagshot, Co. Surry)has this for a Coat of Arms:" Az.on a chev. ar. betw. 3 lions pass. guard. or. as many crosses pattee sa. Crests: 1st,  Fowler: An owl ar. ducally crowned or;  2nd,  Englefield: An arm erect vested per pale az. and gu. cuff ar. the arm holding a branch of laurel, ppr.; Motto: " Sapiens qui vigilat." Made chancellor for Duchy of Lancaster. D. Feb 1676/1677 Mary Coffin 1400 - 1452 William Fowler 52 52 AGINCOURT BATTLE ROLL :
MONSR THOMAS PERCY AND HIS RETENU
William Fowler.
William Fayrchild.
Monsr John Osbaldesten, Chlr.
John de Malpas.
Richard de Malpas.
Monsr Henry de Skaresbreke, Chlr.
Edward Banester.
Henry Gray.
John Gylle.
Monsr Edmund de la Pole, Chlr.
Richard Doo.
Alan Dalby.
Monsr William Stanely, Chlr.
Henry Hoton.
John Barbour.


Burkes General Armory, Page 372, Under "Fowler" (Windlesham House, Bagshot, Co. Surry)has this for a Coat of Arms:" Az.on a chev. ar. betw. 3 lions pass. guard. or. as many crosses pattee sa. Crests: 1st,  Fowler: An owl ar. ducally crowned or;  2nd,  Englefield: An arm erect vested per pale az. and gu. cuff ar. the arm holding a branch of laurel, ppr.; Motto: " Sapiens qui vigilat."

Henry Fowler Removed to Barthomley, Co. Cheshire, of which parish his brother, Rev. Richard Fowler, was Rector; will dated 25 July,1638, proved at London by his brother Richard in 1646, whom he made his heir.

Sir William Fowler of Rycott, Oxford was born about 1400 in Sherbourne, Oxford, England.  It was during the Third Crusade, 1191, in which Richard the Lion Hearted of England, Philip II of France, and Emperor Frederick Barbarosa took part, that Richard Fowler came into prominence. He took with him and maintained during this crusade to Palestine a body of British bowmen, all of whom were his own tenants.

The Third Crusade has been described as a "glorious but fruitless effort for the recovery of Palestine." However, Richard Fowler's services were so brilliant that King Richard bestowed upon him the crest with our family's present coat-of-arms and a grant of land in Abbey-Cwyn-Hir.

According to tradition, it was during the seige of Acre that Richard Fowler blocked an attempt of the infidels to surprise and capture theChristian camp, and that it was this brilliant stroke that brought him knighthood.  From Sir Richard Fowler, this hero of the Third Crusade, we are direct descendants.  Sir William Fowler of Rycot, Oxford, fourth indescent from Sir Richard, was the father of the second Sir Richard Fowler, knighted by King Edward IV and created Chancelor of the Duchy of Lancaster.

Richard Gildart Fowler . "A history of the Fowler family of southeastern North Carolina". Norman, Oklahoma 1985. Grover Parsons Fowler. From a book titled, "The House of Fowler". Pages 28,29. William Fowler born about 1445. He was the 5th great grandfather of Mary Ball. Her son was  Gen & Pres. George Washington.

Sir Wm Fowler (of Buckingham) died 1452. His son, Richard, left a will dated 1477 in which he states his aunt is Sibil Quartermayne etc etc, and 'ITEM I will that there be a monk or a priest found[ener?] to syng daily in the chapel of St.Dunston in the abbey of Westminister where my fader heth buried for the terme of tenne yerres'. The will is a little difficult to read. I dont know if Richard got the date of his father death wrong, or whether his father was buried somewhere else first. Richard preferred to be buried with his friends in Buckingham. Paul Poornan. Oxford, UK.

Thomas Fowler coat of arms, son of William and brother of Richard, found on his Brass in Mr. Mill Stephenson's "A List of Monumental Brasses in the British Isles" 1926. Also found in Monumental brasses in the chapel of Christs College, [I] A monumental brass in the ante-chapel. by A.H. Lloyd, Ph.D., F.S.A.  The slab lies in the south east corner close to the wall and screen. The mesurements are 6' 9" X 2' 9".   There are two figures, a man ond a wife.
The blazon Thomas's shield is: Quarterley:  1] Argent 3 wolves heads erased gules, a border Azure charged with 12 castles Or. {Fowler} 2] Ermine on a canton Gules an owl argent {Barton} 3] Argent 2 bars Gules on a chief Or a Lion Azure {Englefield} 4] Vairy Argent and Gules {Gernon or Gresley} Over all in fess point a crescent for difference.
The wife of Thomas bore on her shield the arms of Dynham of Notewell co. Devon and Arches.
Living Allen Mary Cronkheit Sybout Source:"Westchester Patriarchs",  by: Norman Davis;  Aka:  Maritje. ~1382 - 1448 John Danvers 66 66 The Visitation of the County of Oxford, 1566,1574 and 1634. Together with The Gatherings of Oxfordshire, 1574.  From Harl. MS. No. 1412, p. 28 1555 - 1604 John de Stratton 49 49 ~1400 - ~1450 Joane Bruley 50 50 Dau. and Heire to John Bruly and the  2nd wife to John Danvers.  The Visitation of the County of Oxford, 1566,1574 and 1634. Together with The Gatherings of Oxfordshire, 1574. From Harl. MS. No. 1412, p.28 0973 - 1067 Gerberge of Henneberg 94 94 ~1437 Philip Hingston <1380 - 1452 Henry Fowler 72 72 1371 - 1419 John deBurgundy 48 48 ~1340 John Barton D. 0661 Unknown Erchembaldus 1350 - 1400 John Fowler 50 50 >1350 - >1400 Margaret Loveday 50 50 ~1378 - 1415 Nicholas Englefield 37 37 1354 Nicholas Clarke 1761 - 1838 Jacob Van Wert 76 76 MORRISANIA MANNOR, granted to Lewis MORRIS (1671-1746), Chief Justice of the Province of New York, Governor of New Jersey
SIZE/LOCATION: 1,920 acres in present-day Bronx County (Landlord and Tenant p. 81)
MAP:
DATE(S) OF GRANT: 6 May 1697 by Gov. Benjamin Fletcher ("the Mannour or Lordship of Morrisania"); transcript of original grant in De Lancey pp. 157-159 and Land Patents Transcriptions 7:63-67 (Land Patents 7:64-70)
RIGHTS GRANTED: court leet, court baron, advowson
PUBLISHED HISTORY: Lucy D. Akerly, The Morris Manor (New York: The Order of Colonial Lords of Manors in America, Publication No. 4, 1916) [N.Y. G 51]
LOCATION OF PAPERS:
PUBLISHED PAPERS:
GRANTEE AND FAMILY: Edward F. De Lancey, "Original Family Records, Morris of Morrisania, Westchester Co., New York," Record 7(1876):16-18; John E. Stillwell, Historical and Genealogical Miscellany: Data Relating to the Settlement and Settlers of New York and New Jersey, 5 vols. (New York: n.p., 1903-32; reprinted Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1970) 4:14-34 [N.J. G 32]; Elizabeth Morris Lefferts, Descendants of Lewis Morris of Morrisania . . . . (New York: Tobias A. Wright, 1907) [G M 8335 oversize]; Kathryn M. Wilkinson, Some Descendants of Richard Morris and Sarah Pole of Morrisania With Many Collateral Lineages (Milwaukee, Wis.: privately printed, 1966) [G M 8336]; Eugene R. Sheridan, Lewis Morris, 1671-1746: A Study in Early American Politics (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1981) [N.J. G 44.1]; Samuel Stelle Smith, Lewis Morris, Anglo-American Statesman (Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press, 1983) [not at NYG&B]
TENANTS/RESIDENTS:
0935 - 0980 Berthold Margrave Of The Nordgau 45 45 Henry Fitz Suein D. 1383 Beatrice of France 1296 - 1346 John of Luxemburg 50 50 <1330 - 1369 Peter I of Castile 39 39  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Deposed 1368, assassinated 1369.
Cicely 1282 - 1316 Elizabeth England 33 33 ~1433 Elizabeth Wingfield Elizabeth11 WINGFIELD (5058) (Robert10, Robert9, John8, Thomas7de Wingfield, John6Wingfield, John5de Wingfield, Thomas4, Robert3, John de2Wingfield, Robert de (Robertus de Campo Venti)1) was born circa 1438. She married Lord Male Paulet (5939). She married Sir William Brandon (12840), son of Robert Brandon (143389), before January 1462. She died on 28 April 1497. ~1357 - ~1395 Agnes de Brancestre 38 38 ~1490 - 1527 John Peck 37 37 Jennett Crackeplace "In reagrd to the crakeplace family, the name derives from the Viking word krakr which means crow. In the parish of Dean is Crakeplace Hall, and on a stone above the doorway is this legend: 'Christopher Crakeplace built the same When he was servant to Bron Altham.' In the center is a shield bearing the image of a bird, probably a crow, the emblem of the Crakeplace family. The name seems to have died out in the middle of the eighteenth cerntury, at least in that area."
Source: John Brooks Threlfall, Ancestry of the Children of John Brooks Threlfall,  privately printed, 1970
0941 - 1015 Heliksuinda Von Walbeck 74 74 ~1445 - 1515 William Chudleigh 70 70 1190 Matthew de Whitfield Matthew de Whitfield to whom the lands of Whitfield were confirmed by the Great Charter of Inspectimus of King Edward I about 1280 AD.Matthew de Whitfield had sons Robert and John.  Visitation of York. 1156 - 1189 Matilda Plantagenet Princess of England Princess 33 33  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Duchess of Saxony and Bavaria

Daughter of Henry II., King of England first of the Plantagenet Kings.[FIX.ged]

Duchess of Saxony and Bavaria
Daughter of Henry II., King of England first of the Plantagenet Kings.
~1360 Joan Ferrers 1162 - 1214 Eleanor Plantagenet Princess of England Princess 52 52 Queen of Castile Gray de Barwick 1071 - 1138 William II deWarrenne 67 67 "Watson History of The House of Warren 1782"
History of The House of Warren 1782

"The Complete Peerage Vol.XIIpI,P.495-496"

2ND EARL OF SURRY; ES III:699; NCP XII/1: 491-496.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

2ND EARL OF SURRY; ES III:699; NCP XII/1: 491-496.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
John Sudbury ~1349 Isabel de La Lee 1113 Reginald deWarrenne Source:   Watson History of The House of Warren 1782 is corroborated byCamden
and Ormerod, makes this Reginald to have married Aldelia deMowbray, (dau. of
Rodger de Mowbray)  and to have had a son, William,that the family of Warren,
of Poynton, Co. Chester come from.

Source:Ancestor Warren's of Poynton Chester.

Source: Colonial Families of The United States of America, Vol.1p319,

Source:  Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire, by
Burke.
0889 - 0910 Judith of Fruili 21 21 Rudolf II deWarenne 1135 - 1158 Sancho III of Castile 23 23 D. 1206 Alix deChampagne D. 3 Feb 1147/1148 Berengere of Barcelona III Raymond- Berenger ~1360 John Brancestre 1080 - 1126 Uracca of Castile 46 46 D. 1108 Pierre- Raymond of France  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Count of Burgundy[FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Count of Burgundy
Hugh II of Burgundy 1039 - 1109 Alfonso VI of Castile 70 70 0830 - 0920 Berthold Pfalzgraf of Swabia 90 90 1057 - 1092 Constance of Burgundy 35 35 1011 - 1075 Robert I of Burgundy 64 64 Alfonso V of Oviedo And Leon 0985 - Feb 1034/1035 Sancho III of Navarre And Castile 0985 - 1067 Donna Majora Munia Elvira de Castile 82 82 ~1360 Margaret de Mille Sancho- Garcias of Castile 1099 - 1137 Guillaume X de Poitou 38 38 Duke of Aquitaine, Count of Poitou 1053 - 1102 Hugh I Capet 49 49 Living Warner 0840 - 0897 Liutpold Margrave of Bavaria 57 57 Anna de Kiev 1053 - 1108 Philip I de Capet 55 55 ~1475 John Coffin D. 1067 Ferdinand I of Castile And Leon Iaroslav of Kiev D. 1158 Blanche of Navarre Garcias VI of Navarre D. 1109 Hedwig D. 1093 Bertha de Holland Florence of Holland 0860 - 0900 Kunigundeof Swabia 40 40 1100 - 28 Feb 1142/1143 Helen Borel deBurgundy 1081 - 1137 Louis VI de Capet 56 56 D. 1154 Adelaide de Savoy Humbert II of Savoy 1120 - 1180 Louis VII de Capet 60 60 1106 - 1157 Alfonso VII of Castile 51 51 Theobald II of Champagne 1165 - 1223 Philip Augustus II de France 58 58 1170 - 1190 Isabel de Flanders 20 20 Baldwin VIII of Flanders ~1407 Isabel Stanley 0812 - 0862 Eberhard Marquis of Friuli 50 50 1530 Ann Mable 1356 Katherine deRycote ~1510 - >1532 Margaret Leigh 22 22 1438 - ~1475 Isabel Leigh 37 37 ~1450 - 9 Jan 1517/1518 John I deWarren Jan 1622/1623 - 1667 Nathanel Warren D. 24 Mar 1427/1428 Sir Hugh Luttrell 1652 - 27 Feb 1682/1683 Jane Warren D. 1453 Catherine Beaumont 1560 Alice Webb Some records say she was born in Riddenham, England. 0820 - 0874 Gisela of Friuli 54 54 1555 Christopher deWarren Some records say he was born 1558 in Cornwell, Colstock, England. 1656 - 1744 Martha Bunker 88 88 ~1684 - 1744 Moses Fowler 60 60 Son of Henry born cir. 1657 Providence;  26 years old in 1710. Will dated 27 Dec.1744, proved 23 Jan. 1745."History of Westchester County,  New York"

Will of Moses Fowler:
BET. 1583 - 1588 - 1673 Elizabeth Died in Plymouth, Mass. " aged above 90 (ninety).   If she died in 1673 then
she would have been born before 1588 (prob. 1583).  Her husband died in 1628.
She out lived him by 45 years.  Elizabeth came to America on the ship ANN or
ANNE in 1623.
Herbert V. deVermandois 1532 - 1558 William deWarren 26 26 <1435 - <1474 Laurence deWarren 39 39 ~1394 - 1430 John Luttrell 36 36 1770 Charles McAlpine Sources found show: Birth; 1769 in Maine, USA 1695 - 1729 Paul Coffin 34 34 0835 - 0899 Arnuph Emperor of Germany 64 64 1414 - 1459 John deWarren 45 45 ~1395 Maud deSkeyton(Skegeton) 1370 Joan dePoot(Port) John deWarren Sr. 1330 William deWarren ~1330 Isabel deHayden ~1395 Edward I deWarren Aldelia deMowbray Alice deTownshend ~1388 - >1439 Elizabeth Luttrell 51 51 Lothar II deWalbeck ~1480 Elizabeth Gerard 1081 - 1147 Elizabeth Capet 66 66 D. 1387 Edward deWarren ~1321 Cicely de Eaton John deWarren <1505 Christopher deWarren 1065 - 28 Sep 1120/1121 Adelaide de Vermandois D. >1439 John de Stratton John de Stratton was a son of Walter de Stratton (whose will was dated and proved 1392) and a brother of Augustine de Stratton, the latter an ancestor of John Stratton and Elizabeth (Thorndike) Stratton, immigrants to New England. Margaret Stafford ~1388 - Mar 1443/1444 Lawrence deWarren Otto II Tullfeld ~1384 Margery Bulkeley 0960 - 1085 Gunereda St. Omer 125 125 Some records show the wife of William de Warenne as Miss de Tosta.  Also at one
time it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William the Conqueror. For
details see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C.T. Clay or "Etudes surQuelques
Points de L'Histoire de Guillame le Conquerant" by H.Prentout described under
Surrey in "The Complete Peerage" by G.E. Gibbs.
William deHeyden ~1372 - 1399 Brian de Windsor 27 27 John deWarren Rodger Mowbray Richard deSkegeton 1055 - 1088 William I deWarenne 33 33 Acceded: 16 April 1088

Acceded: 16 April 1088
Gerbod of St. Omer 1449 Elizabeth Walsh 1165 - 1235 Henry I Duke of Brabant 70 70 Duke of Louvain. Emma Sir Thomas Backchurch 0998 Rudolf I deWarrene J. Nicholas deEton John Stafford Hugh Bulkeley ~1354 Richard Faulkner Maria Feliciana Arballo Came to California in the Anza Expedition in 1774. 1912 - 1979 George Hannington Van Wart 67 67 Information on SSI form.  SSI# 557-03-7537
Name: George Hannington Van Wart
Address: 172 - 6th Street San Francisco, California
Employer: George W. Kneass Co. 18th Street and Ill. St. San Francisco, Ca.
Age at last birthday: 24
Birth Date: 24 March 1912, Portland, Oregon
Fathers Name: Miles H. Van Wart
Mothers Name: Minnie Benson
Signed: Dec. 2, 1936, George Van Wart

Other Sources for information on the Van Wart family:
Prominent People of New Brunswick, 1937. Published by The Boiographical Society of Canada,Limited
The Documentary History of the state of New York, Vol. IV. Arranged under the direction of the Hon. Christopher Morgan, Secretary of State, 1851.
The Documentary History of the state of New York, Vol. IIII. Arranged under direction of the Hon. Christopher Morgan, Secretary of State, 1850
History of Westchester County,  New York. From its earliest settlement to the Year 1900.
The New York History Company, New York, New York.  Westchester Patriarchs. A genealogical dictionary of Westchester County, New York, Families Prior To 1755.
~1378 - 1405/1422 Alice Drew Other birth place found: Seagry, Wiltshire, England 1163 - 1267 Maud of Alsace 104 104 1910 - 1955 Dorothy Jean Duhem 44 44 Thomas Rogers Nicholas Ryvell Noted in The Visitation of London, 1568 page 51 Herl. Soc. Pub., Grocer and Citizen of London. Jan de Voe 1699 - <1753 Crestena de Vaux 54 54 THE  arrival of the de Vaux family here was by  two brothers, the eldest named
Nicholas and a younger one named Daniel. They came in company with several other French
refugee families,many of whom had, at an early period, fled to Manheim, in Germany. This place
afterwards was invaded by  Louis XIV., when the family of Nicholas and others
escaped to England; and in 1674 they may have accompanied Sir Edmund Andros across the ocean on the ship "H.M.S. Dimond" when he became the Governor of New York.

The family of Nicholas de Vaux consisted of his wife with one child, Abraham,
and Nicholas's young brother,  Daniel, when he settled at Harlem. The next year (1675)
Nicholas was foundin the "Night Watch," at that place, having been called upon by the Governor to
assist in protecting the inhabitants against an attack from the Indians; and two years
after he was again enrolled by the Governor to assist in cutting 5,000 trees to erect a
"Palisade Wall," on the line of the present "Wall Street" (New York), to guard against an
expected attack of the Indians. This fact gave this prominent business street its name.

Nicholas had previously obtained some land at Harlem, as we find him taxed for property there in 1677. He remained here, however, but a few years, when he removed to New Jersey, where he and his wife joined the church at Bergen, in 1679. It appeared afterwards that several of his wife's relatives had moved to Hackensack, which induced him to change his residence to that place. Here they erected "The French Church," near where still remains "The Old French burying-ground," in which he and his first wife were buried; his second marriage was with  Margaret Jans, in 1706, when he was about sixty-four years old. By his first wife he had children, Abraham, b. 1667; John, b. 1669;  Hester, b. 1671; Susannah, b. 1673; and  Marytie, b. 1675.

Abraham married  Mynno (Menno or Minnie) de Maree in 1688, and joined the "First Reformed Dutch Church" in Hackensack, the records of which show the name of Abraham De Vouw, registered in 1694; afterwards the name appears de Vouw and De Voux,  or DeVeaux and Voe,  with nearly all of this branch many years after. He had six children born at Hackensack, and about the year 1705 for some cause he removed to Tarrytown, N. Y., where he became a member of the Reformed (Dutch) Church of the Manor of
Philipsburgh, at "Sleepy Hollow," and served in the offices of deacon (in 1708) and elder off and on for about twenty years. An old book of records shows on the 16th August, 1710, "At a meeting of the
Consistory, Abraham de Voe (notice change of spelling from the French to the English ver.) was honourably
discharged from his official service as Deacon, afterserving two years; his accounts were approved,
and were as follows: Paid from receipts to  Dominie Bartholf, 29-10 (perhaps Guilders); paid for Communion bread, 10; whole amount, 39-10."

The children of  Abraham were,  Nicholas,  Maria,  Elsie,  Rachel,  John, and Christina, b. 1699. Christina, b. 1699; m.  Joghem Van Weert in 1724; &  had: 1) Catharine, b.1733; 2) Johannes, b. 1735; 3) Jacob, b.  1738, and 4) Maritie, b. 1741.

The Family Surname has been spelled lots a ways in records I have researched.
Each one means something else. 1) De Vaux = Ist Person, presence of Valoir: be worth;  be as good as; to
deserve merit;.  Phonetic is [ VO ] 2) De Veaux = 1st Person,  Meat: of Veal (s); young beef; calf; [VO]
3) De Veau = of Veal or Meat;  Phonetic is [ VO ] 4) De Voe = of Voe (???)(USA) [VO]
(Ref: Langenscheidt Standard Dictionary;  French to English ////  English to French; 1968 Langenscheidt KG,
Berlin and Munich;  Printed in Great Britain) IN glancing over a large number of old records, genealogies, Coats of Arms and late directories of French noble families, we find the name now generally known as De Voe, De Veau, de Veaux, de Vaux, etc., appears to have been originally known in France as Vaux,
Veaux, etc., and was found to be prominent among the government officers at a very
early period.

In a very elaborate genealogy we find: "The family of Vaux [VO] derived its surname from a
district in Normandy, France, where it was originally seated, but as early as the year 749 of the
Christian era a branch of the Vaux Family is found to be in Provence, Southern France  and was
allied by marriage to several of the Sovereign Princes of Europe." Another early branch is noticed by "Bouvier," who says: "Eloi, Sire of Verchmont, had been appointed, in an Edict of Charles the Bald in the year 857, Vidame and Lord of Vaux, Count of Verchmont."

At a later period " Eloi-Michel De Vaux  is called Sire & Count of Verchmont,
Sire & Baron of Gaillon, great baillif of the sword (grand bailli d'epee) of the Dutchy of Nantes,
Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, and Commander of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem of Malta. Another of the Verchmont branch was found in a rescript of Charles deGonzague, when he made Charleville out of the small Town of Arches in 1698." The name is further mentioned in the records of that and subsequent periods by the patronymic of Beaux, Baux, or Vaux (B and V being used indiscriminately in the south (*)"A Count Elie de Vaux de Verchmont was taken, under the Republic, corresponding with  the army of Cond; judged and condemned, he was executed on January 5, 1793, whilst his brother, Michel de Vaux de Verchmont, was receiving a sword of honor for his brave conduct in front of the  enemy." of France), and the ancient possessions of the Princes of Baux in that country are still called "Les Terres Baussengues," comprising Aix, Marseilles, etc.

In the year 1140 the Vaux's disputed the sovereignty of Provence with the house of Barcelona, and in 1173 they acquired the principality of Orange by marriage with Tiburge, heiress of Orange. Bertram de Vaux was Count of Montescaziosi, and married Beatrix, daughter of Charles II., King of Naples and Sicily. His son,  Francis de Vaux, espoused Margaret of Anjou, widow of Edward I,(de Baloil), King of Scotland, crowned at Scone on Sept.24, 1332,  etc. Upon this marriage, Francis de Vaux was created Duke of Andrea in the Kingdom of Naples, &c., and his descendants enjoyed the highest offices, as the following inscription, translated from a monument erected in the year 1615 in the Church of St. Clair, at Naples, fully attests.

" This monument is dedicated to the most illustrious family of Vaux, a potent race, decorated with the royal insignia in the kingdom of Vienne and Arles, Princes of Orange, Counts of Geneva, and great rulers within
the sovereignty of Provence, which they frequently subjugated to their dominion by force of arms."
"Hyero-nymus de Vaux has here deposited the bones of as many of his name and lineage as he has been able to collect, and out of piety to them has erected this monument to their memory:
"Videlicet, to the memories of:
"Antonia de Vaux, Queen of Sicily;  Isabella de Vaux, Queen of Naples.
Cecilla de Vaux, Countess of Savoy;  Sibella de Vaux, Princess of Piedmont.
Maria de Vaux, Dauphiness of Vienne;  Isabella de Vaux, Despotisses of Servia."

"The earliest account we have of the founders of the English branches of the Vaux family is that of Bertrand de Vaux; attended a tournament in the year 929, and was a favorite of  Robert I., Duke of Normandy, grandfather of William the Conqueror. The names of the descendants of this Bertrand are traced through the Rolles Normand, written Baux, (beautiful?), Vaux, Vaulx?, etc." In the next earliest French records we find " Jean de Vaux, gallant (son of a chevalier), who assisted, with several other noblemen, in 1302 at the assizes of the Seneschal of Beauraime." Then appears: Raimond de Vaux, gallant son of Feu Pierre Garin de Vaux; and  Pierre Rigaud de Vaux who pledged fidelity and duty to the  Countess Elinore de Cominges in
1343."

FRENCH Heraldic Genealogists have introduced various "Coats of Arms" of the
family name at a very early periods. Thus,

"Vaux-de-Salins",  appears:

"(D'azur  3 Chapeaux d'Albanois d'or.)  This Family, who recognized as its
stem

Jean de Vaux, Councillor and Master of the Chamber des Comptes, a Court of Burgundy in 1496, became extinct or merged in the last century in that of the Alepy." Another translation introduces in 1508  Jean de Veau,  magistrate of the Province of Languedoc, who was one of the Councillors of the Court of Parliament in Toulouse, and who solicited the king to establish a Criminal Court in the Parliament.

From the Grandmaison Dictionary of Heraldry we also introduce the following:

"de Vaux. D'argent,  une montagne de sable, surmonte d'une aigle de gueules."

The De Vaux  Family :

"de Vaux.  Dauphin. De gueules au lion passant d'argent."

"de Vaux (Baron) or Carra de Vaux (Baron). Domicile, Chateau de Rieux (Marne).

Armes: D'azur, au chevron d'argent, accompagn de 3 losanges 2 & 1, & d'un

croissant en pointe du mme."

"The Arms of de Vaux and Isaac de Fancher, Esquire, Lord of Clozuron
(Perigord), married on the 2d of May, 1598, by contract, the noble  Miss Rebecca de Vaux,
who, by her testament of the 7th of July, 1625, declared that she wished to be
buried in the Church of the Dames de Fontaine, in the place she acquired of the Nuns of the
said place."   "de Vaux.   Dauphin ( tran: Dolphin ). De gueules au lion passant
d'argent."

"De Vaux  of Languedoc," "Lords of Chavagnac, of Robiac and other places--De au
veau (cow) d'argent & un chef d'azur, charg d'un croissant renvers d'or accost de 4
toilesm d'argent."  (In Heraldry, or Coats of Arms,  a pun on someone's name is very
common)

"The family of De Vaux  of Robiac originally came from Languedoc, and enjoyed
from time immemorial all the prerogatives exclusively reserved to the nobility of
ancient extraction. "The name, which is sometimes found written De Vaulk or De Vaux, is often
quoted by historians of that province as distinguished in the magistracy, as in the profession of
arms. The family have always allied themselves to the principal houses of that
province, especially to those of d'Orneau, de Bernard, de Lassagne, de Narbonne, Lary,
and of de Larcy. "It was maintained in its nobility by the Royal Commissioners appointed
to search out the usurpers of nobility in the Province of Languedoc in the year 1666.

"The Coat of Arms of this family, which are represented at the head of this
notice, were to be seen in the year 1766 upon the outer walls of the Church of the Commune
of Robiac, of which 20. de Vaux were patron Lords." Another branch of the family in France, who no doubt had performed important and gallant services for the "House of Lorraine," were ennobled with a "Coat of
Arms" of that place, as here represented.

Sources:

“Bergen's Early Settlers of King County, Long Island, New York."
"History of Westchester County,  New York" History of Westchester County,  New York
"The Documentary History of the state of New York, Vol. IIII"
"The Documentary History of the state of New York, Vol. IV"
"Who's Who in New York, 1909
"Westchester Patriarchs;
“The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 226 W. 58st. New
York, The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record; ; January 1997, Vol.
128, Number 1;  pp. 49-54
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 226 W. 58st. New
York, The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record; ; Volume XXVIII, 1897;
pp.7-9
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 226 W. 58st. New
York, The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record; ; April 1979,
Vol.110, Number 2.; PP.100-104
Nobiliarie de Normandie, Societe de Genealogistes, From 1106
Armorial D’Artois et de Picardie, Generalite D’Amiens, 1699-1710, pub. 1866
Armorial de Flandre, Du Hainaut et du Cambresis, 1696-1710, pub. 1856


From the Grandmaison Dictionary of Heraldry we also introduce the following: "de Vaux. D'argent,  une montagne de sable, surmonte d'une aigle de gueules." The De Vaux  Family : "de Vaux.  Dauphin. De gueules au lion passant d'argent." "de Vaux (Baron) or Carra de Vaux (Baron). Domicile, Chateau de Rieux (Marne). Armes: D'azur, au chevron d'argent, accompagn de 3 losanges 2 & 1, & d'un croissant en pointe du mme."
Catherine Carles 1665 - 1754 Wolfert Acker 89 89 Aka: Ecker;   Wolfert built the house called " Wolferts Roost", later owner by
Washington Irving, renamed: "Sunnyside".

Just north of Abraham Martling was that farm of Jan Ecker the first deacon of the church. A son of Stephen Eckker "from Ham out of the land of Marde," he married Magdalena Vonck June 4 1693 but left no descendants in the male line. Jan's elder brother Wolfert Ecker was born in Flatbush probably about 1668. Some time before 1691 he settled on the bank of the Hudson in Southern Tarrytown where he built the Dutch farm house immortalized by Washington Irving as "Wolfert's Roost." * This house was owned by Major Jacob Van Tassel during the Revolution when it was burned by the British in retaliation for some depredation committed by the doughty Jacob within the British lines. After the war it was rebuilt and was bought in 1802 by Capt. Oliver Ferris whose son Benson sold it to Washington Irving in 1835. All of the Ackers of Westchester County are descended from Wolfert and his wife Mritje Syhouts whom he married in January 1692. The Ecker-Ekkerson family of Rockland County was of a different origin. Just north of Wolfert Ecker's farm Glode Requa settled about 1729.
1170 - 1217 Isabel FitzRobert 47 47 Also Isabel Mortain. Ob. D.S.P.

An undoubted Earl of Gloucester, perhaps the first authentic one, at any rate after the Conquest, is Robert FitzHamon's son-in-law, another Robert, who was an illegitimate son of Henry I and was so created 1122. The Earldom passed to his eldest son, William FitzRobert, and from him to John, later King John and husband from 1189 to 1199 (when he divorced her) of Isabel, the youngest of William FitzRobert's three daughters.  On John's coming to the throne the title did not merge in the Crown for it was not his in his own right but in right of his wife.



The latter seems not to have been recognised as Earl of Gloucester as well as of Kent, despite his wife's undoubted possession of the former Earldom by the time of their marriage.  But then she died only a few days later and her sister Amice, by now the only one of William FitzRobert's daughters still living, seems to have been recognised as Countess of Gloucester till her own death some seven and a half years later.  On the other hand Amice's son Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Hertford or of Clare (usually called the latter), was apparently acknowledged as Earl of Gloucester in addition to his other dignity from as soon as the month after his aunt Isabel's death back in 1217.  [Burke's Peerage]

3rd daughter of William FitzRobert.
~1333 - 1395 Elizabeth Courtney 62 62 1668 Abraham de Vaux Families of the Colonial Town of Philipsburg, by Grenville Mackenzie
Westport, Connecticut, 1966, bound by Sleepy Hollow Restorations
Tarrytown, New York, 1976
THE SETTLEMENT OF PHILIPSBURGH
By MacKenzie, entered by Lisa Shea
To the north of Gerret Van Wert, just about Sheldon Brook, Abraham Devoe settled about 1703. He was born in Europe 1667, a son of the Huguenot refugee Nicholas Devoe who came from England with the Sies in 1674. Abraham married Mynno daughter of Paulus Jurckse and widow of Paulus Hoppe. They lived in Hackensack until about 1700 when they moved to Staten Island where they stayed about three years. In later years his leasehold was occupied by William Hunt. Abraham's godparents were Philippe Mane, young man, and Marie Petillon,young lady.
1142 - 1190 Godfrey III Duke of Brabant 48 48 D. ~1733 Mynno Jurckse de Maree (Tran: Of Tides) Mynno-Minnie de Maree ~1630 Nicholas II de Vaux Records show Nicholas's surname as: De Vaux. /  De Voe (USA) /  De Veau and De Veaux.  I have chosen to try to keep with the French spelling as the family were from all records found,  French Huguenots. See notes for Nicholas's father. Margaret Jans 1620 Nicholas de Vaux Susanne Francois 1774 Chistean Balmaine Adelaide De Clermont Joan Agnett Sir Andrew Luttrell  CP, vol. 8, under Luterel. From  Alexander Luttrell, ancestor of the Luttrells of East Quantockshead, Chilton and Dunster (footnote f, p.285).  H. C. Maxwell Lyte's, A History of Dunster and of the Families of Mohun & Luttrell (2 vols., London, 1909) 1207 - 1 Feb 1247/1248 Henry II Duke of Brabant Anne Agnes Greenway ~1185 Matilda Gifford Sir John Beaumont ~1358 - 1394 Alice de Wymondham 36 36 ~1354 - 1387 Miles de Windsor 33 33 Other birth place found: Benthworth, Hampshire, England. ~1346 Thomas Drew See: Visitation of Devonshire, 1564, p. 88. John Pope Knighted Aug. 2, 1625, Thomas Pope, of Wroxton, Co. Oxford, Knighted at Woodstock, England.??? ~1382 - 1419 Joan Champernon 37 37 John Woodhall ~1311 - 1420 Joan de Beauchamp 109 109 1108 - 1142 Godfrey II Duke of Brabant 34 34 Robert Tayler 1119 - 1180 Louis VII deCapet France 61 61 Marriage of Eleanor and Louis VII annuled in 1152. ~1402 - 1456 James Chudleigh 54 54 1530 - <1571 William Hurst 41 41 ~1356 - 1441 Alexander Champernon 85 85 1665 John Odell 1668 - >1686 Sarah Odell 18 18 1418 John Chudleigh D. 1851 Mary Fowler Also called in some records: Mary, 10th Dau. Will dated 13 May 1756, Proved 5 July 1758.

**Source:"Westchester Patriarchs. A Genealogical Dictionary of Westchester County, New York, Families Prior to 1755". N.B. has lots of records as to the Fowler And VanWart family's who moved together to N.B. at the close of the American Revol.  Both the Fowlers and VanWart's were loyalists to the King of England and recived land grants in New Brunswick. Grenville MacKenzie, Unpublished Genealogy of the Fowler Family. Obtained from the Westchester County Historical Society.  New York City Wills, 1744-1758, Father's will, about 1745.
**Source: "Westchester Patriarchs. A Genealogical Dictionary of Westchester County, New York, Families Prior to 1755" "New York City Wills, 1744-1758, Father's will, about 1745"
**Source:"Grenville MacKenzie, Unpublished Genealogy of the Fowler Family". Obtained from the Westchester County Historical Society.
**Source:  "Names of Persons for whom Marriage Licenses were issued by the Secretary of the Province of New York, previous to 1784." Mary Fowler and Jacob Van Wart were married Oct. 17, 1782, Record: M.B., Vol. XXXVII, page 34.
** Source: "Loyalist Lineages of Canda, 1783-1983, Toronto Branch, The United Empire Loyalists Assocation, 1984"
1657 - 1733 Henry III Fowler 76 76  52 years old in 1710.  Will dated 3 Mar. 1730, proved 5 Dec. 1733 (NYC 12: 135)
Sources:
Grenville MacKenzie, Unpublished Genealogy of the Fowler Family.
Obtained from the Westchester County Historical Society by Nancy Williams, late
1980's. (Fowler-73)
Elise Donaldson Waters Periodical: The Fowler Family,  The Media Research Bureau, Washington, DC, 1979 Text: Photocopy obtained from Nancy Williams, including a letter she received from Mrs. Waters about the book.
New York City Wills, 1730-1744,Text: p 117

Henry Fowler 3rd., of Hambleton, b. 1632 according to Visitation of Rutland, but according to his sworn statement in 1655, was born in 1634; came to Boston shortly after 1650; was in Roxbury apparently apprenticed to Joshua Foote and accompanied Foote to Providence, RI early in 1655; m. atFoote's house in June 1655, Rebecca Foote, daughter of his master.  Hewas an executor of his father in law in 1656.  In 1665, we find Mr.Fowler in Fairfield, CT, and in 1666 in East Chester until 1672, when hereturned to Rhode Island. after the massacres in King Phillip's war,1676, he was one of the 38 who went to Long Island, and received land at Musceta Cove in Oyster Bay (RI His. Mag., Vol.6, p.205),  but in 1678, hewent once more to East Chester, leaving his eldest son, William atFlushing and his 3rd. son, George, at Hempstead.  He also took up land atMamaroneck, which he deeded to his son William, then in Flushing, Sep.19, 1687 (Liber A, p.211, Wills).  He was in Rhode Island in 1695 andagain in 1698.  He d. intestate in 1704.Inherited 1/3 of the Haight Patent at Rye; was Senior Warden at Grace Church for a while, but removed to East Chester . Probated Dec. 5, 1733 (Book 12, p.117).


Probated: 5 December 1733 -
In the name of God, Amen, March 3, 1730. I, HENRY FOWLER, SR., of
Eastchester, in the County of Westchester, being in health of body. I
leave to my wife Sarah, the use of my dwelling-house and garden,
during the time she remains my widow, and 1/3 of my movables. I leave
to my son Henry 5 shillings, he having received the rest of his
portion already. To my daughter, Abigail Morgan, 5 shillings, she
having received her portion already. To my son Moses, 5 shillings, he
having received his portion already. To my son-in-law, John Ward, 5
shillings. I leave to my son, William Fowler, 2 1/2 acres of land in
Eastchester, on the northermost side of the Boston road as the said
land was laid out by Palmer Doughty, Abraham Hyatt, and others. I also
leave him L20. To my daughter, Susanah Ferris, 5 shillings. To my
daughter, Eleanor Fowler, L10. To my son Edmund, 5 shillings, he
having received his portion already. To my daughter, Mary Drake, 5
shillings, she having received her portion. The rest of my movable
estate is to go to my said daughters and to my grand-daughter,
Freelove Ward. I leave to my son, John Fowler, all and singular my
houses, tenements, messuages, and buildings, to him and his heirs
forever. I make my sons, Moses and William, executors.
Witnesses, Elijah Taylor, John Miner, John Cuer. Proved, December 5,
1733. New York Abstract of Wills: pp. 132-133 - Liber 12, p. 117
~1225 - <1277 Walter Coleville 52 52 WALTER DE COLEVILLE, son and heir of Roger (not Robert) DE C., of Bytham Castle, co. Lincoln, by Beatrice, his wife (living 25 October 1265). He took part in Simon de -Montfort's rebellion, and was summoned to Parliament 24 December 1264, by writ directed Waltero de Colevilla, which writ however, having issued in rebellion, should not create a peerage dignity. He was taken prisoner at Kenilworth in 1264, by Prince Edward, and his lands forfeited, but they were redeemed, and he was possessed of them at his death.

He married Isabel or Elizabeth (e). He died 1277, before 2 September, when the writ for his Ing. p. m. is dated.  [Complete Peerage III:374, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(e) Aubourn, Counthorpe, and other of his manors, co. Lincoln, were committed, 25 Oct 1265, to Isabel late (sic) the wife of Walter de Coleville; where also, 20 Feb 1265/6, is a grant of lands in Aubourn to Elizabeth, wife of Walter de Colveville, the King's enemy who is in prison.  Elizabeth and Isabel are her merely different forms of the same name, and the word "late" in the first passage is an error.  V.G.
~1658 Abigail Hoyt 1110 - 1180 Hugh deGournay 70 70 1298 - 1311 Isabel Bigot 13 13 ~1668 - >1733 Sarah 65 65  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Sited in Will.
~1331 James Chudleigh 1590 - 1661 Henry II Fowler 71 71 Will dated 19 Sept 1687, inventory taken 1687 but not finally closed untill Dec. 5/6, 1704. (WLR C-357)  Removed to the colonies 1652/3 and resided in Providence, R.I. 1654.  Henry came to America from London with a friend Joshua Foote in 1652. He settled at Roxbury where he met and married Rebecca. He later moved to Providence, Rhode Island and later to Mamaroneck, Westchester Co., New York. By trade he was a blacksmith or in one
record "iron monger", he was also quite active in the community buying and selling land and appears to have been well able to finance business ventures. He also took an active part in the affairs of the community. He was a blacksmith.
1637 Rebecca Newell ABT 1604/1605 - <1659 Katherine Reynolds "Catherine Reynolds, of (4162), m. 1st Edward Starbuck. ~1272 John deBruley ~1330 Henry de Mille 1122 - 1204 Eleonore of Aquitaine 82 82 Princess of Aquitaine, Queen of England. ~1168 Hawisa FitzWarin Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition: youngest dau and co-heir of William, Earl of Gloucester.

O

O
0873 - 0924 Ordo II King of Austurias 51 51 Elizabeth ~1256 - 1331 Simon Danvers 75 75 1585 - 1647 William de Stratton 62 62 Lived in London from 1606 to 1636 then removed to Tenterden, County Kent, where he died in 1647. ~1362 Alice ~1210 Beatrix Quitfield "The Descent of the family of Whitfield of Whitfield Hall in Northumberland from the Saxon earls of Mercia; and the Norman families of Meschines, D'Estrivers, Egaine, Buslie and Espee", drawn from various authorities. The manuscript is housed at Chetham Library in Manchester, UK. The abbreviated descent:
Leofric, Earl of Leicester living in 750 m. unknown;
Algar, the first, living in 790, buried at Croyland in Lincolnshire m. unknown;
Algar, the second, living in 820, slain by the Danes c. 867 and buried at Croyland, m. unknown;
Leofric, the second, living in 880 m. unknown;
Leofwine, Earl of Mercia, living in 940 m. unknown;
Leofric, the third, Earl of Mercia, who jointly with his lady were founders of the abbey dedicated to the Virgin Mary, St. Peter and St. Osburgh at Coventry in which he was buried, m. Godiva, sister and heiress of . . . Thorold, Sheriff of Lincolnshire;

Algar, the third, Earl of Mercia m. sister of Sir William Mallett;

Lucia, sole heiress of her brothers, Edwin and Morchar?(spelling on name?) m. Ranulph de Meschines, Lord of Cumberland and after the death of his cousin Richard, was Earl of Chester ob. 1129. Ranulph was g grandson of Leofwine, Earl of Mercia, living 940;

dau. of Ranulph de Meschines m. Robert d'Strivers in the right of his wife hereditary forester of Cumberland;
Ibena d'Strivers, dau. and sole heiress of Robert m. Ranulph de Engaine, Lord of Isell in Cumberland and hereditary forester of that county in the right of his wife;

Ada de Engaine, sister and sole heir of William, her brother, who succeeded his father, but died without issue before 1157, m. Simon de Morvill, who had livery of all Engaine's lands in 1157;

Roger de Morvill m. unknown;

Maud Morvill m. William de Vipont, of Westmorland. Her brother, Sir Hugh Morvill was one of the assassins who slew Thomas a Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury in 1171;

Robert de Vipont, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland by grant of King John 1203 m. Idonia de Buslie, only dau. and heiress of John de Buslie, Lord of Maltby, whose ggg grandfather, Roger de Buslie, Lord of Tickhill, came to England with William, The Conqueror;

John de Vipont, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland m. Sibill, dau. and coheir of William Ferrars, Earl of Derby;

Robert de Vipont, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland, slain at the Battle of Evesham, 1265 m. Isabel Fitz-Piers, whose father was John Fitz-Piers or Fitz-Geoffrey, who m. Isabel Bigod. Isabel Bigod's father was Ralph Bigod who married Bertha. Ralph's father was Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk who m. Maud Marshall. Maud Marshall was the eldest dau. of William Marshall and his wife Isabel de Clare.

Isabel Vipont, eldest dau. and coheiress m. 1st Roger de Clifford and 2nd Richard Whitfield, Lord of Whitfield Hall in Northumberland. He died c. 1331;

Richard Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall 1332 m. unknown;

Robert de Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, living 1370 m. unknown;

Matthew de Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall lng pm 22R2 1398, m. unknown;

John Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, m. Alice, dau. of Sir John Milford, of Milford Castle in Northumberland;

Sir Matthew Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, living 1433, m. Margaret, 3rd dau. and coheiress of Sir John de Lancaster, of Howgill and Rydall, co. Kent? died temp Henry VI and his wife Joan, dau. and heiress of John Rookeby of Knock and with her he had the Manor of Knock;

William Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall m. a dau. who was sole heiress of Randle Holme of Alston Moor in Cumberland (note in margin of manuscript--Randleholme is an ancient house in Alston Moor);

William Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall m. Matilda, dau. and coheiress of John Wheatly;

John Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, living 1480 m. Ann, only dau. of Sir William Hilton, of Hilton Castle, co. Palatine? of Durham;

Richard Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall m. unknown;

Ralph Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall lng pin Eliz? m. unknwn;

Miles Whitfield, of Newton-bury in Alston Moor, co. Cumberland m. Matilda, dau. of unknown (Miles's brother,

John Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall from whom descended Matthew Whitfield who sold Whitfield Hall and estate to William Ord, Esq. sometime after 1730 and still remains in the -Ord family);
Information forward from John Brooks Threlfall, in his book and pedigree chart about Rev. Henry Whitfield:

Robert Whitfield, son of Miles, ancestor of the Whitfields of Wadhurst, co. Sussex, b. abt. 1453 at Alston Moor, co. Cumberland. Moved south to Wadhurst, co. Sussex where he was an iron maker. He m. 1st Katherine Wenbourne, a widow, had three daughters and 2nd Anges Giles and had three sons. He was buried 02 June 1541 age 88. Agnes married 2nd unknown Gibbons and she died 1567;
Robert Whitfield was born bet. 1517-1518, probably at Wadhurst, co. Sussex. He m. 1st Ann, dau. of George and Rose Roberts. He m. 2nd Agnes Atwood. They moved to Worth, where he had an iron smelter and built Rowfant, which still stands and is on the Internet. He died 09 Dec. 1597 and is buried in the chancell of the church at Emmington, co. Oxford, where his son, William, was Rector at the time. 7 children; With Agnes, they had:
Thomas Whitfield, who was born in Wadhurst, co. Sussex, about mid 1545, studied law at the Inner Temple; B.A. from Oxford 25 Jan. 1568-69. On 10 Jan. 1584-85, he married Mildred Fortune Manning in the Church of Saint Magnus the Martyr at the foot of London Bridge. 7 ch. Lived at Mortlake, co. Surrey and retired to Rowfant in Worth, co. Sussex, where she died 01 Sept. 1627 and he died 01 May 1629 (The Shield of Arms of Thomas and Mildred [Manning] Whitfield is located in the church of Saint Nicholas, Worth, co. Sussex, England)
Henry Whitfield was born 1590, prob. at Mortlake, co. Surrey and in 1610, he entered Oxford. M. 1617 to Dorothy Sheafe, dau. of Dr. of Divinity, Thomas Sheafe and Marie Wilson. Henry was minister at Ockley, co. Surrey; founded Guilford, Connecticut and went back to England and died there in 1657, buried at Winchester Cathedral. Dorothy went back to England, too, and died there in 1669;
Abigail Whitfield was born 1622 and died 1659. She married Rev. James Fitch, who was born 1622 and died 1702. He married as 2nd wife Priscilla Mason. Rev. James Fitch was minister at Saybrook and Norwich in New England.

John Palmer's references are:

Monastico Anglicanum Vol 1 p.305 Account of the Saxon earls of Mercia under the title Coventry Abbey

Ordericus Vitalis

Register Abbey de Evesham D.V. Cap Eccl. Cath College Oxon

Lands mentioned in Domesday Book
Vol 1 p.284 Warwickshire
Terra in Coleshill and Hd
Terra Comitissae Godeva
Also used Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire

Richard, Earl of Chester was drowned with King Henry's children in the melancholy shipwreck Nov 25 1119 on returning from Normandy to England Ordericus Vitalis details the event

Thoroton's Antiquities of Nottinghamshire (de Buslie family)

Ware's Antiquities of Ireland

An account of the early Marshals of England extracted from Berry's Encyclopaedia Heraldrica Vol 1

Ingulph's History of Croyland Anno 1091

Nicholson and Burn's History of Westmorland and Cumberland Vol 1

Calenarium Inquis Post Mortem

Wallis's History of Northumberland
Dugdale's Baronage

Fodera Litt and Acto Publicas Vol 1
Stow's Survey of London
*************************************
WHITFIELD PAGE

The surname Whitfield is one of antiquity beginning as early as 1165 A.D. with ROBERT de WHITFIELD, Chaplain to Countess Ada, who received the lands of "Whitfield" of Hexham, Northumberland, from her by grant that year. MATTHEW de WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, held "Whitfield of the Prior and Convent of Hexham" from 1174 to 1214 A.D. His son

RALPH de WHITFIELD had:

MATTHEW de WHITFIELD to whom the lands of Whitfield were confirmed by the Great Charter of Inspectimus of King Edward I about 1280 A.D. Had sons Robert and John:

ROBERT de WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, married BEATRIX de QUITFELD,

daughter of ISABEL FITZ-PIERS (lineage descends from ROBERT GRENTESMAISNIL of GRENTESMAISNIL in the Dukedom of Normandy) and ROBERT de VIPONT whose maternal line descends from ROGER de BUSLIE, Lord of Tickhill, who came to England with William the Conqueror, and whose paternal line descends from the famed LADY GODIVA, sister and heir of William Thorold. Lady Godiva married the Earl of Mercia, LEOFRIC III, greatgreat-great grandson of LEOFRIC I, Earl of Leicester in 750 A.D. Robert and Beatrix had Gilbert and:

RICHARD WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, born 1279 A.D., died 1332 A.D. Had sons Gilbert and:

ROBERT de WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, whose second son was: J

JOHN WHITFIELD, became Lord of Whitfield after the death of his older brother. John married ALICE MILFORD, daughter of SIR JOHN MILFORD, of Milford Castle, Northumberland. John and Alice had

MATTHEW WHITFIELD, born about 1389 A.D. His sons John, Robert, Thomas, Nicholas, Richard, Christopher and SIR MATTHEW WHITFIELD, born about 1410 A.D., High Sheriff of Northumberland. Married about 1434 to MARGARET de LANCASTER, daughter of SIR JOHN de LANCASTER, obit. 1475. Matthew had John, William and Henry.

JOHN WHITFIELD born 1435, died 1492. Son Robert: ROBERT WHITFIELD born 1454, married the daughter of RICHARD THIRLWELL, of Thirlwell. His son:

JOHN WHITFIELD, obit. 1507, had Mathew.

MATTHEW WHITFIELD, married the daughter of CHRISTOPHER RIDLEY of Wallstown. Matthew died in 1546. His son:

RALPH WHITFIELD, born 1529, died 1607. He married DOROTHY RIDLEY, daughter of HUGH RIDLEY of Willimeteswick. Had brothers Cuthbert and Peter, sisters Margaret and Agnes. GEORGE WHITFIELD, died before his father Ralph. He married ALICE ? Had brothers Nicholas and Francis. SIR MATTHEW WHITFIELD, Of Whitfield Hall, was 3 months old when his father George Whitfield died. He married ANNE ? On 29 June 1629 he made his entry into the lands which belonged to his grandfather Ralph, and which had been unlawfully held by his uncle Francis Whitfield.
****************************
~1229 - 1301 Isabella de Albiniaco 72 72 pg 89,169 & 175  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 780, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883

He [Walter de Coleville] married Isabel or Elizabeth (e). He died 1277, before 2 September, when the writ for his Ing. p. m. is dated.  [Complete Peerage III:374, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]



-------------------------

Most people have Isabel born in Muston, Lancashire.  Unfortunately I find no record of a Muston in that county.  There is a Muston in Leicestershire & East Ride Yorkshire.  Of these I believe that the Muston in Leicestershire is closest, although it is near Nottingham, not Lancashire.
1244 - 1290 Eleanor deCastile Leon 46 46 Rose Unknown Ara <1560 - >1632 Henry I Fowler 72 72 Buchingham Palace Social Register; Buckingham Parish Records. 1110 - 1176 William D'Aubigny III Earl of Arundel 66 66 Earl of Sussex, Earl of Lincoln. The Complete Peerage vol.XIIp1,p.515 ~1560 - >1635 Annis Knight 75 75 Buchingham Palace Social Register; Buckingham Parish Records. <1530 - >1560 Sarah Kevington 30 30 John Howland ~1326 Henry Loveday <1320 - 1361 John Fowler 41 41 0919 II Berengar ~1322 - ~1380 Hartleigh 58 58 ~1294 - >1330 John Le Fowler 36 36 1403 - >1452 Cecily Englesfield 49 49 ~1380 - <1411 Joan Clarke 31 31 Heir to her mother Surnamed: Rycote 1128 - 1193 William D'Aubigny 65 65  "le Breton" IV Earl of Arundel

pg 129, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
D. <1533 Agnes (Alger) Algore Only child and heir of Robert Algore. Agnes Fitz Suein D. 1514 Juliana Richard Westely Ermengarde Bourgogne ~0768 Leutaud of Paris Mrs- Llewelyn ap Iorwerth 1677 - ~1748 Puella Hussey 70 70 BEF. 14 MAR 1417/18 - 3 Mar 1467/1468 William Algore Miss deBriwere 1123 - 1188 Alice D'Aubigny 65 65 Hugh deClermont John Howland >1575 - 1628 Richard I Warren 53 53 This line has not been researched  as to the right of Richard to be named as the son of Christopher De Warren. This line is kept for info. only.

Mayflower 1620

There is great debate as to who Richard Warren's wife really was.  We know that
her name wa s Elizabeth, but what her last name is we don't know. There has been
published reports that her last name was: Ivatt,Jouatt, & known as " the Widow
March". It is belived that Richard was born between 1575 and1579/80.  Some
records have Richard as living in Greenwich, England at about 1620.

Source :  " Harleian Soc. Vis of Devonshire made 1620 Vol VI,London.

Source: Warren Gen. 1894.
John Morley 1164 - 1221 Robert deVere 57 57 Emme Ryvell 1511 - 1560 Jean deLannoy 49 49 Lord of Molembais, of Solre le Chateau and of Colroy (Conroy). He was created
Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece in 1546 No. CCVIII.,Lord High
Chamberlain to Charles V., Emperor of Germany, and of the Holy Roman Empire,
1519-1556. Governor of Hainault and Captain - General ofFlanders in 1559.
Mahienne deLannoy  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.GED]

Countess Mahienne de Lannoy was the only child and sole heiress of Jean,the
last Lord of Lannoy and of Lys, from whom her husband assumed theSeigneury of
Lannoy and their issue bore the surname of Lannoy ever after.

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Countess Mahienne de Lannoy was the only child and sole heiress of Jean,the
last Lord of Lannoy and of Lys, from whom her husband assumed theSeigneury of
Lannoy and their issue bore the surname of Lannoy everafter.

[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]

Countess Mahienne de Lannoy was the only child and sole heiress of Jean,the
last Lord of Lannoy and of Lys, from whom her husband assumed theSeigneury of
Lannoy and their issue bore the surname of Lannoy everafter.
John Howland Margot Verch Madog 1064 - 1139 William D'Aubigny Lord of Buckingham 75 75 Susanne Planq ~1640 Marie Sie ~1488 - 1569 Wilomot Chudleigh 81 81 Robert Kember Anna 1479 - 1590 Hugh Boscawen 111 111 ~1519 - 1563 Phillippa Carminowe 44 44 See Visitation of Cornwall for full accurate pedigree.
Children of this union:
Joan BOSCAWEN  b: ABT 1538 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Nicholas BOSCAWEN b: 1541 in St Michael, Penkivel, Cornwall, England
Elizabeth BOSCAWEN b: ABT 1539 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
William BOSCAWEN  b: ABT 1542 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Alice BOSCAWEN  b: ABT 1543 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
John BOSCAWEN  b: 1545 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Petronell BOSCAWEN b: ABT 1547 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
George BOSCAWEN  b: ABT 1548 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Edward BOSCAWEN  b: ABT 1549 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Hugh BOSCAWEN  b: 23 Feb 1551 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Mary BOSCAWEN  b: 20 Jan 1552 in St Michael, Penkivel, Cornwall, England
Catherine BOSCAWEN  b: ABT 1555 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England
Margaret BOSCAWEN b: ABT 1558 in Tregothnan, Cornwall, England

Spelled: CARMINOW     CARMYNOWE      KERMYNOW

Source: Sir John MacLean   "History of Trigg Minor..."
1439 - 1515 John Boscawen 76 76 1444 Elizabeth Loare 1413 Richard Boscawen 1083 - UNKNOWN Maud Le Bigod 1415 Maude de Hallop 1392 Hugh Boscawen 1378 - 1443 Joan Trenowoth 65 65 1362 John deBoscawen 1364 Rose Brett 1336 John deBoscawen 1338 Joan deAlbalanda 1309 John deBoscawen 1311 Joan deTregothnan Henry deBoscawen 0989 Toustien Le Goz Toustien or Turstine, surnamed Goz, held the Castle of Ealaise againstDuke William, even though he was still a child. Nicha deSulyn Possible alternate last name spelling "Salyn or Salvin" Henry deBoscawen Hawise 1505 Lady Fowler No records have been found that state the name of Anthony's wife. Juliana Shaw See Visitation Pedigrees and Visitation of Shropshire. ~1296 - ~1355 Isabel Foxley 59 59 <1269 John I Le Fowler ~1270 Fowler 1249 - 1301 Reginald Le Fowler 52 52 <1249 - >1301 Fowler 52 52 D. UNKNOWN Matthew von Lothringen Count Boulogne Thomas Foxley ~1348 - 1380 Philip Englefeilde 32 32 Dyed 7,  King Henry VI.
This Phillipp had 3 wives: Joahanne, Elizabeth, Alice da. and coheir of Walter Russell after married to William Fawkenore by whome he had the Isle of Rossell, Vdlington, Eton and Yeagden in Com. Salop. [Shropshire]
~1316 - <1350 Joanne 34 34 1292 - 1362 Rodger Englefeilde 70 70 Temper. Edward II. ~1270 - ~1285 William Englefeilde 15 15 Temp. King Edward I. Robert Fitz Suein John Englefeilde Temper. King Edward I.Visitations of Sussex, 1664; ; ; ; ;

Temper. King Edward I.  Visitations of Sussex, 1664
Gunnor Bigod ~1225 - ~1300 Margery 75 75 Shown in The Visitation of Berkshire, as "Margery mother in law to Sr Jn'o"



Visitation shows Margery as the mother in law to Williams son, John. This entry
has a qustion mark by it.
D. ~1255 Lady 1136 - 1182 Marie Princess of England 46 46 Mary was an Abbess of Romsey, abducted by Matthew of Flander. Married in1160 and marriage annuled in 1169. 1143 - 1214 William I Scotland 71 71 King of Scotland from 1165 to 1214; although he submitted to Englishoverlordship for 15 years 1174-89) of his reign, he ultimately obtainedindependence for his kingdom. William was the second son of the ScottishHenry, Earl of Northumberland, whose title he inherited in 1152. He wasforced,  however, to relinquish this earldom to King Henry II of England(reigned 1154-89) in 1157. Succeeding to the throne of his elder brother,King Malcolm IV, in 1165, William joined a revolt of Henry's sons (1173)in an attempt to regain Northumberland. He was captured near Alnwick,Northumberland in 1174 and released after agreeing to recognize theoverlordship of the king of England and the supremacy of the Englishchurch over the Scottish church.

Upon Henry's death in 1189, William obtained release from his feudalsubjection by paying a large sum of money to England's new king, RichardI (reigned 1189-99). In addition, although William had quarreled bitterlywith the papacy over a church appointment, Pope Celestine III ruled in1192 that the Scottish church owed obedience only to Rome, not toEngland. During the reign of King John in England, relations betweenEngland and Scotland deteriorated over the issue of Northumberland untilfinally, in 1209, John forced William to renounce his claims. In hiseffort to consolidate his authority throughout Scotland, William evelopeda small but efficient central administrative bureaucracy. He charteredmany of the major burghs of modern Scotland and in 1178 founded ArbroathAbbey, which had become probably the wealthiest monastery in Scotland bythe time of his death. William was succeeded by his son Alexander II.
William Englefeilde Temp. King Richard I. of England ~1175 Unknown Allen Englefeilde Temp. King Richard I & King Henry II of England. See Visitations of Berkshire.
The 3 Visitations of Berkshire, England.
~1150 Unknown  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

!NOTE: The 3 Visitations of Berkshire, England.; ; ; ; ;
~1120 William Englefeilde Temp. King Henry I  The 3 Visitations of Berkshire, England.; ; ; ; ; ~1125 - ~1190 de Englefeilde 65 65 Hely Englefeilde Temp. King William Rufus & William the Conq.
The 3 Visitations of Berkshire, England.
>1100 de Englefeilde Guy Englefeilde "Temp. Wm Conq." The 3 Visitations of Berkshire, England.; Hasculfus de Englefeilde "Temp. Canuts I" The 3 Visitations of Berkshire, England.; D. UNKNOWN Thierry Count of Flanders 1545 - 1629 Thomas Whitfield 84 84 1560 - 1627 Mildred Fortune Manning 67 67 1518 - 1597 Robert Whitfield 79 79 "The Descent of the family of Whitfield of Whitfield Hall in Northumberland from the Saxon earls of Mercia; and the Norman families of Meschines, D'Estrivers, Egaine, Buslie and Espee",  Manuscript at Chetham Library in Manchester, UK.;
Leofric, Earl of Leicester living in 750 m. unknown;
Algar, the first, living in 790, buried at Croyland in Lincolnshire m. unknown;
Algar, the second, living in 820, slain by the Danes c. 867 and buried at Croyland, m. unknown;
Leofric, the second, living in 880 m. unknown;
Leofwine, Earl of Mercia, living in 940 m. unknown;
Leofric, the third, Earl of Mercia, who jointly with his lady were founders of the abbey dedicated to the Virgin Mary, St. Peter and St. Osburgh at Coventry in which he was buried, m. Godiva, sister and heiress of . . . Thorold, Sheriff of Lincolnshire;

Algar, the third, Earl of Mercia m. sister of Sir William Mallett;

Lucia, sole heiress of her brothers, Edwin and Morchar?(spelling on name?) m. Ranulph de Meschines, Lord of Cumberland and after the death of his cousin Richard, was Earl of Chester ob. 1129. Ranulph was g grandson of Leofwine, Earl of Mercia, living 940;

dau. of Ranulph de Meschines m. Robert d'Strivers in the right of his wife hereditary forester of Cumberland;
Ibena d'Strivers, dau. and sole heiress of Robert m. Ranulph de Engaine, Lord of Isell in Cumberland and hereditary forester of that county in the right of his wife;

Ada de Engaine, sister and sole heir of William, her brother, who succeeded his father, but died without issue before 1157, m. Simon de Morvill, who had livery of all Engaine's lands in 1157;

Roger de Morvill m. unknown;

Maud Morvill m. William de Vipont, of Westmorland. Her brother, Sir Hugh Morvill was one of the assassins who slew Thomas a Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury in 1171;

Robert de Vipont, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland by grant of King John 1203 m. Idonia de Buslie, only dau. and heiress of John de Buslie, Lord of Maltby, whose ggg grandfather, Roger de Buslie, Lord of Tickhill, came to England with William, The Conqueror;

John de Vipont, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland m. Sibill, dau. and coheir of William Ferrars, Earl of Derby;

Robert de Vipont, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland, slain at the Battle of Evesham, 1265 m. Isabel Fitz-Piers, whose father was John Fitz-Piers or Fitz-Geoffrey, who m. Isabel Bigod. Isabel Bigod's father was Ralph Bigod who married Bertha. Ralph's father was Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk who m. Maud Marshall. Maud Marshall was the eldest dau. of William Marshall and his wife Isabel de Clare.

Isabel Vipont, eldest dau. and coheiress m. 1st Roger de Clifford and 2nd Richard Whitfield, Lord of Whitfield Hall in Northumberland. He died c. 1331;

Richard Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall 1332 m. unknown;

Robert de Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, living 1370 m. unknown;

Matthew de Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall lng pm 22R2 1398, m. unknown;

John Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, m. Alice, dau. of Sir John Milford, of Milford Castle in Northumberland;

Sir Matthew Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, living 1433, m. Margaret, 3rd dau. and coheiress of Sir John de Lancaster, of Howgill and Rydall, co. Kent? died temp Henry VI and his wife Joan, dau. and heiress of John Rookeby of Knock and with her he had the Manor of Knock;

William Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall m. a dau. who was sole heiress of Randle Holme of Alston Moor in Cumberland (note in margin of manuscript--Randleholme is an ancient house in Alston Moor);

William Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall m. Matilda, dau. and coheiress of John Wheatly;

John Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall, living 1480 m. Ann, only dau. of Sir William Hilton, of Hilton Castle, co. Palatine of Durham;

Richard Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall m. unknown;

Ralph Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall lng pin Eliz? m. unknwn;

Miles Whitfield, of Newton-bury in Alston Moor, co. Cumberland m. Matilda, dau. of unknown (Miles's brother,

John Whitfield, of Whitfield Hall from whom descended Matthew Whitfield who sold Whitfield Hall and estate to William Ord, Esq. sometime after 1730 and still remains in the -Ord family);
Information forward from John Brooks Threlfall, in his book and pedigree chart about Rev. Henry Whitfield:

Robert Whitfield, son of Miles, ancestor of the Whitfields of Wadhurst, co. Sussex, b. abt. 1453 at Alston Moor, co. Cumberland. Moved south to Wadhurst, co. Sussex where he was an iron maker. He m. 1st Katherine Wenbourne, a widow, had three daughters and 2nd Anges Giles and had three sons. He was buried 02 June 1541 age 88. Agnes married 2nd unknown Gibbons and she died 1567;
Robert Whitfield was born bet. 1517-1518, probably at Wadhurst, co. Sussex. He m. 1st Ann, dau. of George and Rose Roberts. He m. 2nd Agnes Atwood. They moved to Worth, where he had an iron smelter and built Rowfant, which still stands and is on the Internet. He died 09 Dec. 1597 and is buried in the chancell of the church at Emmington, co. Oxford, where his son, William, was Rector at the time. 7 children; With Agnes, they had:
Thomas Whitfield, who was born in Wadhurst, co. Sussex, about mid 1545, studied law at the Inner Temple; B.A. from Oxford 25 Jan. 1568-69. On 10 Jan. 1584-85, he married Mildred Fortune Manning in the Church of Saint Magnus the Martyr at the foot of London Bridge. 7 ch. Lived at Mortlake, co. Surrey and retired to Rowfant in Worth, co. Sussex, where she died 01 Sept. 1627 and he died 01 May 1629 (The Shield of Arms of Thomas and Mildred [Manning] Whitfield is located in the church of Saint Nicholas, Worth, co. Sussex, England)
Henry Whitfield was born 1590, prob. at Mortlake, co. Surrey and in 1610, he entered Oxford. M. 1617 to Dorothy Sheafe, dau. of Dr. of Divinity, Thomas Sheafe and Marie Wilson. Henry was minister at Ockley, co. Surrey; founded Guilford, Connecticut and went back to England and died there in 1657, buried at Winchester Cathedral. Dorothy went back to England, too, and died there in 1669;
Abigail Whitfield was born 1622 and died 1659. She married Rev. James Fitch, who was born 1622 and died 1702. He married as 2nd wife Priscilla Mason. Rev. James Fitch was minister at Saybrook and Norwich in New England.

John Palmer's references are:

Monastico Anglicanum Vol 1 p.305 Account of the Saxon earls of Mercia under the title Coventry Abbey

Ordericus Vitalis

Register Abbey de Evesham D.V. Cap Eccl. Cath College Oxon

Lands mentioned in Domesday Book
Vol 1 p.284 Warwickshire
Terra in Coleshill and Hd
Terra Comitissae Godeva
Also used Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire

Richard, Earl of Chester was drowned with King Henry's children in the melancholy shipwreck Nov 25 1119 on returning from Normandy to England Ordericus Vitalis details the event

Thoroton's Antiquities of Nottinghamshire (de Buslie family)

Ware's Antiquities of Ireland

An account of the early Marshals of England extracted from Berry's Encyclopaedia Heraldrica Vol 1

Ingulph's History of Croyland Anno 1091

Nicholson and Burn's History of Westmorland and Cumberland Vol 1

Calenarium Inquis Post Mortem

Wallis's History of Northumberland
Dugdale's Baronage

Fodera Litt and Acto Publicas Vol 1
Stow's Survey of London
*************************************
WHITFIELD PAGE

The surname Whitfield is one of antiquity beginning as early as 1165 A.D. with ROBERT de WHITFIELD, Chaplain to Countess Ada, who received the lands of "Whitfield" of Hexham, Northumberland, from her by grant that year. MATTHEW de WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, held "Whitfield of the Prior and Convent of Hexham" from 1174 to 1214 A.D. His son

RALPH de WHITFIELD had:

MATTHEW de WHITFIELD to whom the lands of Whitfield were confirmed by the Great Charter of Inspectimus of King Edward I about 1280 A.D. Had sons Robert and John:

ROBERT de WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, married BEATRIX de QUITFELD, daughter of ISABEL FITZ-PIERS (lineage descends from ROBERT GRENTESMAISNIL of GRENTESMAISNIL in the Dukedom of Normandy) and ROBERT de VIPONT whose maternal line descends from ROGER de BUSLIE, Lord of Tickhill, who came to England with William the Conqueror, and whose paternal line descends from the famed LADY GODIVA, sister and heir of William Thorold. Lady Godiva married the Earl of Mercia, LEOFRIC III, greatgreat-great grandson of LEOFRIC I, Earl of Leicester in 750 A.D. Robert and Beatrix had Gilbert and:

RICHARD WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, born 1279 A.D., died 1332 A.D. Had sons Gilbert and:

ROBERT de WHITFIELD, Lord of Whitfield, whose second son was: J

JOHN WHITFIELD, became Lord of Whitfield after the death of his older brother. John married ALICE MILFORD, daughter of SIR JOHN MILFORD, of Milford Castle, Northumberland. John and Alice had

MATTHEW WHITFIELD, born about 1389 A.D. His sons John, Robert, Thomas, Nicholas, Richard, Christopher and SIR MATTHEW WHITFIELD, born about 1410 A.D., High Sheriff of Northumberland. Married about 1434 to MARGARET de LANCASTER, daughter of SIR JOHN de LANCASTER, obit. 1475. Matthew had John, William and Henry.

JOHN WHITFIELD born 1435, died 1492. Son Robert: ROBERT WHITFIELD born 1454, married the daughter of RICHARD THIRLWELL, of Thirlwell. His son:

JOHN WHITFIELD, obit. 1507, had Mathew.

MATTHEW WHITFIELD, married the daughter of CHRISTOPHER RIDLEY of Wallstown. Matthew died in 1546. His son:

RALPH WHITFIELD, born 1529, died 1607. He married DOROTHY RIDLEY, daughter of HUGH RIDLEY of Willimeteswick. Had brothers Cuthbert and Peter, sisters Margaret and Agnes. GEORGE WHITFIELD, died before his father Ralph. He married ALICE ? Had brothers Nicholas and Francis. SIR MATTHEW WHITFIELD, Of Whitfield Hall, was 3 months old when his father George Whitfield died. He married ANNE ? On 29 June 1629 he made his entry into the lands which belonged to his grandfather Ralph, and which had been unlawfully held by his uncle Francis Whitfield.
****************************
1522 Agnes Atwood Robert Whitfield ~1496 Agnes Eyles Her Surname has been spelled: Gilles. Aka: Annie. Myles Whitfield The Visitation of London, Harl. Soc. 1633, page 348. Richard Whitfield Richard Whitfield John Whitfield 1114 - UNKNOWN Sybil of Anjou D. 1451 William Whitfield Visitations of the North, Surtees Soc.  Vol.146, page 94.
The Visitation of Kent, Harl. Soc.1619 page 90.
The Visitation of Sussex  Harl. Soc. 1530 - 1634, page 96.
The Visitation of Kent, Harl. Soc.1592, page 118, 119.
The Visitation of Surrey 1530 - 1623, Harl. Soc. Page 218 -219
D. ~1451 Maud Whitley ~1426 William Whitfield ~1425 Holme Sole heiress of Randle Holme of Alston Moor in Cumberland 1336 Randell Holme John Reeve 1725/1736 Peter McAlpine Extracted from marriage record for Strathblane, Stirling, Scotland. IGI: Birth: Abt. 1726, Inverness, Scotland

Tombstone inscription, Upper Hampstead Cemetery, Queens County, New Brunswick, Canada:
Side one:

MacAlpine
in memory of
Peter MacAlpine
his wife
Elizabeth Watters
Born in Scotland
Graves Unknown
Who came from new York
To Cambridge 1783
Son's: John, James
Charles born 1770
Doughters:
Elizabeth MacAlpine Holder
Janet MacAlpine McLeod
Mary MacAlpine Nutter

Side two:

Peters son Charles born 1770
His wife Chistean Balmaine
Made home on Musquash Island
Five sons buried there
Peter born 1795
Charles born 1803
James born 1807
John born 1815
Henry born 1817
1799 William buried at Wickham
1809 Barzilla Laid to rest Cambridge
Margaret born 1797 m. John Porter
Janet born 1801 m. Charleton Peters
Katherine born 1805 m. William Van Wart
Sarah born 1811 m. Jacob Van Wart
Priscilla born 1813 m. Samuel Van Wart
**
deSackville 1724 Elizabeth Watters Margaret Kilpatrick D. 6 Mar 1069/1070 Gerard Duke of Lorraine 1695 Alexander McAlpine Alexander McAlpine 1685 - 1777 Thomas Vernon 92 92 Thomas Vernon Sr. with sons  Isaac and James Vernon and Thomas Vernon Jr. and Jonathan Vernon are listed in the 1749 Lunenburg County Va. tax list of William Caldwell and sveral other tax listings 1750 and 1752 as well.

The Will of David Caldwell, made at Lunenburg C H in 1770, lists Hannah Vernon. It thought that she was Thomas Vernon, Sr. daughter. Another daughter was the "beloved Rebecca, sister mentioned on the Lt. Isaac will in Rockingham Co. NC of 1787

Children Thomas Vernon Sr. (Mary could have been his 2nd wife?)
1 Jonathan Vernon b 1712 PA, d 1804-will in Stokes Co NC ded 1802) m'd Rebecca and settle in Old Surry Co NC., during the early 1770's. Styled "Old John Vernon." One source states he was born 1704.
2 Richard, the Wagonmaster of Culpepper Co. Va. (d abt 1795) m'd Sarah Tinsley in Carolina Co Va. in 1743
3 Thomas Jr. of Charlotte Co Va m'd either Nancy Harrison dau of Benjamin Harrison of Old Brunswick or Sarah Gains or both
4 **Isaac of Rockingham Co. NC (Will 1787) m'd maybe Elizabeth [Austin] and 2nd Jane Caldwell, survived by 13 children. Joseph and Thomas could have proceeded him in death **
5 James d 1803 of Abbeyville Co. SC m'd Eleanor; settled in first in Old Rowan Co NC in 1770 on both sides of Mayo River and on Mayo Mountain. This became Old Guilford Co in 1771 and then Rockingham Co in 1786. James and family removed to Abbeville Co SC in 1787
6 Rebecca (acc: will of bro Isaac)
7 Madaline (acc: Records of Ruby Absher. VFAA
8 John ?
9 Robert (witness to Thomas Sr. deed to Isaac in 1757
10 Hannah ?, mentioned in David Caldwell will of 1770
Walter I deVere ~1652 - ~1738 Zerrubabel Hoyt 86 86 1616 - 1698 Walter Hoyt 82 82 1219 - 1253 William de Ros 34 34 20 Jan 1589/1590 - 1657 Simon Hoyt  Simon immigrated to Salem but within the year had moved on to Charlestown,Mass. as one of its first settlers. Simon again moved, staying at Charlestown for only a year or two, before becoming one of the first settlers of Dorchester, Mass. From here he moved on to Situate, Mass. where there is a record of "Goodman Haites house" between September 1634 and October 1636. Three years later in 1639, Simon left Situate for Windsor, Conn. and by 1649 he had gone to Fairfield, Conn. Before his death, he moved to Stamford, Conn. Here a document is recorded as to the agreement in the distribution of his estate. Simon was a member of the Society of Friends or the "Quakers". The chronicles of the time give us some idea of the hardships endured by thefirst settlers of Charlestown and Dorchester - they suffered many hardships; the conspiracy of the Indians to put off the English, whenever one was working to build the fort, and perils of pestilence and famine, when they were compelled to live on clams, muscles, and fish. Simon experienced this seven times as he moved from one settlement to another, and at very least he was one of the first white men at each of these locations. Watler Mantell 2nd Husband to Joane. Marion Hall 1050 Hedwig Von Formbach John Watters Janet Hugh II deVere 1602 - 1666 Susanna Capen 64 64 1663 Mehitable Rockwell 1223 - <1261 Agatha de Clare 38 38 Agatha (dsp shortly before 27 Dec 1261), daughter and heir of Roger de Clere of Brumlegh, Surrey and Ludborough, Lincoln.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: I am not sure how to read the above.  MCS cannot mean that Agatha "dsp" because in the same statement she is said to have a daughter (Alice) by her husband William le Rus.
1627 - 1673 John Rockwell 46 46 Guy Gobaud 1593 - 1634 Deborah Stowers 41 41 1640 - 1718 Deliverance Hayes 78 78 D. UNKNOWN Gerard of Metz 6 Feb 1590/1591 - 1640 William Rockwell Henry deNonant 1581 - 1672 Abraham Newell 91 91  Abraham sailed to America from Ipswich, England in 1634 on the good ship "Francis". At this time all of Abraham's family except for Jacob & Rebecca were listed on ship. It is believed that Jacob may have been born on the ship on the way over and that Rebecca was born a couple of years after their arrival. Abraham was admitted a freeman in 1634 at Roxbury, Massachusetts. At the time of their leaving of England, Abraham was listed as 50 and Francis as 40; these ages are more likely advanced to releave any resistance from the government to their immigration.
Abraham was the original proprietor ofthe McCarthy Farms which were located between Hawthorne on the east, Walnut Avenue on the west, Cedar on the North, and Marcella on the South. in Roxbury, Mass. He was a prominent in the settlement and was one of the original donors to the "Free School of Roxbury", later the Roxbury Latin School.

THE FRANCIS 30 April 1634.
Passengers of the Francis of Ipswich,
Mr. John Cutting, captain, bound for New England (landed at Plymouth or Boston, MA)
Abraham Newell 50 and Francis his wife 40, Abraham Newell 8, John Newell 5, Isaacke Newell.

"New England Marriages: Prior to 1700" Author: Torrey, Clarence Almon
"The Planters of the Commonwealth: 1620-1640 Passengers and Ships" Author: Banks, Charles Edward, Ship: "Francis"
1594 - 13 Jan 1681/1682 Frances 1713 Daniel Coffin Elizabeth was Daniels 2nd Wife. ~1286 - 1330 Alice Coleville 44 44 The Alice Coleville connection is unproven. D. 1646 John Taylor Thomas Hobbs Hodierna deSackville Margaret deRoucy 1085 - 1122 Ida of Chiny & Namur 37 37 <1611 - 1694 Rhoda Tinker 83 83 1634 - 1697 William Odell 63 63 William Odell the ancestor, younger son of an English baronial family, fled to America in about 1637 after his family had made the mistake of siding with Lady Jane Grey against Mary--Queen of Scots. From Concord in 1644 he went to Fairfield, Conn, where he died in 1676. Some of his sons stayed in Connecticut and founded the New England line. His oldest son, William, was one of the 15 men who founded Rye in 1662. The later Williams was also one of the original purchasers of White Plains. His inclusion in both groups indicates that he was a respected man of wealth. A "Goodie Odell", presumably his mother, is recorded as one of the judges in Fairfield in a witchcraft trial, according to Frederick Haacker of New York, whose hobby for years has been tracing the genealogy of the Odell family of which his wife is a member. Of the sons of William of Rye, Samuel inherited the Rye estates and stayed there. His daughter Sarah Married John Archer, son of the last Lord of Fordham Manor. Her brother John moved to Fordham when he was twenty-two, died in 1735. This John of Fordham is the ancestor of the Odell families to be found in Yonkers today as well as of most of the "Tarrytown Odells" who were descended from John's grandson, Jonathan, of Revolutionary War fame. On August 18, 1670, Margaret, wife of Frederick Philipse, bought land at Yonkers which was formerly in possession of Andriaan Vander Donck, the Jonge Heer (from which Yonkers got its name), for 300, on behalf of her husband and Thomas Lewis, mariner, from Elias Doughty, the brother of widow Vander Donck. It included 300 acres and one half the River Nepperham with milling priviliges. Doughty sold various parcels of land, including one to John Archer, which was erected into the Manor of Fordham. ~1649 - 1697 Sarah Vowles 48 48 Giselbert deChalons 1602 - 1676 William Odell 74 74 William came from England to Concord in 1639,  a member of Peter Bulkeley's congregation. William was born in the parish of Odell, Bedford, England. In 1644, William Odell moved to Fairfield, Connecticut, and his son William became one of the principal proprietors of Rye, New York. (NEHGR, 29:203; 137:37).

William Odell was the younger son of an English baronial family, fled to America in about 1639 after his family had made the mistake of siding with Lady Jane Grey against Mary--Queen of Scots. After living at Concord, in 1644 he went to Fairfield, Conn, where he died in 1676. Some of his sons stayed in Connecticut and founded the New England line. His oldest son, William, was one of the 15 men who founded Rye in 1662. William Jr. was also one of the original purchasers of White Plains. His inclusion in both groups indicates that he was a respected man of wealth. A "Goodie Odell", presumably his mother, is recorded as one of the judges in Fairfield in a witchcraft trial, according to Frederick Haacker of New York, whose hobby for years has been tracing the genealogy of the Odell family of which his wife is a member. Of the sons of William of Rye, Samuel inherited the Rye estates and stayed there. His daughter Sarah married John Archer, son of the last Lord of Fordham Manor. Her brother John moved to Fordham when he was twenty-two, died in 1735. This John of Fordham is the ancestor of the Odell families to be found in Yonkers today as well as of most of the "Tarrytown Odells" who were descended from John's grandson, Jonathan, of Revolutionary War fame.
William may have been a brother of Ursula Wodell (also written Odle), who married Christoper Wooley at Concord in 1646 (King, NEHGR, 60:91). His will, proved 6 June 1676, mentions, among others, sons William and John and daughter Rebecca Moorehouse. Cranfield, Bedford, England, is a small parish about eight miles from the village of Odell. The Cranfield church register records nearly seventy entries of Odell baptisms, marriages, and burials between 1602 and 1625, the name variously written Wodell, Odell, Odle, Woddell, Woddle, etc. Among these: Willliam, son of William Wodell of Warleyend, baptised 24 Feb 1602, and William Odle of Worley buried 22 Jul 1615. This may be the record of the baptism of the William Odell who came to New England and the burial of his father. The name "Warleyend" is doubtless that of a hamlet about one mile from Cranfield, which appears on an old map of Bedfordshire as "Wallerd" or "Wall End." In Cranfield Parish there was in 1632 a district, or possibly an estate, known as "Virginia." At Concord, the original road cut through the woods by the first settlers had been called, since 1650, "the Virginia Road" and the district through which it runs, "Virginy." The plain at the end of Virginia Road was described as "Cranefield" as early as 1648. It would seem that these names, Virginia and Cranefield, were given by the early settlers of Concord in memory of their English home (See NEHGR, 45:7-8).
William Odell is purportedly memorialized as a "Concord Planter" on a plaque in the Fairfield Public Library together with Rev. John Jones, Thomas Bulkley, Thomas Jones, John Tompkins, Daniel Bulkley, Joseph Middlebrook, Ephraim Wheeler, Thomas Wheeler, Jr., James Bennett, Richard Lettiss, John Ebats, Peter Johnson, George Squire, and Benjamin Turney. Ridge, Bateman Connection, 173:


Source: "Banks Topographical Dictonary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England, 1620- 1650, Pub. 1963"
Page 1: Bedfordshire, ODELL, William, Clapham Parish, Ship:  Planter, To Concord, Mass, NEGR, 60/91
Page 9, Buchinghamshire, ODELL, William, Newport Pagnell Parish, Ship: Hopewell, To Concord, Mass, Banks Mss.
Source: "Directory of the Ancestral Heads of New England Families, 1620 - 1700, By: Holmes, Pub. 1964"
Page: clxxvi; ODELL, ODLE: The family is of ancient English ancestry, in later years located at Bedfordshire, England, William, came to Concord, Mass 1639, removed to Southampton, 1642, soon afterwards to Fairfield, Conn.
Source: "Boltons Armerican Armory", By: Bolton, 1964
Page: 123, Odell, Or. 3 Crescents [gu]? Crest: A Cock, Motto: ne quid nimis, From a bookplate of REv. Jonathan Odell, a N.J. tory, NYG&B record, April 1903, Page 99.
Source: "A Genealogical Register of the First Settlers of New England...Etc." By: Farmer, Pub. 1969
Page: 210, ODELL, William, Concord 1639, had son James born in 1639.
Source: "Croziers General Armory...etc." By: Wm. Armstrong Crozier, Pub. 1966
Page 99, ODELL, Massachusetts, William Odell, Concord, 1640, Ar. three crescents, Gu., Crest: An Eagle displayed Gu.
              ODELL, New York, William Odell, [Jr.]  Rye, 1661, Same Arms as Odell of Mass.
Source: " History of the Colonial Gentry, Vol. II", Page 821 [ Chetwood Link]

Children of William ODELL and Rebecca BROWN:
William Odell, born about 1634; died in Rye, Westchester, New York, 1697. Manning has him born 1634, of Newport Pagnell, Buckingham, England. Married Sara Vowles.
James Odell, born in Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts, 2 January 1640; buried in Concord, 4 April 1641. (Birth and death record NEHGR, 4:272)
Rebecca Odell, born in Concord, 17 Jul 1642. Married Samuel Morehouse. Birth record, NEHGR, 4:272.
John Odell, married Mary (Joanna) Walker.
~1606 Grace Chetwood ~1626 - ~1685 Richard Vowles 59 59 ~1628 - >1634 Mary Sadler 6 6 1606 - 1656 Richard Haws 50 50 ~1596 - 1673 John Sadler 77 77 1010 Rainald deChateau- Porclen ~1600 Deborah ~1609 - ~1662 Ann Clapp 53 53 ~1633 - 1659 Sarah Ensign 26 26 Susannah Smith 1632 - 1684 John I Archer 52 52 The “Lords of Manors” were titles awarded to large landowners and other important colonialists by the English Crown granting much the same rights as the Dutch patroonships. The first such manor was “Pelham”, based upon a patent granted to Thomas Pell in 1666 by the colonial governor. A similar patent was granted to John Archer for the manor of “Fordham” in 1671. John Archer the  first lord of the manor of Fordham, New York, said to have been the son of John Archer, who was the son of Humphrey Archer born 1527 died 1562, of Warwickshire, England who married  Elizabeth Townsend. This has not been proven and the pedigrees found would ssem to point to other parents.  John probably came from England to Fairfield, Conn. in 1648, thence to Westchester Co. New York abt. 1654/55. He was sheriff of New York City from 1679 to 1682. He died suddenly in his coach between Fordham and New York City in October 1685. He is buried on Tetard Hill. His eldest son John Archer Jr. became second lord of the manor. He married, Sarah Odell in 1686, daughter of William Odell of Fordham, and had children. Among others, John Odell married Mary Fowler. Samuel Odell, and Richard Odell, who left numerous descendants 1671 - John Archer receives a patent from the colonial governor for the manor of Fordham, which included almost all of today’s western
The Visitation of Warwick 1619 p. 308-309
The Visitation of Worcestershire 1569, P. 11,
The Visitation of Worcestershire 1634 P. 6.
Familie Minorum Gentium, P. 1257-1258
The Visitation of Oxfordshire, 1634, P. 319
The Visitation of Shropshire, 1623, P. 40-42

FORDHAM MANOR, granted to John ARCHER (ca. 1633-1684), merchant
SIZE/LOCATION: 3,900 acres in present-day Bronx County (Harry C.W. Mellick, The Manor of Fordham and Its Founder [New York: Fordham University Press, 1950] p. 72) [N.Y. Co. W522.15]
MAPS: Mellick, above, between pp. 72-73, 120-121, 134-135
DATE(S) OF GRANT: 13 November 1671 by Gov. Francis Lovelace (the Mannor of Fordham to "be an Intire Enfranchised Towneship Mannor & Place of itself"); transcript of original grant in Mellick, above, pp. 70-72, De Lancey pp. 159-160, and Land Patents Transcriptions 4:79-82 (Land Patents 4:83-85) Fordham's own court was added by Gov. Lovelace's grant of 10 or 20 April 1673, calling it the Mannor of Fordham (Landlord and Tenant p. 16; Mellick, above, pp. 80-81; General Entries 1:532-533)
RIGHTS GRANTED: local autonomy in 1671; the right to hold a court in 1673 (Landlord and Tenant pp. 15-17)
PUBLISHED HISTORY: Mellick, above; Minor Manors pp. 5-6
LOCATION OF PAPERS:
PUBLISHED PAPERS:
GRANTEE AND FAMILY: Mellick, above, pp. 167-176; Harry C.W. Mellick, "Descendants of John Archer of Fordham," typescript, 1951, at NYG&B [G AR 23jn]
TENANTS/RESIDENTS:
COMMENTS: On 14 November 1671, the day after Gov. Lovelace's grant, John Archer mortgaged the Manor of Fordham to Cornelis Van Steenwyck by a bargain and sale deed to take effect 14 November 1683. The mortgage apparently was not paid, and Fordham passed to Van Steenwyck. His widow married the Rev. Henricus Selyns, and they conveyed Fordham to the New York Reformed Dutch Church on 1 January 1695 (Mellick, Manor of Fordham, above, pp. 74-77, 104-107, 111, 118-119).
1565 Robert Tinker Source: "The English Ancestry of th Merwin and Tinker Families in New England" published  NEHGR in 1995. Nicholas Howland ~1555 Abraham Newell  "A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came before May 1692 on the Basis of Farmer's Register. 4 vols. 1860–62; rpt. ed." Author: Savage, James ~1342 William Meringe Richard Treat 0966 - 1017 Judith Brittany 51 51 Elizabeth Curtis ~1534 - 1604 William de Stratton 70 70 Will dated Sept. 16, 1601, Probated:  May 12 1604., In this will he calls himself a aged man. John Howland John Michenar 1621 - 1674 John Gorham 53 53 Lived in Marshfield, Mass. His Great grand- son Col. John Gorham states that while on a voyage to London in 1737 he had a search made for the family coat of arms and since a fee of was paid,  the search was succesful, which  means he was well aware of his family heritage and may serve as a starting place to prove his family history. 1625 - 1683 Desire Howland 58 58 Algor Ivrwerth ap Owain 1848 - 1933 Maria Anita Fitch Carrillo 84 84 ******
Index to 1890 Census Sonoma County, California (Reconstructed)
*
Grant Ben E. <18
Grant Charles Fitch 24
Grant Charles F. <18
Grant Charles,
Mrs. Grant
Daniel Grant
Fitch Anita
Grant Fred <18
Grant H.D.
Grant Jesse Runkele 62
Grant John C.
Grant John D. 62
Grant Josepha <18
Grant J.D.
Grant J.D.
Grant J.D.,
Mrs. Grant
J.R. Grant
Otto Grant R.T.
*
Fitch Charles 46
Fitch Chas.
Fitch Joseph 52
Fitch Joseph, Jr. 21
Fitch Samantha C.
Fitch William Clarence 28
*
Steiger Edward 50
Steiger Joseph 21
Steiger Peter Joseph 53
Steiger William 24
*
1232 - 1292 Richard de Braose 60 60 Richard was Lord of Stainten Manor. 1084 - 1116 Mary Princess of Scotland 32 32 1245 - 28 Jan 1299/1300 Alice de Ros Priscilla Mason 1260 - <1335 Margaret Braose 75 75 He [Roger de Coleville] married Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard DE BREWES, of Stinton, Norfolk, by Alice, daughter and heir of William Le Rus, of Stinton. He died 1287/8, before 6 March, date of writ for Inq. p. m. His widow died 1335, before 12 May, when the writ for her Inq. p. m. is dated.  [Complete Peerage III:374, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

---------------------------

Margaret (or Margery) de Braose, died shortly before 12 May 1335; married Sir Roger de Coleville, Knight, born c1251, aged 26 in 1277, died shortly before 6 Mar 1287/8, Lord of Bytham, co Lincoln, son of Walter de Coleville, Lord of Bytham, co Lincoln, died 1277, by Isabel or Elizabeth.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: Neither Ancestral Roots, CP, or MCS mention a second marriage for Margaret, but Roger's death in 1288 would certainly allow for a 2nd marriage.
1313 - 24 Jan 1375/1376 Richard Fitz Alan Earl Richard divorced Isabel in 1345 and remarried Lady Eleanor Plantagenet daughter of Henry Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster.

According to John Young, the marriage of Richard "Copped Hat" FitzAlan
and Isabel le Despencer was contracted at the age of 7 or 8 years of age.
The Church annulled the marriage so that FitzAlan could marry his second
wife, and Edmund and his two sisters were made ilegitimate, and could not
inherit:

"Edmund, who they tried to make illegitimate by the Church annulment, so
his father could remarry his 2nd wife. Well fine, they did the
annulment based upon the contracted marriage at 7-8 yrs of age- The 3
children-Edmund and his 2 sisters were still properly born children (when
they were married) of Earl Richard "Copped Hat" FitzAlan  and Lady
Despencer. This is one of the reasons that Edmund styled himself De
Arundel- by heir right he should have become the next Earl. He was
knighted though and was not cast fully aside. Burke in error shows him a
brother of his father- Cokayne is correct and details it in his
footnotes."

Burke has death date 24 Jan 1375 for Richard


Earl of Surrey 9th.
Weir shows all the children as Eleanor's but the Complete Peerage says
otherwise.--Tompsett

Richard was in 1330/1, in the 4th year of Edward III, fully restored in blood and honours, and in December of that year obtained restitution ofthe Castle and Honour of Arundel. He was Justiciar of North Wales forlife 1334, Governor of Carnarvon Castle 1339, Sheriff of Salop for life1345. He took distinguished part in the wars with France. On June 30,1347, he succeeded to the vast estates of the family of Warren by thedeath of his mother's brother, John, Earl of Warren and Surrey. Heassumed the title Earl of Surrey and in 1366 settled the Warren estatesupon his issue. He married first Isabel de Spenser and obtained a papalmandate for annulment for this marriage, and then married EleanorPlantagenet, great granddaughter of King Henry III.
Source:  Browning's Magna Charta (1915), pp. 257, 265, 286, 333, 171.
              J. B. Burke's Dor., etc., pp. 118, 72, 29 and 30, 200-1,353.
              Yeatman's House of Arundel, 323.

Nickname: Copped Hat
~1179 - 1210 William Braose 31 31 William de Braose, born perhaps c1175, died Corfe or Windsor Castle 1210, of starvation by order of King John, son of William de Braose, died 1211, Lord of Bramber, Sussex, by his wife Maud de St Valery.  [Magna Charta Sureties]

------------------------------------

William did not accompany King Richard on Crusade but fought with King John against Philip in Normandy (1203/4).  King John demanded William as a hostage for his father's loyalty in 1208.  His mother Maud refused and the fled to Ireland.  In 1210 John prepared an expedition to Ireland. Maud and William escaped Ireland, but were apprehended in Scotland. William the father was in Wales at the time.  It is believed that Maud and William were starved to death at Windsor Castle (Some say Corfe).

-------------------------------------

William, who perished by starvation with his mother at Windsor m. Maud, dau. of the Earl of Clare, with whom he had the town of Buckingham, in frank marriage, and left a son, John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]
~1285 - 1334 Isabel le Despencer 49 49 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1642 - >1698 Sarah Longstaff 56 56 1346 - 1397 Richard Fitz Alan 51 51 Richard was beheaded. //  2nd Husband. Margaret Howland D. BEF. 21 JAN 1331/32 Sir Edmund de Mortimer D. 1125 Eustace III Count of Boulogne Henry Cary Elizabeth Trott Some resrachers state  her mother was  Mary Batron.  Elizabeth may have been her middle name. 1799 - 1848 Henry Delano Fitch 48 48 Born in Boston, Massachuetts,  Came to California in 1826. Henry Delano Fitch, was the first white man to lay claim to the land and town called Healdsburg, first arrived in lower California on the Mexican trading brig, Maria Ester, in 1825.  He soon became the first permanent American settler in San Diego.


Sources:
Bancroft, Hubert Howe, History of California vol. IV, pgs. 706, 707.
Ogden, Adele, "Captain Henry Fitch, San Diego Merchant, 1825-1849", in  The Journal of San Diego History, Fall, 1981, pg.s 238. 239.
Miller, Ronald Lee, Henry Delano Fitch: A Yankee Trader in California: 1826-1849 (Dissertation, History, Univ. of Southern California, 1972), pgs. 3, 6, 7, 9.
Finley, Ernest Latimer, History of Sonoma County, 1937, pg. 62.  Miller,  Henry Delano Fitch, pg. 7.
Henry Delano Fitch: A Yankee Trader in California 1826-1849, Ronald Lee Miller, Dissertation, 1972 Page: 219
************

Captain Henry Delano Fitch 6 (Sally5, Thomas4, Thomas3, Jonathan2, Philippe1) is generally regarded as being the 1st American settler 1 in San Diego. Lacking money to build a schoolhouse, classes were held in Henry Fitch's store on Calhoun Street until late 1854. Source: San Diego Historical Society
"On 2 December 1837, 'Don Jose Francisco Snook and Dona Maria Antonia Alvarado' were married in San Diego's presidio chapel, Fr. Vicente Pasqual Oliva officiating. 'Witnesses were Don Juan Bandini and Henry Fitch and others who were present.' The newlyweds made their home in an adobe casa next door to the Fitch house at the west end of the plaza. It stood on property later designated as Lots 1 and 2 of Block 46 on Fitch Street and a corner of Block 32."
Captain Snook used his $3,000 to purchase the English schooner, El Ayacucho. Not to be confused with the brig that first brought him to California, this was a 97-ton schooner owned by Scot mariner James McKinlay. On 2 October 1839 Snook took possession of the ship and applied to juez de paz Henry Fitch for 'a document that in some way legalizes the sale.'
But McKinlay retained ownership when Snook changed his mind--perhaps because he was thinking of 'stopping on shore'" and opening a shop in San Diego. Henry Fitch owned a store there and wanted the captain to become a partner, but Snook had misgivings:
'If I take your shop, I have no capital to pay you my half of the first cost of the goods, and I shall be in your debt and perhaps the half gains that I shall get will not pay.'
Instead, as he wrote in a letter to Abel Stearns, 'Since I came down I have taken into my head to see if I cannot sell a lettle groge.' As a result, in November of 1839, Henry Fitch took over as captain of the Catalina, and Snook became the proprietor of a 'small shop taken from 6 to 7 $ a day poco poco.'" Source: The Journal of San Diego History, Fall 1997, Volume 43, Number 4, by Ruth Collings
"A survey was performed under the supervision of the first City Attorney, Henry Fitch. The year was 1845. Hitch was directed to measure the land from the center of town square in what is now known as 'Old Town.' A surveyor was to set the boundary of the grant one league in each direction. Because town square lied so close to the Pacific Ocean and he desired to assure San Diego's full land entitlement, Hitch extended the boundaries of the survey on the other three sides. The result was a triangular shaped piece extending from Division Street at the northerly boundary of present day National City northward to just south of the present city limits of Del Mar. The easterly boundary was a slightly bowed line which runs along present day Interstate 805. Despite the fact the San Diego was only entitled to four square leagues of land, Hitch prepared a survey which encompassed eleven square leagues, or about 48,556 acres." Source: San Diego Retrospect
John Woodhall Henry F. Waters, "Genealogical Gleanings in England," New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Vol. 38, No. 3, July, 1884. Harleian MS., 1541, fol. 55, in the British Museum" . . as "John Woodhall==Jennett, d. of Crakeplace"  Misc. Essex pedigrees, Visitation of Essex book 2, page 620. 1828 - 1891 John Doty Grant 63 63 Came to California in the Gold Rush pior to 1850.

One must remember that the Spanish name of a married woman is GIVEN NAME followed by MAIDEN NAME followed by "de" MARRIED NAME. Therefore, when Ysabella Fitch married John Grant she became Ysabella Fitch de Grant. Then when Anita Fitch married John Grant she became Anita Fitch de Grant. The "de" means that she is now a member of the Grant Family. [ Source: Antonia Goltz via e-mail]

Marriage Cert.:
From Sonoma County:

"This is to certify that, on the 4th day of September 1862, at the town of Healdburg, and in the presence of J. Alberson, Joseph Fitch, and others,; I joined in Holy Matrimony, John D. Grant, of Sonoma County, aged 34 years, and Mary Anita Fitch, of Sonoma County, aged 16 years, such marriage preformed according to the usages of the Baptist Church.
Signed: G.W. Paddock
Mary Pontus  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Some records show the name "Pontus" as "Ponthus".  Further research will

prove anctry.
1318 - 1342 John Beaumont 24 24 0870 Bethel\ Basset ~1549 Mahiemo 1180 Matilda deClare 1665 Elizabeth Starbuck 1053 - 1093 Bertha of Holland 40 40 1837 - 1916 John Oliver Van Wart 79 79 A son of John Oliver, named Ben,  lived at Hyde Park on the Boston Line in Mass.
Vanwart  jr., John Oliver, b. 11/17/1914, d. 07/28/1986, CPT US ARMY, Plot: W-J CR-6 N-3, bur. 08/08/1986, son of John O. Van Wart Sr.
1771 - 1825 Bariah C. Fitch 54 54 Beriah was the fifth of eleven children. Anne Tayler ~1304 - ~1365 Joan 61 61 D. 1070 Gilbert Fitz Richard Mr. Dewsbury 1740 - 1814 Jonathon Gorham Fitch 73 73 First person on Nantucket with 2 given ( surnames) names and was a house carpenter. Audrey Michenar 1598 - 6 Mar 1685/1686 Christopher Hussey Arrived Boston, Mass. June 5, 1632 in the ship " William and Francis" .One of the purchasers of Nantucket Island from the Indians in 1659. Membr. of the Royal Council of N.H.

Source:
Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, 1988.
Hampton, original settler 6 Sep 1638 with his mother and father-in-law
Rev Stephen Batchelder whose footsteps he followed after marriage to his
daughter, Theodate, meeting her by family tradition in Holland; coming on
the same William and Francis which arrived 5 Jun 1632; settled first at
Saugus (Lynn, MA); freeman 14 May 1634; Newbury, proprietor 1637; Hampton
Commissioner, t. e. s. c. 22 May 1639, the first of many times; lot layer 31
Oct; called present Deacon 30 Jun 1640; Moderator 1641 1663-4, 1672; Town Clerk
1650-3; Selectman 1650, 1658, 1664, 1669.  Often tr. and Gr. j., and
foreman.  Confirmed Lieut. 14 Jun 1653, Captain 11 Oct 1664.  Rep. 1658,
1659, 1660, 1672; Councillor 1679 until Cranfield came in.  Nantucket
proprietor Jul 1659, sold there to his sons in 1671 and 1681.  In Apr
1674 he and son John were admonished for breach of the law called Quakers
meeting.  Colcord depos. that her father gave them all his cattle, goods
and debts on going back to England, indicating his will liv. beyond that
time.

LDS Microfilm 029,883 part 3/  has a seven page Hussey genealogy based on
Austin and 160 Allied Families by John Osborne Austin, 1893, History of
Nantucket by Alexander Starbuck, 1924, and History of Lynn, Mass., by
Alonzo Lewis and James R. Newhall, 1865.

It tells of Christopher Hussey, his wife, mother, and father-in-law first
coming to New England.  It tells of Christopher holding many offices and
being a substantial land owner.

An interesting entry is that 1659, 7, 2, Christopher was one of the nine
purchasers of Nantucket, Mass., from Thomas Mayhew, for 30 pounds
sterling and two beaver hats; "one for myself and one for my wife", as
the deed says.  It is not known that he ever went to that island; he
certainly never lived there for any considerable time.
1671, 10, 23.  Captain Christopher Hussey of Hampton, deeded to his sons
Stephen and John of same place, for 80 pounds, all his interest on the
Island of Nantucket, "that is to say all my lands, arable land, pasture,
meadows, woodland, all commonage, rights and privileges due unto me
according to the purchase made by me; with all my cattle, neat cattle,
goats or horses, all my stock that is on the island of Nantucket of what
kind or quality or ever it be".
For the next fifteen years of his life, he held many important offices
after the King determined to erect New Hampshire into a separate
government, under jurisdiction of a President and Council to be appointed
by himself.

Christopher held the office of Councillor, next to  the president and
deputy, for three years.
1684, 2, 8, will.  Codicil, 1685, 10, 28.  Proved 1686, 10, 7.
Executors, son John Hussey and son-in-law John Smith.  Witnesses Stephen
Torry, Robert Pike, Martha Pike.  He gives to his tow sons, Stephen and
John, his farm of about 150 acres and also about 50 acres marsh land.  To
daughter Mary, wife of Thomas Page, 7 acres medow, 2 shares in Ox Common,
2 shares in Cow Commons, and 30 pounds to be paid her by Stephen and John
Hussey.  To daughter Huldah all the rest of land and housing in the town
of Hampton, and goods and stock, also the planting lot, 3 acre meadow lot
2 shares Ox Commons, 2 shares Cow Commons, and 30 pounts to be paid her
by John Smith, the husband of my daughter Huldah.
Inventory, upwards 600 pounds including the following items:  House,
orchard and land adjoining, 42 pounds.  Upland on the farm, 200 pounds.
Five acres meadow, 100 pounds.  40 acres marsh, 60 pounds.  15 acres
marsh, 24 pounds. Planting land, 28 pounds.  Spring medow, 30 pounds.  7
acre meadow, 14 pounds. Medow, 6 pounds.  Spring medow, 30 pounds.  7
acres meadow, 14 pounds.  Meadow, 6 pounds.  Land at North Division, 6
pounds.  4 shares Ox Common, 24 pounds.  4 shares Cow Commons, 30 pounds.
12 acres pasture, 20 pounds.  3 cows, 1 ox and 1 year old beast, 12
pounds.  Beds, boulsters, blankets, rugs, and curtains, 12 pounds.  Table
and linen, sheets, etc., 10 pounds.
1686, 3, 8.  He was buried on this date at Hampton, so, the town record
declare.  (History of Lynn)

Christopher Hussey's will is copied from LDS microfilm 1561672:
WiL OF CHRISTOPHER HUSSEY OF HAMPTON, NEW HAMPSHIRE
The Last Will and Testament of Chrisopher Hussey was made the 28th day of
February 1684.

I, Christopher Husy, being through the mercy of God in health of body and
I a sound memory and disposing capacity for wch (which) I bles the Lord
and God being strickn in years, not knowing the time of my departure
desiring according to rulle to set my house in order before I dy, revoke
alll former Wills by me made, to make and ordain this my last Will and
Testament in wch I do first resigns my soule unto the hands of the Lord
Jesus Christ my blessed Savior and Redeemer and my body to the dust from
whence it was taken in hope of a blessed resurrection among the just when
my soule and body being again reunited and clothed over with the
righteonsness of Christ to remaine with the Lord forever and as for my
outward estate that God hath graciously lent me my just debts being payd
and funeral charges discharged, I dispose of as followeth.
Imprimis:  I give my two sons Steeven Husy and John Husy my farm with all
the privileges thereof namely the one hundred and fifty ackers of meadows
upland as granted taken also fifty ackers more of marsh which I bought
adjacent to it I say I give it by equal parts that is to say one full
half to my son Steeven his heirs and assigns forever in fee simple and
the other half to my son John in like manner only that paying to my
dafter Mary as hereafter in my Will is expressed.
Item:  I give to my dafter Mary Husy now wife of Thomas Page my 7 acres
of medow lying near Bejamin Shaws and that peec of medow through which
the highway lyeth and also 2 shares in the ox common and also too shars
of cows common and also I do order that my son John Smith shall pay her
thirty pounds and my two sons John and Steeven shall pay her forty pounds
apiece in good pay.
Item:  I give and bequeath to my dafter Huldah the like manner all the
rest of my lands and housing and comon rights in the town of Hampton and
all the houshold stuff and goods and stck then remaining that is to say
my house with all in it or with it with all the land adjacent and the
planting lots and 3 ackers medow lot toward the sprint, 2 shars in the ox
coman and 2 shars in the cow coman and do order and appoint that he shall
pay to my dafter Mary thirty pounds toward her porsion.
Item:  My will is that the legases that I have bequethed to my dafter
Mary that part of it wch is in land that shee shall enjoy it imediately
after my deasease and the thirty pounds that shee shall have of my son
John Smith the husband of my dafter Huldah i do will it to be payd her in
two years after my desease that it to say the one half the first year and
the other half the second year as good pay of country.
Item:  My will is also that the forty pounds apeece that I have willed my
two sons Steeven Husy and John Husy to pay her that it be payd her allso
within or by the end of two years next after my desease in som good pay
of the country.
Item:  My will is also that the forty pounds and in case of fayler shee
my sd. dafter shall have in low thereof thirty ackers of the farm part
whereof shall be the old field lying on the other side of the way on end
whearof buts upon my old house and the other end toward the mill River by
the bridge the rest to be made up of the farms wch ad. lands shall be
ingadged hearby and shall be responsible for the payment of the aforesayd
som ten or twelve ackers whearof shall be medow.
Item:  My will is that the sd. (said) som being payd my sayd sons Steven
and John shall have the farm first bequeathed by evene and equal porsion
(portion) only my son John shall not be molested or hindered of what he
have built on nor his building ncrompltd(?) in the valving of the farm
because they are his owne the land on wch. that stan be rakend or valued.
I do upon further consideration will and declare that it shall be in my
sd dafter Mary 's choifc whether shee will bave the land foremensioned in
the farme or the 80 pounds of my 2 sons Steeven and John Husy.
Lastly, I make and ordaine my son John Husy and my son John Smith to be
joint Executors of this my will and in case they should both dy before as
above sd. then I do appoint my dafter Mary and in case shee should also
in like manor fayle then I apoint my son Steephen to be my Executor in
their stead and my trusty friends Mr. Richard Waldron and Mr. Robert Pike
to be overseers of this my will.  In witness of all wch I have hearunto
sett my hand and seal the day and year aforemensioned.
Christopher Hussey (SEAL) Signed, sealed
nd declared to be his last Will and Testament before us:
Moses Pike
Robert Pike
His
Steeven Tong
Mark
Salisbry October ye 28 - 1685 upon a considering of som dubiausness in
the expression of some things in this my Will respecting coman rights or
privaleges I do by these present for the avoyding of any contraversy or
mistakes about it in time to come declare that by the privileges
mensioned belonging to my farm by it I do plainly intent whatsoever
woods, woodland or feeding rights or coman lands to be divided that do
belong to ye sd. farm it shall remaine and be to ye sd. farme and so ----
porsionably to be divided to my two sons that have the farm and lands
adjacent or lands not yet pofost (possessed) that ly in coman and in like
manner the coman rights that do belong to the lands that is given to my
two dafters Mary and Huldah in the Towne it shall belong to each of them
attending to thayr severall portions of land I meane any coman rights
thereto belonging devided or undevided and this I do declare to by my
plane intent and meaning in that case as wwitness my hand and seale, day
and year above written.
Christopher Hussey (SEAL)
Signed, sealed and declared in ye presence of us
Steeven Tong (his mark)
Robert Pike
Martha Pike
New Hampshire in New England Moses Pike, Robert Pike and steeven Tong
appeared the 7th of 8th month 1686 before Richard Waldron, Jr. and made
oath that they saw Christopher Hussey signe, seal and heard him declare
this Instrumit contained in the two former pages as his last will and
then saw him signe and seal the above menconed codicill being of a
disposing mind.
Attests Elisa Stileman Clery

In September, 1993, at the Sutro Library, an original handwritten
manuscript was found  resulting from a computer search under the Hussey Family.
It is Sutro F 72 N2 G36 1874 [Genealogy of several families who settled in
the Nantucket region]. -- [1874?]. [92] p. ; 32 cm.
There is a section on the Hussey family.  I will quote the beginning of
that section.  The manuscript was written in about 1874.
Capt. Christopher Hussey, the father of Stephen was born in the town of
Dorking in the Co. of Surry England about six miles SSW from London.  He
made suit to a young woman by the name of Bachelor in Holland whos father
had removed there sometime befor from England & was a clergyman and was
then about removing with his family to America.  He would not give his
concent for the said Hussey to marry his dauter on any other terms than
that he should remove with him to America, which he did and settled in
the town of Lynn Co. of Essex a Province of Massachusetts Bay N. England where
the said Bachelr was minister of the town and in so early a time of the
Settlement that the said Stephen Hussey was the second child born in the
town, and the one that was born before him was born in the same week.
When on the following Sabbath they were both carried to church to be
christened the eldest was first presented to the Minister he put it by
and reached for the other saying I will christen my own first.  Hence
arose that saying that has so offent been made use of.
The said Christopher Hussey the father of Stephen was cast away on the
coast of Florida, and was devoured by Cannibals who were at that time
inhabitants of that coast.  He was a man that bore the name of a
gentleman equal to any one that lived at that day.  Christopher's wife's
name was Theodate.  Hence the name of Theodate Gardner wife of Ruben and
several others in the Co of Barnstable, in Stephen Gorham's family.
... the manuscript goes on to describe each of Christopher's and
Theodates children which includes the following about John:
John Hussey son of old Christopher married Mary Perkins of Hampton & move
to Newcastle, Deleware and died in 1711 leaving fourteen daughers.
... Some of the handwritten notes in the folder are dated as early as 1824.
The latest one was a list of people weho celebrated the 85th birthday of
E. F. Gard, December 21, 1874.
1046 - 1118 Robert Beaumont 72 72 Robert de Beaumont; allegedly 1st Earl of Leicester of the c1102creation.  [Burke's Peerage]

------------------------------------

On Leicester, Earldom of [Burke's Peerage, p. 1671]:

Robert de Beaumont, a companion in arms of William I (The Conqueror) atHastings was granted after the Conquest much land in the Midlands ofEngland, but most of it was in Warwickshire rather than Leicestershire.Indeed his younger brother became Earl of Warwick.  Robert also heldterritory in Normandy and is usually referred to as Count of Meulan.  Hewas a leading political figure in the reigns of William II and Henry Iand on the death of one Ives de Grandmesnil in the First Crusade, thefunds for campaigning in which Ives had raised from Robert on thesecurity of his estates, [Robert] came into full possession of them,including a sizeable part of Leicester.  The rest of the town was grantedhim by Henry I and it is possible that he became Earl of Leicester.

Served in the Battle of Hastings, 1066.
1019 - UNKNOWN Theobald III Count of Champagne & Blois ~1084 Aenor deToteneis Richard Howland Bishop of Petersbough. 1713 - 1785 Beriah Fitch 71 71 ~1075 - 1134/1135 Phillip Braiose pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1100 - 1142 Miles Fitz Walter 42 42  Earl Of Hereford

Died in a hunting accident.
~1100 - >1143 Sibyl de Neufmarche 43 43 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1883 - 1954 Miles Hannington I Van Wart 70 70 Miles Hannington Van Wart moved from New Brunswick, Canada to live  in Portland, Oregon. Died Jan. 28, 1954 in Marion County Oregon, Death Cert. Number 1705. This certificate states that Miles was born in Mass. A Brother of Miles lived at Clarendon Hills, a part of Hyde Park near the Boston Line, Mass.  Miles died of Cardio Renal Disease and he had this for 5 years. He stayed for 3 days in the hospital prior to death. Miles was a electrician. Aged 70 at death. 0830 - 0890 Rognvald I Eysteinsson/ Earl of More 60 60 D. 1258 William Gernon Inq.p.m. 43 Henry III D. 1247 Ralph Gernon Received Bakewell in Derby from King Richard I Garsinde von Maine 1813 - 1844 Priscilla McAlpine 31 31 Some books spell her name as McAlpin.
Found in: Hampstead - Merritt - Slipp Graveyard (also listed as Merritt Cemetery, Queenstown)
VAN WART - Priscilla  d. 1844 in her 32nd yr
1284 - UNKNOWN Fulke deRycote 1256 - UNKNOWN William deRycote 1234 - UNKNOWN Matilda Visdelou 1290 John Gernon 1298 Alice Du Plessis 1250 - 1327 William Gernon 77 77 Inq. P.M. 7 EdwIII Chester of Chicheley, cit.I 194 1237 - 1274 Ralph Gernon 37 37 Inq.p.m. 2 Edw.I Lord of the Manors of East Thorpe and Great Birch, co. Comb. D. 1194 Aubrey deVere Eleanor deVere 1046 Roger deBusli 1340 John de Rycote 1346 - UNKNOWN Elizabeth Gernon 1311 Fulk de Rycote Alice 1292 - UNKNOWN Margaret Le despenser 1265 Adam Le despenser 1228 - UNKNOWN Fulke deRycote D. 3 Feb 1244/1245 Isabel deBolbec D. 1062 Hildoin deRameru Jedediah Fitch 1110 - 1160 Maud of Carinthia 50 50 ~1625 - >1708 Chrystyntje Jans 83 83 Also called: Chrisiena and Styntie.  Ref: N.Y. Gen. & Biog. 1878, vol. 9, p.
16.
D. 1062 Adele de Roucy D. 1141 Aubrey deVere From Great Addington and drayton, Co. Northampton, Sheriff of London and Middlesex 1121, 1125 , Justice and Master Chamberlain of England 1133. D. 1155 Alice deClare 1238 - UNKNOWN Adam Le despenser 1099 - 1139 Thomas Basset 40 40 1118 Alice de Dunstanville ~1290 Alice Latham 1005 Fougue\ Fulco deAulney D. 1321 Mary of Brabant D. 1059 Oddone deMaurienne Count of savoy 0915 Norman of Basset Oliver Bostoc Sir. Osmer oliver  de Bostock an'o 1066 1030 Thurston Basset 1530 - 1622 Marie Boscawen 92 92 ~1275 Isabel ~1273 William de La Lee ~1255 Agnes ~1255 William deLa Lee ~1236 - >1274 Robert Danvers 38 38 ~1216 William Danvers 1020 - 1084 Humbert I deMaurienne Whitehands Count of savoy 64 64 Count of Belley, Aosta, Maurienne.See Europäisch Stammtafeln Bund IItafel 110. ~1196 Robert Danvers ~1176 William Geoffrey deAlvers ~1176 Emma Chevalchesul ~1156 Aucher Chevalchesul ~1156 Mabilia ~1156 Robert deAlvers  [FIX.ged]

I wish I was  sure of every name in this file &amp; that I didnt
need to know what you think :) hey, but always refining this,
So if you spot a place where Im just flat wrong please tell
me or someone I didnt go on out with, I do this file out of fun and wanting to know, but do n ot
respond to the 'know it alls' , that dont have manners.I dont
consider them Kin!
Thanks and Happy Hunting!
~1136 Geoffrey deAlvers  [FIX.ged]

I wish I was  sure of every name in this file &amp; that I didnt
need to know what you think :) hey, but always refining this,
So if you spot a place where Im just flat wrong please tell
me or someone I didnt go on out with, I do this file out of fun and wanting to know, but do n ot
respond to the 'know it alls' , that dont have manners.I dont
consider them Kin!
Thanks and Happy Hunting!
~1116 Ralph of Little Marlow deAlvers  [FIX.ged]

I wish I was  sure of every name in this file &amp; that I didnt
need to know what you think :) hey, but always refining this,
So if you spot a place where Im just flat wrong please tell
me or someone I didnt go on out with, I do this file out of fun and wanting to know, but do n ot
respond to the 'know it alls' , that dont have manners.I dont
consider them Kin!
Thanks and Happy Hunting!
1635 Caleb Stratton Anne Reeve 1055 - UNKNOWN Amadeus I deMaurienne Count of Savoy 1712 - 1780 Elizabeth Stratton 67 67 1649 - 1727 James II Fitch 78 78 One of the founders of Yale College. Founder of Canterbury, Conn. ~1485 - 1555 Richard Coffyn 70 70 1357 - 1433 John I of Portugal 76 76  [FIX.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Grand-Master of Aviz, King of Portugal 1385.[FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

[Warner1.2.FTW]

Grand-Master of Aviz, King of Portugal 1385.
1397 - 1472 Isabella of Portugal 75 75 ~1020 Sister of Sir William Mallett 1360 - 1415 Phillipa of England 55 55 1276 - 16 Mar 1321/1322 Humphrey VIII Bohun 0765 - 0836 Hugh II deTours 71 71 1311 - 1391 Margaret Bohun 80 80 1045 Gerard II de Egisheim 1210 - 1263 Margred Wales 53 53 1622 - 1687 James I Fitch 65 65 "In Hoc Sepulcro Depositae Sunt Reliquiae
Viri Vere Reverendi D: Jacobi Fitch: Natus
Fuit Apud Bocking in Comitatu Essexlae in
Anglia, Anno Domino 1622 Decembr 24 Qui Post-
Quam Linguis Literatis Optime Instructus
Fuisset In Novangliam Venit Aetat. 16 Et
Deinde Vitam Degit Harteordlae Per Sepen-
nium Sub Institutione Virorum Ceeeberi-
morum D: Hooker Et D: Stone Postea Mtnere
Passorali Functus Est Apud Saybrook Per
Annos 14 Illinc Cum Ecckesiae Maiori Parte
Norvicum Migravit Et Ibi Ceteros Vitae
Annos Transegit In Opere Evangelico In Sen-
Ectute Vero Prae Corporis Infirmitate Ne-
Cessario Cessabat Ab Opere Publico : Tan-
Demque Recessit Liberis Apud Lebanon Ubi
Semianno Fere Exacto Obdormivit In Iesu
Tomb stone:
Anno 1702 Novebr 18 Etat 80 Vir, Ingenii Acu-
Mine, Pondere Judicii, Prudentia Charitate,
Sanctis Laboribus, Et Omnimoda Vitae Sanc-
titate Peritiaquoque Et Vi Concionandi
Nulli Secundus." Translation
"In this grave are deposited the remains of that truley reverend
man, Mr. James Fitch. He was born in Bocking, in the County of
Essex, in England, the 24th day of December, in the year of our
Lord 1622; who after he had been most excellently taught the learned
languages came into New England at the age of sixteen, and then
spent seven years under the instructions of those very famous men,
Mr. Hooker and Mr. Stone. Afterwards he discharged the pastoral
office fourteen years at Saybrook. Thence he removed with the
major part of his Church to Norwich, where he spent the other years
of his life in the work of the gospel. In his old age indeed he was
obliged to cease from his public labors by reason of bodily indisposi-
tion and at length retired to his children at Lebanon, where after
spending nearly half a year, he slept in Jesus in the year 1702, on the
18th day of November, in the 80th year of his age."
"He was a man as to the smartness of his genius, the solidity of
his judgement, his charity, holy labors, and every kind of purity of
life, and also as to his skill and energy of preaching, inferior to none."
1879 - 1925 Minnie Bentson 46 46 Her name as the wife of Miles Van Wart was found on the SSI documention filed by her 3 sons and her Death Cert.. The spelling of her maden name on these records filed by her sons are: Benson and Bentson and Brentson.  Death Cert Number 1724. Portland Oregon .Place of Death: Mulh., Oregon.  Local Registered Number: 234., City: Portland, Num. 6404-96 S.E., Full Name: Minnie Van Wart, Leighth of Residence in City: 21 Years. Date of Birth: Feb. 26, 1882, Age: 43 Years, 3 Months, 30 Days. Birth Blace: Ill. Name of Father: Benson., Birthplace of Father: Sweden. Birthplace of Mother: Sweden., Signed and filed by: Miles Van Wart, June 26, 1923. Date of Death: June 25, 1923., Place of Burial: Mt. Scott Cemetry., Undertaker: Jacobson & Cox.

1910 Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon ED 174 sheet 5, #107 #3 18/19 April 1910 VanWart, Miles H. head age 27 married 1 year b. Canada / father/mother b. Canada occup: electrician Minnie wife 30 married 1 yr. 1 child/1 child living b. Illinois father: Canada mother: Illinois Miles E. son age 3/12 [3 months] b. Oregon Father: Canada Mother: Illinois
1217 - 1291 Eleanor of Provence 74 74 Jose Ygnacio de Lopez Lucia Efigenia Millar Surname: Millan / Millar Magdalena Marron Maria Antonia Josefa Pasos Surname: Pasos / Posos D. 0919 Manasses deChalons Manasses "The Old" de Chalons D. 1305 Robert II of Burgundy 1040 - 1092 Stephenie Etienne deLongwy 52 52 0997 - 1049 Eustache I deBoulogne 52 52 D. 1787 Deborah Gorham Deborah is a great-granddaughter of John Howland of the Mayflower. (co-heiress) 1591 - 1657 Henry Whitfield 66 66 Rev. Henry died on 17 September 1657 at Winchester, England. 1838 - 1926 Phoebe Christiania Van Wart 87 87 D. 1659 Abigail Whitfield Margery ~1466 - ~1514 Thomas Fitch 48 48 D. 1660 Stephen Batchelder {Found on WWW.}

"As full time RVers we spent the summer of 1997 in Wells, Maine, about 40

miles north of Hampton, New Hampshire.  We drove down there one day and

had a look around Founders Park.  It is a small park in the shape of a

triangle in the south east part of town bounded by Park Ave., Landing

Road, and Cuss Lane.  The perimeter of the park is lined with small

stones about two feet tall with a small plaque with the name of each

founding family who had settled in Hampton prior to 1700.  I checked and

found my ancestor Hussey and Perkins stones.  In the center of the park

is a large stone.  According to the photographs I took, it is  over seven

feet tall.  It has a large plaque that contains the following, "A little

band of pioneers under the leadership of Reverend Stephen Batchelder of

South Ampton, England seeking a larger liberty in October 1638 settled in

the wilderness near this spot to plant a free church in a free town. They

were joined in 1639 by others and in that year the town was incorporated.

To do honor the founders and fathers of Hampton to exhalt the ideals for

which they strove and as an inspiration to posterity this memorial is

dedicated. October 16, 1925."

LDS microfilm 1561672 has this colorful story about him:

Rev. Stephen Bachiler born in England 1561 was well educated (B.A. Oxford

1586), and had received orders in the established church but was not in

sympathy with his rites and institutions.  His unwillingness to conform

to its requirements resulted in his being deprived of his ecclesiastical

commissions. He spend a few yhears in Holland but returned to London.

Came to Lynn, Mass. June 5, 1632 and here he established the first

Episcopal Church of Lynn according to his own ideas.  Differences

occurred from time to time but finally when a council of ministers was

called, it was decided that although the church had not been properly

instituted, yet the mutual exercise of their religious duties had

supplied the defect.  His removal from Lynn was desired by those who

differed from him, but where in that day did not religious differences

lead to enmity.

_Alumni Oxonienses: The Members of the University of Oxford;, 1500-1714_

lists:

> Bachiler, Stephen.  St. John's Coll., matric. circa > 1581; B.A. 3

Feb., 1585-6, rector of Wherwell,

> Hantgs, 1587.  See Foster's _Index Ecclesiasticus_.

Rev. Stephen Bachelor removed from Lynn, Mass. to Ipwich, where he

received a grant of fifty acres of land and a proposal to locate but he

soon left Ipwich and with some friend, John King and others to Mathcheese

on the Barnstable Bay, now Yarmouth, with a view of establishing a colony

there.  This proved impracticable and he went next to Newburyport and

7-6-1638 received a grant of land from the town.  Later the general Court

gave him permission to settle a town at Hampton a few miles from

Newburyport.  In 1639 Ipwich offered him ;l60 acres of land if he would

live there but he declined.

On 7-5-1639 he sold his house and land in Newbury and removed to Hampton,

settled the town and established a church of which he became pastor.  In

1640 Hampton granted him 300 acres of land and he gave them a bell for

the church called "meeting-house".  In 1647 he was in Portsmouth wwwhere

;he remained three years.

At the age of eighty-nine he married unfortunately and lived with his

third wife only one year.  In 1651 he returned to England and died in his

100th year.

Here is a more detailed story I obtained from the Prodigy Genealogy

Topic:

This was written by Rev. Stephen Bachiler, probably a descendant.  This

eccentric and learned divine has the honor of being the first white man

who settled within the present limits of the town of Barstable. He lived

a  hundred years, and his long life was checkered with exciting incidents

on  which the imaginative pen of the novelist would delight to dwell.

He was born in England in 1561, graduated from Oxford, received orders in

the established church, was settled in the ministry, and ejected by The

bishops for non-conformity, at whose hands Gov. Winthrop says he had

suffered much.

He married early in life, and four of his sons and three daughters are

named:

John Wing, afterwards of Sandwich, married his daughter Deborah, probably

before his removal at Holland, where he resided several years. During his

residence in that country, Christopher Hussey, the ancestor of the

Nantucket  family of  that name, became enamored with his daughter

Theodate, and sought her hand in marriage; but Mr. Bachiler refused

assent, without the bridegroom would agree to remove to New England.

Hussey assented to the condition imposed, and took, probably in 1629,

Theodate to wife.

Mr. Bachiler, intending  to emigrate to New England, soon after returned

to London. Mr. Lewis states that his church in Holland consisted of six

members beside himself, and that these returned with him to  London. No

names are given; but it is uniformly stated that they were his friends,

or members of his own family. If so, the seven probably were Mr. Bachiler

and his wife, John Wing and his wife Deborah. John Sanborn and his wife,

a daughter  of Mr. Bachiler, and Theodate Hussey. Sanborn's wife died in

England, and it does not appear that he came over. His sons  John,

William and Stephen came over with their grandfather and settled in

Hampton. Christopher Hussey and his mother, the widow Mary Hussey, were

afterwards members of his church, and followed their pastor in all his

wanderings. Mr. Savage, whose authority is not to be rejected on light or

inconclusive testimony, thinks the Husseys came over in the same ship

with Mr. Bachiler.

The court records, and the decisions of the ecclesiastical councils favor

his supposition, and it will be hard to show how the ubiquitous number of

six members is made up,, if he is not right. On the 9th of March, 1632,

Mr. Bachiler and his company embarked at London in the ship William and

Francis, Capt. Thomas, and arrived in Boston Thursday, June 5, 1632,

after a tedious passage of 88 days, and on the day next after his arrival

went to Lynn.

Mr. Lewis states that "In Mr. Bachiler's church were six persons who had

belonged to a church with him in England; and of these he constituted a

church at Lynn, to which he admitted such as desired to become members,

and commenced the exercise of his public ministrations on Sunday, the 8th

of June, without installation." Four months after a complaint was made

of some irregularities in his conduct. He was arraigned before the court

at Boston, Oct. 3, when the following order was passed: "Mr. Bachiler is

required to forbear exercising his gifts as a pastor or teacher

publiqely in our Pattent, unless it be to those he brought with him, for

his contempt of authority, and until some scndles be removed."

Mr. Bachiler, however, succeeded in regaining the esteem of the people,

and the court on the 4th of March, 1633, removed their injunction against

him.

In 1635, some of the members became dissatisfied with the conduct of

their pastor, "and doubting whether they were regularly organized as a

church," withdrew from the communion. A council of ministers was held on

the 15th of March, and after deliberating three days, decided "that

although the church had not been properly instituted, yet after-consent

and practice of a church-state had supplied that defect. So all were

reconciled," says the record. Mr. Bachiler, however, perceiving no

prospect of terminating the difficulties, requested  dismission for

himself and the six who had accompanied him from England, which was

granted, on  the supposition that he intended to remove from Lynn.

Instead  of this, he remained and formed another church of his friends,

that is of those who came over with him.

This conduct gave great offence to "the most and chief of the town" of

Lynn and they entered a complaint against Mr. Bachiler to the assistants

who forbade him to proceed in the organization of his church until the

subject was considered  by other ministers. Still he goes on. The

magistrates require his attendance before them. He refused to obey; they

send the marshall who brought him into their presence. He submits and

agrees to leave the town in three months. Mr.Bachiler was admitted

freeman May 6, 1635, and  removed from Lynn to Ipswich in Feb. 1636,

where he received a grant of fifty acres of land, and had the prospect of

a settlement; but some difficulty arose and he left the place.

Gov. Withrop in the first volume of his history, under the date of March

30, 1638, has the following passage: "Another plantation was now in hand

at Mattakeese ("now Yarmouth," is written on the margin) six miles beyond

Sandwich. The undertaker of this was one Mr. Bachiler, late  pastor at

Saugus. (since called Lynn) being about 76 years of age; yet he walked

thither on foot in a very hard season." "He and his company, being all

poor men, finding the difficulty, gave it over and others undertook it."

Mr. Bachiler settled in the easterly part of Mattakeese, at a place which

is known to this day as "Old Town." The names  of his associates are not

given; probably the company consisted of persons who belonged to, or were

connected by marriage, with the family of Mr. Bachiler, namely, sons,

sons- in-law and grand-sons, with their families.

Mr. Bachiler probably obtained the consent of Mr. Collicut, to whom the

lands at Matakeese had been granted, before he undertook to establish a

plantation; for without such consent he would have been a trespasser and

liable to ejectment. The terms of the grant cannot be quoted; but it does

not thence follow that not permit was given or grant made. We know by the

Old Colony records that in 1637 or 1638, certain lands in Barnstable were

run out into house and other lots; that these lands were laid out by or

under the authority of Mr. Richard Collicut of Dorchester. He was a

surveyor, but there is not evidence that he was ever in Barstable. The

Plymouth records tell us the thing was done;  but they do not tell us who

did it. The passage quoted from  Gov. Winthrop clearly and distinctly

states that at, or about the time, the Plymouth records say the lands

were run  out, Mr. Bachiler and his company undertook to form a

plantation at Mattakeese.

The very first thing that he and his company did, undoubtedly, was to do

what all such companies did in those times first do that is run out house

lots for each of their party, and farming lands and meadows to be held by

each in severalty. Not to presume this, is to presume that Mr. Bachiler

and his company were not only wanting in common prudence, but wanting in

common sense. The first settlers in new countries never failed to

appropriate a sufficiency of land to themselves, and in order to make

such appropriation, they must first run them out and put up boundaries.

That there were some among his company that could survey lands, scarce

admits of doubt. Mr. Bachiler, as Mr. Prince informs us, was a "man of

learning and ingenuity, and wrote  a fine and curious hand," and he could

undoubtedly run lines and draw plans. His son John Wing, one of the

company, was a man of skill and energy-and he probably had with him his

sons Daniel, Stephen and John, three stout youths, if not all men

grown-one of whom in after-times was a surveyor of lands.  That Mr

Bachiler's party were capable of doing all that the Colony records say

was done, does not admit of doubt, and in the absence of all proof to the

contrary, it is to be presumed that they did do it.

Sandwich was settled in 1637, mostly by people from Lynn-old neighbors

and acquaintances of Mr. Bachiler's company-and it is probable, that

being the nearest settlement to Mattakeese, that they left their women

and little ones there till shelter could be procured for them in the new

settlement.

The first house built within the present bounds of Yarmouth (of which

there is a record) is that of Mr. Stephen Hopkins, afterwards, owned by

his son Gyles, and by him sold to Andrew Hallet, jr. This was in the

summer of 1638, and was built as a temporary residence for his servants

who had the care of cattle sent from Plymouth to be wintered at

Mattakeese. Whether or not cattle had been sent from  Plymouth in

previous years does not appear; if so, then Mr.  Bachiler found whites

within a mile of the place he selected for settlement.

It was also in the immediate vicinity of Lyanough's town," a place not

inhabited by the Indians in the winter, and their deserted wigwams

perhaps afforded them a temporary shelter.  Mr.

Bachiler and his company wee all poor men, illy provided with the means

of establishing a plantation, even in the mild season of the year, and it

is hardly possible that they could have sustained themselves during the

intensely cold winter of 1637, without some kindly herdsmen, or some

friendly Indians gave then shelter while they were preparing their

rudehabitations.

Early in the spring of 1638, Mr. Bachiler, "finding the difficulties

great," abandoned his plantation at Mattakeese. John Wingand his family

stopped in Sandwich. Mr. Bachiler and Christopher Hussey went to Newbury,

and on the 6th of September the Massachusetts Legislature gave them and

others leave to begin a plantation at Hampton, of which he became the

minister. The net year, according to Mr. Felt, he was excommunicated for

unchastity, thought Gov. Winthrop says he was then "about eighty years of

age, and had a lusty, comely woman to wife." In November 1641, he was

restored to the church, but not to his office. About this time his house

in  Hampton took fire and was consumed with nearly all his property.

In 1644, the people of Exeter invited him to settle there;  but the court

forbid his settlement. In 1647, he was at Portsmouth, now Portland, where

in 1650, he being then 89 years old, his second wife Helen(a) being dead,

he married his third wife Mary, without publishing his intention of

marriage according to law, for which he was fined ten pounds half of

which was afterwards remitted. (interesting, I found that he had 4 wives,

any one know?) With his third wife he lived only a few months. She went

to Kittery, and, according to the York records, on the 15th of  October,

1651, was presented for committing adultery with George rogers, and

sentenced "to receive forty stripes save  one, at the first town meeting

held at Kittery six weeks after her delivery, and be branded with the

letter A."  In October, 1656, she petitioned for a divorce from Mr.

Bachiler, because he had five years before "transported himself to Ould

England, and betaken himself to another wife and because she desired

"disposing herselfe in the way of marriage,"

Whether or not she obtained a divorce does not appear on record. Mr.

Bachiler, after his return to England, married a fourth wife, this third

being then living. At last he died in the year 1660, at Hackney, near

London, inthe one hundredth year of his age.

No record of his family is preserved. Four sons and three daughters are

named. Henry, settled at Reading; Nathaniel, born about 1611, "aa chip of

the old block." settled at Hampton, and Francis and Stephen, both

remained in London, the latter said to have been living in 1685. Of his

daughters, one as before stated, married John Sanborn, and died before

1632. Theodate, married Christopher Hussey, and  died in Hampton in 1649.

Deborah married John Wing of Sandwich. On the Yarmouth town records I

find the following entry: Old Goody Wing desesed the last of January, '91

and '92," that is Jan'y 31, 1692, N.S. This record probably refers to

Deborah, widow of the first John Wing. Her son John resided at Sawtucket

(now Brewster). then within thecorporate jurisdiction of Yarmouth, and

his aged mother probably resided with him. There is no one beside to whom

the record will apply. Her age is not given, but an approximation to it

may be made. Her son Daniel of Sandwich,  if he had then been living,

would have been 70 years of age, consequently the mother must have been

about 90 years of age at her death.

(In preparing this article, I have consulted Gov. Winthrops History, the

Plymouth and Massachusetts Records, Felt's Ecclesiastical History,

Savage's Genealogical Dictionary, and Lewis's History of Lynn; the latter

gives the fullest sketch of the life of Mr. Bachiler yet published. The

reading of the extracts from the records, given by Mr. Lewis, leave the

impression of the mind that Mr. Bachiler was not such a man s a minister

of the gospel should be.

A literary friend, who for several years has been collecting materials

for a memoir of Mr. Bachiler, says he is not deserving of the odium which

has been heaped on his character.

The NHSOG (NH Soc. Genealogists Record) Vol. 8, No 1 (Jan 1991) contained

an article by George Freeman Sanborn Jr. (who is Editor, Pres of NHSOG,

and Dir. of the NEHGS Library in Boston - impeccable credentials) .....

His article is just 4 pages long, and reveals research done which proves

that the once-published data that Stephen BACHILER died in Hackney ENG in

1660 was the result of a hasty reading by  someone long  ago of

"Collections of the Mass. Hist. Soc., Vol. VII -  4th Series, pp

583-584" which actually referred to - not Rev. Stephen,  but a Rev. John

BACHILER - no known relation, who actually died Hackney  1674! So much

for one mistake perpetuated for decades <g>. Research originally

commissioned for a Philip Simonds, and published  in the "Batchelor

Family News-Journal" 4:5 (April 1974), gave new  clues. The Sanborn

Family Assoc. continued the research (all N.E.  SANBORNs are desc. from

the 3 grandsons of Rev. Stephen BACHILER) -  and in the Guildhall Library

in London was found, in the burial  register of Allhallows Staining:

"Steeven Batchiller Minister that dyed att Robert Barbers was buryed  in

the new church yard Octob 31th 1656". Only 2 men named Stephen BACHILER

were alumni of Oxford / Cambridge, and it has been concluded that this

burial was that of our ancestor. He would have been about 90. He

matriculated St. Johns College, Oxford 15 Nov 1581, and gave his age as

71 on arrival in N.E. in 1632. The church of Allhallows Staining (taken

down in 1870) stood at west side of Mark Lane, south of Fenchurch St. in

London. Thus, Rev. Stephen BACHILER was buried just 17 days after Mary

(BAILEY) BEEDLE petitioned the courts in N.E. to divorce Stephen.

In June 1995 I noticed that Heritage Books was reprinting the 1898

Batcheller Genealogy:  Descendants of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, of England,

A Leading Non-Conformist who Settled the Town of Hampton, New Hampshire,

and Joseph, Henry, Joshua and John Bacheller of Essex County,

Massachusetts.  624 pp., illus., index, paper, $35.00 #P316.
~1430 - 1468 John Fytche 38 38 ~1289 Miss D. ~1505 Margaret 1056 - 8 Mar 1104/1105 Ermentrudeof Burgundy 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V Plantagenet 38 38 Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the  Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22. Count of Anjou and Maine. Called " The Fair".


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the  Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22. Count of Anjou and Maine. Called " The Fair".
~0552 St. Oda The Sauvan 1774 - 1847 Sarah Delano 73 73 1647 - 1720 Jonathan Delano 73 73 Jonathan Delano died 28 December 1720, aged 73 years Source: Dartmouth, MA, vital records, and gravestone in Acushnet Cemetery. Jonathan married Mercy Warren 28 February 1677-78 Source: Dartmouth vital records  ( De La Noye)(De La Noue)   Lt.

Some qustions have been raised as to the parentage of Jonathan. Further research will prove or disprove both theries.  Jonathen used the Coat of Arms of  the famous Calvinist Caption Francois  De La Noue, surnamed "Bras de Fer"of Briord France, or "Iron Armed" and the arms of Odet De La Noue, these being the same arms as used by Claude De La Noue. NOT the arms of his "family" de Lannoy-DeLano, or the armes of Barbacon, as used by Gysbert and his father Lord Jean de Lannoy or Gysberts mother Jeanne de Ligne de Barboncon.

Jonathan is said to have arrived from Brittany, France via England, landing and then  setting up house in Connecticut. (CGA) Crozier's General Armory: This Armory states on page Viii : " The descriptions of the arms, and the data, carefully collated and verified, have been inserted ONLY when actual examination of the necessary records has shown the family to be entitled to the distinction. ".Bolton's American Armory: " Arms brought over by Jonathan DeLano, to Tolland Connecticut in 1722." Vermonts American Armory, pp. 47 & 163," same  Statement. "Matthews American Armoury and Blue Book,1907: "Philippe De La Noye, from Leydon, Holland, to Plymouth Mass. His Grandson Jonathan de
Lano settled at Tolland, Conn., 1722, same arms.

From the Connecticut Headstones by Charles R. Hale, State Necrologist, found at the CT State Library
DELANO:
Amey, w of Jonathan, 1760, 76 yrs
Jonathan Capt., d Mar. 25, 1752, 71 yrs
Sarah, dau of Timothy & Lydia, d Sept. 27, 1775, 10 yrs
Timothy, s of Timothy & Lydia, d Oct. 5, 1775, 6 yrs
Timothy Capt., d Apr. 12, 1777, 47 yrs (RW)

Found on internet: Genforum:  posted by "don delano"

The origins are disputed. However, it is indisputable that members of a French Huguenot family surnamed DeLaNoue fled France to England before 1572 and settled in and around present-day Southwark, Surrey, and that members of their congregation were
amongst the expatriates in Holland. It is also indisputable that the coat-armor of this family was the "Three Gold Wolve's
Head's". Any number of armorials will verify this information. [See: Visitation of Surrey]

A member of this family who remained in France as the General of the Huguenot forces was one Francois DeLaNoue who carried the
sobriquet "Bras-de-Fer" (Arm of Iron) because he lost an arm in battle and had a metal prosthesis.

Some people fervently believe that this family is Flemish, due to some misleading information published in the 1899 Delano
genealogy by one Mortimer T. Delano (1869- 1920)who laid out an elaborate fantasy connecting this family to the noble Lannoy
family of Europe. There is absolutely no available evidence to support his claims and he himself printed a disclaimer in the
1899 genealogy urging "others" to decide the validity of his claim.

In spite of the recent controversy surrounding the ruins of the Walloon church in Leiden, it remains unclear that Philippe
Delano was ever actually in Holland or that he boarded the Fortune anywhere but England.

There is a family tradition that the father of the Jonathan Delano that married Mercy Warren was not Philippe, but rather another
Jonathan, born in England circa 1629 and who emigrated to present-day CT after 1646 having witnessed Cromwell's forces triumphant
entry into London across the Southwark bridge in that year, as a lad of 16 years age.

Taking this a step further, it would appear that the Jonathan that married Mercy Warren would likely have a birthdate later than
1647, quite likely one in the 1650's and much closer in age to that of his bride. Furthermore, Jonathan was the only son of
Philippe not mentioned in the division of his property, leading one to question the relationship, or if one existed at all.

Lastly, one must keep in mind that many  of the "English" colonists were actually only one or two generations removed from
France and had anglicized surnames, such as the Mullins (Moulines) and the Barlow (Ballou) families.

The DeLaNoue family is from Bretagne,France. (Some of the previous information was accessed through the kindness of the
French Protestant Historical Society in Paris, France)
1580 - BEF 13 Mar 1627/1628 Peter Coffin "Peter Coffyn, of Brixton, in his will, dated December 1, 1627 1602 - 1681 Philippe de Lannoye 79 79 This line of ancesters is not proven.

Arrived on the "Fortune" in 1621.  De La NOYE is how most books spell his name.

Sources:
"Copie Genealogique de la Famille de Lannoy, 1139-1866"
"History and Genealogy of Delano de Lannoy, 1096-1899"
"Olivier de la Marche in his Memoirs"
"Browning's "Americans of Royal Descent"
"Americans of Royal Descent". By: Charles H. Browning, Member of the American
Historical Association, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, etc.
"Who's Who in New York, 1909"
"Anderson's Royal Genealogies"
"NEHGR: 143, p.197-199"
Bullatin du Service de Centralisation des Etudes Genealogiques et Demographiques de Belgique, L'Intermediaire Des Genealogistes; ; #60, November 1955
"City of Leiden Judicial Archives#89, Vol. C, folio 142
Ann Waldo 1613 - <1657 Hester Dewsbury 44 44 aka: Dewsberry 1570 - 1604 Jean deLannoye 34 34 Name has  been spelled both:  "de La Noye"  (of the drowned) or: "de LaNoue" (of the valley).  Some records show his name as "Jan de Lannoy"

The coat of arms used by the grandson of Jean; Jonathan,Tolland Conn.1772 is:
"de La Noue",  from Bretagne (Brittany), La Noue, Parish of Fresnay,Nantes Co.
France. The same armes used by Francois de la Noue, surnamed"Bras de fer" or
"Iron armed"

See:

" Armorial General, Dictionnaire Des Termes Du Blason"  by:  J.B.Rietstap

Tome II, Deuxieme Edition, 1887. :

* Noue(de la) - Bretagne. D'arg. treillisse de sa.; au chef de gu., ch.de trois
tetes de loup d'or.  armes du celebre capitaine calviniste,Francois de la Noue,
surnomme "Bras de fer". ****** Translation:  Arms:Argent (silver), Fretty Sable
(black) on a Chief (top 1/4 of shield)Gules (red), 3 Wolves Heads, Erased, Or
(gold).  Arms of the famous Calvinist captain Francois de la Noue nicknamed
"Bras de Fer".)

See:

Watertown Records Volume 6

Author: Watertown Historical Society Call Number: F74.W33W3

This book contains the historical records, such as land grants, birth,marriage
and death information of the town of Watertown, Massachusetts.

Bibliographic Information: Watertown Historical Society. WatertownRecords
Volume 6. Press of Fred G. Barker. Massachusetts. 1894.



The Huguenot Emigration to America Volume 2

Author: Charles W. Baird

This book contains the history of the Huguenot emigration to Massachusetts.

Bibliographic Information: Baird, Charles W. History of the Huguenot Emigration
to America Volume 2. Dodd, Mead & Company. New York. 1885.

December 30, 1620. Not far from the city of Nantes, in southern Bretagne,was
the seat of the noble house of La Muce-**Ponthus**. Bonaventure Chauvin,
seigneur de la Muce- Ponthus, the head of this house in theearly days of the
French Reformation, was one of the first among thenobility of the province to
embrace the new faith. He became its mostearnest supporter, "consumed with
zeal" for the cause of religion;  (See#1)  and his descendants inherited the
same devotion. His three sonsfought in the Huguenot armies under Henry

IV.; and his grandson David, marquis de la Muce, presided over thepolitical
assembly of the Protestants, held in La Rochelle in the year1621. For his
attendance upon that assembly, contrary to the King'scommands, he was condemned
to be drawn and quartered; a sentence whichwas executed upon him in effigy;
whilst his beautiful castle was actuallydemolished and razed to the ground.
Ceasar, his son, and Olivier, his grandson, were elders in the Reformed Church
of Nantes. Under the provisions of the Edict of Nantes, the seigneurs de la Muce
claimed the right of holding religious services in their own house; and besides years. His
sister survived until the year1780. It was  in this family that the invaluable
"Liste des Fran+ois etSuisses r,fugiez en Caroline," which we have had frequent
occasion toquote from, was preserved.

(#1) La France Protestante, seconde ,dition, vol. IV., p. 266.--On

the margin of the register of the Protestant Church of

Vitr,, opposite the record of his decease, these words are

written: "Va-t-en au nombre des ,lus, Bonaventure de la

Musse!"--(Vaurigaud, hist. des ,gl. r,f. de Bret., III., 181.)

Page 88

supporting this worship, they contributed generously to the funds of
the"temple" in the adjoining village of Suc,. The church of Suc, had
twopastors, one of whom preached also in the chteau of La Muce.
Theministrations of these pastors were frequently attended by Protestantsfrom
Nantes, who went to Suc, by water, singing their psalms in the goodold Huguenot
fashion, as they rowed along the banks of the little riverErdre, which flows
past that village, and empties into the Loire atNantes. Urseline de la Muce,
widow of C,sar, renounced Protestantism atthe period of the Revocation; though
complaint was made that she gave no signs of a true conversion. But herson
Olivier, worthy of his Huguenot ancestors,  (See #2) remained inflexible. Soon
after the Revocation, he fled from his home, and wasarrested on the island of
R,, while waiting for an opportunity to makehis escape to England. Imprisoned
for two years, first in La Rochelle,and afterwards in the castle of Nantes, he
resisted every effort topersuade him to deny his faith. At length an order was
given for theexpulsion of the marquis de la Muce from the kingdom, as an
obstinateheretic. Accordingly, he was placed on board a foreign ship, the
captainof which received orders to land him in England, but carefully to
conceal from him the fact that he was about to be set free. This method was

(#2) Among them was the famous Huguenot leader, Francois, sieur de la Noue.
Nicknamed  "Bras-de-fer" (Iron armed)

Page 89

occasionally resorted to by the government, in dealing with Protestantsof high
rank, whose prolonged imprisonment or summary execution would belikely to
attract public notice and occasion remonstrance from abroad.The mystery
maintained to the last in such cases was designed to deepenthe terror of the
prisoner, and perhaps induce him to recant before themoment set for his actual
liberation. Ignorant of his destination--supposing that like many others at
that period he was but to exchange a  prison for slavery in the West
Indies--his suspense terminated only when the vessel came in sight of the
English coast.(See #3 )  Founder of theSettlement on the James River. Twelve
years later, we find Olivier de laMuce at the head of a large expedition
sailing from England for America.The Breton nobleman became the founder of the
Huguenot settlement on theJames river, known as Manakintown, or King William
Parish, in Virginia.He was a man of recognized excellence of character. The
historian Benoistspeaks of him as a young nobleman of substantial piety, of
which he gaveadmirable proofs during his long imprisonment. A younger sister
ofOlivier de la Muce, who died in 1681, at the age of sixteen years, was
akindred spirit.

( #3 ) Benoist, Histoire de l'Edit de Nantes, tome troisiSme,

seconde partie, pp. 1000, 1001.--Vaurigaud, Hist. des ,gl.

r,f. de Bretagne, III., 99-144. La France Protestante,

seconde ,dition, gives these facts, but does not narrate the

subsequent career of Olivier de la Muce.
1843 - 1931 Victor Marie Duhem 87 87 Served in the Union in the Civil War.

Information found on pedigree written by J.A. Perryman, the wife of Victor Duham and expanded upon by Harold Duham the son of Victor.
Telephone Directory, San Francisco, California Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Company February, 1903 page 070: 
{Red 4585. Duhem, V., r. 41—3d.}

Letter from:
California State Library
Mrs. Carma R. Zimmerman, Librarian
Mr. Ralph Blasingame, Ast. Librarian
October 9, 1953
To:
Mrs. Dorothy Van wart
5217 Folsom Boulevard
Sacramento, Ca.

This letter was request for information of her grandfather Victor Duham. Included was a information card to be filled out.
Card Side one:
California State Library
Pioneer Record
Full name of pioneer: Victor Marie Duhem
Place of birth: France, State of France
Date of birth: 15th day of August 1843
If married , to whome: Julia Ann Perryman
Date of marriage: 8th day of October, 1876
Place of marriage: Denver, county of Rapahoe, State of Colorado, USA.
Fathers name: Constant Duhem
Mothers maiden name: Olympe Combalot
Date of areival in California: 1852
If by sea, Name of Ship: Oscar
There are a lot more notes. See: Duhem Genealogy Research Binder
****************
San Francisco Call Newspaper Vital Records for the Years 1869-1891

Duhem, August ... married in ---- to Jacobus, Katy ... 1876M-449 Duhem, Auguste ... married in 1869 to Smith, Josephine ... 1869M-390 Duhem, Constant ... married in 1881 to Byrne, Mary ... 1881M-1221 Duhem, George A. ... married in 1891 to Hale, Carrie ... 1891M-872 Duhem, dau of Auguste ... born in 1880 ... 1880B-783 Duhem, dau of Victor ... born in 1887 ... 1887B-464 Duhem, son of Auguste ... born in 1870 ... 1870B-180 Duhem, son of Victor ... born in 1880 ... 1880B-784 Duheur, Auguste ... married in 1869 to Smith, Josephine ... 186
1065 - 1107 Raymond of Burgundy 42 42 1795 - 1867 William Van Wart 72 72 1883 - 1953 Harold Nelson Duhem 70 70 1805 - 1878 Louis Constant Duhem 73 73 1768 - 1844 Benjamin Joseph Duhem 76 76 ~1470 Mary de Wadham Jean Baptiste Joseph Duhem  [FIX.ged]

[f.ged]

Personal Doctor to King Louis XVI of France. Died 101 years of age.
Alexander Adams SAVAGE: "ALEXANDER, Boston, a shipwright, freem. 16 18, ar. co.1652, m. as is said, Mary Coffin, sis. of Tristram the first, had Mary, b.19, bapt. 25 Jan. 1646; rem. to Dorchester, there had Susanna, 14 May 1648; John, 26 Feb. 1653; and Samuel, 7 May 1656; beside Elizabeth wh m. William Parkman."
Genealogy of New England, vol I, pg. 214;
Popes:Pioneers of Massachusetts, page 10.
3 Mar 1740/1741 - 1795 Elizabeth Coffin 11 Jan 1434/1435 - 1490 Jean Manuel deLa Cerda <1664 - 1740 William Stratton 76 76 1181 - 1246 Berengaria Queen of Castile 65 65 <1672 - >1733 Catalyntje Conckling 61 61 Records show her name as " Cathalyna and Catalyntje Canckle. or Conckling. 1345 - 1369 Blanche Plantagenet 24 24  [daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
~1632 - 1694 John Conckling 62 62 John Conklin born in Nottingham, England about 1632, was the eldest son of Ananias Conklin and Mary Launder who were married Feb. 23, 1631. His parents brought him to Salem, Mass., before June 25, 1638.  He accompanied them to Southold about 1650 and to East Hampton 1653, and then pushed westward to seek his fortunes in the settlements nearer to New Amsterdam.  He was living in Flushing in 1665 when he bought land in Rye from John Budd.  He lived in Rye until 1676 when he sold his land there to John and Joseph Horton and moved to Eastchester where he died before 1698.  He and wife Helena had children:
2.  Nicholas  mar.  Sarah Hunt
3.  Deliverance mar. Engeltje Buckhout
4.  Cathleen  mar. Gerret VanWert
5.  John      mar. Mehitabel (Tippet) Hadley
                   mar. Lydia _____________
6.   Samuel  mar. Annatje VanWert
7.   Mary     mar. Barent Dutcher
8.   Joseph   mar. Rebecca Hyatt
Ref: N.Y.G. & B. Record-Vol.40 & 41, year 1910, p. 49. Source: McKenzie, John's parents brought him to Salem, MA before 6/25/1638. He accompanied them to Southold abt 1650 and to East Hampton in 1653, then pushed westward to seek his fortune in settlements nearer to New Amsterdam. He was living in Flushing in 1665 when he bought land in Rye from John Budd. He lived in Rye until 1676 when he sold his land there to John & Joseph Horton and moved to Eastchester where he died before 1698.
Source: Westchester Patriarchs by Norman Davis
Source: Families of the Colonial Town of Philipsburgh by Grenville C. McKenzie
Source: Family of Conckelyne, Conklin and Conkling in America, Conklin, Mann
Source: The American Genealogist, Vol. 21, 1944
1660 - 1699 Peter II Coffin 39 39 1630 - 21 Mar 1714/1715 Peter I Coffin ~1255 - <1300 Alice d' Escudamore 45 45 1605 - 1681 Tristram Coffin 76 76 "Allen Coffin in his 'Life of Tristram Coffin' traces the fam ba 1560 - 1613 Nicolas II Coffin 53 53 Richard Bostoc 1683 - 1736 Abigail Coffin 52 52 1076 - 1143 Bertha Princess of Germany 67 67 <1409 John Algor Mrs. Algor 1350 - 1385 Elizabeth de Bohun 35 35 1793 - 1840 Joaquin II Carrillo Jr. 47 47 Lived with his family in San Diego in 1827.  Probably a cousin or brother to Jose Raymundo Carrillo. Family records show he died in 1836. aka: middle name "Victor". Native of Lower California and a cousin of José Raimundo. Was living as a retired soldier at San Diego in 1827. He is said to have been a good performer on the violin, and was once put in the stocks by Capt. Ruiz because the latter thought him too slow in tun­ing up to play his favorite tune. He died before 1840. His widow was María Ignacia Lopez, and their sons were Joaquin, Julio, and José Ramon. The daughters, Josefa, whose elope­ment with Henry D. Fitch has been narrated; Francisca Benicia, wife of Gen. M. G. Vallejo; María de la Luz, wife of Sal­vador Vallejo; Ramona, wife of Romualdo Pacheco and later of John Wilson, who lived in San Francisco; Mabel Pacheco, who was married to Will. Tevis; Juana, and Felecidad, wife of Victor Castro.

Married in the Chapel of the Presidio in San Diego.
Witnesses were:
Senior Jose Sanchez
Ygnacio Martinez y
Sgt. Joaquin Arce.
1729 - 1811 Elizabeth Swain 81 81 Source: Eliza Starbuck Barney, Eliza Starbuck Barney Genealogical Record, Nantucket Historical Association "The Eliza Starbuck Barney Genealogical Record, the most reliable genealogy for Nantucket’s families for the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, contains vital information on more than 40, 000 Nantucketers". 1586 - 1635 John I Mason 49 49 Visitation of London, 1568,  Page 88.
Visitation of London, 1635, Pages 85-87.
Visitation Pedigrees of London, 1664, Pages 137-138.

Mason, John, 1586–1635, founder of New Hampshire, b. England. After serving (1615–21) as governor of Newfoundland, he and Sir Ferdinando Gorges received (1622) a patent from the Council for New England for all the territory lying between the Merrimack and Kennebec rivers. In 1629 they divided the grant, Mason taking as his share an area 60 mi (95 km) deep between the Merrimack and Piscataqua rivers, which he named New Hampshire. This grant was confirmed to him when the Council for New England surrendered its charter in 1635. Attempts by his heirs to make good their claims to this land led to long litigation. The inhabitants were finally compelled to recognize the Mason rights, which were sold (1746) by one of Mason's descendants to a group of 12 Portsmouth men, who became known as the Masonian Proprietors.. They issued settlement permits and land titles in the undeveloped parts of Mason's grant. The grant was redefined by the state in 1788.
J. W. Dean, ed., Captain John Mason (1887, repr. 1972).


Grant of Hampshire to Capt. John Mason, 7th of Novemr., 1629
This Indenture made ye Seaventh day of Novembr Anno Dom'v 1629 & in ye Fifth yeeare of ye Reigne of our Soveraigne Lord Charles by ye Grace of God King of England Scotland ffrance & Ireland Defender of the ffaith &c Between ye President & Councell of new England on the one partie & Capt John Mason of London Esqr on ye other partie Witinesseth yt whereas our late Soveraigne Lord of ffaimous Memory King James for ye makeing a Plantation & estahlishing of a Colony or Colonyes in the Countrey called or knowen by ye name of New England in America did his Highness letters patents under ye greate Seale of England bearing date att Westminster ye third day of November
(1) Historical Collections; Consisting of state Papers, and other authentic Documents; intended as Material for an History of the United states of America. By Ebenezer Hazard, Philadelphia, printed by T. Dodson, for the Author MDCCXCII. I. 289-295.
For all the New Hampshire Grants. charters, Leases, Deeds, Royal Instructions 1620-1746, and later organic acts to 1770 see New Hampshire state Papers, [Edited by Hon. A. S. Batchellor] Vol. XXIX, Concord, N.H. 1896 also, Laws of New Hampshire, Vol. I, Province Period, ]679-1702. Manchester, N. H., 1904.
New Hampshire state Papers; XXIX, Vol. VI, pp. US 33.




A Grant of the Province of Maine to Sir Ferdinando Gorges and John Mason, esq., 10th of August, 1622
This indenture, made the 10th day of August, Anno Dom. 1622, and in the 20th yeare of the reigne of our Sovereigne Lord James, by the grace of God King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, &c. Between the President and councill of New-England on the one part, and Sir Ferdinando Gorges*, of London, Knight, and Captain John Mason, of London, Esquire, on ye other part: Witnesseth, that whereas our said Sovereigne Lord King James, for the making of a plantation and establishing a colony or colonies in ye country called or knowne by ye names of New-England in America, hath, by his Highness Letters Patents, under the Great Seale of England, bearing date at Westmr. the 3d day of November, in the l8th yeare of his reigne, given, granted and confirmed unto the Right Honorable Lodowick, Duke of Lenox; George, Marquis of Buckingham; James, Marquis Hamilton; Thomas, Earl of Arundell; Robert, Earl of Warwick; Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Knt., and divers others whose names are expressed in ye said Letters Patents, and their successors and assignee, that they shall be one Body Politique and Corporate perpetuall, and that they should have perpetual succession, &c., and one comon scale or scales, to serve for the said Body, and that they and their successors shall be known, called and incorporated by the name of the President and Councill established at Plymouth in the county of Devon, for the planting, ruling and governing of New-England in America; and also hash, of his especiall grace, certaine knowledge and meer motion, for him, his heyres and successors; and given, granted and confirmed unto the said President and councill, and their succesors, under the reservacons, limitacons and declaracons in the said Letters Patents expressed, all that part or porcon of that country now commonly called New-England web is situate, lying and being between the latitude of forty and fortyeight degrees northerly latitude, together with the seas and islands lying within one hundred miles of any part of the said coasts of the country aforesaid; and also all the lands, soyle, grounds, havens, ports, rivers, mines, as well royal mines of gold and silver, as other mines, minerals, pearls and pretious stones, woods, queries, marshes waters, fishings, hunting, hawking, fowling, commodities and hereditaments whatsoever, together with all prerogatives, jurisdictions, royaltys, privileges, franchises and preliminaries within any of the said territories and precincts thereof whatsoever. To have, hold, possess and enjoy, all and singular, the said lands and premises, in the said Letters Patent granted and menconed to be granted, unto the said President and councill, their successors and assignee for ever; to be holden of his Majesty, his heyers and successors, as of his Highness Manor of East Greenwich, in the county of Kent, in free and common soccage and not in capite or by Knts. service-yielding and paying to the Kings Majestie, his heyers and successors, the one fifth part of all gold and silver care that from time to time, and at all times from the date of the said Letters Patents, shall be there gotten, had or obtayned for all services, dutyes and demands as in and his highness said Letters Patents amongst other divers things therein contayned, more fully and at large it doth appeare. And whereas the said President and Councill have, upon mature deliberacon, thought fitt, for the better furnishing and furtherance of the plantation in those parts to appropriate and allots to several and particular persons divers parcels of lands within the precincts of the aforesaid granted premises by his Majesty's said Letters Patents.
Now this indenture witnesseth, that ye said President and council, of their full, free and mutual consent, as well to the end that all the lands, woods, lakes, rivers, waters, islands and fishings, with all other the traffics, profits and commodities whatever to them or any of them belonging, and hereafter in these presents menconed may be wholly and entirely invested, appropriated, severed and settled in and upon ye said Ferdinando Gorges and Capt. John Mason, their heyers and assignee forever, as for divers speciall services for the advancement of the sd plantacons and other good and sufficient causes and consideracons, them especially thereunto moving, have given granted bargained sould assigned aliened set over enfeofed and confirmed and by these presents doe give grant bargain sell assigne alien set over and confirm unto ye said Ferdinando Gorges and Capt. John Mason, their heirs and assignee, all that part of the main land in New-England lying upon the sea-coast betwixt ve rivers of Merrimack and Sagadahock and to the furthest heads of the said rivers, and soe forwards up into the land westward until three-score miles be finished from ye first entrance of the aforesaid rivers, and halfway over; that is to say, to the midst of the said two rivers web bounds and limitts the lands aforesaid together wit all the islands and isletts within five leagues distance of ye premises and abutting upon ye same or any part or parcell thereof.
As also all the lands, soyle, grounds, harbors, ports, rivers, mines, mineralls, pearls, pretious stones, woods, quarries, marshes, waters, fishings, hunting, hawking, fowling, and other commodities and hereditaments whatsoever; with all and singular their appurtenances, together with all prerogatives, rights, royalties, jurisdictions, privileges, franchises, liberties, preheminences, marine power, in and upon ye said seas and rivers; as also all escheats and casualties thereof, as flotson, jetson, lagon, with anchorage, and other such duties, immunities, sects, isletts and appurtenances whatsoever, with all the estate, right title, interest, and claim and demands whatsoever wch ye said President and councill, and their successors, of right ought to have or claim in or to the said porcons of lands, rivers, and other ye said premises, as is aforesaid by reason or force of his highness' said Letters Patents, in as free, large, ample and beneficial manner, to all intents, constructions and purposes whatsoever, as in and by the said Letters Patents ye same are among other things granted to the said President and councill aforesaid, except two fifths of the care of gold and silver in these parts hereafter expressed, wth said porcons of lands, wth ye appurtenances, the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges and Capt. John Mason, with the consent of ye President and Councill, intend to name to name The Province of Maine. To have and to hould all the said porcons of land, islands, rivers and premises as aforesaid, and all and singular other ye commodytyes and hereditaments hereby given, granted, aliened, enfeoded and confirmed, or menconed or intended by these presents to be given, granted, aliened, enfeofled and confirmed, with all and singular ye appurtenances and every part and parcell thereof, unto the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges and Capt. John Mason, their heyres and assignee for ever, to be holden of his said Majesty, his heirs and successors, as of his Highness Manor of East-Greenwich, in the county of Kent, in free and common socage, and not in capite or by Knight's service. Nevertheless, with such exceptions reservacons, limatacons and declaracons as in the said Letters Patents are at large expressed; yielding and paying unto our Sovereign Lord the King, his heyres and successors, the fifth part of all ye care of gold and silver that from time to time, and aft all times hereafter, shall be there gotten, had and obtayned, for all services, duties, and demands. And also yielding and paying unto the said President and councill, and their successors, verely the sum of tenn shillings English money, if it be demanded. And the said President and councill, for them and their successors, doe covenant and grant to and with the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, their heirs arid assigns. from and after the ensealing and delivery of these patents, according to the purport, true intent and meaning of these presents, that they shall from henceforth, from time to time for ever, peaceably and quietly have, hold, possess and enjoy, all ye aforesaid lands, islands, rivers and premises, with ye appurtenances hereby before given and granted, or menconed or intended to be hereby before given and granted, and every part and parcell thereof, without any lift, disturbance, denyal, trouble, interrupcon or evacon of or by the said President and councill, or any person or persons whatsoever, claiming by, from, or under them, or their successors, or by or under their estate, right, title or interest. And ye said President and councill, for them and their successors, doe further covenant and grant, to and with ye said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. Mason, their heyres and assignee, by these presents, that they, ye said President and Councill, at all times hereafter, upon reasonable request, at ye only proper costs and charges in the law of ye said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, their heyres and assignee, doe make, perform, suffer, execute, and willingly consent unto any further act or acts, conveyance or conveyances, assurance or assurances whatsoever, for the good and perfect investing, assuring and conveying, and sure making, of all the aforesaid porcons of lands, islands, rivers and all and singular their appurtenances, to ye said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and caps. John Mason, their heyres and assigns, as by them, their heires and assignee, or by his or their, or any of their councill, learned in the law shall be devised, advised or required. And further, it is agreed by and between the said parties to these presents, and ye said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, for them, their heyres, executors, administrators and assignee, doe covenant to and with the said president and council, and their successors, by these presents that if at any time hereafter there shall be found any oare of gold and silver within the ground in any part of the said premises, that then they, the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, their heyres and assignee, shall yield and pay unto the said President and councill, their successors and assignee, one fifth part of all such gold and silver oare as shall be found within and upon ye premises, and digged and brought above ground to be delivered above ground, and that always within reasonable and convenient time, if it be demanded after the finding, getting, and digging up of such care as aforesaid, without fraud or covin, and according to the true intent and meaning of these presents.
And the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason doe further covenant for them, their heyres and assignee, that they will establish such government in the said porcons of lands and islands granted unto them, and the same will from time to time continue, as shall be agreeable, as neere as may be to the laws and customs of the realme of England; and if they shall be charged at any time to have neglected their duty therein, that thus they well conforme the same according to the direct-the President and councill; or in default thereof it shall be lawful for any of the aggrieved inhabitants and planters, being teen's upon ye said lands, to appeal to ye chief courts of justices of the President and councill. And ye sd Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason doe covenant and grant, to and with ye said President and councill, their successors and assigns, by these presents, that they, the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, shall and will, before the expiracon of three years, to be accompted from the day of the date hereof, have in or upon the said porcons of lands, or some part thereof; one parse with a competent guard, and ten families at least of his Majestie's subjects resident and being in and upon ye same premises; or in default thereof shall and will forfeit and loose to the said President and councill the sum of one hundred pounds sterling money; and further, that if the said Sr.Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, their heires or assignee, shall at any time hereafter alien these premises, or any part thereof, to any foraiglle nations, or to any person or persons of any foraigne nation? without the special license, consent, and agreement of the said President and councill, their successors and assignee, that then the part or parts of the said lands so alienated, shall immediately return back to the use of the said President and Councill. And further Know ye, that ye said President and Councill have made, constituted, deputed, authorized and appointed, and in their place and stead do put Capt. Robert Gorges*, or, in his absence, to any other person that shall be their governor or other officer, to be their true and lawfull attorney, and in their name and stead to enter the said porcons of lands, and other the premises wth eclair appurtenances, or into some part thereof in name of the whole, for them and in their name to have and take possession and siezin thereof, or some part thereof in the name of the whole, so had and taken, there for them, and in their names to deliver the full and peaceable possession and siezin of all and singular the said granted premises unto the said Sr. Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, or to their certaine attorney or attorneys in that behalf, according to the true intent and meaning of these presents, ratifying and confirming and allowing all and whatsoever their said attorney shall doe in or about the premises by these presents. In witness whereof to one part of these presents indentures, remaining in the hands of Sir Ferdinando Gorges* and Capt. John Mason, the said President and councill have caused their common seal to be affixed, and to the other of these present indentures, remaining in the custody of the said President and councill, the said Sir Ferdinando Gorges and Capt. John Mason have put to their hands and seals. Given the day and year first above written.
* Pedigree of Sir. Ferdinando Gorges is found in The Visitation of Sommersetshire,1623,  Page 42.


Grant of the Province of New Hampshire From Mr. Wollaston to Mr. Mason, 11th June, 1635
This Indenture Made the 11th day of June in the 11th yeare of ye Raigne of our Soveraign Lord Charles by the grace of God King of England Scotland France &; Ireland Defender of ye ffaith &c Between John Wolaston Citizen & Goldsmith of London of the one part and Capt John Mason Esqr of the, other part Witnesseth that whereas ye Coullcill of New England by their Indenture under their Com'on Seale bearing date the l8th day of Aprill last past before the Date hereof made Between ye Said Councill by ye Name of ye Councill Established at Plymouth in ye County of Devon for ye planting ordering ruling & Governing of New England in America of ye one part & ye Said Jolm Wollaston by the name of John Wollaston Citizen & Goldsmith of London of the other part for the Considerac'ons in the same Indenture contained have demised granted and to Farme Letten unto the Said John Wollaston his Executors and Assignes, all that part purport and porc'on of the Maine Land of New England aforesaid beginning from the Middle part of Naumkeck River and from thence to proceed Eastwards along the Sea Coast to Cape Anne and round about the Same to Passcattaway Harbour and alsoe from Naumkeck through the River thereof upp into the Land West Sixty Miles from wch period to Cross over Land to the Sixty Miles end accounted from Passcattaway through Newichewanock river to the Land Northwestwards aforesaid and alsoe all that the South half of the Isles of Shoalds togeather with all other Islands & Isletts as well imbaid as within ffive Leagues distance from the prmises and abutting upon the Same or any part or parcell thereof not otherwise granted to any by Speciall Name, And togeather also with all woods underwoods and trees now Standing growing & being, or wch hereafter Shall or may stand grow or bee in and upon the Said Porc'ons of Lands & other the Premises All wch part & porc'ons of Lands Islands and premises are from thence forth to be called by the Name of Newhampshire. And whereas alsoe the Said Councill for the considerac'ons aforesaid have demised granted & to farme Letten unto the said John Wollaston his Execrs and Assignes all that other parcell or porc'on of Lands woods & wood grounds lying on the Southeast part of the River of Sagadahock in New England aforesaid at the mouth or entrance thereof containing & to containe there, Ten Thousand Acres togeather also with all the woods underwoods & trees of the same wch said other parcell of Lands from thenceforth is to be called by the name of Masonia. And ,Whereas moreover the Said Councill for the Considerac'ons aforesaid have demised granted & to Farme letten unto the Said John Wollaston his Executors and Assignes together with the Said Lands Islands and premises all the Soyles, grounds, havens, Ports, Rivers waters, Dishings, Mines, & Mineralls as well Royall Mines of Gold and Silver as other Mines & Mineralls pretious Stones Quarries and all and Singular other Comodityes, Jurisdictions Royaltyes priviledges ffranchises and preheminences both within the said Tracts of Land upon the maine,& alsoe within the Said Islands or any the Said demised premises. And also all rents reserved upon the premises or any part or Parcell thereof perquisites & profitts of Courts Deodands waives & strayer goods of ffelons & Fugitives escheats & all other casuall proffitts whatsoever arising or which may hereafter arise out of the Said Demised prerrlises or out of any part or parcell thereof under Such reservac'ons as in the Said Lease are excepted & reserved To have & to hold & enjoy all & Singular the Said Lands Islands and all other the Said Demised premises with their & every of their appurten'ces unto the Said John Wollaston his Executrs and assignee from the Day of the Date of the Said Indenture of Demise unto the. full end & demise of three thousand yeares from thenceforth next it imediatly ensuing & fully to bee compleated & ended without impeachment of any manner of west for and under the yearly Rent of one pepper Corne payable if it be Lawfully Demanded as in & by the said Indenture of Demise more at large it doth & may appeare which said Indenture of Demise was made unto the said John Wollaston by & with the consent of the Said Capt John Mason in trust only for the benefit & behoofe of him the said Capt John Mason his Executors & Assignes, Now therefore this Indenture further wittnesseth That the Said John Wollaston in pformance of the Trust in him reposed & also for divers other good causes & considerac'ons him hereunto especially moving hath granted assigned left over & confirmed & by these prsents doth grant assigne left over & confirms unto ye said Capt John Mason his Executors & Assignes All that the Said part purport & porc'on of Lands called New Hampshire & all & Singular other the said Demised premises with their & every of their appllrtanences in ye said Indenture contained Together with the said recited Indenture of Demise and all ye right title Interest terme of yeares Claime & demand of him the Said John Wollaston of in & to ye Same or any part or parcell thereof & all the benefit profitt advantage & Com'odity whatsoever which shall or may bee had by the same, To have hold & Enjoye the Said part purport & porc'on of Lands called New Hampshire & all & Singular other the Said premises with their & every of their appurten'ces and also all the right title and interest of the Said John Wollaston of in & to the same or any part or parcell thereof unto the said Capt John Mason his Executrs and Assignes from the day of the Date of these presents for and During all ye residue of the Terme of Three thousand yeares yet to come an unexpired in ye same for and under the reservac'ons of Rents in the said recited Indenture contained as fully freely & in as large ample & beneficiall Manner and forme to all intents & purposes whatsoever as he the said John Wollaston his Executes and assigns or any of them may might or ought to have hold & enjoye the same by vertue of the recited Indenture of Demise or otherwise In witness whereof the said partyes to these prsent Indentures interchangeably have sett their hands & Seales the Day & yeare first above written.
(1) New Hampshire State Papers, XXIX, Vol. VI, pp. 66-69.

Grant of the Province of New Hampshire to John Wollaston, Esq., AN. 1635
This Indenture made ye Eighteenth day of Aprill in ye Eleaventh yeare of ye raigne of our Soveraigne Lord Charles by ye Grace of God King of England Scottland France & Ireland Defender of the ffaith &c Between ye Councill established at Plymouth in ye County of Devon for ye planting ruleing ordering & governing of New England in America of ye one part & John Wollaston cittizen & GoldSmith of london of ye other part wittnesseth yt whereas our late Sovraigne Lord King James of blessed memory by his highness Letters patients under ye great Seale of England beareing date at Westminster ye third day of Novembr in ye Eight year of his highness Raigne over ye Realme of England for ye consideracon in ye sd letters patents expressed hath absollltly given granted & confirmed unto ye sd Councill & thier Successors for ever All ye land of New England in America lying & being in breadth from fourty degrees of Northerly latitude from ye Equinoctiall line to fourty eight degrees of ye sd Northerly Latytude inclllsively & in length of & wthin all ye breadth aforesd from Sea to Sea together alsoe wth all ye firme lands soyles grounds havens, ports, rivers waters fishings mines mineralls as well Royall mines of Gold & Silver as other mines & mineralls llretious Stones quarryes & all & singular other Comodityes Jurisdic'ons Royaltyes priviledges ffranchises & preheminences both wthin ye sd tract of land upon ye maine ,& alsoe wthin ye Islands adjoyning as by ye sd letters patients amongst divers other things therein contained more at large it doth & may appeare Now this Indenture further wittnesseth yt ye sd Councill in performance of an agreemt between them made & enacted ye third day of February last past before ye date of these p'nts & also for diverse other good causes & considerac'ons them ye sd Councill hereunto especially moveing have demised granted & to farme letten & by these p'nts doe demise grant & to farme left unto ye sd John Woollaston his Executors & assignee all yt part purpart & porc'on of ye Maine Land in New England aforesd being from ye middle part of Naumkeck river & from thence to proceed Eastwards along ye Sea Coast to Cape Anne & round about ye same to Passcattaway harbour & soe forwards up wthin ye river of Newichewanock & to ye furthest head of ye sd River & from thence northwestward till Six miles be finished from ye first enterance of Passcattaway harbour & also from Naumkeci; through ye river therof up into ye land west Sixty miles from wch period to crose over land to ye Sixty Miles end accompted from Passcattawy though Newichewanock to ye land north westward aforesd & alsoe all yt ye South half of ye Isles of Shoulds together wth all other Islands & Isletts as well imbayed as wthin five leagues distance from ye premises or abutting upon ye same or any part thereof not otherwise granted to any by speciall name and together alsoe wth all ye woods & underwoods & trees now standing growing & being or web may stand growe to be upon ye sd demised premises or any part or pacell thereof wet porc'on of land and premises are from hence forth to be called by ye name of New Hampshire And alsoe ye sd Councill for ye considerac'ons aforesd have demised granted & to farme letten & by these p'nts doe demise grant & to farme lett unto ye si John Wallaston his Executors & assignee all yt other parcell of lands woods & wood grounds lying on ye South east part of ye river of Sagadahock in ye North east part of New England aforsd aft ye mouth & entrance therof containing & to contain tenn Thousand Acres together alsoe wth all ye woods under woods & trees of ye same other parcell of land & wood ground shall from hence forth be called by ye name of Masonia And asoe ye sd Councill for ye considerac'ons oresd have demised granted & to farme letten & by these p'nts doe demise grant & to farme left unto ye sd John Wollaston his executors & assignee together wth all ye sd lands & Islands and premises all ye sovles grounds havens ports rivers wafters ffishings mines & mineralls as well Royall mines of Gold & Silver as other mines mineralls pretious Stones quarreys & all & Singular other Com'odityes Jurisdicc'ons royalltyes priviledges ffranchises & preheminences both wthin ye sd tracts of land upon ye Maine & alsoe wthin ye Sd Islands or any of ye sd demised premises and together alsoe wth all rents reserved upon ye premises or ye any part or pareell thereof perquisitts & profitts of Courts Deodands waives & strafes goods of felons & fugitives escheats & all other casuall profitts wt soever ariseing or wed may hereafter arise out of ye so Demised premises or out of any part or parcell therof Savein excepting & reserveing only out of this p'nte demised or granted ye fifth part of all ye Gold & Silver oare due to his Matie his heires & Successors & in & by ye so Recited letters pattents recovered To have hold & enjoy all & singular ye sd lands Islands & all other the so demised premises we their & every of their appurtences unto ye sd John Wollaston his executors & assignees from ye day of ye date heerof unto ye full end & terme of three Thousand Yeares from thence forth next & imediatly ensuing & fully to be compleate & ended wthout impeachment of any maner of west & also with full Power to doe & comitt of man'er of west either in ye selling felling or cutting of any timber trees woods & underwoods or in ye new opening of any mines of Gold or Silver or any other Mines wt soever & also wth full power licence & authority to sell fell cutt downe carrey & dispose of to his & their owne proper use & behoofe att his & their free will & pleasure all & singular ye so woods & underwoods & trees & alsoe to digge & car'y a way or other wise dispose of all or any ye soyle mines pretious Stones, & quarreys & to convert & imploy or other wise enjoy ye same as fully freely & in as large ample beneficiall man'er to all intents & purposes as they ye sd Councill or any of them by vertue of ye sd recitted letters patients may might or ought to have hold & enjoy ye same Yeelding & paying therfore yearly dureing ye sd terme one peper Corne to be lawfully demanded In wittness wherof to ye one part of this p'nte Indenture remaining in ye hands of ye sd John Wollaston they ye sd Councill have fixed their Com'on scale to ye other part of this plate Indenture remaining in ye hands of ye sd Councill ye sr John Wollaston hath sett his hand & scale dated ye day & yeare first above written Annoqe Dom' 1635
(1) New Hampshire State Papers, XXIX, Vol. VI, pp. 64-66.

Grant of the Province of New Hampshire to Mr. Mason, 22 April 1635, By the Name of Masonia
To all Christian people unto whome these prnts shall come The Councill for ye affaires of New England in America send greeting in our Lord God ever lasting Wereas our late Soveraigne Lord King James of blessed memory by his Highness Le'rs patents under ye great seal of England beareing date at Westminster ye, third day of Novembr in ye Eighteenth year of his Raigne over his Highness Realme of England for ye Considerac'ons in ye so Le'rs patents expresed and declared Lath absoelutly given granted & confirmed unto ye sd Councill & their Successors for ever All ye land of New England in America lying & being in breadth from fourty degrees of Northerly latitude from ye Equinoctiall line to fourty Eight Degrees of ye, so Northerly latitude inclusively & in length of & wthin all ye breadth aforesd from Sea to Sea together alsoe wit all ye firme lands soyles ground havens ports rivers waters dishings mines & Mineralls as well Royal mines of Gold and Silver as other mines minerals pretious stones quarreys & all & singular other comodityes Jurisdicc'ons Royaltys priviledges Franchises & preheminences both wthin Ye sd tract of land upon ye maine & alsoe wthin ye Islands and seas adjoyning as by ye so Le'rs patients amonst diverse other things therein contained more at large it doth & may appeare now knowe all men by these p'nts yt ye Sd Councill of New England in America being assembled in publique Court according to an act made & agreed upon ye third day of ffebry last past before ye date of, these p'nts for divers good causes & considerac'ons them therunto especially moveing haveing granted aliened bargained & sould & in & by these p'nts doe for them & their successors give grant alien bargain sell & confirms unto Capt Jon Mason Esqr his heires & assignees All yt part of ye maine land of New England aforesd being from ye middle part of Naumkeck river & from thence to proceed, East wards along ye sea Coast to Cape Anne & round about ye same to passcattaway harbour & soe forwards up wthin ye river of Newickewanock & to ye farthest head of ye said river & from thence Northwards till six miles be finshed from ye first entrance of passcattaway harbour & asoe from Naumkeck through ye river thereof up into ye land west Sixty miles from wch period to crose over land to ye sixty miles end accounted from passcattaway through Newickewanock river to ye land north west aforesd & alsoe all yt ye south half of ye Isles of Sholds all wch lands wit ye consent of ye Councill shall from henceforth be called New Hampshire & alsoe tenn thousand acres more of land in New England aforesd on ye south east part of Sagahahock at ye mouth & enterance thereof from henceforth to be called by ye name of Masonia together wth all & singular havens Harbours creekes & Islands imbaid & all Islands & Isletts lying wthin five leagues distance of ye maine land opposit & abutting upon ye premises or any part thereof not formerly lawfully granted to any by speciall name and all mines mineralls quarreys soyles & woods marshes rivers waters lakes fishings hawking hunting & fowling & all other Royaltyes Jurisdicc'ons privileges preheminence proffitts com'odityes & hereditaments wtsoever wth all & singular their & every of their appurtences & together alsoe wth all rents reserved & ye benefit of all profitts due to ye Sd Councill & their successors wth ye power of Judicature in all causes & matters wtsoever as well criminall capitall & civill ariseing or wch may hereafter arise wthin ye limits bounds & percincts aforesaid to be exercised & executed according to ye laws of England as near as can be by ye sd Capt John Mason his heires & assignee or his or their Deputies I,ieutenants Judges Stewards or officers thereunto by him or them assigned deputed or appointed from time to time with all other priviledges Franchises liberties imunityes escheats & casualtyes thereof arising or wch shall or may hereafter arise wthin ye said limitts & precincts wth all ye interest right title claime & demand wt soever wch Ye sd Councill & their Successors now of right have or ought to have or claime or may have or aquire heerafter in or to ye sd porc'ons of lands Islands or any of ye premises & in as free large ample & beneficiall man'er to all intents construcc'ons & purposes we soever as ye sa Councill by vertue of his Majts sd letters patients may or can grant ye same saveing & allawayes reserving unto ye sd Councill & their Successors power to receive heare & determine & singular appeal and appeales of every person & persons wt soever dewelling or inhabiting wthin ye sd territoryes & Islands or any part thereof soe granted as aforesd & from all Judgements & sentences wt soever given wthin ye sd lands & territoryes aforesd To have & to hold all & singular ye lands & premises above by these p'nts granted except before excepted wth all & all man'er of profits comodityes and hereditamts wt soever wthin ye lands & precincts aforesd or to ye sd lands Islands & premises or any part of them in any wise belonging or appertaining unto ye sd Capt Jo Mason his heires & assignees for ever To ye only proper use & behoofe of him ye Sd Capt Jo Mason his heires & assigner for ever To be holden of ye sd Councill & their successors & Gladium com'itatus yt is to say by finding four able men coveniently armed & arraied for ye warr to attend upon ye Governor of New England for ye publique Service wthin fourteen dayes after warning given yeelding & paying unto ye sd Councill & their successors for ever one fifth of all ye oar of ye mines of Gold & Silver wch shalbe had possessed or obtained wthin ye limitts or percincts aforesd for all rents services dutys & demands wt soever due unto ye sd Councill & their Successors from any plantation wthin the precincts aforesd ye same to be delivered unto his Mats Receiver his deputie or deputies assigned for ye receipt thereof To ye use of his Matie his heires & Successors from time to time wthin ye lands precincts & territoryes of New England aforesd And last ye sd Councill have deputed authorized & appointed & in their place & stead have putt Henry Jaseline Esqr & Ambrose Gibbins gent or either of them to be their true & lawfull Attorney & attorneys for them & in their name & stead to enter into ye sd lands & other ye premises wth their appurtences or into any part thereof in ye name of ye whole & to take quiet & peacable possession & sezing thereof and after such possession & seeing soe had & taken as aforesd then to deliver ye same unto ye Sd Capt Jon Mason his heires or assignee or to his or their certaine attorney or attornies to be by him or them deputed on intent and meaning of these p'nts In wittness whereof they ye sd Councill have heerunto affixed their com'on seale dated ye two & twenteth day of Aprill in ye Eleaventh year of his Raigne of Soveraigne Lord Charles by ye grace of God King of England Scotland France & Ireland Defender of ye faith &c Anno Dom' 1635
[NOTES.-Contrary to the title of the above grant, the name " Masonia " is not applied to the territory of New Hampshire, but to a tract of ten thousand acres of land in Maine, granted by the same document. New Hampshire was granted by its present name.-OTIS G. Hammond.
I am indebted to Hon. A. S. Batchellor, Editor of the New Hampshire State Papers, for extended courtesies, and for accurate copies of New Hampshire Charters.-Editor.]
(1) Hazard's Historical Collections, I. 384-387. New Hampshire State Papers, XXIX, vol. VI, 64-66.

Grant of the Province of New Hampshire to Mr. Mason, 22 Apr., 1635, By the Name of New Hampshire
This Indenture made the two and twentieth Day of Aprill in the 11th yeare of the Reigne of Our Soveraigne Lord Charles by ye Grace of God King of England, Scotland, France, & Ireland Defender of the Faith &c Between the Councill Established at Plymouth in the County of Devon for the planting ordering ruling & Governing of Near England in America of ye one part and Capt John Mason Esquire of the other part Witnesseth that whereas our late Soveraigne Lord King James of Blessed Memory by his Highnes Letters Pattents under the great Seale of England bearing date at Westminster the 3d day of November in the 18th yeare of his highnesse Reigne over the Realme of England for the considerac'ons in the Same Letters Pattents expressed hath absolutely given granted and confirmed unto the Said Councill & their Successor for ever all the Land of New England in America lying and being in breadth from 40 Degrees of Northerly latitude from ye Equinoctiall Lyne to 48 Degrees of the Said Northerly Latitude inclusively, & in length of & wthin all ye breadth aforesaid throughout ye Maine Land from Sea to Sea togeather alsoe with all firme Lands Soyles, grounds havens Ports rivers waters ffishings, Mines & mineralls as well Royall Mines of Gold & Silver as other Mines & Mineralls, pretious, Stones, quarries and all and Singular other Comodityes Jurisdictions Royaltyes Franchises & prominences both within the Said Tract of Land upon the Maine and also wthin the Islands & Seas adjoyning as by the Said Letters Pattents amongst divers other things therein contained more at large it doth & may appeare Now this Indenture further Witllesseth that ye Said Councill in pformance of an agreement made by & between themselves & enacted the third day of February last past before the Date of these prsents for a Competent Sume of Money, & alsoe for divers other good causes & considerac'ons them ye Said Councill hereunto especially moveing have given granted bargained Sold enfeoffed & confirmed and by these prsents doe give grant bargaine Sell enfeoffe and confirms unto the Said Captain John Mason his heires and assignee all that part purport & porc'on of ye Maine land of New England aforesaid beginning from the middle part of Naumkeck River & from thence to proceed Eastwards along the Sea Coast to Cape Anne and round about the Same to passcattawav Harbour and soeforward up within ye River of Newichwanock and to ye farthest head of the Said River & from thence Northwestward till Sixty Miles be finished from ye first entrance of Passcattawav harbour & alsoe from Naumkek through the :Eliver thereof up into the land West Sixty Miles from which period to Crosse over Land to the Sixty Miles end accounted from Passcattaway through Ne~vichwanock River to the Land Northwestward aforesaid & also all that the South half of the Isles of Shoulds together wth all other Islands, & Isletts as well imbaid as within 5 Leagues distance from the premisses & abusing upon the same or any part or parcell thereof not Otherwise granted to any by Speciaall Name All which part & porc'on of Lands Islands and premises are from henceforth to be called by the Name of New Hampshire & also the Councill for ye considerac'on aforesaid have given granted bargained Sold enfeoffed & confirmed & by these p'nts doe give grant bargaine Sell enfooffe & confirme unto ye sd John Mason his heires & assignee all that other parcell or porc'on of Lands woods & wood grounds Lying on ye South east part of the river of Sagadahock in New England aforesaid at the mouth or entrance thereof containing & to containe there Ten Thousand Acres wch said other parcell of Lands from henceforth is to be called by ye name of Masonia. And moreover the Said Councill for ye considerac'ons aforesaid have given granted bargained Sold enfeoffed & confirmed & by these prsents doe give grant bargaine Sell enfeoffe & confirms unto ye said Captaine John Mason his heires & assignee together wth the said bargained prmises all ye firnie Lantls Soyles Grounds havens Ports Rivers waters dishings Mines and Mineralls as well Royall Mines of Gold & Silver as other Mines & Mineralls pretious Stones quaryes & all & Singular other Com'odityes Jurisdictions Royaltyes priviledges ffranchises & preheminences both wthin the Said Tracts of Lands upon the Maine and alsoe with ye Islands & Seas adjoyning Saving excepting and reserving out of this prsent Grant only ye fifth part of all ye Oare of Gold and Silver due to his Maty his heires and Successors and in & by ye Said recited Letters Pattents reserved To have & to hold all Those the said severall parcells of Land and all other ye said bargained premises Wth their and every of their appurtenances Except before Excepted Unto ye Said Capt John Mason his heires & assignee to ye only & proper use and behoofe of him ye said Capt John Mason his heires & assigner forever. And to bee Enjoyed as fully freely & in as Large ample and beneficiall Manner & forme to all Intents & purposes whatsoever as they the Said Councill & their Successors by vertue of ye Said recited Letters Pattents may might or ought to have hold & enjoy the same or any part or parcell thereof In witnes whereof to one part of this prsent Indenture remain" in ye hands of ye said Capt John Mason they ye Said Councill have affixed their com'on Seale to ye other part of this prsent Indenture remaining in ye hands of ye Said Councill the Said Capt John Mason hath Sett his hand and scale dated ye Day & yeare first above written Annoqi Dom' 1635
(1) New Hampshire State Papers, XXIX. Vol. VI. 62-64
William Wilson Canon of Windsor. William Wilson, DD, will PCC 1615, 36 Rudd, married Isabel Woodhall, sister of William, and niece of the Archbishop. His second son Rev. John Wilson married Elizabeth Mansfield and came to New England with Winthrop, becomeing first minister of the First Church in Boston. Henry F. Waters, Genealogical Gleanings in England, or NEHGR, 38:307-08,   NEHGR 155:3-35.

The  will of John Wilkinson of London, gent., dated 3 May 1614 (PCC Harvey 151): mentions "loving uncle William Wilson, Doctor of Divinity, and ... my loving cosens his children ... To my loving uncle Henry Bowman and every one of his children by my aunt."
D. 1639 Thomas Sheaffe Dean of the Royal Chapel of St. George at Windsor.  Visitation of Buckinghamshire, pp.132. Asa of Adgar Haroldsdottir Matthew Gernon ~1255 - 1343 Hawise de Grey 88 88 ~0857 Adelaideof Paris Maria Wilson 1601 - 1669 Dorothy Sheaffe 68 68 <1846 - 1893 Charles Steiger 47 47 A Immigration and naturalization certificate found has a  C.S.  entering New York from Germany in 1846 and he was under 18 at the time. 1870 - 1949 Josepha Grant Steiger de Geus 79 79 STEIGER/GRANT--Married in San Francisco, May 25, 1887, Chas. STEIGER and Josefia GRANT, formerly of Healdsburg."
Source: Sonoma Democrat (Santa Rosa, CA), 4 June 1887. Transcribed by Jeanne Taylor.
1888 - 1920 Helen Steiger 32 32 "DUHEM--Mrs. Helen Grant DUHEM died in San Francisco following an operation for appendicitis and the funeral was held Thursday afternoon from Young Mortuary Parlors. Mrs. DUHEM was born here May 30, 1888 and spent her girlhood days here with her mother, Mrs. Josefa Grant de GUES, when they moved to San Francisco and where she was married. She was a grand daughter of Mrs. Anita F. GRANT of Healdsburg and is survived by her husband Harold N. DUHEM, and a 10 year old daughter, Dorothy Jean DUHEM. She is also survived by a sister, Marian STEIGER of Healdsburg and Betty de GUES and Leonard de GUES of San Francisco." Source: The Sotoyome Scimitar (Healdsburg, Sonoma Co., CA), 10 Sept 1920. 0800 - 16 Feb 0862/0863 Conrad I D'argengau 1704 - >1778 Thomas Delano 74 74 http://www.usigs.org/library/blackwell/delano.htm#JonathanDelano1647 ~1385 - ~1405 Isabel Barton 20 20 1642 - Jan 1709/1710 Robert Vernon Robert Vernon who was born in 1642 was born in Stokes, Action Parish, Cheshire, England. He had two brothers Thomas and Randel. His fathers name was James, born in 1605 and his mother was Hester of Chester, Cheshire. His grandfather was Hugh wh was born in 1579. When they came to America it was after 1680 when Robers son Isaac was born. Robert, his wife Elinor , his son, brothers, and father made the trip. There mother did not and is buried in Chester, Cheshire, England.  The Quaker Vernons descended from Sir Richard De Vernon, Baron De Shipbrook. They were not only friends of the Quaker William Penn but related to him through marriage. William Penn's father was owed a great deal of money by the King of England and to settle that debt gave the area of Pennsylvania to William Penn.

"History of Chester County Pennsylvania"  by: Gilbert Cope, Pages 754 and 1755.

Ordered that a Warr't and Patent be granted as Requested Joshua Hastings, by Lease and Release, dated , purchased of the Prop'ry 1,000 Acres, of which has been laid out in Middletown, county Chester, 472 Acres in one Tract, and in Nether Providdence 340 Acres, which being resurvey'd by Vertur of a Warr't from the Prop'ry dated 17th 7mo. 1701, by I. Taylor, is found to Contain 390 Acres and is Now sold to ROBERT VERNON and John Sharpless, the said Joshua having a right to more Land by Vertue of his said purchase, requests a Patent on the said 390 Acres and a Warr't for the remainder. Besides the aforegoing two Tracts, he has taken up 20 Acres of Liberty Land, which together with the aforegoing, makes 882 Acres, and the Overplow of this Tract being Acres, makes the whole Acres, and the remainder to be taken up is .
Early PA Land Records, Minute Book G, Pg. 299

ROBERT VERNON having Warr't from the Prop'ry for 285 acres, he desires to Purchase 315 More to make it 600 acres for a Settlem't to two of his Sons and Chooses the N East side of Brandywine, beyond the Barrens, for which he at last offers 10 (pds) 100, complaining much of his loss in not being Suffred to take up his Land before. Granted for Several Considerations as Requested, provided the Land be realy as represented and not culled; John Hope, of Chester County, purchases 200 a's of the Land which was Ja's Stanfield's heading Peter dix's, at 15 (lp) 100 and a Bushell of wheat: to have it at one end.
Early PA Land Records, Minute Book G, Pg, 335-336

ROBERT VERNON having procured of the Proprietor in the year 1700, his Warr't for taking up 285 acres the Ramaind'r of his Purchase, by Agreement with the Commissioners obtained their Warr't, dated 23d 9ber, 1702, for taking up 315 acres adjoining to the other to make up the whole 600 acres, but afterwd's threw it up, and the whole Grant was by Consent made Void.
Early PA Land Records, Minute Book H, Pg. 558

John Edge is mentioned 3 mo. 6, 1689, as an arbitrator between John Worrall and Ann Johnson. He and ROBERT VERNON were "made choyce of for overseers of Providence Meeting" 1 mo. 25, 1706.
Genealogy of the Smedley Family
1220 - 1296 Manfred Hohenstaufens King of Naples & Sicily 76 76 1694 Mary Elizabeth Austin Could be: Mary Elizabeth Austin

The Printed Records of the Synod of  Philadelphia, page 173, gives an account of the Tithables at Caldwell Settlement, showing the sons of Thomas, Sr.,[ m  1748] as follows:
a]Thomas Vernon, Jr..
b] Isaac
c]James (He married Eleanor)
d]Thomas, Jr. 
e]Jonathan
f]perhaps-another son, RICHARD > VERNON
1330 - 1409 Richard Danvers 79 79 ~1345 John Danvers Mrs- Rognvald Eysteinsson Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1199 Unknown ~1085 - 1131 Isabel deVermandois 46 46 COUNTESS OF LEICESTER; MLC/RA/ARSC 84:24.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1080 - 1120/1124 Adelheid deVermandois COUNTESS OF VERMANDOIS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1053 - 1102 Hugh Magnus Capet 49 49 DUKE OF FRANCE AND BERGUNDY ABND COUNT OF VERMANDOI.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
1021 - 1043/1045 Otto deVarmandois PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ERMENGARDE'S 2ND MARRIAGE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
ABT 0942/0953 - 1000 Herbert III PED OF AUGUSTINE. H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

PED OF AUGUSTINE. H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1155 - 1208 Philip II Emperor Holy Roman Empire 53 53 Baron of Würzburg 1191, Duke of Spoleto 1195, Duke of Swabia1196.Murdered by Otto Wittelsbach at Bramburg. Emperor of the Holy romanEmpire from 1198 - 1208. ~0915 - 0978 Albert I, the Pious deVermandois 63 63 ES 111:49; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0884 - 0943 Herbert II deVermandois 59 59 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 111:49; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNT OF VERMANDOIS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1326 Eleanor Bumhley ~0870 - 0925 Edward, the Elder 55 55 0849 - 0901 Alfred, the Great 52 52 ~1334 Adam Hamerton 0865 Harsent To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0876 - 0936 Heinrich I, the Fowler 60 60 ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES DEATH AS 2 JUL 936; KING OF GERMANY; ES I:35; PED OF
AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES DEATH AS 2 JUL 936; KING OF GERMANY; ES I:35; PED OF
AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1068 - 1135 Henry I Beauclerc 67 67 1ST KING OF ENGLAND; DIED AGE 67; ARSC 121:25.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Henry I, Beauclerc
(1100-1135 AD)

Born: 1068

Died: 1135

Parents: William the Conqueror and Mathilda of Flanders

Significant Siblings: Robert, William Rufus

Spouse: (1st) Eadgyth, daughter of Malcolm III of Scotland; (2nd)Adelaide of Louvain

Significant Offspring: William, Matilda, Robert de Mellent (Earl ofGloucester), Sibylla

Contemporaries: Louis VI ("Louis the Fat", King of France, 1108-1137),Roger of Salisbury, Anselm (Archbishop of Canterbury), Pope Pascal II
Henry I, the most resilient of the Norman kings (his reign lastedthirty-five years), was nicknamed "Beauclerc" (fine scholar) for hisabove average education. During his reign, the differences betweenEnglish and Norman society began to slowly evaporate. Reforms in theroyal treasury system became the foundation upon which later kings built.The stability Henry afforded the throne was offset by problems insuccession: his only surviving son, William, was lost in the wreck of theWhite Ship in November 1120.

The first years of Henry's reign were concerned with subduing Normandy.William the Conqueror divided his kingdoms between Henry's olderbrothers, leaving England to William Rufus and Normandy to Robert. Henryinherited no land but received £5000 in silver. He played each brotheroff of the other during their quarrels; both distrusted Henry andsubsequently signed a mutual accession treaty barring Henry from thecrown. Henry's hope arose when Robert departed for the Holy Land on theFirst Crusade; should William die, Henry was the obvious heir. Henry wasin the woods hunting on the morning of August 2, 1100 when William Rufuswas killed by an arrow. His quick movement in securing the crown onAugust 5 led many to believe he was responsible for his brother's death.In his coronation charter, Henry denounced William's oppressive policiesand promising good government in an effort to appease his barons. Robertreturned to Normandy a few weeks later but escaped final defeat until theBattle of Tinchebrai in 1106; Robert was captured and lived the remainingtwenty-eight years of his life as Henry's prisoner.

Henry was drawn into controversy with a rapidly expanding Church. Layinvestiture, the king's selling of clergy appointments, was heavilyopposed by Gregorian reformers in the Church but was a cornerstone ofNorman government. Henry recalled Anselm of Bec to the archbishopric ofCanterbury to gain baronial support, but the stubborn Anselm refused todo homage to Henry for his lands. The situation remained unresolved untilPope Paschal II threatened Henry with excommunication in 1105. He reacheda compromise with the papacy: Henry rescinded the king's divine authorityin conferring sacred offices but appointees continued to do homage fortheir fiefs. In practice, it changed little - the king maintained thedeciding voice in appointing ecclesiastical offices - but it a marked apoint where kingship became purely secular and subservient in the eyes ofthe Church.

By 1106, both the quarrels with the church and the conquest of Normandywere settled and Henry concentrated on expanding royal power. He mixedgenerosity with violence in motivating allegiance to the crown andappointing loyal and gifted men to administrative positions. By raisingmen out of obscurity for such appointments, Henry began to rely less onlanded barons as ministers and created a loyal bureaucracy. He was deeplyinvolved in continental affairs and therefore spent almost half of histime in Normandy, prompting him to create the position of justiciar - themost trusted of all the king's officials, the justiciar literally ruledin the king's stead. Roger of Salisbury, the first justiciar, wasinstrumental in organizing an efficient department for collection ofroyal revenues, the Exchequer. The Exchequer held sessions twice a yearfor sheriffs and other revenue-collecting officials; these officialsappeared before the justiciar, the chancellor, and several clerks andrendered an account of their finances. The Exchequer was an ingeniousdevice for balancing amounts owed versus amounts paid. Henry gainednotoriety for sending out court officials to judge local financialdisputes (weakening the feudal courts controlled by local lords) and curberrant sheriffs (weakening the power bestowed upon the sheriffs by hisfather).

The final years of his reign were consumed in war with France anddifficulties ensuring the succession. The French King Louis VI beganconsolidating his kingdom and attacked Normandy unsuccessfully on threeseparate occasions. The succession became a concern upon the death of hisson William in 1120: Henry's marriage to Adelaide was fruitless, leavinghis daughter Matilda as the only surviving legitimate heir. She wasrecalled to Henry's court in 1125 after the death of her husband, EmperorHenry V of Germany. Henry forced his barons to swear an oath ofallegiance to Matilda in 1127 after he arranged her marriage to thesixteen-year-old Geoffrey of Anjou to cement an Angevin alliance on thecontinent. The marriage, unpopular with the Norman barons, produced amale heir in 1133, which prompted yet another reluctant oath of loyaltyfrom the aggravated barons. In the summer of 1135, Geoffrey demandedcustody of certain key Norman castles as a show of good will from Henry;Henry refused and the pair entered into war. Henry's life ended in thissorry state of affairs - war with his son-in-law and rebellion on thehorizon - in December 1135.

Third surviving son of WIlliam the Conqueror.

Henry had at least 20 illegimate children. (The Kings & Queens ofBritain, John Cannon and Anne Hargreaves, Oxford University Press, page184, printed 2001)

Henry

Kings of England. Henry I, 1068-1135 (r.1100-1135), was the youngest sonof William I. On the death of his brother William Ii, he had himselfelected and crowned king while his older brother, Robert Ii, duke ofNormandy, was on crusade. In 1101 Robert invaded England, but Henrybought him off. Henry invaded Normandy in 1105, defeated his brother, andbecame duke of Normandy. In the meantime he had been involved in astruggle with Anselm over lay investiture. His later years were marked byhis attempts to obtain the succession for his daughter Matilda. UnderHenry's reign of order and progress, royal justice was strengthened.Henry II, 1133-89 (r.1154-89), was the son of Matilda and Geoffrey Iv,count of Anjou. Founder of the Angevin, or Plantagenet, line, he becameduke of Normandy in 1150 and in 1152 married Eleanor Of Aquitaine, thusgaining vast territories in France. In 1153 he invaded England and forcedStephen to acknowledge him as his heir. As king he restored order towar-ravaged England, subdued the barons, centralized the power ofgovernment in royalty, and strengthened royal courts. Henry's desire toincrease royal authority brought him into conflict with Thomas à Becket,whom he had made (1162) archbishop of Canterbury. The quarrel, whichfocused largely on the jurisdiction of the church courts, came to a headwhen Henry issued (1163) the Constitutions of Clarendon, defining therelationship between church and state, and ended (1170) with Becket'smurder, for which Henry was forced by public indignation to do penance.During his reign he gained northern counties from Scotland and increasedhis French holdings. He was also involved in family struggles. Encouragedby their mother and Louis Vi of France, his three oldest sons, Henry,Richard I, and Geoffrey, rebelled (1173-74) against him. The rebellioncollapsed, but at the time of Henry's death, Richard and the youngestson, John, were in the course of another rebellion. Henry III, 1207-72(r.1216-72), was the son of John. He became king under a regency and wasgranted full powers of kingship in 1227. In 1230, against the advice ofthe chief justiciar, Hubert de Burgh, he led an unsuccessful expeditionto Gascony and Brittany. He dismissed Hubert in 1232 and began a reign ofextravagance and general incapacity, spending vast sums on futile wars inFrance. Henry's absolutism, his reliance on French favorites, and hissubservience to the papacy aroused the hostility of the barons. Hisattempt to put his son, Edmund, earl of Lancaster, on the throne ofSicily (given to Henry by the pope) eventually led to the Barons' War.Simon de Montfort, the barons' leader, won at Lewes and summoned (1265) afamous Parliament, but Henry's son Edward I led royal troops to victoryat Evesham (1265), where de Montfort was killed. By 1267 the barons hadcapitulated, Prince Edward ruled the realm, and Henry was king in nameonly. Henry IV, 1367-1413, (r.1399-1413), was the son of John Of Gaunt.In 1387 he joined the opposition to Richard Ii and was one of the five"lords appellant" who ruled England from 1388 to 1389. In 1398 Richardbanished Henry and, after John's death in 1399, seized the family's vastLancastrian holdings. Counting on the king's unpopularity and his absencein Ireland, Henry invaded England and successfully claimed the throne,thus establishing the Lancastrian dynasty. His reign was spentsuppressing rebellions, notably by Richard's followers; by the Scots; bythe Welsh under Owen Glendower; and by Sir Henry Percy. He left thekingdom militarily secure but in debt. His son, Henry V, 1387-1422(r.1413-22), presided over the privy council during his father's illness.As prince of Wales (Shakespeare's "Prince Hal"), he led armies againstOwen Glendower and figured largely in the victory over the Percys. Theearly years of his reign were troubled by the rebellion of the Lollards(see Lollardry). Determined to regain lands he believed to be his, heinvaded France in 1415, thus reopening the Hundred Years War. Afterannouncing his claim to the French throne, he met and defeated a superiorFrench force at the famous battle of Agincourt. By 1420 he had conqueredNormandy, married Catherine Of Valois, and persuaded her father, CharlesVi of France, to name him his successor. He fell ill and died in 1422. Asking he ruled with justice and industry, restoring civil order and thenational spirit. Though his wars left the crown in debt, his charm,military genius, and care for his less fortunate subjects made him apopular hero. His son, Henry VI, 1421-71 (r.1422-61, 1470-71), becameking when he was not yet nine months old. During his early years Englandwas under the protectorate of two of his uncles. After their defeat atOrléans by Joan Of Arc, the English attempted to protect their Frenchinterests by crowning Henry king of France at Paris in 1431, but theircause was hopeless. Henry's rule was dominated by factions, and therewere many riots and uprisings indicating public dissatisfaction with thegovernment. The struggle between the faction headed by Henry's wife,Margaret Of Anjou, and Edmund Beaufort, duke of Somerset, and that headedby Richard, duke of York, developed into the dynastic battle between theLancasters and Yorks known as the Wars of the Roses. Henry went insane in1453. In 1455 Somerset was killed in the battle of St. Albans, and theYorkists gained control of the government. Margaret had control from 1456until 1460, when the Yorkists won a victory at Northampton and Henry wastaken prisoner. York, who had been named Henry's successor, was killed atWakefield in 1460, but his son Edward Iv defeated the Lancastrians andwas proclaimed king. Later he fled to Holland, and Henry was briefly(1470-71) restored. In 1471 Edward retook the throne, and Henry wasmurdered in the Tower of London. Henry was a mild, honest, pious man, apatron of literature and the arts, and the founder (1440) of EtonCollege. He was also unstable, weak-willed, and politically naïve. HenryVII, 1457-1509 (r.1485-1509), became head of the house of Lancaster atHenry VI's death. In 1485 he invaded England from France and defeated theforces of Richard Iii at the battle of Bosworth Field. The next year hemarried Edward IV's daughter, Elizabeth, thus uniting the houses of Yorkand Lancaster and founding the Tudor dynasty. Although his accessionmarked the end of the Wars of the Roses, the early years of his reignwere disturbed by Yorkist attempts to regain the throne, e.g., theimpersonations of Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck. He consolidatedEnglish rule in Ireland (1494) and effected a peace treaty with Scotland(1499), which was followed by the marriage of his daughter Margaret toJames Iv of Scotland. He established the Tudor tradition of autocraticrule tempered by justice and increased the powers of the Star Chambercourt. His son Henry VIII, 1491-1547 (r.1509-47), married his brotherArthur's widow, Katharine Of Aragón, who bore him a daughter, Mary I. Hischief minister, Thomas Wolsey, concluded an alliance with Francis I ofFrance. but Henry (despite the Field Of The Cloth Of Gold) joined (1522)Emperor Charles V in a war against France. England prospered internallyunder Wolsey, who had almost complete control. The court became a centerof learning, and the pope gave Henry the title "Defender of the Faith"for a treatise he wrote against Martin Luther. By 1527 Henry, desiring amale heir, wished to marry Anne Boleyn, but Pope Clement Vii, under thecontrol of Katharine's nephew, Charles V, resisted his demands for adivorce. Wolsey's failure in this affair caused his downfall, and ThomasCromwell became chief minister. An anti-ecclesiastical policy wasadopted, and the subservient Thomas Cranmer became archbishop ofCanterbury. He immediately pronounced Henry's marriage to Katharineinvalid. Papal powers were transferred to the king, who became thesupreme head of the English church. The break with Rome was now complete,and the Church of England was established. Anne, whom Henry immediatelymarried, had one daughter, Elizabeth I. The marriage ended in 1536, whenAnne was convicted of adultery and beheaded. Ten days later Henry marriedJane Seymour, who died in 1537 giving birth to Edward Vi. The king dealtharshly with rebellions against the abolition of papal supremacy and thedissolution of the monasteries. In 1537 he licensed the publication ofthe Bible in English. His marriage (1540) to Anne Of Cleves (whom hedisliked and soon divorced) led to the execution of Cromwell. He thenmarried Catherine Howard, who suffered (1542) Anne Boleyn's fate. In 1543Catherine Parr became his sixth queen. In 1542 war with Scotland beganagain, and Henry made unsuccessful attempts to unite the two kingdoms.Wales was officially incorporated into England (1536), but the conquestof Ireland proved too expensive. The end of Henry's reign saw a gradualmove toward Protestantism. Henry remained immensely popular, despite hisadvancement of personal desires under the guise of public policy or moralright. His political insight, however, grew steadily better, and thepower of Parliament increased. He gave England a comparatively peacefulreign
Ecgwyn Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1172 - 1208 Irene Marie Angela of Byzantium 36 36 ~1230 Piers d' Escudamore ~0878 Edgiva Theudebert Dietrich Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0860 - 0916 Rainer or Regnier I Lorraine 56 56 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Raoul III deValois Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0852 - 0905 Ealhswith 53 53 0952 - 1004 Adélaïde 52 52 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0939 - 0996 Hugh Capet 57 57 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Sources: RC 134, 244; Coe, AF; Kraentzler 1161. 1171, 1181,1202, 1218, 1258, 1290, 1492, 1515; The Franks; Pfafman, The Horizon Concise History of France, Ancestral Roots 53, 101, 106, 141; P of W; Roberts/Reitwiesner; Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants; Carolingian Ancestry. Roots: Hugh Capet, King of France 987-996, Count of Poitou, Count of Orleans. First of the Capetian kings of France. B. winter 941, died 24 Oct. 996. Count of Paris, 956-996, and of Poitou and Orleans. He founded the Capetian Dynasty that lasted almost 900 years. Born late 941. He was the first king of France to speak only Romance (French). K: Hughes Capet, Duke de France, de Paris, King of France. AlsoCount de
Orleans and Paris, King of France. Roberts/Reitwiesner: Hugh Capet,King of France, died 996.
Descents: Hugh Capet, King of France, died 996. Carolingian: Hugh Capet, King of the West Franks, died 996.
~0824 - 0866 Adélaïde(Adelheid) 42 42 ES 11:10; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ES 11:10; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0855 - 0903 Hedwige 48 48 1190 Beatrice von Hohenstaufen ~0851 - 0912 Otto 61 61 ~0878 - 0968 Matilda Von Ringelheim 90 90 HENRI'S 2ND WIFE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PED OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.;
ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES DEATH AS 14 MAY 968; QUEEN OF THE GERMANS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0947 - 1037 William III Taillefer 90 90 ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF TOULOUSE.

COUNT OF TOULOUSE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF TOULOUSE.

COUNT OF TOULOUSE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0921 - 0960 Raymond III 39 39 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0927 Garsinde Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
<0919 - 0924 Raymond II 5 5 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1172 - 1220 Richard de Latham 48 48 ~1046 - 1118 Robert deBeaumont 72 72 EARL OF MILLENT, IN THE VEXIN, AFTERWARDS, IN 1103, EARL OF LEICESTER;
COUNT OF MEUECENT; U.S. PRESIDENT #1 WASHINGTON; FOUGHT AS A KNIGHT WITH
WILLIAM TO CONQUER ENGLAND; PED. EMPEROR CHARLEMAGNE'S DESC. (2) P. 222; MLC/RA.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks



EARL OF MILLENT, IN THE VEXIN, AFTERWARDS, IN 1103, EARL OF LEICESTER;
COUNT OF MEUECENT; U.S. PRESIDENT #1 WASHINGTON; FOUGHT AS A KNIGHT WITH
WILLIAM TO CONQUER ENGLAND; PED. EMPEROR CHARLEMAGNE'S DESC. (2) P. 222;
MLC/RA.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

EARL OF MILLENT, IN THE VEXIN, AFTERWARDS, IN 1103, EARL OF LEICESTER;
COUNT OF MEUECENT; U.S. PRESIDENT #1 WASHINGTON; FOUGHT AS A KNIGHT WITH
WILLIAM TO CONQUER ENGLAND; PED. EMPEROR CHARLEMAGNE'S DESC. (2) P. 222;
MLC/RA.

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Earl of Leicester
Also had the titles of Comte De de Beaumont, Comte De Meullan, Earl of Beaumont.  and having greatly distinguished himself at the battle of Hastings, wasrewarded with vast possessions in England, receiving ninety one greatlordships of manors, mostly in Warwickshire. "Robert de Bellomont came into England with the Conqueror, and contributed mainly to the Norman triumph at Hastings. This Robert inherited the Earldom of Meullent in Normandy, from his mother Adeliza de Waleran. Of his conduct at Hastingsit is said: " A certain Norman young soldier, making his first onset in that fight, did what deserved lasting fame, boldly charging and breaking in upon theenemy, with that regiment which he commanded in the right wing of the army."For these gallant services he obtain ed sixty-four lordships in Warwickshire, and many others in Leicester, Wilts, Northampton, Gloucester, in all ninety-one.His lordship did not, however, arrive at the dignity of the English peerage before the reign of Henry I, when that monarch created him Earl of Leicester.
1008 - 1060 Henry I 52 52  KING OF FRANCE.

ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:11; KING OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

A

A

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1036 - 1076/1089 Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna  GRAND DUCHESS OF KIEV, PRINCESS OF RUSSIA, AND QUEEN OF FRANCE. 1201 - 1235 Maria Von Hohenstaufen 34 34 0374 Tehvant 0985 - 1032 Constance deToulouse 47 47 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:187; QUEEN OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:187; QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:187; QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Queen of France
[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 134, 140, 154, 232, 333, 397; Coe; A. Roots 53, 101, 108, 141A;
Kraentzler 1171, 1176, 1179, 1181, 1218, 1224, 1225, 1258, 1265, 1290; AF;
Pfafman; Royal Descents; AIS; and a pedigree sheet based on the work of
Christian Settipani, written in French.
Settipani says Constance's father was William II, Duke and Marquis of
Provence, 979-983. And that his mother was Constantia, the wife of Boso, the
count of Provence "...942-c.966."
He takes the line back 84 generations from Henry I to Rameses II. Don't
think I will type in all that! Chart in pedigree file.
RC: Constance of Arles, Provence and Toulouse; born c986.
K: Constance deProvence, d'Arles and Toulouse.
Roots: Constance of Provence (variously styledof Arles and of Toulouse),
third wife of Robert. Married 998. (Others say 1001/2).
AIS: Constance of Provence-Arles.
Descents: Constance of Provence.
0980 - 20 Feb 1053/1054 Yaroslav I Of Kiev GRAND DUKE AND PRINCE OF KIEF; ES 11:128.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1001 - 1050 Ingrid (Ingegerda) Olafsdotter Princess of Sweden 49 49 ES II:114; PRINCESS OF SWEDEN.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks



Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0939 - 0996 Hugues "Capet" 57 57 ANCESTRAL FILE; KING OF FRANCE; ES II:10-11; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; KING OF FRANCE; ES II:10-11; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0945 Arsinde(Blanche) de Anjou ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNTESS OF TOULOUSE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNTESS OF TOULOUSE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
D. 1015 Vladimir I "The Great" Grand Duke Of Kiev ES II:128; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0962 - 1002 Rogneda Princess Of Polotsk 40 40 MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0950 - 1022 Olaf III "Skotkonung" Eriksson King of Sweden 72 72 BAPTIZED WITH HIS WHOLE FAMILY IN 1001, AND EXERTED HIMSELF WITH GREAT
ENTHUSIASM TO PROPOGATE THE TRUE FAITH; MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0979 Astrid (Inegrid) Princess Of The Obotrites Queen of Sweden AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; QUEEN OF SWEDEN; OBOTRITIAN PRINCESS; ANCESTRY QUESTIONABLE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0970 - >1018 Ermengarde de Bar 48 48 Invalid endowment temple code: Slak.

Invalid endowment temple code: Slak.

Invalid endowment temple code: Slak.

ES III:730; BOUCHARD SAYS SHE MAY NOT BE HEIRESS OF BAR-SUR-SEINE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Invalid endowment temple code: Slak.

Invalid endowment temple code: Slak.

Invalid endowment temple code: Slak.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Frederich Von Buren ~0900 - 0956 Hugues Magnus 56 56 ANCESTRAL FILE; DUKE OF THE FRANKS, COUNT OF PARIS, AND PRINCE OF FRANCE; FGRA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; DUKE OF THE FRANKS, COUNT OF PARIS, AND PRINCE OF FRANCE; FGRA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0922 - 0965 Hedwige or Hartwige 43 43 ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF THE GERMANS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF THE GERMANS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0929 - 0963 Guillaume III (I) Duke Of Aquitaine 34 34 COUNT OF POITIERS AND DUKE OF AQUITAINE; ES 11:76; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.
CORRECT INFO - DO NOT TAMPER WITH!!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0897 - >0962 Adèle (Gerloc) 65 65 COUNTESS OF POITIERS; ES 11:76; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

COUNTESS OF POITIERS; ES 11:76; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0909 - 0958 Foulques II "le Bon" Count Of Anjou 49 49 MLC/RA; ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF ANJOU.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

MLC/RA; ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF ANJOU.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0913 - ~0952 Gerberge Du Maine 39 39 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0942 - 0972/0973 Svyatoslav I Grand Duke Of Kiev ES II:128; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0517 - 0599 Beli ap Rhun of Gwynedd 82 82 ~0941 daughter Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0930 - 0994/0995 Erik VIII "Seiersal" "Victorious" Bjornsson King of Sweden KING OF SWEDEN. IS SAID TO HAVE HAD THE PAGAN TEMPLES AND IDOLS DESTROYED IN
UPSALA, SWEDEN, WHICH COST HIM HIS LIFE IN THE RAGE OF THE PEOPLE; MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0679 - 0727 Theutbold Duke of Allemania 48 48 ~1196 - >1243 John deNovo Foro de Newmarch 47 47 0919 - 0999 Mieceslas Prince Of Obotrites 80 80 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; TURTON P. 8, 27; DO NOT TAMPER WITH THIS
INFORMATION!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0921 Sophia AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; TURTON P. 8, 27; ANCESTRY QUESTIONABLE; DO NOT TAMPER WITH
THIS INFORMATION!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; TURTON P. 8, 27; ANCESTRY QUESTIONABLE; DO NOT TAMPER WITH
THIS INFORMATION!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0920 - >0997 Reinald Count Of Bar 77 77 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0925 Mrs-Reinald Countess Of Bar Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0872 Poppa ANCESTRAL FILE; SOME SOURCES GIVE HER FATHER AS COUNT BERENGER DE BAYEAUX;
DUCHESS OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; SOME SOURCES GIVE HER FATHER AS COUNT BERENGER DE BAYEAUX;
DUCHESS OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0870 - 0923 Robert I King Of France 53 53 ANCESTRAL FILE; FGRA; COUNT OF PARIS & POITIERS; KING OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0880 - 0931 Béatrice de Vermandois 51 51 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; QUEEN OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0897 - >0931 Liegarde 34 34 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0876 - 0935 Ebles II dePoitier 59 59 DUKE OF ACQUITAINE; COUNT OF POITOU; ES 11:76; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Hildegard von Schwaben ~0912 Elgiva FGRA; PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.PEDIGREE OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0870 - 0938 Foulques I "le Roux" Count Of Anjou 68 68 ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF ANJOU; MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF ANJOU; MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0874 Roscille de Loches ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTEINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0878 Rotbold II Count Of Arles Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0873 Rotbold Mrs Arles Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0877 - 0945 Igor Grand Duke Of Kiev 68 68 ES II:128; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; GRAND DUKE OF KIEV.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0881 - 0969 Olga of Kiev 88 88 MORIARTY, PG 221; GRAND DUCHESS OF KIEV, RUSSIA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0867 - ~0950 Bjorn "the Old" Eriksson King of Sweden 83 83 KING OF UPSALA (SWEDEN); MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0872 Mrs-Bjorn Eriksson Queen of Sweden Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0922 - 0992 Mieszko I 70 70 MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1058 - UNKNOWN Bertha Countess Of Maurienne John Byron <0893> - 0985 Mistui II P.-Obotrites Christian UA/BLACK 150653.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

UA/BLACK 150653.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1065 - 1138 William II deWarren 73 73 ~1006 MathildeDe Friesland ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Raoul II de Valois Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0967 - >1016 Bertha deBourgogne 49 49 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 1:57; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PRINCESS OF BURGUNDY AND
QUEEN OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 1:57; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PRINCESS OF BURGUNDY
AND
QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 1:57; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PRINCESS OF BURGUNDY
AND
QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1220 Unknown Mrs- Yaroslav I Kiev Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Mrs-Hugh "Capet", Concubine Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1250 - 1292 Adam de Bavent 42 42 1180 - 1257 Beatrix Faucigny 77 77 Adlaga Grand Duchess Of Kiev Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Olava Grand Duchess Of Kiev Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Predislava Grand Duchess Of Kiev Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Milolika Princess Of Bulgaria Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) MalfriedeOf Bohemia Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Miss Princess Of Bohemia Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1315 Jane de Bosco Miss Oechlingen Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Jarl Of Sweden Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0985 Edla deWends Princess Of The Wends Concubine of Sweden. 1009 - UNKNOWN Godgifu Princess of England Milon II de Tonnerre Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Judith Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0908 - 0937 Ethile (Eadhilde) 29 29 PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Raingarde Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Predislava Princess Of Bulgaria ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1192 Alice Basset ~0960 - 1014 Svend I "Forked Beard" King Of denmark, Norway And England 54 54 ES 11:97-98; KING OF DENMARK.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Miss Concubine Of Normandy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Adèle, Queen Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Hatheburg Countess Of Merseburg Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1135 - 1223 Thurstan Le despencer 88 88 Thurstan de Spenser, who appears, with his brother to have taken armswith the other barons against King John, for in the 18th of that reign,the king committed the custody of Thurstan de Spenser to Rowland Bloit,and gave the lands of Almaric de Spenser to Osbert Giffard his ownnatural son. Thurstan seems to have regained his rank in the next reign,and to have twice served the office of Sheriff of Gloucestershire.

1  NAME Thurston /De Spencer/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 1122
2  PLAC London, Middlesex, England
~0879 Aremburge Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0890 Emiliane Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Oda Princess Of The Ostmark Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Mrs-Mieszko Princess Of Poland Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0856 AdélaïdePrincess Of France To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1160 - >1242 Margaret Fitz Gilbert Marshal 82 82 pg 64, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1641 - 9 Feb 1642/1643 Elizabeth Hill Melinda de Buscancois Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0834 Concubine #2 Eysteinsson ~0896 daughter Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1139 - 1211 Lucia Spencer 72 72 Mrs-Rainulfe II Countess Of Poiters Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0848 Sigelline ~0854 Mrs-Erik Edmundsson Queen of Sweden QUEEN OF SWEDEN.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Mrs- Rognvald Eysteinsson From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0852 Mrs- Bérenger de Bayeux Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Conrad I Count Of Burgundy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Agane Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1348 Joan Brailsford ~0850 Efenda (Edvina) Grand Duchess Of Novgorod Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0892 - <0964 Ziemomysl 72 72 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1115 - 1207 Almeric Le despencer 92 92 Almeric served the office of Sheriff of Rutland in the 34th of Henry II,1188, and again in 1st of Richard I in 1189. From the latter monarch, towhom he was also steward, he obtained a confirmation in fee of thelordships of Wurdie and Stanley, in the vale of Gloucester. The former ofwhich King Henry II had given to Walter, the Usher of his Chamber, son ofThurstan and uncle of Almaric, for his homage and service reserving apair of gilt spurs, or twelve pence, to be yearly paid for the same intothe exchequer. In the 6th of King John, 1205, this Almaric paid a fine of120 marks and one palfrey to be exempted from attending upon the king inan expedition then proposed to be made beyond the seas. He marriedAmabil, daughter of Walter de Chesnei, by whom he had 2 sons, Thurstanand Almaric, and was succeeded by the elder. ~0901 Bozena Or Biagota, Duchess Of Bohemia Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Joanna de Trafford ~0830 - 0879 Ryurik Novgorod 49 49 MORIARTY, PG 221.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Mrs- Rognvald Eysteinsson Line 1530 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
  TITL [CONCUBINE #3 OF ORKNEY]

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Line 1530 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
  TITL [CONCUBINE #3 OF ORKNEY]

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0844 Aelinde(Rescinde) De Amboise Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0862 Bertha deMorvois ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Groa de Trondheim From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0849 - ~0900 Erik Edmundsson King of Sweden 51 51 FIRST KING OF ALL SWEDEN; MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Unknown Miss ~0848 Mrs- Garnier Loches Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1116 - 1210 Amabel Maud Chesnei 94 94 1033 - 1093 Malcolm III Scotland 60 60 Malcolm III "Ceanmor (Longneck)" King of Scotland, founder of the dynastythat consolidated royal power in the Scottish kingdom. The son of KingDuncan I, Malcolm lived in exile in England during part of the reign ofhis father's murderer, Macbeth.  Malcolm killed Macbeth in battle in 1057and then ascended the throne. After the conquest of England by Williamthe Conqueror, in 1066, Malcolm gave refuge to the Anglo-Saxon princeEdgar the Aetheling and his sisters, one of whom, Margaret (later St.Margaret), became his second wife. Malcolm acknowledged the overlordshipof William in 1072 but nevertheless soon violated his feudal obligationsand made five raids into England. During the last of these invasions hewas killed by the forces of King William II Rufus (reigned 1087-1100),near Alnwick, Northumberland, England. Except for a brief interval afterMalcolm's death, the Scottish throne remained in his family until thedeath of Queen Margaret, the Maid of Norway, in 1290. Of Malcolm's sixsons by Margaret, three succeeded to the throne: Edgar (reigned1097-1107), Alexander I (1107-24), and David I (1124-53). ~0844 Garnier, Seigneur de Loches Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Parvie Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0862 Miss, Princess Of France To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Mrs-Robert II Concubine Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
0887/0891 - >0931 Liegarde, Countess Of Vermandois Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 111:49; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PRINCESS OF FRANK.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Edmund Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 146.  Edmond Willoughby of Willoughbye Esquire.
Irmgard Of Reinald Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0280 Agnes (Concubine) ANCESTRAL FILE; CONCUBINE OF FRANCE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0860 - <0891 Adelaide(or Aelis) 31 31 ARSC 181:6.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ARSC 181:6.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0950 - <0998 Milo IV of Tonnerre 48 48 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. UNKNOWN Walter deChesnei ~0885 Mieceslas I UA/BLACK 150653.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

UA/BLACK 150653.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0867 - >0882 Dir of Kiev 15 15 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0845 - ~0912 Oleg of Kiev 67 67 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0895 - >0981 Raoul of Bar-Sur- Seine 86 86 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0925 - >0978 Gerberga de Lorraine 53 53 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ES 111:49; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; GERBERGE'S 1ST MARRIAGE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0890 - 0939 Gilbert Lorraine 49 49 DUKE OF LORRAINE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1270 James Molynes 0913/0914 - 0984 Geberge ~0846 - ~0931 Rollo 85 85 FIRST DUKE OF NORMANDY, 912, WHO MADE GREAT CONQUESTS, ACCEPT THE HAND OF A
DAUGHTER OF CHARLES THE SIMPLE, TOGETHER WITH A TRACT OF NEUSTRIAN TERRITORY
NORTH OF THE SEINE, FROM ANDALYE TO THE SEA (MODERN NORWAY), IN EXCHANGE FOR
CHRISTIAN BAPTISM AND AN OATH OF FEALTY (IN 912); ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

FIRST DUKE OF NORMANDY, 912, WHO MADE GREAT CONQUESTS, ACCEPT THE HAND OF A
DAUGHTER OF CHARLES THE SIMPLE, TOGETHER WITH A TRACT OF NEUSTRIAN TERRITORY
NORTH OF THE SEINE, FROM ANDALYE TO THE SEA (MODERN NORWAY), IN EXCHANGE FOR
CHRISTIAN BAPTISM AND AN OATH OF FEALTY (IN 912); ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Roger Bostoc 1095 - 1181 Thurston Le despencer 86 86 1268 - 1323 John de Grey 55 55 Name Suffix:<NSFX> DE GREY D. 1143 Geoffrey V Plantagenet Foulques, Count of Anjou Eleanor of Aquitaine Catherine Caldwell ~1260 - 1286 William deWarenne 26 26 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Richard I Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Sir Richard Willoughby of Willoughby Knight
[alive in the fifth year of Edward II, i.e. 1312].

B. Burke 1888, The Complete Peerage, p. 1118.  Willoughby lineage:
1)  Richard Bugg, Lord of Willoughby-upon-the-Wold
2)  Sir Richard Bugg (d. 1324); assumed name of Willoughby; purchased
Wollaton 1317 from Sir Roger de Mortein

#1 is either this Richard Willoughby or possibly his father William.
Hawise Honkerle John de Botetourt ~1320 Julian Molynes 1657 - 1730 Joseph Alexander Caldwell 73 73 Joseph is buried on his farm "Lifford" or "Leffera", Parish Ballycoogan, County Donegal, Ireland. 1039 - 1119 William Le deSpencer 80 80 Elizabeth Caldwell Eleanor Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Isabel Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks George Caldwell Elizabeth Raymer Faith Gratwick See "Barrys Sussex Genealogies", p. 169, 170 and 256. Also see Dallaways "Sussex" Vol. II. i. P. 66 and 79, for information reguarding the Gratwick genealogy. James Caldwell John Caldwell 1603 - 1675 Hatevil Nutter 72 72 Hate-Evil Nutter., Found in Banks Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England, 1620 - 1650.,
Page 157:  Namne of Emigrant: NUTTER, Hate -Evil., English Parish Name: Kersey, Ship Name: Arbella, New England town,: Dover., Various Reference: Banks Mss.
Directory of the Ancestral Heads of New England families 1620 - 1700, Holmes. Page clxxv. "Hateevil Nutting, b. England 1603, one of the founders of Dover, N.H. 1633".

Nutter Arms found: The General Armory, Page 743.

Elder Hateveil Nutter arrived in Dover, New Hampshire, around 1635, NEHGRegister, Vol. 7, page 259. Birth in England found in N.H. State Papers, Vol. 31, page 157.  Married twice, first wife is unknown, and his second wife is Ann Ayers. Will dated 28 Dec. 1674, proved 25 June 1675,  names "present wife, Ann,"and his children: Anthony, Mary Wingate, and Abigail Roberts (N.H. State Papers, Vol. 31, page 157).

Hostory of Dover,New Hampshire, by John Scales, page 314,

Elder Hateveil Nutter was born in England in 1603, as appears from a
deposition he made. It seems that he did not come over with the first lot
of emigrants in 1633, but in 1637 he bought a lot of Captain Thomas
Wiggin, which was rebounded in 1640, as follows: "Butting on ye Fore
River, east; and on ye west by High street; on ye north by ye Lott of
Samewell Haynes; and on ye south by Lott of William Story." His house
stood on the east side of High Street, about 15 or 20 rods from the north
corner of the meeting-house lot.... He received various grants of land
from the town, and had part ownership of a saw-mill at Lamprey River. His
ship-yard was on the shore of Fore River; the locality can be easily
found by reference to the map. He was largely engaged in the lumber
business and in ship-building. He was one of the first Elders of the
First Church, and helped organize it in November, 1638. He remained a
zealous and generous supporter of the Church. When the Quaker
Missionaries created disturbances in 1662, he vigorously opposed them,
contending they had no right to come to Dover and make a disturbance...etc.
1100 - 1149 Gilbert deClare 49 49 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Pembroke 1018 - 1076 Robert Le deSpencer 58 58 Robert le Despenser is mentioned among the bishops and barons assembledin council with William, the Conqueror, in the 18th year of his reign, inLondon. Despenser was so called from being Steward to the King, and waswitness to the royal charter for removing the secular canons out of thecathedrals of Durham, and placing monks in their stead. He had 38 manorsin Warwickshire, Lincolnshire, Gloucester and Leicestershire. This Robertwas a brother to Urso de Abitot, called a very powerful man by the monksof Worcestershire. Robert appears, as well by his high official position,as by his numerous lordships he possessed, to have been a person of greateminence. From his having all these lordships he evidently was one of theNorman barons who had helped conquer England. 1819 - 1873 Abraham Van Wert 54 54 ~0916 Mrs- Herbastus deCrepon Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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0994 - 1033 Elbes I deRoucy 39 39 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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1034 - 1090 Rohese Giffard 56 56 pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1018, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1065 - 1117 Adeliza or Adelaide de Claremont 52 52 pg 155, 201, 206 & 208, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

There seems to be a serious error in line 246b-24 of Ancestral Roots,which has this Adeliza marrying Robert de Condet d. 1141, after hermarriage to Gilbert Fitz Richard.  This does not agree with any other lines, which have Robert de Condet's wife as Adeliza dau. of Ranulph leMeschin, Earl of Chester.  The error in generation 24 is shown in thenext generation of this line (246b-25) which has Adeliza dau. of Ranulphmarrying first Richard Fitz Gilbert and then Robert de Condet.
~1014 - 1063 Alice (Adela) deRoucy 49 49 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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~1045 - ~1110 Margaret Marguerite de Montdidier 65 65 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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~1024 - ~1090 Richard deTonbridge Fitz Gilbert 66 66 Richard de Clare

Richard Fitz-Gilbert, a lawyer, was the founder of the House of Clare in
England.  He accompanied William the Conqueror into england and
participated in the spoils of the Conquest, obtaining extensive
possessions in the old and new dominions of his royal leader and
kinsman.  (He and William the Conqueror were both great grandsons of
Richard I, Duke of Normandy.)  In the 6th year of William I, Richard was
joined, under the designation of Richardus de Benefactor, with William de
Warren, Earl of Surrey, in the great office of Justiciary of England.  He
was also called richard de Tonebruge or tonbridge from his seat at
Tunbridge in Kent.  He had 38 lordships in Surrey, 35 in Essex, 95 in
Suffolk and many others.  One of these lordships was that of Clare, on
the border and in the County of Suffolk, which subsequently becoming his
chief seat he came to be styled Richard de Clare, and his descendants
known as the Earls of clare.  He married Rohese, daughter of Walter
Gifford de Bolbec, Earl of Buckingham, who had been count de Longueville
in Normandy.  In 1066 he was distinguisehd for gallant action at the
Battle of Hastings, assisted in making the General Survey and owned 107
lordships.  They had five sons and two daughters



pg 128 & 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 1018, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 118, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Lord of Bienfaite & Orbec in Normandy, Lord of Clare & Tonbridge England,  Richard tried to consolidate gains made by his father in Cardigan but was killed in an ambush in 1136. Soon after his lordship was recovered by the Welsh.
Richard was kinsman and companion of William the Conqueror. He founded the house of Clare during the conquest and played a major role in suppressing the revolt of 1075.  Richard was a knight who served in the Norman invasion of England in 1066. Richard was regent of England jointly with William de Warenne during the Conqueror's absence in 1075 and served in other capacities for the King.  King William granted him one of the largest fiefs in the territorial settlement. The lordship centered on Clare and Suffolk. William arranged for Richard's marriage to Rohese, sister of Walter Giffard, and her dowry consisting of lands in Huntingdon and Hertford became absorbed in family inheritance.

Richard Fitz Gilbert; also known as "de Bienfaite" (from the quantity ofhis fiefs), "de Clare" or "de Tonbridge" (from actual fiefs); went withhis cousin William I the Conqueror to England and was granted 176Lordships, 95 of them associated with the Honour (feudal unit ofadministration) of Clare, Suffolk, and others with Tonbridge, Kent.[Burke's Peerage]

-----------------------------

Richard FitzGilbert, having accompanied the Conqueror into England,participated in the spoils of conquest and obtained extensive possessionsin the new and old dominions of his royal leader and kinsman. In 1073 wefind him joined under the designation of Ricardus de Benefacta, withWilliam de Warren, in the great office of Justiciary of England, withwhom, in three years afterwards, he was in arms against the rebelliouslords Robert de Britolio, Earl of Hereford, and Ralph Waher, or Guarder,Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk, and behaved with great gallantry. Butafterwards, at the time of the General Survey, which was towards theclose of William's reign, he is called Ricardus de Tonebruge, from hisseat at Tonebruge (now Tunbridge) in Kent, which town and castle heobtained from the archbishop of Canterbury in lieu of the castle ofBrion, at which time he enjoyed thirty-eight lordships in Surrey,thirty-five in Essex, three in Cambridgeshire, with some others in Wiltsand Devon, and ninety-five in Suffolk, amongst those was Clare, whence hewas occasionally styled Richard de Clare, and that place in a few yearsafterwards becoming the chief seat of the family, his descendants aresaid to have assumed thereupon the title of Earls of Clare. This greatfeudal lord m. Rohese, dau. of Walter Giffard, Earl of Buckingham, andhad issue, Gilbert, his successor, Roger, Walter, Richard, Robert, a dau.m. to Ralph de Telgers, and a dau. mo. to Eudo Dapifer. Richard deTonebruge, or de Clare, whose is said to have fallen in a skirmish withthe Welsh, was s. by his eldest son, Gilbert de Tonebruge. [Sir BernardBurke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p.118, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

Richard Fitz-gilbert, a lawyer, was the founder of the House of Claire inEngland. He accompanied William the Conqueror into England andparticipated in the spoils of conquest, obtaining extensive possessionsin the old and new dominion of his royal leader and kinsman. William theConqueror, being the grandson of Richard, 4th Duke of Normandy, brotherof Godfrey.  At the time of Domesday survey he was called Richard deTonebruge, now Tunbridge, in Kent, which town he had obtained from theArchbishop of Canterbury in lieu of the Castle of Brione. At this time hehad nearly 200 lordships in various counties. One of these lordships wasthat of Clare, in County Suffolk, which subsequently becoming his chiefseat, he became styled Richard de Clare. He married Rohese, or Rohais,daughter of Walter Giffard de Bolbec, who assisted in making the "GeneralSurvey." He is said to have fallen in a skirmish with the Welsh and wassucceeded by his eldest son, Gilbert. Aka: First Earl,  Richard Tonebridge FitzGilbert DeClare

Richard Fitz-gilbert, a lawyer, was the founder of the House of Claire inEngland. He accompanied William the Conqueror into England andparticipated in the spoils of conquest, obtaining extensive possessionsin the old and new dominion of his royal leader and kinsman. William theConqueror, being the grandson of Richard, 4th Duke of Normandy, brotherof Godfrey.  At the time of Domesday survey he was called Richard deTonebruge, now Tunbridge, in Kent, which town he had obtained from theArchbishop of Canterbury in lieu of the Castle of Brione. At this time hehad nearly 200 lordships in various counties. One of these lordships wasthat of Clare, in County Suffolk, which subsequently becoming his chiefseat, he became styled Richard de Clare. He married Rohese, or Rohais,daughter of Walter Giffard de Bolbec, who assisted in making the "GeneralSurvey." He is said to have fallen in a skirmish with the Welsh and wassucceeded by his eldest son, Gilbert.
1296 - 1367 Richard de Windsor 71 71 ~1139 Sibilla (Sibyl) de Salisbury 0995 - 1056 Amaury D'Abbetot 61 61 Sadb ~1186 - 18 Feb 1224/1225 Hugh le Bigod Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1130 - 1202 Hameline Plantagenet 72 72 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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D. 1070 Murchad Pierre de France ~1100 - 1147 Walter fitz Edward 47 47 1105 Miss deVenuz ~1075 - <1130 Gilbert "The Marshal" fitz Robert 55 55 0528 - 0584 Chilperic II 56 56 King of Soissons 1104 - 1167 Matilda (Empress of Germany) Beauclerc 63 63 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

She was designated Henry's heir, and on his death (1135), Stephen siezed
the throne and Matilda invaded England (1139) inaugurating a period of
inconclusive civil war. She and her second husband (Geoffrey) captured
Normandy and in 1152 the Treaty of Wallingford recognised Henry as
Stephen's heir.
Burke says she was betrothed in her eight year (1119) to Henry.


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She was designated Henry's heir, and on his death (1135), Stephen siezed
the throne and Matilda invaded England (1139) inaugurating a period of
inconclusive civil war. She and her second husband (Geoffrey) captured
Normandy and in 1152 the Treaty of Wallingford recognised Henry as
Stephen's heir.
Burke says she was betrothed in her eight year (1119) to Henry.


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D. UNKNOWN Helindis ~1105 John Fitz Gilbert Mac Brioc Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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1021 - 1043 Otto deVarmandois 22 22 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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0942/0953 - 1000 Herbert deVermandois Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1268 Miss ~0939 - 0996 Hugues "Capet" deCapetian King of France 57 57 ANCESTRAL FILE; KING OF FRANCE; ES II:10-11; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


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~1006 Mathilde de Friesland ANCESTRAL FILE.


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ANCESTRAL FILE.


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Living Warner Milon II deTonnerre Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Margrett Vernon <1167 - >1228 Sewallis de Shirley 61 61 Burke's Peerage has a very confusing lineage at this point.  I will giveall four "generations".  The 2nd generation is apparently older than thefirst--so I don't know if Burke's is actually indicating fourgenerations.  They are certainly indicating confusion.

-----Text Copied from Burke's Peerage indicating 4 or 6 generations-------
-----of which generations 2-5 are in question (#'s added forclarity)---------

1. Sewallis de Shirley's 2nd son:

2. Henry de Shirley, of Shirley; living (of age by?) 1195; married 1205Joanna, daughter of John de Clinton, of Essex, and had, with a youngerson (Ralph) and a daughter (Avice, married her cousin Serlo de Monjoyeand had issue):

3. Sewallis de Shirley, of Shirley; living 1167; married Isabel (married2nd Joscelin de Nevill and 3rd Ralph Musard of Staveley), daughter ofRobert de Meynell of Meynell Langley, and died in or after 1228, leaving,with a daughter (Elizabeth):

[end of page 1050, and continuing on to top of page 1051]

4. Henry de Shirley, of Shirley, had:

5. Sewallis de Shirley; Coroner of Derby 1242, as which is recorded asbeing "insufficiens" (i.e. Not up to the job? or perhaps overworked withtoo many cases); had:

6. Sir James Shirley; married 1st well before 1280 Agnes--and had adaughter (Isabella married c1296 William de Yeaveley); married 2nd by1280 Isabella, widow of John de Brunston, and died in or after 1296,leaving by her.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

I believe that it is pretty obvious that generation #2 is a good fit asparent of #5 Sewallis Coroner of Derby in 1242.  What I don't know is ifBurke's Peerage is stating that.  One could interpret that Burke'sPeerage in #4 is making a backward reference to #2.  I think that it isalso pretty obvious that #2 is not a parent of #3, since someone "living1167" is not very often a child of a 1205 marriage by a father who mighthave been of age by 1195.

In order to make the best fit for the above, I am switching generations#2 and #4 in the above, trading a Henry who obviously belongs in the #4slot for a Henry about whom nothing is known.   Thus making it #1, #4,#3, #2, #5, #6, which at leat preserves the order of "Sewallis" and"Henry" names in the lineage.  An alternative would be #1, #3, #2/#4combined, #5, #6.  Another alternative is #1, #2/#4 combined, #5, and #6leaving out #3 which does not seem to fit.
Beatrice of Faucigny ~0974 Avelina Aveline deCrepon CDROM AND ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES AVELINA AS THE DAUGHTER RATHER THAN THE
DAUGHTER
IN-LAW OF HERFAULT.


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CDROM AND ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES AVELINA AS THE DAUGHTER RATHER THAN THE
DAUGHTER
IN-LAW OF HERFAULT.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

CDROM AND ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES AVELINA AS THE DAUGHTER RATHER THAN THE
DAUGHTER
IN-LAW OF HERFAULT.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

CDROM AND ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES AVELINA AS THE DAUGHTER RATHER THAN THE
DAUGHTER
IN-LAW OF HERFAULT.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

CDROM AND ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES AVELINA AS THE DAUGHTER RATHER THAN THE
DAUGHTER
IN-LAW OF HERFAULT.


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~1110 - 19 Jan 1146/1147 William deWarenne(Warren) 3RD EARL OF ESSEX AND SURREY; ES III:699; NCP XII/1:491-496.


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3RD EARL OF ESSEX AND SURREY; ES III:699; NCP XII/1:491-496.


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Unknown Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks D. 23 Feb 1071/1072 Diarmait MacMael nam Bo Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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1137 - 1199 Isabel deWarenne 62 62 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1166 - 1240 William Plantagenet de Warenne 74 74 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Surrey
~1110 - 1174 Adelia deTalvas (Talvace) 64 64 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Adelaide de Angers Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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1147 - 1181 Hugh Kevelioc deMeschines 34 34 vol 1, pg 26, Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

Hugh II, 5th Earl of Chester, surnamed Keveliock or Cyveliok, because hewas born 1147 at Kevelioc, Co. Merioneth, Wales. He succeeded his fatherin the Earldom of Chester. This nobleman joined in the rebellion withRobert, Earl of Leicester, and the King of Scots against King Henry II,and in support of that monarch's son, Prince Henry's pretentions to thecrown. In which proceeding he was taken prisoner with the Earl ofLeicester at Almwick, but obtained his freedom soon afterwards, upon thereconciliation of the king with the young prince. During troublesometimes following his lands were taken from him, but they were restoredwhen public tranquility was restored. He died at Leeks, Co. Stafford, in1181, aged about 34. His lordship married Bertred, daughter of Simon deMontfort, Earl of Evereaux in Normandy. They were married 1169 whenBertred was just 14 years old. She died in 1227, aged about 71. They hada son, Randle III, who succeeded his father as Earl of Chester, but hedied sine prole 1232. He had the Earldom of Lincoln from hisgreat-grandmother Lucia, and he resigned this Earldom to his sisterHawise about 1230-1. She was the widow of Robert de Quincey, and theirdaughter Margaret married John de Lacy, to whom the Earldom of Lincolnwas confirmed Nov. 22, 1232. He was Surety for Magna Charta and hisdaughter Maud married Richard de Clare, son of Gilbert son of Richard deClare, last two Sureties. Beside Randle III and Hawise, Hugh and Bertred had Mabil, married Hugh de Albini, died sine prole.
~1239 Walter de Waldeshef 1624 Susan Paine Died without issue. ~1141 - <1199 Isabel de Say 58 58 pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883 Edward Bird John Appleton Henry Smyth Wrote letter # 8, 12 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. ~1136 - 1210 William Fitz Alan 74 74 pg 1871, Burke's "Extant  Peerage and Baronetage etc" 1970 edition

pg 200, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
Sarah Appleton Margaret? 1200 - 1230 Theobald le Botiller 30 30 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks William Downes 0900 - 0992 Fresenda of Normandy 92 92 William Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1099 - 1153 Ranulph I deMeschines 54 54 called "Gernon"


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~1120 - 1189 Maud Fitz Robert 69 69 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks <1066 - 1114/1117 Gilbert Fitz Richard de Clare Lord Cardigan

"Gilbert de Tonebruge or de Clare, 2nd Earl of Clare, inherited all his
father's lands in England.  Her married, in 1113 Alice, or Adeliza,
daughter of Hugh 2nd Count of clermont in Beauvais by his wife
Marguerita; daughter of Hildwin IV, Count of Montidier, by his wife
Alexandria, Countess of Rouci; daughter of Beatrix; daughter of Rynerious
IV, count of Hainault and his wife, Princess Hedewidge, daughter of Hugh
Capet, King of France 987, by his wife Adeliza; daughter of William,
sovereign Duke of Aquitiane, by his wife Adelheide, daughter of Otto I,
Sovereign Emperor of Saxony.  Of this distinguished ancestry was their
eldes son, Richard de Clare."  from "King of Mellcene Thurman Smith",
page 87


Gilbert de Tonebruge aka de Clare, inherited all of his father's lands in England. In rebellion against the King, William Rufus, he fortified and lost his Castle of Tunbridge. He married in 1113 Adeliza, or Alice,daughter of Hugh, Count of Clermont, in Beauvais.

pg 155 & 201, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 119, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Gilbert de Tonebruge, who resided at Tonebruge and inherited all hisfather's lands in England, joined in the rebellion of Robert de Mowbray,Earl of Northumberland, but observing the king (William Rufus) upon thepoint of falling into an ambuscade, he relented, sought pardon, and savedhis royal master. We find him subsequently, however, again in rebellionin the same reign and fortifying and losing his castle at Tunbridge. Hem. in 1113, Adeliza, dau. of the Earl of Cleremont, and had issue,Richard, his successor, Gilbert, Walter, Hervey, and Baldwin. Gilbert deTonebruge, who was a munificent benefactor to the church, was s. by hiseldest son, Richard de Clare. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare,Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

Gilbert m. Adeliza, dau, of the Earl of Claremont, and was father ofRichard de Clare, Earl of Hertford, and Gilbert de Clare, created Earl ofPembroke. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 230, Giffard,Earls of Buckingham]
1679 Edward Merritt 1556 Cicely Dutton ~1162 - 1201 Clemence Dauntsey 39 39 ~1200 - BEF 22 Feb 1246/1247 Rohese deVerdun ~1175 Nicholas de Verdon ~1200 - ~1220 Joan deMarreis 20 20 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 0900 - 0980 Tancred D'Hauteville 80 80 1042 - 1093 Margaret Atheling Scotland 51 51 Canonised 1250 and her feast day is 16th November. In 1057 she arrived atthe
English court of Edward the Confessor. Ten years later she was in exileafter
William defeated Harold at the Battle of Hastings. She fled to Scotlandwhere
she was married against her wishes to King Malcolm to whom she bore sixsons and two daughters. Her unlearned and boorish husband grew daily moregraceful and Christian under the queen's graceful influence. Her remainswere removed to Escorial Spain and her head Douai, France.
Ancestors of Margaret from "The Forgotten Monarchy of Scotland" by HRHMichael of Albany.
~1638 Jean Sie www.gamber.net/gamber/ ~0960 - 1063 Osbern de Bolebec 103 103 HIGH STEWART OF NORMANDY; WAS ASSASSINATED AT VANREUIL WHEN SLEEPING IN
THE
CHAMBER OF DUKE WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, WHO WAS THEN A CHILD; PED OF
AUGUSTINE
H. AYERS.


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HIGH STEWART OF NORMANDY; WAS ASSASSINATED AT VANREUIL WHEN SLEEPING IN
THE CHAMBER OF DUKE WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, WHO WAS THEN A CHILD;
PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

HIGH STEWART OF NORMANDY; WAS ASSASSINATED AT VANREUIL WHEN SLEEPING IN
THE
CHAMBER OF DUKE WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, WHO WAS THEN A CHILD; PED OF
AUGUSTINE
H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

HIGH STEWART OF NORMANDY; WAS ASSASSINATED AT VANREUIL WHEN SLEEPING IN
THE
CHAMBER OF DUKE WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, WHO WAS THEN A CHILD; PED OF
AUGUSTINE
H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

HIGH STEWART OF NORMANDY; WAS ASSASSINATED AT VANREUIL WHEN SLEEPING IN
THE
CHAMBER OF DUKE WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, WHO WAS THEN A CHILD; PED OF
AUGUSTINE
H. AYERS.


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1696 - 1767 Samuel Hill 70 70 D. 1115 Donnchad Macmurchada Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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1201 - 1248 Maud Matilda Marshall 46 46 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]

[daddy5.FTW]

[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1221 - 1282 Roger de Mortimer 61 61 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

pg 32, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 79, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 200 & 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
1210 Robert de Whitfield Robert de Whitfield, Lord of Whitfield, married Beatrix de Quitfeld, daughter of Isabel Fitz- piers (lineage descends from Robert Grentesmaisnil of Grentesmaisnil in the Dukedom of Normandy) and Robert de Vipont whose maternal line descends from Roger de Buislie, Lord of Tickhill , who came to England with William the Conqueror, and whose paternal line descends from the famed Lady Godiva, sister  and heir of William Thorold. Lady Godiva married the Earl of Mercia , Leofric III, great-great-great grandson of Leofric I, Earl of Leicester in 750 AD. Robert and Beatrix had Gilbert and Richard Whitfield, Lord of Whitfield (born 1279 AD, died 1332 AD). 1108 - 1185 Hugh deMortimer 77 77 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1138 Maud deLongespee Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1245 Robert de Vipont Hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland, slain at Battle of Evesham 0880 - 0971 Guiscard D'Hauteville 91 91 ~1155 - 1214 Roger de Mortimer 59 59 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

This feudal lord, like his predecessors, was in constant strife with theWelsh. He married 1st Millicent Ferrers, daughter of Robert, 4th Earl ofDerby; 2nd, Isabel Ferrers, sister of Hugh of Oakham in Rutlandshire. Heinherited all of Hugh's lands and by his 2nd wife had Ralph, Robert andPhilip. He died in 1215 and was succeeded by his eldest son, Hugh, son ofhis first wife, who died 1227, and was in turn succeeded by his halfbrother Ralph de Mortimer.
Jane Phillips 1204 - 1230 William de Braiose 26 26 pg 73, 150 & 220,  "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1194 - <1246 Eva Marshal 52 52 pg 73 & 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 358, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
1144/1146 - 1219 William Marshal 1173 - 1220 Isabel fitz Gilbert de Clare 47 47 ~1153 - 1211 William de Braiose 58 58 From "A Baronial Family in Medieval England: The Clares, 1217-1314", by Michael Altschul, Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins press, 1965.
The Clares came to England with the Conqueror. Like many other great families which settled in England after the Conquest, they were related to the dukes of Normandy and had established themselves as important members of the Norman feudal aristocracy in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries. The origin of the family can be traced to Godfrey, eldest of the illegitimate children of Duke Richard I (the Fearless), the Conqueror's great-grandfather. While the Duke granted Godfrey Brionne, he did not make him a count. Godfrey's comital title derives from the grant of the county of Eu made to him after 996 by his half-brother, Duke Richard II. After Godfrey's death, Eu was given to William, another of Duke Richard I's bastard sons, and Gilbert, Godfrey's son, was left with only the lordship of Brionne. However, under Duke Robert I, father of William the Conqueror, Gilbert assumed the title of count of Brionne while not relinquishing his claim to Eu. When Count William of Eu died shortly before 1040, Gilbert assumed the land and title, but he was assassinated in 1040 and his young sons, Richard and Baldwin, were forced to flee Normandy, finding safety at the court of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders. When William the Conqueror married Count Baldwin's daughter, he restored Gilbert's sons to Normandy, although he did not invest them with either Brionne or Eu or a comital title. William granted the lordships of Bienfaite and Orbec to Richard fitz Gilbert, and Le Sap and Meules to Baldwin. While Gilbert's descendants later pressed a claim for Brionne, it was never restored.
Richard and Baldwin fitz Gilbert took part in the Norman conquest of England, and both assumed important positions in the Conqueror's reign. Baldwin was made guardian of Exeter in 1068, and appears in the Domesday Book as sheriff of Devon, lord of Okehampton and numerous other estates in Devon, Dorset, and Somerset. His sons William and Richard were also sheriffs of Devon and participated in the abortive Norman penetration of Carmarthen in the early twelfth century.
However, the lasting position of the family in England must be credited to Baldwin's brother, Richard fitz Gilbert I. He was regent of England jointly with William de Warenne during the Conqueror's absence in 1075, and he served in various other important capacities for the King. King William rewarded his cousin well, granting him one of the largest fiefs in the territorial settlement. The lordship centered on Clare (obviously the origin of the Clare family name), Suffolk, which had been an important stronghold in Anglo-Saxon times. The bulk of Richard fitz Gilbert's estates lay in Suffolk, Essex, Surrey, and Kent, but comprised holdings in various other counties in the southern and eastern parts of the kingdom as well. In addition, King William arranged for Richard's marriage to Rohese, sister of Walter Giffard, later Earl of Buckingham, and her dowry, consisting of lands in Huntingdon and Hertford, became absorbed in the family inheritance.
After Richard's death, his extensive properties in Normandy and England were divided between his two eldest sons. The Norman fiefs of Bienfaite and Orbec passed to Roger, while Gilbert, inherited the English honors of Clare and Tonbridge.
- the players -
Richard I, Duke of Normandy, died 996  :  Godfrey of Brionne and Eu died ca 1015  :  Gilbert, count of Brionne died 1040
:  -Richard fitz Gilbert (1035-1090) = Rohese de Giffard
:  Roger d.s.p. 1130  Gilbert fitz Richard I(ca1066-1117 ) = Adeliz daughter of Hugh Claremont  Walter d.s.p.1138  Richard, abbot of Ely 1100  Robert d.1136  Adelice = Walter Tirel  Rohese = Eudo Dapifer
-Baldwin fitz Gilbert died 1095
:  William d.s.p. 1096  Robert d.s.p.1101  Richard d.s.p.1137
While Gilbert fitz Richard I found himself at odds with the Conqueror's successor, William Rufus, he and other members of the family enjoyed great favor with Rufus' successor King Henry I. Some have suggested that Henry's largesse was due to the fact that Walter Tirel, husband of Richard's daughter Adelize, shot the arrow which slew Rufus. Proof of this is lacking, but with certainty the wealth and position of the Clare family increased rapidly during Henry's reign. One of Rohese Giffards brothers (Walter) was made Earl of Buckingham and another Bishop of Winchester. Gilbert fitz Richard's brothers were also rewarded: Richard, a monk at Bec, was made abbot of Ely in 1100; Robert was granted the forfeited manors of Ralph Baynard in East Anglia; Walter, who founded Tintern Abbey in 1131, was given the great lordship of Netherwent with the castle of Striguil in the southern march, territories previously held by Roger, son of William fitz Osborn, Earl of Hereford, who had forfeited them in 1075. In 1110 Gilbert was granted the lordship of Ceredigion (Cardigan) in southwestern Wales, and immediately embarked upon an intensive campaign to subjagate the area.
- the players -
Gilbert fitz Richard I (ca1066-1117)=Adeliz d/o Hugh Claremont
:  Richard fitz Gilbert II (ante 1100-1136)=Adelize de Chester  Gilbert b. 1100  Baldwin d. 1154  Hervey  Walter  Margaret=William de Montifichet  Alice=Aubrey de Vere  Rohese=Baderon de Monmouth
After Gilbert fitz Richard I died in 1117, his children continued to profit from royal generosity and favorable connections. His daughters were all married to important barons; William de Montfichet, Lord of Stansted in Essex, the marcher Lord Baderon de Monmouth, and Aubrey de Vere, Lord of Hedingham in Essex and father of the first Vere Earl of Oxford. Of the five sons, little is known of two: Hervey, whom King Stephen sent on an expedition to Cardigan abt 1140, and Walter, who participated in the Second Crusade of 1147. Baldwin established himself as an important member of the lesser baronage by obtaining the Lincolnshire barony of Bourne through marriage. Richard fitz Gilbert II, the eldest and heir, was allowed to marry Adeliz, sister of Ranulf des Gernons, Earl of Chester, thus acquiring lands in Lincoln and Northampton as her marriage portion. He tried to consolidate the gains made by his father in Cardigan, but was killed in an ambush in 1136 and the lordship was soon recovered by the Welsh.
Of Gilbert fitz Richard I' sons, Gilbert was the only one to achieve any great prominence, being the founder of the great cadet branch of the family and the father of one of the most famous men in English history. Gilbert fitz Gilbert de Clare was high in the favor of Henry I, perhaps because his wife Isabell, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Count of Meulan and Earl of Leicester, was one of Henry's favourite mistresses. When Gilbert's uncle Roger died without heirs, Henry granted Gilbert the lordships of Bienfaite and Orbec in Normandy. When another uncle, Walter, Lord of Netherwent in South Wales, died without issue in 1138, King Richard? gave Gilbert this lordship in addition to the lordship of Pembroke, which had been forfeited by Arnulf of Montgomery in 1102. Gilbert was also created Earl of Pembroke in 1138. At his death in 1148, he was succeeded by his son Richard fitz Gilbert, aka "Strongbow" who led the Norman invasion of Ireland and obtained the great lordship of Leinster in 1171.
Thus, in just two generations, the cadet branch of the Clares became one of the most important families in England. Strongbow was Earl of Pembroke, Lord of Netherwent, and Lord of Leinster being the most powerful of the marcher and Anglo-Irish magnates under King Henry II. Strongbow d. in 1176 and son Gilbert d. abt. 1185, ending the male line. In 1189, the inheritance passed to Strongbow's daugther Isabel and her husband, William Marshal.
Meanwhile, the senior side prospered. After Richard fitz Gilbert II died in 1136, Clare, Tonbridge, and other estates passed to the eldest son Gilbert fitz Richard II, who was created Earl of Hertford by King Stephen. Gilbert died probably unmarried in 1152, when his younger brother Roger inherited the estates and comital title. Roger resumed the the campaign against the Welsh in Cardigan where, after 8 years, he was defeated in 1165. However, Roger did add some lands and nine knights' fees through his marriage to Maud, daughter and heir of the Norfolk baron James de St. Hillary. Roger died in 1173 and his widow, Maud, conveyed the remainder of the inheritance to her next husband, William de Aubigny, Earl of Arundel. The Clare estates along with the earldom passed to Roger's son, Richard, who for the next 4 decades until he died in 1217, was the head of the great house of CLARE, adding immensely to the wealth, prestige, and landed endowment of his line.
Roger's son Richard, hereinafter Richard de CLARE acquired half of the former honor of Giffard in 1189 when King Richard I, in need of money for the Third Crusade, agreed to divide the Giffard estates between Richard de CLARE and his cousin Isabel, Strongbow's daughter based on their claims of descendancy to Rohese Giffard. Richard de CLARE obtained Long Crendon in Buckingham, the caput of the Giffard honor in England, associated manors in Buckingham, Cambridge, and Bedfordshire, and 43 knights' fees, in addition to some former Giffard lands in Normandy. When Richard de CLARE's mother Maud died in 1195, he obtained the honor of St. Hilary. Maud's 2nd husband, William de Aubigny, Earl of Arundel, who had held St. Hilary jure uxoris, d. in 1193, and despite the fact he had a son and heir, the honor reverted to Maud and after her death escheated to the crown. Richard de CLARE offered 360 and acquired it. The honor later became absorbed into the honor of CLARE and lost its separate identity.
Richard de CLARE's most important act, however, was his marriage to Amicia, 2nd daughter and eventual sole heir to William Earl of Gloucester. The Gloucester inheritance included the earldom and honor of Gloucester with over 260 knights' fees in England, along with the important marcher lordships of Glamorgan and Gwynllwg. It was not easy though!! William died 1183, leaving 3 daughters. The eldest, Mabel, married Amaury de Montfort, Count of Evreux, while the second, Amicia married Richard de CLARE. King Henry II meanwhile arranged the marriage of the youngest Isabel, to his son John, Count of Mortain, in 1189. When John became King in 1199, he divorced Isabel to marry Isabelle of Angoulªme, but, he kept the 1st Isabel in his custody. Then in 1200, John created Mabel's son Amaury Earl of Gloucester. In addition, Richard de CLARE and his son Gilbert were given a few estates and 10 fees of the honor of Gloucester of Kent; otherwise, John kept the bulk of the honor, with the great lordships of Glamorgan and Gwynllwg. Mabel's son Amaury died without issue in 1213. Shortly thereafter, John gave the 1st Isabel in marriage to Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, who was also created Earl of Gloucester. When Geoffrey died, the inheritance was assigned to Hubert de Burgh, the justiciar. Hubert married Countess Isabel shortly before her death in Oct. 1217, however, he did not retain the estates, since they passed to Amicia, now recognized as Countess of Gloucesthire, and her husband Richard de CLARE, despite the fact Richard and Amicia had been separated since 1200.
Richard outlived Isabel by several weeks and by 28 Nov 1217, he was dead, leaving Gilbert, aged 38, as the sole heir to the Clare and Gloucester estates and title. Gilbert de CLARE assumed the title of Earl of Gloucester and Hertford and was charged £350 relief for the honors of Clare, Gloucester, St. Hilary and his half of the old Giffard barony. He controlled some 456 knights fees, far more than any other, and it did not include some 50 fees in Glamorgan and Gwynllwg.
By a remarkable series of fortuitous marriages and quick deaths, the CLARES were left in 1217 in possession of an inheritance which in terms of social prestige, potential revenues, knights' fees, and a lasting position of great importance among the marcher lords of Wales. They were probably the most successful family in developing their lands and power during the 12th century and in many ways the most powerful noble family in 13th century England. By 1317, however, the male line of Clares became extinct and the inheritance was partitioned. Between 1217 and 1317 there were four Clare generations.
Gilbert de CLARE, born abt. 1180 had a brother Richard/Roger and a sister Matilda. Richard accompanied Henry III's brother, Richard of Cornwall, to Gascony in 1225-26 and was never heard from again. Matilda was married to William de Braose (died 1210 when he and his mother were starved to death by King John), eldest son of the great marcher baron William de Braose (died 1211), Lord of Brecknock, Abergavenny, Builth, Radnor, and Gower, who was exiled by King John. Matilda returned to her father and later (1219) sued Reginald de Braose, second son of William, for the family lands, succeeding only in recovering Gower and the Sussex baronry of Bramber.
Gilbert de CLARE, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford from 1217 to 1230, married Oct. 1214 his cousin Isabel, daughter and eventual co-heiress of William Marshal (died 1219), earl of Pembroke. Gilbert and Isabel had three sons and two daughters, with the eldest son and heir Richard, born 4 Aug 1222, thus only 8, when his father died. In 1243, Richard de CLARE came of age and assumed the estates and titles of his father until he d. 15 July 1262. His brother William, b. 1228 held lands of Earl Richard in Hampshire and Norfolk for the service of a knight's fee. In June 1258, during a baronial reform program, William was granted custody of Winchester castle. A month later he died, reportedly by poison administered by the Earl Richard's seneschal (an official in a medieval noble household in charge of domestic arrangements and the administration of servants; a steward or major- domo. Middle English, from Old French, of Germanic origin), Walter de Scoteny, in supposed collaboration with Henry III's Poitevin half-brothers, who strongly opposed the baronial program and Earl Richard's participation in it. (Why didn't they poison Richard??)
Earl Gilbert's daughters were very well placed. Amicia, born 1220, was betrothed (promised to be given in marriage) in 1226 to Baldwin de Reviers, grandson and heir to William de Reviers, Earl of Devon (died 1217). Baldwin was only a year or two older than Amicia and Earl Gilbert offered 2,000 marks to the King for the marriage and custody of some Reviers estates during Baldwin's minority. The marriage must have been consummated around 1235, since Baldwin's son and heir (Baldwin) was born the next year. After Baldwin died in 1245, Amicia (died 1283) controlled the lands of her son (died 1262) and was given permission to marry a minor English baron, Robert de Guines/Gynes, uncle of Arnold III, Count of Guines.
Earl Gilbert's other daughter, Isabel born 1226, married 1240 the Scots baron Robert Bruce, lord of Annandale (d 1295), and by him was the grandmother of the hero of Bannockburn. Her marriage was probably arranged by her mother Isabel and uncle, Gilbert Marshal who gave her the Sussex manor of Ripe as a marriage portion.
Isabel Marshal outlived Earl Gilbert de CLARE by ten years, during which time she was busy. In 1231 she married Richard of Cornwall, to the displeasure of Richard's brother King Henry III, who was trying to arrange another match for Richard. She died 1240, after 4 children by Richard, only one of which lived past infancy. According to the Tewkesbury chronicle, she wished to be buried next to her 1st husband, but Richard of Cornwall had her buried at Beaulieu Abbey in Hampshire, although as a pious gesture he allowed her heart to be sent to Tewkesbury.
- the players -
Richard de CLARE, Earl of Hertford d. 1217
Richard/Roger d.s.p. 1228
Matilda = (1) William de Braose
(2) ?? 1219 Rhys Gryg died 1233
Gilbert de CLARE (1180-1230) = 1214 Isabel =1231 Richard of Cornwall died 1272
William (1228-d.s.p. 1258)
Gilbert born 1229
Amicia (1220-1283) = (1) 1226 Baldwin de Reviers
(2) 1247 Robert de Guines died 1283
Isabel born 1226 = 1240 Robert Bruce died 1295
Richard de CLARE (1222-1262) = (1) Margaret de Burgh died 1237
(2) Maud de Lacy d. 1289
Thomas (124?-1287) = Juliana of Offaly d. 1300
Bogo (1248-d.s.p. 1294)
Isabel (1240-1271) = 1258 William,Marquis de Montferrat
Margaret (1249-1312) = 1272 Edmund of Cornwall died 130
Rohese (1252-1299+) = 1270 Roger deMowbray died 1297
Eglentina (1257-1257)
Gilbert de CLARE (1243-1295) = 1254 (1) Alice de Lusignan (annulled)
Joan (1264/71-1322+ = 1284 (1) Duncan died 1289, 1302
(2) Gervase Avenel died 1322+
Isabella (1263-1358) = 1316 Maurice de Berkley
= 1290 (2)
Joan of Acredid died1307
Eleanor (1292-1337)=(1) 1306 Hugh Despenser died1326
(2) 1327
William la Zouche died 1337
Margaret (1293-1342)= (1) 1307 Peter Gaveston d.s.p. 1312
(2) 1317
Hugh D'Audley died 1347
Elizabeth (1295-1360)= (1) 1308 John de Burgh died 1313
(2) 1316 Theobald Verdun d.s.p. 1316
(3) 1317 Roger Damory d.s.p. 1322
~1231 - BEF 20 Mar 1300/1301 Maud de Braiose Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

pg 78 & 79, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72 & 383, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1259 - 1328 Alexander deFreville 69 69 ~1155 - 1210 Matilda deSt. Walerie 55 55 0852 - UNKNOWN Hialti D'Hauteville D. 1080 derb- Forgall Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
D. 1064 King of Munster Donnchad Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Living Warner 1110/1111 - 1171 dermot (Diarmait) Macmurchada Jane Jennings David Caldwell 1649 Mary Hill ~1330 - Bef. 20 Mar 1381/82 Thomas Latham Richard Wintershall ~1054 Agnes deMortaigne Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1150 - 1204 Isaac II Angelus Emperor 54 54 ~1200 Baldwin Thies ~1058 - >1102 Roger de Montgomery 44 44 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Custom Field:<_FA#> EARL DE ARUNDEL & SHREWSBURY
Custom Field:<_FA#> VICOMTE de EXEMES
Custom Field:<_FA#> LORD de LANCASTER
William IV Taillefer 1646 - 1646 Joseph Hill ~1176 Alice Nelson ~1062 Almodis (Audmodis) Countess of la Marche Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks William de Braiose Joan deToteneis Philip de Braiose King of England Harold II Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1155 - UNKNOWN Irene Comnenus ~1034 - >1086 Edith\ Ealdgyth deMercia 52 52 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Gerard of Vergy pg. 201, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W.C. Turton, published 1928 William Caldwell Elizabeth Hocknell James Phillips ~0985 - <1056 Roger de Montgomery 71 71 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1022 - 1094 Roger deMontgomery 72 72 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
<1300 - 1362 Thomas Shirley 62 62 Sir Thomas Shirley; MP Waricks c1321; fought Hundred Years War.  [Burke'sPeerage] ~1281 - 1327 Ralph Shirley 46 46 Sir Ralph de Shirley; JP 1298 (this seems too early; other sources referto him as JP Waricks c1310); Constable of Shrewsbury Castle c1300.[Burke's Peerage] ~0989 Josceline de Ponteaudemer Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1224 - 1288 Matilda Countess of Artoise 64 64 Mr la Marche Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Unknown Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1008 Papie deNormandie Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1058 Nesta verch Gruffydd Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1100 - 1142 Miles fitz Walter 42 42 Died in a hunting accident.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1080 Walter\ Gautier fitz Roger Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Bertha Fitz Walter ~1065 - 1093 Bernard deNeufmarche 28 28 He conquered the ancient kingdom of Brychan in Breconshire, Wales,
including Talgarth, Chatellenie de Hay, Ystradvy forest, and the
mini-kingdom of Brecon of Brecknock.  Empress Mathilda gave Bernard
Abergavenny castle and St. Briavel castle.
His family should not be confused with the earls of Gloucester.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1075 Nesta fitz Osborn Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1025 Geofrey deNeufmarche Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1216 - 9 Feb 1249/1250 Robert I of Artoise Lineage Sources:
      Betham's Charts of Royal Houses of Europe. DCVIII, DCVI, CCCVIII,
      DCXIV, CCCLIII, CCLXXIV, DCXII, DCVI, CCLV, CCLV.
      H. B. George's Genealogical Tables Illustrative of Modern Hist.Tables
      XX, XXIX, XXXIII and XXXVI, XXXVII, IV.
      Allstrom's Genealogical Dict. of Royal Lineage. Vol. I, Kings of
      England and France. Vol. 2, pp. 619-623, 425-6-7-11, 614.
      Burke's Royal Families of England, Scotland and Wales. Part II,
      Pedigree, VII, CXXV, LXXIV, LXXVI, LXX, XXVII, CIII CXV.
      Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 4, pp. 278-281; Vol. 5, p. 320.
Margaret Perpoynt ~1000 Richard deNeufmarche Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1045 - 1080 Osbern fitz Richard 35 35 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1050 Roger dePitres Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 0955 - >1007 Savory III of Thouars 52 52 pg 187, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" by W. H. Turton, published 1928 Hugh X deLusignan ~0709 - >0772 Wido Gui Hornbach 63 63 Count of Hornbach ~0630 Kunza Metz ~0280 (Concubine) Agnes ANCESTRAL FILE; CONCUBINE OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; CONCUBINE OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; CONCUBINE OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; CONCUBINE OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Unknown Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1270 - 14 Feb 1316/1317 Marguerite Hardi of France The early death of the brave son and successor of Saint Louis IX, King ofFrance, King Philip the Hardy of France, left his youngest daughter, thePrincess Marguerite, fatherless at a very tender age. If she possessedany comliness of person, her claims to beauty were wholly overlooked byher contemporaries, who admired the exquisite persons of her elderbrother and sister, Philip le Bel and Blanche le Belle. A marriage treatywas made between Edward and Blanche, but through the scheming of theirbrother Philip, Marguerite, then a child of eleven, was substituted and awar immediately ensued, lasting from 1294 to 1298, and by this timeMarguerite had grown up; as Edward was a widower of 60, he agreed to theterms and they were married Sept. 8, 1299, nine years after the death ofhis first wife. She is the ancestress of all the English nobility bearingthe name of Howard through her son Thomas and all who bore the name ofHolland through her son Edmund of Woodstock, through his daughter Joan,the Fair Maid of Kent, who married Sir Thomas Holland. D. ~1080 Richard Fitz Scrob Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

of Richards Castle
~1014 - Bet. 1038 - 1108 Agnes Ermentrude Fleitel 1  NAME Agnes Ermentrude /Fleitel/

pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 230, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks



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~0953 - ~1015 Geoffroy Count D' Eu & Brionne 62 62 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~0985 Gerald Flaitel Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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1586 - 1665 Thomas Sherwood 79 79 ~1000 - 1040 Gilbert de Brionne 40 40  Guardian of William the Conqueror

pg 1048, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetage etc", 1970 Edition

pg 118, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

pg 139, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

Gilbert, Count of Brionne; benefactor of the Abbey of Bec in Normandy.[Burke's Peerage]

-------------------

Gilbert, Earl of Brion, had two sons, Richard, ancestor of the house ofClare, and Baldwin de Brionis. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 139, Courtenay, BaronsCourtenay, Earls of Devon]

--------------------

Gislebert, surnamed Crispin, Earl of Brion, in Normandy, whose eldest son[was] Richard FitzGilbert. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 118, Clare, Lords of Clare,Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

I Count of Brionne
~1010 - 1085/1102 Walter Giffard Was both a Baron and an Earl.

Walter was present at the Battle of Hastings, witnessed the Charter of Henry I.

pg 155, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks



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~0984 - >1024 Gunnora D'Aunou 40 40 ~0958 Mrs-Geoffrey Countess of Eu & Brionne Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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~1030 - 1101 Hugh Clermont 71 71 Hugh Count of Clermont Creil, Mouchy 0935 - 0996 Diarmait King of Hy Kinsale 61 61 D. >1098 Renaud de Clermont Ermengardis de Clermont ~1021 - 1063 Hildouin IV Montdidier 42 42 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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WFT EST 1094-1137 - WFT EST 1134-1218 Robert Whitfield Miss Chester Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Miss deIsles Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks UNKNOWN - UNKNOWN Adelisa Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~1068 - 1135 Henry I "Beauclerc" King of England 67 67 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

1ST KING OF ENGLAND; DIED AGE 67; ARSC 121:25.


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1ST KING OF ENGLAND; DIED AGE 67; ARSC 121:25.


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1079 - 1118 Matilda (Edith) deScotland 39 39 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

Brought Christianity to Scotland.


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1027 - 1087 William I The Conqueror 59 59 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1225 - 1274 Henry I King of Navarre 49 49 UNKNOWN - 1034 III Baldwin Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks UNKNOWN - UNKNOWN Alfrith Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks UNKNOWN - UNKNOWN IV Baldwin Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks UNKNOWN - UNKNOWN Ogive Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks 1032 - 1083 Mathilda 51 51 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks UNKNOWN - 0919 II Baldwin Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Unknown Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks Beatrix fitz Robert Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks D. 1125 Henry V Emperor of Germany Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks V Foulques 0996 - 1028 Alfonso V King of Leon 32 32 1080 - 1118 Matilda Scotland 38 38 Ermengarde du Maine ~1065 - 1138 William II deWarrenne 73 73 2ND EARL OF SURRY; ES III:699; NCP XII/1: 491-496.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

2ND EARL OF SURRY; ES III:699; NCP XII/1: 491-496.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


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Rudolf II de Warenne D. 1147 Elizabeth Capet of France 0960 - 1085 Gundred- Gunereda of St. Omer 125 125 Some records show the wife of William de Warenne as Miss de Tosta.  Also at one time it was thought that Gundred was the daughter of William theConqueror. For details see "Early Yorkshire Charters" by C.T. Clay or "Etudes surQuelques Points de L'Histoire de Guillame le Conquerant" by H.Prentout described under Surrey in "The Complete Peerage" by G.E. Gibbs.
[Mike Warner.FBK3.1.FTW]
Gerbod of St. Omer Jane Bassett Thomas Walsh Robert Waller 0745 Welf I of Argengaid 0905 - 0974 Comnall King of Hy Kinsale 69 69 ~0780 - >0833 Edith of Saxony 53 53 1282 - 1316 Elizabeth Plantagenet 33 33 D. UNKNOWN Maud deFinnes Mary Appleton ~1216 Miss 1642 - 1669 Harry Longstaff 27 27 1245 - 1287 Thomas deClare Lord of Thomond 42 42 ~1325 - 20 Jan 1405/1406 Roger Pilkington D. ~1316 Thomas deCorona Robert Ince 0835 - 0876 Cairpre King of Hy Kinsale 41 41 ~1240 Miss ~1174 Robert de Alfreton ~1468 - 1558 Richard Chudleigh 90 90 Joseph Wise D. 0491 Chilperich deBurgundy William Ap Jenkin 20th to 50th of Edward III.
Lord of Gwarinddu.
Simon de Creye ~1248 Richard de Worsley 1187 VIII Louis Immachilde 0885 - 0945 Cellach macCinaeda King of Cheinnselaig 60 60 ~1368 - 1401 Baldwin Freville 33 33 The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 146.
Marguerite deHardi Princess of France 1675 - Mar 1750/1751 Andrew Caldwell 1715 Andrew sold his land in Somerset County, amounting to 450 acres or more, and moved to Kent County, DE. In 1717 he sold his property there called Point Patience. Eventually he acquired over 6000 acres in Kent County, mostly in Murderkill Hundred, in the present-day Woodside and Bowers' Beach area. Andrew was a carpenter and a member of the Society of Friends (Quakers). ~1329 John Saville ~1220 - 1275 Thurstan de Holand 55 55 1214 - 1270 IX Louis 56 56 D. ~0955 Gudrod The Magnificent Halfdansson ~1280 John deSaville 16 Mar 1604/1605 James Vernon alt. birth place:  Davensham, Cheshire, England

John Burke, esq. wrote in his Commons, Vol 1 page 292: "John Plume, Esq. of Wavertree Hall and Aughton espoused Miss Sarah Marsh, neice and Co-heiress of James Vernon, Esq. of Vernon Hall, near Liverpool (She died in 1741) According to the map found in the booklet published by the National Trust in connection with the Vernons of Hanbury, Vernon Hall is located near Haddon Hall in Bakewell, Derbyshire. This is near the counties of Lanceshire and Cheshire.
1009 - 1038 Ludolf von Brunswick Count in the derlingau 29 29 Thora Sigurdsdottir 0885 - 23 Feb 0942/0943 Herbert II deVermandois Concubine #2 ~1475 Elizabeth (Phillippa) Hingston 0770 Olaf Gudrodsson 0846 - 0879 Louis II The Stammerer 32 32 ~1307 John Chudleigh Chrodobertus I of Neustria 0820 Rothaideof Bobbio Sarah Heriz 1281 - 1345 Henry III Earl of Lancaster & Leicester 64 64 Earl of Leicester 1324. He was one of the leaders of the great confederacy
which overturned the power of the Spencers and deposed Kind Edward II. Hewas
appointed guardian of the new King Edward III. He was appointed captain-
general of all the King's forces in the Marches of Scotland. Lord ofBeaumont and Nogent 1336. AKA 'Tortcol'.

Earl of Leicester 1324. He was one of the leaders of the great confederacy
which overturned the power of the Spencers and deposed Kind Edward II. He was
appointed guardian of the new King Edward III. He was appointed captain-
general of all the King's forces in the Marches of Scotland. Lord of Beaumont and Nogent 1336. AKA 'Tortcol'.
D. 1324 Richard II Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Sir Richard Willoughby of Willoughby Knight
on of the Justices of the Comon Bench.

B. Burke 1888, The Complete Peerage, p. 1118.  Willoughby lineage:
1)  Richard Bugg, Lord of Willoughby-upon-the-Wold
2)  Sir Richard Bugg (d. 1324); assumed name of Willoughby; purchased
Wollaton 1317 from Sir Roger de Mortein

The marriage of this Richard with Issabell Mortein, daughter of Roger
Mortein, strongly suggests that he is synonymous with Sir Richard
Bugg, which is here accepted.  Also note that Burke gives a
subsequent Richard (identified here as the son of this Richard) as
the father of Edmond and Hugh.

Publications of the Harleian Society, vol. 84, Knights of Edward I.
Sir Richard de Wilughby, Knight, of Wollaton Manor.  First mentioned
in connectional with Nottinghamshire in November 1305.  Chief Justice
of Bench at Dublin 1323.  Dead before 7 april 1325.  Succeeded as
Chief Justice by son Richard.
~1236 - 1334 Henry de Trafford 98 98 ~0740 - ~0817 Cynan Dindaethwy of Wales 77 77 1579/1580 - 1648 Robert Peck 1287 William Vampage 1298 - 1326 Beatrice Thornden 28 28 Robert III deDreux ~1311 - 1360 William of Northampton deBohun 49 49 Isaac Appleton Wrote letter # 16 in the book: "Family Letters from the Bodleian Library, with notes"  by:  William S. Appleton. Printed in Cambridge, The University Press, 1902. 1303 - 11 Jan 1371/1372 Eleanor Plantagenet 1016 - 1058 Kazimierz I Karol Prince Of Poland 42 42 1649 - >1712 Ambrose Dudley 63 63 Source:  "Magna Carta Line of Descent". Vestryman of Kingston Parish, VA in 1667. Gloucester Justice 1698. Speaker of the House of Burgess 1710-1712. Found in "Colonial VA Register. Gloucester Burgess in 1702. 1716 Martha Frances Scott Aka: Patsy ~1327 - 1342 John deBeaumont 15 15 1502 Agnes Petley surname also listed as Petty ~1498 - 1543 John Manning 45 45 Burial: March 1, 1542/43. Source:  "Family of Manning", in North West co. Kent,  Quarterly Journal, Vol. I, No. 3, 1979, p. 69. ~1524 - 1593 Henry Manning 69 69 Marshall of the Household of the King
Descendants: Seven children
Geoffrey B. Barrow:  Further Notes on the Family of Manning, in North West co. Kent Quarterly Journal, 1979, p.70
Armor maker for his father-in-law, succeeding him as chief armourer to the crown; Keeper of the Royal Park at Greenwich, England; Knight Marshal to King Henry VIII, Edward VI and Queens Mary and Elizabeth
~1431 - ~1502 Hugo Manning 71 71 "This estate (Kevingtown of St. Mary Cray parish) was for some generations the residence of the Mannings.... He speaks of John Manning as settled in the parish of Cowdham in the reign of King Henry IV.,his son of the same name, was also of that parish and died anno 14 King Henry VI leaving by Juliana his wife, daughter and heir of Richard Brockhill relict of William Wallys, one son, Hugh Manning, who was of St. Mary Cray and married the daughter of Sir William Brandon, knt. kinswoman to Charles, Duke of Suffolk, by whom he had two sons, John, who settled at Downe, from whom descended the Mannings of Downe, Halsted and Westerham- and Richard, who continued at St. Mary Cray, and had three sons."

"Through the removal of John Manning (the elder son of Hugh Manning of St. Mary Cray above mentioned) to Downe the interest of our New Englanders becomes transferred to that parish, since it is from this John Manning that so many New England families are descended, through female lines;e.g. the families of Whitfield, Higginson, Lee and others, through one alliance and the families of Waters (of Milbury), Proctor, Felton, Porter, Putnam, Shillaber, Poole, Benson, Whittredge and others through another alliance. "

"The parish of Downe immediately adjoins Cowdham, to the west and northwest. The manor of Downe Court, in this parish, was, we are told by Hasted (History of Kent vol.I,p116) in the reigns of King Henry I and II, the property of Richard de Downe, who lies buried, with his wife Margery, in the chancel of this church, but without any inscription on his gravestone, the brass having been torn from it.This family becoming extinct here before the middle of the reigh of King Edward III. the family of Petle (later Petley) appear as lords of the fee. According to Hasted, John Petle, the ancestor of this family was settled at Downe in the reign of King Henry III and bore for his arms-Argent, 2 bends iugrailed,a canton sable. His son Richard left issue two sons, John and Richard. John, the elder son, was possessor of Downe manor, as above, and died possessed of it in the 18th year of King Richard II. By Juliana, daughter and heir of William Troumer of Downe, he had issue Thomas Petle, who died in the 9th year of King Henry V and lies buried, with Isobel his wife, in the church of Downe. His son John Petle married Alice, daughter and coheir of James Brampton, by whom he had John Petley, who lived in the reign of King Henry VIII. He died without male issue, leaving by Christiana his wife, daughter and heir of Thomas Philipott, four daughters, his coheirs, of whom Agnes, the eldest, was married to John Manning of Downe...On the division of their inheritance the manor of Downe was allotted to the eldest daughter, Agnes; and her husband, John Manning, in her right, became entitled to it. He died possessed of it, in the 35th year of King Henry VIII, and lies buried, with Agnes, his wife, in this church. His descendant (grandson) Peter Manning, of Trowmer, in the reign of King James I alienated this manor to Palmer...It is from Phebe, sister of the said Peter Manning and wife of James Waters of London, and from her cousin Fortuna Mildreda, daughter of the said Henry Manning and wife of Thomas Whitfield of Mortlake, that th New England families I have mentioned are descended."

John and Juliana Mannings grandfather, Simon, is also mentioned; "Simon Manning of Codham Kent and Katherine his wife convey lands to Robert Attewode etc. This must have been that Simon Manning whose wife Katherine, according to the pedigree, was a sister of Geoffrey Chaucer."

Phebe Manning, the daughter of Richard Manning (son of John and Agnes Petley Manning), married James Water of St. Buttolph, Algate, London. Phebe's cousin Phebe, daughter of George Manning, married a Jacob Waters. James and Phebe had at least six children, John , Phebe (bapt. Dec.6, 1602), Richard, Judith, Elizabeth, and Mary. James Waters died in 1617 and his widow, Phebe, married William Plasse in 1618 and later moved with him to New England.

Source: "Genealogical Gleanings in England" by Henry Waters NEHG Vol 51 July 1897
~1399 - ~1435 John Manning 36 36 ~1403 - ~1435 Juliana Brockhill 32 32 ~1420 - UNKNOWN John Petley D. 1660 Symon Ayers Extract of Will: Symon Eyer of Osmiongton in Co. of Dorset, Yeoman, 29 April 1659, Proved 4 Oct. 1660, by William Eyre. Notes wife Joan, son William and etc...da. in law Mary, Son Symon Eyers, . ~1424 Alice Brampton ~1438 Thomas Philipott ~1498 Framsen Trady ~1524 - BEF. 26 Jan 1595/96 Catherine Kirkener ~1403 William Wallis ~1371 Alice Walden ~1280 Cecilia ~1281 Mary Heyrone Heyrown ~1254 - 1280 Robert de Muscegros 26 26 0967 - 1025 Boleslaw I 'Chrobny' Count Of Poland 58 58 1377 - 1422 Thomas Petley 45 45 ~1392 Isabella ~1353 - 1394 John Petley 41 41 ~1354 Juliana Troumer ~1328 William Troumer ~1295 John (Richard) Petley ~1469 Christiana Philipott 1440 Margaret II Brandon Waters, Henry F., "Genealogical Gleanings in England: Manning Family," NEHGR 51:3 (Jul 1897), p. 403, citing Hasted's "History of Kent" vol. 1, p. 141, states, "Hugh Manning, who was of St. Mary Cray, married the daughter of Sir William Brandon, Knight,[ b: 1425 d: 1491 ref #: BxP:71] kinswoman to Charles, Duke of Suffolk, by whom he had two sons... John and Richard."  See Harl. Mss. Number 1432.

The Brandon line is accounted for in Plantagenet Ancestry (2nd Ed.), p. 265, as descended from the Edward I through the Wingfields. Moriarty, G. Andrews, "The Brandons," NEHGR, 103:2 (Apr 1949), p. 106, names Sir William Brandon's daughters: Elizabeth m. (1) John Cavendish and (2) John Leventhorpe,  Anna m. John Sydney , Margaret (the elder) m. Sir Thomas Lovel,  Eleanor m. John Glemham Katherine m. John Gourney Mary m. John Riding ,  Margaret (the younger)  Since all of the daughters are accounted for save Margaret (the younger), We have concluded that Margaret (the younger) is the unnamed wife of Hugh Manning of St. Mary Cray. Margaret was the aunt of Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, Henry Water's article.

Sir William Brandon's will was composed in 1475, before the marriage of his youngest daughters. He mentions Mary, Anne, Margaret the elder, Margaret the younger, and Katherine. Daughters Eleanor and Elizabeth are not mentioned as they were already married.

The will of Elizabeth (Wingfield) Brandon mentions daughters Elizabeth Leventhorp, Anne Sydney, Eleanor Glemham, Margaret Lovel, Katherine Gourney. The younger Margaret is not mentioned, possibly because she was already deceased. Hugh Manning and his wife only had two sons and no other children, possibly indicating that she died shortly after the birth of her second son, c. 1480. (cf. NEHGR 51:3, p. 404).


The marriage of Hugo Manning and "filie" Brandon is recorded in a Visitation of co. Kent, England, 1619.
In Geoffrey B. Barrow's article, Further Notes on the Family of Manning, in North West co. Kent Quarterly
Journal, Vol. I, No.3, 1979, he mentions" ...the puzzling marriage of Hugh Manning (d. 1491) who is said to
have married Elizabeth (I will write the only daughter of Sir Knight William Brandon who I can NOT place
with a husband as yet is Margaret "The Younger" Brandon. I do not know how Barrow confirms her name to
be Elizabeth), daughter of Sir William BRANDON, a connection to the Dukes of Suffolk, of that name. This. .
.is unconfirmed by the authoritative account of the Brandons in the New England Historical & Genealogical
Register for April 1949. It would be interesting to link with the Downe Mannings, another family of the same
name, of which Thomas Manning of Westerham, Kent, is recorded in 1663. The arms of this family differ from
those of Downe, in that they have a chevron in place of the cross patonce. Pedigrees of them were entered in
the Visitations of London and Kent."

Fred Whyler's article, The Mannings of Cudham, Downe, St. Mary Cray and Greenwich, Vol. I, No.2,
1979, p.41, he does NOT mention a wife for Hugh or Hugo Manning. He writes, "One of Hugh or Hugo's sons
married Thomasina Trady and they had three sons, ..." His references include those from documents from
Bromley Central Library, the Local History Library at "Woodlands", Greenwich, and Howarths', History of
Downe.

Roscoe Conkling Fitch published a Genealogy Chart in his book, History of the Fitch Family from 1400-
1930 . This pedigree was prepared on Apr. 22, 1903 by Henry F. Waters, AM., or as Waters" writes, "This Pedigree of Whitfield and connecting families has been drawn from Herald's Visitations, Gleanings from Early English Records and Genealogical Authorities in Europe and America, mainly by Henry F. Waters, AM. and compiled by Charles L. N. Camp, New Haven, Connecticut."
He revealed on the pedigree a Hugo Manning de Cray (the print on this chart is very small, and I will try to
spell the words as best as I can); again, Hugo Manning de Cray Ob. apud Cray anno 17. Henry VII = ...filie .
..BRANDON Amida Caroli Ducis Suff. (dau. of Wm. Brandon Knt. Kinswoman of Charles, Duke of Suffolk).

John B. (John Brooks) Threlfall's, The ancestry of Reverend Henry Whitfield (1590-
1657) and his wife Dorothy Sheafe (159?-1669) of Guilford, Connecticut.

A Genealogy Chart presenting the ancestors of Fortuna Mildreda (Manning) ox. Thom. Whitfeild de
Mortlake

Descendants of the Reverend James Fitch 1622-1702, Vol.
I, The First Five Generations, 1996, John T. Fitch documents the Fitch line back to Rev. James and Abigail
[Whitfield] Fitch) by Henry F. Waters, AM. is located in New England Historical and Genealogical Register
(NEHGR) Vol. LI, 1897: "Hugo Manning de Cray Ob. Anno 14 Henry 6 = ...filia ...Brandon Amita Caroli
Ducis Suff." Henry F. Waters, AM. presented his research in this 1897 Volume of TheNEHGR under the title,
"Genealogical Gleanings in England". Pages concerning the Mannings are 389-406. On page 403, Waters'
writes, "In his account of St. Mary Cray, Hasted (Vol. I., p. 141) describes Kevington as a manor and seat in
that parish, 'now (he says) vulgarly called Kevingtown.' This estate was for some generations the residence of
the Mannings. Here also the reader may find some account of this family. He speaks of John Manning as
settled in the parish ofCowdham in the reign ofK. Henry IV., 'his son, of the same name, was also of that
parish and died anno 14 K. Henry VI. leaving Juliana, his wife, daughter and heir of Richard Brockhill relict of
William Wallys, one son, Hugh Manning, who was of St. Mary Cray and married the daughter of Sir William
Brandon, knt. kinswoman to Charles, Duke of Suffolk, by whom he had two sons, John, who settled at Downe,
from whom descended the Mannings ofDowne, Halsted and Westerham--and Richard, who continued at St.
Mary Cray, and had three sons." The Whitfield family and their information is located in the same volume in
The NEHGR;  comments and wills are located on pages 410-421. The Whitfields' Genealogy
Chart on p. 419 mentions Thomas Whitfield of Mortlake in Surrey 1606 = Mildred, dau. of Henry Manning of
Greenwich.

The American Genealogist, Vol. XXV, a person's pedigree only reveals Eleanor Brandon, daughter of
Elizabeth Wingfield and Sir William Brandon, who married John Glemham. No other daughter is mentioned.

Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, Who Came to America before 1700, by Frederick Lewis
Weis, he, too, reveals Eleanor Brandon, daughter of Elizabeth Wingfield and Sir William Brandon, who
married John Glemham.

The Brandons, in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1949, Vol. Cill,
ps. 102-107, communicated by the Committee on English and Foreign Research, G. Andrews Moriarty, AM.,
LL.B., F.AS.G., F.S.A, gives "an account of the immediate descendants of Sir William Brandon". I include an
entry on page 104, "He (Sir William Brandon) married, prior to January 1462, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Robert
Wingfield of Lethringham, co. Suffolk, and died in 1491 (WedgwoodHist. of the ParI. Biog. 1439-1509, pp.
102-103). Evidently, Sir William Brandon had recorded two wills in the P.C.C. (I don't know what is the
P.C.C., or P.P.C.) The first, located in P.P.C. 46 Milles, was dated 10 June 1475, was proved 13 July 1491. On
page 104, Moriarty writes, "Sir William Brandon. ..Wishes my place in Southwark to be sold and the money
divided among my daughters, Mary, Anne, Margaret the elder, Margaret the younger and Katherine, if they do
marry." The executors were wife Elizabeth and Sir Robert Wingfield The second will, located in P. C. C. 7
Dogett, was dated 09 April 1491 and proved 17 Nov. 1491. In Sir William Brandon's second will, he speaks to
where he wanted to be buried, to the High Altar of St. George the Martyr at Southwark, personalty to wife
Elizabeth, to nuns at Bungay, to church of St. Thomas at Bungay, to pray for the souls of his father and mother,
and to land and manor rights. The executors were Elizabeth and Robert Mosley. Named in the probate are:
John Ryding; John Gurney; John Leventhorpe; John Hardy; and Hugh John. Could this Hugh John be Hugh,
or Hugo Manning who was supposed to have married a daughter of Sir Knight William and Elizabeth
(Wingfield) Brandon? Hugh or Hugo's father was supposed to be John. Maybe Hugh John is this person?

The will of Dame Elizabeth Brandon was proved 08 May 1497, and located in Testa. Vetusta, vol. n, p. 432. In it, Elizabeth speaks to where she wants to be buried, land and manor rights; and,
names her children: son, Sir Robert Brandon; son, Sir Thomas Brandon; daughter, Elizabeth Leventhorp;
daughter, Eleanor Glemham; daughter, Anne Sydney; daughter, Dame Margaret Lovell; daughter, Katherine
Gourney; remainder to the right heirs of Sir William Brandon." The two youngest daughters, Mary and
Margaret, as mentioned in Sir Knight William Brandon's first will, are not specifically mentioned. On page
106, the author further reports, "Dugdale in the Baronage (vol. n, p.300) gives inq. p.m. taken 2 Elizabeth (1559/1560) after the failure of the issue male, by his third wife, Katherine Willoughby, of Charles Brandon,
Duke of Suffolk It was found that his heirs were the descendants of his grandfather, Sir William Brandon, as,
by doctrine of possessio fratris, his daughters by his other wives were excluded. Sir William Brandon and
Elizabeth Wingfield, his wife, had issue: i. Sir William; ii. Sir Robert; iii. Sir Thomas; iv. Elizabeth; v.
Anna; vi. Margaret; vii. Eleanor; viii. Katherine; ix. Mary; x. Margaret; and? xi. Anne."

In David Faris's book, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists, he mentions only Eleanor
Brandon as wife of John Glemham, and daughter of William and Elizabeth (Wingfield) Brandon, ps. 213-4.

History of St. Mary, Downe  "The Manning family was also numerous and important, and a brass in the nave records the death of John in 1543. Another brass in the chancel shows the family arms and motto and records that Edward, the son of the last Manning buried in Downe, died in 1622 at the age of 20, having been page to Prince Charles, later King Charles I." I found no information about Hugo Manning or his supposed wife, "filie" Brandon.


G. Andrews Moriarty, A.M., LL.B., F.S.A, F.AS.G., presented information, communicated by Committee
on English and Foreign Research, in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1949, Vol. CIII,
pp. 287-295. Mr. Moriarty refers to the Glemhams. He does not mention any other children of Sir Knight
William and Elizabeth (Wingfield) Brandon. He does give references for John and Eleanor (Brandon)
Glemham. They are: Vis. of Suffolk 1561, edMetcalf, p. 34; Davy's Suffolk Pedigrees, Add. MSS. 19, 132,
B.M.; and, Dugdale's Baronage, vol. III, pp. 299-300. Maybe one of these references gives a clue to another
daughter of Sir Knight William and Elizabeth (Wingfield) Brandon, who may have married Hugo or Hugh
Manning. I guess the Glemhams and Brandon(s) had brasses, arms and/or memorials located at Northwood
Berningham, co. Norfolk church. He mentions the issue of Sir Robert and Elizabeth (Gousell) Wingfield as
several children, including Elizabeth, wife of Sir William Brandon, Marshal of the Marchelsea (ancestors of Dr.
Richard Palgrave of Charlestown, Mass.) His references to Elizabeth (Wingfield] and her husband, Sir William
Brandon are: Powerscourt, op. cit., Visitation of Suffolk 1561, op. crt. I don't know anything about these
references, or whether they have anything to do with a daughter of Sir Knight William and Elizabeth
(Wingfield) Brandon.

Descendants: Had three children.

Residence: Lived at Saint Mary's Cray, co. Kent, England.
~1321 Richard Petley William Copton 0922 - 0992 Mieszko I Prince Of Poland 70 70 Miescyslaw was a Danish Viking. ~1350 - UNKNOWN John Shelley 1354 Margaret Rolfe ~1329 John Rolfe ~1330 John Shelley Helen ~1495 - 1567 Erasmus Kirkener 72 72 ~1500 - BEF. 25 Jan 1592/93 Agnes Dymoke Waller ~1110 - ~1160 Warin Vernon 50 50 ~1120 - ~1170 Daughter Baillot 50 50 ~1085 - ~1135 Hugh Vernon 50 50 1015 - 1063 Bela I King of Hungary 48 48 Bela the Holy, died 1063. King of Hungary 1061-63. He married Richenza,daughter of Mieczyslaw II, born 990, died 1034, King of Poland, and hiswife Richenza, daughter of Ehrenfeld, Palatine of the Rhin and Matilda,daughter of Emperor Otto II. (Mieczyslaw II was son of Boleslaw I, son ofMieczyslaw I, the first Christian Duke of Poland and with whom opens theauthentic history of Poland and who is entitled to the remembrance ofposterity, not merely from his being the first Christian ruler of Poland,but from the success with which he abolished paganism and enforced theobservance of the new faith in his dominions. He who could effect soimportant a revolution without bloodshed must have been no commoncharacter. 1031 - 1083 Matilda de Flanders 52 52 Duchess of Normandy and Queen of England.
She was the ancestress of English rulers down to the present time (1991).
Two death dates: 2 or 3 Nov. 1083. Nomention in all this of a second hubby
as claimed by Kraentzler in line 1371. William was her second husband. Her first was Gerbod de Flandre, Advocate of the Abbey St. Bertin and St. Omer. Their daughter, Gundreda of Chester, married William de Warenne, First Earl of Surrey. Mostsources say Gundred/Gundrada was the daughter of William I. Birth dates given would indicate this is so while some experts dispute this.
~1065 - ~1115 William Vernon 50 50 ~1040 - ~1087 Richard Vernon 47 47 ~1010 - ~1060 William Vernon 50 50 0936 Gunnora deCrepon ~1010 - ~1080 Herlewine deConteville 70 70 From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1003 - 1050 Herleva de Falaise 47 47 Sources: A. Roots 121E, 130; RC 89, 160; Coe; Kraentzler 1156, 1163, 1179, 1241, 1264, 1265, 1309, 1342, 1350, 1383; AIS; Davis; Ayers, p648. Roots: Arlette (or Herleve/Herleva). Coe: Arlette.  AIS: Narlette of Falaise.

PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PED OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER.

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1174 Sybil Strange Fredville 1163 - 6 Jan 1232/1233 Matilda de Meschines Maud Chester ~1110 - 1153 Randle Gernons Chester 43 43 Ranulph or Randle II, 4th Earl of Chester, surnamed Gernouns, because hewas born at Gernon Castle in Normandy, succeeded his father in theEarldom of Chester and in all his patrimony, both in England andNormandy. This nobleman was a leading military character, and took anactive part with the Empress Maud and Prince Henry, her son, against KingStephen. Later Ranulph II became reconciled with Stephen. He came to theKing and desired pardon for his rebellion at Lincoln and for seizing hissovereign's possessions and thereupon was received into favour. Infurther testimony he helped the king's forces and gallantly assaulted thetown of Bedford, and delivered it into Stephen's hands. But for all thisfriendship, Randle was suspected of Stephen because he surrendered notthe castles and rents which he had taken, and because of the Earl'swavering and unstable mind, so that neither the king nor his primecouncillors durst rely on him. Seeing himself suspected of treason helater turned against Stephen. He died Dec. 16, 1153, distrusted by bothsides and supposed to have been poisoned by his wife and William Peveralof Nottingham. Maud, his widow, died July 29, 1189. She was daughter ofRobert, son of Henry I. 1106 - 1189 Matilda Gloucester 83 83 1043 - 1095 Sophia Princess of Hungary 52 52 ~1093 - 1147 Robert Gloucester 54 54 ~1090 - 1157 Mabel Sibyl Maud FitzHamon Countess Gloucester 67 67 Unknown Sida ~1246 Unknown Maud ~1042 - >1121 Robert Corbet 79 79 ~1070 - ~1120 Robert FitzHamon Of Gloucester 50 50  Lord Of Corboil ~1070 - 1128 Randulf Meschines Chester 58 58 ~1030 - ~1080 Randulf Briscard Meschines 50 50 ~1048 - ~1100 Margaret Davranches 52 52 ~1030 - ~1080 Richard D' Avranches 50 50 Isabel de Duston ~1030 - ~1080 Emma deConteville 50 50 ~1040 - ~1090 Alversa Malet 50 50 0950 - 1028 Leofwine Earl Of Mercia 78 78 0955 - ~1030 Alwara Athelstan Countess Of Mercia 75 75 D. 0972 Eberhard IV Count Of Luxembourg Herleva Harlette deFalaise 0864 - 0968 Elgiva Wessex 104 104 D. 1035 Duke Robert I Of Normandy 0968 - 1016 Ethelred II The Unready King Of England 48 48 King of England 978-1016

Reigned 979-1013(deposed) and 1014-1016. In the face of Danish raids, hewas forced to pay huge tributes (Danegeld) to the enemy. He was driveninto exile by Sweyn but returned after his death. Died during Canutesinvasion of England.
Burke says he died 1010. His tomb was lost when the old St Pauls wasdestroyed in the great fire of London.
0921 - 0946 Edmund I Magnificent King Of England 25 25  [daddy5.FTW]

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King of England 939 -946

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King of England 939 -946

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King of England 939 -946
1145 Margret deHuntington BET. 859 - 875 - 0924 Edward The Elder King Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

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King of England 899-924
0849 - 0901 Alfred The Great King Of England 52 52  [daddy5.FTW]

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King of England,871-899
D. 0918 Ethelfleda Princess Of England  [daddy5.FTW]

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0975 - 6 Mar 1051/1052 Emma Of Normandy Some records show as Daughter of Richard I, Duke of Normandy

Unlinked from: Thored, Earl of Mercia and Northumbria and  Ealdgyth
1034 Ealdgyth Of England Edith Swan Neck 0997 Elfgifu Of England 1002 - 1059 Alfgar III Of Mercia 57 57 1504 - 1556 Mrs. Margaret Waters 52 52 1500 - 1547 John Waters 47 47 Hugh The Great Count Of Paris 1090 - 1172 William I Talvas Montgomery deSpencer 82 82 William de Montgomerie "de Talvas," was Count of Ponthieu, Montgomerie,Belesme and Alencon, who placed himself at the head of the affairs of hishouse during his father's imprisonment in England. Uniting in himself hisfather's large possessions, with those of his mother's wealthy family, hewas one of the wealthiest vassals of the crown. William did not get hisinheritance without a struggle, for during his father's captivity theKing of France had ceded the County of Alencon to Thibault, Count ofBlois, who in turn had given it to his brother Stephen, Count of Mortain.The latter's tyrannical conduct aroused the Alencais against him andthey, with Arnulphy, William's uncle, with help of Fulke, Count of Anjou,finally conquered the city and castle and the Count of Anjou, by histreaty with Henry I, remitted it to the King in order that he shouldinvest William with it, which was done in 1119. In 1146 William took upthe cross for the Holy Land with his son Guy, one authority saying hefitted out an army for Palestine at his own expense. He died June 20,1172. His wife was Helen or Alice, daughter of Eudes, Count of Burgandy,by whom he had Guy, John, Adela or Hele or Ala, called de Talvas, whomarried William de Warren, Earl of Warren and 3rd Earl of Surrey. Theironly daughter and heiress, Isabel de Warren, married HamelinePlantagenet, natural brother of King Henry II. Hedwige(Hartwige) Princess Of Germany 1280 Unknown Mistress Garsinde Herluin Viscount Of Conteville 1074 - ~1140 Lucy Tailbois 66 66 ~1045 - ~1095 Ivo deTailbois 50 50 ~1060 - ~1110 Lucy Of Mercia 50 50 ~1500 - >1520 daughter 20 20 <1500 - 1546 George Parkhurst 46 46 Thored Ealdermann Gunnarsson 1138 Maud de Warenne Gunnor ~1000 - 1057 Leofric III Earl Of Mercia 57 57 ~1010 - ~1060 Godiva Countess Of Mercia 50 50 Godiva, Lady Godiva was the sister of of Thorold, Sheriff of Lincoln.
Source; Ancestral Roots, 1988, line 176, A.
0921 Edulph Of Mercia 0905 Elfwina Of Mercia Athelstan Mannesson 0896 - 0961 Edgiva Queen Of England 65 65 ~1234 Maud Bracebridge Poppa Duchess Of Normandy Ethelred Duke Of Mercia 1166 - 1197 Beatrice deSay 31 31 Willa Princess Of Tuscany D. 1027 Richard III Duke Of Normandy Elgiva Princess Of England Alagaut Gutreksdottir ~0868 - 0920 Elfrida Princess Of England 52 52 0915 - 0958 Adela de Vermandois 43 43 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:5; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNTESS OF FLANDERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0852 - 0905 Ethelswida Queen Of England 53 53 0871 Sigehelm Earl Of Kent Thurstan I Le Goz Judith deMontanolier >1146 - 1236 William de Albini 90 90 William de Albini, feudal Lord of Belvoir, in the 6th of Richard I[1195], was with that monarch in the army in Normandy, and the next yearwas sheriff of the counties of Warwick and Leicester, as he wassubsequently of Rutlandshire. In the 2nd of King John [1201], he hadspecial license to make a park at Stoke, in Northampton, and liberty tohunt the fox and hare (it lying within the royal forest of Rockingham).Afterwards, however, he took up arms with the other barons and, leavingBelvoir well fortified, he assumed the governorship of Rochester Castle,which he held out for three months against the Royalists, and ultimatelyonly surrendered when reduced to the last state of famine. Upon thesurrender of Rochester, William Albini was sent prisoner to Corfe Castle,and there detained until his freedom became one of the conditions uponwhich Belvoir capitulated, and until he paid a ransom of 6,000 marks. Inthe reign of Henry III, we find him upon the other side and a principalcommander at the battle of Lincoln, anno 1217, where his formerassociates sustained so signal a defeat. This stout baron, who had beenone of the celebrated twenty-five appointed to enforce the observance ofMagna Carta, m. 1st, Margery, dau. of Odonel de Umfraville, by whom hehad had issue, William, Sir Odinel, Robert, and Nicholas, rector ofBottesford. He m. 2ndly, Agatha, dau. and co-heir of William Trusbut, anddying in 1236, was s. by his eldest son, William de Albini. [Sir BernardBurke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage,Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 160, Daubeney, Barons Daubeney, Earl ofBridgewater] ~0970 - >1035 Ansfred II Le Goz 65 65 Vicomte De Hiesmer >0978 I Ansfred  Stuarts royalty For Commoners 295 : 36 called the Dane, said to have been a nephew of Rollo Helloe Hrolf Thurstan Gerlotte Of Blois Hrollager Of More ~0887 Thyre ~0875 Ethelgiva Princess Of England 1062 Matilda Maude Montgomery Roger de Montgomery 0800 - 0843 Judith 43 43 Mabel Talvas ~1120 - 1178 Adam de Warenne 58 58 Margaret Phillips The following letter can be found in the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 19,
pp 92-94 (a letter from John Roger to Elias B. Caldwell; subject-the Caldwell family).

"Our [John Roger and Elias B. Caldwell--cousins] grandfather emigrated from Scotland to Ireland soon after King William's conquest of that place [ie. Scotland--King William III of England; 1650-1702][JAC NOTE: Other sources indicate during the reign of James I]. Our grandfather, John Caldwell, was born in Ireland and was there married to a Margaret Phillips (our grandmother). He remained there until they had five children, at which time he got three of his brothers-in-law, who had married his sisters, to come to America with him (to wit) Moor, Ritchey, and Dudgeon. Wll:[?] of whom I well remember and one brother-in-law who married his wife's sister whose name was Dougherty, grandfather of my wife and Thomas Dougherty formerly clerk to the lowest house of Congress. They set sail together and landed in Delaware the very day that King George II was proclaimed there [King George II of England; 1683-1760]. From thence they got up the country to a place in Pa., then, called Chestnut Level. Our grandfather naturally of an enterprising spirit, explored the country southwesterly from a place in Va. to Albemarle Co. to which he moved and was soon followed by all his kindred.

There he lived some years; there our grandfather died and his oldest son and my mother-his only daughter-were married.

They and their companions moved with him to Roanoke River and the fine lands there explored the country westerly until his followers fixed on a fine level waterly spot not 30 miles outside any inhabitants, to which place him and his sons and brothers-in-law moved about the year 1742-43.

They were soon after joined by other friends mostly from Ireland or Pa. until they formed a little settlement which was known and always called Caldwell Settlement. For thirty years after father was the first Justice of the Peace and his oldest son the oldest militia officer that was ever appointed under King George II within 25 miles of that place in that neighborhood. I was born and in it was married and had six children before I moved to Ky in the year 1781.

Our grandfathers children were William, Thomas, David, all are buried in the same graveyard with their father. David's widow and all the family moved to Ky. Uncle John went to So. Carolina and died there. Uncle William's widow and all that family went also to So. Carolina. Our friend John C. Calhoun is a son of the 2nd daughter of that family."

(signed by) Cousin John Roger
1068 - 1135 Henry I Beauclerc England 67 67 King Of England, Henry I Beauclerc - Plantagenet

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King 1100-1135
~1230 Gilbert Peche 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V The Handsome Plantagenet Of Anjou 38 38  [daddy5.FTW]

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~1110 - 1148 William IV Earl Of Surrey deWarenne 38 38 ~0732 Auda Martel 1204 William de Braose 1040 - 1087 William I Count Of Burgundy 47 47 0820 - UNKNOWN Gisele of France ~1301 - 1374 Alicia deBury 73 73 Was Sister of Henry, not daughter.
See page 178History of the Parish of Garstang, County of Lancaster/ pt.II.
1008 - 1040 Henri Capet I King Of France 32 32 ~1017 - 1108 Gui II of Rameru & Montlhery 91 91 1010 - 1089 Walkelin deFerrers 79 79 1496 - <1525 Henry Peck 29 29 ~1660 - Jan 1739/1740 Sarah Nutter SARAH, b. ca 1659, according to a 8 Mar 1737 deposition she made at age 78, d. Jan 1740; m. (Capt.) NATHANIEL HILL of Oyster River [Durham],NH, son of Valentine and Mary (Eaton) Hill. ~0912 Unknown Gerberga 0910 - 0970 Judicael Berenger 60 60 1102 - 1167 Matilda the Empress Plantagenet 65 65  [daddy5.FTW]

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Alice Somerville 0805 - UNKNOWN Engeltrudeof Paris 1022 - 1057 Edward Atheling England 35 35 1194 - 1268 Joanne Isabel de Mortimer 74 74  [daddy5.FTW]

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~1272 Thomas de Booth 1208 - 1315 John deAnnesley 107 107 1100 - 1143 Sybil deNeufmarche 43 43 1070 Bertha 1065 - 1129 Walter FitzRoger 64 64 1070 - 1142 Bernard deNeumarche 72 72 ~1123 Eleanor Aenor deCastelherault  [daddy5.FTW]

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~1075 Aubrey Dammartin 1052 Patrick deChaworth  [daddy5.FTW]

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0786 - UNKNOWN Leutaud Count of Paris 1057 Matilda Hesdin  [daddy5.FTW]

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1038 Ernulf Hesdin  [daddy5.FTW]

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1145 - AFT. 5 FEB 1226/27 Sybil de Braose  [daddy5.FTW]

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Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
0614 - 0693 St. Begga of Andenne 79 79 ~1070 - 1103 Humbert II Count Of Maurienne 33 33 BET. 1010 - 1021 - 1060 Gisela Countess Of Burgundy Harold Klack 1059 - 1153 Nest verch Gruffydd 94 94 ~1000 Gwerfyl Verch Lludicca ~1180 Gilbert FitzMaldred Hansard 0843 - 0870 Judith France 27 27 Mary Sweetenham R. M. Sibbet R.M. Sibbet, Belfast Times 1856. "The Caldwells of Ayrshire became very prominent family in 1349. William Caldwell, Prebendary of Glasgow, was Lord Chancellor of Scotland, and his descendant William Caldwell of Stratton, Ayrshire, had sons Joseph, David and John, who appeared early in the Parish of Enniskillen, (county) Fermanagh.
John Caldwell, son of William, became prominent as a merchant in Enniskillen and Londonderry; he died at Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, 1639; will proven March 1640; married 1627 Mary Sweetinham. Issue: Baptisms: Derry Cathedral
**I. William Caldwell baptised May 10, 1628; buried Parish of Glendermott, Co., Donegal, Oct 20, 1698; marr'd Elizabeth Huston in Londonderry by John Hanford, Mayor of Londonderry, May 27, 1652,
Issue;
A. John Caldwell, bap. Aug 19, 1653
B. Robert Caldwell bap. Nov. 3, 1654.
C. Thomas Caldwell, bap. June 10, 1656.
D. Alexander Caldwell, bap. Sept. 23, 1659
E. Jean Caldwell, bap. Sept 2, 1661.

**II. John Caldwell, bap. Sep 16, 1630; bur Parish of Ballycogan, Co., Donegal, Nov. 18, 1692. 1st Marr. June 11, 1651, Margaret Porter, who was bur May 16, 1653; no issue. 2nd marr. in Londonderry by John Elwin, Mayor, June 6, 1654, Mary Holmes, bap. June 16, 1632; bur May 14, 1695, dau. of James Holmes and his wife Jane Jennings, daughter of Francis and Jean (Scott) Jennings of County Londonderry.
Issue:
A Margaret Caldwell, bap. Aug 19, 1655.
B. Joseph Caldwell, bap. Jan 9, 1657; buried Parish of Ballybogan, County Donegal, Sep 3, 1730; marr. April 8, 1682, Jane McGhie.
C. John Caldwell, bap. June 10, 1659.
D. Mary Jane Caldwell, bap. Oct. 8, 1660.
E. William Caldwell, bap. April 20, 1662; bur Oct. 20, 1725; marr. Oct. 2, 1697, Elizabeth Porter.
F. Andrew Caldwell, bap. Sept. 8, 1664.
**III. Mary Caldwell, bap. Sep 20, 1632; marr. Jan 9, 1654, William Eiffield.
**IV. James Caldwell, bap. Nov. 30, 1634; died Castle Cauldwell Co., Fermanagh, Ireland, 1716; High Sheriff, created Baronet 1683; marr. Catherine, daughter of Sir James Hume.
His grandson, Hon. James Caldwell, born County Tyrone, Ireland, 1724, emigrated to America 1769; died Wheeling, W. VA ca 1800; marr. in Ireland 1752 Elizabeth Alexander.
**V. Margaret Caldwell, bap. May 24, 1636; marr April 8, 1660, Hugh Delop.
**VI. Joseph Caldwell, bap April 6, 1638

**VII. Alexander Caldwell, bap Sep 4, 1639; died Dublin (?) marr. his cousin, Ann Caldwell.
Issue:
A. Jane Caldwell, bap. Jan 26, 1661
B. John Caldwell, bap. Feb 3, 1662.
C. Agnes Caldwell, bap. July 18, 1665.
D. David Caldwell, bap July 1667.
E William Caldwell, bap. Jan 11, 1669.
F. Henry Caldwell, bap. Sep 2, 1671."

There are obviously two families represented here. Research conducted by Plunkett Caldwell of North Ireland at PRONI show the children of John m. Mary Sweetenham as different than listed from this Belfast Times excerpt.
~1035 - 1092 Stephanie Of Barcelona 57 57 0948 Gerberge deBerengar 1086 - 1147 Isabel(Elizabeth) Queen Of England deBeaumont 61 61 ~0989 Aenor Alberade 0975 Humphrey deVieilles Aubrey deLa Haie 1050 - 1120 AdelaideCountess De Vermandois 70 70 1036 - 1076 Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna Kiev Queen Of France 40 40 Lora 1266 Isabel deValence 1051 Beatrix deMontdidier 0633 - 0656 II Clovis 23 23 ~1634 Isaac Sie www.gamber.net/gamber/ 0805 Ingeltrudeof Paris dermod Of Leinster Mc Murrough King Of Ireland 1114 - 1164 More O Toole 50 50 Robert FitzWalter de Clare 1126 - 1164 John Fitz Gilbert 38 38 1127 Sibilla deSalisbury 1100 Walter FitzEdward Of Salisbury 0840 - 0879 Baldwin I 39 39 1082 Sibyl deChaworth 1075 Gilbert The Marshall FitzRobert 1105 deVenus 1081 - 1138 William III de Warenne 57 57 By the marriage of William, 2nd Earl Warren and the Countess Isabel, every known European line and also those of the Far East from earliest history were united. 2nd Earl of Warren & Surrey 1034 Unknown La Marche 1644 - 1644 Benjamin Hill 1070 Julienne Du Perche Thiedoric of Neustria 0844 - 0887 Harold Parcus 43 43 ~0930 - 0973 Alberade de Lorraine 43 43 0865 - UNKNOWN Baldwin II Count of Flanders ~1430 Anne Catherine Vavasour Ann (Anne) (Or Catherine) /Vavasour/ Cynan Feiniad Ap Gwaethfoed ~1014 Cynan Ap Iago 1096 - 1126 Ermengarde(Ermentrude) Countess Du Maine 30 30 ~1303 - 9 Jan 1383/1384 Robert Assheton ~0996 Ednofain Bendew Ap Cynan ~1178 Miss ~1356 John Saville Nesta deVale 1681 Mathew Merritt 0877 - UNKNOWN Elfridam Ida deOdingsells 1045 - 1110 Margaret deMontdidier 65 65 ~1186 Sir. 1763 - 1840 Gilbert Merritt 76 76 1730 - 1802 Robert Merritt 72 72 MERRITT - Robert; Will - Parish of Hampstead, Kings County; wife: Elizabeth; sons: Calib, Gilbert, Israel, Robert; has two daughters: grand daughter: Elizabeth Merritt; grand daughter: Anna Heustis
Children:
MERRITT - Robert & Elizabeth (ROBINSON)
MERRITT - John    m. Effie Palmer
MERRITT - Annie   m. John Golding
MERRITT - Mary    m. Philip Heustis
MERRITT - Caleb   m. Mary Perley
MERRITT - Gilbert m. Phoebe Birdsell
MERRITT - Israel  m. Mary Peters
1000 Renaud deClermont 1010 Ermengardis deClermont 1021 - 1063 Hildouin IV Count deMontdidier 42 42 1014 Alice Adela Countess Of Roucy 1060 - 1130 Edward Sherriff Of Salisbury 70 70 1127 - 1205 Isabel Elizabeth deCourtenay 78 78 Maud FitzHubert 1022 - 1094 Roger deBeaumont 72 72 0990 Waleran Count Of Meulan deBeaumont 0994 Oda deContville Bertha - ~1458 Alice Middleton 1071 - 10 Feb 1126/1127 Guillaume IX Of Aquitaine  Mediaeval troubadour whose songs have come down to us. 1073 Phillipa Matilda Maud Countess Of Toulouse 1058 - 1092 Emma deMortaigne 34 34 1080 - 1131 Raymond IV Count Of Barcelona Berenger 50 50 0914 - 0969 Adele de Vermandois 55 55 1057 Gerberge Countess Of Provence 1055 Maud Guiscard deHauteville 1065 - 1107 Raymond Count Of Burgundy 42 42 1082 - 8 Mar 1125/1126 Urraca Queen Of Castile & Leon 1040 - 1109 Alfonso VI the Valiant King Of Castile & Leon 69 69 1046 Constance Princess Of Burgundy 1045 Robert FitzJohn 1033 Walter deEwrus William D' Evereux ~1286 Margery Byron 0940 - 0992 Baldwin III Count of Flanders 52 52 1099 - 1150 Garcia V King Of Navarre 51 51 1100 - 1141 Marguerite deL' Aigle 41 41 1092 - 1148 Amadeo III Count Of Savoy 56 56 ~1092 - Jan 1144/1145 Maud Countess Albon 1060 - 1133 Guiges V Of Forcalquier 73 73 1056 - ~1143 Matilda Princess Of England 87 87 1075 - 1136 Aimer I Viscount Chatellerault 61 61 1079 - >1119 Dangereuse deL'Isle Bouchard 40 40 1012 - ~1050 Gerold II Count Of Geneva 38 38 BET. 1034 - 1040 - ~1095 Joan Of Geneva 1125 - 1182 Pierre Emperor of Constantinople 57 57 Maroth deBihar 1085 - 1143 Hugh II deBurgundy 58 58 1055 - 1082 Raymond III Count Of Barcelona Berenger 27 27 ~0700 - 0780 Eystein of Vestfold Halfdansson 80 80 ~1454 - 1516 Richard Peck 62 62 1104 - 1168 Robert II Earl deBeaumont 64 64 ~1080 Aelis Dammartin 1151 Urraca Princess Of Portugal ~0720 - 0783 Bertha of Laon 63 63 1166 Agnes deDammartin Annora Manvers ~1192 Enguerrand Ingelram deFiennes 1113 - UNKNOWN Hawise deDonjon ~1210 Isabel Conde ~1110 Alberic Count Dammartin 1135 Clemence Bar-Le- Duc ~1100 Renaud I deBar Le Duc Ida deClinton 1050 Gilbert Dammartin 1117 - 1166 Gundred deWarenne 49 49 1095 - 1190 Dulce Aldonza Countess Milhaud 95 95 Reginald de Braose Grecia Alice Briwere 1069 - 1127 Milo deCourtenay 58 58 1098 - BET. 1131 - 1198 Gwladys Verch Llywarch 1055 - 1136 Gruffudd Ap Cynan 81 81 1044 - 1105 Owain Ap Edwyn Ap Goronwy 61 61 1048 - BET. 1065 - 1148 Merwyl Merfydd Verch Ednofain 1020 - 1073 Edwyn Ap Goronwy Ap Einion Llewellyn 53 53 1024 - BET. 1044 - 1124 Iwerydd Verch Cynfyn ~1540 William Neves Madog Ap Meredydd 1077 Elvira Christina Diaz D. 1116 Romiro Of Navarre 1085 - UNKNOWN Ermengarde de Nevers ~1252 - 1304 Edmund I de Mortimer 52 52 Josiah Edson Morris D' Estratlinges Susan Baker Died prior to the relocation to America in 1637. ~1270 - 7 Feb 1333/1334 Margaret de Fiennes 1619 - 1659 Elizabeth Deane 40 40 ~1230 Adam de Bavent 1065 - 1162 Angharad Verch Owain 97 97 ~0948 Angharad Verch Iago Ap Idwal Ap Meurig ~1070 - 1128 Llywarch Ap Trahearn 58 58 1047 - 1089 Renaud deNevers 42 42 ~1060 Dyddgu Verch Iorwerth Gwenllyan Verch Aron ~1000 Aron Ap Paen ~1018 Caradog ~1022 Verch Gwerystan Blanche deBrienne William deFiennes Rainier Marquis deMontferrat Rhanullt Verch Apphrach Ap Suttick Ap Mackmoth Apprach Ap Suttick Ap Mackmoth 1054 - 1085 Ida Forez Countess deForez 31 31 ~1020 Iorwerth Ap Cadwgan Ap Elystan Glodrudd Cadwgan Ap Elystan Glodrudd ~0979 Efa Verch Gwrgan 1610 - <1648 William Warner 38 38 See N.E Register, 1866. Lived in Bowsted Essex England. His Children were born there. Came to America in 1637. 1039 - 1081 Trahairn Ap Caradog 42 42 Christiana Verch Goronwy Ap Owen Ap Edwin 1158 - 1215 Roger Lord Of Wigmore de Mortimer 57 57  [daddy5.FTW]

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[daddy3.FTW]

[daddy2.FTW]
1108 - 1185 Hugh Mortimer 77 77 1082 - 1105 Ralph de Mortimer 23 23 pg 382, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883 1086 Millicent Ferrere 1034 - 1100 Josceline deCourtenay 66 66 1085 Geoffrey deVenus Murcertac O'Toole Inghin O Byrne Alice dePercy ~1275 John Bumhley Henry deBriwere Joan deVernon Redfers William deVernon Redvers Mabel deBeaumont 1151 - 1211 William de Braose 60 60 Starved to death with his mother by King John.  5th Baron du Braiose; Marcher Baron, Lord of Brecknock, Abergavenny, Builth, Radnor, and Gower; Sheriff of Herefordshire; Justice Itinerant for Staffordshire 1040 - 1117 Isabel Of Montlheri 77 77 1632 - 1695 Mary Holmes 62 62 Osbert deClinton Robert Ogle ~1184 James deConDe Nicholas OCnde Isabel deMoreaumer 1217 - 1296 Jean deBrienne 79 79 ~1227 Jeanne deChateaudun 1195 - 21 Mar 1236/1237 Jean deBrienne ~1094 Pagan deLangtun 1010 - 1095 Guy I Seigneur Of Montlheri 85 85 1125 - 8 Feb 1190/1191 Erard deBrienne 1125 Agnes deMontBelliar 1100 - 1156 Gautier deBrienne 56 56 1100 Hambeline 1080 - 1125 Erard deBrienne 45 45 Alice deRouche Alex Ramerie ~1087 - BET. 1169 - 1170 Owen Gwynedd D. 1161 MelisendeOf Jerusalem 0911 - 0943 Sprota Adelaide Bretagne 32 32 1147 Geoffrey Wake 1024 - 1074 Hodierna Of Gommetz 50 50 Miss Wake 1648 - 1720 Elinor Minshall 71 71 Jean Edge and Mary Sharpless were chosen to that position (overseer) 9mo. 25, 1706: Jean Edge and Mary Malin, 4 mo. 26, 1710, in place of ELINOR VERNON and Sarah Crockson, but were succeeded by ELINOR VERNON and Rebecca Minshall, 7 mo. 24, 1711.
Genealogy of the Smedley Family
History of Chester County, Pennsylvania Page 755 Robert Vernon came from Stoke, in Cheshire, England. He was a member of the Society of Friends, but did not take such an active part in meeting affairs as Thomas and Randal, though the Monthly Meetings were sometimes held at his house. He conveyed his brick messuage and 330 acres of land, where he resided, to his son Jacob just before his death, which occurred in January or February, 1709-10. His wife, Elinor, who came with him, was the daughter of John Minshall, and sister of Thomas Minshall, a settler in Providence. She died 7, 24, 1720. Their children were Isaac, m. in 1710, Hannah Williams and Mary (Sellers) Marshall; Jacob, m. 4, 5, 1712, Eleanor Owen, and settled in Philadelphia later in life; John, m. in 1702, Sarah Pyle, who left three children,--Moses, Rachel (m. to Robert Green), and Aaron. Gideon Vernon, son of Moses, went to Nova Scotia at the time of the Revolution.
~1235 Alice deWiston Olaf "Tree Hewer" Ingjaldsson Mary Issac ~1170 - 1247 William de Ferrers 77 77 4th Earl of Derby

pg 113 & 161 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition

pg 197, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
~1174 - 1247 Agnes de Meschines 73 73 Jane Anne de Mowbray Sybil Braose Ingibiorg 0985 - 1055 Athon deCourtenay 70 70 Hildeswinde De Croatie David Gam knighted by Hen. V. at Agincourt, France Maud Morley Berkerolles D. 1483 Thomas Ap Gwyllm Nest ferch Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr of South Wales William I (Count) of Geneva ~1014 - 1063 Adele (Alix) deRoucy 49 49 1018 - 1094 Roger deMontgomery 76 76  Earl of Shrewsbury Adelheid deBretuil ~1024 - 1079 Mabilia (Mabel) Talvas 55 55 0970 - 0997 Henry deFranconia 27 27 D. ~1048 Guillaume Talvas Hildeberge deBeaumont Maud Peverel 1005 - 1047 Hamon dentatus 42 42 1030 - 1090 Hamon "the Sheriff" of Kent 60 60 D. >1067 Emma Sibyl deMontgomery ~1074 - 1138 Lucy Malet 64 64 Renaud deCreil 1080 Alice deBuci 0948 - 1006 Otto Duke of Carintha 58 58 Robert deBuci Edith D. 1149 Loigsech O'Morda Gormlaith Ingen Fin O'Caellaide 1031 - 1083 Matilda of Flanders 52 52 ~1013 - 1067 Baldwin "the Pious" "debonnaire" of Flanders 54 54 1180 Hawise deMeschines 1099 - 1153 Ranulph deGernon 54 54 ~1120 - 1189 Maud Fitz Robert deCaen 69 69 1070 - Jan 1128/1129 Ranulph I de Meschines  Earl of Chester 0912 - UNKNOWN Anastaso of Byzantine 1074 - >1135 Lucia Taillebois 61 61 Christon Ddu ~0820 Ragnhild Hrolfsdottir Line 1516 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
  NAME Ragnhild (Hilda) /HROLFSDATTER COUNTESS OF MORE/

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Line 1516 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
  NAME Ragnhild (Hilda) /HROLFSDATTER COUNTESS OF MORE/

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1090 - 1147 Robert de Caen 57 57 of Gloucester de Mellent ~1094 - 1157 Maud Fitzhamon 63 63 ~1068 - 1135 Henry I England 67 67 after eating a surfeit of lampreys William de Clare 1024 - 1087 William The Conqueror 62 62 William I The Conqueror, King of England from 1066 to 1087, was a man ofremarkable political and military skill and a dominant force in WesternEurope. The Domesday Survey of 1086 was a striking illustration of hisadministrative capabilities. William was the illegitimate son of Robert Iof Normandy and Herleve, a Tanner's daughter from Falaise, and becameDuke of Normandy as a child in 1035. William the Conqueror died whilecampaigning to maintain his hold on Maine and was buried in his ownmonastic foundation of Saint-Etienne at Caen. "The Encyclopedia of theMiddle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor.

S

S

Custom Field:<_FA#> "The Bastard"
Custom Field:<_FA#> DUKE de NORMANDY
CustomField:<_FA#> Ruled 1066-1087
D. 2 Jan 1610/1611 John I Lawrence Visitation of Norfolk, 1664, pp. 118.,  Harl. Publ.
Lawrence
Arms: Ar. a cross raguly gules
Crest; A tail of a fish proper
1] John Lawrence of St. James Park in co. Suffolk, Will Proved 11 Jan. 1610/1 ==
2] Nathaniel
2] John Lawrence of Syleham in co. Suffolk., Cler. == da of Wm. Herne of Tibenham
3] John Lawrence of Wrampingham in co. Norfolk., Gent. 1664 == Eliz. da. of Bedwell of ? in co. ?
4] Mary==?
4] Sarah==?

He was "pastor 'to those who fleeing for religion in Q. Marie's days [r. 1552-1558] met together in woods and secret places . . . he was a gentleman of a great estate and exceeding in liberality to the poore. In the time of Q. Elizabeth [r. 1558-1603] he preached at Fresingfield.' He was seized of St. James Park, South Elmham, co. Suff. Copinger states that he bought the manor of fressingfield (co. Suff.) in 1589. he gave it to his third son, James, who, with his brother Nathaniel, alienated it (probably a settlement) in 1614. However, John, son and heir of John, was lord in 1614. Arms of Lawrence: arg., a cross raguly, gu., on a chief of the second a lion passant guardant, or. H.G. Somrby's discredited pedigrees of Lawrence , places one William Lawrence of St. James Park as brother of John Lawrence of Rumburgh, co. Suff. (will 1590). How Somerby's William fits in, if at all, is not at present clear. Rev. John Lawrence died 2 Jan. 1610/1, and his will was proved 11 Jan. 1610/1."
~1654 - ~1730 Mary Pope 76 76 0960 - 1022 Olaf III Skötkonung King of Sweden 62 62 ~1060 - 1107 Robert Fitzhamon deThan 47 47 1142 Joanna de Meschines 1110 - 1171 Diarmait MacMurchadda 61 61 Marguerite (Margaret) deRoucy 1639 - 1641 James Odell 1 1 <1600 Marie Des Pre <1680 Susanna Devou 1817 - 1885 John Van Wert 68 68 ~1100 Walter deSalisbury Sibill deChaworth 0910 - 0995 Eric VI The Victorious King of Sweden 85 85 ~1045 Walter D' Evereaux ~1045 Philippa ~1070 Patrick deChaworth ~1070 Matilda 1642 Rebecca Odell 1049 - 1118 Robert deBeaumont 69 69 ~1014 - 1081 Adeline deMeullant 67 67 >1081 - 13 Feb 1130/1131 Isabel (Elizabeth) deVermandois de Crepi ~1340 - 1412 Alice de Driby 72 72 Alice de Driby, b. c 1340, d. 12 Oct 1412, will as Alicia Basset de Bytham, Apr 1412, probated 26 Oct 1412, Inq.p.m. 1413 #15; m. (1) Sir Ralph Basset, Lord Basset of Sapcote, d. 17 July 1378, issue; m. (2) Sir Robert Tochet, no issue; m. (3) Sir Anketil Mallory, Knight, of Kirkby Mallory, co. Leics, d. 26 Mar 1393 (Order of 1st two marriages uncertain).  [Ancestral Roots]

Note: Even if the 1st two marriages were reversed, Sir Ralph Basset didn't die until 1378, and Alice had Sir William, b. c 1375 with Anketil Mallory.  It doesn't quite make sense.  Probably her son William wasn't born until after 1380.

---------------------------------------

He [Ralph Basset] married, 2ndly, Alice, daughter of John DERBY. He died s.p.m., 17 July 1378, when the Barony fell (according to modern doctrine) into abeyance between his two daughters and coheirs. Will, as Ralph Basset, knight, Lord of Sapcote, directing his burial to be at Castle Bytham, dated there the Monday after the Ascension I I May 1377, proved at Lincoln. His widow, who married Sir Robert TUCHET, and afterwards Sir Anketine MALLORY, died a widow, 12 October 1412, and was buried at Stamford, near her last husband.  [Complete Peerage II:7-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 8WKF-LR
1057 - 1102 Hugh "the Great" Magnus deFrance 45 45 0867 - 0950 Bjorn 83 83 D. 28 Sep 1120/1124 Adelheid of Vermandois 1009 - 10 Jan 1078/1079 Adelaide(Adela) de France ~1114 - 1164 Mor Ua Tuathail 50 50 ~1050 - 1115 Donnchad MacMurchadda 65 65 Orlaith ~1025 - 1070 Murchad of Leinster 45 45 Sadb MacBricc ~1270 Christina ~1080 Cacht Ingen Loigsig O'Morda ~1010 - ~1063 Hilduin of Montdidier 53 53 0849 - 0883 Erik King of Sweden 34 34 >1051 - >1115 Harold deEwyas de Sudeley 64 64  Lord of Sudley & Eywas 1079 - 1118 Matilda of Scotland 39 39 ~1220 Sibill Ferrars Co heir of father's  estate who was Earl of Derby mistress D. 1155 Herbert FitzHerbert ~1030 - 1101 Hugh deCreil 71 71 0818 Throndheim Eysteinsdottir Unnamed Makir of Septimania Nivelon I dePerrecy 0519 - 0575 Sigibert King of Austrasia 56 56 Siegbert was murdered by his son Cloderic in at the instigation of ClovisI the king of the Salic Franks. 0768 - 0830 Childebrand II dePerrecy 62 62 0752 Ingeramne of Hesbaye ~0897 Gerberge du Maine ~0739 - >0783 Lambert of Hornbach 44 44 Nest ferch Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr of South Wales 1179 - 1228 Reginald deBraose 49 49 1186 - 1223 Grace (Gracia) deBriwere 37 37 Isabell Neville Henry deBriwerre William Le Meschine 0835 - 0879 Lothaire II King of Lorraine 44 44 Cecily deRumilly Margaret Caldwell Unnamed Unknown Ermengarde ~0665 - 0713 Lietwinus Treves 48 48 William Unknown Cunugunde Bertrada of the big foot ~0845 Bertha deMorvois ~0997 Papia of Envemeu 1197 - 1253 Amedeus IV Count of Savoy 56 56 0953 - 1006 Bruno I deBrunswick 53 53 Susanna D. 1137 Gryffydd ap Cynan D. ~1129 Llywarch ap Trahaearn Dyddgu of Builth Meredudd (Meredith) ap Bleddyn ~1459 John Anne ~1463 Catherine Preston ~1044 - 1079 Trahaerne Ap Caradoc 35 35 Caradoc ~1170 Millicent de Ferrers 1122 - 1202 Eleanor of Aquitaine 80 80 Eleanor was an extraordinarily powerful woman, she was the duchess ofAquitaine and Queen of France (1137-1152) with her marriage to Louis VIIand Queen of England after her marriage to Henry. She was the Countess ofSaintonge, Angoumois, Limousin, Auvergne, Bordeaux, Agen. Eleanor had 10children, three of whom were crowned kings of England (Henry, Richard,and John). One of her daughters, Matilda, married Henry the Lion ofBavaria and Saxony and was the mother of Otto of Brunswick; anotherdaughter Eleanor wed King Alfonso VIII of Castile and had Blanche, themother of Louis IX of France; her daughter Jeanne was the wife of KingWilliam II of Sicily and after his death, Count Raymond VIof Toulouse."The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages" Norman F. Cantor, General Editor. Christina Owain ab Edwin Renaud deCreil ~0600 Unknown Siagree D. 0864 Herbert of Burgundy D. 1166 Reginald deSt. Valery Ranulph deSt. Valery Picquqny 1 Mar 1658/1659 - Mar 1740/1741 Nathaniel Hill History of the Town of Durham New Hampshire & Oyster River Plantation with Genealogical Notes by Everett S. Stackpole and Winthrop S. Meserve.

"He inherited his father's farm of 500 acres at the Falls. Sept. 13, 1697 Nathaniel Hill, only son and heir of Valentine Hill, renounced in open town meeting all right to Oyster River Falls, granted to his father. He was chosen deacon 3 April 1718. Will, 6 Jan. 1741-28 April 1742. He was prominent as an offical in the church and town. He gradually lost his reason in his old age and spent the last six months of his life at the residence of his son-in-law, Capt. Benjamin Mathes."
D. 1141 Guy deSt. Valery 1164 Ida Isabel Plantagenet Albreda Albreda Geoffrey deVenuz ~0596 St. Clodoule of Metz D. 0473 Unknown Gunderic D. 1149 Loigsech O'Morda Gormlaith Ingen Fin O'Caellaide ~0710 - 0751 Childebrand I dePerrecy 41 41 0584 Beretrudis of Burgundy Abbess of Chelles Bathildis 0539 - 0640 Bertha of Kent 101 101 0584 - 0629 Clothaire II 45 45 King of Soissons >0770 - 0870 Ivar Halfdansson 100 100 0550 Arnoldus of Metz Aron Ap Bleddyn 1055 Maud Margaret de Abrincis 0695 Rolanda The Merovingian ~1277 Henry de Worsley Bertha (Auba) of Autun John deAnnesley Ela FitzWalter 0558 - UNKNOWN Arthemia Marguerite (Margaret) deRoucy Bertha of Neustria 0890 - 0941 Gorm del Gammel 51 51 D. 1169 Owaine Gwynedd ap Gruffydd Gwladys 1055 - 1137 Gruffydd ap Cynan 82 82 D. 1137 Angharad of Tegaingl Cynan ap Lago Ranult (Ragnhildir) Olaf Agnes de Grey 0490 - 0561 Chlotar I King of the Franks 71 71 Hilf Daysdottir ~1135 - bet 1180-1181 Hugh deMortimer ~1198 - 1230 William "Black Will" deBraose 32 32 1146 - 1219 William Marshall 73 73 Maria Marie Von Hohenstauffen ~1126 - ~1164 John Marshall 38 38 ~1096 - ~1130 Gilbert Marshall 34 34 ~1256 - 1322 William Standish 66 66 ~1127 Sibyl of Salisbury (deEvereaux) 1133 - 1189 Henry II Curtmantle, King of England 56 56 0539 - 0584 Chilperic King of Neustria 45 45 ~1075 Edward D' Evereaux ~1075 Matilda 1165 Hugh deOdingsells ~0630 - 0677 Warinus Poitier 47 47 ~1070 Matilda 1125 - 1176 Richard "Strongbow" deClare 51 51 ~1143 - >1186 Aoife (Eve) MacMurchadda 43 43 Guibour of Hornbach Amye deGregor Gwenllian Ap Bleddyn D. UNKNOWN Aalez deVergy William Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  William Willoughby of Willoughby vppon
[upon] the Wold in Com. Nottingham [contemporary of Edward I, i.e.
1272-1307].
~1022 - 1094 Roger deBeaumont 72 72 ~1344 John Assheton D. 28 Sep 1120/1124 Adelheid of Vermandois D. 1160 Madog (Madoc) ap Maredudd ~0600 Bodilon Poitiers 0800 William Toulouse Sadb MacBricc ~1080 Muirchertach Ua Tuathail ~1084 Aenor de Totnes Some sources state this person was born in France. 1148 - 1192 Hugh III Duke of Burgundy 44 44 1049 - 1087 William Guillaume de Briouse 38 38 ROBERT DE BRUSEE & EMMA DE BRITTANY NOT PROVEN PARENTS.

Guillaume de Briouze is recorded in lists of those present at the Battle of Hastings.  He became the first Lord of the Bramber Rape by 1073 and built Bramber Castle.  William made considerable grants to the abbey of Saint Florent, Saumur to endow the foundation of Sele Priory near Bramber  and a priory at Briouze.  He continued to fight along side King William in the campaigns in Britain, Normandy, and Maine.
William de Braose came into England with the Conqueror and held, at the general survey, considerable estates in the counties of Berks, Wilts,Surrey, Dorset, and Sussex. He was s. by his son, Philip de Braose. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]
~1047 Agnes de Clare 1777 Elizabeth Heustis ~1054 Judeal deTotnes ~1055 - >1100 Osborn Fitz Richard 45 45 1058 - 1153 Nest Verch Gruffydd 95 95 ~1087 Hugh deMortimer ~1087 Maud deLongespee ~1055 - 1100 Ralph deMortimer 45 45 ~1055 - <1088 Millicent 33 33 Alix de Lorraine ~1025 Roger deMortimer ~1025 Harvise deNixin Duke of Burgundy 1171 Robert de Chetwode Hugh IV of Burgundy ~1143 Maude Miltida /Le Meschine ~1021 Ranulf deBessin >1021 Alix (Helen) deNormandie ~1360 William Vavasour Daughter of Chrodobertus 1118 - 1162 Eudes II Duke of Burgundy 44 44 Elizabeth Maxwell 0840 - 0890 Gorm Enske 50 50 Nanthildis of Neustria Rolando deAutun Gwarin Ddu Rotrou deAlemania 0669 Halfdan "White Leg" Olafsson 0730 Thierry deAutun Bernier Jenkin Herbert Ap Adam Lord of Gwarinddu. ~0586 Clothildeof Treves D. UNKNOWN Marie deBlois Abbess of Fontevrault 0933 - 0996 Richard I The Fearless 63 63 ~0895 - 0958 Fulk II deAnjou 63 63 0602 - 9 Jan 0638/0639 Dagobert I King of the Franks 628 ~0700 Unknown Haninai ~1426 Alianora Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 147.
Audeof France Clotildeof The Austrasia 0602 - ~0662 Ansegisal of Metz 60 60 1348 - <1400 Henry de Arderne 52 52 1317 Ralph de Arderne D. UNKNOWN Mathilda deMayenne ~1235 William Woodthorpe 0585 - 21 Feb 0638/0639 Peppin I of Landen 0592 - 0652 Itta of Nivelles 60 60 1738 - 1801 Jacob Van Wart 63 63 First Record Book of the 'Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow' Organized in 1697 and now The First Reformed Church of Tarrytown, N. Y
by Rev. David Cole, D.D., Yonkers, N. Y., Published by The Yonkers Historical and Library Association, 1901 FOURTH DIVISION (OR "BOOK").
[Baptisms: 1776- 1791]

77 years old at death.  On his grave stone:
"Hark! from the tomb, A doleful sound;
Mine ears attend the cry;
Ye living men come
view the ground;
Where you must shortly lie!"

In the year 1772, Jacob purchased from Cartain Foltin the improvements on 246 acres of Cortland[t] Mannor, New York, owned by Colonel Delancey. Jacon served as 2nd. Lieut. in the 3rd Regiment Weschester County militia being the Regiment of Colonel Samuel Drake.Jacob joined the British army in 1779 and served till the end of the war. Joined Colonel Delancey and served with him till the end of the war. Source: Loyalist Papers, New York Publiuc Lib. Vol. 2, p. 304. Jacob purchased a part of Philipsburgh Mannor in 1779 as they had been forfited by the attainder of Col. Federick Philipse.

PHILIPSBURGH  MANNOR, granted to Frederick PHILIPSE (1627-1702), merchant
SIZE/LOCATION: 92,000 acres in southern Westchester County along the Hudson River (Landlord and Tenant pp. 68-69; French p. 698 n. 1)
MAP: Landlord and Tenant p. 68; De Lancey, between pp. 160f-161
DATE(S) OF GRANT: 12 June 1693 by Gov. Benjamin Fletcher ("into a Lordship or Manor of Phillipsborrough"); transcript of original grant in De Lancey pp. 160-160f and Land Patent Transcriptions 6:396-415 (Land Patents 6:409-429)
RIGHTS GRANTED: court leet, court baron, advowson
PUBLISHED HISTORY: Landlord and Tenant, passim; Edward Hagaman Hall, Philipse Manor Hall at Yonkers, N.Y. (New York: American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, 1912) [N.Y. L Y80.2]
LOCATION OF PAPERS: see Landlord and Tenant, pp. 425, 427-428, principally Historic Hudson Valley [Philipsburg Manor, Tarrytown, N.Y.]
PUBLISHED PAPERS: "The Town Book of the Manor of Philipsburgh," Record 59(1928):203-213; F.J. Sypher, "Rent Roll of Col. Frederick Philipse's Estate (Philipse Manor) 1776-1784," 108(1977):74-78; Field Horne, "The Philipsburg Manor Rent Roll of 1760," 110(1979):102-104
GRANTEE AND FAMILY: Edwin R. Purple, Contributions to the History of Ancient Families of New Amsterdam and New York (New York: privately printed, 1881) pp. 119-124 [N.Y.C. G 33]; Hall, above, pp. 37-44; William J. Hoffman, "Philipse Family Record," Record 72(1941):53-54; Field Horne, "The Friesland Ancestry of Frederick Philipse," 109 (1978):201-204; Henry B. Hoff, "Identity of Eva (Philipse) Van Cortlandt," 124 (1993):153-155; C.R. Schrick, "The Philipse Jewel: A Legend Is Born," de Halve Maen 67 (1994):30-36 [N.Y. G 125.4]
TENANTS/RESIDENTS: Grenville C. Mackenzie, "The Families of the Colonial Town of Philipsburgh, Westchester County, N.Y.," 4 vols., typescript, n.d., at NYG&B [MS., LOCALITY SHELF 2 (T1.1)] (families listed in Newsletter 5 [1994]:20)

CORTLANDT MANNOR, granted to Stephanus VAN CORTLANDT (1643-1700), Mayor of New York City, Secretary of the Province of New York, Chief Justice of the Province of New York
SIZE/LOCATION: 86,000 acres in the northern part of Westchester County (French p. 698 n. 1)
MAPS: ***Landlord and Tenant pp. 71, 183; De Lancey, between pp.140-141 ***
DATE(S) OF GRANT: 17 June 1697 by Gov. Benjamin Fletcher ("henceforth be called the Lordship and Mannour of Cortlandt"); transcript of original grant in De Lancey pp. 116-118 and Land Patents Transcriptions 7:145-149 (Land Patents 7:165-170)
RIGHTS GRANTED: court leet, court baron, advowson, and an assembly seat (to be effective twenty years after the grant; see Landlord and Tenant pp. 70, 116)
PUBLISHED HISTORY: Sung Bok Kim, "The Manor of Cortlandt and Its Tenants, 1697-1783," Ph.D. diss., Michigan State Univ., 1966 [microfilm 62.2]; De Lancey pp. 115-141
LOCATION OF PAPERS: see Landlord and Tenant pp. 424-426
PUBLISHED PAPERS: see Landlord and Tenant pp. 421-424; Kim, "Manor of Cortlandt," above; Jacob Judd, ed. Van Cortlandt Family Papers [1748-1848], 4 vols. (Tarrytown, N.Y.: Sleepy Hollow Restorations, 1976-81) [G V 2796]
GRANTEE AND FAMILY: L. Effingham de Forest, The Van Cortlandt Family (New York: Historical Publication Society, 1930) [G V 2797]; William J. Hoffman, "An Armory of American Families of Dutch Descent: Van Cortlandt," Record 66 (1935):269-280
TENANTS/RESIDENTS:
COMMENTS: Stephanus Van Cortlandt owned many properties, one of which has been erroneously referred to as a manor; see Miss Sarah D. Gardiner, The Sagtikos Manor 1697 (New York: The Order of Colonial Lords of Manors in America, Publication 26, 1935) [N.Y. G 51]. The grant of Sagtikos on the south shore of Long Island by Gov. Benjamin Fletcher makes no mention of manors or manorial rights, but merely uses the standard language of freehold ownership: "in free and common soccage as of our Manor of East Greenwich in our County of Kent."
~1298 Mrs. Stapleton ~1253 - 1339 John Byron 86 86 ~1620 - >1708 Joachim Wouters Van Goda 88 88 The present "Van Wart" family in USA desends from: Jochem (Jacob) Wouters from
Amsterdam in the  Netherlands, to New Amsterdam (New York City) in the ship
"Faith" arriving in March 1661.  Moved to Philipse Manor in Tarrytown,
Westchester Co. New York. about 1690.  In the first book of membership of the
"Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow"  Joachim and his wife Styntie Jans, are
registered number 6 and 7. One authority (ref. N.Y. Gen.& Biog. record, 1928) claims that Jacob's father, Walter, came from Gouda, in the United Netherlands and settled  in the Long
Island, N.Y. area and assumed, when surnames became popular, the name of " van
Gouda " (from Gouda) and then later " van Weert"  Weert signifies a low lying
marshy country which could describe the country in Holland or on Long Island.
However, the son of Jacob (Gerrit)  was to have been born in Gouda, Netherlands.
In the year 1699 Joachim Wouters was made an Elder  and opposite his name is
the notation that his full name is : Joachim Wouters van Weert.  Aug. 6, 1701, he retired as an elder and under this entry his name is written : Joachim van Weert.  (ref.-S.C.H. & H.S. - vol.9) (Ref. Coc. Hist. of N.Y.-vol. 3,p.52 - 63)
Jochem and his Wife were members of the Dutch Church of New Amsterdam, June 1,
1676. (Ref: Membership list under this date, Gen. Sec. N.Y. Public Library.

Note: Armorial D'Artois Et De Picardie, Generalite D'Amiens, 1696-1710, Pub. 1866, On page: 466
a note on the family of "Wouters". Jacob (Jochem) Wouters was from this area.  France and Amsterdam were very close to one another and those fleeing Rel. Per. would travel to Amsterdam to avoid death. " Wouters" - cette famille est issue Jean Wouters, seigneur de Hallebast et de Van den Brouck, president de la chambre des comptes a Lille, mort en 1516. Deux de ses rejetons ont ets crees chevaliers, lun par Phillippe II le 7 aout 1559, lautre par Philippe IV le 15 juillet 1626. Son dernier rejeton male fut Philippe - Francois Wouters, seigneur de Vinderhoute,Meerendre, Belseele, etc...decede a Gand en 1708. Alliances: Alegambe, Bette, Colins, Gomiecourt, Nieulant, le Poyvre..Etc. Armes: d'or, au chevron de gueules, charge de cinq fleurs de lis argent et accompagne de trois perroquets essorants de sinople, becques et membres de gueules.

I feel that given the time we should be able to use this information to track the family line in France and Holland.

The present "Van Wart" family in USA desends from: Jochem (Jacob) Wouters from
Amsterdam in the  Netherlands, to New Amsterdam (New York City) in the ship
"Faith" arriving in March 1661.  Moved to Philipse Manor in Tarrytown,
Westchester Co. New York. about 1690.  In the first book of membership of the
"Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow"  Joachim and his wife Styntie Jans, are
registered number 6 and 7. One authority (ref. N.Y. Gen.& Biog. record, 1928) claims that Jacob's father, Walter, came from Gouda, in the United Netherlands and settled  in the Long
Island, N.Y. area and assumed, when surnames became popular, the name of " van
Gouda " (from Gouda) and then later " van Weert"  Weert signifies a low lying
marshy country which could describe the country in Holland or on Long Island.
However, the son of Jacob (Gerrit)  was to have been born in Gouda, Netherlands.
In the year 1699 Joachim Wouters was made an Elder  and opposite his name is
the notation that his full name is : Joachim Wouters van Weert.  Aug. 6, 1701, he retired as an elder and under this entry his name is written : Joachim van Weert.  (ref.-S.C.H. & H.S. - vol.9) (Ref. Coc. Hist. of N.Y.-vol. 3,p.52 - 63)
Jochem and his Wife were members of the Dutch Church of New Amsterdam, June 1,
1676. (Ref: Membership list under this date, Gen. Sec. N.Y. Public Library.

Note: Armorial D'Artois Et De Picardie, Generalite D'Amiens, 1696-1710, Pub. 1866, On page: 466
a note on the family of "Wouters". Jacob (Jochem) Wouters was from this area.  France and Amsterdam were very close to one another and those fleeing Rel. Per. would travel to Amsterdam to avoid death. " Wouters" - cette famille est issue Jean Wouters, seigneur de Hallebast et de Van den Brouck, president de la chambre des comptes a Lille, mort en 1516. Deux de ses rejetons ont ets crees chevaliers, lun par Phillippe II le 7 aout 1559, lautre par Philippe IV le 15 juillet 1626. Son dernier rejeton male fut Philippe - Francois Wouters, seigneur de Vinderhoute,Meerendre, Belseele, etc...decede a Gand en 1708. Alliances: Alegambe, Bette, Colins, Gomiecourt, Nieulant, le Poyvre..Etc. Armes: d'or, au chevron de gueules, charge de cinq fleurs de lis argent et accompagne de trois perroquets essorants de sinople, becques et membres de gueules.
***
Families of the Colonial Town of Philipsburg, by Grenville Mackenzie, Westport, Connecticut, 1966, bound by Sleepy Hollow Restorations
Tarrytown, New York, 1976, THE SETTLEMENT OF PHILIPSBURGH,By MacKenzie, entered by Lisa Shea

Jochem Woutersz was born about 1637 but whether in the Netherlands or in one of the Dutch settlements on Long Island is not certain. He married Christina Jans. They lived in Flatbush until they settled in Tarrytown before 1688, probably about 1683. He and his wife were both living in 1716. His son Gerret born in Flatbush about 1668 married Catherine sister of Deliverance Conklin and lived on the west side of Broadway about opposite Sheldon Avenue. Jochem's son Jacob, a few years younger than Gerret, married Belitje Hoppe a step-daughter of Abraham Devoe, and lived on a farm just below Prospect Avenue, probably part of his father's original leasehold.
1578 - 1657 Timothy Bunker 79 79 Mary Cronkheit Sybout Source:"Westchester Patriarchs",  by: Norman Davis;  Aka:  Maritje. 1058 - UNKNOWN Eudes Borel I "The Red" Duke of Burgundy ~1257 Alice Banastre Rachel Gardenier ~1364 Elizabeth Stapilton ~1286 John Standish 1770 - 1850 William Van Wert 79 79 Found in: Hampstead - Merritt - Slipp Graveyard (also listed as Merritt Cemetery, Queenstown)
VAN WART - William  1 Jan 1798 - 3 Jan 1867 / h/w Catherine (*) 24 Sep 1805 - 15 Oct 1897 (* Note by M.S.T. = nee MacAlpine)
VAN WART - (side of Wm's stone) son Levarett  d. 29 Mar 1860 ae 23 yrs
VAN WART - Wesley  22 Apr 1841 - 30 Jan 1909 / h/w Hannah (*) 1 Dec 1844 - 25 Nov 1901 (* Note by W.S.T. = nee Merritt)
VAN WART - Priscilla  d. 1844 in her 32nd yr
VAN WART - William  d. 6 Jan 1850 ae 81 yrs
M.S.T. = Murray S. Thompson, all records can be found at the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Canada.
Elizabeth Anne de Ferrers William Bassett Alan FitzAlan 1070 - UNKNOWN Sibylle deBourgogne ~1085 Sywarde 1540 - 1580 Elizabeth Pierce 40 40 Children of Richard ODELL and Elizabeth PERST:
Alice Odell, christened 1566.
Henry Odell, christened 1568.
Elizabeth Odell, christened 1569; married Thomas Field (Flyded).
John Odell, born about 1574; died 1575; married Joan Bingley.
Richard Odell married Martha Nicholls.
John Odell, born 1577; died in Bedford, England, 12 January 1656
0555 - 0588 Bodegeisel II of Metz 33 33 1738 Johannis Van Tessel 1812 - 1886 Samuel Van Wart 74 74 NEW BRUNSWICK CENSUS RECORDS, QUEENS COUNTY
Cambridge Parish, 1891
108 Vanwort      Samuel [jr.]         M  47  M      NB  NB  NB  C.E.  G.Store K.
       Vanwort      Annie          F  44  M  W   NB  NB  NB  C.E.
       Vanwort      Minnie         F  16     D   NB  NB  NB  C.E.
~1359 - ~1397 Ellen Workesley 38 38 D. 1652 Elizabeth Hawkins 1703 - 1770 Jogahim Van Weert 67 67 Jojakim,Jochim,Joghem. Information is taken from the" First Book"  from the Old Sleepy Hollow, Church, Philips Burgh, New York.
First Record Book of the 'Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow' Organized in 1697 and now The First Reformed Church of Tarrytown, N. Y.," An original translation of its brief historical matter, and a copy, faithful to the letter, of every personal and local name, of its four registers of members, consistorymen, baptisms, and marriages, from its organization to 1791, by Rev. David Cole, D.D., Yonkers, N. Y., Published by The Yonkers Historical and Library Association, 1901. FOURTH DIVISION (OR "BOOK").  [Baptisms: 1776- 1791]
APRIL 28, 1776 / 2266. Johannis Van Wart, Ragel his wife / Myno / Daniel Martlings, Marytie his wife
***
Families of the Colonial Town of Philipsburg
by Grenville Mackenzie
Westport, Connecticut, 1966
bound by Sleepy Hollow Restorations
Tarrytown, New York, 1976
THE SETTLEMENT OF PHILIPSBURGH
By MacKenzie, entered by Lisa Shea
The old record book of the "Christian Church of the Manor of Philipsburgh" begun in 1715, gives the following account of the origin of the Manor :- "About the year of our Lord Jesus Christ 1680, his Royal Majesty of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith etc., was pleased to agree by prerogative, consent and license, to grant to the Hon. Lord Frederick Philipse to purchase without restriction at a real estate sale, a certain stretch of land and valley lying in Westchester County in America, beginning at the north of Spuytenduyvel Creek and extending northward along the River to the kill of Kitchewang, as specified in the license and patent granted by the state." * The royal patent was granted in 1693 when Frederick Philipse was confirmed as lord of the manor known as Philipse Manor or the Manor of Philipse.The first settlers on record in the vicinity of Tarrytown were Lourens Matthys Bankert and Jochem Woutersz Van Wert. Both came before 1688. It may well have been that Frederick Philipse brought Lourens Matthys from Flatbush to Tarrytown in the spring of 1682 to look after his affairs at the upper mill. The fact that he named five of his children after members of the Philipse family, and that they acted as sponsors to several of his children, would suggest his status as a trusted and privileged employee.

Jochem Woutersz probably came here about 1683. About or shortly before 1690 they were followed by the Ecker brothers Wolfert and Jan, also from Flatbush. Whatever other residents there may have been before 1690 would seem to have been transients who shortly moved on, leaving no descendants and no record of their existence here. The statement of Governor Bellmont that there were only "twenty poor families" in Philipse Manor in 1698, is an understatement. There were nearly forty. Nineteen families are on record as living in Philipsburg at that date:- Lourens Matthys Bankers (7), Deliverance Conklin (4), David Davids (3), Barent de Witt (5), Abraham de Revier (3), Wolfert Ecker (5), Jan Ecker 94), John Foseur (4), Francois Guiliamse (6), Jan Harmse (3), John Hyatt (7), Thomas Hyatt (2), David Storm (4), Peter Storm (3), Isaac Sie (5), Peter Sie (2), Jochem Woutersz Van Wert (6), Gerret Van Wert (5) and Robert Williams (5). The number in parentheses are the number of persons in each family as determined from church and other records, totaling 83. A few other families who were definitely here shortly after 1698 may have come before that date. The census of 1698 lists twenty one families living in Yonkers, Lower Yonkers. **8 Census record:- 7 men and 7 women over sixty, 62 men and 61 women between sixteen and sixty and 86 boys and 86 girls.
~1668 - >1743 Gerridt Joachimse Van Weert 75 75 (Ref: Grenville C. McKenzie) Gerret Jochemse van Weert was born on Long Island, N.Y. about 1668 and married Catherine Conckling about 1690. They resided in Tarrytown, N.Y. just below Sheldon Brook. on the west side of Broadway about opposite Sheldon Ave.
(Ref: N.Y. Gen & Biog. Soc. Qurt. vol. 54, p. 17) Gerrit was constable for the Philipe Manor in the year 1715. His name appears on the tax list in the same place in 1732.
(Ref: N.Y. Hist. Coll. 1891-1909, 1893, p. 171) G. acted as executor of the will of Abraham de Renere(Rivere) which was probated June  22, 1716.
D. UNKNOWN Palantina Abraham Van Wart 0582 - 0640 St. Arnulf of Metz 58 58 ~0560 Carloman of Landen Gertrudeof Bavaria Unknown deutria Blithildes The Merovingian 0530 St. Gondolfus of Tongres Unknown D'angouleme 0500 - 0533 Munderic of Vitry En Perthas 33 33 Unknown Artnemia Gallus Magnus Troyes 0475 Tonanthus Ferreolus of Rodez 0440 - 0517 Tonantius Ferreolus 77 77 0410 Unknown Ferreolus 0415 Unknown Syagrius Flavius Afrainius Syagrius 0510 Maurilion d'Angouleme 0475 - 0509 Cloderic The Parricideof Cologne 34 34 0450 - 0509 Sigebert I of Cologne 59 59 0420 - 0450 Childebert of Cologne 30 30 0390 - 0420 Clovis of Cologne 30 30 0955 - 1006 Gisela of Burgundy 51 51 Garibald I of Bavaria 0530 Waldrada of Lombardy 0500 Agivald The Agilulfing Waccho of Lombardy 0508 Ostrogotha The Gepide 0948 Adalbert of Ivrea 0806 - >0876 Osburh deWight 70 70 0973 Alberic of MacOn D. 0971 Unknown Lietaud Ermengarde de Chalons 1092 - 1157 Sybilla Corbet 65 65 Sources state this is not the Mother of Robert. Further research will prove the correct line. ~0880 - 0931 Beatrice deVermandois 51 51 0875 - 0936 Heinrich I of Germany 61 61 0878 - 14 Mar 0966/0967 Matilda of Ringelheim ~0730 - 0770 Thuringbert deWormsgau 40 40 Rupert II - 0762 Theodedrata - 0853 - 0920 Dietrich of Ringelheim 67 67 0820 Gottfried Von Friesland 0863 - 0899 Arnulph of Carinthia 36 36 Oda of Bavaria 0752 - 0841 Harold King of Haithabu 89 89 Eudolph of Saxony Unknown Hatwige Bruno of Saxony Suana of Montfort D. 0843 Wigbart 0715 Warinus Count Ingram of Hasbania D. 0924 Berengarius of Frioul 0750 Gersvind of Saxony D. 0825 Wittekind of Saxony 1215 - 1268 William III Beauchamp 53 53 0918 - 0955 Henry I deBavaria 37 37 Wernicke of The Saxons Dietrich of Saxony Sighard of Saxony Berthold of Saxony Bodicus of Saxony Hulderick of Saxony Hathwigate of Saxony Hartwake of Saxony Hengest of Kent 0838 - 0905 Herbert I deVermandois 67 67 0920 - 0950 Lothar King of Italy 30 30 ~0799 Cuningundeof Italy ~0710 Unknown Williswint 0870 - 0942 Fulk I 72 72 Roscillem Toscanda Warnerius deLoches ~0840 I Ingelerius 0821 Tertullus of Anjou 0825 Petronilla deFrance 0770 Unknown Regina ~0744 Unknown Hiltrude 1100 Richard de Beaumont 0707 Luitfrid I - 0719 Edith - 0675 Adalbart 0679 Gerlinde - 0877 - UNKNOWN II Parkuritan 0882 Unknown deRennes ~1040 Robert deEstoteville 0860 Orequen deRennes ~1222 - 1273 Robert Tattershall 51 51 1244 Agnes de Ferrers 1217 - 1267 Isobel deMauduit 50 50 ~0675 Adelheim de Wormsgau ~0670 - 0741 Lambert II of Neustria 71 71 ~0726 - 0779 Gerold I von Schwaben 53 53  Count in the Anglachau ~0790 Unknown Adalhard ~0685 - 0744 Gerold of Mayenne 59 59 ~0697 - >0730 Hnabi Nebi D'alamania 33 33 Count of Linzgau ~0672 - 0727 Houching D'alamania 55 55 ~0672 Unknown Hersuinda ~0656 - 0709 Godfrey von Bayern 53 53 ~0637 - 0716 Theodo II von Bayern 79 79 1271 - 1315 Guy deBeauchamp 10th Earl of Warwick 44 44 Guy acquired high military honors in the martial reign of Edward I,distinguishing himself at the Battle of Falkirk, for which he wasrewarded with extensive grants of land in Scotland, at the seige ofCaerlaverock, and upon different occasions and also beyond the seas. Inthe reign of Edward II (1306-1326) he likewise played a very prominentpart. In 1310 his lordship was in the commission appointed by parliamentto draw up regulations for "the well governing of the kingdom and theking's household," in consequence of the corrupt influence at that periodby Piers Gaveston, in the affairs of the realm, through the unboundedpartiality of the king; and in two years afterwards, when that unhappyfavorite fell into the hands of his enemies, upon the surrender ofScarborough Castle, his lordship violently seized upon his person, andafter a summary trial caused him to be beheaded at Blacklow Hill nearWarwick. The Earl's hostility to Gaveston is said to have been muchincreased by learning that the favorite had nicknamed him "the Black Dogof Aedenne." For this unwarrantable proceeding his lordship, and allothers concerned therein, received in two years the royal pardon, but heis supposed to have eventually perished by poison, administered by thepartisans of Gaveston.
The Earl married Alice, daughter of Ralph de Toni, son (by Alice deBohun) of Ralph de Toni of Flamstead, County Herts, and had Thomas, hissuccessor, John, Maud, Emma, Isabel, Elizabeth and Lucia. This great Earlof Warwick was, like most of the nobles of his time, a munificentbenefactor to the church, having bestowed lands upon several religioushouses, and founded a chantry of priests at his Manor of Elmley. His willbears date "at Warwick Castle" on Monday next after the Feast of St.James the Apostle 1315, and by it he bequeaths to Alice, his wife, aproportion of his plate, with a crystal cup, and half his bedding; asalso all the vestments and books belonging to his chapel; the othermoiety of his beds, rings and jewels he gives to his daughters. To hisson Thomas his best coat of mail, helmet and suit of harness, and to hisson John his second suit of mail, etc., appointing that all the rest ofhis armour, bows and other warlike "provisions" should remain at WarwickCastle for his heir. His widow married 2nd William la Zouche of Ashby,County Leicester. The Earl died at Warwick Castle August 12, 1315,succeeded by his eldest son, then but two years of age.
Regentrudeof Austrasia Some sources state a birth of 634/5 ~0620 - 0641 Fara von Bayern 21 21 ~0602 - 0624 Chrodoalel von Bayern 22 22 ~0575 - 0616 Agiluf von Bayern 41 41 ~0586 Unknown Theudelinde 0565 Garibaldi von Bayern 0565 Waldrade di Lombardi Wacho Ostrogotha 0545 Theodebert Von Bayern ~0525 Theodon III von Bayern 1215 - 1258 John FitzGeoffrey 43 43 John was a man of great wealth and position, who was appointed Justice ofEngland, and at the coronation of King John, June 26, 1199, was girt withthe sword, as Earl of Essex, and then served at the King's table). JohnFitz-Goeffrey, on the death of his half-brother William in 1227, paid afine to the King of 300 marks for those lands which were his father's anddid by inheritance rightly belong to him, and whereof this last EarlWilliam died seized. In the 18th of Henry III, this John was constitutedSheriff of Yorkshire, and in the same reign was admitted one of the PrivyCouncil, and the same year was one of those sent to the Pope to prohibithis attempting anything therein prejudicial to the interests of the Kingand kingdom. In eight years afterwards John Fitz-Goeffrey was one of thecommissioners sent from King Henry III, with Roger Bigod and others, tothe Council at Lyons, in order to complain of the great exactions madeupon the realm by the Holy See; the next year he was constituted Justiceof Ireland, where for his services he received a grant from the crown ofthe Isles of Thomond. 0495 Theodon II von Bayern 0465 Theodon I von Bayern Arnoldus - Oda deSavoy ~0527 - ~0570 Ausbert Moselle 43 43 Princess Blithildus of Sessions Wambert - Adelbert - Long Haired Clodius Basina - 1190 - 1275 Hugh Le Bigod III Earl of Norfolk 85 85 Hugh Bigod, Surety for the Magna Charta. There are few particularsconcerning this baron's life extant, for he enjoyed the title of Earl ofNorfolk and Suffolk, and his father's estates and honors, only a fewyears, as he died in the 9th year of Henry III, 1225, only five yearsafter the death of his father in 1220. He married Maud, eldest daughterof William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Marshal of England,from which post the family assumed its surname. This William le Mareschalwas left at home when Richard I, Coeur de Lion, set out for the Holy Landon the Third Crusade, and was appointed one of the assistants to theChief Justice of England in the government of the realm during theabsence of the King. He had 5 sons, who all died sine prole, when all hishonors became extant, and his great inheritance devolved upon his 5daughters, Maud, Joane, Isabel, Sybil and Eve. King Pharamond of Westphalia Argotta of the East Franks ~0354 Duke Genebald of the East Franks Dagobert I - Clodius - King Theodomir of the Franks Richimir Hastila - Clodomir - Dagobert - 1189 - 1248 Maud Marshal 59 59 Walter Clodius - ~0180 King Bartherus of West Franks Hilderic - Sunno - Farabert - ~0104 King Clodomir of the Franks Hasilda deRugis Nicanor - Clodomir - 1134 - UNKNOWN Roger Le Bigod II Earl of Norfolk One of the 25 sureties of the Magna Carta. Steward of the Houshold of
Richard I and one of the four earls who carried the silken canopy over the
monarch's head at his second coronation. He was summoned to Parliament asa baron in 1177.  In 1200 this Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk was sent byKing John to William, the Lion, King of Scotland, to pay homage to theKing in the Parliament  held at Lincoln. Later he was won over to therebel barons and became one of the strongest advocates of the Charter ofLiberty, and chosen to help enforce this great instrument.
Bassanus Mangus Marcomir IV - Althildis deBritain King Coilus of Britain Odomar IV - 0860 - 0916 Regnier I "Longhals" of Hainault 56 56 ~0769 - 15 Feb 0823/0824 Hadrian D'orleans D. 0825 Richard of Amiens 0830 - ~0849 ErmengardePrincess of Lorraine 19 19 0918 - 0986 Harold I Gormsson 68 68 Garret Van Wart ~0915 Unknown Cyrid Concubine #4 ~0990 - 1057 Renaud I of Burgundy 67 67 0958 - 1026 Otto Guillaume de Burgundy 68 68 0935 - 0971 Adalbert II of Lombardy 36 36 0940 Gerberge deMacOn 0905 - 0961 Berenger II of Italy 56 56 0916 Willa D'arles 0785 - 0822 Rutpert III deWormsgau 37 37 ~0893 - 0925 Ragnvald The Viking 32 32 1020 - 1088 Oda (Eudes) de Conteville 68 68 ~1110 Ibena d'Strivers Sole heriss of father's estate 0820 Unknown Matilda Litwindeof Carinthia Theodore of Bavaria 0890 - 0939 Giselbert II deLorraine 49 49 ~0785 - 0807 II Rupert 22 22 0920 - 15 Mar 0972/0973 Renaud deRoucy Willa Tuscany 0982 - 1017 Judith of Brittany 35 35 0958 - 1027 Richard II The Good 69 69 0879 - 0929 Charles III The Simple 50 50 1140 - 1179 Eva Princess of Leinster Countess of Ireland 39 39 0747 - 28 Jan 0813/0814 Charlemagne 0810 Adelaideof France 0795 - 20 Mar 0850/0851 Ermengardeof Tours 0830 - 0880 Carloman of Bavaria 50 50 0920 - 0954 Louis IV D'outremer 34 34 0797 - 0818 Bernard of Italy 21 21 King of Italy 0818 - ~0892 Pepin Quentin deVermandois 74 74 0897 Hildebrante Liegarde 0918 Robert deVermandois 0914 - 0967 Adelaide de Chalons 53 53 1100 - 1171 Dairmait MacMurchada King of Leinster 71 71 ~0950 - 16 Mar 0974/0975 Adelaide de Vermandois Sources: Ancestral Roots 118; Kraentzler 1152, 1167, 1432. Anst. Roots: Adelaide de Vermandois; born 950, died 975/8. Geoffrey was her second husband. AKA:  Adelaide de Troyes. 0938 - 0987 Geoffrey deAnjou 48 48 Seneschal of France

Sources: RC 91; 157, 167; A. Roots 39, 40, 118; AF; Kraentzler 1152, 1167, 1194, 1432; Pfafman. RC: Count of Anjou. Senescal of France. Killed in battle. AKA:  Geoffroy "Grisgonelle," Count d'Anjou, Senechal de France. Anst.  Roots: Geoffrey I "Grisgonelle", Count of Anjou. Died 21 July 987.
0777 Bertha Toulouse Queen of Italy 0797 - ~0835 Unknown Cunigunde 38 38 0872 Poppa deValois Unknown Adalind Unknown Mistress Unknown Maedlgard 0802 Hugues Abbot of St. Quentin Unknown Fastrada D. UNKNOWN Gormflaith O'Néill 0689 - ~0757 Robert deWormsgau 68 68 0778 - 0818 Ermengardeof Hesbaye 40 40 0750 Irmentrudeof Swabia ~0730 Unknown Berengarius ~0820 - 0866 Rutpert IV deParis 46 46 0865 - 0923 Robert I of France 58 58 0802 Eystein Hognasson 0836 - 0912 Otto Duke of Saxony 76 76 0842 - 0903 Hedwige of Germany 61 61 0913 - 0984 Gerberge of Saxony 71 71 1079 - UNKNOWN Orlaith ingen O'Braenain 0890 Aedgifu of England 0915 Liutgarde Vermandois 0806 - 0858 Aethelwulf Wessex 52 52 Braut- Onond Ingvarsson Aya Eysteinsdottir Ingvar Eysteinsson of Sweden Eystein Adilsson of Sweden Sigurd II Ragnarsson Ragnar Sigurdsson Aslang Sigurdsdottir D. 1069 Faelan O'Morda King of Loigsi 0690 Sigurd Randversson ~0724 Alfhild Gandolfsdottir 0650 Rurick of Russia 0530 Ogne Norbrilsdottir ~0612 Ivar Halfdansson ~0590 Halfdan Haroldsson 0595 Unknown Maolda ~0568 Harold Valdarsson ~0547 Valdar Hroarsson 0550 Hildis 1082 - 1149 Cacht ingen Loigsig O'Morda of Leix 67 67 0795 - 0855 I Lothaire 60 60 0827 - 0869 II Lothaire 42 42 0830 Baldwin of Metz 0830 Richildeof Arles 0800 - 0855 Boso III "The Old" 55 55 0770 - >0826 Boso II de Arles 56 56 ~0821 - Aft. 1 Jul 874 Gisela of France 0780 - >0839 Hunroch of Frioul 59 59 0820 - 0866 Eberhard deFriuli 46 46 D. 0680 Unknown Leudisius 1055 - 1149 Loigsech O'Morda of Leix King of Loigsi 94 94 ~0727 - 0795 Imma Emma D'alamania 68 68 Wulfrthyth ~0701 I Luitfride ~0719 Unknown Edith ~0675 Unknown Adalbert ~0645 Eticho I Alsace ~0649 Berswinda 0630 - 0656 Sigebert III 26 26 Austrasia,  King of the Franks 0548 Fredegonda 0498 - 0561 Clothaire I 63 63 1065 - 1152 Gormflaith ingen Finn O'Caellaide 87 87 ~0465 - 0511 Clovis II 46 46 ~0475 - 0548 Clothilde 73 73 Niece of the King of Burgundy Unknown Galswintha 0800 Unknown mistress D. 0720 Adalricus Ethicus 0823 - 0877 Charles II The Bald 54 54 0758 - 0783 Hildegardeof Vinzgau 25 25 Countess of Vinzgau, Aachen, Rhineland 0773 - 0810 Pepin I 37 37 0830 - 0869 Ermentrudeof Orleans 38 38 Ricardis of Metz 1055 - 1119 Gilla Comgaill O'Toole 64 64 ~1070 Ranulf II de Meschines Adam FitzHerbert 0762 - 0789 Unknown Theodedrata 27 27 ~1003 Alice AdelaideJudith of Normandy 0962 - 5 Mar 1004/1005 Ermentrude De Roucy Queen of Lombardy

Countess of Rheims
0844 - 0870 Judith of France 26 26 ~0822 Aethelred 0852 - 0905 Alswitha of Mercia 53 53 ~0820 Guerri I of Morvois ~0820 Eve of Roussillon 1005 - 1059 Donncuan O'Toole 54 54 ~1169 - 1227 Emma Pantulf 58 58 0800 - 0877 Gerard of Roussillon 77 77 0782 Lisiard of Fezenzac 0760 - 0816 Begue of Paris 56 56 0774 - >0852 Unknown Aupais 78 78 ~0708 - >0775 Unknown Girard 67 67 ~0718 Unknown Rotrude ~0698 Unknown Carloman 0676 - 0741 Charles Martel 65 65 0690 - ~0724 Rotrude De Austrasia 34 34 0635 - 0741 Pepin II of Herestal 106 106 0980 - 1041 Ua Tuathail Prince of Leinster 61 61 ~0654 Aupais (Alpaide) Herestal ~0742 Unknown Himiltrude Unknown Lendisius Unknown Erchembeldag 0820 - 0875 Unknown Frotho 55 55 ~0780 Oslac The Thane 0775 - 4 Feb 0835/0836 Eggbert of England ~0758 - 0838 Aclkmund of Kent 80 80 ~0740 - ~0781 II Luitfride 41 41 ~0679 Unknown Gerlinda 0950 - 1041 Donn Cuan "The Simpleton King" of Leinster 91 91 Unknown Aldaric Berswinda deAutun Unknown Aldare ~0640 Unknown Doda ~0850 Richildis deMetz 0800 - 0843 Judith of Bavaria 43 43 0740 Boso I de Arles Unknown Asloga 0750 - 0820 Horda Knut Sigurdsson 70 70 Sigurd Snodoye Ragnarsdottir 0920 - 1014 Dunlaing II King of Leinster 94 94 0695 - 0794 Unknown Sigurd 99 99 Aslanga Sigurdsdottir 0675 - 0750 Raynor Lodbrok 75 75 Harold Hilditonn ~0640 - 0680 Martin of Laon 40 40 Rotrude D'alemannia Charibert of Neustria Unknown Ansaud Unknown Papinilla Unknown Ricomer 0890 - 0958 Tuathal King of Leinster 68 68 ~0755 Gibour von Hornbach ~0745 - ~0812 William Toulouse 67 67 Unknown Clodereius 0523 - 0611 Ansbertus of Metz 88 88 0550 Unknown Erchenaud Unknown Gerberge ~0885 Gisele D'italy 0875 - 0925 Adalbert D'ivrea 50 50 ~0851 - 0924 Berenger I deFriuli 73 73 ~0855 Berthe deSpolete 0860 - 0958 Augaire King of Leinster 98 98 ~0790 Hrolf Nefja 0943 - 19 Mar 0967/0968 Emma of France deMetz Ermengarde Aubric deNarbonne Erolane deMacOn Unknown Berta <0840 Thierry II deChalons Count de Chalons ~0820 Thierry I deAutun Dunne of Autun 0800 - 0869 Dunlaing King of Leinster 69 69 D. 0880 Ansgardeof Burgundy Regentrude Daughter of Theodo II ~0872 - 0917 Theodoric Von Ringelheim 45 45 Count of Ringelheim 0871 - 0924 Edward I of England 53 53 0788 Unknown Redburgh ~0732 Eaba of West Saxon ~0676 - 0718 Ingild of West Saxon 42 42 ~0684 Unknown Ethelburgh ~0644 Cenred of West Saxon 0770 - 0818 Muiredach King of Leinster 48 48 ~0622 Unknown Ceolwald ~0600 Unknown Cuthwulf D. <0852 Inigo Garciez ~0547 - 0591 Ceawlin Wessex 44 44 King of West Saxon ~0525 - 0560 Cynric Wessex 35 35 King of West Saxon ~0493 Crioda of West Saxon ~0467 - 0534 Cerdic of West Saxon 67 67 ~0471 Unknown Hengist ~0439 Unknown Elesa ~0411 Unknown Esla 0740 - 0795 Bran Ardcenn King of Leinster 55 55 ~0383 Unknown Gewis ~0355 Wig ~0327 Unknown Freawine ~0299 Unknown Frithogar ~0271 Unknown Brand ~0243 Beldeg Balder ~0247 Nanna of Norway ~0220 Unknown Fourth ~0190 Unknown Frithuwald ~0194 Unknown Beltsa 0710 - 0760 Muiredach King of Leinster 50 50 ~0170 Unknown Freothelaf ~0150 Unknown Frithwulf ~0130 Unknown Finn Unknown Flocwald Unknown Scealdea Unknown Sceaf ~0879 Ludmilla Reinhildis Unknown Itormann Unknown Athra Unknown Hwala 0670 - 0726 Murchad King of Leinster 56 56 0440 Adelbert So. Franks Unknown Bedwig Unknown Seskef Unknown Magi Unknown Moda Unknown Vingener Unknown Vingethorr Unknown Eiaridi Unknown Hloritha Unknown Vingener Tror 0640 - 0693 Bran Muit King of Leinster 53 53 Unknown Memnon daughter of Priam Unknown Priam Lame oedon Unknown Ilus Tros Unknown Erichthonius Unknown Darda Zarah Unknown Judah 0600 - 0672 Conall King of Leinster 72 72 Unknown Tamar 1836 - 1689 Jacob Israel 147 147 Unknown Leah 1896 - 1689 Isaac 207 207 Unknown Rebekah 1996 - 1872 Abraham 124 124 Unknown Sarah 2122 - 1917 Unknown Terah 205 205 2152 - 2003 Unknown Nahor 149 149 2181 - 1951 Unknown Serug 230 230 0570 - 0665 Faelan King of Leinster 95 95 2213 - 1973 Unknown Reu 240 240 2244 - 2004 Peleg 240 240 2277 - 1814 Eber 463 463 2307 - 1874 Unknown Salah 433 433 2342 - 1904 Unknown Arphaxad 438 438 2442 - 1842 Unknown Shem 600 600 2944 - 1998 Noah 946 946 3126 - 2349 Unknown Lamech 777 777 3313 - 2344 Methuselah 969 969 3378 - 3013 Unknown Enoch 365 365 0530 - 0576 Colman Mor King of Leinster 46 46 3540 - 2578 Unknown Jared 962 962 3605 - 2710 Unknown Mahalaleel 895 895 3675 - 2765 Unknown Cainan 910 910 3765 - 2860 Unknown Enos 905 905 3870 - 2978 Unknown Seth 892 892 4000 - 3070 Unknown Adam 930 930 4000 Unknown Eve Unknown Laban 0217 Gewar of Norway Papia deNormandy 0500 - 0546 Cairpre King of Leinster 46 46 ~0843 - 0871 Aethelred Wessex 28 28 King of Wessex Leutharius Gallo Roman 0828 Reginhart deRingleheim ~0810 - 31 Jan 0874/0875 Emma of Bavaria 0896 - ~0919 Aelflaeda of England 23 23 0849 - 0901 Alfred The Great 52 52 0885 - 0940 Boso Tuscany 55 55 ~0815 Guerin deChalons ~0859 Aethelhelm de Wiltshire 0836 - 0870 Eystein Glumra Ivarsson 34 34 0470 - 0535 Cormac King of Leinster 65 65 Hogne Eysteinsson 0755 Eystein of Hedmar Unknown Gunhilda Blithildes The Merovingian Daughter of Leutharius 0526 Hroar Halfdansson 0653 Auda Ivarsdottir 0507 Unknown Sigris 0456 Fridleif Frodisson 0391 Olaf Vermundsson 0440 - 0526 Ailill King of Leinster 86 86 0395 Unknown Dampi 0366 Wermund Frodasson 0325 Havar Fridleifsson 0303 Fridleif Frodisson 0259 Fridleaf Skjoldsson 0237 I Skjold 0241 Unknown Gefion 0215 Odin 0219 Unknown Frigg 0190 Unknown Frithuwald 0410 - 0490 Naill King of Leinster 80 80 Maud de Botetourt ~0160 Unknown Frealaf Unknown Frithiwulf Unknown Finn 0101 Unknown Godwulf 0179 Unknown Geata 0249 Unknown Taetwa Unknown Beowa 0459 Unknown Heremod 0529 Unknown Itermon 0380 - 0455 Ennde Nia 75 75 0599 Unknown Hathra 0669 Unknown Hwala 0739 Unknown Bedwig 0809 Unknown Seskaf 0879 Unknown Maji 0949 Unknown Moda 1019 Unknown Vingener 1089 Unknown Vingethor 1140 Unknown Einridi 1170 Unknown Loridi 0360 - 0436 Bressal Belach King of Leinster 76 76 1187 - 1226 Louis VIII France 39 39 1  NAME Louis VIII King of /France/
1  BIRT
2  DATE 3 SEP 1187
2  PLAC Paris, Isle De France, France
1  DEAT
2  DATE 8 NOV 1226
2  PLAC Chateau De Montspensier, Auvergne
1200 Unknown Thor 1180 Unknown Sibil 1230 Unknown Memnon 1225 Troana 0638 Radbard of Russia 0690 Randver Radbardsson Hild Eiriksdottir Ottar Egilsson Egil Anunsson Aun "The Aged" Jorundsson 0320 - 0393 Fiachu Ba Aiccid 73 73 Unknown Jorund Unknown Yngvi Unknown Alrek Unknown Agni Unknown Dag Unknown Dyggvi Unknown Domar Unknown Domaldi 0319 Unknown Visbur Solwieg Halfdansdottir 0299 - 0370 Caithair Mar King of Leinster 71 71 Unknown Thrond 0937 - 0992 Conan I Le Tort 55 55 ~0955 - 0992 Ermengardeof Anjou 37 37 Unknown Ega Unknown Gerburga Unknown Richemeres D. 0655 Unknown Gertrude D. 0570 Unknown Anabertus D. 0528 Wambertus D. 0491 Unknown Adalbertus 0268 - 0341 Felim Fiorurglas 73 73 ~0370 - 0430 Unknown Pharamond 60 60 0347 - 0404 Unknown Marcomir 57 57 ~0840 Aethelwulf of Mercia ~0822 Edburga of Mercia ~0860 Aethelgyth of Mercia ~0859 Aethelhelm of Wiltshire Unknown Aslanga Unknown Rurik 0650 Sigurd Ring Frotho of denmark 1183 - 1230 Gilbert de Clare 47 47 Sir Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hereford and Earl of Gloucester, Suretyfor the Magna Charta, married Isabel de Mareschal or Marshall, one of thedaughters of William de Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, Protector ofEngland. Sir Gilbert de Clare died Oct. 25, 1230.
Source:  Browning's Magna Charta Barons and Their Descendants, pp. 94-96,122-3, 305.
Unknown Hroerekr 0894 Willa di Tuscany 0855 - 0895 Theobald of Arles 40 40 0862 Bertha of Lorraine 0826 Engeltrude D'alsace Chrotlind of The Franks ~0800 - >0827 Amadeus of Burgundy 27 27 D. ~0896 Anscario II of Ivrea Giselle 0865 - 0932 Hersent of France 67 67 1222 - 1262 Richard I deClare Earl of Gloucester 39 39 Sir Richard de Clare, Earl of Hereford and Gloucester, born Aug. 1, 1222,died July 15, 1262, married Feb., 1237, Maud de Lacie, daughter of SirJohn de Lacie, Surety for the Magna Charta, Earl of Lincoln, 7th BaronHalton, and hereditary Constable of Chester, and his wife, Margaret, onlydaughter and heiress of Robert de Quincey, and his wife, Hawise, daughterof Hugh de Keveliock, 5th Earl of Chester, son of Saire de Quincey,Surety for the Magna Charta, and his wife, Margaret de Bellomont,descended from Henry I, King of France.
Source:  Browning's Magna Charta Barons and Their Descendants, pp. 94-96,122-3, 305.
0830 - 0892 Giselbert of Brabant 62 62 ~0779 - 0837 Bava 58 58 Daughter of Aethelbert of Kent de Kent ~0870 Alberadeof Mons ~0800 - ~0842 Giselbert Maasgau 42 42 Gainfroi Sens D. >0795 Theidlindis of Blois D. 0800 Mainier of Austrasia Aubrey II of Blois 1190 Margaret Scott de Huntington Aubrey I of Blois Adela de Austrasia 0652 - 0679 Dagobert II 27 27 King of Austrasia D. 0670 Mechtilde Unknown Caratone ~0385 - 0436 Unknown Gundicus 51 51 Unknown Gislahaire Unknown Godomar Gibica of East Rhine 0436 Childeric I 1687 Valentine Archer ~0438 Basina Thuringia ~0415 - 0458 Unknown Merovech 43 43 ~0419 Unknown Verica ~0385 - 0448 Childeric "Long Haired" 63 63 ~0398 Basina of Thuringia ~0376 Unknown Argotta Unknown Frotmund ~0324 I Clodius ~0300 - 0379 Unknown Dagobert 79 79 ~0262 - 0358 Unknown Genebald 96 96 1272 - 1325 Alice deToeni 53 53 ~0230 - 0317 Unknown Dagobert 87 87 <0298 - 0306 Walter 8 8 <0272 - 0298 III Clodis 26 26 <0272 Unknown Bartherus <0212 - 0253 Unknown Hilderic 41 41 <0186 - 0213 Unknown Sunno 27 27 ~0354 - 0419 I Genebald 65 65 ~0193 Unknown Cadwalladr 1275 - 1323 Peter FitzReginald 48 48 Alice Broadspear 1255 - 1296 Ralph VII deToeni 41 41 Blethin Broadspear D. BEF. 15 MAR 1543/44 Maurice Gethin Mailt Verch Gryfydd D. ~1207 Madog Ap Rhirid Flaidd Lord Of Penllyn Lord Of Broughton Jenkin Eva Verch Ifan Ap Einion Ap Llowarch William Cogan ~1278 Margaret Fitzralph Lowry Verch Howel Ap Gruffydd Goch Ap Dafydd Rhys Ap Meredydd Ap Tudur Ap Howel  standard bearer at the battle of bosworth fo r henry vii tudor;
byuried at yspytty church where alalbaster effigies fo himself and his wife may be seen
1215 - 1302 William deFiennes II Count De Fiennes 87 87 ~1129 - ~1174 Iorwerth Drwyndwn ap Owain 45 45  Prince North Wales

Prince North Wales
Eva Verch Ieuan Ap Rhys Wynne Roger Hoeskin Holland Margaret Verch Dafydd Chwyth Ap Dafydd Dafydd Chwith Ap Dafydd William Troutbeck John Holland Roger Troutbeck Thomas Holland Jane Valence Fulke Valence D. UNKNOWN Ralph deFay Thomas Holland Joyce Croft Jasper Croft D. >1343 Iorwerth Y Penwyn Angharad Verch Heilyn Ap Sir Tudur D. ~1483 David Myddleton  Receiver General for North Wales in the time of Edward IV and Richard III
Receiver General Of North Wales
Elin Done John Done Jenkin Done Ann Myddleton ~1253 - <1326 Mary de Ros 73 73 Rhirid Myddleton Margaret Verch David Ap Howel David Ap Howel, Lord Of Arwystli Alawn Verch Gruffydd Ap Jenkin Gruffyd Ap Jenkin Lord of Broughton Robert Myddleton Catherine Meredydd Robert Meredydd D. <1396 Rhirid Ap David Ap David Ap Rhirid Vychan Cecilia Middleton 0792 - 0873 Wigmund of Mercia 81 81 Alexander Middleton D. >1375 David Ap David Jonet Verch David Vychan ap David Ap Cadwaladr David Ap Rhirid Vychan Margaret Verch Gruffydd Ap Goronwy Rhirid Vychan Ap Madog Gwenllian Verch Dafydd Ap Cadwaladr Roger Holland Jane Troutbeck Angharad Holland 0799 - 0880 Elflega of Mercia 81 81 Rhys Wynn Ap David Llwyd Heilynn Gloff Ap Tyfid Ap Tangno Ap Ystryth Margred ferch Morus Gethin ap Rhys Meredydd Ap Tudur Ap Howel Ap Cynwrig Vychan Tudur Ap Howel Ap Cynwrig Vychan Howel Ap Cynwrig Vychan Ap Llowarch ~1159 - >1211 Richard de Molyneux 52 52 ~1198 Alice Thorpe ~1246 Herbert Flinton ~1260 John Skipwith 0762 - 0833 Witglaff King of Mercia 71 71 Gwenllian Verch Madog Ap Rhirid Flaidd Llowarch Ap Heilynn Gloff Ap Tyfid Ap Tangno Cynwrig Ap Llowarch Ap Heilynn Gloff Ap Tyfid Dyddu Verch Cadwgan Fottwm Ap Ednyfed Cadwgan Fottwm Ap Ednyfed Ap Cadwgan Ddu Madog Goch Ap Iorwerth Ap Gwrgenau D. ~1377 Cynwrig Vychan Ap Llowarch Ap Heilynn Gloff Morfydd Verch Madog Ddu Ap Madog Goch Madog Ddu Ap Madog Goch Ap Iorwerth Cynwrig Ap Cynddelw Gam 1140 - 1213 Alix deChampagne 73 73 Ieuan Ap Rhys Wynn Ap David Llwyd Margaret Verch Robert Ap Iorwerth Ap Madog Robert Ap Iorwerth Ap Madog Ap Ednyfed Vychan Iorwerth Ap Madog Ap Ednyfed Vychan Madog Ap Ednyfed Vychan Ednyfed Vychan D. >1343 David Llwyd Ap Iorwerth Y Penwyn Nest Verch Robert Ap Gruffydd Robert Ap Gruffydd ~1325 - >1392 William Skipwith 67 67 1092 - 1152 Theobald III 4th Count of Blois 60 60 Dafydd Goch Jones Ap Hwfa Ap Ithel Felyn Ithel Ap Jones Ap Hwfa Ap Ithel Felyn Madog Ap Ithel Ap Jones Ap Hwfa Meredydd Ap Madog Ap Ithel Ap Jones Susannan Verch Meredydd Ap Madog Ap Ithel Margaret Verch Howel Tangno Ap Ystryth Ap Marchwystl Ap Marchweithi Tyfid Ap Tangno Ap Ystryth Ap Marchwystl John ap Maredudd Llwyd 0870 - 0942 William I Longsword II Duke of Normandy 72 72 William, eldest son of Rollo, surnamed Longa Spatha, Long-Sword, Duke ofNormandy, married Adela, daughter of Hubert, Count of Senlis, and dyingin 948, slain, it is said by the treachery of Arnulph, Count of Flanders,left a son and successor, Richard I, Duke of Normandy. ~1299 Margaret Fitzsimon Maredudd Llwyd ap Llywelyn Jonet ferch Gwilym ap Llywelyn Llwyd Llywelyn ap Gruffudd Llwyd ap Robin Dyddgu ferch Dafydd Llwyd Dafydd Llwyd ap Gruffudd Gwen ferch Gruffudd Goch ap Leuan Gruffudd ap Cynwrig Bleddyn Llwyd Lleucu ferch Maredudd ~1230 Gwyn ap Madog 0867 - UNKNOWN Hrollangr Rognvaldsson Meredydd ap Ievan ~1314 Efa ferch Einion ~1275 - >1329 Dafydd ap Trahearn 54 54 ~1279 Mawd ferch Dafydd ~1253 Dafydd ap Cynwig ~1255 Annes ferch Gwyn ~0367 Gadeon ap Cynon\ Eudaf ~1232 Angharad ferch Thomas ~0450 Cenue ap Coel Hen Morfudd ferch Gruffudd Llywelyn faychan 0818 - UNKNOWN Eysteinsdotter Throndheim 0480 Wambert Ferreolus 1059 Henry IX deBavaria ~0420 Coel Hen ~1230 Tanglwyst ferch Gronwy ~1250 - >1273 Trahairn "Goch" ap Madoc 23 23 ~0407 Tudwal ap Gwefawr\ Morfawr ~1257 Gwyrryl ferch Madog ~1312 - >1352 Ievan "Gouch" ap Dafydd 40 40 ~1284 Einion ap Celynin ~0997 - 1093 Rhys ap Tewdwr 96 96 Nest ferch Rhys ~1041 Gladwise ferch Rhiwallon 0836 - 0875 Eystein Ivarsson Glumra 39 39 Susan of North Wales D. 0927 Sigtryg , King of Dublin & York Unknown1 ~1065 - 1162 Anghard ferch Owain 97 97 1055 - 1137 Griffith ap Cynan 82 82 ~1100 - 1170 Owen I Gwyned , Prince of North Wales 70 70 Madoc Prince of Powis ~0740 - 0808 Cadell ap Brochwel 68 68 ~0997 Gwenlian of Anglesea ~1081 - 1137 Gruffud ap Rhys 56 56 0810 - 0870 Ivar Oplaendinge Jarl of the Uplanders of Norway 60 60 ~1090 Gwenllian II Verch Gruffydd ~1127 - 1197 Rhys ap Gruffudd 70 70 Griffith , Lord of Cymcydmaen ~1140 Gwladys ferch Griffith ~1167 Rhys "Golff" ap Rhys Maelywn ap Cadwalader ~1191 Gwyrryl ferch Maelgwn ~1225 - >1292 Madoc ap Rhys 67 67 ~0420 Ystradwel ferch Gadeon 1375 - 1423 Hugh Annesley 48 48 0775 - 0840 Halfdan "The Old" Eysteinsson 65 65 ~1185 - WFT EST 1204-1276 Ralph Whitfield Alice de Neville ~1208 - 1246 David Dafydd ap Llewelyn Fawr 38 38 ~1062 - 1116 Adelmode de la Marche 54 54 Eachraid ~0407 Anlach ap Coronac ~0407 Marchell ferch Tewdrig ~1228 Cynwrig ap Llywelyn ~0387 Gwrfawr\ Morfawr ap Gadeon Llywelyn ap Dafydd , Constable of Rhuddlau 0879 - UNKNOWN Charles III "The Simple" King of France unknown mistress2 Isabel deBraose Amice deMontfort Eve fitz Warin Ralph de Neville 1150 - 1204 Geoffrey de Stapleton 54 54 ~1000 - ~1037 Eleanor de Normandy 37 37 Thomas Gregor Ioreth ap Cyndel Madog ap Ioreth 0902 - UNKNOWN Edgifu Meurig ap Madog Cyndel ap Elystan ~0495 Elidir Lydanwyn ap Meirchion ~0480 Meirchion ap Gwrgust ~0495 Gwawr ferch Brychan ~0510 - ~0600 Llywarch Hen ap Elidir Lydanwyn 90 90 ~0405 Gratian ferch Macsen Wledig Madoc ap Meurig ~0540 Douc ap Llywarth ~0755 Elidir ap Sandef D. UNKNOWN Aelflaeda ~0600 Tegid ap Gweir Wife 1 ~1002 Cynfyn ap Gwerystan ~0959 Gronwy ap Einion ~0970 Gwerystan ap Gwaithfoed ~0630 Alkwn ap Tegid ~0977 Tudor "Mawr" ap Cadell ~0670 - ~0750 Elisse ap Gwylog 80 80 ~0953 Cadell ap Einion ~0917 Angharat ferch Llewwlyn Queen of Powys 0775 - 0839 Ecgbert III Wessex 64 64 In 825 Egbert annexed Kent, Surrey, Essex and Sussex. In 829 Mercia fellto Egbert and Northumbria soon acknowledged his lordship. As the overlordof all the English Kings he is considered the first King of England. "TheOxford History of Britain" Kenneth O. Morgan. The House of Wessex lineagetraced from "The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy" JohnCannon & Ralp Griffiths. ~0890 Llewellyn ap Merfyn , Prince of Powys ~1007 Elinor ferch Gwerystan ~0928 Cadel ap Brochwel ~0970 Nest ferch Cadell ~0893 - 0943 Elen verch Llywarch of Dyfed 50 50 ~0918 Anghard ferch Llewelyn ~0934 Nest ~0933 Gwaithfoed ap Gwynnan ~0437 Prawst ferch Tudwal ~0725 - 0754 Rhodri "Molwynog" ap Idwal 29 29 D. UNKNOWN Ecgwyn Margaret of Ireland ~0775 - 0818 Cynan ap Rhodri 43 43 ~0775 Margaret of Flint ~0800 Essylt ferch Cynan ~0700 Brochwel ap Elisse ~0775 Gwriad ap Elidir ~0800 - 0843 Merfyn "Frych" ap Gwriad 43 43 ~0825 - 0878 Rhodri "Mawr" ap Merfyn 53 53 Duptory ~0830 Angharad ferch Meurig 0914 - 0946 Edmund I England 32 32 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Uithyr Pendragon ~0570 Gweir ap Douc ~0800 Meurig ap Dyfnwallon ~0755 Dyfnwallon ap Arthen ~0725 - 0807 Arthen ap Seisyll 82 82 ~0690 - ~0730 Seissil ap Arthlwys 40 40 ~0680 - 0712 Idwal "Iwrch" ap Cadwaladr 32 32 ~0633 Cadwaladr ap Cadwallon ~0437 Brychan ap Anlach Anna 1067 - UNKNOWN John II Comnenus Emperor of the Byzantine Empire Comnenus, the name of a Byzantine family, which from 1081 to 1185,occupied the throne of Constantinople, originally came from Paphlagonia.The Comneni, who for a while upheld the fate of the sinking Empire,assumed the honor of a Roman origin, but the family had long since beentransported from Italy to Asia. The first of their line was theillustrious Manual, who, in the reign of Basil II, Roman Emperor,958-963, of the Macedonian Dynasty, contributed by war and treaty toappease the troubles of the East. D. 0918 Conrad I ~0660 Sanddef ap Alkwn ~0775 Nest ferch Cadell ~0465 Gwrgust ap Cenue ~0510 Anllech ap Tudwall ~0540 Cynin ap Anllech ~0570 Merfyn Mawr ap Cynin King of Man ~0600 Anarawd Gwalch ap Merfyn ~0630 Tudwal ap Anarawd ~0660 Celeinion ferch Tudwal ~0640 Gwylog ap Beli King of Powis 0810 - 0846 Osburh Von Wessex 36 36 ~0640 Sanant ap Noe ~0610 Noe of Dyfed Arthur of Dyfed ~0610 Beli ap Eilud ~0580 Eilud ap Cynan D. 1078 Trahaern ap Caradoc , Prince of North Wales ~0570 Tandreg "Ddu" ferch Cynan ~1059 Nest ferch Gruffydd ~0695 Agatha deBritany Caradoc Prince of Wales 0982 - 1037 Nevia 55 55 ~0620 of Mercia ~0605 Pybba ~0575 Crioda King of Mercia ~0545 Cynewald of Mercia ~0640 Alan deBritany ~0550 Gwen ~0530 - 0896 Domongart 366 366 ~0980 - 1023 Llewelyn ap Seisyllt , Prince of Wales 43 43 ~0545 Cynan "Garwyn" ap Brochwel ~0530 Brochmael Isgythrawg ap Cyngen 1011 - 1077 Gertrude Von Egisheim 66 66 ~0520 Arddun ferch Pabo ~0545 - 0599 Beli ap Rhun 54 54 ~0540 - 0613 Iago ap Beli 73 73 ~0570 - 0630 Cadfan ap Iago 60 60 ~0595 - 0634 Cadwallon ap Cadfan 39 39 D. 1129 Llywarch of North Wales Gladys of North Wales unknown2 mistress ~0105 - 1068 Rhywallen ap Cynfyn Prince of Powis 963 963 D. 1073/1075 Blethyn Prince of Powis 1673 Marie Devou ~0880 Hugues I deLusignan D. 1122 Meredith Prince of Powis Idnerth , Lord of Builth Gwenlian Aaron Paed Hen Cadogan , Lord of Builth Margaret Brockwell Aeddan 1000 - 1057 Edmund II "Ironside" King of England 57 57 0982 - ~1010 Eystan Glodrydd 28 28 Gladys Rhyn Cynelin , Lord of Bulith Gwyn D. 1161 Melisende of Jerusalem Dyddgu of Builth ~1208 - ~1288 Ralph* deStandish 80 80 D. 1037 Foucauld , Sire dela Roche Hildegarde de Baugency 0944 - 1027 Gautier II the White Count deVexin 83 83 Count of Amiens ~0986 - 1040 Renaud I , Count of Nevers & Auxerre 54 54 Haer Cilin Blaidd Rhudd , Lord of Gest Hunydd Eunyid of Dyffrynclwyd Eva Morien of Cardigan Gwenlian Morgan Gwernwy 0953 - 0990 Gui Vermandois Count of Soissons 37 37 Gwaithgenau Rhys Marchion of Dyffrynclwyd Marchweithian of Llewenny Llewellyn Dolfyn Llewelyn Eurdorehog , Lord of Yale 1031 - 1090 Robert de Mortaigne 59 59 ~0112 Mistress ~1027 Aelfled of Berncia Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1090 - 1147 Robert deCaeny 57 57 0953 - 1009 Adelaideof Soissons 56 56 ~1068 Edith a concubine D. 0890 Guthorm , King ~1020 - 1055 Siward Biornsson 35 35 MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1009 - 1040 Sibyl fitz Seward 31 31 ~1348 Miss Standish ~1062 - 1110 Helias of Maine 48 48 ~1062 - >1099 Maud deChateau du Loire 37 37 ~1002 - 1055 Lanzelin I , Seigneur deBaugency 53 53 ~1032 - >1099 Gervase , Seigneur deChateau de Loire 67 67 ~1032 Erenburg 0972 - 1070 Aelis of Soissons 98 98 ~1002 Robert de Loire ~0973 Doda Beatrix of Geneva ~1092 - 1126 Ermengarde du Maine 34 34 1043 - 1109 Fulk IV "Rechin" , Count of Anjou 66 66 ~1017 Elise of Corbeil ~0983 - >1000 Geoffrey I , Count of the Gatinais 17 17 ~0986 - 1067 Richard , Count d'Evereux 81 81 ~1030 Agnes D'Evereux ~1026 - 1087 Simon I deMontfort 61 61 0970 - 1040 Nocher II Count of Bar-Sur-Aube 70 70 1216 - 16 Mar 1278/1279 Jeanne deDammartin Jeanne succeeded to the County of Aumale in 1239 at the death of herfather and to those of Ponthieu and Montgomerie in 1251. She marriedafter 1237 Ferdinand III, called the Saint, King of Castile and Leon. Shehad been contracted in marriage to Henry III of England, who had, indeed,married her by proxy, but St. Louis (Louis IX of France) compelled herfather to break this alliance, which was in contravention of one of theconditions of his pardon in 1230 that he should not give his daughters inmarriage to a declared enemy of the King. Ferdinand died May 30, 1252,and Jeanne returned to France with Prince Ferdinand, her eldest son. Shemarried 2nd Jean de Nesle and died at Abbeville March 26, 1279. By KingFerdinand she had three sons, who died before her, and a daughter,Eleanor of Castile, the wife of Edward I, King of England. Countess of Ponthieu. ~0984 Bethoc\Beatrice , Princess of Scotland 0978 - 1045 Crinan 67 67 Gersinde ~1034 Ponce ~0910 Hugues II deLusignan ~0970 - ~1048 William deBelleme 78 78 ~0970 - 1051 Ralph\ Rodulf II deToeni 81 81 ~1004 Adela deToni Nicholas Grindall William Atwood 0990 - 1060 Nocher III Count of Bar-Sur-Aube 70 70 ~1026 - <1055 Isabel deBroyes 29 29 Papia ~0960 - ~0999 Elizabeth deVendome 39 39 ~0996 - >1031 Amaury II deMontfort 35 35 Elisant D. 1125 Henry V , Holy Roman Emperor Constance of Brittany 1526/1533 - 1556 Robert Peck ~1008 - 1038 Ludolf 30 30 ~0988 - 1077 Gertruda of Egisheim 89 89 1012 - 1043 Adele of Bar-Sur- Aube 31 31 ~1002 - 1036 Herbert , Count of Maine 34 34 ~1002 Arembourge William Caldwell Slani O'Brien 1323 - 2 Oct 1360/1361 James de Windsor ~0976 - 1040 Fulk III "The Black" , Count of Anjou 64 64 ~0987 - 1040 Hildegarde 53 53 1113 - 1151 Geoffrey V Plantagenet 38 38 1102 - 1167 Matilda of England 65 65 1092 - 1143 Fulk V d'Anjou 51 51 1012 - 1074 Raoul III de Valois 62 62 ~1060 - 1117 Bertgrade Montfort 57 57 ~1004 - 1046 Geoffrey II de Gastinois 42 42 ~1018 - 1076 Ermengarde d'Anjou 58 58 1069 - 1135 Henry I "Beauclerc" 66 66 1079 - 1118 Edith Matilda "Atheling" of Scotland 39 39 ~0970 - 1056 Roger Hugh de Montgomery 86 86 1024/1031 - 1093 Malcolm III "Canmore" 1045 - 1093 Margaret "the Saint" of England 48 48 Agnes Herne William Herne Hawise de Valois 1012 - 1067 Baudouin V 55 55 ~1302 Agnes Doterinde ABT 1001/1005 - 1040 Duncan I MacCrinan 1016 - 1057 Edward "Aethling" 41 41 ~0997 - 1028 Richard III , 5th Duke of Normandy 31 31 ~1025 - >1066 Agatha of West Friesland 41 41 ~0958 - 23 Aug 1026/1027 Richard II de Normandy 0982 - 1017 Judith de Bretagne 35 35 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES II:75; DUCHESS OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1317 - 1375 Baldwin deFreville 58 58 0980 - 1036 Baldwin Baudouin IV de Flanders 56 56 1204 - UNKNOWN John deBraose V Lord of Bramber & Gower ~0995 - 1030 Ogive Otgiva de Luxembourg 35 35 D. ~1015 Joscelin deLusigan ~1226 Richard Hamerton ~0986 Sigefrith\ Ealgyth of Northumbria unknown mistress John Dudley ~1049 - 1107 Maud deMontgomery 58 58 Emma deMortain ~0899 Inyr ap Cadfarch ~1016 - 1109 Helie of Semur 93 93 1250 - 1304 Edmund deMortimer 54 54 Edmund succeeded in 10th of Edward I, 1282, and the next year had liveryof his lands. He was afterwards constantly employed in the Welsh wars,and was summoned to Parliament as a baron from 1294-1302. He was mortallywounded in 1303 in a battle against the Welsh and died at Wigmore Castle. D. >1104 Hildegarde\ Aldegarde of Burgundy Irmgard of Anjou ~0983 - ~1055 Dalmas I , Count of Semur 72 72 ~0980 Aremburge deVergy ~1026 - 1086 William IV , Count of Poitou 60 60 ~0937 - 0995 Guillaume II "Fier deBras" , Count of Poitou 58 58 ~0969 - 1030 William III "The Great" , Count of Poitou 61 61 1040 - 1120 Geoffroy III , Vicount of Thouars 80 80 D. UNKNOWN II Adolph Eleanor deThouars Hugh de Chastellerault Gerberga dela Rochefoucauld D. 1092 Boso II , Vicount of Chastellerault D. 1136 Aimery I , Vicount of Chastellerault Dangerose ~0995 - 1068 Agnes deBourgone 73 73 ~0952 - ~1004 Emma deBlois 52 52 Pyll Ameline 1204 - 1230 William deBraose IV Earl of Abergavenny 26 26 Elizabeth Boteler ~1048 - 1060/1078 William de Belleme Alencon ~1058 - 1123 Roger de Montgomery 65 65 Amelia ~0974 Avendreg ferch Gwair Alberic III , Count dela Marche ~0940 - 0981/0982 Alberic II , Count d'Macon ~0983 Beatrice d'Macon Ruivallon deVitre' Adda 1220 - 1255 Eve de Braose 35 35 D. ~1075 Pedro Ansurez , Count deValladolid ~1031 Raduplha of Dublin Genergan dela Vicaire ~1054 - 1139 Andre deVitre' 85 85 ~1011 - 21 Mar 1075/1076 Robert The Old , Duke of Burgundy D. 1076 Raymund II ~0814 - 0884 Knud Sigurdsdson of Staelland 70 70 ~1022 - 1075 Adelmodede la Haute Marche 53 53 of Northumberland Mael Sechnaill Ireland 1160 - 1243 Hubert deBurgh I Earl of Kent 83 83 Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl of Kent D. 0765 Fruela deCantabria ~1600 - <1661 Ursula Scott 61 61 D. 0921 Finn , Lord of Naas unknown4 Blanche d'Anjou D. 1030 Gormflaiyh of Naas D. 1014 Maelcorcre D. >1130 Eleanor de Chastellerault Martin I , Sire deVitre' D. 1037 Guillaume III , Count deToulouse Emma of Provence 1200 - 17 Jan 1240/1241 Isabel Marshall D. 1060 Pons , Count of Toulouse ~1015 - 1060 Hughes V de Lusignan 45 45 D. 1093 Guillaume IV , Count of Toulouse D. 1117 Maud of Toulouse ~1071 - 10 Feb 1126/1127 Guillaume IX , Duke of Aquitaine ~0970 Mathilde 1122 - 1 Apr 1203/1204 Eleanor of Aquitaine ~1036 Bertha John Dudley ~0985 Hildeburge 1108 - 1147 Sibilla Maud deChaworth 39 39 Sibyl de Chaworth- Chaources 1140 - 1190 William de Ferrers 50 50 William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby, rebelled against Henry II andmarching at the head of the Leicestershire men (19th Henry II) uponNottingham, then kept for the king by Reginald de Luci, got possession ofthe town which he sacked, putting the greater part of the inhabitants tothe sword and taking the rest prisoners. He was soon afterwards, however,reduced to submission and obliged to surrender to the crown his castlesin Tutbury and Duffield, which were demolished by order of the king. Hislordship m. Sibilla, dau. of William de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny andBrecknock, by whom he had issue. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]

Ferrers, the name of a great Norman-English feudal house, derived fromFerrières-St.-Hilaire, to the south of Bernay, in Normandy. Its ancestorWalkelin was slain in a feud during the Conqueror's minority, leaving ason Henry, who took part in the Conquest and held a great fief in themidlands. [Encyclopædia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 9, p. 184, Ferrers]

Holdings in 9 southern counties
Seige of Acre, Palestine
Walklin was slain ina feud during the Conqueror's minority,leaving hisson Henry, who took part inthe conquest and hels agreat fief in the Midlands

Earl of Derby



This nobleman rebelled against King Henry II and, marching at the head ofthe Leicestershire men upon Nottingham, then kept for the King byReginald de Lucie, got possession of the town, which he sacked, puttingthe greater part of the inhabitants to the sword and taking the restprisoners. He soon afterwards, however was reduced to submission andobliged to surrender to the crown his castles of Tutbury and Duffield,which were demolished by order of the king. His lordship married Sibilla,daughter of William de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny and Brecknock, by whomhe had issue: William, his successor; Milicent married Roger Mortimer ofWigmore; Agatha, concubine to King John, by whom she had Jaone, whomarried Llewellyn the Great, Prince of North Wales; Anghared marriedLlewelly Vychan, grandson of Lord Rhys, Prince of South Wales.
Joane Dudley ~1144 Margaret Perverel ~1005 - 1094 Roger II de Montgomery , Earl of Shrewbury 89 89 1099 - 1137 Guillaume X , Duke of Aquitaine 38 38 ~0955 Arnulf ~0975 Josceline de Pontaudemer Roger de Montgomery ~0980 - 1047 Bernard I , Count de la Haute Marche 67 67 Dunlang Leinster 1126 - 1165 John FitzGilbert Marshal 39 39 D. 0981 Olaf Kvaaran King of Dublin ~0980 - 1053/1058 Amelie d'Aulnay 0941 - 1014 Brian Boru , High King of Ireland 73 73 ~1026 - 1079 Mabel Talvas d'Alencon 53 53 O'Mahony ~1600 Hope Allen 1492 William Wilson D. 0951 Cennedi D. 0944 Areadh , Lord of West Connaught 1647 John Hill 1195 - 1270 Juliane deCogan 75 75 ~0945 Senfrie ~0930 - ABT 1030/1033 Cadelon IV , Vicomte of Aulnay ~0950 - 0997 Adalbert I , Count de la Haute Marche 47 47 ~0950 - 1007/1011 Almode of Limoges D. 0942 Lorean Bebinn of West Connaught D. 1034 Olaf King of Dublin O'Sullivan D. 1042 Sihtric "Of the silken Beard" King of Dublin 1234 - UNKNOWN Isabel FitzJohn Gwyr ap Pill Bron (O'Mahony) D. 0970 Murchad , Lord of Naas unknown2 D. 1030 Gyrgant , Prince of Glamorgan Mabel Talvas ~0910 Caradog ap Lles Gwyn King of Gwent ~0930 - 1037 Lluddica ap Tudor 107 107 ~0948 Angharad ferch Iago 1136 - 1199 Isabelle deWarenne 63 63 de Bury Gwerfyl of Herford ~0470 - 0491 Chilperic of Bourgogne 21 21 ~0894 Gwrydr "Hir" ap Caradog ~0857 - 0913/0916 Anarawd ap Rhodri ~0924 Gwaithfoed ap Gwrydr ~1014 Cynan ap Iago Prince of North Wales ~0908 Iago ap Edwal D. 0994 Ithel ~1020 - >1079 Ednywaid I ap Neiniad 59 59 1182 Margaret Le Bigod Tudor Trevor Wife 2 ~0963 Ethelfleda ferch Edwin 0968 Neiniad ap Gwaethfoed ~0887 Mereddon ferch Cadwr Eva of Galamorgan ~1048 Morwyl ferch Ednywain Angharat ~0861 - 0907 Cadel "Mawr" ap Rhodri 46 46 ~0857 Rheingar 1095 - UNKNOWN Hugh Bigod I Earl of Norfolk Hugh Bigod, Knight, 2nd son, who succeeded his elder brother William (whowas accidentally drowned sine prole, with the King's children, in the20th year of Henry I), was mainly instrumental in raising Stephen, ofBlois, to the throne upon the decease of Henry I. He married Juliana deVere, daughter of Alberic, 2nd Baron de Vere, and his wife Adeliza deClare, who was 12th in descent from Charlemagne's eldest son, Louis I,King of France. ~0820 - 0892 Hyfaidd ap Bledri 72 72 ~0887 - 0950 Hywell "Dda" ap Cadell 63 63 ~0913 - 0987 Owen ap Hywel 74 74 ~0938 - 0998 Maredydd ap Oain Prince of Wales 60 60 0968 Herleve ~0982 Angharat II ferch Maredydd 0933 - 0984 Einion ap Owain 51 51 Sources: Llantarnam Abbey; Young; Kraentzler 1446; History of Morgan Family.
Also called Einion and Eineon. Young: Einion,died 984. History: "Married Ellinor, daughter of Gwenston. Killed in battle with the Chief of Gwent. Sons were Edwin, Gronw and Cadell."   Morgan, Dennis.  A History of the Morgan Family.  Also called Einion and Eineon.  "Married Ellinor, daughter of Gwenston.  Killed in battle with the Chief of Gwent.  Sons were Edwin, Gronw, and Cadell.
~0920 Angharat ferch Hywel ~0859 - 0900 Merfyn ap Rhodri 41 41 ~0887 - 0943 Eleanor ferch Llywarch 56 56 1030 - 1088 Aubrey I deVere 58 58 The Complete Peerage vol.X,p.193-195. ~0850 - 0903 Llywarch ap Hyfaidd 53 53 Avendreg of Powys ~1325 Robert deStandish Unknown Haget ~1250 - ~1300 Cicilie Sandbach 50 50 ~1239 - 1279 Robert de Ferrers 40 40 Robert Hodson als Barnett Robert Castell ~1305 Thomas Eland ~1287 Matthew deBosco 1038 - 1107 Roger Bigod II Earl of Norfolk 69 69 Roger Bigod or le Bigot, a feudal Baron, the first of this great familythat settled in England and was, in the Conqueror's time, possessed ofsix lordships in Essex, 117 in Suffold. At the accession of King Henry I,being a witness of the King's laws and stanch in his interests, heobtained gifts of land from the crown, and was Lord Stewart of the King'shousehold. 1199 - 1251 Marie Jeanne dePonthieu 52 52 Marie, Countess of Ponthieu and Montgomerie, succeeded her father inthese counties. She married Simon de Dammartin, Count d'Aumale, whohaving followed the party of Ferrand, Count of Flanders, against PhilipAugustus, her uncle, was proscribed for this in 1214 and withdrew toEngland. The King of France in his vengeance took extreme measure of thelaw and seized also all the possessions of the wife, his niece, includingthe County of Ponthieu. Her husband was not pardoned until the reign ofLouis IX, called the Saint, in March, 1230, who returned his possessions,and he died Sept. 21, 1239. Marie died in 1251, leaving three daughters:Jeanne, Phillipette and Marie. 1284 - 1341 Alice de Driby 57 57 <1274 - ~1309 Hugh Eland 35 35 Agnes Margaret Byron ~1170 - ~1219 Warren deBostock 49 49 vol 3, pg 259 Ormerod's History of Cheshire ~1080 Eneburga deBaldric ~1070 Robert deEstoteville ~1049 Hugh Fitzbaldrick ~1142 - 1189 Bertha de Montfort 47 47 Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

vol 1, pg 26 & 49 Ormerod's  "History of Cheshire"
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
1066 - 1136 Adeliza de Toeni 70 70 Hanna ~1310 Agnes de Notton ~1120 - 1189 Matilda Gloucester 69 69 Thomas Castell Marchwystl Ap Marchweithian Marchweithian, Lord Of Is Aled ~1333 Alice Hiltoft 1558 - BET. 1585 - 1591 Walter Deane D. 1653 Eleanor Deane 1575 - 1634 William Deane 59 59 1245 - UNKNOWN Mary deLusignan ~1195 William Skipwith ~1298 William Skipwith Unknown ~0128 Joan Cornhill Gwenllian Verch Ednyfed Ap Cynwrig Ap Rhiwallon Ednyfed Ap Cynwrig Ap Rhiwallon Cynwrig Ap Rhiwallon Lord Of Broughton Ednyfed Ap Cadwgan Ddu Ap Llowarch Goch ~0944 - 1037 Lludicca Ap Tudor 93 93 D. 0948 Tudur Trevor 1208 - 1265 Humphrey deBohun V Earl of Hereford & Essex 57 57 Humphrey de Bohun, as Earl of Hereford, and possessing the honour ofEssex from his mother, was created Earl of that county by Henry III, atwhose marriage his lordship performed the office of marshal in the King'shouse, and in three years afterwards, Anno 1239, was one of thegodfathers at the font for Edward, later Edward I, eldest son of theKing, there being no less than nine sponsors on the occasion, viz., fivetemporal and four spiritual lords. He was Lord High Constable of England.In 1250 he took up the cross and proceeded to the Holy Land. In threeyears afterwards his lordship was present with other lords when thatformal curse was denounced in Westminster Hall, with bell, book andcandle, against the violators of the Magna Charta; in which year hefounded the church of the Friars Augustines, in Broadstreet, within thecity of London. In the great contest between the King, Henry III, and hisbarons this nobleman fought for the latter at Evesham, where he was takenprisoner, but did not long continue in bondage, for we find him soonafter again in favour and receiving new grants from the crown. Angharad Verch Hywel Llewellyn Rhirid Flaidd Lord Of Penllyn Dingad Ap Tudor Rhiwallon Ap Dingad Ap Tudor Arddun Verch Philip Ap Uchryd Philip Ap Uchryd Lord Of Cyfeiliog Uchdryd Lord Of Cyfeiliog Ap Edwin Ap Goronwy Edwin Ap Goronwy Prince of Tegeingl Goronwy Cadwgan Ddu Ap Llowarch Goch 1313 - 1360 William deBraose VIII Lord Braose 47 47 Llowarch Goch Iorwerth Ap Gwrgenau Gwrgenau Ap Cyfnerth Ap Rhun Ap Nefydd Hardd Cyfnerth Ap Rhun Ap Nefydd Hardd Rhun Ap Nefydd Hardd Nefydd Hardd 1561 - 1613 John Stronge 52 52 Hwfa Ap Ithel Felyn Ap Llewlyn Audorchog Ithel Felyn Ap Llewellyn Audorchog Llewellyn Audorchog 1177 - 1 Mar 1232/1233 Thomas deMaurienne Count of Savoy Cynddelw Gam ~1304 Alice Muer ~1224 Hugh de Neville 1556 - BET. 1594 - 1660 Johanna Walsele 1553 - 16 Feb 1635/1636 George Stronge ~1250 Cecilia deLa LynDe ~0974 - 1039 Iago Ap Idwal Ap Mourig 65 65 ~1274 Ralph Fittzsimon D. 0986 Mourig Ap Idwal Foel Ap Anarawd, King Of Gwyned 0945 - 0996 Idwal Ap Mourig Ap Idwal Foel 51 51 1156 - 1230 Beatrix deMacon 74 74 1599/1600 - 1660 John Deane Was among the first settlers of Taunton, Massachusettes, from Plym. Coll. Dec. 4, 1638. Will Probated June 7, 1660, about 60 years old. Names wife Alice, Children: John, Thomas, Israel, Isaac, Nathaniel and Elizabeth. Brother Walter. Reg. V. page 388. Alice Stronge ~0891 Afandreg Verch Merfyn Ap Rhodri Mawr ~1225 John Skipwith ~0984 Afandreg Verch Gwair 0958 Gwair Ap Pwll ~1210 William deWiston Rhanullt Verch Apphrach Ap Suttick Ap Mackmoth ~1250 Joan deNeville 1105 Robert de Villiers 1130 - 1195 Henry Faucigny I Count Of Geneva 65 65 ~1192 Cecilia deHartley Llywarch Dyfnwallon ap Arthen Essylt verch Conan <1439> Thomas Preston ~1402 John Peck ~1426 Isabel Lacy ~1421 John Harrington ~1426 Mrs- John Harrington ~1471 John Middleton 1157 - 1218 Matilda of Portugal 61 61 ~1478 Maud Thwaytes ~1478 - <1500 Henry Vavasour 22 22 ~1428 - 1462 Jane Gascon 34 34 joan <1409> - ~1456 Ralph Anne <1413> Grace Goldsborough <1413> John Bosvile ~1417 Richard Peck ~1421 Margery (Margarite) (Heselden) Haselden ~1396 John Lacy ~1401 Mrs- John Lacy 1166 - 1218 Eudes III Duke of Burgundy 52 52 1456 - 1474 William Middelton 18 18 ~1447 Margaret Hamerton D. 1469 John Thwaytes <1456> - 1468 Isabel Ryther ~1360 Elizabeth Radcliffe ~1356 Richard Hamerton ~1398 - <1466 William Gascoigne 68 68 ~1397 - 1441 Margaret Clarell 44 44 ~1372 Alexander Anne Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) <1387> Agnes Grammarye Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0940 - 3 Feb 1013/1014 Svend I Forkbeard King of denmark Sweyn, generally called Sweyn Splitbeard, from some peculiarity observedabout his beard. Nearly all of his time was spent in making expeditionsto Norway, Germany and England. He was successful in his expedition toEngland. The impotent Anglo-Saxon King Ethelred II, called the Unready,held at this time the supreme authority in that kingdom. Sweyn obligedthe English King to acknowledge his superiority and to get rid of theDanes by paying a large sum of money called Danegeld. In the beginning ofhis reign he persecuted Christianity, but before he expired he began toperceive his folly, and he secured the help of Poppo, a German bishop ofgreat piety and eloquence, and persuasion brought about what the King'sauthority could not effect. Sweyn Splitbeard had two sons, Harold, who byright of primogeniture succeeded his father as King of Denmark, andCanute or Cnud, who at Sweyn's death was living and was elected King ofthe Danes there. The English, taking advantage of Canute's youth, calledEthelred II back, whereupon Canute repaired to Denmark, where he broughttogether a numerous host of brave soldiers and leaders and defeated KingEthelred II. The valiant Edmund Ironside, who succeeded Ethelred, wasforced to yield half of England to Canute. Canute married Emma, daughterof the Duke of Normandy, widow of Ethelred. His brother Harold was a weakruler and after 4 years Canute became King of Denmark also. SweynSplitbeard had also a daughter, Estrith. 1166 - 1230 Alfonso IX Fernandez de Castile 64 64 Alfonso IX, (b. 1171, Zamora, Leon--d. Sept. 24, 1230, Villanueva de Sarria, Galicia), king of Leon from 1188 to 1230, son of Ferdinand II of Leon and first cousin of Alphonso VIII of Castile, and numbered next to him as being a junior member of the family, is said by Ibn Khaldun to have been called the "Baboso" or Slobberer, because he was subject to fits of rage, during which he foamed at the mouth. Though he took a part in the work of the reconquest, this king is chiefly remembered by the difficulties into which his successive marriages led him with the pope. He was first married to his cousin, Teresa of Portugal, who bore him two daughters and a son who died young. The marriage was declared null by the pope, to whom Alphonso paid no attention till he was presumably tired of his wife. It cannot have been his conscience which constrained him to leave Teresa, for his next step was to marry Berengaria of Castile, who was his second cousin. For this act of contumacy the king and kingdom were placed under interdict. The pope was, however, compelled to modify his measures by the threat that if the people could not obtain the services of religion they would not support the clergy, and that heresy would spread. The king was left under interdict personally, but to that he showed himself indifferent, and he had the support of his clergy. Berengaria left him after the birth of five children, and the king then returned to Teresa, to whose daughters he left his kingdom by will. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 1, p. 688, ALPHONSO IX of Leon] ~1582 - 1648 Anne Lawrence 66 66 She was "of an armigerous family. Anne's brother, John Lawrence of Wramplingham, co. Norfork., (d. 1685), Mayor of Norwich 1667, a Quaker himself, did not make an extensive declaration to the herald in 1664, evidently to avoid bringing his kin into danger as tainted with religious rebellion.It is clear from the above few notes that Anne (Lawrence) Peck came from gentelfolk deeply compromised with Nonconormity. This makes for certain difficulties in tracing her family."   Robert Peck's will, states "All my other goods cattells debts moneys household stuffe or whatsoever ells belongeth unto me I give and bequesath to my siad Executors toards payeingeof my legacies alrerdy bequeathed and toward the bringinge of my body to buriall which I desire if I depart his lie in Hingham may be entered in the church yard near unto Anne my wife deceased."
Sources: The Maternal Ancestry of Anne Peck, Second Wife of Captain John Mason (c 1600-1672 The American Genealogist October 1946
N. Grier Parke, II,  The Ancestry of Lorenzo Ackley & his wife Emma Arabella Bosworth/ Woodstock, VT: self-published, 1960
Ira B. Peck,  A Genealogical History of the Descendants of Joseph Peck/ Boston: Alfred Mudge & Son, 1868
John Brooks Threlfall,  Fifty Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins/ Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1992
Thomas Beckingham Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) John Fitz Williams Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Robert Waterton Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1600 - 30 Jan 1671/1672 John Mason The parent of Major John Mason is unclear at this time.

See: p.69, fig. 230, Heraldry in America, by: Eugene Zieber, pub. 1895, Capt. John Mason used the arms of his wife, Anne Peck, "Argent, on a chevron engrailed gules 3 crosses patee of the field." as a seal on paperwork found in the archives of the State of Connecticut.


Time Line:
Served in the Netherlands as a Lieutenant under Sir Thomas Fairfax. Came to America in 1632. Commanded the colonial force which destroyed the Pequot Castle 26 May 1637 near Stonington, CT. Negotiated the first land purchase from Uncas of the Mohicans, August 1659.
Named Deputy Governor by King Charles II, in the Connecticut charter of1662.
1700 -    In March 1700, basing their claim on the gift of the Mohegan chief, Uncas, to Major John Mason, the so-called "Uncas heirs" laid claim to Colchester.  Leaders in this group were the sons of John MASON, Daniel CLARK, Nicholas HALLAM, Major PALMER, and James FITCH.

"History of the First Congregational Church"
Stonington, Conn.
1674-1874
Marriages By Rev. James Noyes:
July 15, 1719, Capt. John Mason and Mrs. Anna Noyes.


"Major John Mason was born in England in the year 1600, was bred a soldier and served in the English army, and after his election as lieutenant, served under Sir Thomas Fairfax. He emigrated to America in 1632 and settled first in Dorchester, Mass., and represented that town in the General Court. In 1635 he removed to Windsor, Conn in the company of Rev. John Warham, Henry Wolcott and others, prominent settlers of that town, where he was elected an assistant or magistrate of the Connecticut Colony in 1642. In May, 1637, he commanded the successful expedition against the Pequot Indians when he and his famous ninety men immortalized themselves in the overthrowing and destroying the prestige and power of the Pequots and their fort near Mystic River, on Groton side, which event is commemorated by a boulder monument upon Mystic Hill upon the pedestal of which is a life size statue of Major Mason drawing his sword, when he heard the war-whoop of "Owanux," "Owanux," by the Indians in their fort. In 1647 he removed his family to Saybrook, where he continued to live until 1660, when he united with a number of distinguished families in the settlement of Norwich, Conn., where he was a Deputy Governor and Major General of the forces of Connecticut, and held other prominent positions. After a life of great usefulness and eminence, he died January 30, 1672. His widow died shortly afterwards. Unfortunately, the first wife of Major John Mason is not known, but she did not live long, but was the mother of one daughter: JUDITH. After the death of his first wife he m. 2d, Miss Anna Peck in July 1640."
1619 - 1672 Anne Rosamond Peck 53 53 Buried: At Bean Hill on the south side of the Post Road. 1654 - 1684 Elizabeth Mason 30 30 ~1394 Thomas Peck ~1398 Miss Bradley ~1371 Richard Peck 0876 - UNKNOWN Harold Klak ~1375 Daughter Saville ~1345 Richard Peck ~1349 Daughter Brunning ~1319 John Peck ~1323 Wemborne ~1299 John Jr. Peck ~1300 Daughter Flemming ~1136 - >1219 Lucy deGloucester 83 83 1430 John Middelton 1434 Alice Mauloreverer 0919 - 1000 Gyrithe Olafsson 81 81 1347 Nicolas Middelton 1347 Alice Middleton <1408> Peter Mauloreverer ~1321 Thomas Middelton ~1325 Eliza Gramary 1300 Peter de Middelton  [SIR KNIGHT SHERIFF OF YORKSHIRE] ~1302 Eustacia de Plumpton ~1300 Robert Gramary <1291> William de MidDelton <1295> Agnes Boteler 0955 - 1027 Thorkils Sprakalegg 72 72 ~1268 - 1325 Robert Plumpton 57 57 RESEARCH FROM RICHARD W. PRICE - ENGLISH GENEALOGIST, 2061 EAST
SAIT MARY'S DRIVE, SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84108.
~1270 - >1332 Lucy de Ros 62 62 John Wintershall Elizabeth Stoner Robert Wintershall Joan Humpfrey 1177 - <1226 Robert II de Ros 49 49 Robert de Ros, surnamed Furfan, in the 1st Richard I [1189], paid 1,000marks fine to the crown for livery of his lands. In the 8th of the samereign [1197], being with the king in Normandy, he was committed to thecustody of Hugh de Chaumont, for what offence appears not; with especialcharge to the said Hugh, that he should keep him as safe as his own life;but Chaumont trusting William de Spiney with his prisoner, that personbeing corrupted, allowed him to escape out of the castle of Bonville. deRos eventually gained nothing, however, by this escape, for Richardcaused him nevertheless to pay 1,200 marks for his freedom, while he hadthe false traitor Spiney, hanged for his breach of faith. In the nextreign, however, Robert de Ros found more favour, for upon the accessionof King John, that monarch gave him the whole barony of hisgreat-grandmother's father, Walter Espee, to enjoy in as large and amplea manner as he, the said Walter, ever held it. Soon after which he wasdeputed, with the bishop of Durham, and other great men, to escortWilliam, King of Scotland into England, which monarch coming to Lincoln,swore fealty there to King John, upon the cross of Hubert, archbishop ofCanterbury, in the presence of all the people. About the 14th of KingJohn's reign [1213], Robert de Ros assumed the habit of a monk, whereuponthe custody of all his lands, viz., Werke Castle, in the co.Northumberland, with his whole barony, was committed to Philip de Ulcote,but he did not continue long a recluse, for we find him the very nextyear executing the office of sheriff for the county of Cumberland. At thecommencement of the struggle between the barons and John, this feudallord took part with the king, and obtained, in consequence, some grantsfrom the crown; but he subsequently espoused the baronial cause, and wasone of the celebrated twenty-five appointed to enforce the observance ofMagna Charter. In the reign of King Henry III he seems, however, to havereturned to his allegiance, and to have been in favour with that prince,for the year after the king's accession, a precept was issued by thecrown to the sheriff of Cumberland, ordering the restoration of certainmanors granted by King John to de Ros. This feudal lord was the founderof the castle of Helmsley, otherwise Hamlake, in Yorkshire, and of thecastle of Werke in Northumberland -- the former of which he bequeathed tohis eldest son--the latter to the younger, with a barony in Scotland tobe held of the elder by military service. In his latter days he became aKnight Templar, to which order himself and his predecessors had ever beenmunificently liberal, and dying in that habit, anno 1227, was buried inthe Temple Church. Robert de Ros m. Isabel, natural dau. of William theLion, King of Scotland, and widow of Robert de Brus, and had issue twosons, William, his successor; and Robert, Baron Ros of Werke. He wassucceeded by his elder son. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 458,Ros, or Roos, Barons Ros]

pg 89 & 146, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
<1144 - <1191 Robert de Bruce 47 47 From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1153 - <1183 Everard de Ros 30 30 ~1166 - 1235 Piers Fitz Herbert 69 69 0922 - 0970 Styrbjorn Olafsson Prince of Sweden 48 48 ~1243 Isabella de Westwick ~1216 - 1271 Nigel de Plumpton 55 55 ~1217 Avicia de Clare ~1240 - 1298 Robert de Plumpton 58 58 ~1217 Serlonis de Westwick ~1190 Miss Mowbray ~1168 - 1205 Nigel de Plumpton 37 37 Maria de Eboraco ~1184 - 1261 Hugh or deLevington Fitz Ralph 77 77 ~1225 - <1262 Ralph Fitz Hugh 37 37 0937 - 1000 Thyra Haraldsdottir of denmark 63 63 ~1240 - >1265 Miss deLa Haye 25 25 ~1214 Agnes deGreasley ~1154 Ralph deLevington ~1184 - ~1226 Ralph deGreasley 42 42 ~1184 Isabel deMuschamp ~1215 - <1274 John deLa Haye 59 59 MFA XII:226, 229. ~1215 - <1267 Daughter 52 52 ~1154 - <1254 Ralph deLa Haye 100 100 ~1190 Eustacia ~1187 - 1244 Robert de Plumpton 57 57 0900 - UNKNOWN Olaf Bjornsson King of Sweden ~1170 - >1213 Juliana de Warwick 43 43 ~1133 Peter dePlumpton ~1136 Helena ~1107 Eldredus dePlumpton 1151 - <1194 Roese deTrussebutt 43 43 ~1120 - 1191 Ralf D'albini 71 71 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1129 - ~1218 Sibyl deValoines 89 89 BURIED NUN APPLE PRIORTY ~1088 Peter (or Piers) deRos Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1099 Geoffrey deValoines Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1124 - ~1162 Robert deRos 38 38 D. 0950 Bjorn Ericsson the Old King of Sweden ~1062 William Espec Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1092 - <1155 Adeline Espec 63 63 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Robert Of Glapton, Notts deRabacy ~0940 - >1040 Touroude Thorold de Harcourt 100 100 ~0911 - <0940 Sprote deBretagne 29 29 ES II:75; ANCESTRAL  FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; CORRECT INFO - DO NOT
TAMPER WITH!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0953 Adeline deMontfort Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Afperlang Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0928 Thurston deMontfort Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0928 Mrs- Thurston de Montfort Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) <0858> Richende To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. 0900 Eric Emundsson King of Sweden and Goten ABT 0951/0960 - ~1024 Turchetil deTurchetil SIRE DE TURCHETIL, FROM WHOM WERE DESCENDED THE HARCOURT FAMILY OF ENGLAND.
MOTHER IS NOT ERMENBERGE DE BRIOQUIBEC ES X:123; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

SIRE DE TURCHETIL, FROM WHOM WERE DESCENDED THE HARCOURT FAMILY OF ENGLAND.
MOTHER IS NOT ERMENBERGE DE BRIOQUIBEC ES X:123; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

SIRE DE TURCHETIL, FROM WHOM WERE DESCENDED THE HARCOURT FAMILY OF
ENGLAND.
MOTHER IS NOT ERMENBERGE DE BRIOQUIBEC ES X:123; PED OF AUGUSTINE H.
AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Agnes Margaret Drokensford Had a brother: Sir. John Drokensfield, Knight  Quarterly, azure and or four caps counterchanged--DROKENSFORD. ~0904 Gerlotte ~0904 - >0959 Hrolf Robert Turstain 55 55 BARON "VIR NOBILIS ET PRAEPOTENS TORSTINGUS".  GAVE LAND TO THE ABBEY OF ST.
WANDRILLE (OR FONTANELLE) IN 960, WHICH DUKE RICHARD I SANCTIONED & CONFIRMED.
~0874 Ermina ~1091 - >1138 William deTrussebutt 47 47 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1039 Colede de Argouges CRA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1060 - <1117 Robert de Harcourt 57 57 EVE DE BOISSAY'S 1ST MARRIAGE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

pg 1239 Burke's "Peerage and Baronetage", 1970 Edition

vol   pg 883 Burke's Landed Gentry

pg 261, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883

vol 2, pg 221, Burke's  "Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland"
~0885 Hubert ES II:75; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0770 - UNKNOWN Billung II Prince of Obotrites ~0874 Daughter ~1030 Eve deBoissay PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1025 - ~1072 Anchetil of Harcourt 47 47 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1091 Rollo deHarcourt ES X:123.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1091 - <1186 Rose Peverel 95 95 MFA VIII:387.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1135 - 1205 Aubreye deHarcourt 70 70 ~1130 - 1175/1176 William II deTrussebutt ~0925 Eperleng Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1091 Miss Fitz Pain PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1061 Robert Peverel "ENGLISH BARONIES" BY I. J. SANDERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. UNKNOWN Emund King of Birka 1137 - 1188 Fernando II Alfonsez deLeon 51 51 ~1065 Adelicia D'eynecourt Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1177 Alan de Columbers D. ~0800 Sigard Ring Randuer Radbert Auda Ivar Halfdan, the Violent >0770 Ivar Halfdansson Froude D. UNKNOWN Antonia Eistein Jocunda Hunthiofsdatter Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0814 Mrs- Rognvald Olafsson ~0816 - 0850 Rognvald Olafsson 34 34 1840 Ysabella Fitch Carrillo Ysabella Fitch de Grant* died from childbirth. Husband John Doty Grant, remarried -- the youngest sister, Anita Fitch

Birth: 24 Aug 1840
Death: 15 Jun 1861 in Santa Rosa, CA, inscription on headstone reads - In Memory of Isabella Fitch wife of John d. Grant who departd this life June 15, 1861 Aged 20 years 9 mos and 22 days
Baptism: 30 Sep 1840 San Diego Presidio - age 1 month, 7 days
Burial: Oakmound Cemetary, Healdsburg, CA
Note: Alias: Ysabel Fitch y Carrillo
~0790 - 0821 Gudrod "Jagtkonge" Halfdansson King In Vestfold 31 31 ~0794 Asa Haraldsdatter MPA P. 170; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0768 - ~0800 Halfdan "the Meek" Eysteinsson King In Vestfold 32 32 ~0772 Hlif Dagsdatter 0810 - UNKNOWN Mieceslas I Prince of Obotrites ~0736 Eysteinn "Fret" Halfdansson King In Vestfold ~0740 Hildi Eiriksdatter ~0704 Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King In Uppsala ~0708 Asa Eysteinsdatter ~0692 Eirik Agnarsson ~0682 Olaf "The Wood Cutter" Ingjaldsson ~0684 Solveig Halfdansdotter ~1270 - >1312 Walter Foliot 42 42 Walter's parents are indicated by the fact that when Joan (Jane),daughter of Walter's brother Richard Foliot, married Alfonso de Vere,part of her dowry was Whiteford.  Walter was of Whiteford according toMCS. 1232 - 1291 Ralph Basset 59 59 ~0794 Alfhild Alfarinsdatter 1048 - 1118 Alexius I Comnenus Emperor of Byzantine 70 70 ~0770 - 0840 Olaf or Godofriedsson II Gudrodsson 70 70 ~0774 Mrs- Olaf Gudrodsson ~0720 Dag ~0769 Alfarin King of Alvheim ~0773 Mrs- Alfarin of Alvheim ~0800 - >0869 Eystein Ivarsson 69 69 LIVING IN A.D. 870; MPA P. 10; ~0830 - 0890/0894 Rognvold KILLED BY HARALD HAREFOOT'S SONS, AND HARALD GRANTED ROGVALD'S BROTHER,
HULDRICH, THE FIEF OF NORMANDY, AND ROLLO CONQUERED IT FROM THE ORIGINAL DUKES
OF NEUSTRIA; ES 11:79, MPA P. 10-11;  JARL OR EARL
OF MOERE IN 885; ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES DEATH IN ORKNEY, ORKNEY ISLANDS,
SCOTLAND.
~0785 Eysteinsdatter Ivar Halfdon 1124 - UNKNOWN Agnes Countess Of Saarbrucken Harold, the Old Valdar, the Mild Hroar Rolf Kraki Helgi Yrsa Halfden Frodi, the Valient Fridleif Frodi, the Peaceful 1010 - 1078 Henry II of Brabant 68 68 Dan, the Proud Olaf, the Mild Vermund, the Wise Frodi Havar, the Strong Hand Fridleif Fridfrod Fridleif Skiold ~0241 Gefion 1167 - UNKNOWN Margaret Princess of Scotland ~1185 Richard deLegh 1237 - 1308 Reginald de Grey 71 71 Ellen deCorona Margery Staunton RECORD:

1. The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999.

2. Visitation of Nottingham.

3. Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760, 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992, . NS4216423  Source Media Type: Book.
~1031 - 1093 Malcom III 62 62 KING OF SCOTLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
ABT 1042/1045 - 1093 Margaret Aetheling Brought Christianity to Scotland.

ARSC 1:22; CDROM GIVES HER BIRTHPLACE AS HUNGARY; MALCOLM'S 2ND WIFE;QUEEN OF
SCOTLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1013 - 1040 Duncan I 27 27 This was the same duncan who was murdered in
Shakespeare's play "Macbeth"

UA/BLACK 150653; KING OF SCOTLAND, MURDERED BY MACBETH IN 1040.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0984 Bethoc PRINCESS OF SCOTLAND; ES 11:88.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0975 - 1045 Crinan deMormaer 70 70 HEREDITARY LAY ABBOT OF DUNKELD AND SENESCHAL OF THE ISLES; GOVERNOR OF SCOTS
ISLANDS; U.S. PRESIDENT #1 - WASHINGTON; UA/ANDRA 1500232.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1245 - UNKNOWN Agnes deFerrers ~0970 - 1034 Malcolm II MacKenneth 64 64 KING OF THE SCOTS; ES 11:88; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0932 - 0999 Kenneth II 67 67 KING OF SCOTLAND; ES II:88; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0862 - 0900 Donald II 38 38 REIGNED 889 TO 900; FGRA; PED. OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1016 - 1057 Edward Atheling 41 41 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
<1013 - 1016 Edmund II, Ironside 3 3 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0978 - 1052 Emma of Normandy 74 74 Mormon Genealogies doesn't clarify if Emma
or Aelfflaed was the mother of Edmund Ironside.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Aelfflaed Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0968 - 1016 Ethelred II, the Unready 48 48 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0944 - 0975 Edgar, the Peaceful 31 31 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Aethelfaed To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1058 - UNKNOWN Ralph deGael De Montfort 0939 - 0946 Edmund I 7 7 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1254 Stephen Hamerton 0879 - 0929 Charles III, the Simple 50 50 0902 - >0951 Eadgifu 49 49 ~0921 - 0954 Louis IV, d'Outre- Mer 33 33 ~1320 - ~1377 Peter de Braose 57 57 0943 - 0992/0994 Charles Lorraine ES II:1: PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; GERGERGE'S 2ND MARRIAGE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1006 GertrudeDe Gand ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0918 - 0998 Siegfried Count Of Luxembourg 80 80 ES VI:127-128.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1012 - 1067 Baldwin V of Flanders 55 55 ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF FLANDERS; ES 11:5.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1065 - 1119 Henry deBeaumont I Earl of Warwick 54 54 Henry was the first who bore the title of Earl of Warwick, to which hewas created by William I, but when this eminent person obtained theearldom is not exactly ascertained. Sir Wm. Dugdale presumes the periodto have been toward the close of the Conqueror's reign, "for then saithhe, King William, having begirt Warwick with a mighty ditch, for theprecinct of its walls, and erected the gates at his own charge, didpromote this Henry to the earldom and annexed thereto the royalty of theborough, which at that time belonged to the crown." Dugdale makes him die23 of Henry I, 1123. He was buried in Preaux Abbey in Normandy. (Thisline ended 26 of Henry III, 1242.) Although Henry was made Earl ofWarwick by the first Norman sovereign, he was not invested with all thelands attached thereto until the ensuing reign, when on the accession ofWilliam Rufus he received the inheritance of the Saxon Earl of Warwick,Turchitel, who at the time of the conquest had the reputation of Earl andgained the favor of the Conqueror by espousing his cause and was rewardedby being allowed to retain Warwick. From this time the Earls of Warwickused the "bear and ragged staff," the device of Turchil's family, derivedfrom the chivalrous Guy, Earl of Warwick, famed for his marvelous featsrelated in the Saxon Chronicles, and has continued as the badge of theEarls of Warwick. The name of this Henry, Earl of Warwick, appears as awitness to the charter of King Henry I, whereby that Prince confirmed thelaws of Edward the Confessor and granted many other immunities to theclergy and laity. He was memorable for his donations for piousfoundations as well for his military record. He died in 1123. He marriedMargaret, sister of Rotrode, Earl of Perch, and daughter of Geoffrey,Count of Moreton. They had two daughters, names unknown. and five sons:Roger, Henry, Geoffrey, Rotrode and Robert. ~1212 Cecilia* deBradshaw ~1198 John Hamerton Elgiva Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Ethelfleda of Domerham Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0858 - ~0917 Reginhilde Von Friesland 59 59 ~1230 Agnes Theudebert Dietrich Ordgar Ealdorman Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) D. 1000 Elfrida Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0975 - 1038 Stephen I 63 63 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1080 - 1157 Margaret Du Perche 77 77 1144 - 1188 Urraca Affonsez dePortugal 44 44 Gunnor Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Mrs- Harald Gormsson Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1355 - 1373 Thomas Booth 18 18 ~0910 - 0987 Harald "The Blue Tooth" Gormsson King of denmark 77 77 STUART ROYALTY FOR COMMONERS LINE 369; PED. OF AUGUTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Agatha Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Algitha Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) D. 1003 Elgifa Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) James Lawrence ~0963 - 1027 Richard II, the Good 64 64 ANCESTRAL FILE; DUKE OF NORMANDY; FGRA; PED OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. >1329 Richard III Willoughby The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Sir Richard Willoughby of Willoughby
Knight.

B. Burke 1888, The Complete Peerage, p. 1118.
Sir Richard Willoughby, Knight of Wollaton
  a)  Sir Edmond Willoughby (living 4 Henry IV); ancestor of
Willoughby of Wollaton
  b)  Hugh Willough; ancestor of Willoughby of Risley, Derbyshire

Publications of the Harleian Society, vol. 84, Knights of Edward I.
Sir Richard de Wilughby, Knight, son of Sir Richard de Wilughby,
Knight, went to Ireland with his father in 1323.  Name as Chief
Justice of Bench at Dublin 30 August 1325.  alice 30 December 1329.
1050 - UNKNOWN Geoffrey Count of Perche Walter Fitz- Other William de Windsor Thored Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0924 - ~0966 Willa 42 42 ES 111:86; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0906 - >0936 Willa 30 30 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0958 - 1008 Mathilde of Saxony 50 50 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNTESS OF FLANDERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Thora Mrs Gormsson Queen of denmark Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0933 - 0962 Baudouin III of Flanders 29 29 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES DEATH AS 1 NOV 962; COUNT OF
FLANDERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1172 Orme Hamerton 1060 - UNKNOWN Beatrice deMontdidier ~0962 Dovada Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1021 - ~1066 Ingeborg Finnsdatter 45 45 QUEEN OF SCOTLAND.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1014 - ~1040 Sibyl FitzSiward 26 26 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1238 John* deEuxton ~1105 Mauger Le Vavasour 0912 - 0973 Otto I 61 61 Emperor of the West, Germany and Duke of Saxony.
Source: The Genealogist, vol. 2 #1.

EMPEROR OF THE WEST, EMPEROR OF GERMANY, AND DUKE OF SAXONY; "THE GENEALOGIST"
VOL. 2 #1 "BYZANTINE ANC. HRH PRINCE CHARLES".

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0945 Gerberga Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1173 Unknown ~1169 Robert deMulton 1101 - 1159 Roger deNewburgh II Earl of Warwick 58 58 Roger de Newburgh, 2nd Earl of Warwick, supported the Empress Maudagainst Stephen, but his lordship is much more known by his munificentgrants to the church than his martial deeds. He was taken prisoner withRobert, Earl of Gloucester, at Winchester, who after his releaseconquered Gowerland in Wales, where he founded the priory of Languenithand was a great benefactor to other religious houses in England. Hemarried Gundred, daughter of William de Warren and Isabel de Vermandois,daughter of Hugh Magnus, Henry I, son of William de Warren and Gundred,daughter of the Conqueror. Wm. Warren was made Baron of Lewes in Sussexand Earl of Surrey by the Conqueror. He died June 12, 1155, and wassucceeded by his eldest son, William, 3rd Earl, who died in the Holy Landin 1184, when he was, in turn, succeeded by his younger brother, Walerande Newburgh. Sir Richard Bingham The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 146.  Sir Richard Bingham Knight Cheefe Justice
of the Kings Bench.  2 [second] husband [of Margarett Frevile].

The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 121.  Ricardus Bingham Justiciar' de Banco [in
the reign of Wdward IV].  Of Watnow-Chaworth in Co. Nottingham.
1471 - 1540 Thomas Pultney 69 69 ~1226 Thomas de Knowsley ~0942 Wevia Duceline de Crepon <1193 - 1234 Robert Le Vavasour 41 41 1003 - 1079 Adèle (Alix) 76 76 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES II:11; PRINCESS OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0997 Elfgifu PED OF VERN ORVEL CURTIS, 1934; PED AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; DO NOT
TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Walter de Windsor Had 2 daughters. William de Windsor D. 1275 William de Windsor 1103 Robert Steward of Normandy 1579 Margaret Stephenson Stephenson, Margaret Birth : Abt 1579 Benefield, Northhampton, England ~0951 Turchetil Harcourt Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1176 Isabel Meynell ~0983 - 1015 Vsevolod Vladimirovich 32 32 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
James Moleyns See Visitation of Hampshire, p. 121-122. ~0968 Alfgifu (Aelflaed) ES 11:78; ANCESTRAL FILE; UNITED ANCESTRY HAS HER MARRIAGE DATE 985; "OF
DEIRA."


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0988 - 1016 Edmund II "Ironside" 28 28 FGRA; PED OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER; KING OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0869 - 0908 Rudolf of Wurzburg 39 39 ~0970 - 1034 Hedwig of Normandy 64 64 vol 1, pg 744, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire"
pg 174, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
1117 - 1166 Gundred deWarenne 49 49 ~0910 Miss ~1302 Ellen de Radcliffe 0943 - 0968 Emma 25 25 DUCHESS OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Ellena Neale ~1305 Alice Or Alicia Blackburn ~0950 - 0987 Geoffroy I "Grisegonnelle" Count Of Anjou 37 37 ADELAIDE IS GEOFFREY'S 1ST WIFE; MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0939 - 0963 Rognwald (Rogvolod) Count Of Polotsk 24 24 MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1201 Cecily de Columbers 1340 John Saville ~0970 - >1014 Swietoslava Or Sygryda Queen Of Sweden Norway & denmark 44 44 QUEEN OF SWEDEN AND DENMARK; MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1083 Erneburga FitzBaldric ~1240 William Le Vavasour 1276 - >1340 Hawise de Muscegros 63 63 ~1074 Avice ~0943 - 0975 Edgar England 32 32 ES 11:78; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; KING OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
William de Bintworth ~0938 - >0979 Thored Ealderman Gunnarsson 41 41 PED OF VERN ORVEL CURITS, 1934; ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0948 Mrs- Thored Gunnarsson Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1133 Matilda Perry ~1372 Margery Meringe ~1340 John Basset 1140 - UNKNOWN Alice deBelmeis ~1336 Katherine Knoll ~1205 Maud ~0912 Elgiva FGRA; PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.PEDIGREE OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1274 Miss Joan de Creye ~0885 Olof "Mitkg" Bjornsson King of Sweden KING OF SWEDEN.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Julien deRos Lucy Assheton ~0967 - 1025 Boleslaw I "Chrobny" "the Brave" King Of Poland 58 58 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1073 - UNKNOWN Daughter deMontlhery ~1109 Unknown 0910/0915 - 0993 Herbert deVermandois ES 111:49; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1264 - 1320 John de Trafford 56 56 ~0918 - 0968 Robert deVermandois 50 50 MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0920 - 0977 Ledgarde de Vermandois 57 57 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.DUCHESS OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. >1296 Alice deLa Plaunche ~0945 - 1003 Rosele (Susanna) 58 58 ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF ITALY AND QUEEN OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF ITALY AND QUEEN OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF ITALY AND QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF ITALY AND QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF ITALY AND QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS OF ITALY AND QUEEN OF FRANCE.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1001 - 3 Feb 1026/1027 Richard III deNormandy DUKE OF NORMANDY; ROYAL ANCESTORS, CHART 541.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0971 - 1016 Ughtred 45 45 MLC/RA; ANCESTRAL FILE; EARL OF NORTHUMBERLAND.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Concubine of Normandy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0806 - 0876 Louis The German 70 70 1005 - >1063 Emma Venaissin 58 58 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
~1310 John de Saville 1069 - 1118 Ansel deGarlande Seneschal 49 49 1110 - 1185 Alfonso I dePortugal 75 75 Title:  Affonso I "The Conqueror" Henriquez King Of PORTUGAL & THEALGARVES. ~1225 - >1293 Margaret de Somery 68 68 1380 John Staunton Milon II de Tonnerre Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Gladys ap Conwyn Source: Berry's Surrey Pedigrees and other authorites. The Visitation of Cornwall, Carew Pedigree. ~0986 - 1016 Ealdgyth (Algitha) 30 30 STUART ROYALTY FOR COMMONERS LINE 233-234; ES II:78.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1298 William de Radcliffe ~0908 - 0937 Ethile (Eadhilde) 29 29 PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1150 - 1191 William Vavasour 41 41 1130 - 1203 Waleran IV Earl of Warwick 73 73 Waleran de Newburgh, son of Roger, succeeded his brother William as 4thEarl of Warwick. Dugdale says' that this nobleman had much ado a greatpart of his time touching his inheritance, there starting up one whofeigned to be his brother, Earl William, deceased in the Holy Land, whichoccasioned him no little trouble and vexation; so that it is thought bysome that the grant which he made to Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury,then Chancellor of England, of the advowson of all the prebendariesbelonging to the collegiate church in Warwick to hold during his life,was to purchase his favor in that weighty business. He married 1stMargery, daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, and had Henry, his successor,Waleran and Gundred, 2nd Alice, daughter of John de Harcourt, and widowof John de Limisi, by whom he had an only daughter Alice. ~0963 - 1000 Olaf I Tryggvesson 37 37 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0940 - 1000 Elfrida Elfthryth 60 60 QUEEN OF ENGLAND.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ES II:78; ANCESTRAL FILE; QUEEN OF ENGLAND.
Wulfryth Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0895 - 0919/0920 Gisèle ONE OF ROLLO'S WIVES WAS GIVEV TO HIM FROM CHARLES THE SIMPLE IN 912.  IS HER?

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ONE OF ROLLO'S WIVES WAS GIVEV TO HIM FROM CHARLES THE SIMPLE IN 912.  IS HER?

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0931 - 0999 Adelheid 68 68 ~0910 - 0947 Editha 37 37 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PRINCESS OF ENGLAND; EMPRESS OF GERMANY; DEATH 26 JUN 1946 ON CDROM.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1313 Agnes 1130 Margery deBohun ~1232 - <1271 Laurence Sanford 39 39 ~0947 - 1000 Thyra Haraldsdatter Queen of Norway 53 53 STUART ROYALTY FOR COMMONERS LINE 369; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0889 - 0964 Arnoul I of Flanders 75 75 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:5; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; I HAD ARNOUL, CD-ROM HAS
ARNULF.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0914 - 0967 Adelais "Were" Countess Of Vermandois 53 53 PED FROM ELIZABETH ANN KELSO - BORN 27 JUN 1926.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0919 - 0966 Berenger II 47 47 ES 11:59; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; DO NOT TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0923 - 0992 Hedwig Countess Of Luxembourg 69 69 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0905 Gyrithe Olafsdotter Queen of denmark UA/ERICKSON.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0903 - 0985 Styrbjorn "the Strong" Olafsson Prince of Sweden 82 82 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1144 - UNKNOWN John Marshal ~1004 - 1049 Eustache I Count de Boulogne 45 45 MPA P. 165; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; DO NOT TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Ermentrude, Countess Of Luxembourg Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1215 - 1265 Ralph Basset 50 50 "Immediately after the Norman conquest," says Collins, "arose into power and importance, more especially in the midland counties, the great baronial family of Basset" (descended from Thurston the Norman), which gave a chief justice to England in the reign of Henry I, in the person of Ralph Basset, from whom sprang the Lords Basset of Drayton, the Lords Basset of Heddington, &c. About the middle of the 12th century, the Bassets of Cornwall obtained the estates of Tehidy by marriage with the heiress of the great house of de Dunstanville. In the 42nd year of KingHenry III (1257-8), Ralph Basset, Lord of Drayton, co. Stafford,[great-]great-grandson of Richard Basset, justice of England, and his wife, Maud Ridel, had summons (amongst other great men) to attend the king at Chester, well furnished with horse and arms, to oppose the incursions of the Welsh. But in the 48th of the same monarch, having joined Simon Montfort, Earl of Leicester, and the other rebellious barons, he was appointed the next year, after the defeat of the king's arms at Lewes, and capture of the king, governor for those lords of the castles of Salop and Bruges. He fell, however, before the close of the same year at the battle of Evesham. It is said that when the Earl of Leicester perceived the great force and order of the royal army,calculating upon defeat, he conjured Ralph Basset and Hugh Dispenser to retire and reserve themselves for better times but they bravely answers,"that if he perished, they would not desire to live." Lord Basset m.Margaret, dau. of Roger de Someri, Baron of Dudley, and widow of Uriah St. Pierre, and had issue, Ralph, and Maud. Not withstanding the death ofLord Basset, thus in arms against the king, his widow was so favoured by the monarch as to have the chief of his estates settled upon her for life, but soon afterwards, taking the veil, she passed her title in those lands to her son, Ralph Basset. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.26-7, Basset, Barons Basset, of Drayton]

RALPH BASSET, son and heir of RaIoh Basset, of Sapcote, co. Leicester, was summoned to Parliament 24 December 1264, by writ directed Radulfo Basset de Sapcote. Such summons having issued in rebellion, should not, however, Constitute a peerage dignity, and none of his successors were summoned to Parliament till 1371. He was summoned cum equis et armis against the Welsh 24 May 1282.



"This feudal lord held the sheriffalty of Lincolnshire from the 25th to the 29th of Henry III, inclusive, and in four years after performed pilgimage to St. James in Galicia. In the 42nd of the same monarch he recieved command to attend the king at Chester, to repel the incursions of the Welsh, andhe was constituted in that year governor of Northampton Caslte. But after the battle of Lewes, being summoned to the parliament which the barons held in the king's name (49th Henry III.) he subsequently sided with Simon Montfort, Earl of Leicester, and fell with that ambitious noble at the battle of Evesham, on 4 August 1265. His lordship m. Milisent, one of the daus. andco-heiresses of Robert de Chaucombe, and was s. by his son, Ralph . . ." He was son of Simon Basset and the daughter of William Avenel.)

Note: The above text from Burke's Extinct Peerage is obviously somewhat wrong.  This Ralph, d. 1282, was son of another Ralph.  However I assume that Ralph's father Ralph may have been son of Simon Basset & Elizbbeth Avenel, as indicated by the above text.

BASSET (a) (of Drayton)

RALPH BASSET, son and heir of Ralph Basset, of Drayton, co. Stafford, andof Colston Basset, Notts (b), was summoned to Parliament 24 December1264, by writ directed Radulfo Basset de Drayton; which writ however,having issued in rebellion, should not create a peerage dignity.

He married Margaret, daughter of Roger de Somery, of Dudlcy, co.Worcester, by his 1st wife (to whom she was daughter and cohheir),Nicole, daughter and eventmaclly coheir of William (d'AUBIGNY), EARL OFARUNDEL. He died 4 August 1265, being slain at the battle of Eveshamfighting against the King, who, however, continued the estates to hiswidow and son, as her father had fought for the King at Evesham. Hiswidow married before 26 January 1I270/1, as 2nd wife, Ralph DE CROMWELL,Of Cromwell, Notts, and West Hallam, co. Derby, who died shortly before18 September 1289. She took the veil shortly before 18 June 1293.[Complete Peerage II:1-2, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(a) In Dugdale's "Usage of Arms", are given the numerous variations (forthe sake of "difference") in the armorial ensigns borne by the variousmembers of the Basset family. From this it would appear that the house ofWeldon, and that of Drayton, both of whom derived from the elder sons ofRichard Basset by Maud, daughter and heir of Geoffrey Ridel (a powerfulfeudal Baron, whose lands they inherited), adopted the "3 piles" (theRidel coat), but that William Basset (ancestor of the house of Sapcote,being the youngest son of the said William and Maud), "having noadvancement by the house of Rydell, retained "Undie" the devise of theBassets, and only changed the colours thereof (from gold and red) intosilver and black. But, about the time of Edward III, Simon Basset, Baronof Sapcote (descended from the forenamed William) and Sir John Basset ofBlore (also so descended), both of them (I know not the case why) at oneinstant (as I think) relinquished their devise of "Undie" and investedthemselves into "Ridels" (ie. the 3 piles with certain variations). [G.E.Cokayne] J. H. Round, however points out that all this is invalidated bythe fact that Geoffrey Ridel d. as early as 1120, when there cannot haveexisted a family coat of Ridel. [Vicary Gibbs]

(b) This Ralph, who d. 1254-61, was son of Ralph, who d. 1211, son ofRalph who d. 1160, son of Richard Basset, Justiciar temp. Henry I, whoheld Drayton through his marriage with Maud Ridel, and d. 1144.

------------------------------------

"Immediately after the Norman conquest," says Collins, "arose into powerand importance, more especially in the midland counties, the greatbaronial family of Basset" (descended from Thurston the Norman), whichgave a chief justice to England in the reign of Henry I, in the person ofRalph Basset, from whom sprang the Lords Basset of Drayton, the LordsBasset of Heddington, &c. About the middle of the 12th century, theBassets of Cornwall obtained the estates of Tehidy by marriage with theheiress of the great house of de Dunstanville. In the 42nd year of KingHenry III (1257-8), Ralph Basset, Lord of Drayton, co. Stafford,[great-]great-grandson of Richard Basset, justice of England, and hiswife, Maud Ridel, had summons (amongst other great men) to attend theking at Chester, well furnished with horse and arms, to oppose theincursions of the Welsh. But in the 48th of the same monarch, havingjoined Simon Montfort, Earl of Leicester, and the other rebelliousbarons, he was appointed the next year, after the defeat of the king'sarms at Lewes, and capture of the king, governor for those lords of thecastles of Salop and Bruges. He fell, however, before the close of thesame year at the battle of Evesham. It is said that when the Earl ofLeicester perceived the great force and order of the royal army,calculating upon defeat, he conjured Ralph Basset and Hugh Dispenser toretire and reserve themselves for better times but they bravely answers,"that if he perished, they would not desire to live." Lord Basset m.Margaret, dau. of Roger de Someri, Baron of Dudley, and widow of UriahSt. Pierre, and had issue, Ralph, and Maud. Notwithstanding the death ofLord Basset, thus in arms against the king, his widow was so favoured bythe monarch as to have the chief of his estates settled upon her forlife, but soon afterwards, taking the veil, she passed her title in thoselands to her son, Ralph Basset. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.26-7, Basset, Barons Basset, of Drayton]

_____________________

Ralph Basset (d 1265), baronial leader, was lord of Drayton inStaffordshire, and, joining the baronial party against Henry III, wasappointed by them custos pacis for Shropshire and Staffordshire on 7 June1264, and was summoned to Simon de Montfort's parliament on 4 Dec 1264 asRalph Basset 'de Drayton'.  He fell at Evesham by De Montfort's side on 4Aug 1265, heaving refused, when urged by him, to seek safety in flight.

     Sir Rauf the gode Basset did ther his ending, (Robert Brune)

His lands were forfeited for rebellion, but restored to his widowMargaret, as the daughter of a royalist, Roger de Someri. [Dictionary ofNational Biography I:1305]
1694 Valentine Hill ~0888 Megingoz Count Of Avalgau Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0986 - 1030 Otgive de Luxembourg 44 44 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES VI:128; CD GIVES DEATH MONTH AS NOV.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1063 - 1085 Gundred 22 22 Weis shows Gundred as daughter of Gherbod the Fleming, not King William. ~1006 - 1077 Gertrud Countess In Nordgau 71 71 ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
ABT 0967/0968 - 1036/1039 Baudouin IV "Le Barbu", Count Of Flandres ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF FLANDERS; "BARBATUS."

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1080 Amice deMontfort 0990 - 1039 Konrad II Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire 49 49 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES I:4; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; EMPEROR OF THE HOLY ROMAN
EMPIRE; KING OF ITALY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Miss Hythus Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1244 - 1290 Eleanor (Alianore Leanor) of Castile 46 46 Eleanor OF CASTILE, Spanish LEONOR DE CASTILLA (b. 1246--d. Nov. 28, 1290, Harby, Nottinghamshire, Eng.), queen consort of King Edward I of England (ruled 1272-1307). Her devotion to Edward helped bring out his better qualities; after her death, his rule became somewhat arbitrary. Eleanor was the daughter of King Ferdinand III of Castile and his wife, Joan of Ponthieu.

In 1254 Eleanor was married to Lord Edward, son of England's King Henry III. In honour of the event, her half brother, Alfonso X of Castile, transferred to Edward his claims to Gascony. When Henry III's baronial opponents seized power in England in 1264, Eleanor was sent for safety to France; she returned in October 1265, after Edward had crushed the rebels.

Eleanor accompanied Edward on a crusade from 1270 to 1273. The story that she saved his life at Acre (now in Israel) by sucking poison from a dagger wound is evidently apocryphal. After Edward ascended the throne, Eleanor was criticized for allegedly mistreating the tenants on her lands. Upon her death, Edward erected the famous Eleanor Crosses--several of which still stand--at each place where her coffin rested on its way to London. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '907]

----------

Queen of England, Princess of Castile and LeUn, Countess of Ponthieu [Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed., R. W. Stuart, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1998]
~0892 - ~0892 Rainer II Count Of Hainault To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0924 - 0973 Rainer III Count Of Hainault 49 49 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0984 Mahaut Of Louvain To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0977 - 1015/1018 Gerberge deLorraine PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0952 - 1015 Lambert II Count Of Louvain 63 63 ES 1:95; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1155 Elana de Clare <1600 - <1657 Jean Sie 57 57 ~0980 Doda Of Falaise From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1009 - ~1071 Eléonore de Normandie 62 62 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNTESS OF FLANDERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0918 Irmintrud Countess Of Avalgau Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0914 - 0992 Heribert Count In Kinziggau 78 78 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1183 - <1273 Roger de Somery 90 90 The Magna Charta Sureties states that Roger is the son of John de Someryand Hawise de Paynell.  However Ancestral Roots and John and Hawise asgrandparents with a generation "27a" (obviously a later addition to theoriginal numbering) indicatin Ralph de Somery and Margaret Marshal.  Ibelieve that Ancestral Roots has the latest and correct information.

pg 64, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 81, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 113, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss  6th edition
pg 171, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 222, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1240 John* (Sir) Eland ~1141 Richard Hamerton Margaret Poultney 1042 - UNKNOWN William dela Ferte de Massey ~0923 Lothaire II King Of Italy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Isabel deBraose 0999 - 1043 Gisèle 44 44 ANCESTRAL FILE; ES I:11; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1208 - <1234 William Percy 26 26 ~0953 - >0992 Bonne AdelaideDuchess Of Lorraine 39 39 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0847 - >0893 Pépin II Count Of Senlis 46 46 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0927 - 0992 Conan I Duke Of Bretagne 65 65 FGRA; JUHEL & BERENGER ARE TWO GIVEN NAMES.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0943 - ~1018 Aldun 75 75 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0973 Eggfrida Countess Of Northumbria MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1046 - ~1111 Simon de Saint Liz or Senlis 65 65 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS;
  NAME Simon De /SAINT LIZ OR SENLIS/
  TITL [CT HNTNGTN & NRTHMPTN]/
  DEAT PLAC La Charite-Sur-Loir, Nievre, France
  BURI PLAC Reinterred St. Neots, France


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1128 - 1183 William FitzRobert 55 55 Some call him Earl of Bristol. He has also been named as Mafonache.  TheComplete Peerage vol.V,p687-9. ~1072 - 1130/1131 Matilda (Maud) Huntington COUNTESS OF HUNTINGTON AND NORTHAMPTON; QUEEN OF SCOTLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1100 - 1170 William de Lancaster 70 70 LORD OF KENDAL.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

pg 87, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
~1046 - 1076 Waltheof 30 30 EARL OF HUNTINGTON AND NORTHUMBERLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1054/1055 - >1086 Judith of Boulogne COUNTESS OF HUNTINGTON AND NORTHUMBERLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0994 - ~1039 Aldred of Bernicia 45 45 MLC/RA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1104 - 1178 Ada deWarren 74 74   TITLE [COUNTESS OF WARWICK] ~1020 - 1054 Lambert deBoulogne 34 34 COUNT OF LONVAINE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1027 - <1090 Adélaïde de Normandie 63 63 COUNTESS OF CHAMPAGNE & PONTHIEU.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
ABT 1080/1082 - 1153 David I "The Saint" KING OF SCOTLAND; DIED AGE 73.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1055 - 1088 William de Warren 33 33 1086 - 1147 Robert deCaen 61 61 The illegitimate son of King Henry I of England (reigned 1100-35), Robertwas made Earl of Gloucester in 1122. After the death of Henry I andusurpation of power by Stephen (December 1135), Gloucester became theleader of the party loyal to Matilda, his half sister, who had beendesignated heir to the throne by Henry I. He took Matilda to England inSeptember 1139 and at the head of her forces won from Stephen most ofwestern England and southern Wales. In February 1141 he captured Stephenat Lincoln and imprisoned him in Bristol. Later that year Gloucester wascaptured at Winchester, Hampshire, and exchanged for the king. Hecontinued to be the mainstay of Matilda's cause until his death.Chroniclers considered Gloucester an able and sagacious leader. ~1230 - 1294 William de Percy 64 64 ~0980 Daughter Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Elflaed Princess Of England Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1016 - 1057 Edward, the Exile Atheling 41 41 ARSC 1:21; DIED AGE 41; PRINCE OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1018 - 1024 Agatha Von Brunswick 6 6 ARTICLE BY DE VAJAY; RUSSELL'S BOOK GIVES BRUNO, BISHOP OF AUGSBURG, AS HER
FATHER.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0998 - >1074 Ralph deWarren 76 76 ~1020 - 1059 Emma 39 39 ~0978 Fulbert de Falaise From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0960 Edgitha Of England Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1260 Arnold de Percy 1090 - 1157 Mabel Fitzhamon 67 67 ~0976 Enricule "le Petit Arnoul", Comte de Boulogne ES 11:5; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0980 Adeline Comtesse de Boulogne ES 11:2; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Bernhard deWerl Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0978 Seward ~0982 Mrs-Seward Countess Of Northumbia Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0899 - ~0938 Boso 39 39 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1016 - 1038 Liudolf of Brunswick 22 22 ANCESTAL FILE; ES VIII:131A; MARGRAVE IN FRIESLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0949 Duncan, Lord Of Mormaer ES 11:89; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0951 Mrs- Duncan Mormaer Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0960 - ~0994 Walroef 34 34 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0730 - 0778 Gunderland Count of Hasbania 48 48 1125 - 1157 Matilde De Savoy 32 32 ~0965 Elfeda ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0950 William deWarren ~0960 Miss deTorta 0961 - 0987 Arnold II of Flanders 26 26 ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF FLANDERS; ES II:5; MPA P. 277; PED OF AUGUSTINE H.
AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0945 - 1019 Frederic I Count Of Luxembourg 74 74 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0948 Irmtrud Countess Of Gleiberg PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0971 Sigrid Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0922 - >0972 Arnoul (Arnold) (Ernulfe), Comte de Boulogne 50 50 ES 11:5; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; DO NOT TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0927 daughter Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0929 - 0961 Adele (Alice) Countess Of Equisheim 32 32 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1070 - 1129 Herbert FitzPeter 59 59 Chamberlain and Treasurer of England. ~1170 - 1242 William II de Albini 72 72 William de Albini, feudal Lord of Belvoir, like his father, adheredfirmly to King Henry III. He m. 1st, Albreda, dau. of Henry Lord Biseth,and 2ndly, Isabel-----, and left issue by the former, an only dau. andheiress, Isabel de Albini, who m. Robert de Ros, Lord Ros of Hamlake, andconveyed to him the feudal barony and castle of Belvoir, which eventuallypassed from the family of Ros to that of Manners. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, England, 1883, p. 160, Daubeney, Barons Daubeney, Earl ofBridgewater]

Note: Magna Charta Sureties states that Isabel was daughter of his 2ndwife Isabel.
~0960 Morcar Of England Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0960 - 1016 Bruno 56 56 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0960 - <1049 Hugo VI - IV Nordgau 89 89 COUNT OF LOWER ALSACE; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0964 - 1046 Heilwig Von Dagsburg 82 82 GENEAOLIGIST VOL.  1 #2 FALL 1980 P. 131-134; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0936 Daughter Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0930 Sigurd Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0930 Maldred Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0925 Walter deSt. Martin ~0930 Daughter un mistress ~0935 Ralph (Rodolphe) deTorta ~0940 Mrs. Ralph deTorta ~0903 Alice Burgundy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0903 Hugh Count Of Equisheim Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0943/0948 - 0981 Mathilde ANCESTRAL FILE; ES 11:1; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; GERBERGE'S 2ND MARRIAGE;
COUNTESS OF FLANDERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0927 - >1005 Godefroy de Ardenne 78 78 Gottfried 'The Captive' Count of Verdun, France. ~1210 Ada ~0928 Styrbiorn Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0933 Mrs. Styrbiorn Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0930 - 0994 Ekbert "One- Eyed" 64 64 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1222 - 1237 Margaret deBurgh 15 15 0934 Frederuna Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0950 - 1003 Hermann II 53 53 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED FROM ELIZABETH ANN KELSO -- BORN 27 JUN 1926; DUKE OF
SWABIA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0973 - 1017 Gerberga deBurgundy 44 44 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED FROM ELIZABETH ANN KELSO - BORN 27 JUN 1926; PRINCESS OF
BURGUNDY AND DUCHESS OF SWABIA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0928 - <0986 Hugo V, Count In Nordgau 58 58 PED OF AUGUSTINE H, AYERS; COUNT OF LOWER ALSACE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0928 Mrs-Hugo V, Countess Of Nordgau Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0940 - >0980 Ludwig Von Dagsburg 40 40 ~0940 Von Dagsburg ~0897 - 0954 Malcolm I 57 57 ES 11:88; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1220 Margery de Stuteville ~0922 - 0944 Elgiva England 22 22 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0980 First Wife Or Mistress ~0922 Ordgar Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0927 Mrs Ealdorman Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0908 Gunnor Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1090 - 1153 Roger deBeaumont 63 63 FGRA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
ABT 1114/1119 - 1152 Henry deScotland EARL OF HUNTINGTON, AND NORTHUMBERLAND, ENGLAND AND PRINCE OF SCOTLAND. Godiva Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Enguerrand II Count Of Ponthieu Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1032 - >1096 Eudes III Count Of Aumale 64 64 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNT OF CHAMPAGNE & AUMALE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Sigeferth Arngrimsen Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Gouet Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 1100 - 1155 William deMohun 55 55 William de Mohun was a knight of great valour. He improved the buildingsof his predecessor at Dunster, and was a great benefactor to the priorythere, as well as to that at Taunton, which was founded by WilliamGiffard, Bishop of Winchester. William sided with the Empress Maud in thefight against King Stephen, and in 1138 Dunster Castle was beseiged byStephen, who, however, found it too strong to take. He married Agnes,daughter of Walter de Gaunt or Gant, who was grandson of Baldin, 6thCount of Flanders, who married Matilda, sister of William the Conqueror,thus making Walter de Gant 1st cousin to Kings William Rufus and Henry I. Estrid (Margret) Of Normandy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Gillacomgan Mormaer Of Moray Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Macbeth King Of Scotland Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0997 Pope (Papie) Duchess Of Normandy ANCESTRAL FILE; DUCHESS OF NORMANDY.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Mrs Richard II de Normandie Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0960 Mrs-Svend Haroldsdotter Queen of denmark Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) Gunhild Queen Of denmark Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0953 - >0991 Agnès de Vermandois 38 38 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0985 - 1015 Ernst 30 30 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0865 Mrs-Charles III, Concubine Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) D. UNKNOWN Éndae Cennsalach macLabraid Laídech 0930/0935 - ~1005 Gottfried Count Of Verdun To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Saum- Aesa Mrs Gormsson Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) <0948> - 1036 Cuno of Oeningen ~0925 - 0993 Conrad I "the Peaceful" 68 68 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED FROM ELIZABETH ANN KELSO - BORN 27 JUN 1926; KING OF
BURGUNDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Ethelfleda Queen Of England Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1181 Cicily Waleton Joan de Colewick John Booth ~0820 - 0866 Robert "Fortis" Duke Of France 46 46 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PED OF ROLAND B. CLARK, JR.; COUNT
OF ORLEANS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Mrs-William I, Concubine Of Scotland Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1072 - 1100 Sadb ingen MacBricc 28 28 ~0882 - 0949 Miss de Vermandois 67 67 ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNTESS OF WETTERAU.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Lambert, Count Of Chalon-Sur- Saone Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1125 Beatrix deLangtun ~0901 Mrs-Charles III, Concubine Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0903 Mrs-Charles III, Concubine Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0887 - 0917 Fréderune 30 30 ES 11:1; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; CORRECT INFORMATION - DO NOT TAMPER WITH!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0872 Adelheid de Burgundy Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0905 Mrs-Charles III, Concubine Of France Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) D. UNKNOWN MacBricc King of dessi ~0877 - 0920 Elfridam 43 43 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0950 - >0982 AdelaideDe Vermandois 32 32 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; SWORD, MITER, & CLOISTER PP. 307-314.
MLC/RA; DIED IN 975 OR 978.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0867 - 0921 Richard Duke Of Burgundy 54 54 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0950 - 0978 Lambert D' Autun 28 28 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; SWORD, MITER & CLOISTER PP 307-314.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1174 Unknown ~0844 - ~0935 Thyre "Danebod" Queen Of denmark 91 91 BAPTIZED AS A CHILD IN FRANCE.  GOT GORM TO LISTEN TO THE MISSIONARIES BUT HE
CONTINUED TO WORSHIP THE IDOLS OF HIS ANCESTORS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0840 - ~0940 Geva Knudsson King of denmark 100 100 KING OF DENMARK, REIGNED 58 YEARS, FROM A.D. 883-A.D. 941.
ES 11:97; THE AMER. GEN. VOL. 33 @2[SIC] PP. 87-94; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0952 Richilde <0854> - 0950 Theobald de Tours COUNT OF BLOIS AND CHARTRES; VISCOUNT OF TROYES; ~1140 - ~1234 Miss Avenel 94 94 pg 89, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition 1008 - UNKNOWN deb-Forgaill O'Brien of Munster ~0902 - 0937 Rudolph II 35 35 King of the Burgundies. Mrs-William I, Concubine Of Scotland NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 4 Of /SCOTLAND/


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 4 Of /SCOTLAND/


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1226 - >1277 Joan Nichole Fitz Ralph 51 51 ErmengardeDe Beaumont Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0895 - 0966 Bertha Von Swabia 71 71 Mrs-William I, Concubine Of Scotland NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 6 Of /SCOTLAND/


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 6 Of /SCOTLAND/


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Mrs-William I, Concubine Of Scotland NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 2 Of /SCOTLAND/NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 3 Of /SCOTLAND/


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 2 Of /SCOTLAND/NAME Mrs-William I, Concubine 3 Of /SCOTLAND/


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1195 Julian deMulton ~1140 Unknown 0995 - 7 Feb 1071/1072 Diarmait MacMáil King of Kinsale & Leinster 1 Mar 1105/1106 - 1157 Alphonso Raimerez VII deCastile D. 1103 Humbert deMaurienne De Savoy 1587 - 1676 Anne Paine 88 88 *roger deHerdeburgh ~1150 Isabel Scotland pg 89 & 146, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~0942 Aethelwold Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0890 Bernard "The Dane" Harcourt PRINCE IN DENMARK, GOVERNOR AND REGENT IN NORMANDY UNDER ROLLO, WITH WHOM HE
RECEIVED BAPTISM AT ROUEN IN A.D. 912.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

PRINCE IN DENMARK, GOVERNOR AND REGENT IN NORMANDY UNDER ROLLO, WITH WHOM HE
RECEIVED BAPTISM AT ROUEN IN A.D. 912.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0876 Ecgwy (or Ecgwyn) Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1315 - 1393 Isabel Basset 78 78 Isabel, (illegitimate?, half?) sister and eventual heiress of RalphBasset, 3rd Lord (Baron) Basset of Drayton (who dsp 10 May 1390, since when that Barony has been abeyant or dormant).  [Burke's Peerage] Agnes Bernington Omerod's Cheshire, vol.  III, page 113. The Visitation of Cheshire 1613, page 191. The Visitation of Cheshire, 1580, page 21-22. The Visitation of Berkshire 1613, page 16.  Some records state this persons surname is: Bennington. ~1358 Isabel Leygard (Legard) 0965 - 1006 Donnached "Mael-Na-Mbo" King of Cheinnselaig 41 41 ~1242 - ~1405 John (Leygard) Leygard 163 163 ~0863 - >0896 Drugo Hrollagur Turstain 33 33 IN THE DIVISION OF NORMANDY IN FIEFS (BY ROLLO HIS HALF BROTHER), ROLLO
ALLOTTED THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF LA MANCHE TO DROGO, WHO TOOK THE SURNAME OF
TURSTAIN; THE BERTRAND FAMILY ARE DERIVED FROM DROGO; JARL OR EARL OF MOERE;
MFA VOL. 9, P. 516; .
~0878 - ~0919 Elfrida (or Elfleda) (or Aelflaed) of Wiltshire 41 41 ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES ELGIVA; FGRA; QUEEN OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0923 - 0946 Edmund I The Magnificent 23 23 PED OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER; ANCESTRAL FILE; KING OF ENGLAND REIGNING FROM 940
TO 946.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0871 - 0924 Edward I "The Elder" 53 53 ANCESTRAL FILE; ARSC 1:16; KING OF ENGLAND, RULED FROM 901 TO 925.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0922 - 0944 Elgiva (or Aelfgifu) The Fairies Gift 22 22 ES II:78; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; PRINCESS WHO BECAME QUEEN.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0896 - 0963 Edgiva (or Edgind) 67 67 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0920 Abbott Dunkin ES 11:89; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0896 - >0955 Aedgifu (or Edgiva) 59 59 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; CORRECT INFORMATION - DO NOT TAMPER
WITH; QUEEN OF FRANCE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0989 - 1064 Donnchad O'Brien King of Munster 75 75 0865 - 0918 Baldwin (or Boudouin) II "The Bald" 53 53 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNT OF FLANDERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0860 - 0929 Elfridam (or Aelfthryth) 69 69 ES II:78; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; PRINCESS OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0845 - 0917/0920 Theodoric (or Dietrich) ANCESTRAL FILE; COUNT OF THE SAXON HAMALANT; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNT
OF RINGLEHEIM.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0850 Ragnhildis (or Reginhilde) Ludmilla ANCESTRAL FILE; OF MIDDLE FRIESLAND; ES 11:104; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS;
COUNTESS OF RINGLEHEIM.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0901 Unknown Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0866 Unknown Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) 0879 - 0929 Charles III "The Simple" 50 50 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED FROM ELIZABETH ANN KELSO - BORN 27 JUN 1926; KING OF WEST
FRANKS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1176 Avicia ~0890 Lambert PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0900 - 0944 Wichmann 44 44 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0945 - 1014 Brian Boru King of Ireland 69 69 ~0890 Daughter PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0940 - ~1033 Adalbert II 93 93 ~0900 Adaloff ES 11:5; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0900 Frederuna PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0915 - 18 Dec 0972/0973 Eberhard IV of Nordgau Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0890 Kunigunde PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0881 - ~0919 Wigeric 38 38 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0915 - 1005 Liutgarde 90 90 ES VI:127; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0882 - 0910 Gisela 28 28 BORN 880-85.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0895 - >0932 Ermengarde 37 37 BERTHA'S 2ND MARRIAGE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
D. 1097 Amargen O'Morda King of Loigsi 0880/0885 - 0923/0925 Adelbert (or Adalbert) PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0882 Concubine Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0900 Concubine Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0895 Concubine Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~1308 John Hamerton ~0860 - 0950 Ricfried 90 90 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; CORRECT INFO - DO NOT TAMPER WITH!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0860 Hersinde Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0862 - 0940 Hugh I of Nordgau 78 78 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0862 Hildegarde Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0892 Bertha of Metz PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0940 - UNKNOWN Murchad Leinster 0914 - ~0970 Juhel Berenger 56 56 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; JUHEL & BERENGER ARE TWO GIVEN NAMES.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0884 - <0930 Berenguer of Bayeau 46 46 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ES II:75; DO NOT TAMPER WITH THIS INFORMATION!


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0914 Gerberge Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0930 - ~1002 Wulfric of Mercia 72 72 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; MPA P. 249.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0900 - >0943 Wulfrun 43 43 MPA P. 249.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Agnes de Vermandois Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0900 - 0942 William I, the Longsword 42 42 ES 11:79; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; DUKE WILLIAM LONGSWORD OF
NORMANDY---2ND DUKE OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

ES 11:79; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; DUKE WILLIAM LONGSWORD OF
NORMANDY---2ND DUKE OF NORMANDY.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1274 Christian Drokenbrode ~0952 - 0992 ErmangardeD' Anjou 40 40 DUCHESS OF BRITONS; ES 111:116; PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1219 John Vavasour 0950 - UNKNOWN Princess Connacht John II Lawrence John was said to be "of Saint James, South Elmham, Suffolk", and  was also said to be "Rev. John Lawrence (jr.) of Syleham, co. Suff." He is described as 'a plausible preacher but not so good a man as his father. His father gave him St. James-Parke in South Elmham after which he sold it to Alderman Massam'. [Tanner Lirary (Oxford) MS 180 ff. 48 & 49, dated 1660.] He married a daughter of William Herne of Tibenham, co. Norf. and had at least four children." Joan Hepphale Joan Bingley D. 1311 John de Grey Elizabeth deMontfort ~0970 - >1010 Gudrid 40 40 AFTER HER 2ND HUSBAND DIED, ABT 1011, SHE MADE A PILGRAMAGE TO ROME IN HER
BEREAVEMENT, AND LATER DIED IN A CLOISTER FOUNDED BY HER SON IN ICELAND.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

AFTER HER 2ND HUSBAND DIED, ABT 1011, SHE MADE A PILGRAMAGE TO ROME IN HER
BEREAVEMENT, AND LATER DIED IN A CLOISTER FOUNDED BY HER SON IN ICELAND.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

AFTER HER 2ND HUSBAND DIED, ABT 1011, SHE MADE A PILGRAMAGE TO ROME IN HER
BEREAVEMENT, AND LATER DIED IN A CLOISTER FOUNDED BY HER SON IN ICELAND.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Eliza Issabell Mortein The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Issabell daughter of Sir Roger Mortein
Knight Lord of Dunesley.
~0860 - 0955 Bernard de Harcourt 95 95 ~0879 Sprote Burgoyne 0910 - 0951 Cennetig Thomond macLorcain King of Thromond 41 41 Sadb Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
D. 1070 Murchad Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Alice (de) Courtenay ~1100 - 1147 Walter Fitz Edward 47 47 Joane de Gray The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 145.  Joane daughter of the Lord Gray of
Rotherfeld.
Sir. Staunton See Pedigrees Brian FitzAlan Maud 0952 - 1004 Adelaide de Poitou 52 52 PED. OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
0925 - 1005 Be Bind Ingen Urchada 80 80 Mary Milon II deTonnerre Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~0911 Herfault deCrepon CREPON BEING AN ESTATE NEAR BAYEUX, NORMANDY---DE BEING LATIN FOR "OF".
DANISH KNIGHT; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

CREPON BEING AN ESTATE NEAR BAYEUX, NORMANDY---DE BEING LATIN FOR "OF".
DANISH KNIGHT; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

CREPON BEING AN ESTATE NEAR BAYEUX, NORMANDY---DE BEING LATIN FOR "OF".
DANISH KNIGHT; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks

CREPON BEING AN ESTATE NEAR BAYEUX, NORMANDY---DE BEING LATIN FOR "OF".
DANISH KNIGHT; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS.


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Emma deMoton Unknown Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks D. 23 Feb 1071/1072 Diarmait MacMael nam Bo Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Orlaith Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Reynold de Grey Henry II (Duke) of Brabant 0900 - UNKNOWN Urchad macMurchada King of West Connacht Robert dePierrepont ~1222 - >1279 John Byron 57 57 ~1178 - 1228 Reginald de Braiose 50 50 pg 150, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 72, Burke's " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" published 1883
D. 1080 derb- Forgall Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
William de Braiose Joan deToteneis Philip de Braiose King of England Harold II Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks ~0282 Frodi Fridleifsson of denmark 1012 - 1098 Dirborgaill ingen Taidg of Ossory 86 86 1078 Agnes Tregoz John Warner ~1080 Walterr Fitz Roger Bertha Fitz Walter 1075 Nesta Fitz Osborn 1314 - 1378 Gervase deClifton 64 64 ~1109 Miss ~1330 - 1393 Anketil Mallory 63 63 Sold Kirkby Mallory in 1347.

Ancestral File Number:<AFN> 8WKF-KL
Isabel de Clare John deAnnesley ~1146 - ~1176 Rosamundeof Clifford 30 30 Rosamond; mistress of Henry II, known as "Fair Rosamond" and quitepossibly mother of William Longespee, Earl of Salisbury.  [Burke's Peerage] 1262 Joan deLusignan Aka: Jeanne. Alfonso II "The Chaste" King of Aragon 1403 Margaret Staunton ~1130 Mauger Vavasour ~1240 Margaret Margery de Massey 1698 - 1735 Mary Underhill 37 37 Thomas Ashe ~1228 Amicia de Alfreton 1630 - 1705 Thomas II Merritt 75 75 1005 - 1086 Dunlaing O'Caellaide 81 81 1668 Isaac Merritt ~1215 Adam de Booth D. >1098 Renaud deClermont Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
Ermengardis deClermont Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks


Desperate for information on Stewart and Montgomery Families of Allegeheny Co., Pennsylvania. Your assistance would be most appreciated. Thanks
BEF 1206/1207 Miss de Kellet ~1197 - >1242 Robert de Holland 45 45 ~1171 Mathew de Holland ~1154 - 1206/1207 Adam de Kellet ~1158 - ~1219 Matilda Or Maud de Singleton 61 61 ~1134 Osbert (Orm) de Kellet 0836 Barrdub de Ulster ~1125 - <1185 Uctred Or Ughtred Huctred deSingleton 60 60 ~1131 - <1175 Mrs- Uctred deSingleton 44 44 deHonford ~1288 Ellis Knoll ~1265 Peter de MidDelton ~1100 - >1170 Huck or Hucca deSingleton 70 70 ~1104 Mrs. Huck deSingleton ~1311 - 1351 John Tempest 40 40 ~1310 Henry Brailsford 1243 Joan Basinge 0832 - 0919 Aed 87 87 ~1287 Margaret (Holand) Holland ~1263 - 1305 Richard Tempest 42 42 ~1264 Mrs Richard Tempest ~1261 Robert (Holand) Holland ~1320 Jane Audley ~1242 Roger Tempest ~1243 - 8 Mar 1301/1302 Alice deWaddington ~1221 John Tempest ~1222 Mrs- John Tempest ~1200 - 1272/1273 Richard Tempest 0922 - 0976 Donnchad King of Ossary 54 54 ~1201 Elena de Tonge ~1217 Walter deWaddington ~1174 - 1209 Roger Tempest 35 35 ~1178 Alice de Rillieston ~1148 Richard Tempest ~1152 Alice de Meschine ~1118 - 1181 Roger Tempest 63 63 ~1124 Mrs. Tempest ~1152 Elias de Rillieston ~1156 Alice Hebden 0922 - 1016 Aife 94 94 ~1087 Archil Tempest ~1091 Mrs- Archil Tempest ~1062 Ulchil Tempest ~1066 Mrs- Ulchil Tempest ~1155 Henry de Waleton ~1282 - >1345 John de(Assheton) Ashton 63 63 ~0610 - 0664 Cadwaladr ap Cadwallon of Britons 54 54 pf 434 Magna Charta ~0480 - 0547 Maelgwn I ap Cadwallon of Gwynedd 67 67 ~1262 Thomas de(Assheton) Ashton ~1266 Mrs-Thomas de(Assheton) Ashton D. UNKNOWN Faelan King of the dessi of Munster ~1240 Roger (Wrightington) de Ashton ~1244 Mrs-Roger (Wrightington) de Ashton ~1218 Orm (Ailward) Fitz Edward ~1220 Emma de Gresley ~1401 - 1480 Richard Hamerton 79 79 ~1399 - BET OCT 1466 AND AUG Elizabeth Assheton ~1427 - 1501 Stephen Hamerton 74 74 ~1368 - 1428 John de Assheton 60 60 1372 Jane Savile ~1344 John de Assheton 0892 - 0908 Cillach King of Ossary 16 16 ~1348 Standish ~1342 John de Assheton ~1344 Margaret de Leigh ~1337 Robert Standish 1360 - 1414 Isabel Lathum 54 54 Latham ~1322 - ~1386 Thomas de Assheton 64 64 ~0591 - 0634 Cadwallon ap Cadfan of Gwynedd 43 43 ~1305 Elizabeth ~1300 John Bumhley ~0973 Gerberga Princess Of Burgundy 0892 - 0986 Echrad 94 94 0910 - 0997 Konrad Count In The Rheingau 87 87 PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; POSSIBLY SAME AS KUNO OF OHNINGEN JAMS BAQ, QAQ, ES
I:11; ANCESTRAL FILE; DUKE OF SWABIA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0914 Judith Duchess Of Swabia PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; ANCESTRAL FILE; DUCHESS OF SWABIA.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0925 - 0993 Conrad I King Of Burgundy 68 68 ~0943 - 0981 MathildePrincess Of France 38 38 ~0695 Mrs- Budli Leinfnisson ~0915 - 0978 Albert I The Pious, Count Of Vermandois 63 63 ~0848 - 0902 Herbert I Count Of Vermandois 54 54 ~0862 Miss Princess Of France ~0406 Hring Raumsson ~0414 Miss Vifilsdatter Matudan 1082 - 8 Mar 1125/1126 Urraca Alfonsez deCastile ~0430 Eymund King In Holmgard ~0434 Mrs- Eymund Of Holmgard ~0892 - ~0892 Rainer II Count Of Hainault ~1206 Ralph (Lord) Fitz Randolph ~0770 Eisyllt verch Cynan ~0841 Theodore de Ardennes ~0880 - 0931 Bbeatrice de Vermandois 51 51 ~0902 - 0937 Rudolph II King Of Burgundy 35 35 ~0907 - 0967 Bertha Von Swabia 60 60 ~0882 - 0949 Miss de Vermandois 67 67 0832 - 0888 Cerbal\ Kjarval King of Ossary 56 56 ~0852 - 0929 Willa Von Swabia 77 77 ~0882 Richard I Von Swabia ~0887 Reginlinde de Nullenburg 0860 - 0923 Robert I King Of France 63 63 ~0361 Domar Domaldasson ~0365 Drott Danpsdotter ~0898 - 0956 Hugues Magnus, Duke Of France 58 58 0340 Domaldi Visbursson ~0344 Mrs- Domaldi Visbursson ~0319 Visbur Vanlandasson 0805 - 0895 Dunlang King of Ossary 90 90 ~0323 Mrs- Visbur Vanlandasson ~0298 Vanlandi Svegdasson ~0302 Driva Snaersdotter ~0832 Emund Eriksson ~0837 Mrs- Edmund Eriksson ~0815 Mrs- Erik Refilsson ~0598 Egdir Skulasson ~0602 Mrs- Egdir Skulasson ~0548 Skuli Lofdasson ~0558 Mrs- Skuli Lofdasson 0919 - 1005 Luitgarde Trier 86 86 ~0508 Mrs- Lofdi Halfdansson ~0555 Mrs- Ottar Egilsson ~0530 Egil Aunsson King In Sweden ~0532 Mrs- Egil Aunsson ~0509 Aun "The Aged" "Ani" Jorundsson King In Uppsala ~0513 Mrs- Aun Jorundsson William Paine William Payne, son of Edmund  and his heir, grandson of Sir Thomas, removed to Suffolk County, and took up his residence at Hengrave in that county. Carrying with him the use of his grandfathers Coat of Arms, this came thenceforth, in heraldic history to be known as the “Coat and Crest of Leicester County, and Suffolk county, and is especially known as belonging to “Payne of Hengrave.” He was a man of much note and importance in his day, being in the service of Edward Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, as bailiff of his manor of Hengrave. In 1521, the Duke was put to death having been convicted of conspiring against King Henry VIII. To establish himself in power, as his successor, was, by order of the King, put to death. The office thus becoming vacant by the death of the Duke, Payne lost his place as deputy, and was obliged to retire to private life. The Dukes successor, however, appointed Payne’s son to office held by the father, as stated mentioned in the history of Suffolk County. Payne married Margery daughter of Thomas Ash, by whom he had twelve children:

Henry, who never married
John, who married, and his widow married William James.
Thomas
George
Nicholas, who married Ann Bowles of Baldock
Edward, who married
Anthony, who married Martha Castell
Agatha, who married John Pratt
Elizabeth, who married Oliver Sparrow
Agnes
Anna
Frances
~0491 Mrs- Jorund Yngvasson ~0988 - 1016 Edmund II "Ironside" King Of England 28 28 0900 - 0973 IV Eberhard 73 73 1016 - 1057 Edward "Atheling" Prince Of England 41 41 ~0968 - 1016 Ethelred II England 48 48 Reigned 979-1013(deposed) and 1014-1016. In the face of Danish raids, hewas forced to pay huge tributes (Danegeld) to the enemy. He was driven into exile by Sweyn but returned after his death. Died during Canuteinvasion of England. Burke says he died 1010. His tomb was lost when the old St Pauls Cath. was destroyed in the great fire of London.

FGRA; PED OF WILLIAM FLOYD BONNER; ANCESTRAL FILE; CDROM & ANCESTRAL FILE GIVES
MARR TO ALFGIFU AS ABT 985; KING OF ENGLAND.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.

Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
Margaret de Bintworth ~0922 - 0946 Edmund I "The Magnificent" King Of England 24 24 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0810 Odoscer ~0820 Mrs- Odacre ~0896 - 0961 Edgiva Queen Of England 65 65 ~0780 Engleran ~0750 Liderie 0853 - UNKNOWN Arlinda ~0871 Sigehelm, Earl Of Kent ~0876 Mrs- Sigehelm Of Kent John* (Sir) Dalton ~1274 Joan deTankersley Marguerite deTurenne ~0668 - 0710 Eystein "Haardaade" Throndsson King of Hedmark 42 42 ~0670 Solveig Halfdansdatter ~0700 Hogne Eysteinsson ~0621 Mrs- Ingvar Eysteinsson ~0638 Onund "Braut" Ingvarsson King In Sweden 0875 Ermentrude of France 0823 - 0877 Charles II 54 54 John Poultney  "Joh'es Poultney Ch'ro modo petens terras".
Translation:  Mono = Matrimonio [ married]
~0599 Mrs- Eystein Adilsson ~0528 Helgi Halfdansson ~0540 Olof "The Mighty" Mrs Halfdansson ~0185 Kari Fornjotsson King In Kvenland ~0185 Mrs- Kari Fornjotsson 0830 - 0869 ErmentrudeIrmtrud De Orleans 39 39 ~0210 Frosti Karasson King In Kvenland ~0160 Fornjotur King In Kvenland 0846 - 0879 Louis II "The Stammerer" King of France 32 32 ~0165 Mrs- Fornjotur Kvenland 0921 - 0954 Louis IV France 33 33 <0953 - BET 21 MAY 992 AND 994 Charles France Duke of Upper Lorraine 0879 - 0929 Charles III "The Simple" King Of France 50 50 ~0904 - >0951 Ogive France 47 47 BET 855 AND 860 - ~0900 Adbelahide France ~0878 Elfleda England ~0912 Elgiva Princess Of England 0843 - 0879 Louis II France 35 35 ~0851 - 0912 Otto deSaxony 61 61 0850 AdelaideJudith Queen of France 0855 - 0906 Hathui 51 51 0778 - 0840 Louis I 61 61 ~0824 - 0866 Adbelahide(Adelheid) Princess Of The Holy Roman Empire 42 42 ~0789 Rutpert Robert III deWormsgau 0790 Wiltrud Waltrada of Orleans ~0799 Louis "The Pious" Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire ~0800 - 0843 Judith Bavaria 43 43 ~0800 Ermengarde Of The Holy Roman Empire ~0890 - 0939 Gilbert Duke Of Lorraine 49 49 ~0930 - 0973 AlberadeDe Lorraine 43 43 1173 - 1240 Llywelyn Fawr Wales 67 67 Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, (Llywelyn Fawr or Llywelyn the Great: 1173-1240)can justly be called the greatest of the medieval Welsh kings. By 1202,he had taken advantage of the quarrels of his uncles and had become rulerof the kingdom of Gwynedd. Further successes in Deheubarth, after thedeath of the Lord Rhys, and in Powys made him the most powerful of allthe Welsh rulers, though it was Gruffudd ap Llwyelyn who is remembered asthe only native monarch to rule over all of Wales. Peter N. Williams,Ph.D. ~0925 Gerberge Princess Of Lorraine 0742 - 0814 Charlemagne 71 71 0806 - 0866 Liudolf deSaxony 60 60 0810 Oda deSaxony ~0757 - 0783 Hildegard 26 26 0876 - 0935 Ebles II de Poitiers 59 59 ~0846 - ~0931 Rollo Rognvaldsson 85 85 ~0872 Poppa Duchess Of Normandy ~0710 Gandolf Alfgeirsson King In Norway 1170 - 1263 Tangwystyl Verch Llywarch 93 93 1079 - 1130 Raimund Berenger III deBarcelona 51 51 ~0688 Alfgeir King In Vingulmork ~0814 Knud (Harde-Knud) Sigurdsson ~0818 Mrs- HardeKnud Sigurdsson ~0784 Heluna (Bleja) Princess In England ~0410 Hergrim Arngrimsson ~0776 - ~0830 Guelph I (Welf I) Duke Of Bavaria 54 54 ~0414 Ogn Mrs Arngrimsson ~0408 Stark "Aludregn" Of Norway ~0412 Alfhild Finnalfsdatter ~0830 - ~0892 Giselbert Count Of The Moselle (Maasgau) 62 62 1136 - 1174 Iorworth Dywyndwn Ap Owain Gwynedd 38 38 ~0780 Hedwig Duchess Of Bavaria 0865 Hersent, Duchess Of Lorraine ~0800 - 0834 Eudes de Orleans 34 34 ~0805 Ingeltrude De Orleans ~0660 Halfdan Solfasson ~0664 Mrs- Halfdan Solfasson ~0590 - ~0650 Halfdan Haraldsson King In Sweden 60 60 ~0594 Moalda "Digri" Kinriksdatter ~0568 Harald Valdarsson ~0547 Valdar Hroarsson 1140 - 1224 Margred Verch Madog 84 84 ~0549 Mrs- Valdar Hroarsson ~0370 Raum "the Old" Norsson ~0371 Hildur Gudraudsdatter ~0507 Sigris Mrs Frodasson ~0483 Mrs- Frodi Fridleifsson ~0460 Mrs- Fridleif Frodasson ~0970 Thorgils "Sprakaleg" Styrjornsson To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0886 - 0932 Ingeberg Thrandsdotter 46 46 UA/ERICKSON.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0345 Norr Thorrasson King In Alfheim ~0352 Mrs- Norr Thorrasson 1192 - UNKNOWN Enguerran deFiennes II Lord Martock ~0504 Norbrii King Of Northumberland BET 1080 AND 1082 - 1153 David I "The Saint" King Of Scotland One of the most powerful Scottish kings (reigned from 1124). He admittedinto Scotland an Anglo-French (Norman) aristocracy that played a majorpart in the later history of the kingdom. He also reorganized ScottishChristianity to conform with continental European and English usages andfounded many religious communities, mostly for Cistercian monks andAugustinian canons. The youngest of the six sons of the Scottish kingMalcolm III Canmore and Queen Margaret (afterward St. Margaret), Davidspent much of his early life at the court of his brother-in-law KingHenry I of England. Through David's marriage (1113) to a daughter ofWaltheof, earl of Northumbria, he acquired the English earldom ofHuntingdon and obtained much land in that county and in Northamptonshire.With Anglo-Norman help, David secured from his brother Alexander I, kingof Scots from 1107, the right to rule Cumbria, Strathclyde, and part ofLothian. In April 1124, on the death of Alexander, David became king ofScots.

David recognized his niece, the Holy Roman empress Matilda (died 1167),as heir to Henry I in England, and from 1136 he fought for her againstKing Stephen (crowned as Henry's successor in December 1135), hopingthereby to gain Northumberland for himself. A brief peace made withStephen in 1136 resulted in the cession of Cumberland to David and thetransfer of Huntingdon to his son Earl Henry. David, however, continuedto switch sides. While fighting for Matilda again, he was defeated in theBattle of the Standard, near Northallerton, Yorkshire (Aug. 22, 1138). Hethen made peace once more with Stephen, who in 1139 grantedNorthumberland (as an English fief) to Earl Henry. In 1141 Davidreentered the war on Matilda's behalf, and in 1149 he knighted her sonHenry Plantagenet (afterward King Henry II of England), who acknowledgedDavid's right to Northumberland.

In Scotland, David created a rudimentary central administration, issuedthe first Scottish royal coinage, and built or rebuilt the castles aroundwhich grew the first Scottish burghs: Edinburgh, Stirling, Berwick,Roxburgh, and perhaps Perth. As ruler of Cumbria he had takenAnglo-Normans into his service, and during his kingship many otherssettled in Scotland, founding important families and intermarrying withthe older Scottish aristocracy. Bruce, Stewart, Comyn, and Oliphant areamong the noted names whose bearers went from northern France to Englandduring the Norman Conquest in 1066 and then to Scotland in the reign ofDavid I. To these and other French-speaking immigrants, David grantedland in return for specified military service or contributions of money,as had been done in England from the time of the Conquest.
~1072 - 23 Apr 1130/1131 Matilda (Maud) Huntington BET 1114 AND 1119 - 1152 Henry Prince Of Scotland ~1046 - 1076 Waltheof Earl Of Northumberland 30 30 1054/1055 Judith Of Boulogne ~1020 - 1055 Siward Biornsson 35 35 ~1021 - 1045/1049 Biorn Bjorn Ulfiusson Estridsen MLC/RA.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0980 Ulsiusson ~0660 Ingjald "Braut" "The Wicked" Onundsson King In Sweden 1148 - 1233 Alan Basset 85 85 Alan and his brother Thomas were both nobles named in the Magna Charta in1215. ~0664 Gauthild Algautsdotter ~0643 Mrs-Onund "Braut" Ingvarsson ~0644 Mrs- Algaut Gautreksson ~0618 Gautrek Gautsson ~0620 Mrs- Gautrek Gautsson ~0638 Radbart King Of Gardarige ~0670 Randver Radbartsson ~0275 Snaer (Svaer) Jokulsson King In Kvenland ~0276 Mrs-Snaer (Svaer) Jokullsson ~0320 Thorri Snaersson King In Kvenland 1212 - UNKNOWN Margaret Verch Llywelyn ~0240 Jokull Frostasson ~0244 Mrs- Jokull Frostasson ~0214 Mrs- Frosti Karasson ~0825 Ethelred deGainai Margery Ashe (55-1015) 0960 - 1015 Vladimir I "The Great" Grand Duke Of Kiev 0942 - 0972/0973 Svyatoslav I Grand Duke Of Kiev ~0830 Eadburh Fadburn ~0881 - 0969 Olga Grand Duchess Of Kiev 88 88 1036 - 1084 Roger D' Aubigny 48 48 ~0818 - >0840 Pbepin II Quentin Count Of Vermandois 22 22 0828 - 0877 Charles II The Bald 49 49 BET 804 AND 806 - 0843 Judith ~0977 - BET 1015 AND 1018 Gerberge de Lorraine ~0820 Countess Of Vermandois ~0929 Adele (Alice) Countess Of Equisheim ~1220 Miss ~0929 - 1008 MathildeVon Sachsen 79 79 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)

Sources: Kraentzler 1157, 1257, 1271; RC 13, 104, 141; Coe, A. Roots; AF. RC: Countess of Flanders. Widow of Baldwin III (RC 141-35), Count of Flanders.  Mathilda von Sachsen.
~0900 - 18 Dec 0972/0973 Eberhard IV, Count In Nordgau ~0910 Luitgard, Countess Of Luxembourg 1066 Gerald de Gournay Gerard de Gournay, Baron of Yarmouth, was a grand Seigncur. He marriedEdith, daughter of William, Earl of Varenne in France, and 1st Earl ofWarren and Surrey, in England, so created by William, the Conqueror, withwhom he came to England in 1066. They had five children: Hugues III,Gautier, Anseau, Gonnor and Gundred. He went on the First Crusade anddied on the way home on the 8th of May, 1097. Edith, who had accompaniedhim, was taken back to Normandy by Drogon, a Chevallier and friend ofGerard, who after married her, and they had a son. Drogon had richmanoirs of his own, but Henry I, of England, under pretense of danger toGerard's children, put senechals in all their manoirs, took theirfortresses, and took Gerard's children to himself. ~0928 - <0986 Hugo V, Count In Nordgau 58 58 0886 Wigerich, Count Palatine Of Luxembourg 0886 Kunigunde William Sandes The will of Sir. William Sandys
Sir. William Sandys, the elder, 17th October 9 Henry VII, 1493. I will that William, my son, and Margaret, my wife, pay all my depts out of my goods at Andover and at the Vine; I will that Richard, my son, have all my purchased lands.
Proved: 8th April 1497
Jane Sandes ~0797 - ~0835 Cunigunde, Queen Of Italy 38 38 ~1294 - 1362 William de Plumpton 68 68 ~0984 Bethoc (Beatrix) Princess Of Scotland 1091 - 1160 Madoc ap Maredudd Prince of Powys 69 69 ~1013 - 1040 Duncan I King Of Scotland 27 27 ~0777 Mrs Pbepin, Queen Of Italy Agatha deFerrers Marguerite Berenger ~0870 - 0940 Hugo III, Count In Nordgau 70 70 ~0876 Mrs Hildegard, Countess In Nordgau ~0835 - >0898 Eberhard III, Count In Nordgau 63 63 0835 Mrs-Eberhard III, Countess Of Nordgau ~0847 Bberenger de Bayeux Alice Hayward D. 1132 Maredudd ap Bleddyn Prince of Powys Meredith, or Meredyad, ap Bleddyn. In 1109 Bleddyn began the erection ofthe Castle of Powis, which is about a mile from Welshpool, Wales. Theprincipality of Powis comprised about one-third of Wales in 1069 whenBleddyn ap Cynwyn became its ruler. Meredith adopted the "black lion ofPowys" argent a lion rampant sable in substitution for his father's arms:or a lion rampant gules. He married 1st Efa, daughter of Blettrus apEdnowain Bendew, married 2nd Hunnydd, whose son was King Griffith apMeredith. ~0326 Mrs- Thorri Snaersson ~0365 Gorr Thorrasson ~0953 Biorn Styrbiornson Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0958 Mrs- Biorn Styrbiornson Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0804 Ascrida (Aseda) Rognvaldsdatter Countess of Oppland ~0735 - ~0735 Fergus (Ungust), King Of The Picts ~0737 Mrs-Fergus, Queen Of The Picts ~0755 Fergusa (Urgusia), Queen Of Scotland 0709 Urgust, King Of The Picts ~0714 Mrs-Urgust, King Of The Picts D. UNKNOWN Hunydd Einudd 1081 Dulce Aldonza Milhaud William Sandes The Visitation of Cumberland states the name of the father of Jane Sandis was Oliver Sandis and his wife Joan,  son of Sir. William Sandis and Margaret Rawson of Yorkshire. This is also shown in the pedigree of Sandes in the Visitations of Sussex and Joan his wife. The arms of Sandes: Ar. a fess counter compony of the first and Sa. between three cross crosslets fitchee of the second. The Pedigree recorded in the Visitation of Surrey 1623 shows William Sands of Little Patensham as the father of Jane, wife of Robert Wintershall. This is also shown in all the pedigrees of the Wintershall family in the Visitations of Surry and Oxfordshire. As the Wintershall pedigrees and 2 out of 4 Sandes pedigrees show the father as Sir. William, I will keep him as the father until further research proves otherwise.
Also see "History of the Family of Sandys of Cumberland, afterwards of Furness in North Lancashire, and its branches in other parts of England & in Ireland." By: E. S. Sandys,  Published by: Barrow Printing Co. Ltd., Lawson Street, Barrow-in-Furness, England, 1930
See: The Visitation of Buckingham, 1632, page 108. William Sands is called, Sir. William Sands of Surry, Knight.
See: Visitation of Bedfordshire, page: 14 and 15.
See: Visitation of Cambridgeshire.
Elizabeth Cheney Isabel Woodhall Waters Gleanings, 1:53, gives the following descent from Harl. MS. 1541, f. 55, 1. John Woodhall of Ullock, Cumb. 2. John Woodhall m. Jennett Craleplace (this John had a brother Thomas who married Joane Longdale). 3. John Woodhall of Walden, Essex, married Elizabeth Grindall, daughter of William and sister of Archbishop Emond. 4. William Woodhall of Walden, Essex, m. Mary Woodhall, daughter of James Woodhall, son of James Woodhall of Cockesmore, Cumb., widow of William Byrd of London. 5. Edmond Woodhall, of Walden Essex, married Margaret Law (this Edmond had sisters Debora [m. Anthony Calton], Elizabeth [m William Burrows of Wickhambroek, Suffolk], Mary [m. Thomas Harrison], Dorothy, Jane, Katherine [m. Barley], Joane, d.s.p.; and brothers William, James and Grindall, all who d.s.p.). 6. Edmond, with siblings John, Mary (m. Thomas Goade, DCL), and Penelope (m. John Gbson of Crake Welborne, Yorks.). Waters also relates that in Walden church are epitaphs for James Woodhall, Assistant and Treasurer, d. 1529; William Woodhall, Esq., Register [sic] of the {rerogatice Court of Canterbury, d. 1603; Mary Woodhall, daughter of James, and wife to WilliamBryd and William Woodhall, d. 1613; and WIlliam Byrde, gent., d. 1568. Waters also presents extensive abstracts from (1) the will of Archbishop Edmund Grindall; (2) James Woodhall, of Walden, Essex, 1601, father-in-law of William Woodhall, (3) William Woodhall, of Walden, which mentions his father-in-law James, and also mentions John, Archbishop of Canterbury, his faithful brother Mr. William Wilson, son Grindall Woodhall, etc., (4) Edmund Woodhall, 1638, (5) William Wilson, Canon of St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, 1615, etc. Margaret Rawson William Grindall William  "was a well to do"  farmer who lived in Hensingham in the Parish of Saint Bees, Cumberland, which is about a mile south of Whitehaven. That he was a prosperous man is evident from the fact that he was able to give his son Edmund sufficient education to prepare him for college, then send him on to Cambridge where he entered Magdalene College. Little is known of William Grindall. He was probably born about 1480 to 1490, presumably of a local family altho there is no record of the Grandall family in the area in that early period of scant records. The parish of Saint Bees where the Grindall family lived, Archbishop Grindall described it in the 16th century as '"the ignorantest par in religion, and most oppressed of covetous land lords of any part of this realm'". This criticism of land lords woud seem to imply that William Grindall, relatively prosperous as he may have been, was nevertheless a tenant of some feudal lord. This was the case for most farmers of that time."
Source: John Brooks Threlfall, Ancestry of the Children of John Brooks Threlfall,  privately printed, 1970
Henry Wintershall Elizabeth Grindall Misc. Essex pedigrees, Visitation of Essex book 2, page 620.
Elizabeth Grindall was the sister of Archbishop Edmund Grindall who was first Bishop of London, then Archbishop of York, and finally on 10 January 1575 elected Archbishop of Canterbury.  Edmund Grindall, Archbishop of Canterbury left in his will dated 8 May 1583 [PCC 39 Rowe, 60 Dorset]    . . "to my nieces Dorothy, Katherine, Elizabeth and Isabell, the daughters of Elizabeth Woodhall, my sister late deceased, £50 to each.... *William Woodhall, my nephew,* Mr. WIlson, my chaplain, nieces Dorothy, Katherine, Elizabeth and Isabel, daughters of Elizabeth Woodhall, my sister, late deceased (50 pounds each), the children of Mabel, daughter of his sister, to be divided at the discretion of their uncle WIlliam Woodhall, niece Isabel Wilson, godson Edmond Woodhall, and others, will dated 8 May 1583, proved 15 July 1583.

Source: Henry F. Waters, "Genealogical Gleanings in England," New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Vol. 38, No. 3, July, 1884. John Brooks Threlfall, Ancestry of the Children of John Brooks Threlfall, privately printed, 1970.



The Dean Register has the following entries (taken from a transcript): John Wooddall, baptised 8 Jul 1544, Dean Isabel Wooddall , baptised 2 Mar 1546 (?7), Dean Dorathye Wooddall, baptised 20 Feb 1548, Dean Christopher Wooddall, buried 6 Oct 1549, Dean Elizabeth Wooddall, baptised 10 Mar 1552, Dean John Wooddall, buried 2 Feb 1553, Dean William Woodall, buried 15 Nov 1553, Dean Elizabeth Wooddall, baptised 13 Mar 1555, Dean, John Wooddall, baptised 2 Feb 1556, Dean John Wooddall, buried 10 Feb 1558, Dean Oswald Woodal = 10 May 1559, Dean = Margaret PAYLL Elizabeth Wooddall, baptised 20 August 1561, Dean Elizabeth Wooddall, buried 1 Mar 1561, Dean Richard Wooddall, buried 4 Mar 1563 Dean William Wooddall, buried 20t May 1565, Dean John Wooddall, baptised 30 Feb 1567, Dean Thomas Wooddall, buried 10 Feb 1567, Dean Henry Wooddall, baptised 25 Oct 1570, Dean Thomas Wooddall, buried 13 May 1570, Dean Jane Woodall, baptised 11 Sep 1573, Dean Margaret Woodall, baptised 26 Feb 1574, Dean, buried 26 Feb 1575, Dean Thomas Wooddall, buried 13 Jul 1575, Dean Robert Wooddall = 30 Jul 1577 Dean = Jane GAYTSCARTH John Wooddall, buried 9 Apr 1578, Dean Oswald Wooddall = 2 Jun 1579 Dean = Mary SALKELD Henry Wooddall, baptised, 22 May 1580, Dean, buried 4 Sep 1582, Dean Anthony Wooddall, buried 2 Feb 1580/1, Dean Mary Wooddall, buried 14 Jan 1582, Dean John Wooddall, buried 2 Dec 1582, Dean (WILL 1582) Elizabeth Wooddall = 28 Jun 1584 Dean = Willm BOWMAN Robert Woodall, buried 4 Feb 1586, Dean John Woodhall, buried 1587/8, Dean John Woodhall, buried 10 Nov 1586, Dean
John Woodhall Research: Bedfordshire Visitations : Woodhull

James Woodhall's will, dated 21 Feb. 30 Eliz. I, proved 30 June 1601, mentions, among other things, his daughter Mary and her husband William Woodhall, Mary and WIlliam's eldest son James, the second son Edmond and third son William, William and Mary's daughters Debora, Elizabeth, Mary, Dorothy, Jane, Katherine and Johane. A codicil 29 Aug. 1596 states another child of Mary's has been born named Grindall Woodhall. [PCC 1 Woodhall]. Misc. Essex pedigrees, Visitation of Essex book 2, page 620.
Henry de Grey ~1305 Eleanor de Ferrers 1081 - 1137 Gruffydd ap Rhys Prince of deheubarth 56 56 ~1144 de Warwick 1404 - 1480 William Plumpton 76 76 ~1406 - 1451 Elizabeth Stapleton 45 45 ~1422 Isabel Plumpton 1383 - 1421 Robert Plumpton 38 38 1386 - 1416 Alice Foljambe 30 30 1362 - 1405 Robert William Plumpton 43 43 ~1364 - 1424 Alice Gisburn 60 60 ~1340 - 1407 Robert Plumpton 67 67 1349 Isabella Scrope 1039 - 1093 Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr King of deheubarth 54 54 ~1336 - 1390 John de Gisburn 54 54 ~1338 - 1407 Ellen 69 69 1367/1368 - 1388 Godfrey Foljambe ~1371 Isabel Leeke 1344 - 1376 Godfrey Foljambe 32 32 ~1349 Margaret deVillers ~1345 Simon Leeke ~1305 - 1362 Christiana Mowbray 57 57 ~1244 - <1310 William de Ros 66 66 ~1268 - <1310 Eustace FitzHugh 42 42 D. 1075 Bleddyn ap Cynfyn Prince of dehehubath ~1279 John Or Alexander Mowbray ~0865 - 0921 Leszek IV Prince Of Poland 56 56 ~0869 Mrs-Leszek IV Princess Of Poland ~0835 - 0892 Ziemowit Prince Of Poland 57 57 0714 - 0768 Pepin France 54 54 ~0840 Mrs-Ziemowit Princess Of Poland ~0813 - 0992 Piast Or Chosciszko Duke Of Poland 179 179 ~0720 - 0783 Berthe Bertrade De Laon 63 63 ~0855 - 0890 Ranulph II Count Of Poitiers 35 35 Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) D. UNKNOWN Haer ~0856 AdbelahidePrincess Of France ~0844 - BET FEB 879 AND NOV AnsgardePrincess Of Burgundy ~0815 Hardouin ~0795 - 0843 Renaud, Count Of Poitiers 48 48 ~0827 Slavibor, Zupan Of Psov ~0674 Mrs- Randver Radbartsson 0676 - 0741 Charles Martel 65 65 William Owen  Aka: de Poultney OR "of Poultney" ~0690 Claribert I Heribert deLaon ~0695 Bertrada deLaon D. 1050 Cynfyn ap Gwerystan King of Powys 0710 Gerold I deVinzgau ~0736 Imma deSwabia ~0625 Sigar Odinsson ~0630 Mrs- Sigar Odinsson ~0600 Odin ~0604 Mrs- Odin 0880 - 0949 Udo deWetterau 69 69 ANCESTRAL FILE; PED OF AUGUSTINE H. AYERS; COUNT OF WETTERAU.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0866 - 0910 Gebhard deWetterau 44 44 0826 - 0879 Gebhard Count Of Lower Lahngau 53 53 >0770 Ivar Halfdansson D. UNKNOWN Angharad Ferch Maredudd Queen of Powys ~0826 Hrolf Nefja (Nefia) ~0828 Mrs- Hrolf Nefja >1192 - ~1264 William de Ros 72 72 ANOTHER RECORD HAS DEATH IN 1258. ~1250 - >1265 Lucia FitzPiers 15 15 ~1144 - ~1186 Everard de Ros 42 42 pg 89, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~1146 - <1196 Roysia Trusbut 50 50 pg 89, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc"  by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition

pg 779, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition

pg 458, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke,  published 1883
~0924 Billung Count In Saxony ~0800 Bruno Duke Of East Saxony 0780 Billing Of Saxony D. UNKNOWN Efnydd ap Gwerny Lord of Duffryn 0784 Aeda ~0918 Angharad verch Llywelyn of Powys ~1104 Ada de Warenne ~0835 - 0869 Lothaire II King Of Lorraine 34 34 ~1065 - 1138 William II de Warenne 73 73 This nobleman, William de Warrenne (Earl of Warrenne), 2nd Earl ofSurrey, joined Robert de Belesmé, Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury, infavour of Robert Curthose against Henry I, and in consequence forfeitedhis English earldom and estates, but those were subsequently restored tohim and he was ever afterwards a good and faithful subject to King Henry.His lordship m. Isabel, dau. of Hugh the Great, Earl of Vermandois, andwidow of Robert, Earl of Mellent, by whom he had issue, William,Reginald, Ralph, Gundred, and Adeline. The earl d. 11 May, 1138, and wass. by his eldest son, William de Warrenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 569, Warren, Earls of Surrey] ~1085 - 1131 Isabel (Elizabeth) de Vermandois 46 46 ~1117 Richard Avenal BET 1042 AND 1045 - 1093 Margaret "Atheling" Queen Of Scotland 0871 - 0925 Bertha, Princess Of Lorraine 54 54 0795 - 0855 Lothaire I Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire ;[King of Italy] 60 60 1087 - 1169 Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd Prince of Gwynedd 82 82 Yielded sovereignty to his nephew Llewelyn ap Iorworth in 1194. There isdisagreement as to who is Dafydd's mother, Christina or Gwladys. ~0970 - 1034 Malcolm II (Melkolf) MacKenneth King of Scotland 64 64 ~0932 - 0995 Kenneth II King Of Scotland 63 63 Kenneth began his reign by ravaging the Britons, probably as an act ofvengeance, but his name is also included among a group of northern andwestern kings said to have made submission to the Anglo-Saxon king Edgarin 973, perhaps at Chester; and the chronicler Roger of Wendover (FloresHistoriarum, under the year 975) states that shortly afterward Kennethreceived from Edgar all the land called Lothian (i.e., between the Tweedand the Forth rivers). This is the first mention of the River Tweed asthe recognized border between England and Scotland. Kenneth was slain,apparently by his own subjects, at Fettercairn in the Mearns. ~0897 - 0954 Malcolm I King Of Scotland 57 57 King of the Picts and Scots (Alba), also called Malcolm Macdonald.Malcolm succeeded to the crown when his cousin Constantine II entered amonastery (943). He annexed Moray to the kingdom for the first time.After driving the Danes from York, the English king Edmund turned Cumbriaover to Malcolm, apparently as a fief or seal of alliance. Later, whenNorsemen again invaded the land, the Scots sent raids against theEnglish, and in 954 the West Saxon king Eadred reunited the northerncounties to his dominions. Malcolm was slain the same year at Fordoun inthe Mearns in a conflict with his own northern regions. ~0800 - 0851 ErmengardeCountess Of Tours 51 51 ~0901 Mrs-Malcolm Queen Of Scotland Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com) ~0862 - 0900 Donald II Dasachtach, King Of Scotland 38 38 ~0866 Mrs-Donald, Queen Of Scotland ~0836 - 0877 Constantine I King Of Scotland 41 41 1098 - 1163 Gwladus Verch Llywarch 65 65 ~0840 Mrs-Constantine I, Queen Of Scotland ~0810 - 0859 Kenneth I "Macalpin" King Of Scotland 49 49 ~0814 Mrs-Kenneth I Queen Scotland ~0778 - 0834 Alpin King Of Scotland 56 56 ~0782 Mrs-Alpin Queen Of Scotland ~0747 - 0819 Eochaid IV King Of Scotland 72 72 ~0725 - 0778 Aodh Hugh Fionn, King Of Scotland 53 53 ~0727 Mrs-Aodh Hugh Fionn, Queen Of Scotland ~0695 - 0721 Eochaid III King Of Scotland 26 26 ~0832 Ermengarde(Irmgard) Duchess Of the Moselle (Maasgau) 1055 - 1137 Gruffydd ap Cynan Prince of Gwynedd 82 82 Burke titles him as King of North Wales. 0883 Roger deMontgomerie The earliest records have of the family of Montgomery states its origins in the north of France in the 9th century. We can go back through an unbroken succession of ten centuries in length to the first known ofthe name Roger de Montgomery, who was Count of Montgomery before the coming of Rollo the Dane into Normandy in 912. A native of Neustria himself, his ancestors were probably for many generations back natives of that province, which, when conquered by the Northmen, was afterwards known as Normandy. The earlier generations of the Montgomeries took their surname from the early appanage of the family, the County of Montgomery.This custom was common with all families dating back to that era, family names with but few exceptions having a local derivation. The County of Montgomery in France is situated in the Pays d'Auge and consists of several baronies and about 150 fiefs and arriere fiefs, dependent on the bailiwicks of Argentan, Caen, Alencon and the Viscounty of Trau. The House of Montgomery was well known and its members took a leading part inthe affairs of France and Normandy, and also in England for severalcenturies before the Domesday Survey. ~0700 Mrs-Eochaid III King Of Scotland ~0660 - <0692 Findon (Eochaid II) King Of Scotland 32 32 ~0677 Spondana ~0630 - 0692 Dongart (Eugene VI), King Of Scotland 62 62 ~0600 - 0673 Dongart, King Of Scotland 73 73 ~0778 - 0818 Ermengarde(Irmengarde) Princess Of Hesbaye 40 40 ~0758 Ella King Of England ~0277 Svegdi Fjolnarsson ~0281 Vana Mrs Fjolnarsson ~0256 Fjolnir Yngvi- Freysson 1065 - 1162 Angharad Verch Owain 97 97 ~0260 Mrs Yngvi- Freysson ~0235 Yngvi-Frey King Of The Swedes ~0239 Gerd Gymersdotter ~0214 Njord King Of The Swedes ~0217 Mrs-Njord Queen Of The Swedes ~0193 Yngvi Turkey ~0196 Mrs- Yngvi ~0753 Ingeramne, Duke Of Hesbaye ~0758 Mrs-Ingeramme, Duchess Of Hesbaye ~1203 Miss D. UNKNOWN Christina Hammon de Massey ~0802 Adela de Tours Miss Butler ~1265 Miss ~1012 - 1067 Baudouin V Count Of Flanders 55 55 1003 - 1079 Adaele (Alix) Princess Of France 76 76 ~1255 Agnes deRockley ~1250 John deSaville 0960 - 1040 Fulk IV D' Anjou 80 80 Fulk IV, Count of Anjou, surnamed the Rude, who succeeded as Count ofAnjou at the decease, in prison, of his brother Geoffrey, the Bearded.Fulk married Bertrade, daughter of Simon de Montfort, they had a daughterErmengarde and a son, Fulk V, Count of Anjou. ~1031 - 1083 Matilda Countess Of Flanders Queen Of England 52 52 ~0993 - 1027 Ulf Thorgilsson 34 34 To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0997 Estrid (Margarete) Svendsdatter Princess of denmark ES II:98; RUSS' BOOK, P. 160 PLACES HER WITH THIS HUSBAND.ANCESTRAL FILE.

To my (Roger W. Winget - Genealogy@Winget.com) knowledge,
this individual was still alive as of May 2000.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
0972 - 1031 Robert II "The Pious" France 59 59 ~0986 - 1032 Constance Toulouse 46 46 ~1053 - 1102 Hugues "le Grand" de France 49 49 ~1065 - BET 28 SEP 1120 AND 1124 Adelle (Adelaide) Vermandois ~1425 - 1485 John Shirley Esq 60 60 The Visitation of the County of Nottingham In the Years 1569 and
1614, edited by G.W. Marshall 1871, Publications of the Harleian
Society, vol. 4, p. 147. Some records show this person as Guy.
~0990 Adelle Of Vermandois ~0979 - BET 25 MAY 1043 AND 1045 Otho (Otto) Count Of Vermandois 0993 - UNKNOWN Edwin Ap Gronwy ~0939 - 0996 Hugues "Capet" King Of France 57 57 BET 942 AND 953 - BET 29 AUG 997 AND 1015 Herbert III Count Of Vermandois ~0946 - >1018 ErmengardeCountess Of Vermandois 72 72 ~0952 - 1004 AdbelahidePrincess Of Aquitaine 52 52 1271 - 1312 John de Ferrers 41 41 ~1070 Ralph (Pincerna) le Boteler ~0922 - 0965 Hedwige (Hartwige) Princess Of The Germans 43 43 ~1055 - 1088 William de Warren 33 33 ~1063 - 1085 Gundred Princess Of England 22 22 ~1020 de Warenne 1014 - 1106 Cynan Ap Iago 92 92 Excluded from the throne by Gruffydd ap Llewelyn and exiled in Ireland. ~0929 - 0963 Guillaume III (I) Duke Of Aquitaine 34 34 ~0897 - >0962 Adaele (Gerloc) Of Normandy 65 65 ~0947 - 1037 Guillaume III Taillefer 90 90 ~0470 Mrs- Yngvi Alreksson ~0945 Arsinde(Blanche) De Anjou ~0431 Dag "the Powerful" King ~0434 Mrs- Dag ~0917 - 0960 Raimond III Toulouse 43 43 Unknown Miss ~0806 - 0857 Ethelwulf Wessex 51 51 1036 - UNKNOWN Gwenllian Verch Aron ~0810 - 0846 Osburh Wessex 36 36 ~0785 Oslac Wessex ~0790 Mrs- Oslac Wessex 0876 - 0936 Heinrich I 60 60 ~0878 - 0968 Matilda deRingelheim 90 90 0913/0914 - 0984 Gerberge ~0853 - ~0930 Theodoric deRingelheim 77 77 ~0858 Ludmilla Ragnhildis ~0828 Reginhart deRingelheim ~0833 - 0910 Matilda deRingelheim 77 77 0974 - 1039 Iago ap Idwal 65 65 Excluded from the throne by Llewellyn Sitsyllt but eventually restored.

Sources: Young; History of Morgan Family; Kraentzler 1406, 1409; AF. History: Kingof Gwynedd, 1033. Young: Iago, prince of Gwynedd, died 1039. Iago, Prince of Wales. Excluded from the throne. Exiled in Ireland. Murdered in 1039. His son was Cynan."
~0800 Wolpert Von Ringelheim ~0800 Alburgis Von Ringelheim ~0820 Gottfried ~0820 Matilda ~1220 Agnes ~1250 Isabella Widow of John Brunston ~0340 Danp Rigsson ~0343 Danpi ~0784 - >0838 Egbert Wessex 54 54 ~0788 Redburh Wessex 0945 - 0996 Idwal ap Meurig 51 51 ~0758 - 0788 Ealhmund Kent 30 30 ~0762 Mrs- Ealhmund Of Kent ~0625 Thrond ~0630 Mrs- Thrond ~0700 Mrs- Hogni Eysteinsson ~0738 Eystein "Glumra" Hognasson ~0693 Agnar Sigtrygsson ~0671 Sigtryg Of Vendil Anne de Rockley 0917 - 0986 Meurig Ilwa ap Foel 69 69 1206 Thomas deClinton ~1299 Unknown Miss 1299 - 1327 Robert deClifton 28 28 ~0428 Skjalf Frostadotter 1210 Mazera Bisege ABT 0967/0968 - BET 30 MAY 1036 AND 1039 Baudouin IV "Le Barbu", Count Of Flandres ~0945 - 1003 Rosele (Susanna), Princess Of Italy 58 58 ~0407 Mrs- Dag Dyggvasson ~0590 - ~0630 Cadfan ap Iago of Gwynedd 40 40 ~0382 Dyggvi Domarsson 0883 - 0942 Idwal Ap Anarawd 59 59 Rainald III deBurgundy ~0386 Domarsson ~0402 Frosti King In Finland ~0406 Mrs- Frosti Of Finland ~0800 - 0840 Olaf Gudrodsson King of Jutland And Vestfold 40 40 Robert Bulkeley ~1314 Miss ~0848 Ethelhelm ~0437 Mrs- Frodi Dansson ~0412 Dan Olafsson ~0416 Mrs- Dan Olafsson Avandreg ~0285 Mrs- Frodi Fridleifsson ~0259 Fridleif Skjoldsson ~0263 Mrs- Fridleif Skjoldsson ~0237 Skjold King Of The Danes ~0215 Odin (Woden, Woutan) ~0219 Frigg (Friege) Frea ~1247 Miss ~0351 Mrs- Frodi Havarsson ~0329 Mrs- Haver Fridleifsson ~0307 Mrs- Fridleif Frodasson 0857 - 0916 Anarawd Rhodi Prince of Gwynedd 59 59 ~0700 Halfdan "the Aged" Sveidasson ~0705 Mrs- Halfdan Sveidasson ~0650 Sveidi (Sveithi) "the Sea King" Svidrasson ~0655 Mrs- Sveidi Svidrasson ~0740 Mrs- Eystein Hognasson William Foliot ~0770 - 0807 Rutpert Robert deWormsgau 37 37 ~0770 - 0789 Theoderata Tiedrada de Wormsgau 19 19 1145 Ralph de Chetwode ~1027 - <1090 AdbelahideDe Normandie 63 63 0859 - 0900 Merfyn ab Rhodri Mawr King of Powys 41 41 ~0020 Llyr Llediaith (Lear) of Siluria ~0963 - 1027 Richard II "The Good" Duke Of Normandy 64 64 0986 - 1067 Richard of Evreux 81 81 ~1544 Agnas ~0395 Danpi Mrs Vermundsson ~0373 Mrs- Vermund Havarsson 0982 - 1017 Judith de Bretagne 35 35 ~0695 Chrodobertus II ~0695 Doda ~0720 - ~0764 Rupert (Robert) I Wormsgau 44 44 0822 - 0878 Rhodri Mawr 56 56 Only five rulers could claim to be kings of Wales. A sense of unity outof the ever-quarrelling, petty Welsh kingdoms and princely fiefs wasbrought about only by Rhodri Mawr (Rhodri the Great), Hywel Dda (Hywelthe Good), Gruffudd ap Llywelyn (1039-63), Llywelyn ap Iorwerth (Llwyelynthe Great) (1194-1240) and Llywelyn ap Gruffudd (1248-82).   Rhodribecame King of Gwynedd in 844, following the death of his father; ofPowys following the death of his uncle in 855; and of Seisyllwg(including Ceredigion and Ystrad Tywi) following the death of hisbrother-in-law in 872. He was most successful in keeping out the Danesand the English from settling his territories.  Peter N. Williams, Ph.D.

Rhodri Mawr, Roderick the Great, was King of Powis, and by inheritanceand marriage reunited the States of North Wales, South Wales and Powis,and became King of all Wales in A. D. 843. Rhodri was 5th in linealsuccession to his memorable progenitor, St. Cadwaleder Bendegelig (theBlessed), who was as well saint as monarch, and was crowned King of theBritons, A. D. 676. Cadwaleder's standard displayed the "Red Dragon"transmitted as the distinctive cognizance of his royal race. Rhodrimarried Angharad (Ingharad), daughter of Meyrick (Meuric), in 844 andthey had six sons: Cadell, Mervyn, Gurat, Elisse, Anarod and Tudwal, whowas called Gloff, or the lame, because of having received a wound in hisknee in battle. The whole of Wales acknowledged Roderick the Great as onesovereign, but on his death it was divided between his sons into threeprincipalities.
~0670 Lambert (Lamtbertus) I ~0690 Mrs Lambert ~0665 Chrodobertus (Robert) I ~0665 Mrs Chrodobertus I ~0640 Charibert ~0931 - 0973 Renaud de Roucy 42 42 ~0600 Svidri Heytsson ~0605 Mrs- Svidri Heytsson ~0425 Heytir Gorrsson ~0435 Mrs- Heytir Gorrsson 0825 - 0900 Angharad Verch Meurig 75 75 ~0375 Mrs- Gorr Gorrsson ~0899 - ~0938 Boso Tuscany 39 39 ~1285 Hugh deCorona 0855 - 0915 Adalbert Tuscany 60 60 ~0880 Rudolph King Of Burgundy ~0732 Eaba ~0736 Mrs- Eaba ~0745 - 0770 Thhuringbert 25 25 ~0745 Mrs Thhuringbert ~0725 - ~0768 Williswint 43 43 0801 - UNKNOWN Meuric ap Dyfnwal Lord Caerdigan Meuric ap Dyfnwal ap Asthin ap Sitsllt Lord Caerdigan. 0933 - 0996 Richard I Normandy 63 63 Duke of Normandy "Sans Peur"
Sources: RC 24, 89, 166, 168, 222; Coe; AF; Kings and Queens of Britain;  Norr (pages 46, 60); The Dukes of Normandy by Onslow; Butler; Pfafman; A. Roots 1-19,39, 121E; Kraentzler 1153, 1156, 1174, 1176, 1180, 1194, 1211, 1218, 1265, 1432, 1443; Davis; Magna Charta Sureties 157-1. Roots: Richard I, "the Fearless,"b. Fecamp, ca. 933; named father's heir 29 May 942. Married first (Danish wife) Gunnor but betrothed ca. 945 and eventually married 960 to Emma. After Emma's death he married (Christian marriage) Gunnor to legitimize their children. Sureties: Richard I, the Fearless, Duke of Normandy. Richard "sans Peur," Third Duke of Normandy, 942-996. The line to the dukes of Normandy comes throughIsabel St. Liz, and the line to Charlemagne comes through her husband, WilliamMauduit. The lines merge again with the marriage of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, and Emma, daughter of Hugh "The Grand," King of France. His son, Hugh Capet, later assumed the title, and primogeniture beganin the French line of kings. The two lines met again later with the marriage of Adele, daughter of King Robert II, and Richard III, Duke of Normandy. Richard was betrothed to Emma for some time but did not marry her until about 960,after the death of her father, Hugh the Great, in 956. Richard was the guardian of Hugh's son, the Duke of Paris, and eventually married Emma to strengthen his position. He did not treat her unkindly, he merely loved Gunnor. "Poor Emma passed her life at Rouen alone and solitary, and eventually she died about the year 962". Richard I, "The Fearless" (sans Peur), 3rd Duke of Normandy (942/3-996), son of William Longsword and Sprote de Bretagne. Stuart, Roderick W.  Royalty forCommoners.  2nd Edition. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1992; line 166-33.  Only says that he was born about 933.  Died 20 Nov 996 at Fecamp.  Married after 962, (1) Emma (Agnes), daughter of Hugh le Grand, Count of Paris. 2.  Taute, Anne.  "Kings and Queens of Great Britain" chart.  Edition. Gives her date of death as 996.   Norr, Vernon M.  Some Early English Pedigrees, page 60, generation 38. Gives his death date as 996.  This source states that he married (1) Agnes, daughter of Hugh le Grand; had issue byand later married (2) after Agnes' death, Gunora, born 952.  Ancestral File   gives his birth date as 28 Aug 933. Death date agrees with that given in Stuart.
~0214 Gymer ~0218 Orboda ~0936 - 1031 Gonnor de Crepon 95 95 DUCHESS OF NORMANDY; ES 11:79; ~0982 - 6 Mar 1051/1052 Emma Normandy Sources: A. Roots 1-19, 250-20; RC 242; Kings and Queens of Britain;
Anst. Roots: Emma, daughter of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, and mother of Edward the Confessor. Married (2) Canute "the Great," King of England, by whom she had Harthacanute, King of England.
Emma, married (1) King Ehtelred the Unready, Kings and Queens of Britain has her descending from the kings of Mercia in one pedigree chart. She daughter of Richard I in Saxon/Norman Succession chart in same book, page 221.

QUEEN OF ENGLAND AND DENMARK; ROYAL ANCESTORS, CHART 546.
~0745 William ~0758 Mrs-William, Countess Of Toulouse ~0900 - 0942 Guillaume I "Longue Epbee" Duke Of Normandy 42 42 ~1181 Alice Fitz Walter 0861 - 0910 Cadell Rhodri Prince of deheubarth 49 49 ~0880 Hubert, Count Of Senlis Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~0890 Mrs-Hubert Count Of Senlis Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
~1180 Gilbert Pecche ~1308 Bryan Stapleton ~1312 Elizabeth Aldborough ~1334 Bryan Stapleton ~1286 William Aldborough ~1195 - 1249 Robert deTattershall 54 54 ~0477 Edhan Aidan ~0448 Eochaidh I Buidhe 1010 - 1043 Banquo Thane of Lochaber 33 33 ~0446 Gabhran ~0415 - 0505 Donart 90 90 ~1198 Unknown Miss ~0331 Fedelmia ~0389 Fergus Mor Mac ~0612 - 0647 Ivar "Vidfame" Halfdansson King In Sweden 35 35 ~0614 Gauthild (Gyrithe) Alfsdatter ~0633 Aud Ivarsdatter ~0580 Alf Olafsson ~0933 - 0962 Baudouin III, Count Of Flanders 29 29 1155 Maud Saint Valery Maude St. Valerie and her eldest son, William, were imprisoned in Windsor Castle and starved to death by King John. Maude had refused to allow King John to hold her sons in order to keep her husband obedient to the king.  "Arthur, duke or count of Brittany" and "Braose, William de(d. 1211)," in the Dictionary of National Biography; see also "King John," pg.83, by W. L. Warren; see also "Blood Royal: Issue of the Kings and Queens of Medieval England," pgs. 349-351, by T. Anna Leese. ~0941 - 0987 Arnold II Count Of Flandres 46 46 ~0488 Hofund Gudmundsson King In Glaesivollum ~0492 Hervor Angantyrsdatter ~0512 Heidrek Hofundsson King In Reidgotalandi ~0472 Angantyr Arngrimsson ~0474 Svofu Bjartmarsdatter ~0452 Arngrim "Berserkur" Grimsson ~0454 Eyfuru Svaflamasdatter ~0428 Grim Hergrimsson ~0432 Bauggerd Starksdatter 1177 - 1210 Margaret deBraose 33 33 1143 - 1192 John deMontgomery 49 49 In 1190 he went to the Holy Land on the Third Crusade with Philip Augustus, King of France, and died at the seige of Acre the year following. He was married three times. Count of Ponthieu and Montgomery. ~0552 Heidrek "Ulfhamr" Angantyrsson ~0556 Amfleda ~0572 Hildur "Hildis" "Hervor" Heidreksdatter ~0532 Angantyr Heidreksson King In Reidgotalandi ~0532 Mrs- Angantyr Heidreksson ~0512 Helga Haraldsdatter ~0889 - 0964 Arnoul I, Count Of Flanders 75 75 ~0815 - 0844 Bernard I Count Of Poitiers 29 29 ~0817 BilichildeD Anjou ~0835 - 0875 Ranulph I, Count Of Poitiers 40 40 0879 - UNKNOWN Pepin II deVermandois Count of Senlis ~0790 Roricon Count Of Maine ~0794 BlichildeCountess Of Maine BET 910 AND 915 - 0960 Adaele (Alice, Alix) de Vermandois ~1327 Unknown Miss ~0821 Tertulle, Count Of Anjou ~0825 Petronilla Countess Of Anjou ~0800 Torquat (Tortulfe) de Rennes ~1152 Henry Foljambe 1244 - 1301 Gunceline deBadlesmere Baron Badlesmere 57 57 ~1154 Eleanor FitzHerbert ~1179 - 1249 John Foljambe 70 70 ~1132 Thomas FitzHerbert ~1077 Godfrey de Foleschamp ~1078 Uchtred ~1101 Raphe de Foleschamp ~1050 Richard de Foleschamp ~1024 Gilbert de Foleschamp ~0998 Robert Foleschamp Nigel Boteler 1136 - UNKNOWN Lucy of Hereford Lady of Blaen Llyfni ~0972 William Niger ~0946 Ragnald ~0920 Sweno 1317 - 1377 Godfrey Foljambe 60 60 ~1320 Avena Ireland ~1282 - ~1327 Thomas Foljambe 45 45 ~1295 Alice Darley ~1258 - ~1314 Thomas Foljambe 56 56 ~1262 Alice de Furnival ~1291 Thomas Ireland 1100 - 1147 Walter FitzEdward deEvereux 47 47 ~1206 - 17 Jan 1282/1283 Thomas Foljambe ~1208 Margaret de Gernon ~1181 Margaret Lutterell ~1158 Geffrey Lutterell ~1125 - 1184 Godfrey de Foleschamp 59 59 ~1127 Matilda Musard ~1105 Gundred Ferras ~1080 Henry de Ferras ~1106 Hasculfus Musard ~1243 Gerald de Furnival D. UNKNOWN Aline Pipard ~0864 - 0918 Baudouin II "the Bald" Count Of Flanders 54 54 ~0877 - 0920 Elfridam Princess Of England 43 43 ~0625 Lienfni Attipsson ~0630 Mrs- Lienfni Attipsson ~0680 Budli Leinfnisson BET 837 AND 840 - 0879 Baudouin I Count Of Flanders ~0565 Attip Budlasson ~0580 Mrs- Attip Budlasson ~0502 Budli Halfdansson ~0520 Mrs- Budli Halfdansson 1075 - 1130 Gilbert FitzRobert Marshal 55 55 ~0450 Halfdan "the Old" Hringsson King In Ringerik ~0455 Almveigu Eymundsdatter ~0498 Lofdi Halfdansson 0844 - >0870 Judith Princess Of France 26 26 0825 - ~0887 Conrad II, Count Of Auxerre 62 62 ~0830 Ermentrude, Countess Of Auxerre ~0847 - 0911 Rudolph I, Duke Of Burgundy 64 64 ~0800 Conrad I, Count Of Auxerre ~0735 Sigurd "Fafnisbana" Sigmundsson ~0738 Brynhild Budlasdatter 1248 - 1302 Blanche of Artoise 54 54 ~0765 Aslaug Sigurdsdatter ~0705 Sigmund Volsungsson ~0710 Hjordis Eylimasdatter ~0680 Volsung Rersson ~0685 Ljod Hrimnirsdatter ~0655 Rer Sigarsson ~0660 Mrs- Rer Sigarsson ~0664 Hrimnir "the Giant" ~0666 Mrs- Hrimnir ~0688 Eylimi (Elina) Hjalmthersson 1056 - 1085 Judita Princess of Bohemia 29 29 ~0690 Mrs- Eylimi Hjalmthersson ~0848 - 0901 Alfred England 53 53 ~0638 Hialmther Egdirsson ~0646 Mrs- Hialmther Egdirsson ~0797 Luitfried ~0802 Mrs- Luitfried ~0852 - 0905 Ealhswith England 53 53 ~1031 Aelfled (Elfleda) Of Bernicia ~0971 - 1016 Ughtred Northumbria 45 45 1016 - 1087 Dobronega Maria Viscountess of Kiev 71 71 ~0796 Refill Bjornsson ~0797 Mrs- Refill Bjornsson ~0814 Erik Refilsson ~0777 Bjorn "Ironside" Ragnarsson ~0778 Mrs- Bjorn Ragnarsson ~0765 - 0845 Ragnar "Lodbrok" Sigurdsson 80 80 <1360 Brian Stapleton <1360 Agnes Goddard ~1338 Agnes Goddard 0975 - 1038 Stephen I Saint King of Hungary 63 63 1116 - 2 Feb 1147/1148 Berenguela Raimundo deBarcelona ~1312 John Goddard <1335 Filius Goddard <1335 Matilda Neville ~1282 Bryan Stapleton ~1286 Isabella Bellewe ~1256 Myles Stapleton ~1260 Daughter Philibert ~1260 John Bellewe ~0894 Eric ~0868 Regner Lodbrok D. UNKNOWN Vratislav King of Bohemia ~0786 Sigurd "Snake-Eye" Ragnarsson ~0730 - 0812 Sigurd "Ring" Randversson King In Sweden 82 82 ~0735 Alfhild Gandolfsdatter Richard Byron Margery Booth Richard Byron ~0877 - 0921 Vratislav I Duke Of Bohemia 44 44 ~0881 - 0937 Drahombira ze Stodor 56 56 0949 - 0997 Geza Prince Of Hungary 48 48 ~0842 - ~0894 Borijov I, Duke Of Bohemia 52 52 ~0853 - 0921 Lidmila ze Psova 68 68 ~0871 - 0924 Edward I England 53 53 ~0820 - 0870 Hostivbit, Duke Of Bohemia 50 50 ~0824 Miloslava, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0800 - 0873 Neklan, Duke Of Bohemia 73 73 ~0795 Ponislava, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0780 - 0851 Kresomysl, Duke Of Bohemia 71 71 ~0782 Libuse, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0884 - 0943 Herbert II Count Of Vermandois 59 59 0980 - 20 Feb 1053/1054 Yaroslav I de Kiev ~0758 - 0833 Unislav, Duke Of Bohemia 75 75 ~0760 Mrs-Unislav, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0737 - 0820 Vojen, Duke Of Bohemia 83 83 ~0738 Blanka, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0716 - 0804 Mnbata, Duke Of Bohemia 88 88 ~0711 Strezislava, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0897 - >0931 Hildebrante Princess Of France 34 34 ~0718 - 0783 Nezamysl, Duke Of Bohemia 65 65 ~0720 Hruba, Duchess Of Bohemia ~0694 - 0745 Premysl, Duke Of Bohemia 51 51 0962 - 1014 Vladimir I Grand Duke of Kiev 52 52 Also Known As:<_AKA> /St. Vladimir/
1  BIRT
2  DATE ABT. 995
2  PLAC Russia


Saint Vladimir. Converted to Christianity in 988. 1   Sources: RC 143, 321, 361; Clarkson; A. Roots 241. 243; AF; Kraentzler
1162, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1233, 1603; Timetables of History; Through the Ages.
Roots: St. Vladimir, Grand Prince of Kiev. Died 15 July 1015. Married after
1011, a daughter (died 14Aug 1014) of Kuno, Count of Ohinigen, by Richilde,
dau. of Otto I, the Great.Married also Rogneide, dau. of Rognald of Polotzk.
RC: "The Great" of Kiev,Ukraine, Russia. Grand prince of Novgorod and
Kiev. Baptized a Christian, 988.
K: Wladimir I le Grand et le Saint. Grand Duke of Novogorod, Kiew.
"Le Grand et le Saint." Grand Prince of Kiev or Grand Duke of Kiev and
Novgorod. Ruled 980-1015. "980. St.Vladimir becomes Prince of Kiev."
Clarkson:
Vladimirsucceeded his father through the process of fratricidal wars in
which his brothers were slain. "He installed himself at Kiev (977), whence, by
savage campaigns, he collected wives and tribute from most of the Dnieper
Basin. Vladimir's chief fame rests on his forced conversion of the Russian
Slavs to Christianity...During his reign, Kiev was repeatedly harassed by the
Pechenegs; tohold them off, Vladimir built a sort of fortified line of new
towns along thesteppe frontier. At his death (1015) he left seven sons--offour or five different mothers--each ruling as prince in a portion of the
Russian land; one of them, Yaroslav of Novgorod, was in open rebvellion, having
refused to pay tribute to his father. Sviatopolk, who seized Kiev, promptly
murdered three of his brothers, but was defeated in a four-year struggle by
Yaroslav, who succeeded to the title of grand prince. Yaroslav, however, was
forced to share the territory with another brother, Mstislav, who took the
opportunity to move hisresidence from outlying Tmutorakan, beyond the Sea of
Azov, to Chernigov, near Kiev. Not until Mstislav's death (1036) did Yaroslav
"the Wise" venture toremove his seat from Novgorod to Kiev."
"Vladimir...who had won the throne of Kiev by the murder of his older
brother, was the last major European rulerto abandon paganism." He invited
envoys from the Khazars (Jews), the Volga Bulgars (Muslims), Rome and Greece to
"sell" their religious beliefs. But "Vladimir and his simple warriors (were)
unable to make up their minds in this warof words." Therefore, they visited
the temples of the Bulgars, the Romans and the Greeks, not bothering with a
visit to the Khazars. They found the mosques unclean and western Catholic
worship tolerable, but they were entralled with the spendor and beauty of the
Greek places of worship. Hence, they embraced the Greek Orthodox religion.
Vladimir was promised the hand of Anne, sisterof the Byzantine emperor, in
return for military aid and, despite some footdragging by the emperor after
the aid was provided, married the lady in 988."In 990 Vladimir returned to
Kieve with his imperial bride and a retinue of priests. Throughout his
dominions the population was compulsorily baptized wholesale..."
RC says he had many pagan wives and concubines of whom these are known:
(1) Adlaga; (2) Olava; (3) Malfrida, a Bohemian, d. 1002; (5) a Greek,widow of
his brother, Teropolk; (6) N.N.(27-36), a Bulgarian; md (7) 989, Anna, daughter
of the Eastern Emperor, the Basilius Romanos, d. 10011; (8) N.N.(321-33),
daughter of Kuno, Count of Ohningen.
K. calls the latter Rognedade Oehningen. One AF record says born about 962.
According to my records, St.Vladimir had three daughters with Vladimirovna
as name or part of name--allvia different wives. Maybe he just liked the name.
Maybe there are errors inthe records.
~0700 Libuse Duchess Of Bohemia ~0667 Krok (Cracus) Duke Of Bohemia ~0672 Mrs-Krok Duchess Of Bohemia ~0642 Cech Or Czechus, Of Bohemia Richard Byron ~0984 Mahaut Of Louvain ~1020 - 1054 Lambert de Boulogne 34 34 Saire de Huntingfield William Hayward 13 Mar 0962/0963 - 1011 Anna of Byzantine ANCESTRAL FILE.


Acquired from Roger W. Winget (Genealogy@Winget.com)
1182 - <1235 Peter (Earl) FitzHerbert 53 53 Alice deWarkworth Herbert FitzHerbert Lucy of Hereford D. <1155 Herbert FitzHerbert Sibella Corbett D. 1150 Herbert deWinchester Emma of blois D. 1101 Stephen of blois 1023 - UNKNOWN Anastasiya Agmunda Yaroslavna Princess Of Kiev [Mistress] D. 1089 Theobald III Alix deCrepi 0990 - 1037 Eudes II 47 47 Ermengardeof Auvergne D. 0995 Eudes I Bertha of Burgundy 0978 - 0943 Theobald I (Le Tricteur) 35 35 Luitgarde de Vermandois D. 0904 Theobald 1244 - 1290 Eleanor Princess Of Castile And Lâeon 46 46 Lineage Sources:
      Early Genealogical Hist. of House of Arundel, being an account of
      the origin of the Families of Montgomery, Albini, Fitzzalan andHoward,
      pp. 1-64, by John Pym Yeatman.
      History and Pedigree of House of Montgomery, by Thomas Harrison
      Montgomery, pp. 1-11, 12, 13, 20, 22, 26, 33, 35/36, 37, 38
Richildeof Bourges Hugh 0870 Rothaut Richaut Budwine 1284 - 1339 William Bernake 55 55 ~1018 - 1024 Agatha Von Brunswick Princess Of England 6 6 0960 - 1016 Bruno Count Of Brunswick 56 56 0999 - 1043 Gisele Duchess Of Swabia 43 43 ~0930 - 0994 Ekbert "One-Eyed" Count Von Ambergau 64 64 1005 Guerta of deheubarth Sarah Bradshaw ~1239 Robert de MidDelton ~1243 Aeneas Middelton ~1213 Hugh de MidDelton ~1187 Hipolitus John Baguley D. 1350 Ellin Baguley Ellen De Corona /aka:  Baggiley, Great aunt of Thomas the last of the De Corona's. ob.: 1350 Amabilla deBamville Thomas de Bamville Lucy deCorona 1016 - 20 Feb 1069/1070 William FitzOsbern Hugh deCorona Lord of Adlington, Henry III, Little Neston, Hargreave and Penisby in Wirrall. John Leigh 7. Hen. 6. John Leigh 17 R. 2. James Leigh Jane Maud ~1460 Elizabeth Brereton ~1478 Ellen Leigh ~1478 Thomas Hulse ~1515 Philip Hulse 1082 - 1122 Alan Fitz Flaad deHesdin Baron of Oswestry 40 40 Alan Fitz Flaad, who was sometimes called Fitz Harold, because hisgrandmother was widow of Harold. He is first mentioned as a witness atthe Court of Henry I at Windsor September 3, 1101. About 1109 Alan FitzFlaad gave the Manor of Eaton to Norwich Priory. He married Adeliza,daughter of Warine, Sheriff of Shropshire, and had in her right theBarony of Warine. Her mother was Ameria, daughter of Roger Montgomery.Alan obtained by gift the Castle of Oswaldestre, with the territoryadjoining, which had belonged to Meredith, Prince of Powis ap Bleddyn,King of Powis.  Commander in the First Crusade.   "The Forgotten Monarchyof Scotland"  by HRH Prince Michael of Albany. 1083 Maria De Vivar Lineage Sources:
    Cokayne's Complete Peerage of England, Vol. 4, pp. 267-278; Vol. 5,
    pp. 305-320.
    Allstrom's Dict. of Royal Lineage, Vol. 1, pp. 133-140, 169-177; Vol.2,
    pp. 618-621.
    Betham's Charts of Royal Houses of Europe, DCXIV, CCXXXIII and IV.
    Williams' Historians' History of the World, Vol. 10, p. 58.
~1450 Philip Leigh Inquisition taken 8 Hen. 8. BET. 1510 - 1515 Margery Corbett ~1533 Alice Hinton 1538 Thomas Hulse ~1447 Joan Hody ~1410 Miss ~1444 Nicholas de Wadham ~1407 John Gambon ~1423 - 1486 William Coffin 63 63 ~1427 Margaret Giffard 1156 - UNKNOWN Werburga ~1392 - 1427 John Coffin 35 35 ~1396 - >1427 Thomasin Hathey 31 31 ~1361 - >1392 David Coffin 31 31 ~1401 Thomas Giffard Sources found state he was from Halesbury, Devonshire, England ~1405 Wilmot Knight ~1444 James Chudleigh ~1448 Margaret Stourton See Coffin Book GEDCOM ~1422 Thomasine Kirkham ~1402 Radigund Chudleigh ~1394 Nicholas Kirkham 1068 - UNKNOWN Sheriff Warine of Shropshire ~1398 Jane Way (Wray) ~1332 David Coffin ~1301 John Coffin ~1336 Thomasine Coffin- Mn 1300 John deBeauchamp Alice Monant Nonant? 1334 Martin Ferrers ~1237 - 1301 Maud FitzGeoffrey 64 64 ~1096 - >1143 Sybil deNeufmarche 47 47 ~1092 - 1143 Miles deGloucester 51 51 1066 Gwentha Wales 1630 - 1692 John Caldwell 62 62 John buried in Conleigh Parish, Ballycoogan, Ireland - source; Carolina Herald, Vol XIV, A History of Orange Presbytery by Robert Hamlin Stone, Belfast Times, 1858. Year of death is relatively agreed as year 1692. Month has been given as January, and 18 Nov 1692.
Source for John m. Mary Holmes as son of John m. Mary Sweetenham may be Vol XIV, A History of Orange Presbytery by Robert Hamlin Stone, Belfast Times, 1858, which also states that this John (Mary Holmes) is buried in Conleigh Parish, Ballycoogan, Ireland.
~1198 - <1286 Robert de Latham 88 88 Margaret Chandos Robert deGloucester ~1190 Ernald III Boys ~1340 - >1394 Richard Champernon 54 54 ~1347 Alice Astley ~1129 Ernald I Boys 1596 - 1660 William Paine 64 64 Came to America on the ship "Increase" that sailed from London, England in April 1635.  William was 37 years old at the time of sailing and his wife, Ann, was 40 years old.  They came with 5 children the oldest 11 years old and the youngest 8 weeks old. Landed at Boston and lived at Watertown and was allotted on July 25, 1636 a lot of 70 acres. ~1105 - 1269 William deBeauchamp 164 164 1022 - UNKNOWN Fleance Thane of Lochaber 1596 - 1635 Richard (Twin) Paine 39 39 Randolf Fitz Henry ~1305 - ~1385 Thomas Astley 80 80 ~1227 - 1298 William deBeauchamp 71 71 Henry Fitz Hervey ~1305 - 1359 Elizabeth deBeauchamp 54 54 ~1105 Paganus le Chamberlayne ~1131 Emma le Chamberlayne ~1103 Robert deWaterville Boys ~1279 - <1316 Giles Astley 37 37 0960 - UNKNOWN Frotmundus Vetuels ~1283 - AFT 1344/1345 Alice Wolvey ~1246 - 1301 Andrew Astley 55 55 ~1250 Sibyl Astley- Mn ~1257 Thomas deWolvey 1272 - 1315 Guy deBeauchamp 43 43 1284 - 1324 Alice deToeni 40 40 ~1255 - <1295 Ralph deToeni 40 40 ~1260 - >1283 Mary (Clarissa) deToeni-Mn 23 23 ~1210 - 1269 William deBeauchamp 59 59 Earl of Warwick ~1214 - <1268 Isabel Mauduit 54 54 0937 - 1008 Fretaldus 71 71 ~1194 - 1268 Joane (Isabel) deMortimer 74 74 ~1186 - 1257 William Mauduit 71 71 1196 - <1263 Alice deNewburg 67 67 John Bures ~1140 - <1204 deWaleran 64 64 ~1181 - >1212 Alice deHarcourt 31 31 BIOGRAPHY: Also of Stanton Harcourt, Oxford, ENG. ~1109 - <1301 Maud deBraose 192 192 ~1171 - >1210 Oliver Champernon 39 39 ~1215 - 1265 Thomas deAstley 50 50 ~1223 Joan Boys 0915 - 0985 Frotmund 70 70 ~1184 - >1235 Walter (William) Astley 51 51 ~1188 Isabel Astley- Mn ~1153 - 1221 Thomas deAstley 68 68 ~1157 Maud Camvile ~1192 Joan deBeauchamp ~1159 - 1206 Ernald II Boys 47 47 ~1161 Emma deHedenton ~1160 - 1198 Andrew deBeauchamp 38 38 1164 - 1242 Eva deGrey 78 78 ~1175 Eva Andea 0890 - UNKNOWN Alirad ~1208 - >1272 Henry deChampernon (Campo Arnulphi) 64 64 ~1145 - >1191 Henry deChampernon 46 46 ~1149 Rohais Campo Ernalda ~1096 - <1190 Jordan de Champernon 94 94 ~1100 - >1170 Mabel deGloucester 70 70 ~1260 - >1272 Richard Champernon 12 12 ~1284 - >1316 Richard Champernon 32 32 The History of the Commoners, Vol II, page 271, by Burke, states that Richard Chambernon "married the heiress of Sir Alexander Okeston, by his wife, Joan, relict of Richard de Valletort." This Joan has no surname. In a footnote, Burke states that "This Joan, or Jone, is supposed to have been a concubine of Richard Plantagenet, Earl of Cornwall, King of the Romans."  Burke continues in the main entry, "By her, whom Edmond, Earl of Cornwall, calleth by the name of sister, in a grant made by him, dated 12th Edward I. (Richard Chambernon) had a son and heir, Sir Richard Chambernon..." Richard de Cornwall has a daughter Joan, half-sister of Edmond de Cornwall, recorded in some sources as married to Richard Champernowne, so this indicates that Champernowne married a daughter of Richard de Cornwall, not a daughter of Sir Alexander Okeston.

Wadham College, Oxford by: T.G. Jackson  States  Richard de Cornwall, King of the Romans, had as a concubine "Joan, 2nd da. and co-heir of Richard de Valletort, widow of Sir Alex. Oakeston", with a son Richard and a daughter Joan, by her. The daughter is recorded as marrying Richard Champernowne. By this account, Joan the concubine was the daughter of Richard de Valletort, not the widow.

A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Enjoying Territorial Possessions or High Official Rank; But Uninvested with Heritable Honours.  By: John Burke, Publication: 1836, Vols. I - IV
Wadham College Oxford, T.G. Jackson, author.  Its Foundation Architecture and History with an Account of the Family of Wadham and Their Seats in Somerset and Devon.
Visitation of the County of Devon, 1620, By: Vivian, John Lambrick, Published By: Henry S. Eland, Exeter, 1895.
Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564, & 1620. With additions by Lieutenant-Colonel J.L. Vivian.
~1236 Richard Champernon ~1238 Joan Okeston ~1212 Dionisia English 0867 - 0923 Frotbald 56 56 ~1186 Robert English ~1190 Femname English- Mn ~1211 Alexander Okeston ~1213 Joan Or Jane de Valletort ~1187 Reginald deValletort ~1314 - >1342 Thomas Champernon 28 28 ~1318 Eleanor de Rohart ~1288 Elizabeth Joan Valletort ~1264 Joan ~1262 Ralph Valletort Could be: Ralph, Edmond or Hugh. 0841 - UNKNOWN Adelrad 1040 - 1087 William I deBurgundy 47 47 1060 - 1133 Gisela deBurgundy 73 73
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