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.
?
1350 - 1397
Richard
III
Fitzalan
47
47
Beheaded
~1343 - 1385
Elizabeth
De
Bohun
42
42
~1276 - ~1321
Humphrey
Viii De
Bohun
45
45
4th Earl of Essex and Hereford; Lord Constaple of England; Killed in Battle.
~1310 - 1360
William
De
Bohun
50
50
1537
Elizabeth
Perkins
1699 - 1776
Mary
Child
77
77
1696 - 1728
Nathaniel
Whitney
32
32
1740 - 1807
Eli
Whitney
67
67
1740 - 1777
Elizabeth
Fay
36
36
1765 - 1825
Eli
Whitney
59
59
Whitney, Eli (1765-1825), American inventor, best known for his invention of the cotton gin. Whitney was born in Westboro, Massachusetts, on December 8, 1765, and educated at Yale College (now Yale University). In 1792 he visited the plantation, near Savannah, Georgia, of Catharine Greene, widow of the American Revolutionary War general Nathanael Greene. There he designed and built a model for a machine that would separate the seeds from the fibers of the short-staple cotton plant, work that until that time had been done by hand. He completed the machine-the first cotton gin-in 1793. This invention had a great impact on the development of the southern United States. With the gin, cotton could be cleaned so efficiently that it became the most important crop in the South and the basis of the region's profitable agricultural economy. Whitney entered into partnership with the plantation manager, Phineas Miller, to manufacture cotton gins at New Haven, Connecticut. A disastrous factory fire prevented the partners from making enough gins to meet the demand, and manufacturers throughout the South began to copy the invention. Although Whitney and Miller received a patent on the gin in 1794, a decision protecting their patent was not rendered until 1807. In 1812, the Congress of the United States denied Whitney's petition for renewal of the patent. In all, he profited very little from his invention. In 1798 Whitney turned to the large-scale manufacture of firearms. After signing a contract to supply the federal government with 10,000 military muskets, he built a factory near New Haven, at present-day Hamden, in which he experimented with a system of manufacturing standardized, interchangeable parts. He died in New Haven on January 8, 1825.
1540
John
Perkins
~1542
Edward
Perkins
~1546
Luke
Perkins
William
Gedney
Tracy
Charles
Tracy
Frances
Louise
Tracy
1837 - 1913
John
Pierpont
Morgan
75
75
John Pierpont Morgan, known as J. P. Morgan, b. Hartford, Conn., Apr. 17, 1837, d. Mar. 31, 1913, the son of Junius, was a major figure in international finance before World War I. An agent for his father in New York, he formed (1871) the banking house of Drexel, Morgan, & Co., which 24 years later was renamed J. P. Morgan & Co. After the crash of 1893, Morgan was active in railroads, reorganizing several lines in the eastern United States. He also marketed U.S. government securities on a massive scale. In 1898 he entered the field of industrial consolidation, forming the Federal Steel Company and (1901) the United States Steel Corp. The latter firm included the Carnegie steel interests, which were purchased for $400 million. Morgan had wide-ranging influence over many of the companies that he financed, an influence that was, however, probably exaggerated in public opinion. A great art collector, he gave many works to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. His collection of manuscripts and books is housed in the MORGAN LIBRARY in New York City.
1867 - 1943
John
Pierpont
Morgan
75
75
John Pierpont Morgan, Jr., born in Irvington, New York, Sept. 7, 1867, died Mar. 13, 1943, inherited the family's banking house. He was instrumental in financing $1.5 billion in Allied military purchases during World War 1 and in arranging $1.7 billion in reconstruction loans after the war.
~1548
Isache
Perkins
1534 - 1603
Thomas
Morgan
69
69
1391 - 1425
Edmund
Mortimer
34
34
3rd Earl of Ulster.
1371 - 1409
Edmund
Mortimer
38
38
1342 - 1408
Henry
De
Percy
66
66
<1342 - 1386
Hugh
De
Stafford
44
44
D. <1337
Phillippa
De
Beauchamp
~1538
Elizabeth
Bodenham
D. 1396
Margaret
De
Stafford
Isabel
De
Beaumont
1341 - 1369
Blanche
Of
Lancaster
28
28
1817 - 1891
Rebecca
Staples
74
74
1870 keeps house, River Falls, WI. 1880 wd, keeping house, River Falls, WI.
1828 - 1908
Sherman
Roger
Staples
79
79
1880 farmer, River Falls, WI. 1900 none, River Falls, WI.
1831 - 1907
Maria
Staples
75
75
1833 - 1917
Martha
Staples
83
83
1900 mother of 7, 7 still living.
1835 - 1901
John
Staples
65
65
1860 with father.
1836 - 1872
Mary
Staples
35
35
1838 - 1871
Sophia
Staples
32
32
~1562
Edward
Morgan
1842 - 1934
Samuel
Staples
91
91
1880 farmer, Adams Twp, Butler, PA. 1900 farmer, North Adams Twp, Butler, PA. 1910 farmer, own farm, Callery, PA. 1920 farmer own, farm, Callery, PA. 1930 none, wd, Callery, PA.
1801
William
Cashdollar
WILLIAM CASHDOLLAR was born in Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, in 1801, came to Butler county in boyhood, and was reared by Joseph PARKS, of Middlesex township. After reaching manhood he married Margaret RICHARDSON, a daughter of Joseph RICHARDSON, of Adams township, to which union were born twelve children: Catherine, who married Robert HOON; John F.; William S.; Joseph; James; Margaret A., who married Jacob M. MILLER; George W., deceased; Mary E., wife of Samuel STAPLES; Rosanna, wife of John A PURVIS; Samuel B.; Thomas D., and Matilda, wife of Samuel RAMSEY. Mr. CASHDOLLAR died July 4, 1882, at the age of eighty-one years. He was a member of the United Presbyterian church, and filled the office of elder in that denomination. He was a stanch Democrat, and was tax collector of Cranberry township, and supervisor [p. 1150] of Adams township. Mr. CASHDOLLAR was one of the substantial and respected citizens of Butler county.
1810
Margret
Richardson
1835
John
Fowler
Cashdollar
JOHN F. CASHDOLLAR was born in Cranberry township, now Adams township, Butler county, January 19, 1835, and was reared and educated in his native township. He was married December 16, 1858, to Catherine BEERS, a daughter of James BEERS, of Adams township. They are the parents of eleven children, as follows: Jane, wife of Frederick McNEAL; Samuel J., deceased; Margaret E., wife of John B. HILL; James M.; William O., deceased; Elizabeth B., wife of Harvey MILLER; Robert F., deceased; Charles A.; Albert C.; David R., and Walter F. Mr. CASHDOLLAR and wife are members of the United Presbyterian church, in which he is a trustee. In politics, he is a Democrat; was elected county auditor in 1878, and filled that office for three years. He takes and active interest in educational matters, and has served as school director.
1837 - 1917
Joseph
F.
Cashdollar
80
80
JOSEPH CASHDOLLAR, was born in what is now Adams township, Butler county, upon the old homestead near Myoma, December 6, 1837, and is the third son of William CASHDOLLAR. He grew to manhood engaged in the usual routine of a farmer's life, and was engaged in that vocation when he enlisted in Company D, One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteer's, August 7, 1862. He served in the battles of Antietam and Fredricksburg, and was honorably discharged from the service June 3, 1863. Returning to his home, he was married to Sophia STAPLES, daughter of Job STAPLES, of Adams township, in September, 1864. Mrs. CASHDOLLAR died in 1871, and the following year he married Elizabeth P., a daughter of Anthony RAMSEY, of Cranberry township, to which union were born five children: Lawrence B.; Walter; Anthony S.; Edith E.; and Elizabeth, deceased. The mother died in 1881, and he married Miss MARBURGER, a daughter of Milton MARBURGER, of Adams township, in 1882. Three children are the fruits of this marriage, as follows: Milton; William, and George. Mr. CASHDOLLAR is a member of the United Presbyterian church, and is a deacon in that denomination. He is filling the office of notary public at the present time, and has also been a justice of the peace.
1849 - 1926
Mary
Elizabeth
Cashdollar
77
77
1782 - 1789
Sophia
Staples
7
7
1791 - 1813
Sophia
Staples
21
21
1807 - 1886
James
Beers
79
79
JAMES BEERS was born in Down county, Ireland, in June, 1807, and was reared to farm life, and also followed boating. He married Jane, daughter of Samuel FERGUSON, of the same place, to which union were born eleven children: Ellen, and Sarah, both deceased; Catherine, wife of John CASHDOLLAR, of Adams township; Samuel; John; Ellen, wife of J. M. LITTLE, of Callery; James; Margaret, wife of Robert MCKEE, of Fayette county; Alexander M.; Robert, and Eliza, wife of R. J. PARK, of Adams township. Mr. BEERS came to the United States in 1827, first settled in Missouri, then removed to Louisiana, and from there to Pittsburg, whence he came to Butler county. He purchased the Patterson farm in Adams township, also the Johnson farm, and part of the Patton farm, making in all 106 acres. He also bought mining property in Fayette county, where he mined fire clay and quarried rock. He owned property at Dunbar, Fayette county, and was quite a prosperous business man down to his death, in July, 1886. His widow survived until March, 1888. The were members of the United Presbyterian church. In politics, Mr. BEERS was a Democrat, filled the office of school director for several years, and took an active interest in public affairs.
1815 - 1888
Jane
Ferguson
73
73
~1564 - <1610
John
Morgan
46
46
1838
Catherine
Beers
~1813 - <1868
Pyrrhus
Dunbar
55
55
Thora
D. 0475
Theodemir
I
Erelieva
~0455 - 0526
Theodoric
'the
Great'
71
71
Theodoric, in Late Latin Theodoricus, in German Dietrich, often called Theodoric the Great (circa 454-526), Ostrogothic king (474-526) and founder of the Ostrogothic Kingdom in Italy. Born in the Roman province of Pannonia, he was, from the age of 7 to 17, a hostage at the court of the Byzantine Empire in Constantinople. In 474 Theodoric was elected king after his father's death, and during the following 14 years he and the Byzantine emperor Zeno engaged in alternate warfare and alliance. In 488, under the auspices of Zeno, Theodoric invaded Italy. He defeated Odoacer, the first Germanic ruler of Italy, in three decisive battles and blockaded him in Ravenna. In 493, when all of Italy had been subdued by Theodoric, Odoacer surrendered and was treacherously slain by the Ostrogothic king. Theodoric then assumed the leadership of Italy and made Ravenna his capital. Theodoric's reign of 33 years was devoted primarily to the consolidation and development of his new kingdom, and it was a period of nearly unprecedented peace and prosperity in Italy. He zealously promoted agriculture and commerce. Although himself an Arian Christian, he exhibited an unusual tolerance for all other Christian sects. The government was administered by Romans on Roman lines; separate codes of law were used for Romans and Goths. Among the Romans who held high office under Theodoric were the statesmen Anicius Boethius and Flavius Cassiodorus; Boethius, however, incurred the suspicion of the monarch toward the end of his reign and was executed for treason. Theodoric's last years were also marred by growing tension with the anti-Arian Byzantine emperor Justinian I. Theodoric was succeeded by his daughter Amalasuntha as regent for her son Athalaric. The magnificent mausoleum of Theodoric still stands in Ravenna.
~1566
David
Morgan
~0469 - 0535
Theodora
66
66
Died: Murdered!
D. 0507
Alaric
II
Alaric II (died 507), king of the Visigoths (484-507), succeeding his father, Euric (died 484). He ruled all Gaul beyond the Loire and Rhone rivers and most of Spain. Like most Visigoths, Alaric adhered to Arianism; this gave the Frankish king Clovis I, an orthodox Christian, an excuse for making war on him. Alaric's forces were completely routed at Vouillé, near Poitiers (in present-day France), and he himself was overtaken and slain by Clovis. This defeat brought to an end the rule of the Visigoths in Gaul. Alaric is also known for the Breviary of Alaric, an abstract of Roman laws and decrees prepared at his direction for use in his domains. This document is a primary source of knowledge about the application of Roman law in nations formed from the disintegrated Roman Empire.
Theodegotho
~0494 - 0521
Eustšre
27
27
0486 - 0533
Theoderic
I
47
47
~0511 - 0548
Theodebert
I
37
37
0503 - 0548
Deuterie
De
Reims
45
45
0534 - 0555
Thšodebald
21
21
0520 - 0555
Waldrada
De
Lombardie
35
35
0555 - 0599
Grimaud
D'aquitaine
44
44
~1568
Blanch
Morgan
0560 - ~0612
Itte De
Gascogne
52
52
D. 0484
Euric
0520 - 0584
Chiliperic
I
64
64
King of Neustrie.
0543 - 0598
Fredegund
55
55
0584 - 0628
Clotaire
II
44
44
~0582 - 0618
Bertrude
36
36
0600 - 0638
Dagobert
I
38
38
King of the Franks (629-39), son of Clotaire II. He became king of Austrasia in 623 and at the death of his father the sole king of the Franks. By 632 he had also brought Burgundy and Aquitaine under his rule, becoming the most powerful of the Merovingian kings and the most respected sovereign in the West. He made Paris his capital. St. Eloi (588?-659) was Dagobert's principal adviser, and his rule was marked by the building of numerous monasteries and the strengthening of the royal power. At his death the Frankish kingdom was divided between his sons.
Ragnetrude
0632
Daughter
Of
Dagobert I
~1572
Elizabeth
Morgan
~0633 - 0652
Clovis
II
19
19
~0635 - ~0680
Bathildis
45
45
~0651 - ~0690
Theoderic
(Thierry)
39
39
~0650 - 0692
Clotilde
Dode
42
42
~0660 - >0721
Bertrade
De
Pruem
61
61
Founder of the Pruem Abbey.
~0660 - <0696
Martin
Of
Leon
36
36
Theodard
~0669 - 0718
Irmina
49
49
~0665 - ~0697
Hugobert
Of
Bavaria
32
32
N.n.
De
Burgondie
~1574
Jane
Morgan
Gondobald
~0385 - ~0436
Gundicar
51
51
Took refuge in Gaul in 411 from Allemani as allies of the Romans; established themselves in certain cantons of the Soquani & of upper Germany; thus founded the first kingdom of Burgundy under Gundicar & later his son Gunderic.
Gunderic
~0433 - >0470
Syagrius
37
37
~0470 - >0500
Syagria
30
30
D. 0473
Gunderic
~0465
Latinus
~0485
Gondobald
Augin
Agia
~1578
Ann
Morgan
N.n.
Of
Soissons
D. 0500
Godogisel
De
Burgondie
Theodelinde
Daughter
Of
Godogisel
N.n.
Of
Toulouse
N.n.
Of
Toulouse
D. 0527
Theodon
II
D. 0567
Theodobald
I
D. 0584
Theodebert
D. 0549
Desire
~1580
Margaret
Morgan
~0533
N.n.
Of
Dijon
Gondoald
Of
Meaux
N.n.
Of
Dijon
Syagrius' brother.
Garnier
I Of
Burgundy
N.n.
Of
Neustrie
Garniers II's Brother.
N.n.
Of
Dijon
N.n.
Of
Meaux
Bodilon
D. >0677
Sigarde
D. 0676
Guerin
Of
Paris
~1582
Catherine
Morgan
Gunzie
Childebrand
~0985 - 1048
Humbert
I Bianco
Mano
63
63
~0989
Ancelie
Von
Lenzburg
~1534
William
Winter
~0947 - >0980
Adalbert
Of
Ivrea
33
33
Marquis of Ivrea.
~0952
Gerberge
Of
Burgandy
~0930
Letald
Of
Macon
~0916 - ~0942
Adelaide
Of
Burgundy
26
26
~0525 - ~0590
Garibaldi
65
65
D. 0609
Tassilon
I
D. 0610
Romilde
Of
Frioul
D. 0611
Gisulf
II De
Frioul
Geila
De
Frioul
D. 0640
Garibaldo
I
~1538
Maria
Lanston
D. 0630
Theoden
III
D. 0613
Regintrude
Of
France
D. 0717
Theoden
V
Folchaide
De
Salzburg
~0610 - 0642
Nanthilde
32
32
D. 0677
Robert
De
Salzburg
D. <0678
Theodora
(Theoda)
Erlebert
Of
Therouanne
Severus
Alberic
~1520 - 1551
William
Parke
31
31
Adele
~0550 - 0611
Arnoldus
61
61
Bishop of Metz 601-611
~0523 - 0570
Ansbertus
47
47
0558 - ~0603
Blithilde
45
45
Ansbertus
Ferreolus
Dode
De
Montfaucon
~0541 - 0572
Wultrade
De
Lomardie
31
31
~0493 - >0511
Tonantius
18
18
Industrie
~0475 - 0509
Cloderic
'the
Parricide'
34
34
Murdered 0509 by agents of his kinsman Clovis I.
~1525
Margaret
Roddon
Of
Bavaria
~0420 - >0475
Tonance
Ferreol
55
55
~0463
Papianille
Niece of Emperor Avitus.
Probus
Eulalie
~0445 - 0509
Sigebert
'the
Lame'
64
64
Murdered by his own son at the instigation of Clovis I.
D. 0491
Chilperic
II
Agrippine
Wacchon
Austricuse
~1547
William
Parke
N.n.
Syagria
Magnus
Thaumaste
I
~0430 - 0483
Childebert
53
53
~0435 - 0478
Amalaberge
43
43
Zucchilo
Afranius
Syagrius
~0398 - 0448
Clodion
Le
Chevelu
50
50
0399 - ~0450
Ildegonde
De
Cologne
51
51
Clodoweg
~1551
John
Parke
Wedelphe
De
Saxe
D. ~0490
Claffon
~0374 - 0414
Theodemir
40
40
Ildegonde
Of
Lombardy
Marcomir
Blesinde
Gondeon
Lething
~0350 - 0384
Richimir
34
34
Ascyla
Chlogio
I
1530 - 1575
William
Chaplin
45
45
Held messuage called Lyons in Whatfield jointly with his son Edmund; will dated 15 NOV 1575 and proved 25 JAN 1577/8
Blesinde
Of
Sueve
Mildeon
Lething
0320 - 0376
Mellobaude
56
56
Ascyllius
Leth
~0295 - ~0360
Malaric
I
65
65
First King of Franks in Toxandrie.
~0270 - ~0307
Ragaise
37
37
~0245 - ~0289
Gonobaud
I
44
44
~0220 - 0281
Marcomir
61
61
Sandregisisle
Joan
Froste
Hugues
Of
Austrasie
Theodebald
De
Baviere
~0560 - 0649
Garitrude
D'hamage
89
89
Basin
Menia
D. ~0529
Baderic
De
Thuringe
Daughter
Of
Baderic
Pretextat
Parovius
~0525
Betton
~1540
Francis
Anstey
~0465 - 0508
Ragnomer
43
43
~0505
Ragnoara
~0500
Pastor
~0530
Aiga
Austregilde
~0555 - >0607
Richomer
52
52
~1029 - <1090
Guillaume
Bertrand
61
61
~1030
Adelaide
(Adelais)
Cavanez
~1003 - ~1054
Guillaume
Bertrand
51
51
~1008
Aldegarde
~1004
Guy
Of
Cavanez
1534 - 1585
Thomas
Freeman
51
51
~0981 - 1018
William
II
37
37
~0986
Gerberge
De
Burgundy
~0968 - 1018
William
I
50
50
~0960 - 1029
Adela
(Blanca)
D'anjou
69
69
~0908
Bozon
~0946
Constance
~0931 - 15 MAR 973
Renaud
De
Roucy
~0930 - 15 MAR 973
Alberade
De
Lorraine
~0956 - ~0985
Gilbert
De
Roucy
29
29
~1562
John
Freeman
~0890 - 0939
Giselbert
49
49
Lay Abbot of Echternach 915-939
~0932
Henri
Of
Lorraine
~0937
Wiltrude
Of
Lorraine
~0850 - 0916
Regnier
I
66
66
Fl. 877-886; markgraf between the Meuse and the Schelst; lay abbot of Echternock (Luxembourg) 897-915.
~0865
Hersent
Of
Lorraine
~0860 - 0932
Alberade
Of
Lorraine
72
72
~0830 - ~0892
Giselbert
Of
Darnau
62
62
In 846 kidnapped and carried off to Aqitaine the Emperor Lothair's daughter, whom he subsequently married.
~0830
Ermengarde
0795 - 0855
Lothaire
I
60
60
Holy Roman emperor (840-55), and eldest son of Holy Roman Emperor Louis I, the Pious, and grandson of Charlemagne. Lothair became coruler with his father in 817 and was crowned by the pope six years later. He twice conspired with his brothers in revolts against their father. In 839 Lothair received the eastern part of the empire in addition to Italy, which he had received in 822. After the death of Louis I, Lothair attempted to assert his power over his brothers, but he was defeated by them at Fontenoy, France, on June 25, 841. By the Treaty of Verdun (843), the title of Holy Roman emperor was guaranteed to Lothair, together with sovereignty over Italy, Burgundy, Alsace, Lorraine, and the Low Countries. After having divided his kingdom among his three sons, Lothair retired to a monastery. His second son, sometimes called Lothair II (circa 835-69), reigned from 855 to 869 over the kingdom of Lotharingia.
~0800 - 0851
Hermengarde
D'alsace
51
51
~1564
Elizabeth
Freeman
~0820
Rotrude
~0825 - 0875
Louis
II
50
50
Designated King of Italy 839 and crowned king at Rome by Pope Sergius II 15 June 844; in 850 crowned joint emperor at Rome by Pope Leo IV; on the death of his father in 855 became sole emperor; involved with his brother Lothair's divorce proceedings; in 863 received the kingdom of Provence on the death of his brother Charles; with help of Basil I fought against the Saracens who were ravishing southern Italy, but could not follow up his successes for want of a fleet; crowned a second time as emperor by Pope Adrian II 18 May 872; won further victories against the Saracens; named as his successor his wife's brother Carloman, son of Louis the German.
~0828 - 0863
Charles
35
35
~0827 - 0869
Lothaire
II
42
42
Received the territory known as Lorraine for his kingdom on death of his father in 855; did little for its government or defense - his reign chiefly occupied by his efforts to secure a divorce from his wife Teutberga in order to marry Waldrada; sought consent of his uncles Charles the Bald and Louis the German; he put away Teutberga but had to restore her in 858; finally got his divorce and married Waldrada in 862; threatened with excommunication he took back his wife but now she wanted a divorce; Lothair went to Rome to get consent of the new Pope Adrian II; on his return journey was seized with a fever and died at Piscenza; his kingdom was divided between Charles the Bald and Louis the German - a kingdom lost for love.
~0832
Beletrude
~0834 - 0861
Gisle
27
27
Dode
Of
Italy
~0765 - 0829
Hugh II
64
64
~0779
Ava
D'alsace
~0798
Luitfrid
III
~1566
Blase
Freeman
~0819 - ~0866
Adelaide
D'alsace
47
47
~0740 - >0765
Luitfrid
II
25
25
~0744
Hiltrude
Of
Alsace
~0707 - 0747
Luitfrid
40
40
~0719
Edith
Of
Alsace
~0742
Theitbaldus
Of
Alsace
~0675 - 0741
Adalbert
66
66
~0679
Gerlinde
Of
Alsace
~0697
Eberhard
~0699
Eugenia
Of
Alsace
~1537 - ~1591
Edward
Edwards
54
54
~0701
Attala
Of
Alsace
~0703
Gundlindis
Of
Alsace
~0705
Maso
Of
Alsace
~0643 - 0690
Eticho
I
47
47
Obtained the duchy of Alsace 662; head of the Alsatian House of the Ethiconides; Duke of Alsace 662-690.
~0652
Berswinde
Of
France
~0673 - 0723
Eticho
II
50
50
~0677 - 0722
Ottilia
Of
Alsace
45
45
~0679
Rosvvinda
Of
Alsace
~0620 - >0643
Lendisius
23
23
~1544 - 1606
Ursula
Coles
62
62
~0590 - >0620
Erchembaldus
30
30
~0594 - >0620
Leudefindis
26
26
~0584
Grasulf
I
Chlodwig
I
Basine
De
Saxe
Eadburh
Of
Mercia
D. 0997
Geza
Was converted to Christianity in 975.
Sarlota
Of
Transylvania
~0975 - 1038
Saint
Stephen
I Arp d
63
63
Stephen I, also called St. Stephen (975?-1038), first king of Hungary, founder of the ArpÏd dynasty. A pagan at birth, he was converted to Christianity in his youth. He became duke of Hungary in 997. Shortly thereafter a pagan revolt broke out in several Hungarian provinces; Stephen immediately attacked the insurgents and defeated them at Veszprém. He was crowned king in 1001; on the occasion of his coronation Pope Sylvester II sent a crown from Rome and accorded him the title "Apostolic Majesty," which was borne by Hungarian sovereigns until the overthrow of the Hungarian monarchy in 1918. His reign was notable for the propagation of Christianity and the suppression of paganism throughout Hungary. He was canonized in 1083 and became the patron saint of Hungary. His feast day is August 16.
~0960 - >0992
Hildouin
II
32
32
~1566
Peter
Edwards
~1010 - 1057
Manassess
47
47
~0930 - >0970
Helpuin
40
40
~0934
Hersinde
~0950 - ~1013
Regnier
IV
63
63
~0972 - >1013
Adwige
(Avoise)
Of France
41
41
~1000
Rotilde
De
Hainault
Hugues
III
~0924 - 0973
Regnier
III
49
49
Reformed his monasteries; captured at war with Emperor Otto the Great; died in exile.
~0929 - 0961
Adele
(Alice) Of
Equisheim
32
32
~0952 - 1015
Lambert
I 'the
Bearded'
63
63
Slain in battle.
~1571
Francis
Edwards
~0890 - 0932
Regnier
II
42
42
His capital was at Mons but his principal residence was in the castle of Hornu
~0903
Adelaide
Of
Burgundy
~0903
Hugh
0955 - >1007
Savery
III
52
52
0925 - 0969
Herbert
I
44
44
0930
Alderde
D'aunay
~0970 - 1031
Thibault
De
Montlhery
61
61
Ansaud
II 'la
Riche'
~1573
Richard
Edwards
Reitrude
D. 1106
Arnold
II
Adelaide
De
Rameru
~0883 - 0942
Idwal
Voel Ab
Anarawd
59
59
King of Gwynedd.
~0917 - 0986
Meuric
Ab Idwal
Voel
69
69
Toscanda
~1575
Robert
Edwards
Bodilon
Sigrada
D. 0677
Warin
Kunza
Of
Treves
Lambert
Of
Hasbaye
Robert
Of
Hasbaye
~0700
Williswinda
D. 0772
Guerin
Adelindar
D. ~0811
Bouchard
'the
Constable'
~1577
Nicholas
Edwards
D. ~0801
Aubre
'the
Burgundian'
D. ~0876
Bouchard
Geoffrey
Aubri
'dux'
Geoffrey
Aubri
Geoffrey
II
Aubri
II
~1579
Elizabeth
Edwards
Hoedlyw
Urban
Tehvant
Coel
Hen
Ceneu
Gwrst
Meirchion
Gul
Elidir
Gwawr
D. ~0600
Llywarch
Hen
~1475 - 1528
Thomas
Perkins
53
53
Had lands and tenements in towns of Fylds, Hilmorton and Lylborne, Northamptonshire; will made April 13, 1528; proved April 21, 1528; directed that he be buried in church of St. John the Baptist before thr Rood.
Dwywg
Gwair
Anna
Pendragon
Tegid
Algyn
Sandde
Ap
Algyn
Elidir
Ap
Sandde
Cunedda
Moved from north of Hadrian's Wall to drive out Irish invaders of Wales.
Vala
(Princess
Gwawl)
Einion
Yrth
At war with Gaels settled in Anglesey, 5th century.
~1470 - 1538
Alys
De
Astley
68
68
Will dated July 31, 1538; proved Oct. 15, 1538; buried in Church of St. John the Babtist.
D. 0517
Cadwallon
'the
Long-Handed'
Defeated Irish in Anglesey in a decisive battle
D. ~0570
Brochmaeli
D. 0599
Cynan
Glodrydd
D. 0615
Selyo
Sarffgadau
Tryffyn
Ap
Merfyn
Isabel
Ivor
Cynelin
Gwyn
0932 - ~1010
Elystan
Glodrydd
78
78
1508 - 1577
Roland
Morgan
69
69
Gladys
Brockwell
Rhyn
Severus
Manne
~0970 - 1029
Alberto
Azzo I
59
59
1512
Blanch
Thomas
Waldrade
Of
Venice
~0976 - 1047
Guelph
III
71
71
~0990 - 1055
Ermingarde
Of
Luxembourg
65
65
Elicho
I
~0920
Henry
I
~0766
Isembert
D. 0780
Warinus
~0920 - 0988
Albert
I 'the
Pious'
68
68
~0935
Gerberga
Of
Lorraine
~0955 - 1000
Herbert
III
45
45
~1536
Mary
Morgan
~0970 - >1035
Ermengarde
De
Bar
65
65
Ermengarde
Of
Alsace
D. 0753
Childebrand
I
Sonsored the continuation of Fredegar's Chronicle.
Jean
De
Contville
1267 - 1302
Richard
I
Fitzalan
35
35
~1271 - 1292
Alisona
Di
Saluzzo
21
21
~1256 - 1286
William
Plantagenet
De Warren
30
30
~1264 - 1293
Joan
De
Vere
29
29
1246 - ~1302
John III
Fitzalan
56
56
~1248 - 1274
Isabel
Mortimer
26
26
1536 - 1603
Henry
Morgan
67
67
~1245 - ~1296
Tomasso
I De
Saluzzo
51
51
~1245 - ~1299
Leugia
Di
Ceva
54
54
1231 - 1304
John
Plantagenet
De Warenne
73
73
John Plantagent de Warren - Americans of Royal Descent, Charles H. Browning, p. 79
~1224 - 1291
Alice
De
Lusignan
67
67
Alice le Brun - Americans of Royal Descent, Charles H. Browning, p. 79
~1251 - ~1282
Eleanor
Plantagenet
De Warren
31
31
~1230 - 1296
Robert
De
Vere
66
66
~1231 - 1317
Alice
De
Saundford
86
86
D. 1331
Robert
De
Vere
1223 - 1267
John II
Fitzalan
44
44
~1225 - 1283
Maud Le
Boteler De
Verdon
58
58
~1542
Mary
Morgan
~1166 - 1240
William
Plantagenet
De Warren
74
74
Named in the Magna Carta.
~1210 - 1263
Hugh
De
Vere
53
53
Great high chamberlain - Americans of Royal Descent, Charles H. Browning,p.43
~1164 - 1240
John I
Fitzalan
76
76
~1193 - ~1243
Isabella
D'aubigny
50
50
~1175 - 1220
William
D'aubigny
45
45
Crusader.
~1173 - 1233
Maud
De
Meschines
60
60
~1143 - 1219
David
Huntingdon
76
76
D. ~1237
John
Huntingdon
Isabel
Huntingdon
Ada
Huntingdon
~1544
Elizabeth
Morgan
D. ~1233
Margaret
Huntingdon
~1364 - 1425
Ralph
Neville
61
61
6th Baron Neville of Raby. Joint Warden of the Marches. Created Earl of Westmoreland in 1397. Took part against Richard II in 1399 and conveyed his resignation to convocation. Captain of Roxburgh Castle 1402. Warden of the West Marches after Battle of Shrewsbury, wher Hotspur was slain. In the 1405 revolt, routed the Cleveland forces and took Scrope and Mowbray prisoners. Benefactor of Staindrop and a great builder.
~1341 - 1388
John
Neville
47
47
~1345 - 1378
Maude
De
Percy
33
33
~1301 - 1352
Henry
De
Percy
51
51
~1303 - 1365
Idonea
De
Clifford
62
62
1274 - 1314
Robert
De
Clifford
40
40
~1279 - 1327
Maud
De
Clare
48
48
~1243 - 1282
Roger
De
Clifford
39
39
~1254 - 1291
Isabel
Vipont
37
37
~1543
Catherine
Morgan
~1215 - ~1285
Roger
De
Clifford
70
70
~1215
Hawise
Botterell
~1168 - 1231
Roger
De
Clifford
63
63
~1052
Maud
D'avranches
Ermentrude
De
Clermont
D. ~1032
Adalbert
Of
Holland
Adeliza
De
Clare
~1069
Emma
De
Gant
1122 - 1168
William
De
Percy
46
46
~1134 - 1205
Agnes
De
Percy
71
71
1512
Roger
Bodemham
~1069 - 1120
Alan
De
Percy
51
51
~1130 - 1189
Josceline
De
Louvain
59
59
~1160 - ~1194
Henry
De
Percy
34
34
~1193 - ~1245
William
De
Percy
52
52
~1228 - 1272
Henry
De
Percy
44
44
~1272 - ~1315
Henry
De
Percy
43
43
~1274 - 1328
Eleanor
Fitzalan
54
54
~1490 - 1531
William
Parke
41
41
~1275
Ralph
De
Monthermer
~0920
Angharad
Verch
Hywel
~0918
Tudor
'trevor'
Ap Ynyr
~0965
Robert
II
~0970
Alix
De
Vexin
~0939 - 0967
Robert
I
28
28
~0944 - 1027
Gauthier
II Le
Blanc
83
83
~0944
Adele
De
Senlis
~0972
Raoul I
Crespy
~1504
Robert
Chaplin
~0985 - ~1030
Raoul
II
45
45
~0990
Adele
De
Bretuil
~0919 - ~0944
Gautier
I
25
25
~0924
Adele
(Eva) De
Dreux
~0919
Bormard
(Bernard)
De Senlis
~0989
Toustien
Le
Goz
~0994
Judith
De
Montanolier
~1015 - 1071
Robert
Bigod
56
56
~1017
Humphrey
De Tillieul
Or Bigod
~1508
Elizabeth
~0963
Ansfred
Le
Goz
~0937
Ansfred
'the
Dane'
~0942
Helloe
Of
Beulac
~0909
Rollo
Thurstan
Gerlotte
Of
Blois
~0921
Godfrey
(Ginbert)
Adeliza
De
Grentmesnil
~1401 - >1494
Dafydd
Mathew
93
93
1505 - 1585
Henry
Freeman
80
80
Prospered as steward of certain manors, probably in service of William Vaux of Harrowden, and invested in his lands; at same time, for social reasons, entered his four sons in a London Guild, the Skinner's Company.
~1401
Gwenllian
Verch
Dafydd
~1378 - >1419
Mathew
Ap
Ieuan
41
41
~1365
Jonet
Fleming
~1384
Dafydd
Ap
Gwilym
~1385
Gwenllian
Verch
Philip
~1358
Ieuan
Ap
Gruffudd
~1344
Crisli
Verch
Gawdyn
~1344
Jenkin
Fleming
~1348
N.n.
Rayne
~1334
Philip
Ap
Llywelyn
1511
Joan
Rudd
~1338
Nest
Verch
Gwilym
~1325
Gruffudd
'gethin'
Ap Madog
~1329
Joan
Verch
Rhun
~1318
Gawdyn
Ap
Llywelyn
~1324
Verch
Rhys
~1300 - >1377
Llywelyn
Ap
Cynwrig
77
77
~1300
Jonet
Verch
Cynfyn
~1373
Leuen
Kemeys
~1399
Gwilym
Kemeys
~1769 - <1829
John
Hamilton
60
60
~1536 - 1590
Blase
Freeman
54
54
1769 - 1849
Elizabeth
Erskine
80
80
1802 - 1852
John
Hamilton
49
49
1850 farmer, Cranberry Twp, Butler, PA. Buried Old Union Church next to William Hamilton.
1812 - 1883
Patrick
Hamilton
71
71
Buried: United Presbyterian Church Cemetery
1800 - 1875
Alexander
Hamilton
74
74
Buried in the Brownsdale Prebyterian Church Cemetery.
1808 - >1880
Mary
Gibson
72
72
1860 seamstress, Cranberry Twp, Butler, PA. 1870 keeping house, with Hugh, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI. 1880 keeping house, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI.
1832
Eliza
Hamilton
1834 - 1870
Mary
Jane
Hamilton
36
36
1836
John
Hamilton
1860 farmer, with mother. 1870 carpenter, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI. 1880 farmer, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI.
1835
Sara
Hamilton
1870 seamstress, with mother. 1900 mother of 1, 1 still living. Died; left 1 boy in Michigan; had big farm.
1838
Nancy
Hamilton
1880 with mother. 1900 wd, mother of 5, 2 still living, with James. 1910 wd, with Mary.
~1541
John
Freeman
1840
Rosanna
Hamilton
Died in St. Paul; had 2 boys.
1842
Hugh
A.
Hamilton
1870 farmer, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI. 1880 South Branch And Center Plains, Crawford, MI. 1900 carpenter, Gaylord, Bagley, Otsego, MI. 1910 in Gaylord, MI.
1848
Malinda
Hamilton
Husband was in tobacco business; had 2 girls, 1 boy who lived in McDonald; girls in Allegheny. 1900 mother of 7, 3 still living.
1846
Frances
"Fanny"
Hamilton
1860 with Robert and Mary Boggs. 1870 dress maker, with mother. 1880 single, with mother. Married well to do German with grown children; lived across street from Sarah in Michigan; had no children of her own.
1829 - 1916
Eleanor
McCully
87
87
1900 in Forward Twp., Butler, PA.
1849 - 1869
Ellen
J.
Hamilton
20
20
Cause of death: tuberculosis
1863 - 1898
Mary
Emma
Hamilton
35
35
Cause of death: tuberculosis
1850 - 1872
John
A.
Hamilton
22
22
Cause of death: tuberculosis
1854 - 1929
Elizabeth
Ann
Hamilton
75
75
1858 - 1882
Melinda
Hamilton
24
24
Cause of death: consumption
~1544
Oswolde
Freeman
1859 - 1920
Robert
E.
Hamilton
61
61
1900 farming in Forward Twp., Butler, PA. 1920 farmer, general farm, Forward Twp, Butler, PA.
1855 - 1933
Margaret
Hamilton
78
78
1860
Jane
Cashdollar
1871 - 1945
William
Alexander
Ralston
74
74
1910 farmer, Slippery Rock Twp, Butler, PA. 1920 farmer, general farm, Slippery Rock Twp, Butler, PA. 1930 mail carrier, US mail, Slippery Rock Twp, Butler, PA. Lawyer and farmer.
1905 - 2001
Raymond
Hamilton
Ralston
96
96
1930 none, with parents. Name: Raymond H. Ralston SSN: 263-03-5449 Last Residence: 16057 Slippery Rock, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 14 Aug 1905 Died: 23 Oct 2001 State (Year) SSN issued: Florida (Before 1951 )
1910
Ruby
Mae
Fennell
~1546
Elizabeth
Freeman
~0946 - 0992
Conan
I 'le
Tort'
46
46
Count of Rennes and Duke of Brittany; Killed at battle of Conqueruex.
0950
Ermengard
Grisgonele
D'anjou
Daughter of Godfrey Grisgonelle, Count d'Anjou. Previously married.
~0931 - 0952
Juhel
(Berenger)
21
21
Leader against the Northmen.
Gerberge
D. ~0903
Parkuritan
II
Daughter
Of
Erispok
Granddaughter of Berenger I (Count of Rennes 887 - 890) and heiress of Rennes.
~1549
Mary
Freeman
D. 0907
Alan I
'the
Great'
Son of Ridoreh Count of Nantes. Duke and King of Brittany abt 888.
Orequem
D. 1368
Henry
De
Percy
D. 1372
Margaret
Neville
1316 - 1336
John
Plantagenet
20
20
1318 - 1355
Eleanor
Plantagenet
36
36
1321 - 1362
Joan
Plantagenet
41
41
1324 - 1371
David
II
46
46
David II (1324-71), king of Scotland (1329-71), son of King Robert Bruce. He succeeded his father at only five years of age, but soon after his coronation (1331) he was deposed by Edward de Baliol, an English-backed claimant to the throne. For the next eight years David lived in exile in France. In 1341 he returned to Scotland, and five years later went to war with England as an ally of France. The English defeated both the French (at Crécy) and the Scots (at Neville's Cross, October 1346), taking David prisoner and capturing large parts of Scotland and France. David remained a prisoner in England for 11 years. In 1357 he was freed in return for the promise of a ransom, and thereafter enjoyed friendly relations with the English. David was succeeded by his nephew Robert II, founder of the Stuart dynasty.
~1551
Edward
Freeman
1274 - 1329
Robert
I 'the
Bruce'
54
54
His place of birth uncertain; it is also reportedly Turnberry, Ayshire or in Essex. In 1296, as Earl of Carrick, he swore fealty to Edward I at Berwick. In 1297 he renewed that oath at Carlisle. Shortly afterwards, with his Carrick vassals he joined the Scottish independence fighters under Sir William Wallace. in 1298, after Wallace's defeat at Falkirk his lands were wasted by the English. One of the four Regents of Scotland in 1299; he rejoined the battle against Edward in 1306. Originally supported by John Comyn, the nephew of John Baliol, they eventually quarrelled and Comyn was killed during the final rising of 1306 by Kirkpatrick. Bruce assembled his forces and two months later was crowned at Scone, but was forced to retreat to Ireland. In 1307, the Bruce landed a force at Turnberry and defeated the English under the Earl of Pembroke at Loudon Hill. After the death of Edward I in 1307, the English were cleared out of Scotland and all of the great castles recovered except Stirling, which the Governor promised to surrender if not relieved before 24 June. This led to the battle of Bannockburn when the Engliish armies of some 100,000 men under King Edward II were totally routed by Robert the Bruce with 30,000. In 1317, Bruce passed over to Ireland to help his brother Edward and defeated the Anglo-Irish at the battle of Slane. Hostilities continued until a truce in 1323 and then resumed in 1327 with a great Scottish inroad into the northern counties. The war at last closed with the Treaty of Northampton (1328) which recognised the independence of Scotland and Bruce's right to the throne. Bruce died of leprosy at Cardross Castle. His heart was to be carried to Palestine [this was the period of the Crusades] but Douglas who was carrying it was killed fighting the Moors in Spain. Bruce's heart was returned to Scotland and buried at Melrose Abbey.
D. 1327
Elizabeth
De
Burgh
Daughter of Richard de BURGH, Earl of Ulster. {Burke's Peerage}
1210 - 1295
Robert
Bruce
85
85
In 1251, on the death of his Mother, he did homage to Henry III for her lands in England. He was made Sheriff of Cumberland and Constable of Carlisle. His claim to the crown based on a verbal nomination (tanistry) by Alexander III. In 1290, on the death of the Maid of Norway, he and John BALIOL claimed the succession. The arbitrator, King Edward I of England, decided in favour of John BALIOL. To avoid swearing fealty to his rival, Robert resigned Annandale to his eldest son.
D. 1292
Margaret
Carrick
Daughter of Neil, 2nd Earl of Carrick.
D. 1245
Robert
De
Brus
Great-great-great grandson of Robert de BRUIS a Norman knight who accompanied William the Conqueror to England in 1066.
N.n.
De
Brus
Ordmaer
~1552
George
Freeman
Donada
Macmalcolm
D. 1020
Finlaed
Mormaer
Of Moray
D. 1057
Macbeth
Macfinlaec
His kingdom was confined to the country South and West of the Tay; the rest remaining under control of his Northman ally Thorfinn. He was slain by Mailcolm, son of Duncan I.
Isabella
Of
Mar
D. 1316
Margery
De
Bruce
1293 - 1326
Walter
Stewart
33
33
Joan
Beaufort
~1337 - 1406
Robert
III
69
69
Earl of Carrick
~1367 - ~1401
Annabella
Drummond
34
34
1394 - 1437
James
I
42
42
James I (of Scotland) (1394-1437), king of Scotland (1406-1437), only surviving son of King Robert III, born in Dunfermline. In 1406, shortly before the death of his father, James was sent to France for safety from rebellious Scottish nobles. The ship was seized by the English, and James was kept a prisoner until 1423. Having inherited the Scottish throne in 1406, James was crowned king when he returned to Scotland in 1424. He married Joan Beaufort, niece of the English king Richard II, and granddaughter of John of Gaunt. By 1429 James had forced the Scottish nobles to submit to royal authority. He tried to improve the administration of justice and for the first time published parliamentary acts in the language of the common people. He angered the papacy by preventing church revenues from being sent to Rome. He formed a closer alliance with France and gave his eldest daughter, Margaret, in marriage to the Dauphin, later King Louis XI. James, however, had antagonized the Scottish nobles by confiscating their estates, and he was assassinated in 1437 by a group of nobles. He was succeeded by his son James II.
~1516 - 1552
Peter
Edwards
36
36
1430 - 1460
James
II
29
29
James II (of Scotland) (1430-60), king of Scotland (1437-60), son of King James I, born in Edinburgh. He was crowned shortly after the murder of his father in 1437. A regency led by the Douglas family ruled until 1449, when James began to govern by himself. His efforts to promote social welfare were greatly obstructed by the nobles, especially by William, 8th earl of Douglas, who was involved in treason and who was stabbed to death by the king. James crushed a revolt of the Douglas family in 1452 and seized their estates. He then became entangled in the Wars of the Roses, a contest between the houses of York and Lancaster for the English throne. In 1460, at the head of an army, he was killed during the siege of Roxburgh Castle in Scotland. He was succeeded as king by his son James III.
Marie
Of
Guelders
1451 - 1488
James
III
36
36
James III (1451-88), king of Scotland (1460-88), son of King James II, born in Stirling. He was crowned king in 1460 after the death of his father. A regency ruled until 1469, when he began his personal rule. Through his marriage to Margaret of Denmark (1457?-86) in the same year, James gained control of the Orkney and Shetland islands. James was unpopular with the Scottish nobles, who were led by his brother Alexander Stewart, duke of Albany (1454?-85). The nobles seized the king and kept him prisoner in the castle at Edinburgh. Under the duke of Albany, English forces took Berwick and advanced to Edinburgh. In 1487, James made peace with the English, thereby further alienating his turbulent nobles, who rose in rebellion and induced James's son, later James IV, to become their nominal head. In the ensuing battle at Sauchieburn between the nobles and the Royalists, James was defeated, and he was murdered after the battle by one of the rebels. He was succeeded by James IV.
~1457 - 1486
Margaret
Of
Denmark
29
29
1452 - 1479
Mary
Stewart
27
27
D. 1479
James
Hamilton
James Hamilton of Cadzow, Knight, was created Lord Hamilton 28 June 1445 and surrendered all his lands and baronies for erection into a new barony of Hamilton, the name used thereafter for the town of Cadzow. His loyalties lay initially with his Douglas kinsmen, with whose chief he visited Rome in 1450 and Canterbury in 1451, and with whom he joined in the league with the Earls of Crawford and Ross against James II, but he subsequently moved over to the King's side to help suppress their revolt. He was rewarded with the office of sheriff of Lanarkshire 1 July 1455, and on 23 October was granted a new charter of his lands and baronies. He m 1st (by dispensation of 2 Feb 1440/1) Euphemia, who d 1468, eldest dtr of Sir Patrick Graham and Eupheme, Countess of Strathern, and widow of Archibald, 5th Earl of Douglas, and had issue:
~1475 - 1529
James
Hamilton
54
54
James Hamilton, 2nd Lord Hamilton, b ca 1475, Privy Councillor, created Earl of Arran 11 Aug 1503, Admiral of the Scottish Fleet 1513, Lord of Regency under the Duke of Albany 1517, commanded the Royal army against the Earl of Lennox September 1526. He is supposed to have m 1st 1490 (he was 15 and the bride 13) Elizabeth, widow of Thomas Hay of Hoprew, Master of Yester, dtr of Alexander Home, 2nd Lord Home, and is believed to have divorced her subsequently in 1504 on the grounds that the Master, although believed to be dead, was actually alive at the critical time. (In fact, the Master had m in 1483 Elizabeth Borthwick, who was alive at the time of his death, so the grounds for the Hamilton divorce appear suspicious, even though it was confirmed four years later.) He m (perhaps as his 2nd wife) Nov 1516 Janet, widow of Sir Robert Livingston of Easter Wemyss, dtr of Sir David Beaton of Creich. Among several natural children of the 1st Earl of Arran, three were legitimated 17 Jan 1512/3 by James IV, their first cousin of the half blood:
Janet
Beaton
Of Creich
D. 1574
James
Hamilton
James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran, chosen as Regent of Scotland following the death of James V, and declared on 13 Mar 1542/3 Heir Presumptive of the Crown. During the subsequent religious troubles he attempted to compromise but finally favoured the Reformers. For his services in promoting the marriage of Queen Mary to the Dauphin of France he was created Duc de Chƒtelherault. In 1554 he resigned the Regency to Marie de Guise-Lorraine, the Queen-Mother, and in 1565, after opposing the marriage of the widowed Queen Mary to Henry Stuart (known to the English as Lord Darnley, but to the Scots in sequence as Master of Lennox, Duke of Albany and King Henry), he went abroad for four years, returning to oppose the Regency of the Earl of Moray (assassinated by James Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh 1569/70) and then of the Earl of Lennox (killed by the Hamiltons 1571), but submitting finally on 15 Feb 1572/3 to the 4th Earl of Morton, ("the grimmest of that grim race from which he sprung"), the husband of his wife's sister Elizabeth, who lost the Regency in 1578 and was executed 1581). Much of his life was strongly influenced by his nearness in blood to the Queen, the strength that gave to the candidature of his sons for the r“le of Consort and the power of King, and the temptation that might arise when only an infant was between his family "and home" (as it was once said aloud). He m Sep 1532 Margaret, eldest dtr of James Douglas, 3rd Earl of Morton, by Catherine, natural dtr of James IV, and d 22 Jan 1574/5 having had issue:
Margaret
Douglas
~1511
Susanna
Samwell
~1542 - ~1604
John
Hamilton
62
62
Commendator of Arbroath; created Marquess of Hamilton 17 April 1599; ancestor of the Dukes of Hamilton.
Margaret
Lyon
~1589 - ~1625
James
Hamilton
36
36
Anne
Cunningham
1606 - 1648
James
Hamilton
41
41
Died: Beheaded
D. 1638
Margaret
Feilding
1606 - 1648
William
Hamilton
41
41
Died: Beheaded
Elizabeth
Maxwell
~1543 - ~1621
Claud
Hamilton
78
78
Commendator of Paisley; created Lord Paisley 29 July 1587; ancestor of the Dukes of Abercorn.
D. 1616
Margaret
Seton
~1542
Nicholas
Edwards
D. 1617
James
Hamilton
D. 1662
Marian
Boyd
D. ~1670
James
Hamilton
D. 1648
Claud
Hamilton
Jane
Gordon
D. 1668
George
Hamilton
Elizabeth
Fagan
D. ~1691
Claud
Hamilton
D. 1701
Charles
Hamilton
D. ~1679
George
Hamilton
~1546
Amy
Edwards
D. 1680
Mary
Butler
D. 1673
James
Hamilton
Elizabeth
Colepepper
D. 1734
James
Hamilton
D. 1754
Elizabeth
Reading
1685 - 1744
James
Hamilton
58
58
D. 1776
Anne
Plumer
1712 - 1789
James
Hamilton
76
76
Died unmarried.
D. 1755
John
Hamilton
Died: Drowned
D. 1769
Harriet
Eliot
~1518 - 1575
Richard
Coles
57
57
1756 - 1818
John
James
Hamilton
61
61
D. 1791
Catherine
Copley
1786 - 1814
James
Hamilton
27
27
D. 1833
Harriet
Douglas
1811 - 1885
James
Hamilton
74
74
D. 1905
Louisa
Jane
Russell
1838 - 1913
James
Hamilton
74
74
D. 1929
Mary
Anna
Curzon
1869 - 1953
James Albert
Edward
Hamilton
83
83
D. 1958
Rosalind
Cecilia
Bingham
~1522
Jane
Bond
1904
James
Edward
Hamilton
1843 - 1925
Claud
John
Hamilton
81
81
1845 - 1927
George
Francis
Hamilton
81
81
D. ~1676
George
Hamilton
Knight.
Frances
Jennings
John
Hamilton
Sir Knight
~1537 - 1609
James
Hamilton
72
72
..A1 James Hamilton, 3rd Earl of Arran, b 1537-8, Commander of the Scots Guards in France, 1550-7, proposed by the Lords of the Congregation as husband for Queen Elizabeth of England 1560, and proposed himself as husband for Mary, Queen of Scots, 1561. Soon thereafter, in 1562, he was judged insane, although he was probably only scatterbrained, and in this state he resigned the Earldom of Arran to James Stewart of Bothwellhaugh, 1581, but this was reduced by the Court of Session in 1586 "as the act of a person incompetent in consequence of insanity," whereby he was restored to his honours. He dsp Mar 1609, his titles passing to the heirs of his brother John.
Ine
Indorb
'the White'
Finn
1430 - >1495
William
Perkins
65
65
~0214
Gymer
~0218
Orboda
Of
Berg
~0239
Gerd
Gymersson
~0214
Njord
~0235
Yngvi-
Frey
~0256
Fjoinir
Yngvi-
Freysson
~0277
Svegdi
Fjoinarsson
Vana
~0298
Vanlandi
Svegdasson
Snaer
1434
Joanna
Read
~0302
Driva
Snaersson
~0319
Visbur
Vanlandasson
~0340
Domaldi
Visbursson
~0361
Domar
Domaldisson
Drott
Danpsson
~0382
Dyggvi
Domarsson
~0403
Dag
Dyggvisson
~0424
Angi
Dagsson
~0424
Skjalf
Frostasson
~0445
Alerk
Angisson
1456
John
Perkins
Dagreid
Dagsson
~0466
Ygnvi
Alerksson
~0487
Jorund
Ygnvisson
~0509
Aun
Jorundsson
~0539
Egil
Aunsson
~0551
Ottar
Egilsson
~0572
Adils
Ottarsson
Yrsa
Helgasson
~0594
Eystein
Adilsson
~0616
Ingvar
Eysteinsson
1460 - 1536
William
Perkins
76
76
1820 - 1879
Frederick
Staples
58
58
1850 farmer, Cranberry Twp, Butler, PA. 1870 farmer, River Falls, WI. Buried in Big River Presbyterian Cemetery (aka Davison Cemetery) Pierce County, Wisconsin.
1822
Catherine
Staples
1827 - 1870
Susannah
Staples
43
43
1826 - 1902
Seth
Staples
76
76
1860 farmer, Forward Twp, Butler, PA. 1880 farmer, Adams Twp, Butler, PA. 1900 farmer, North Adams Twp, Butler, PA.
~0562 - 0588
Bodogisel
II
26
26
~0500
Munderic
Very young in 509, when his father was murdered; revolted against Thierry I, who killed him.
~0535
Bodogisel
I
Palatina
Gallus
Magnus
A Gallo-Roman nobleman.
~0500
Arthemia
Sister of Gondulf, Bishop of Metz.
~1470
Richard
Perkins
ABT 0480/85 - >0513
Florentin
ABT 0480/90
Artemie
Gallo-Roman noblewomen.
~0455
Rustique
Daughter
Of
Rurice
Brunulphe
Crotechilde
D'ostrogothie
Tonnance
III
~0430
Aquilin
Rurice
I
Hiberie
~1482 - 1538
Thomas
Morgan
56
56
Son
Of
Decime
Son
Of
Adelphius
Ommace
Decime
Rustique
Artemie
Adelphius
Pontius
Anicia
Faltonia
Proba
Quintus
Clodius
Turrenia
Anicia
Iuliana
1476
Elizabeth
Vaughan
Anicius
Auchenius
Bassus
Turrenia
Honorata
Amnius
Paulinus
Amnius Manius Caesonius Nicomachus Anicius Paulinus
Amnius
Anicius
Iulianus
Sextus
Anicius
Faustus
Quintus
Anicius
Paulinus
Daughter
Of
Caius
Quintus
Anicius Fautus
Paulinus
Legate of Mesie Inferieure (229-230).
D. ~0250
Caius Asinus
Nichomachus
Iulianus
~0324 - 0396
Priarios
72
72
~1510
Rheinallt
Morgan
~0358 - 0400
Sunno
42
42
~0390 - 0445
Merovee
55
55
Hatilde
Asturius
~0367 - ~0407
Merowna
40
40
Merwig
I
Elizabeth
1770
Francis
Hays
Moved to Butler County, PA in 1820. Were the parents of six sons and six daughters.
Rebecca
or Beckley
Drennan
1750 - 1808
Abraham
Hays
58
58
Boucher, John Newton, A century and a half of Pittsburg and her people New York: Lewis Pub. Co., 1908, 2211 pgs. HAYS FAMILY. Among the pioneer Scotch-Irish families who settled in the vicinity of Greater Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, none are more worthy of mention in history than the family whose name heads this sketch. According to Dr. Eglee, the author of genealogical works of the state of Pennsylvania, this name has been spelled in a variety of ways-the American branch of the family spelling it Hays, while at an earlier period it was spelled Hayes, Hay and De La Haye. William Hays, a native of Scotland, left that country during a period of religious .persecution and settled in county Tyrone, Ireland. He was present at the siege of Derry and suffered with others of his faith until relief came, being absent from his family twenty months. (I) Abraham Hays, the first of the family to settle in Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, removed to that county from Maryland in 1767, locating one mile above what is now Homestead, opposite Braddock's Field, and remained there nine months. On account of the Indian troubles they returned to Maryland, and three years later again came to Allegheny county, where they took up land still in the possession of their descendants. In his religious faith he was a Presbyterian, and he was of an upright and manly character. He and his wife died on the old homestead where they first located about one mile from the present borough of Homestead. He married Fannie Pittee, a French lady, sister of the wife of James Whittaker, and the two families had as neighbors: Robert Byerley, who also came from Maryland; Andrew McClure, Samuel Hamilton, Samuel Ferguson, James McKinley, Edward and Joseph West, John Neal, Judge McClure, John Risher, Davy Calhoun, John Irvine, Robert Patterson, William Furl, William Brown and David McKee, all being men of about the same age. Abraham and Fannie (Pittee) Hays had children: i. Francis, born in 1770, married Beckley Drennen, and in 1820 moved to Butler county, Pennsylvania, and were the parents of six sons and six daughters.
~1512
John
Morgan
1750/1756 - 1818
Frances
"Fannie"
Pittee
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF FRANCES PUTTEE HAYS IN THE NAME OF GOD, AMEN. The fourth Day of September one thousand Eight Hundred & Nine- I, FRANCES HAYS of The township of Mifflin and County of Allegheny & Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Being frail and weak in Body but of Perfect mind memory thanks be to God therefor Calling to mind the mortality of my body and knowing that it is appointed for all of the human Race once to die Do make and Ordain this my Will and Testament That is to say first of all I Give & Recommend my soul to God that gave it & my body to the Earth to be Buried in a Decent Christian Manner at the Discretion of my Executors Nothing Doubting but at the General Resurrection I shall Receive the same again by the Mighty Power of God and as touching such Worldly Estate Wherewith it hath been pleased God to Bless me in this life I Give Demise and Dispose of the same in the following Manner and form Imprimis I Give and Bequeath unto my son Frank A Clear and full discharge of Note I have against him for four Dollars, Also a Clear Discharge of all book accounts Whatever that I have against him provided he does not produce any account against my Estate but if he should produce an account I do allow my Executors to settle with him all that I have against him and I should fall in his Debt to pay it out of my estate but if he should fall in my Debt I Give him a clear Discharge and one Dollar as a legacy to be paid out of my estate- Item I Give and Bequeath unto my son Isaac Hays the sum of fifty Dollars to be paid out of my Estate Item I Give & Bequeath unto my son Abraham Hays the sum of forty Dollar to be paid to him by my Daughter Sarah Harden out of the Legacy I shall leave her- Item I Give and Bequeath unto my son John Hays one feather bed that one that is Generally in the Kitchen with its furniture- Item I Give & Bequeath unto my son Jacob Hays one Dollar to be paid out of my Estate by my Executors- Item I Give & Bequeath unto My Daughter Sarah Hardin all my Household Furniture of every Description Together with all my Beasts Consisting of one Mare & Colt and one horse & A Cow and Calf with all the sheep & hogs and every thing or things that I might or could claim on the premises where I now Live she paying all my Just Debts and A Legacy to my son Abraham Hays of forty Dollars and farther if there should be any money Left after all my Just Debts are paid and all the Legacies paid of I Will and Bequeath unto my Daughter Sarah Hardin- Item I Give and Bequeath unto my Daughter Marthew Heirs one Dollar Each- Item I Give & Bequeath unto my son Thomas Hays one Dollar to be paid to him out of my Estate by my Executors- & furthermore I Do Constitute Make and Ordain my trusty friend Abraham Hays & James Hardin Executors of this my Last Will & Testament and I Do Utterly Revoke and disannul all and Every other Testaments Wills Legacies and Bequests and Executors by Me in any Way Named Willed and Bequeathed Ratifying and Confirming this & None Other to be my Last Will and Testament. In Witness Whereof I have Hereunto set my hand and seal the Day and year above Mentioned. her FRANCES X HAYS. (SEAL) mark Signed & Sealed as the last Will & Testament of Frances Hays in presence of us. ABRAHAM WHITAKER AARON WHITAKER STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA ALLEGHENY COUNTY, S.S. I, Geo. H. Stengel, Register of Wills, etc., in and for said County, do hereby certify the foregoing to be a full and perfect copy of the Original last Will and Testament of Frances Hays, Deceased, as the same remains on file, and is of record in my office at Pittsburgh, in Will Book, Volume 2, page 131. Will probated March 11, 1818. Witness my hand and seal of said office, this 16th day of March, A. D. 1904. Geo. H. Stengel Register [1809]
1647 - 1692
Joseph
Staples
45
45
JOSEPH, Taunton, prob. s. of John the first of Weymouth, had John, b. 28 Jan. 1671; Amy or Ann, 13 Apr. 1674; Mary.. 26 Jan. 1678; Joseph, 12 Mar. 1680; Hannah, 17 May 1682; and Nathaniel, 22 Mar. 1685. SAMUEL, Braintree, m. 30 Aug. 1652, Mary Coles, had Mary, b. 24 Sept. 1655; Rachel, 31 Oct. 1657; and Sarah, 10 July 1660. THOMAS, Fairfield 1645, is on freem.'s list 1669. He had by w. Mary, Thomas; Mary, wh. m. Josiah Harvey; ano. d. m. John Beach; Mehitable; and John; but the order of success. is not kn. He d. bef. 1688; was a man of import. and spirit eno. to prosecute Dept. Gov. Ludlow, not long bef. his rem. to Virg. for defam. in report. that the ws. of S. was a wtich. The trial for satisfact. of both parties was in the neighb. Col. of New Haven, where the Court wisely held, "that there was no proof that goodw. S. was a witch," mulct. L. to pay L10 to the h. for repar. of his w's name, and L5 for his trouble and cost. Happily in a later day the New Haven Col. pass. unharm. by the doleful delus. spread in Mass. by rampant vanity and insane apprehension. Four of this name had, in 1834, been gr. at Yale, and three at some other N. E. Coll. says Farmer. A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of New England, Before 1692 Volume #4 Stanhope - Starbuck By James Savage
1643 - ~1723
Mary
Macomber
80
80
Made maintenance Deed 7 MAR 1721/2 in favor of Eldest son John; Deed recorded 2 APR 1722.
~1610 - 1683
John
Staples
73
73
May have come over with the "Dorchester Emigration", settling for a time in Dorchester, MA; removed to Weymouth, MA, first appearing on records there in 1636; made freeman 10 MAY 1648; surveyor; Fence Viewer 1660, 1661, 1662; took Oath of Allegience 1678/9, Weynouth, MA; successful farmer; will dated 18 MAR 1683, probated 2 AUG 1683.
Rebecca
Died before husband.
D. 1694
John
Macomber
Cooper successful mill owner, large land owner; in 1643 listed as able to bear arms at East Taunton, MA; made settlement of Estate 31 MAR 1694; will filed Taunton 2 APR 1723, recorded 30 OCT 1723. John Macomber was admitted as a freeman and enrolled in the militia of Taunton in 1643. He was granted permission to build a mill in Taunton in 1659. There were then four persons in his family, and there is no record of more. The name of his first wife has not been learned. He was in a military company in 1680. He was living in 1687, as shown by a deed. Another deed shows that he died before 1690. He was a carpenter by trade. His property was equally divided between a daughter, Mary Staples, and a son, John Macomber. Source: 'Macomber Genealogy', 1908, Everett S. Stackpole, p 10.
~1645 - 1687
Samuel
Bishop
42
42
A.B. Harvard College 1665; in Indian Wars.
~1656 - 1704
Hester
Cogswell
48
48
~1653 - 1710
Caleb
Fobes
57
57
Probably born Duxbury; to Preston, CT before age 27; owned land in Norwich, CT 1672; Volunteer in Narraganset Campaign of King Phillips War; An original proprieter of Voluntown, CT; First Deacon in Church of Preston; Constable 1684-5; Selectman; Town Treasurer; Committeeman on Land and Highways; deed from the Sachem Owaneco, 10 Dec. 1683, conveys to him 110 acres of land south of Connoughtug Brook; left an estate of œ625, wife and 5 children.
1651 - ~1702
Sarah
Gager
51
51
~1514 - 1595
Edmund
Morgan
81
81
~1618 - 1670
Thomas
Bishop
52
52
In Ipswich by 1636; representative Ipswich 1666; at death estate valued at œ5000.1.1
D. 1681
Margaret
D. 1700
William
Cogswell
1633 - 1696
Susanna
Hawkes
63
63
~1600 - 1660
John
Fobes
60
60
Grew up in Holland; one of 15 young men who landed in Plymouth in 1636, in- dentured to Isaac Allerton, richest man in Plymouth Colony to pay for pass- age; granted land ts Powder Point; tailor by trade; an original proprietor of Bridgewater, MA; made a Freeman with voting rights in 1645; a man of standing and local influence; Constable in 1651 and juror in 1659.
Constant
Mitchell
<1625 - 1703
John
Gager
78
78
Probably came with father to Boston 1630; received money from Gov. Winthrop originally due his father; resided Norwich, CT; made Freeman 1675; Constable of Norwich 1681; will dated 21 Dec. 1695, mentions Caleb Fobes as son-in-law, and gives him 20 shillings besides what his wife has slready received.
~1627 - 1703
Elizabeth
Gore
76
76
D. >1603
John
Standish
In 1597 appointed coroner of the Sheading of Ayre in which Lezayre is situated in 1587 appointed Clerk of the Parish of Kirk Andreas by Henry then Earl of Derby and Lord of Man; in 1592 appointed Clerk of the Parish of Lezayre; in 1593 was member of House of Keys (Lower House of the Manx Parliment), mention- ed as a member in 1595.
Mallie
(Mary)
Moore
~1516
Margred
Morgan
Huan
Standish
Of Ormskirk and of Ellanbane, Isle of Man; with his brother John went to Isle of Man about 1540 as Tenants of the Stanleys, except for a short period before the monastaries were broken up; at least 21 in 1540, for in 1540 'Huyn Standish' was recorded as a tenant of Lezayre Abbey and paid an annual rent of 24 shillings for the property known as the Ellabane estate; evidentley cheated out of the lands of Ormskirk, Burscough, Wrightington, Newburg, Mawdesley and Croston by hid brother Thomas.
D. <1529
Robert
Standish
Of Ormskirk; described in 1567 by a Royal Herald as 'a son of Gilbert Standishe, a younger sonne descended owte of the house of Standishe'; in 1502 inherited lands in Newburgh and Ormskirk from his father.
Margaret
Croft
Brought certain lands in Mawdesley, Wrightinton and Croston as her dowry; as a widow in 1529 paid rents for a whole year for 'Ormskirk, Borscoghe, Croston, Mawdisley, Wryghtington, Newburghe'
Gilbert
Standish
Appears in a deed dated at Ormskirk on 17 JUN 1502, whereby he was granted a life interest in lands at Ormskirk and Newburgh by Peter Gerard and Richard Hulme.
D. <1492
Robert
Croft
Alice
Standish
Hugh
Standish
One of the earliest known members of the Ormskirk branch; in 1481 received rights and claims to lands in Newburgh and Ormskirk; granted without any consideration by Evan or Ewan Standish of Weryngton, heir of the late William Standish, these lands already being in the possession, having descended by inheritance or gift to Hugh Standish from his aunt, Alice Standish Burscough; involved in a fray at Wigan Church along with his nephew, Alexander Standish against the Gerards and Langtons.
Isabel
Avenal
D. ~1492
John
Croft
Made will 6 AUG 1492 leaving all his lands to the children of his son John in succession.
Christopher
Standish
~1518
Barbara
Morgan
Margaret
Unton
D. >1437
Thomas
Croft
In 1437 gave his lands in the town and townfields of Ormskirk to his son John.
~1325 - >1410
John
Standish
85
85
In 1410 held lands in Mawdisley, Wrightington and Croston.
Alice
De
Bretherton
Brought the lands in Wrightington and part of those in Croston as her dowry.
Robert
Unton
~1360 - 1434
Laurence
De
Standish
74
74
Lord of the Manor 1418-1434; marriage settlement dated at Shevyngton 30 SEP 1398; in which he received from his father part of the manor of Shevynton and 12 acres of land; disputed title of advowson of Wigan Church 1414 - dispute settled by King Henry IV against the Standishes, although they did get damages
~1375
Lora
De
Pilkington
Robert
Standish
Knighted after being appointed High Sheriff of Lancaster; held lands in Mawdesly and Croston.
Isolda
Widow of William de Lea, knight.
Henry
De
Bretherton
1520
Maud
Morgan
Margery
~1333 - 1418
Ralph
De
Standish
85
85
Lord of the Manor 1396-1408.
~1337
Cecilia
Bradshaigh
Brought a valuable dowry with provision for cattle, household utensils, and even ploughing of land.
~1349
Roger
Pilkington
Thomas
Gerard
Of Byrn.
Isabel
~1286 - ~1353
John
De
Standish
67
67
Lord of the Standish Manor 1326-1353; renowned as a soldier and honored in court circles; in 1345 was at Battle of Nevill's Cross under Queen Phlippa when King David II of Scotland was captured; was an equerry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa.
~1292
Margaret
~1316 - ~1396
Henry
De
Standish
80
80
Lord of Standish Manor 1353-1396; a second son who inherited the manor in 1353 pre-occupied with preserving family's manorial possessions in aftermath of the Black Death and the Peasant's Revolt.
~1316
Joan
De
Worsley
~1522
Jane
Morgan
~1311
Roger
De
Bradshaigh
~1292 - 1379
William
Le
Boteler
87
87
Of Bewsey.
Elizabeth
De
Argentine
~1256 - 1322
William
De
Standish
66
66
Lord of Standish Manor 1296-1326; rendered due homage and service to the Baron of Penwotham and he was also bound to do service at Penwortham Court, a kind of magistrate's duty, which was required of him every three weeks; was a judge at the trial of Robert de Clitheroe, Rector of Wigan Church, who had been arraigned for treason against King Edward II; was also 'in summons', that is to say duty bound to attend the Great Council of Westminster and was held in high esteem there; in 1304 unsuccessfully claimed the advowson of Wigan Church and prepared a pedigree of his family stating that the advowson had been held by his ancestor, Radulphus de Standish, whgo had provided rectors in the reign of Richard I (Lion Heart) 1189-1190; in 1310 received a plot a land in Wygan from William de Wyan.
Allianora
(Margaret
De Euxton)
D. >1330
William
Le
Boteler
~1234 - 1290
Jordan
De
Standish
56
56
Lord of Standish Manor 1288-1290; succeeded as lord of Standish manor in 1288 after the death of his two elder brothers; in 1289 granted lands to the three children of his sister Alicia who had married Sir Robert de Haydock, rector of the Church of Standish.
D. ~1328
William
Le
Boteler
Succeede his grandfather in 1280; 14 JUN 1294 summoned to attend the King in the French wars in Gascony; summoned to Parliament 23 JUN 1295, 26 AUG 1295 and 6 FEB 1298/9; in 1305-06 he was in the expedition to Scotland.
Sybil
Living in 1330.
~1524
Constance
Morgan
~1208 - ~1288
Radulphus
De
Standish
80
80
~1241 - 1298
Robert
De
Plumpton
57
57
~1243
Isabella
De
Westwick
D. 1297
Henry
Le
Boteler
Did not inherit, died before his father.
Ralph
Fitzhugh
~1182 - ~1246
Alexander
De
Standish
64
64
Rector, Lord of Standish manor 1220-1240; succeeded as lord of the manor when an elder brother (Ricardus) became Rural Dean of Standish, and two other brothers senior to Alexander also entered the Church.
~1592 - 1669
John
Cogswell
77
77
Immigrant on Angel Gabriel 1635, in passage wrecked at Pemaquid, Maine; settled Ipswich, MA 1635; admitted freeman 1636.
1594 - 1676
Elizabeth
Thompson
82
82
D. 1671
Adam
Hawkes
Immigrant in Winthrop Fleet 1630; soon thereafter in Charlestown, MA; in Lynn, MA 1638.
~1595 - 1669
Ann
Hutchison
74
74
~1526
Mary
Morgan
1566
Thomas
Mitchell
Aged 56 on 15 Aug 1622
~1568
Margaret
Williams
D. 1630
William
Gager
Immigrant in Winthrop Fleet 1630 with Gov. Winthrop, reckoned as one of Gov's household; given salary from public treasury; deacon of first Church at Charlestown, now Boston.
D. 1643
Samuel
Gore
"Citizen and grocer of London"
Elizabeth
Hill
1554 - ~1615
Edward
Cogswell
61
61
Will dated June 23, 1615; proved Jan 12, 1616.
1570 - 1616
Alice
46
46
Will dated June 25, 1615; proved May 11, 1616.
1575 - 1623
William
Thompson
48
48
Vicar of Westbury, Wiltshire, ENG for 20 years, 1603-1623.
~1578
Phillis
John
Hawkes
~1528
Elizabeth
Morgan
1510
Robert
Cogswell
1518
Alice
Thomas
Rudd
Katherine
Parris
D. 1492
Robert
Pemberton
Alice
Lago
D. 1511
Thomas
Gifford
D. 1535
Joan
Langston
Richard
Coles
Gentleman; held lands in Preston Capes, Everdon, Litchborough Maidford, Adston , Woodford, Church Brampton & elswhere; through his daughter Anne he was ancestor in the ninth generation of George Washington.
Henry
Somerset
~1474
John
Thomas
Elizabeth
Browne
Thomas
Rudd
William
Pemberton
Stephen
Lago
~1431 - 1506
John
Gifford
75
75
Commisioner of peace 1479 and 1483; high sheriff of Bucks County 1497; on 24 NOV 1487 granted his lands in Fringford, Oxfordshire to son Thomas & daughter-in-law Joan and their heirs; on 25 SEP 1506 also gave lands of Twyford to Thomas.
Agnes
Winslowe
D. 1506
John
Langston
had 22 children, of whom 17 died unmarried.
Amy
(Amice)
Danvers
D. >1474
William
Coles
Alice
~1460 - >1490
William
Parke
30
30
D. ~1280
William
Le
Boteler
Of Warrington, who held the Lordship of Warrington in 1212; sheriff of county Lancashire 1258-1259; governor of Lancaster Castle.
~1183 - 1235
Piers
Fitzherbert
52
52
Adult by 1204; living 19 May 1235; through his mother heir to one third interest in the barony of Miles of Gloucester, Earl of Hereford; died shortly before 6 JUN 1235; marriage settlement made on 28 NOV 1203.
D. 1225
Alice
Fitzrobert
Hugh
Fitzralph
Agnes
De
Greasley
~1160 - ~1220
Radulphus
(Ralph) De
Standish
60
60
Adopted the name de Standish from his manor which he soley possessed about 1206, when he and his brother Siward parted the townships between them and divided the church advowson; Radulphus took the manor of Standish and adopted the name de Standish, and Siward adopted the name of his manor, Langstre; begand the ancestral line of the Standishes of Standish.
Juliana
D. 1212
Richard
Le
Boteler
Aquired the Lordship of Warrington by marriage.
Beatrice
~1153 - 1186
Everard
De
Ros
33
33
Still a minor in 1166; adhered to the King in the rebellion of 1173; was a benifactor of the abbeys of Newminster and Rievaulx.
~1487
Thomas
Rudd
1151 - >1194
Roese
(Rose)
Trussbut
43
43
Said to be 34 in 1185 and to have two sons, the elder (Robert) aged 13; she was living in the summer of 1194.
~1150 - 1204
Herbert
Fitzherbert
54
54
Lucy
Fitzmiles
Lady of Blaen Llyfni and Bwich and Dinas, Brecknock; heir to one third interest in barony of Miles of Gloucester her father.
~1160 - 1214
Robert
Fitzroger
54
54
Lord of Clavering; Sheriff of Northumberland.
D. >1231
Margaret
De
Chesney
Ralpd
De
Greasley
~1135
Leising
Believed to have been the first rector of the ancient Standish Church, built about the end of the 12th century.
Daughter
Of
Richard
D. 1400
Robert
Parke
D. 1408
Margaret
~1491 - 1540
Alice
Pemberton
49
49
1408 - 1469
Thomas
Gifford
61
61
Under custody of William, Lord Roos of Hamlak & Thomas, Duke of Clarence; in 1429 held manor of Helydon and also Solerton lands; got manor of Fringford 1428/9; commisioner of peace and array in Bucks 1460-1464.
~1405
Eleanor
Vaux
D. 1463
Thomas
Wynslowe
~1420
Agnes
Throckmorton
D. 1487
John
Langston
Sheriff of Oxford 1471.
Elizabeth
~1362 - 1448
John
Danvers
86
86
Lord of Banbury, Cothorp & Ipwell, Oxon.
~1370 - >1450
Joan
Bruley
80
80
Richard
Coles
Gentleman; alive 1474.
Agnes
~1490
Peter
Edwards
D. 1237
Osbert
Giffard
Granted lands from his brother Elias in manor of Winterburn, Dorsetshire 11 MAY 1229; received from King a grant from forest at Selwood 10 JUN 1232.
~1211 - 1242
Isabel
De
Bekland
31
31
~1235
John
Giffard
La Beef
Knight; enfeeffed of 2 parts of a knight's fee in Twyford by Robrt Fitz Nicholas, steward of Henry III, prior to 1272; in 1282 performing in Wales the service due from John Giffard of Brimsfield; in 1284-86 held 15 1/2 virgates of land in Charnden, Buckinghamshire and 40 librates in Twyford; 3 MAY 1296 knight of the shire (M.P.) for Buckinghamshire in Parliament at Westminster - one of the earliest Parliaments; in the roll of arms in the time of Eward I, known as the Planche Roll, the arms of John Giffarg La Beef are given as Gules, three lions passant in pale argent, and a label for differance; these are the arms of the Brimfield Giffards, with the mark of cadency.
Julianna
~0746
Himiltrude
~0769 - 0811
Pepin
'the
Hunchback'
42
42
~0771
Rothais
(Rothaide)
0772 - 0811
Karl
39
39
0775 - 0810
Rotrud
35
35
0776 - 0826
Bertha
Of
France
50
50
~1494 - 1519
Richard
Samwell
25
25
0781
Gisele
Aupals
(Alpis)
~0763 - 0794
Fastrada
31
31
~0784
Theodrade
~0766
Mathalgard
~0788 - 0852
Rothilde
64
64
~0768
Gerswind
~0790
Adeltrud
~0801 - 0855
Drogo
54
54
~0796
Adelinda
~1490
Amy
Anne
Gifford
~0785
Adelheid
0810
Deitrich
'the
Monk'
Genna
Of
Italy
Daughter
Of
Pepin
~0920 - 0988
Theodoric
III
68
68
D. 0983
Wieman
I
(Wickmann)
Hildegardis
Of
France
Adela
~0846 - 0893
Pepin
De
Senlis
47
47
~1486 - 1570
Peter
Coles
84
84
Lord of the manor of Little Preston.
D. 0836
Lambert
D. ~0858
Gui Of
Spoleto
Itana
(Judith)
D. ~0858
Gui II
Of
Spoleto
Judith
Of
Fruili
Ita
Rothilda
(Rohaut)
~0800
Daughter
Of
Louis
~0803 - 0838
Pepin I
Of
Aquitaine
35
35
~1407 - ~1479
Thomas
Perkins
72
72
Dhouda
(Duodene)
0806 - 0876
Louis
II 'the
German'
70
70
His early years spent at the court of his grandfather Charlemagne, whose special affection he won; undertook the government of Bavaria, his inheritance, in 0817; fought slavonic tribes on his eastern frontier; involved in the fighting with his father and his brothers Lothair I and Charles the Bald over the division of the Empire; influenced by his step-mother Judith who was a sister of his wife, Emma; by the Treaty of Verdun which the three brothers made August 0843, Louis received the lands lying east of the Rhine, together with a district aroun Spires, Worms and Mainz; his territories included Bavaria where he made Regensburg the center of his government of Thuringia, Franconia and Saxony; may be called the founder of the German kingdom; at his instance synods and assemblies were held where laws were decreed for better government of church and state; lived in close alliance with the church to which he was generous; his later years, after the death of his brother Lothair I were spent opposing the forces of his half-brother, Charles the Bald in Aquitaine anf Italy; he persuaded his daughter Engelberge at Trent in 0872 to name his son Carloman as her husband (Louis II)'s successor in Italy, but Charles the Bald reached Italy before his rival and secured the imperial crown; Louis was preparing for war with Charles but died.
~0808
Rotrude
D. 0861
Berthe
D. 0876
Carloman
D. ~0900
Engelberge
(Angilberg)
Louis
Charles
D. 0897
Irmgard
(Trungard)
Gisele
~1401
Margaret
D. 0886
Boso
Of
Provence
On the death of Louis II of Italy, his lands passed into the hands of King Charles the Bald, and he in turn gave Provence to Boso, the son-in-law of Louis II; Boso reclaimed all the territory that had formerly belonged to his wife's grandfather, and on the death of Charles the Bald was acknowledged in 879 as its sovereign at Mantaille in Viennois.
~0883 - 0928
Louis
'the
Blind'
45
45
On the death of his father his mother with the assistance of Emperor Arnulph, had Louis acknowledged as King at an assembly at Valance in 890; in 900 he attempted to sieze the crown of Italy and in 901 was crowned Emperor of Italy by Pope Benedict IV; in 905 he was suprised at Verona by his rival Berenger I who captured him, put his eyes out, forced him to give up Italy and return to Provence, where he lived until his death, after which his kingdom was given to Rudolph II of Burgundy by Hugo of Arles.
D. 0919
Ingeltrude
(Angelberge)
~0894 - 0933
Sympherienne
De
Hainault
39
39
D. 0868
Valtrude
(Waldrada)
Hugues
De
Lorraine
Gisele
De
Lorraine
~0863 - 0925
Bertha
De
Lorraine
62
62
Hermengarde
De
Lorraine
~0844
Thibault
~1428
John
Morgan
D. 0947
Hugues
D. 0948
Teutberge
?
D. 0915
Adalbert
II De
Toscane
D. 0932
Gui De
Toscane
Lambert
De
Toscane
Hermengarde
D. 0841
Gerard
De
Auvergne
The 'Stammvater' of the great house of the feudal Counts of Poitou and Dukes of Aquitaine, whose heiress the Duchess Eleanor became the ancestress of the Plantagenet Kings.
Ansgarde
Of
France
~0805 - 0844
Bernard
I
'naso'
39
39
D. 0920
Guillaume
I Of
Perigod
~1445
Jonet
Mathew
Regilinde
0920 - 0936
Bernard
I Of
Perigod
16
16
~0806 - 0876
Emma
Of
Andech
70
70
D. 0882
Louis
II Of
Lorraine
0839 - 0888
Charles
III 'le
Gros"
49
49
Charles III (Holy Roman Empire), called The Fat (839-88), Holy Roman emperor (881-87), king of the East Franks, or Germans (876-87), and, as Charles II, king of the West Franks, or French (884-87). He was the son of Emperor Louis II and the great-grandson of Charlemagne. Charles was deposed from his thrones in 887 by his nephew, Arnulf, duke of Carinthia. His deposition marked the dissolution of the Frankish Empire.
D. 0857
Hidegarde
Berthe
Helingarde
Gisele
0893 - 0912
Louis
IV
19
19
~1470 - 1504
Morgan
Morgan
34
34
~0897
Glismonde
D. 0912
Ludgara
D. 0913
Helingarde
D. 0900
Zuentibold
Of
Lorraine
Rapold
Berthe
0845 - 0866
Carloman
21
21
0847 - 0865
Charles
Of
France
18
18
0850
Lothaire
Of
France
~0854
Hermentrude
Of
France
~1472
Philip
Morgan
~0856
Hildegarde
Of
France
~0858
Gisele
Of
France
~0862
Rothilde
Richilde
~0871
Rothaut
Of
France
~1350
John
Bruley
~1358
Matilda
Quartermain
~1350
William
De
Bruley
M.P. for Oxon 1394-1395; married Agnes his 2nd cousin.
~1360
Agnes
De
Bruley
~1338
Thomas
Quartermain
~1476
Jane
Morgan
~1344
Joan
Russell
~1305
John
De
Bruley
~1298
Henry
De
Bruley
~1313 - 1342
Thomas
Quartermain
29
29
~1317
Katherine
De
Breton
~1320
John
Russell
~1328
Agnes
Planches
~1272
John
De
Bruley
~1478
Margred
Morgan
~1270
William
De
Bruley
~1282
Thomas
Quartermain
~1285 - >1346
Guy
De
Breton
61
61
Held lands in Welston, Maerston & Marten; M.P. for Warwickshire 1327-8.
~1289
Joan
De
Gray
~1304 - 1363
John
Russell
59
59
~1300 - 1363
Elizabeth
Fitzelys
63
63
~1243
Henry
De
Bruley
Knight; acquired the manor of Henton 1266.
~1247
Katherine
Foliot
Lady of Waterstoke; heir to her brothers.
~1484
John
Morgan
1250
William
Quartermain
~1254
Maud
~1253
William
De
Breton
~1231
Agnes
De
Chetwode
Heir to part of Welston.
~1253
Thomas
De
Gray
~1287 - 1337
Nicholas
Russell
50
50
~1290
Agnes
Grindon
~1211 - >1250
Richard
De
Bruley
39
39
~1215
Millicent
~1485
Lewis
Morgan
~1221 - >1267
William
Foliot
46
46
Knight.
~1190 - ~1260
William
Quartermain
70
70
~1200
William
Chetwode
~1258 - >1300
James
Russell
42
42
~1260
Jane
~1185
Robert
De
Bruley
~1189
Joan
De
Kingwarton
~1170 - ~1230
Herbert
Quartermain
60
60
~1178
Lecia
Knyvet
~1171 - 1249
Robert
Chetwood
78
78
~1486 - 1511
William
Morgan
25
25
~1174
Sybil
Strange
Fredville
~1230
Robert
Russell
~1163
Robert
De
Kinewarton
~1165
Joan
~1158
Herbert
Quartermain
~1145
Kalph
Chetwood
~1148
Roger
De
Fredville
~1202
Thomas
Russell
~1436
Roger
Vaughan
~1174 - 1224
John
Russell
50
50
~1180
Rose
Bardolf
~1150
Odo
(Eudo)
Russell
~1154
Thomas
Bardolf
~1156
Alice
De
Corbet
Agnes
~1320 - >1409
Richard
Danvers
89
89
~1435
Jane
Whitney
~1327 - >1395
Agnes
De
Brancestre
68
68
~1290
John
Danvers
Lord of Bourton & Ipswell.
~1290
Isabel
De La
Lee
~1340
John
Brancestre
~1340
Margaret
(Mille)
Mile
~1256 - 1331
Simon
Danvers
75
75
Lord of Bourton, Ipswell Chiselhampton.
~1262
Alice
~1270
William
De La
Lee
~1325
Isabel
~1310
Henry
(Mille)
Mile
~1461
Watkin
(William)
Vaughan
1225 - >1274
Robert
Danvers
49
49
~1197 - <1246
William
Danvers
49
49
~1201
Matilda
Talemasche
~1172 - 1223
Robert
Danvers
51
51
Knight.
~1175
Richard
Talemasche
~1177
Amicia
Taillard
1135 - 1197
William
-Geoffery
De Alvers
62
62
~1142
Emma
Chevauchesul
~1109 - >1145
Robert
De
Alvers
36
36
~1116
Awcher
Chevauchesul
~1463
Thomas
Vaughan
~1118
Mabilia
Talesmasche
~1087
Geoffrey
De
Alvers
~1061
Ralph
De
Alvers
Knight; Lord of Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire.
~1063
N.n.
Le
Poure
~1370 - 1405
William
Thomas
Vaux
35
35
Ancestor of the Lords Vaux of Harrowden, Northamptonshire.
~1374 - <1454
Eleanor
Drakelowe
80
80
~1350
Thomas
Draketon
Knight; Killed at Alhokeston before 26 MAR 1378.
~1356
Ankeret
De
Salford
~1345 - ~1401
William
Vaux
56
56
~1344
Joan
Thirning
~1465
Henry
Vaughan
~1324 - <1373
William
Vaux
49
49
~1325
Joan
~1318
John
Thirning
~1284 - ~1330
Elias
Vaux
46
46
~1291
Elizabeth
Hastings
~1254 - >1305
Robert
Vaux
51
51
~1258
Alice
St. Liz
~1226 - ~1275
Nicholas
Vaux
49
49
~1471
Eleanor
Vaughan
~1232
Adam
St. Liz
~1236
Iseud
Beckyngham
~1200 - >1244
Roger
Vaux
44
44
~1170 - >1244
Oliver
Vaux
74
74
~1174
Petronill
Croun
~1140
Robert
Vaux
~1148
Guy
De
Croun
~1117
William
Vaux
~1473
Joan
Vaughan
~1099
Robert
Vaux
~1097
Agnes
Fitzwalter
~1065
Harold
Vaux
~1071
Ralph
Fitzwalter
~1075
Matilda
Langetot
1389 - <1414
William
Wynslowe
25
25
Yeoman of the chamber to King Richard II, 19 MAR 1381; king's pavillioner, 22 MAY 1395; held lands in Ramsbury, Wiltshire.
1379 - 1443
Agnes
Poure
64
64
Eventual heir of the lordships of Burton, Wendlebury & Cherlton-upon-Otmore, Oxfordshire.
~1333 - 1387/88
John
Wynslowe
~1337 - 1409
Mary or
Mariota
Crouchman
72
72
Eleanor
Somerset
~1346 - <1399
Thomas
Poure
53
53
Knight; lord of Burton, Cherlton, Wendlebury & Garford.
~1350 - 1407
Joan
57
57
~1300
William
Wynslowe
~1311
William
Crouchman
~1321 - >1346
William
Poure
25
25
~1296 - <1338
Richard
Poure
42
42
~1271 - 1316
William
Poure
45
45
~1430
John
Parke
~1275 - >1332
Margery
Chasteleyn
57
57
~1240 - <1283
Richard
Poure
43
43
~1249
Richard
Chasteleyn
~1460
John
Samwell
~1382 - 1445
John
Throckmorton
63
63
Kt., M.P., J.P., of Throckmorton, in Fladbury, Worc., & Coughton, Warw., Born c. 1380. M 1409 Eleanor, d. & heir of Guy Spyne, M.P., of Coughton, Worc. (See SPYNE). M.P. for Worc., 1414, 1420, 1422, 1432, 1433 & 1439. J.P. for Worc., 16 Jan. 1414 until his death, & for Warw., 26 Oct. 1433 to Dec. 1439. Escheator of Worc., 4 Nov. 1418 to 23 Nov. 1419. Warw. Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Dec. 1418 to 1445. Under Treasurer of the Exchequer, 19 July 1433 to July 1443. Served on many Royal Commissions, 1414 to 1441. Will dated 12 April 1445. Died 13 April 1445. Will Proved at P.C.C., 1445.
~1385 - >1466
Eleanor
De La
Spine
81
81
~1356 - 1411
Thomas
De
Throckmorton
55
55
Served in Ireland in the retinue of Thomas, 6th Lord Despencer, K.G. Commissioner for Array, Worc., Dec. 1399 & Sept. 1403. J.P. for Worc., 16 May 1401 to Nov. 1403, & 19 July 1404 to Feb. 1410. M.P. for Worc., 1402. Escheator of Worc., 8 Nov. 1401 to 29 Nov. 1402. Constable of Elmley Castle, Worc., 1404. Tax Collector, Worc., 1404. Died Jan. 1411.
~1350 - >1428
Agnes
De
Besford
78
78
1350
Guy
De La
Spine
Knight; lord of Cocton.
1354
Katherine
Holt
~1335
Robert
De
Throckmorton
~1334
Lucy
Coleman
~1319 - 1403
Alexander
De
Besford
84
84
M.P. for Worchestershire 1382 & 1393; commisioner of array 1399; lord of Besford, Flyford Flavell & Black Nauton, Worchestershire & of Hoddison, Hertfordshire.
~1323
Beatrice
Thornden
~1387 - ~1451
William
Perkins
64
64
~1324
William
De La
Spine
Knight.
~1326
Alice
Bruley
~1324
John
Holt
~1328
Alianore
Durvassal
~1309
Giles
De
Throckmorton
~1314
Agnes
Fraunceys
~1309
Geoffrey
Coleman
~1295
John
De
Besford
~1294
Joan
De
Harley
~1303
Nicholas
Durvassal
~1389
Margaret
~1308
Rose
De
Mountford
~1271 - 1335
Robert
Throckmorton
64
64
~1282 - 1315
Joan
De
Weston
33
33
~1288
John
Franceys
~1260
Alexander
De
Besford
Lord of Besford, Flyferd, Flavell & Nauton; verderer of the Forest of Feckenham; M.P. for Worcestershire 1323-24.
~1276
Margery
De
Thornden
~1274
Robert
De
Harley
~1274
Joan
De
Corbett
~1272
John
Durvassall
~1276
Sybil
Corbicon
~1400 - >1448
Ieuan
Morgan
48
48
~1276
William
De
Mountford
~1280
Agneta
Holt
~1251 - 1315
Simon
De
Throckmorton
64
64
~1255
Isabel
De
Donnisley
~1256
Richard
Weston
~1230 - 1268
Alexander
De
Besford
38
38
~1234
Margaret
De
Nauton
~1251
John
De
Thornden
~1239
Thomas
Durvassal
Lord of Spernere.
1404
Denis
Verch
Thomas
~1242
Margeria
~1244
Peter
Corbicon
~1231 - <1266
Robert
De
Throckmorton
35
35
~1235
Prudence
De
Compton
~1210
Walter
De
Besford
Knight.
~1214
Helen
~1215
Philip
Durvassal
Lord of Spornore.
~1217
Felicia
De
Camville
~1212 - ~1246
Adam
De
Throckmorton
34
34
~1430
David
Morgan
~1215
Matilda
De
Dersinton
~1198
Robert
De
Compton
~1202
Lucy
~1185
Vivian
De
Besford
~1189
N.n.
De
Nafford
~1193 - >1244
Roger
Durvassal
51
51
1192
Eva
De
Ewenlode
1192 - >1235
Thomas
De
Camville
43
43
~1196
Agnes
~1172
Robert
De
Throckmorton
~1432
Jenkyn
Morgan
~1160
Osbert
De
Besford
~1164
N.n.
De
Bedsford
~1166
John
Durvassal
~1146
John
De
Throckmorton
~1135
Vivian
De
Besford
~1139
N.n.
De
Besford
~1134
William
Durvassal
~1421
John
Mathew
~1367 - 1409
Roger
Giffard
42
42
Held lands at Leisdon, Kent; at Twyford, Buckinghamshire; at Cogges, Bekbroke and Newynton, Oxfordshire; and at Helydon, Northamptonshire.
~1365
Isabella
Stretele
~1345 - 1394
Thomas
Giffard
49
49
Knight; held lands in Kent & Oxfordshire.
~1339 - ~1367
Elizabeth
De
Missenden
28
28
1301 - 1368
John
Giffard
67
67
Knight; inherited manorial estates at Somerton & Fringsford and Coggs land in Oxfordshire from the de Gardinis family, and messuage at leisdon from Arsic family, and manor of Ixning from the de la Haye family; in 1330 inherited the Gifford lands; 26 MAR 1338 to array 10 men at arms, 20 armed men & 40 archers for the French War; in 1340 had license to build an oratory in his home at Twyford; an assessor of taxes on Pxfordshire 1340; one of knights who accompanied Edward III to France, and in King's division at the Battle of Crecy 1346; in 1349, 1351 and 1361 commisioner of peace in Buckinghamshire; 14 MAR 1360 a commisioner of array in Buckinghamshire for the French War; in 1368 again a commisioner of array.
~1305 - >1361
Lucy
De
Morteyn
56
56
~1270 - >1328
John
Giffard
Le Beef
58
58
24 JUN 1301 at muster at Berwick on Tweed for military services against Scots; 28 SEP 1315 knights of the shire (M.P.) for Buckinghamshire; 1316 lord of the vills of Twyford, Charnden & Pounden in Buckinghamshire; held Twyford land of Ralph Pipard, lands at Begbrooke, Oxfordshire; half of manor of Heliden in Northamptonshire; and lands in Astwell; on 26 MAR 1316 a commisioner to raise soldiers for Scotch War.
~1279 - <1328
Alexandra
De
Gardinis
49
49
~1279
John
Morteyn
~1283
Joan
De
Rothwell
~1425
Catherin
Kemeys
D. >1427
William
Coles
D. <1427
Richard
(Collys)
(Colles) Coles
D. >1369
Thomas
Drakelowe
Alice
De
Wyleby
D. 1375/81
Peter
De
Salford
Knight; served at Crecy.
Joan
Robert
De
Wyleby
Emma
D. ~1336
Nigel
De
Salford
Margery
~1410
Roger
Vaughan
D. 1317
William
De
Spinete
Margery
Durvassal
Thomas
De
Gardinis
Knight; Lord of lands at Leysdon in the Isle of Sheppey and at Fringford, Cogges & Somerton, Oxfordshire.
D. 1296
John
De
Morteyn
Lord of Tilsworth & Marston, Bedfordshire.
Joan
Gobion
Richard
De
Bethwell
D. >1327
John
De
Wyleby
Joan
D. 1313
John
De
Salford
D. >1317
Joan
~1414
Denis
Verch
Thomas
William
De La
Spine
Joan De
Cocton De
Kinewarten
William
Fitzelys
William
De
Gardine
Lord of Langley, Salop & Ixening, Suffolk.
Alexandra
De La
Haye
Agnes
D. ~1284
John
De
Morteyn
Constance
De (Marston)
Merston
D. 1275
Hugh
Gobion
Succeeded his father 1230.
Matilda
~1399 - 1455
John
Parke
56
56
Roger
De
Spinete
Randulph De
Cocton De
Kinewarten
D. >1198
Christiana
D. <1295
Robert
De
Grey
Knight; Lord of Rotherfield, Semerton & Hardwicke, Oxfordshire and of Sculccates & Kettlewell, Yorkshire.
Joan
De
Valeines
D. 1318
William
Fitzelys
~1189 - <1237
Alan
De
Bekland
48
48
Knight; Lord of Egg Buckland & Hoce, Devonshire.
~1189 - <1242
Alice
Murdac
53
53
D. <1264
William
De
Gardinis
Thomas
De La
Haye
~1434
James
Samwell
Alexandra
Arsic
D. ~1234
Eustace
De
Morteyn
Lord of Cossale & Wellerton
'hillar'
Silvein
D. 1257
Ralph
De
Marsten
N.n.
De
Mellers
D. <1230
Richard
Gobion
Agnes
De
Merlay
D. ~1232
Hugh
De
Salford
D. >1213
Lucy
D. >1240
Nigel
De
Salford
1645 - 1731
Desire
Doty
Sherman
86
86
Avice
De
Nauton
William
De
Cocton
D. <1267
Walter
De
Grey
Isabel
De
Dusten
D. 1234
Thomas
De
Valeines
D. >1302
Joan
D. 1302
Roger
Fitzelys
Guy
De
Bekland
D. ~1196
Ralph
Murdac
Sheriff of Nottingham & Derby 1180-89; judge 1183; justiciar of Richard I.
D. 1242
Eve
De
Grey
1689 - 1766
Desire
Standish
77
77
Roger
De
Gardine
Robert
Arsic
Sybylla
De
Crevequer
~1160 - 1223
Eistace
De
Morteyn
63
63
Hillaria
Richard
Silvein
D. 1227
John
De
Marsten
Richard
De
Gobion
Beatrice
De
Lucelles
D. 1188
Roger
De
Merlay
1690 - 1774
Thomas
Standish
84
84
Agnes
De
Stuteville
D. >1240
William
De
Camville
a justice gor gaol delivery in 1234-5.
Albareda
Marmion
Robert
De
Grey
Granted Rotherfield by his brother, Walter de Grey, archbishop of York.
D. 1232
William
De
Duston
D. >1235
Mary
D. 1234
Robert
De
Valeines
D. 1252
William
Fitzelys
Margaret
~1030 - 1089
Thibault
III
59
59
Count of Blois 1037; Count of Champagne 1048.
1693 - 1772
Ichabod
Standish
78
78
Alix
De
Crepi
D. ~1040
Raoul I
De
Crepi
Count of Amiens
Adele
De
Clermont
D. ~1027
Gaucher II
'le Blanc'
De Vexi
Count of Vexin, Count of Valois
Alix
De
Senlis
D. ~0987
Gaucher
I
Eve
De
Dreux
D. ~0965
Waleran
D. ~0981
Hildegarde
De
Flanders
D. 0903
Raoul I
1691
Phebe
Ring
~0863
Winidilde
(Widimille)
D. 0933
Adolphe
Egilfride
De
Flandre
Elstrude
De
Flandre
Isaac
Of
Cambray
D. 0898
Wilfred
I 'le
Velu'
D. 0954
Sunifred
Of
Besalu
~0863 - 0882
Louis
III
19
19
Son
Of
Louis
D. 0897
Trungard
1722
Mary
Standish
N.n.
~0899
Gisele
Of
Normandy
~0887 - 0917
Frederune
30
30
~0908
Ermentrude
Of
France
~0910
Frederune
Of
France
~0912
Adelaide
Of
France
~0914
Hildegarde
Of
France
~0916
Rotrude
Of
France
~0895
N.n.
~0917
Arnulf
1725
Desire
Standish
1875 - 1919
Clyde
Lytle
Hamilton
44
44
Agent for Kerbaux Co. of Pittsburgh; said to have provided financing for TEXACO; cause of death listed as apoplexy; buried in Homewood Cemetery.
Susanna
De
Montfort
0850 - 0924
Berenger
I
74
74
King of Italy 888-924; captured Louis the Blind and put his eyes out; murdered at Verona.
~0850 - 0915
Bertrila
De
Spoleto
65
65
~0881 - 0910
Gisele
Of
Italy
29
29
~0868 - 0923/25
Adalbert
Of
Ivrea
Adelaide
D. 0816
Begue
Of
Paris
~0790
Engeltrude
(Engeltron)
Donat
I
~0785
Leutand
Of
Paris
1727
Phebe
Standish
~0775 - 0839/40
Hunroch
Of
Friuli
D. >1166
Ralph
Murdac
Beatrice
De
Chesney
D. >1198
John
De
Grey
Daughter
Of
Robert
~1140 - 1201
Alexander
Arsic
61
61
D. >1180
Adam
De
Morteyn
Nigel
De
Marsten
D. 1168
Hugh
Gobion
Sheriff of Northampton 1161-4
D. 1159
Hugh
De
Lucelles
1729
Ichabod
Standish
D. 1160
Ralph
De
Merlay
Founder in 1138 of the Cistercian monastery of Newminster.
Juliana
De
Dunbar
D. 1194
Roger
De
Stuteville
Sheriff of Northumberland 1169-83
N.n.
De
Dersinton
Felicia
De
Throckmorton
Walter
De
Nafford
William
De
Cocton
D. >1129
William
De
Cocton
Geoffery
Marmion
Lord of the honour of Llanstephan, Carmathenshire, Wales
D. 1218
William
De
Duston
Constable of Scarborough Castle.
1654
Caleb
Sampson
N.n.
Wake
Alan
De
Valeines
Sheriff of Kent 1185-90
Helen
De
Alveston
D. 1226
William
Fitzelys
D. >1236
Rose
De
Rekely
Ponce
Walter
Of
Gloucester
D. >1130
Ralph
Murdac
D. >1109
Roger
De
Chesney
D. >1148
Alice
De
Langtot
1699
Mary
Eaton
D. >1150
Anschetil
De
Grey
D. 1166
Robert
Basset
Beatrice
De
Harcourt
~1120 - ~1172
Menasser
Arsic
52
52
Sheriff of Oxfordshire 1160
Margaret
Robert
De
Morteyn
A tenant under William Peverel
Hugh
Gobion
First appeared in the vill of Northampton 1130-1.
Richard
De
Lucelles
D. 1129
William
De
Merlay
A sergeant to Geoffery, Bishop of Countances; gave lordship of Norwich to the monks of Durham.
Menialde
1749
Sarah
Sampson
D. 1138
Gospatric
II
2nd Earl of Dunbar; Baron of Beanley; slain at battle of the Standard.
Sibyl
Morel
Osmund
De
Stuteville
Lord of Weston Colville & Burton Agnes, Yorkshire
Osmund
De
Throckmorton
D. ~1129
Roger
Marmion
Walkelin
De
Duston
Lord of Dusten jure uxeris; later a monk and an abbot.
Alice
Torfin
De
Alveston
D. 1198
William
Fitzelys
Lord of Waterperry, Oakley and Worminghall.
Emma
De
Braie
1754
Zabdial
Sampson
Roger
De
Pitres
D. >1114
Richard
Fitzmeurdrac
Lord of la Meudraquire in Cotentin & Broughton Peggs.
Ralf
De
Chesney
In 1086 landholder in Sussex, Oxfordshire and Norfolk
Maud
De
Watville
Ralph
De
Langtot
In 1086 a tenant of Walter Giffard in Bedfordshire and Suffolk
Richard
De
Grey
Robert
Arsic
William
De
Locels
In 1086 a tenant of Beauchamp and Lord of Streatley-Sharpenhoe & Heigham Gobion
D. 1095
Arkil
Morel
~1075
Robert
D'estouteville
Like his father a supporter of Duke Robert of Normandy against Henry I; was captured in battle 1106, lived for some years in confinement; added to his inheritance the Lordship of Schypwic by marriage.
1756
William
Sampson
~1075
Erneburga
Fitzbaldric
Roland
De
Alvers
This name taken from the town of Auvers, was bourne by Roland D'Anvers, who came thence to the conquest of England; name on Duchesne's ANCIENT LIST OF THE CONQUERORS OF ENGLAND, as derived from a Charter in Battle Abbey.
William
Austurcarius
To whom Henry II granted Duston by 1157
Fulk
De
Braie
Lord of Waterperry, Ockley and Wormenhall.
Meurdrac
D. ~1085
William
De
Watville
Anschetil
De
Grey
The Conquror's companion in arms; from Graye-sur-Ner in Calvados; held lands of the fee of William Fitz-Osborne, as recorded in Domesdat Book; in 1086 Lord of Rotherfield, Widelia and lands in Burton and Cornewell, Oxfordshire.
Menasser
Arsic
Descendant of William de Arsic, one of eight knights appointed by William de Fiennes, in the reign of William the Conqueror to the custody or guard of Dover Castle.
~1040 - ~1106
Robert
D'estouteville
66
66
The Conqueror's follower; from Etouteville-sur-Mer, Normandy; received extensive land in Yorkshire after 1086; feudal Lord of Cottingham in Yorkshire was a benifactor of St. Mary's Abbey, York; in 1105 supported Duke Robert; in 1106 was captured at Tinchebrai and was imprisoned for the rest of his life.
Beatrice
1739/40
William
Bent
Luvel
De
Braie
John
Of
Crey
Girard
(Fleital)
Flatel
Hugues
Butler to Henry I King of France
~0953 - ~0996
Godfrey
D'eu
43
43
Natural son of Richard I Duke of Normandy; in 1006 both he and his brother William Count of Exmes, affixed their signatures to the act of assembly at Fecamp.
Mattew
De
Vilers
~1124 - 1162/63
Robert
De
Ros
Confirmed (1147-53) to Rievaulx the gift of his uncle Walter Espec for the souls of his said uncle, his father and brother Everard; consablte, probably to the Count of Aumale, lord of Holderness from about 1153 until his death; in his grant to Selby Abbey he styled 'Roberttus de Ros, Conatabularius, filius Petri Dapiferi'; attested charter of Count William about 1150, and Henry II's charter to Scarsborough where for several years from 1158 on was in charge of the works at the King's castle; on his death money was owing to the Crown upon the works at Scarsborough; his son's lands were charged with debt and they and his lands were put in custody of Ranulf of Glanville.
~1129 - <1219
Sibyl
De
Valognes
90
90
Gave 400 marks for the wedding; born at Nun Appelton Priory.
William
Trussbut
Stlawart soldier who held the trust of Henry I; hereditary castellan of Bonn- ville-sur-Touquet in 1138, where in that year he discovered his enemies (Geoffrey, Count of Anjou and his forces) lack of caution he set fire to the town Tocque where they were encamped in 45 different places, the sallied forth from Bonneville to put them to flight.
Albreda
De
Harcourt
1702
Jabez
Fuller
Richard
Avenel
Sibyl
D. 1155
Herbert
Fitzherbert
Chamberlain to Henry I; succeeded to his father's lands in 1130.
D. >1157
Sibyl
Corbet
Mistress of Henry I.
~1140 - 1214
Roger
Fitzrichard
74
74
First Lord of Warworth, Northumberland; adult by 1157; with his wife Alice gave a salt-pan at Warkworth to Newminster.
~1130 - >1185
Alice
De
Vere
55
55
Her father gave as a marriage portion for her first marriage to Robert de Essex land at Ugley (Essex); for the soul of her 1st husband, her father and brother Robert she gave land in Ugley to the Order of the Hospital; received the ville of Aynho, Northamptonshire from her 1st husband, and Compton, Warwickshire from her 2nd; as a widow (2nd time) she joined her sister Rohese at Chicksand Priory, but later moved to Walden Abbey; attested charters for Colne issued by her mother and sister Rohese; after death of 2nd husband she continued to be styled as Alice de Essex, perhaps because her 1st husband was a lord, or because her 2nd husband had no surname.
William
De
Chesney
Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk
~1216
Richard
De
Spileman
In 1153 received lands in Standish and Langtree from Richard de Bussel, as a dowry for Richard's sister.
~1218
Daughter
Of
Warin
~1088 - 1157
Piers
De
Ros
69
69
Probably derived his name from Holderness, Yorkshire; he was steward of the Count of Aumle, lord of Holderness; styled himself 'Piers de Rossa' or 'Piers the steward of Holderness'; he gave 2 carucates of land in Gilling, near Helmsley, and the church to St. Mary's Abbey, Yorkshire; he pre-deceased his brother-in-law, Walter Espec, and was presumably dead in 1130; was the founder of 3 monastaries - Kirkham (1122), Rievaulx (1131) and in Yorks and Wardon, Beds (1135).
1703
Harriot
(Hannah)
Whitman
1881 - 1963
Laura
Keys
Wilson
82
82
1900 none, with grandmother Agnes. 1930 in Pittsburgh, PA
~1092
Adeline
Espec
Geoffrey
Fitzpagan
Held estates in Yorkshire before reign of Henry I, where he was seated at Wartre in Holderness; founded a priory there; family afterwards was known as Trussbutt of Wartre.
D. <1130
Herbert
Fitzherbert
Also known as Herbert of Winchester; accompanied Duke William from Normandy; filled office of Chamberlain and Treasurer to William II and Henry I; held lands in Hampshire in 1086 and afterwards other lands in Bedford, Hampshire, Gloucester and Yorkshire; his name appears on various lists as a companion of the Conqueror.
Emma
Of
Blois
Illigitimate daughter of Stephen, Count of Blois and half sister of Stephen King of England.
Robert
Corbet
Accompanied his father and brother to England in the Norman invasion; after- ward received large estates; in Domesday compilation held 14 lordships in Shropshire, also Longdeen and Alcester in Warwickshire; known in Normandy before the Conquest by the surname Moreton, and also inscribed upon the Tablet at Falaise; after arrival in England known as Fitzcorbet or Corbet.
Richard
Jane
Bigod
Robert
Fitzwalter
A knight of William Malet, by whom he was enfoeffed of Horsford, where he built his castle.
Sibyl
Was given the manor of Coxford by her father on her marriage
Warin
De
Bussel
Held lands in the West Derby, Salford and 'Walluntine' Hundreds according to Domesday book; evidently took no part in the rebellion against Henry for his fee (land tenure, subject to homage and services to the superior lord) was mentioned in charters issued in 1093-1102; in a charter he issued in favor of Evesham abbey he styles Walter de Glanville as his knight.
1727
Gideon
Soule
William
De
Courcelles
Sold land in Normandy to Odo Bishop of Bayeaux; sold meadow land in Normandy to Lanfranc, abbot of Caen; evidence suggests the original feoffe in England was William, and his overlord bishop Odo may have assisted in his advancement.
Richard
De
Courcelles
An under-tenant in Shropshire and Cheshire whre he held gtear estates; held office of butler (boteler) under Randulph, Earl of Chester in 1153; the ancestor of the Butlers (Botelers) of Chester; made grants to Chester abbey about 1090.
Robert
Le
Boteler
Pagan
Troussebot
Le Sire de Troussebot, the first known member of the family; was a warrior at Hastings; name appears on the bronze tablet at Falaise; the original seat of the family is supposed to have been in the northwestern part of the district of Neubourg, Normandy near the domain of the Harcourts.
~1070
Anchetil
De
Harcourt
~1075
Daughter
Of
William
Le
Sire
D'argouges
Name is on the list of l'abbe de la Rue in his REAEARCHERS OF THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY; name appears on the bronze tablet at Falaise.
Corbet
Le
Normand
Came over with his 2 sons with the Conqueror; settled in Shropshire where they assisted Roger de Montgomery in the government of his earldom od Shrewsbury; Corbet died before the compilation of the Domesday book; name appears on the bronze tablet at Falais.
Walter
De
Caen
Companion of William the Conqueror; held great estates in Norfolk in 1086 in Domesday book; name is on the bronze tablet at Falaise.
Ralph De
(Cheney)
Canieto
Lord of Ling in Norfolk; came to England with William the Coqueror; received considerable grants of land; named appears on several Rolls of Companions, sometimes spelled Cheine or Cheyne.
1720
Abigail
Cushman
Warin
De
Bussel
Participated in the invasion of England 1066; received the tenancies of various county palatine lands; was sheriff and one of the three chief advisors of Roger de Montgomery; his name appears on several Rolls of Companions of William I.
Amiera
Niece of Roger de Montgomery and first cousin once removed to William the Conqueror.
Hugh
Pincerna
Styled Hugue le Bouteillier in FALAISE ROLL, witnessed a charter in favor of Saint-Amand in Rouen, Normandy, before the conquest; was feudal butler of the counts of Meulent, and accompanied his over lord to England in 1066.
Turquetil
De
Neufmarche
Seignior de Turqueville and de Tanqueraye c. 1001; appears in several charters concerning the Abbeys of Fecamp and Bernay; was Lord of Neufmarche-en-Lions; governor of the boy Duke William; was treacherously assassinated between 1036 and 1040 by hirelings of Raoul de Grace.
Anceline
Sister of Poustain, seignior de Montfort-Risle.
Richard
De
Hugelville
~1019
Papia
Of
Normandy
D. ~1080
Richard
Fitzscrob
Of Richard's castle.
Aubri
De
Ver
The baronial name derived from Ver, near Bayeux and Caen, which was included in the dowry of the duchess Judith; it was granted to this family before 1058 whe Aubri was in possession of it.
~1010 - 1074
Raoul
III 'the
Great'
64
64
1748
Gideon
Soule
0983 - 1037
Eudes
II Le
Champenois
54
54
Count of Blois 1004 amd of Campagne and Chartes 1019.
~1010 - 1040
Emergarde
De
Auvergne
30
30
~0928
Torf 'the
Rich' De
Harcourt
~0930
Estemberge
De
Bricquibec
~0904 - 0955
Bernard
'the
Dane'
51
51
A descendant of the kings of Denmark; a companion of Duke Rollo; governor and regent of Normandy in 912; from whom descended many noble English and French houses.
~0908
Sprota
De
Bourgoyne
~0975 - 1015
Gerberga
De
Lorraine
40
40
~0950 - 1026
Adelaide
D'anjou
76
76
1711
Mercy
(Mary)
Sylvester
~0950 - 0995
Eudes
I
45
45
~0995 - 1032
Robert
I
D'auvergne
37
37
0606 - 0663
Fatima
57
57
Fatima (606?-32?), daughter of Muhammad by his first wife, Khadija (circa 555-619), and the only child of Muhammad to bear offspring. She married the caliph Ali, Muhammad's cousin, and from Ali and Fatima are supposedly descended the Fatimids, a medieval caliphate of northern Africa.
~0600 - 0661
Ali Ibn
Abi
Talib
61
61
Ali (of Arabia), in Arabic, Ali ibn Abi Talib (600?-61), fourth caliph of Islam and son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad. He was born in Mecca, the son of Abu Talib (circa 540-619), Muhammad's uncle. Ali was one of the first converts to Islam and one of the most faithful followers of the Prophet. He married Muhammad's daughter Fatima, who bore him two sons, Hasan (624?-79?) and Husayn (626?-80). In 632, when Muhammad died, Ali claimed the right of succession. He was preceded in the caliphate, however, by Abu Bakr, Umar I (581?-644), and Uthman ibn Affan (575?-656), and did not become caliph until 656. In the first year of Ali's reign he was forced to deal with a rebellion led by Aisha, whom Muhammad had married after the death of Fatima's mother and who bitterly opposed Ali's claim of succession. Although the rebellion was suppressed in 657, disputes over Ali's right to the caliphate were not resolved. Muawiyah I, a member of Uthman's family, refused to recognize Ali as caliph and claimed the caliphate himself. This dispute continued until 661, when Ali was murdered at Kufah by a member of the Kharijite sect; Muawiyah I was then acknowledged caliph. Dissension between Ali's adherents and his opponents continued to shake the Muslim world. This conflict led to the first and most important schism in Islam, between the Shiites (adherents of Ali) and the Sunnites (orthodox Muslims). Ali is the ancestor of the Fatimid line of caliphs, who traced their descent from Ali and Fatima.
~0624 - ~0679
Hasan
Ibn Ali
55
55
Husain
1741
Mercy
Soule
Zohra
Abu
Farisi
Na'im
Al-
Lakhmi
Ittaf
Came to Spain in 741.
Amru
Aslan
Amru
Abbad
Qarais
Ismail
1752
Ruth
Hardin
0995 - 1042
Kadi Abu-L
Kasim
Muhammad I
47
47
Abu
Abed
D. 1016
Uchtred
~1013
Aldgyth
Of
Northumberland
Hugh
De
Monfort
Gormo
I
1710
Susanna
Coomer
~0736
Geva
Of
Denmark
~0700 - 0768
Werneke
68
68
~0710
Gunilda
Of
Rugen
~0752 - 0807
Witteking
55
55
~0775 - 0825
Wigbert
50
50
Ratboldus
~0756
Sindacilla
Of
Freisland
Biornno
D. 0707
Baldrus
Harold
V
1678
Experience
Sherman
D. 0540
Hulderick
D. 0568
Bodicus
D. 0633
Berthold
D. 0691
Sighard
Julanda
D. 0740
Dietrich
Billing
Dobzogera
D. >0834
Waldrat
Rutpert
II
Of record 770-807; Lord of Dienheim 795.
1660
Isaac
Sampson
D. <0789
Theoderata
~0725
Turincbertus
(Thuringbert)
Of record 767-770; a wealthy land owner at lersch.
~0695 - <0764
Rupert
I
69
69
Of record 722-757; Duke in the Haspengau 732; royal "missus" in Italy 757.
Williswint
Heiress of large possessions in the Wormgau which she brought to her husband's family; in 764 the widow Williswint and her son Cancer built a monastery near their own church of St. Peter and their manor at Lersch.
~0665 - <0741
Lantbertus
II
76
76
Count
Adalhelm
~0635
Robert
Described as "vir clarissmus"; majordomo of King Chlodwig II 22 JAN 653; Chancellor of King Chlotar (Clotaire) III of Neustria 658; Count Palatine 22 OCT 678.
Doda
~0590 - >0650
Lantbertus
I
60
60
A nobleman of the Frankish Kingdom of Neustria; referendarius of King Dagobert I of Neustria; of record 8 APR 630.
Giselbert
1686
Josiah
Sampson
1907 - 1967
Agnes
Elizabeth
"Betty" Hamilton
60
60
Gainfroi
Flourished 795.
Theidlindus
D. 0800
Mainer
Count of Sens.
Daughter
Of
Haurde
A daughter of Duke Haudre.
Aubri
II
Haurde
Aubri I
D. 0724
Hnabi
'dux'
D. 0709
Houching
Brother of Lentfrey, Duke of Allemania.
Brion
Half brother of Niall of the Nine Hostages.
1688
Ephraim
Sampson
D. 0474
Eochaid
Muinremur
North Antrim in Ireland.
~1749 - >1769
William
Hamilton
20
20
Alexandria
~1740
Alexander
Erskine
Had two other sons, names not known; said to be a dragoon in the Brirish Army; said to have retired at half-pay; said to have been married to a famous Scotch beauty who lived to be 99 yrs. old.
1804 - 1879
James
Hamilton
74
74
1850 Cotton spinner in Allegheny, PA. 1870 Gentleman in Allegheny, PA.
1807 - 1856
Elizabeth
Hamilton
49
49
Buried: Alleghany Cemetery, Pittsburgh Cause of death: stroke or heart attack.
1809 - 1881
Robert
E.
Hamilton
72
72
1850 Carpenter in Pittsburgh, PA. 1860 Carpenter in Pittsburgh, PA. 1870 Carpenter in Pittsburgh, PA. 1880 Carpenter in Allegheny, PA
~1810
Sara
Parks
1802 - 1874
Hugh
Adams
72
72
1817 - 1910
Melinda
McCully
92
92
1900 wd, mother of 10, 6 still living, with James.
1700
Peleg
Sampson
1863 - 1918
William
Hamilton
54
54
1900 farming, living with mother in Forward Twp., Butler, PA.
1868 - 1940
Sarah
"Sadie" Bell
Hamilton
72
72
1900 School teacher, living with mother in Forward Twp., Butler, PA.
Ferreolus
D. 0968
Boso II
D. 0961
Constance
De
Vienne
Humberge
Reinald
0915 - 0978
Thibault
II 'the
Swindler'
63
63
1700
Mary
Ring
0920 - 0978
Luitgarde
De
Vermandois
58
58
Megingoz
~0940
Irmentrude
Herbert
I
~0920 - 0962
Charles
Constanine
42
42
Teutberg
Hugh
Richilde
Skoglar
Toste
1724
Mary
Sampson
D. 0904
Gerlon
~0854 - >0896
Hrollager
Rognvaldsson
42
42
Natural son of Rognvald; living in 896 in Avranches, Normandy.
Emma
~0898 - ~0914
Anna
16
16
~0846
Judith
Of
Friuli
Adalbert
I
~0837 - 0905
Adalbert
II 'the
Illustrious'
68
68
1726
Peleg
Sampson
~0865 - 0911
Burkhard
46
46
Called 'Duke of Alaminnia'; killed by two counts Palatine, Bertold and Erchanger, who were accused of treason and put to death by order of the German king Conrad I.
Eberhard
I Of
Hellenburgh
Gisela
D. 0963
Valrun
(Ralph)
De Goucy
Count of Amiens, Valois and Vexin.
Eldegarde
Of
Amiens
D. 0919
Wigeric
(Richwin)
~0890
Cunegunde
D. 0949
Odo I
D. >0943
Daughter
Of
Herbert
Ardern
1731
Mercy
Sampson
~0485 - 0567
Cormac
Mac
Ailella
82
82
~0500 - 0546
Cairpre
Mac
Cormaic
46
46
~0530 - 0576
Colmán
Mac
Cairpri
46
46
Fedelm
Ingen
Óengusa
~0570 - 0663
Fáelán
Mac
Colmáin
93
93
Acceded 0633.
~0575
Sárnat
Ingen
Echach
~0600
Conall
Mac
Fáeláin
Condadil
Ingen
Crundmáel
~0640 - 0693
Bran
Mutt Mac
Conall
53
53
Acceded 0680.
~0645
Almaith
Ingen
Blathmaic
1733
Jonathan
Sampson
~0670 - 0726
Murchada
Mac
Brain Muit
56
56
Acceded 0715.
~0675 - 0743
Conchenn
Ingen Cellaig
Cualain
68
68
~0710 - 0760
Muiredach
Mac
Murchada
50
50
Acceded 0738.
~0740 - 0795
Bran
Ardchenn
Mac Muiredaig
55
55
Acceded 0785.
D. 0795
Eithne
~0770 - 0818
Muiredach Mac
Bran Ardchenn
O'muiredaig
48
48
Etromma
Ingen
Indellaig
~0800 - 0869
Dúnkaing
Mac Tuathal
O'muiredaig
69
69
Acceded 0863.
0830 - 0871
Ailill Mac
Dúnlaing
O'muiredaig
41
41
Acceded 0869.
~0860 - 0917
Augaire
Mac Ailll
O'muiredaig
57
57
Killed in the Battle of Cennfuait by Sitric ua Imair. Acceded 0909.
1736
Simeon
Sampson
D. 0958
Tuathal Mac
Augaire
O'muiredaig
Acceded 0947.
~0920 - 1014
Dúnlaing
Mac Tuathail
O'muiredaig
94
94
Acceded 1014.
~1000
Maelcorcre
Ingen Dúnlaing
O'muiredaig
~1000 - 1034
Amlaib
Mac
Sitric
34
34
D. 0981
Amlaib
Cuaran
~0949 - 1030
Gormlaith
Ingen
Murchada
81
81
~0980 - 1042
Sitric "Silken
Beard" Mac
Amlaib
62
62
Ellen
0347
Cas
0388
Blad
Priscilla
Sampson
~0417
Carthann
Fionn
Oge Mor
Eochaidh
Ball-
Dearg
Conall
Aodh
Caomh
Cathal
0641
Toirrdelbach
0683
Mathgamain
Mac
Toirrdelbaig
Anluan
Mac
Mathgamna
Corcc
Mac
Anluain
Lachtnae
Mac
Cuircc
1740
Epriam
Sampson
1909 - 1977
Kathryn
Keys
Hamilton
68
68
Buried: Roseland Cemetery
D. 0942
Lorcan
Mac
Lachtnai
0926 - 0951
Cennetig
Mac
Lorcain
25
25
King of Thomond
~0910
Be Bind
Ingen
Aurchada
~0941 - 1014
Brian
Boruma Mac
Cennetig
73
73
Brian, also called Brian Boru (941?-1014), king of Ireland. In 978 he became king of Cashel, capital of the ancient kingdom of Munster. By 984 he controlled all of Munster, and in 1001 he was acknowledged the chief king of Ireland. From his youth, Brian had been fighting the Vikings, who had occupied part of the country. In the Battle of Clontarf (April 23, 1014), his sons led an Irish army to a decisive victory over the Vikings, thereby permanently destroying their power in Ireland. Brian, too aged to fight, was awaiting news of the battle when he was slain in his tent by a Viking intruder. Brian is one of the great heroes of the Irish, but fact and legend have become so intertwined in the accounts of his life that an accurate biography cannot be given.
~0928
Eachraidh
~0963 - 1022
Teige
O'brien
59
59
~0975
Mor
O'mulloy
1015 - 1086
Turloch
Mor
O'brien
71
71
~1010
Mor
~1032 - 1119
Marchertus
O'brien
87
87
1729
John
Weston
~1033 - 1098
Dubhchobhleigh
Of
Ossory
65
65
Anscarius
Gisela
D. 0910
Gebhard
Count in the Wetterau; killed in battle.
D. 0831
Halfdan
Hucbold
Helwise
(Heilwich)
Of Friuli
Owain
Ap
Maredudd
D. 0754
Rhodri
Molwynog Ab
Idwal Iwrch
Prince of North Wales, whose death as 'King of the Britons' was recorded in 754
1767
Rhoda
Weston
D. ~0712
Idwal Iwrch
Ap Cadwaladr
Fendigaid
D. 0796
Maredudd
Ap
Tewdws
D. 0664
Cadwaldar 'the
Blessed' Fendigaid
Ap Cadwallon
King of the Britons in North Wales; with his capital at Aberffaw; died in the great plague.
D. 0634
Cadwallon
Ap
Cadfan
Overcame Northumbria; married sister of king Penda and daughter of Wibba, king of Mercia.
D. 0617
Cadfan
Ap
Iago
His Latin tombstone calls him 'wisest and most renowned of all Kings'
D. ~0613
Iago
Benifator of the cathedral church of Bangor.
D. ~0599
Beli
Named after King Coel's legendary ancestor, the god-spirit Beli Mawr.
D. ~0586
Rhun
Half-brother of Bruida, King of the Picts.
1765
Asa
Bearce
D. 0547
Maelgyn
'the
Tall'
Overcame the tide with a floating chair; patron of bards.
D. >0410
Coel-
Hen
(Nursery rhyme Old King Coel); ancient British King Caelius Votepacus in North when the Romans left Briton c. 410.
D. >0862
Bouin
Richardis
Of
Arles
Budwine
D. 0770
Harald
Hilditonn
Defeated by Sigurd Ring at Bravalle.
Suppo
D. >0879
Gebhard
1830 - 1913
William
Henry
Fowler
82
82
Our County and Its People, Part III: Family Sketches by Daniel E. Wager. (The Boston History Company, 1896.) FOWLER, WILLIAM H. JR., was born at Trenton, Oneida county, N. Y., June 13, 1830. His father, William H. Fowler, was born at Fairfield, Conn., November 8, 1801, and died at Little Falls, N. Y., April 17, 1896. In 1827 he removed to Trenton, N. Y. In 1832 he moved to Cold Brook, Herkimer county, N. Y., where he carried on a furniture and undertaking business for fifty years. In 1829 while in Connecticut he married Mary Ives of New Haven, who was born in 1803, and died in Cold Brook in December, 1881. William H., jr., was educated in the common school in Cold Brook, where he lived until twenty-three years of age; from which place he went to Poland, Herkimer county, and was manager of the Union store, a position he held for twelve successive years. December 25, 1857, he was married to Mary M. Slocum, daughter of Sidney Slocum of Cold Brook. In 1866 Mr. Fowler moved to Trenton, N. Y., where he became associated with Levi Wheaten, under the firm name of Wheaton & Fowler, dealers in general merchandise, and remained until 1870, when he settled at Oriskany Falls, N. Y., where he has since resided and is now engaged in the general merchandise trade. Mr and Mrs. Fowler have three children: Frank S., born January 31, 1861; Ruth Ives, born March 30, 1866; and Nettle E., born December 3, 1872. Frank S. is engaged with his father in business, and October 15, 1884, he married Anna Louisa Root, of Madison, N. Y. April 19 Ruth Ives married Clifton C. Newell, of Oriskany Falls. Mr. Fowler has been identified with the Prohibition party for the past ten years. (p. 259)
1836 - 1896
Mary
Matilda
Slocum
60
60
Buried in Hillside Cemetery.
1743
Averick
Standish
1866 - 1937
Ruth
Ives
Fowler
71
71
1913 of Oriskany Falls. Had no children. Buried in Hillside Cemetery.
1861 - 1929
Frank
S.
Fowler
68
68
1900 Salesman in Oriskany Falls, NY. 1910 Dry goods merchant in Oriskany Falls, NY. 1920 none, Oriskany Falls, NY.
1837 - 1905
Thomas
J.
Geer
68
68
Senca Falls Reveille December 15, 1905 Thomas J. Geer In the death of Thomas J. Geer, which occurred at the home of his son, Dr. Leroy T. Geer, in Syracuse, yesterday morning, this community has lost one of its most highly esteemed citizens. Mr. Geer went to Syracuse about three weeks ago to vist his son, and while ther became ill with pleurisy. Medical aid was promptly summoned, but he did not seem to rally from the effects of the disease. It is possible that other complications followed , which hastened his death. Mr. Geer was born in Cork, Ireland, in 1837, but nearly his whole life was spent in this village. He was a moulder by occupation, and for many years was foreman of the foundry of the Silsby Steam Fire Engine works, and one of the concern's most faithful and trusted employes. He was an intelligent and valuable member of the board of education for several terms, and won the confidence and respect of his associates in the board to an unlimited extent. Of late he had been engaged in the life insurance business. In the community, in the church and in all business and social relations, he was the truest and best of men, faithful and conscientious in the performance of every duty, ever mindful and considerate of the feelings and views of all by whom he was surronded, and kindly disposed in all ways. He was a manly and upright citizen, and his death is a source of sincere regret to his large circle of friends and aquaintances. All sympathize with his stricken family in there bereavemant. His wife, one daughter, Mrs. Charles H. Weighman of Seneca Falls, and three sons, Leroy T. Geer of Syracuse, Clarence Geer of Pittsburgh and George Geer of New York survive him.
1837 - 1915
Maria
E.
Spenser
78
78
Senca Falls Reveille Friday, November 19, 1915 Mrs. Maria E. Geer Mrs. Marie E. Geer, widow of Thomas J. Geer, and mother of Mrs. Julia Geer Weigman, teacher in Mynderse Academy, died at the home of her son, Dr. Leroy T. Geer, in Syracuse, on Monday morning, aged 75 years. She had been in failing health for the last two years, but her condition did not become serious until a few days before her death. Mrs. Geer had lived in Syrucuse for the last twelve years, but a considerable part of her life was passed in Seneca Falls, her husband being foreman of the Silsby Foundry for many years. He was also a member of the board of education. Mrs. Geer was a well known resident of the village, a member of the Methodist Episcopal church, active in all good work, and highly esteemed by a large circle of friends and aquiantances. Her great kindness of heart and her purity of motive were conspicuous traits of her charecter. She is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Julia Geer Weigman of Seneca Falls, three sons, Clarence J. Geer of Pittsburgh, Pa., George H. Geer of Bayonne, N.J., Dr. Leroy T. Geer of Syracuse, and two sisters, Mrs. Julia Powers of Rippon, Wis., and Mrs. DeYoe of Mechanicsville, N.Y. The remains reached Seneca Falls for burial in Restvale cemetery at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon; brief service at the grave by Rev. Deane Edwards.
1861 - 1921
Julia
M.
Geer
60
60
1892 teacher Mynderse Acadamey; living with parents. 1894-95 teacher; living with parents 1900-1905 teacher living at 122 State st. Seneca Falls 1910 High School teacher, widow, Living with Leroy and mother in Syracuse, NY.
1872 - 1921
George
Herbert
Geer
49
49
1892 law student; living with parents. 1900 Manhattan, NY, NY 1910 School teacher, Bronx, NY, NY. 1920 High school teacher, Bayonne, Hudson, NJ.
~1873
Leroy
T.
Geer
Onondaga County Medical Society, 1906-1956 Syracuse?: The Society?, 1956, 144 pgs. Pg. 63, 64 The Syracuse directory, 1908 : containing a street directory, general directory of the citizens, business directory, house directory and city, county and state registers, with new map. Syracuse, N.Y.: Sampson & Murdock Co., c1908, 1241 pgs. Pg. 787 124 Geer Leroy T physician. Pg. 1027 Geer Leroy T 124 Merriman Av
1749 - 1825
Joel
Ives
76
76
In June 1776 enlisted in Capt. Peck's company, in Col. Douglas' batallion, Wadsworth's brigade. The company served on the city of Brooklyn front, on the right of the line, during the Battle of Long Island 27 AUG 1776 and were removed in boats across the East River to Manhattan during the night of 29-30 August, under Washington's personel supervision. The company also particpated in the Battle of White Plains 28 OCT 1776. The company was mustered out 25 DEC 1776. Married 1st Mary Heaton, 2nd Sarah Harrison. Joel Ives, 1776, enlisted as a private and was in the battles of Long Island, Kip's Bay and White Plains.
1774 - 1817
Enoch
Ives
42
42
1780 - 1850
Sarah
Gorham
69
69
1746 - 1837
Shadrack
Standish
91
91
Drummer in Revolutionary War from MA Source: DAR Patriot Index
1803 - 1881
Mary
Ives
77
77
~1570 - 1660
William
Fowler
90
90
William came to Boston with Rev. John Davenport, landing there on June 26, 1637; moved to New Haven (Quinnipiac) March 30, 1638, and finally located at Milford in 1639. He was one of four settlers to whom the deed of Milford was given in 1639 by the Indians in exchange for valuables. At the second General Court in Milford, March 1640, "it was agreed between William Fowler and the Brethren that he should build a mill and have her going by the last of Sept." The town granted him land and the use of the stream (Wepawaug River). This was the first mill in New Haven Colony, and has been owned by Fowlers ever since, "The oldest manufacturing business in the United States." In 1889 a memorial bridge and tower were erected near the mill and the first millstone is built into the wall as a seat. William was a very creditable ancestor being a magistrate and one of the pillars of the church. All of his children were born in England. On the "Roll of Planters" at New Haven in 1642, as having an L 800 estate, a family of three (probably wife and dtr. Mary). Another note has year of death as 1660, with same day and month. A handwritten note says that he came to the Guilford Colony from Milford, but I am not sure about this. From the New England Historical & Genealogical Register Vol. 11 page 248 William Fowler came over in the company of Rev. John Davenport, Gov. Eaton and others, and arrived at Boston 26 June 1637. His probable grandfather, William Fowler is mentioned as a prisoner in Bridewell with other Puritans in the year 1592. The list of prisoners is immediatly preceded by a petition addressed to the Lord Treasurer by many of the "poor Cristiains impresoned by the Bishops in sundry prisons in and about London." About this time a congregation of Puritans were discovered at Islington, which was then and now is a part of London in fact. In this connection we introduce the following from " Weever's Funeral Monuments," of " Monumental remains at Islington near London." -- "Here ---- John Fowler -- 1538," and "Alis Fowler, wife of Robert Fowler, Esquire, who d. ---- , 1540;" "Divers of the family lie here interred; the ancestors of Sir Thomas Fowler, Knight and Baronet, living 1630." Mr. Davenport was born in Warwickshire, and removed to London, where he was vicar of St. Stephen's Chirch, Mr. Eaton, another of the New Haven ompany, was a member of this chirch, and also from Warwickshire -- the ancestors of both being originally from the County of Chester. Mr. Fowler sailed with this company from Boston, and arrived at New Haven in April, 1638, and was at the famous meeting in Mr. Newman's barn, 4 June, 1639, when the peculial constitution and policy of Mr. Davenport, which afterwards characterized the New Haven Colony, was agreed upon. Mr. Fowler subscribed to that agreement. In the spring of 1639, the settlement of Milford had been arranged, and Mr. Fowler is the first named of the trustees, and the only one bearing the honorable prefix of "Mr." At the first meeting of the Milford Company he was chosen one of the "Judges." The church was organized 1639, and he was elected one of the "seven pillars," -- Mr. Peter Prudden, Pastor. Mr. Fowler was elected magistrate, and reappointed yearly to 1654. In 1640, by agreement with the town, he built a mill, the first erected in New Haven Colony, and which is now in possession of his descendants. It is probable that Mr. Fowler was one among those of the first settlers who had recived a classical education in his native country. His name is in the roll of planters at New Haven, 1642, as having an &800 estate, and a family of three persons. He d. 25 Jan 1660-1, and his will was presented by his son William to the General Court of the Colony 1661, but was not recorded, and being unfortunately lost, we are without guide as to his family.
1652 - 1720
Abraham
Fowler
68
68
REF: "The Musket and the Cross", book by Walter D. Edmonds, Little, Brown & Co., Boston - Toronto, 1968, Library of Congress 68-11527. Tells of the Narragansett Swamp Fight that Abraham took part in as a Sargeant in King Philip's War. He was age 23 in the battle and wounded. They won a battle against the savages under tremendous hardship...they marched 14 miles without food or rest, fought an intense battle hand-to-hand, turned around without food or rest and marched out in a snow storm and through a swamp at night. "There was no question but that the Great Swamp Fight was the turning point in the King Philip's War". He was one of 300 men from Conn. under Major Robert Treat, in a total of 985 men in the battle under Josia Winslow. The first long march followed a camp in the snow without blankets to battle 3000 Indians in a fortified log fort in the swamp. Abraham was a deputy to the General Court of Hartford for many years, a Justice of the Peace, and a Judge of the County Court, and also of the higher court. He was one of the most eminent men in town as well as one of the richest, with property of 500 acres and L1421 in money at death. He was a Captain in the Militia.
1688 - 1757
Josiah
Fowler
69
69
Removed to Durham as early as 1714; is mentioned with some of the pricipal men as appointed to "seat the Meeting House"; appointed to take care of the public lands; was lister and surveyor; will dated 23 Feb. 1757.
1724 - 1802
Josiah
Fowler
78
78
In April 1775 when the Lexington alarm reached New Haven, he marched as a Captain at the head of a company of 37 men, to the releif of Boston. This was part of the 1st Regiment under Colonel Wooster which was raised by the General Court in April and May 1775. In April 1777 the legislature authorized the raising of several regiments which were known as the Continental Line. April 24, 1777, Josiah enlisted as a private in Captain Ely's company of the sixth regiment, Colonel Douglas of Northford commanding. The regiment rendezvoused at New Haven and went into camp in the summer of 1777 at Peekskill, New York. Performed outpost duty at Kingsbridge, New York under General Israel Putnam. During the winter of 1777-78 the regiment was at West Point engaged in erecting fortifications on the east side of the Hudson River. At the time of the invasion of New Haven on 5 July 1779 by the British under General Tryon, Josiah marched from Branford to New Haven with other militiamen to repel the invaders, who departed the next day. Captain from Connecticut; DAR Patriot Index, Pg. 248 Buried in Northford Cemetery.
1756 - 1829
Stephen
Fowler
72
72
Dwight, Benjamin Woodbridge, The history of the descendants of Elder John Strong, of Northampton, Mass. Albany: J. Munsell, 1871, 1680 pgs.
1801 - 1896
William
Henry
Fowler
94
94
A cabinetmaker and was for 48 years engaged in business as an undertaker at Cold Brook. 1860 mechanic, Russia, Herkimer, NY. 1870 farmer, Russia, Herkimer, NY. 1880 undertaker, Russia, Herkimer, NY.
1648 - 1694
Joseph
Ives
46
46
1650
Mary
Yale
1607 - 1648
William
Ives
41
41
Son of a wealthy merchant; member Church of England; listed as passenger on "Truelove", sailed from London, 19 SEP 1635 to Boston
1734
Zadock
Thomas
1622 - 1665
Hannah
Dickerman
43
43
There is a record of a Goodwife Bassett (Hannah's 2nd hubands name) that was hung as a witch, the report says that this Goodwife Bassett was tried and convicted as a witch and as she was being drug to the hanging she struggled against her captors and subsaquently grabbed a hold of a rock. She was said to have left her fingerprints on the rock and so confirming her as a witch.
1616 - 1683
Thomas
Yale
67
67
ABT 1615/20 - 1704
Mary
Turner
1615 - 1692
David
Atwater
76
76
Buried: Cedar Hill Cemetery
1625 - 1691
Damaris
Sayre
66
66
1623 - 1699
Jeremiah
Peck
76
76
1637 - 1711
Joanna
(Johanna)
Kitchell
74
74
~1597 - 1657
Thomas
Dickerman
60
60
"Thomas, Dorchester 1636, a tailor, freeman. 14 Mar 1639, had Isaac b. Nov 1637 d. soon and the f. d. 3 Jan 1658. His widow Ellen act. as Admor. and m. John Bullard of Medfield." per book "Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England" p.47
~1601
Eleanor
(Ellen)
Whittington
1590 - 1619
Thomas
Yale
29
29
1746
Mary
Churchill
1591 - 1659
Anne
Lloyd
68
68
1600 - 1646
Nathaniel
Turner
46
46
1567 - 1636
John
Atwater
69
69
Buried: Lenham Church Yard
1577 - 1637
Susan
Narsin
60
60
Buried: Lenham Church Yard
1597 - 1671
Thomas
Sayre
73
73
~1600 - 1634
Margaret
Aldrich
34
34
1604 - 1694
William
Peck
90
90
1608 - 1683
Elizabeth
75
75
1601 - 1672
Robert
Kitchell
71
71
1598 - 1682
Margaret
Sheafe
83
83
1558 - 1626
David
Lloyd
Yale
68
68
1553 - 1642
Frances
Lloyd
89
89
1560 - 1615
George
Lloyd
55
55
1564 - 1648
Anne
Wilkenson
84
84
1521 - 1573
Christopher
Atwater
52
52
1534
Maryan
~1565 - 1645
Francis
Sayre
80
80
~1570
Elizabeth
Atkins
1575 - >1604
William
Peck
29
29
1531 - 1573
John Lloyd
Wynn
Yale
42
42
1536
Agnes
Lloyd
1526
Meredith
Lloyd
1530
Janet
Convy
~1500 - 1547
Thomas
Atwater
47
47
~1499
Johanna
~1535 - <1581
William
Sayre
46
46
~1539 - 1581
Elizabeth
42
42
1912 - 1967
John
Craig
Hamilton
54
54
1930 living with his mother. Name: John Hamilton SSN: 121-09-1820 Born: 30 Jul 1912 Died: Mar 1967 State (Year) SSN issued: New York (Before 1951 )
1562 - >1619
Stephen
Peck
57
57
~1565
Mary
Cave
1532/35 - 1604
Thomas
Sheafe
1536 - 1609
Mary
Harmon
73
73
1487 - 1570
Dafydd
'llwyd'
Ap Elise
83
83
~1511
Gwenhwyfar
Lloyd
1500
John
Lloyd
~1502
Margaret
Gethin
1500 - 1540
Hugh
Convy
40
40
1500
Annes
1514 - 1564
William
Sayre
50
50
~1514 - 1567
Alice
Squire
53
53
~1540
John
Peck
~1540
Margery
Passon
~1539
William
Cave
1440
Elise
Ap
Gruffydd
~1442
Margred
Verch
Jenkin
~1474
Reynold
Convy
~1476
Maud
~1474
Thomas
Sayer
~1495
John
Squire
~1492
Margaret
~1524
Richard
Peck
~1398
Gruffydd
Ap
Einion
~1400
Lowri
Verch
Tudur
~1506
John
Peck
~1501
N.n.
(Kerke)
Kirke
~1365 - 1405
Tudur
Ap
Gruffydd
40
40
~1367
Mawd
Verch
Ieuaf
~1490 - 1527
John
Peck
37
37
Buried: Parish Church
~1490
Joan
Aune
~1330
Gruffydd
'fychan' Ap
Gruffydd
~1334
Elen
Verch
Thomas
~1464 - 1516
Richard
Peck
52
52
~1468
Alice
Middleton
~1459
John
Anne
~1463
Catherine
Preston
~1280
Gruffydd
'llwyd' Ap
Madog
~1284
Elizabeth
Strange
~1447
Richard
Peck
~1448
Joan
Harrington
~1442
Peter
(Midleton)
Middleton
~1444
Anne
(Catherine)
Vavasour
~1435
Thomas
Anne
~1439
Elizabeth
Bosville
~1439
Thomas
Preston
1716 - 1792
Jonathan
Ives
75
75
1677 - 1726
Samuel
Ives
49
49
1688 - 1758
Ruth
Atwater
69
69
1656 - 1726
Jonathon
Atwater
69
69
1661 - 1726
Ruth
Peck
65
65
~1592
John
Ives
~1573 - 1602
John
(Jhon)
Kitchell
29
29
~1564 - 1659
Joan
Jordan
95
95
1558 - ~1625
Richad
Shaefe
67
67
John
Wilkenson
~1544
Ellen
Bearcliffe
~1515
David
Wilkenson
1504 - 1577
Richard
Sheff
73
73
1510 - 1564
Elizabeth
Andrews
54
54
~1500 - 1547/48
Thomas
(Harmon)
Harman
~1500 - <1547
Elizabeth
Courthope
47
47
~1085 - 1163
Gilbert
De
Lacy
78
78
~1089
N.n.
Fergus
D. 0702
Muireadach
Maolleathan
D. 0723
Inreachtach
Murgal
Tomhailtach
D. 0815
Muirgheas
(Murias)
Teige
Mor
0925
Conchobhar
Cathal
D. 0956
Teige
D. 0973
Conchobhor
(Conner)
Cathal
~1020
Teige
An Each
Ghal
Aodhangath
Bearnaigh
Ruadhri
An
Saighteach
1088 - 1156
Turloch
Mor
O'connor
68
68
~1089
Dubhcols
Macdermott
D. 1198
Roderick
O'connor
Teige
Macdermott
~0809
Mulroona
Mor
Macdermott
Flann
Abraid
O'malley
N.n.
O'malley
~0830
Murtogh
Macdermott
O'dowd
N.n.
O'dowd
Bernice
Lundy
~0851
Teige
Macdermott
~0874
Mulroona
Macdermott
~0894
Teige
Mor
Macdermott
~0915
Dairmaid
Macdermott
~0935
Conchobhar
(Connor)
Macdermott
~0955
Tomaltach
Na Carrigan
Macdermott
~0976
Cormac
Macdermott
~0996
Conchobhr
Macdermott
~1006
Giollachriosd
Macdermott
~1026
Mulroona
Macdermott
~1140 - 1191
Jean I
51
51
~1160
Beatrice
Candavaine
De St. Pol
1179 - 1221
Guillaume
III
Talvas
42
42
~1170 - ~1221
Alixe
Of
France
51
51
Princess of France, Countess of Vexin: Alixe was the full sister of King Philip II Augustus, who was born 1165. Alix had been engaged as a young child to Richard the Lion Hearted, son of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine. As a child, Alix was sent to the English court. Henry began a sexual relationship with her, and she bore his child out-of-wedlock before she was 18; the child was stillborn. Richard refused to marry Alix; instead, Richard had a homosexual relationship with Alix's brother, Philip. Alix was banished from the English court by Eleanor when Henry died, and Alix was locked up for a period. Ultimately, Alix's granddaughter, the Countess of Ponthieu born about 1216, married Henry and Eleanor's great-grandson, King Fernanado II of Castile and Leon. Alix's great-granddaughter thru that union, Eleanor of Castile, married a great-great grandson of Henry and Eleanor in 1254 and ascended to the throne of England in 1272 when her husband became King Edward I. The union between Eleanor of Castile and Edward I was a happy one.
1199 - 1250
Marie
51
51
D. 1239
Simon
Count of Aumale.
~1216 - 1279
Jeanne
Of
Dammartin
63
63
Beatrice
Montlucon
~1160 - 1216
Gui II
De
Dampierre
56
56
~1165 - 1218
Mahaut
I De
Bourbon
53
53
D. 1171
Archambaud
Viii
D. 1218
Alice
Of
Burgundy
~1115 - 1162
Eudes
II
47
47
~1123 - ~1190
Marie
De
Champagne
67
67
D. 1171
Archambaud
Vii
D. >1180
Agnes
Of
Savoy
Margaret
Maria Of
Hungary
~1049
Maud
De
Montgomery
Jean I
Paula
Heiress of Maine
Gisela
Of
Bavaria
Venedobel
Guyula
Unroch
Eberhard
~0895
Judith
D. 0979
Erchanger
I
Judith
~0875
Kunigunde
~0875 - 0907
Luitpold
32
32
~0895 - 0937
Arnulph
I 'the
Bad'
42
42
D. 0973
Judith
Of
Bavaria
~0918 - 0955
Henri
'le
Querelleur'
37
37
D. 0995
Heinrich
II 'the
Wrangler'
D. 1006
Gisela
Christina
Of
Hohenstauffen
Agnes
Von
Sarrbruche
Garsende
D'albon
Arnaud
De La
Flotte
D. >1070
Petronel
D'annonay
Ingenach
Or
Lleian
D. 0680
Dagobert
II
Mathilde
D. 0737
Adela
0631 - 0656
Sigebert
II
25
25
D. 0656
Himnechilde
Brychan
The ruler who gave his name to Brecknock
Daughter
Of
Dyenwal
Sister of King Cinbelin (Shakespeare's 'Cymbeline')
Dyenwal
D. 0547
Cynan
D. ~0470
Cadell
Aelis
N.n.
De
Boulogne
1084 - 1136
Humbert
III 'le
Renforce'
52
52
Aimon
II
Aldesinde
Of
Nevers
Melisinde
De
Montlhery
D. 1131
Baldwin
II
Baldwin II (of Jerusalem), king of Jerusalem (1118-31), cousin and successor of Baldwin I, with whom he participated in the First Crusade. In 1104 he was captured by the Muslims, who detained him until 1108. After his election as king, on the death of Baldwin I, he campaigned against the Turks, winning control of Aleppo and Dimashq. Baldwin II was succeeded by his son-in-law Fulk V the Young (1092-1143), count of Anjou.
D. >1131
Morphia
Of
Melitene
An Armenian princess
~1095
Margaret
Of
Schwarzenburg
Mathilda
Of
Bavaria
~1050 - 1091
Boson
I De
Turenne
41
41
~1055 - 1103
Gerberge
De
Terrasson
48
48
~1060
Mathilda
Of
Burgundy
~1060 - 1103
Eudes
I Borel
43
43
~1012 - 1058
Estephania
Of
Barcelona
46
46
~1012 - 1054
Garcia
Sanchez
Vi (III)
42
42
Killed battle of Atapueaca
Lain
Nunez
Diego
Lainez
Castro
Nuno
Of
Amaya
Teresa
Nunez De
Amaya
D. 0999
Bermudo
II 'the
Gouty'
D. 1052
Elvira
Garcez
Of Castilla
1905 - 1968
Frank
R.
Schaumberg
63
63
1930 bank mortgage clerk in East Orange, NJ.
0994 - 1028
Alfonso
V 'the
Noble'
34
34
D. ~1008
Melindo
Gonzales
D. ~1022
Mayor
Nu¤ez De
Celanova
~0994 - 1052
Elvira
Valdes
58
58
~0950 - 1017
Sancho
Garcia
67
67
~0954 - 1025
Urraca
Salvadorez
Of Bureba
71
71
~1015 - ~1039
Ximena
De
Leon
24
24
~1030
Diego
Rodrequez
De Asturias
D. 0994
Sancho
Garces II
Abarca
D. >1005
Urraca
Fernandez
Of Castille
Fernando
Vermudez
Elvira
~0932 - 0995
Garcia
Fernandez
63
63
D. 0970
Ava
Of
Ribagorza
D. >0994
Salvador
Petriz
D. 0955
Ordo¤o
III
Elvira
D. ~0985
Gonzalo
Menendez
D. <0985
Ilduara
Pelaez
D. 0934
Nu¤o
Gutierrez De
Celanova
Velasquita
Nuno
Lainez
Engilona
D. 0970
Garcia
Sanchez
I
Andregota
Galindez
~0893 - 0970
Fernan
Gonzales
77
77
D. >1011
Urraca
Garces
D. ~0960
Ramon
II
Gersenda
Of
Fezensac
Petrus
Fernandez
D. 0951
Ramiro
II
Teresa
Florentina
Gonzalo
D. ~0959
Pelayo
Gonzales
Hermensinda
Gutierrez
Lain
Fernandez
~0870 - 0925
Sancho
I
Garcia
55
55
~0874
Toda
Aznarez
D. ~0922
Galindo
I
Aznarez
D. >0919
Gonzalo
Fernandez
Munia
D. >0950
Bernat-
Unifred
Tota
Galindez
~0872 - 0924
Ordono
II
52
52
Nuna
Elvira
Menendez
Fernan
Lainez
Ximena
Nu¤ez
0825 - ~0893
Aznar
II
Galindez
68
68
~0830
Onnecas
Inigo
Fernando
Nu¤ez
Nuna
Of
Amaya
Nu¤o
Nu¤ez
<0884 - >0920
Ramon
I
36
36
Daughter
Of
Mutarrif
0848 - 0910
Alfonso
III 'the
Great'
62
62
D. >0910
Ximena
Garces
D. ~0943
Hermingildo
Gutierrez
Hermesinde
Gatonez
Flavio
Lain
Teresa
Elvira De
Amaya
D. >0870
Llop
Donat
Daughter
Of
Raymond
D. 0955
Fortun
Garez
Le Moine
King of Navarre; King of Pamplona; abdicated 905.
D. ~0867
Galindo
I
Aznarez
~0840 - 0889
Garcia
II
Iniguez
49
49
King of Pamplona.
Urraca
Ribilli De
Sancorsa
Heiress of Aragon.
Mutarrif
Ibn
Lope
D. 0866
Ordo¤o
I
Nuna
Of
Vierzo
Gutier
Elvira
Gaton
Nu¤o
Nu¤ez
Sulla
Asura
D. >0835
Donat
Llop
Facquilo
D. ~0839
Aznar
I
Galindez
D. 0888
Inigo
Arista
D. 0862
Lope
Ibn
Musa
D. 0850
Ramiro
I
Paterna
D. ~0825
Ermengild
N.n.
Diego
Rodreguez
Porcellos
Asura
Ansurez
D. >0818
Llop
Centull
Mancio
D. ~0820
Iniga
Ximenez
D. 0862
Musa
II (Ben
Qasi)
Ausona
Of
Pamplona
D. 0797
Bermudo
I 'the
Deacon'
~1907
William
R. Bell
1930 bank bond clerk in East Orange, NJ.
Ursinda
Nunilona
D. ~0850
Rodrigo
D. >0816
Ximeno
D. <0778
Musa I
Ibn
Fortun
D. 0760
Fruela
Of
Bardalia
Urraca
Of
Castile
Fortun
Ibn
Qasi
Pedro
Lord of Biscay.
Diego
Rodreguez
Paterna
Qasi
(Casius)
Ervigio
Of
Spain
Rodrigo
Frolaz
Sanchia
Ardebasto
Goda
Athangildo
D. 0585
Hermengild
Duke of Baetica.
D. 0585
Ingudnda
Of
Austrasia
D. 0586
Leovigild
Of
Spain
Theodosia
Of
Carthage
0535 - 0575
Sigebert
I
40
40
0552 - 0613
Brunhild
61
61
Brunhild (550?-613), queen of the Frankish kingdom known as Austrasia (in present-day northeastern France and southwestern Germany), the daughter of Athanagild (reigned 554-67), king of the Visigoths in Spain. Brunhild was married to Sigebert I, the Merovingian king of Austrasia. Her sister Galswintha married Sigebert's brother Chilperic, ruler of the neighboring Frankish kingdom of Neustria. Fredegund, Chilperic's former concubine, caused Galswintha to be murdered; she then married Chilperic. Brunhild determined to avenge herself on Fredegund, and the annals of the next half century in Gaul are filled with the bloody deeds provoked by the enmity of the two women. Brunhild and her husband were successful until Sigebert was murdered in 575 at the instigation of Fredegund. Brunhild herself was captured by Chilperic, but she escaped, returned to Austrasia, and governed as regent in the name of her son, Childebert II. After the death of her son, she ruled Austrasia in the name of her young grandson. Finally, the armies of Austrasia were overthrown in 613 by Clotaire II of Neustria, son of Fredegund; the aged queen herself was taken captive. For three days she was subjected to insult and torture, then bound to a wild horse and dragged to death.
Severginus
Theodora
Anthanagoldo
Goisvintha
~0836
Fulguad
Senegonde
Of
Toulouse
Fredelon
Bertha
Of
Autun
~0730 - 0793
Theuderic
(Thierry)
63
63
Of the family of Exilarchs of the Jews at Babylon; sent to France at Charlemagne's of Pepin's request.
~0732
Auda
Of
France
Habibai
Ben
Natronai
D. 0739
Natronai
Ben
Nehemiah
Daughter
Of
Hisdai
D. 0665
Hisdai
Shahrijar
An exilarch is the head administrator of a Jewish community.
~0610 - ~0670
Bustanai
Ben
Hanini
60
60
An exilarch is the head administrator of a Jewish community.
Izdundad
Of
Sasania
Yezdegerd
III
Shahrijar
(Kavadh
II)
0590 - 0628
Khosrau
(Chosroes)
II Parves
38
38
Khosrau II, called Parvez ("the victorious") (died 628), Persian king of the Sassanid dynasty (590-628), the grandson of Khosrau I. He was assisted in gaining the throne by the Byzantine emperor Mauricius (circa 539-602) and, in gratitude, restored to the Byzantine Empire many of the territories conquered by his grandfather. When Mauricius was deposed and murdered in 602, Khosrau turned against Byzantium and for the remainder of his reign waged war against that empire. He reconquered the territories restored in 592 and invaded most of southwest Asia, including Syria and Palestine. The Persian armies captured Egypt in 616 and a year later advanced to Chalcedon, opposite Constantinople. Intrigues and insurrections against Khosrau began to arise in Persia, and the Byzantine emperor Heraclius took advantage of this domestic weakness to defeat the Persian monarch in a campaign from 623 to 628. After this defeat, Khosrau was deposed and murdered by his son, later Kavadh II (reigned 628).
Sira
D. ~0590
Hormouz
IV
D. ~0579
Khosrau
I
Anushirvan
Khosrau I, called Anushirvan ("having an immortal soul") (died 579), Persian king of the Sassanid dynasty (531-79), the son of Kavadh I (reigned 485-531). Khosrau I is considered one of the greatest kings of the ancient Persian Empire. In a series of wars with the Byzantine Empire (531-32, 540-45, 571-76), he extended his domain to the Black Sea. Other military conquests extended the frontier of Persia to the Indus River in the east and from the Arabian Sea far into Central Asia. He was successful in all his Byzantine wars until 576, when the forces of Emperor Justin II of Byzantium (died 578) defeated the Persians at Melitene (now Malatya, Turkey). Khosrau's military prowess was equaled by his administrative ability. His reformation of the provincial administration and tax system, advancement of industrial and commercial development, and encouragement of learning and literature caused his reign to be known as the Golden Age in ancient Persian literature. Khosrau himself became the central figure in many Persian legends.
D. ~0531
Kavadh
I
D. ~0484
Peroz
D. ~0457
Yezdegerd
II
D. ~0438
Varahan
(Bahram)
V Gor
D. ~0420
Yezdegerd
I
N.n.
Of
Babylon
Shapur
III
D. ~0379
Shapur
II
D. ~0310
Hormuzd
II
D. ~0302
Narses
D. ~0277
Shapur
I
D. ~0241
Ardashir
I
Ardashir I (flourished 3d century ad), king of Persia (224- 41), founder of the Sassanid dynasty and grandson of Sassan, for whom the dynasty was named. Ardashir's father made himself ruler of a district in Persia as vassal of the Arsacid king of Parthia. After his father's death in 212, Ardashir took over the district, killed his brothers, warred against neighboring vassals, and, in 224, finally defeated the king of Parthia, Artabanus V (reigned about 213-24), at the Battle of Hormuz. Ardashir then assumed the title of king of kings and tried to rebuild a unified Persian empire after the model of the ancient Achaemenids. He made Zoroastrianism the national religion, built a new capital at Ctesiphon on the Tigris River, and, on the site of the ancient city of Seleucia, built the city of Weh-Ardashir. His last years were spent in unsuccessful wars against the Roman Empire. He was succeeded by his son, Shapur I (reigned 241-72). Worshiped as a god in his own day, Ardashir was later the subject of countless legends among the Persians. His sculptured image, identified by an inscription in the Greek and Pahlavi languages, was found on the site of Persepolis.
Ziyanak
(Mirud)
D. ~0244
Artabanus
V
D. ~0208
Vologases
V
Fulcoald
Nehemiah
Ben
Hanini
Harar
Papak
Soshandukt
An exilarch is the head administrator of a Jewish community.
~0990
Amelie
D'aulmay
~1078 - 1122
Christina
Of
Sweden
44
44
Constantine
Ix
Monomachus
~0997 - 1056
Emund
II 'the
Old'
59
59
N.n.
Of
Sweden
Ragvald
Of
Westergothland
Astrid
Of
Halogaland
D. 1066
Stenkil
Ragvaldsson
<1066 - 1112
Inge I
Stenkilsson
46
46
Ragnhild
~0997
Gytha
Of
Denmark
’thelhelm
’thelfrith
Eadric
D. 0998
Ethelweard
'the
Historian'
Thegn of Sussex 973; Earlodorman of Wessex 974
D. ~1016
Ethelmaer
Cild
Thegn of Sussex.
D. ~1007
Wulfroth
Cild
"Had Compton"; rebelled 1009
Lancelin
I
D. 1026
Herbert
Eveille
Chien
D. ~1055
Dalmas
I
Killed by his brother-in-law Robert I of Burgundy.
D. 1060
Arembourge
De
Vergy
Niece of Bishop Azelind de Vergy, Bishop of Paris.
Friedrich
Artund
Petronel
Sister of Artaud, Bishop of Grenoble.
D. >1100
Gauthier
II
Beatrice
1851 - 1913
Alexander
Hamilton
61
61
In 1880 was living at 18 Robinson St., Allegeney, PA; occupation was listed as contractor. Source: 1880 US Census, Allegeny County, PA In 1900 was living on West 5th Ave., Corsicana, Texas; occupation was listed as oil tester (refinery). Source: 1900 US Census, Navarro County, TX In 1910 was living at 177 Boulevard, Houston Hieghts, Texas; occupation listed as Superintendent, oil co. Source 1910 US Census, Harris County, TX In 1902 built refinery in Corsicana, TX Built refinery in Port Arthur, TX for Teaxas Company. May have had diabetes along with Dora HOUSTON DAILY POST: MONDAY MORNING MAY 12, 1913 "Alexander Hamilton, 60 years old, died at his home, 171 Heights Boulevard, Houston Heights, Sunday morning. Mr. Hamilton was well known in the oil business, having been prominently connecyed with independent oil refining industries in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh nearly 40 years ago. He came to Corsicanna at the time of development there (c. 1895) and for several years was associated with Corsicana oil interests. During the past three years Mr. Hamilton was vice president of the Utah Oil Refining Company of Salt Lake City. Mr. Hamilton was born in Butler County, Pa. He is survived by Mrs. Hamilton, one son C. L. Hamilton and two daughters, Mrs. R. C. Holmes and Miss Marabelle Hamilton both of Houston. The funeral service will be held from the home at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The pallbearers wil be: H. F. Robinson, T. G. Donohue, G. L. Noble, C. F. Ireland, P. C. Sculli, all of Houston, and F. T. Manly of Port Arthur. The body will be shipped to Corsicana for burial by the Sid Westerman Company."
~1033 - 1112
Alberide
De
Burgundy
79
79
D. 1118
Hugh I
D. <1103
Gabriel
Govener of Melitene on the Upper Euphrates.
D. 1078
Archambaud
IV
Philippine
Of
Auvergne
D. 1097
Guillaume
I
~1032 - 1102
Ida Of
Saxony
70
70
D. ~1030
Louis I
Adelaide
D. 1022
Frederick
0953 - 0992
Charles
39
39
D. 0988
Godefroi
'the Old'
D'ardenne
D. 1008
Maud
Of
Saxony
0953
Bonne
D'ardenne
~0972 - >1012
Ermengarde
De
Lorraine
40
40
Berenger
~0932
Robert
I
~0968 - ~1011
Albert
I
43
43
Frederunda
Voiry
Cunigunda
D. 0943
Gonzelon
Voda
~0942 - ~1013
Otto I
71
71
Ermengarde
~0930 - 1005
Godfrey
'the Captive'
D'ardenne
75
75
0966 - 1003
Matilda
De
Bourgogne
37
37
Regnier
Luitgard
Of
Chiny
~0870
Ermentrude
Of
France
~0911 - 0943
Gonzalon
32
32
D. 0963
Oda
D. 0902
Eberhard
I
Amalrada
Eberhard
II
Mathilda
D. 0966
Eberhard
III
Eberhard
III
Adelaide
De
Vermandois
~1104 - 1176
Adelaide
Von
Wolfratschausen
72
72
Gebhard
II
D. 1020
Otto II
Von
Wolfratschausen
Adelaide
Von
Ragensburgh
Berthold
II
Henry
Of
Ragensburgh
D. 0954
Arnulph
II
Died at siege of Rogensburg
D. 0990
Berthold
I
0940 - 1005
Beatrice
Of
France
65
65
~0912 - 0984
Frederick
I
72
72
Daughter
Of
Frederick I
Frederick
I
Kuno
Hemma
Of
Oeringen
D. 1075
Frederick
II
D. ~0975
Albetic
II
Ermentrude
De
Roucy
D. 1003
William
De
Montfort
D. 1037
Robert
D'evreux
Herleve
Hugh
III
Bertrade
Of
Norway
0914 - 0973
Harold
II
'greypelt'
59
59
Atho
(Athos) De
Courteney
French knight; Fortified Courteney ca. 1010
D. ~0954
Eric I
'bloodaxe'
Gunnhild
D. 0938
Harold
I
'fairhaired'
Harold I (of Norway), called The Fairhaired (circa 860-circa 945), king of Norway (circa 885-circa 940), the first to rule, at least nominally, the entire country. Harold inherited three small domains in eastern, central, and western Norway from his father, Halfdan the Black (flourished 9th century), and set out to conquer the rest of the country, spurred-according to the saga tradition-by the refusal of another petty king's daughter to marry him until all of Norway was under his sway. After many years of campaigning, during which the chieftains of western Norway offered the most stubborn resistance, Harold gained his final victory in the Battle of Hafrsfjord, which probably took place around 885, although it may have been some years later. Once in power, Harold ruled with a strong hand and consolidated his realm. One result of his firm rule was the acceleration of the immigration that had begun shortly before to pioneer settlements in Iceland. Many chieftains also fled to the Western (British) Isles, from where they and their kinsfolk in the Orkneys, Shetlands, and Hebrides raided the Norwegian coast. Harold was finally compelled to send a punitive expedition across the North Sea to flush out these Vikings. For the same purpose he entered into an alliance with King Athelstan of England; but he made no actual conquests. In his old age Harold abdicated in favor of his eldest legitimate son, Eric Bloodaxe (895?-954), who was deposed by his half brother Håkon I after a few years of misrule.
Schwanhild
Asfurs
Tote Of
Hologaland
D. 0860
Halfdan
'the
Black'
~0830
Regnhild
Of
Sogne
Eystein
Glumra
Halfdan
Guldand
'gold Tooth'
Mistawri
Hilda
Of
Vestfold
Eric
Arnarsson
Dag
Of
Vestmare
Harold
'ridskeg'
Alfhilde
Alfheim
Of
Vingulmark
D. ~0780
Sveide
'the
Viking'
Hildois
Valdarsson
D. ~0802
Halfdan
'the
Old'
Ivar
Oplaendigne
1854 - 1934
Julia
Lytle
80
80
1900 listed with her sister Belle. 1930 wd, none, with William and Marabell Woods, Houston, TX.
Klak
Harold
Thorny
Sigurd
Hiort
D. 0885
Frotho
Vi
~1255
Madog
'fychan'
Madog
~1262
Gwenellian
Verch
Ithel
~1421
John
Harrington
~1413
John
Bosville
~1409 - ~1456
Ralph
Anne
47
47
~1413
Grace
Goldsborough
~1383
Alexander
Anne
~1387
Agnes
Grammarye
~1357
William
Anne
~1361
Alice
Haringell
~1361
Henry
Grammarye
~1331
John
Anne
~1335
Isabella
Mallory
~1335
Robert
Haringell
~1339
Margaret
St.
George
~1305
Richard
Anne
~1309
Isabella
Brough
~1309
John
Mallory
~1313
William
St.
George
~1279
Thomas
Anne
~1283
Jane
Riseam
~1283
Thomas
Brough
~1253
Edmund
Anne
~1257
Thomas
Riseam
Urracca
Of
Italy
~0967 - 1015
Gonzelon
I
48
48
1103 - 1151
Adelicia
Of
Brabant
48
48
~1102 - 1176
William
'strong Hand'
D'aubigny
74
74
~1075 - 1139
William
D'aubign‚
64
64
~1080
Maud
(Mary)
Bigod
~1040 - 1108
Roger
D'aubign‚
68
68
~1054
Amice
De
Mowbray
~1140 - 1193
William
D'aubigny
53
53
1254 - 1309
John
V Le
Strange
55
55
~1251 - >1309
Maud
D'eiville
58
58
~1226 - 1276
John
IV Le
Strange
50
50
~1233 - 1282
Joan
De
Somery
49
49
~1225
Roger
D'eiville
~1194 - ~1269
John III
Le
Strange
75
75
~1210 - 1294
Lucy
Tregoz
84
84
~1205 - 1273
Roger
De
Somery
68
68
~1195 - 1240
Nicole
D'aubigny
45
45
~1168 - ~1237
John II
Le
Strange
69
69
~1172
Amicia
~1151 - 1210
Ralph
De
Somery
59
59
~1160 - >1242
Margaret
Fitzgilbert
82
82
~1142 - 1178
John
Le
Strange
36
36
~1146
Hawise
~1125 - <1195
John
De
Somery
70
70
~1129 - 1208
Hawise
Paganel
79
79
~1096 - <1158
Roland
Le
Strange
62
62
~1100
Matilda
Le
Brun
~1100
Ralph
Paganel
1048 - 1105
Guy
Le
Strange
57
57
~1074
Ralph
Hunstanton
~1076
Helewisa
Plaiz
~1060
Fulk
Paganel
~1074
Beatrice
Fitzwilliam
~1022
Hoel
Le
Strange
~1026
Hawsie
~1020
William
Paganel
~1044
William
Fitzansculf
~1014
Ansculf
~1402
John
Peck
~1426
Isobel
Lacy
~1417
Richard
Peck
~1421
Margery
Haselden
~1396
John
Lacy
~1394
Thomas
Peck
~1398
N.n.
Bradley
~1371
Richard
Peck
~1375
N.n.
Saville
~1345
Richard
Peck
~1349
N.n.
Brunning
~1319
John
Peck
~1323
N.n.
Wemborne
~1299
John
Peck
~1300
N.n.
Flemming
~1279
John
Peck
~1283
N.n.
Carre
~1257
Thomas
Peck
~1261
N.n.
Littleton
~1236
Thomas
Peck
~1213
John
Peck
~1217
N.n.
Waterford
~1191
Robert
Peck
~1195
N.n.
Musgrave
Ansoud
Daughter
Of
Leutharius
Leutharius
Gerberge
Of
Franconia
Erchenaud
Richemir
D. 0655
Gertrudis
1797 - 1855
William
Hamilton
58
58
Immigrated to Baltimore arriving 31 May 1829; Granted natuarlization papers 06 Oct 1837; operated a shoe shop in Callery, PA; buried at Old Union United Presbyterian Church.
Gerulf
I
D. 0810
Nordolah
Alfbad
Poppo
Rodbar
Rorik
Great-grandson of Rurik, Skioldung prince at Lethra.
Daughter
Of
Ethelbert
D. 0762
Ethelbert
II
Ethelbert, 552-616, king of Kent from 560, was the first Christian Anglo-Saxon ruler in England. He married Bertha, a Christian Frankish princess, and in 597, ’thelbert himself was converted by the missionary Saint Augustine of Canterbury. Ethelbert issued a code of laws (c.600) that is the oldest surviving document in Old English.
D. 0725
Wihtred
Cynegyth
D. 0673
Ecbert
I
D. 0664
Earconbert
Saxburga
Brynhild
Gandalf
Thrond
Daughter
Of
Eystein
Eystein
Glumra
D. ~0710
Hogne
0880 - 0940
Hugues
I
60
60
Matfrid
Matfrid
II
Son
Of
Matfrid
D. ~0926
Matfrid
III
~0885
Hildegarde
Of
Metz
~0885
Gerhard
~0910 - 0966
Eberhard
IV
56
56
~0915
Bertha
Of
Metz
~0956 - 1034
Adalbert
II
78
78
~0969
Judith
Of
Luxembourg
1863 - 1936
William
Hamilton
Wallace
72
72
1900 physician in Allegheny, PA. 1920 single, doctor, medical, Callery, PA WILLIAM H. WALLACE, physician and surgeon, was born in the borough of Butler, May 10, 1863, eldest child of Dr. Thomas C. WALLACE. After receiving a common school education, he attended Western University, at Allegheny, and later the Polytechnic Institute of the same city. In the meantime he had commenced to read medicine with his father, and attended lectures at the Cleveland Medical College, from which institution he graduated. He practiced with his father until October, 1890, when he located at Callery, where he has since been engaged in the duties of his profession. Dr. WALLACE was married February 12, 1889, to Rachel DONNELL, a daughter of James DONNELL, of Allegheny. He is a member of the Presbyterian church, and in politics, a Democrat. He is connected with the K. O. T. M. and the Jr. O. U. A. M.
1864 - 1960
Edwin
Sherman
Wallace
95
95
In 1839 was appointed by President Grover Cleveland as consul to Jerusalem, served as US consul to Palestine from 1893 to 1898; wrote the book "Jerusalem, the Holy"; served for six years as chaplain of the Pennsylvania state senate. 1910 minister in , Lower Merion, Montgomery, PA. 1930 minister in Pittsburgh, PA.
1868
Frank
Musgrove
Wallace
At time of father's death he was treasurer of the Pittsburgh Coal Company and President of the 2nd National Bank of Erie, PA. 1910 bank president, living with in-laws, Erie, PA. 1920 bank president, Erie, PA. 1930 president, bank, Erie, PA.
1870 - 1954
Thomas
Cushing
Wallace
84
84
1900 physician, Allegheny, PA. 1920 doctor, medicine, Pittsburgh, PA. 1930 physician, general practice, Pittsburgh, PA.
1873
Charles
Frederick
Wallace
1900 dentist in Allegheny, PA.
1874 - 1878
John
Wallace
4
4
1880 - 1966
Grace
Hamilton
Wallace
85
85
1900 living with father. Name: Grace W. Grubbs SSN: 182-36-0883 Last Residence: 15230 Pittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 26 May 1880 Died: 15 May 1966 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1962 )
1867 - 1944
Anna
Frances
Beers
76
76
Name: MCCANDLESS, ANNA FRANCES Social Security #: 0 Sex: FEMALE Birth Date: 13 May 1867 Birthplace: PENNSYLVANIA Death Date: 20 Mar 1944 Death Place: SANTA BARBARA Mother's Maiden Name: HAMILTON Father's Surname: BEERS
1868 - 1878
James
Beers
10
10
1872 - 1878
Elizabeth
Beers
6
6
1874 - 1878
Catherine
May
Beers
4
4
1876 - 1971
Mary
Hamilton
Beers
95
95
Name: BEAR, MARY H Social Security #: 549289111 Sex: FEMALE Birth Date: 14 Feb 1876 Birthplace: PENNSYLVANIA Death Date: 30 Nov 1971 Death Place: SANTA BARBARA Mother's Maiden Name: Father's Surname:
1872 - 1873
William
Henry
Gilleland
1
1
1882
Edwin
Crawford
Gilleland
1918 Seatlle, WA. 1920 draftsman, school board, Seattle, WA. 1930 electrical engineer, power plant, Seattle, WA.
Olaus
II
Thyra
Of
England
Ulfhild
(Gisela) Of
Denmark
D. 1071
Ortholf
(Ordulph)
~1110 - 1171
Lewis
I
61
61
~1120 - >1175
Agnes
Von
Metz
55
55
D. <1141
Arnulf
V
Agnes
Von
Rieneck
Arnulf
IV
Gerhard
Berthe
~1090
Folmar
V
~1097 - >1135
Mathilda Of
Dagsburg-
Moka
38
38
D. 1111
Folmar
IV
~1023 - 1058
Pierre
35
35
D. >1058
Ermesinde
Of
Longwy
~1000 - 1048
Adalbert
III
48
48
~1005 - 1065
Giselbert
60
60
D. 1040
Hugh
Vi Von
Egisheim
Mathilda
Von
Moka
~0980 - 1049
Hugh
IV
69
69
~0980
Heilwig
Of
Dagsburg
Albert
~0958 - 0984
Hugues
III
26
26
~0962
Berlinda
Lewis
D. 1075
Folmar
III
D. <1075
Spanehilde
D. <1028
Folmar
II
Gerberge
Of
Verdun
D. <0995
Folmar
I
Berta
D. ~1078
Emmo
IV
Irmengard
Von
Hornes
D. >1050
Giselbert
I
Luitgard
De
Namur
Otto
D. ~0995
Gerberge
Godfrey
Folmar
Of
Worms
1818 - 1911
Frances
"Fanny"
Staples
92
92
1910 wd, none, with William & Susan Cashdollar. Buried: Old Union United Presbyterian Church. Frances lived to be just short of 93 years of age. Four of her children lived fairly closed, but the other four removed to far places. Mary Hamilton Beers moved to California; Alexander Hamilton went south; Belle McNeal Irvine journeyed to Colorado; and Frederick McNeal also moved to California.
Richilda
Folmar
D. 1156
Otto
Von
Wittelsbach
D. 1170
Heilika
Von
Lengenfeld
D. 1107
Otto II
Von
Scheyern
D. >1120
Richardis
Von
Weimar
D. 1110
Frederick
D. 1110
Sigena
Von
Liege
D. 1071
Otto I
Von
Scheyern
Died enroute to Jerusalem
D. 1104
Haziga
(Hadagunda)
Von Diessen
D. 1070
Ulrich
(Udalrich)
N.n.
Von
Liege
Henry
Von
Schweinfurt
N.n.
Of
Swabia
D. 1017
Henry
Von
Schweinfurt
Gerberge
~0927 - 0987
Rudolph
II
60
60
D. 1020
Itha Of
Oehringen
0921 - 0980
Berthold
I Von
Babenburg
59
59
D. 1015
Eiliswinta
Von
Walbeck
Herbert
Ermentrude
~0933 - 0980
Guelph
II
(Welph)
47
47
Kuno
Of
Oehringen
D. 0999
Richilde
Ermengarde
D. 1044
Poppo
I
Azzica
(Azzeb)
Of Friuli
D. 1039
William
II
D. <1068
Oda
Von
Ostmark
D. 1051
Berenger
Of
Friuli
D. 1064
Wilbergis
Of
Ebersberg
D. 1003
William
I
D. 1030
Thietmar
II
Rainhilda
Von
Beichlingen
Goswin
Von
Liege
D. 0986
Lothaire
II
Mathilda
Von
Arneburg
Rudolph
I
Gerbergus
D. 0963
William
Poppo
II
Poppo
I
D. 1015
Gero
Adelaide
D. 0978
Dietmar
I
D. 1014
Suanhilde
Of
Saxony
Christian
D. 0969
Hidde
Poppo
Of
Thuringen
Billung
~1839
Elizabeth
Hamilton
Three children; died of consumption.
~1840
Martha
E.
Hamilton
1910 wd, own income, mother of 5, 3 still living, with Elizabeth.
~1842 - 1877
Sarah
"Sadie"
Hamilton
35
35
1870 School teacher in Allegheny, PA. Cause of death: consumption; never married.
~1851
Mary
Jane
Hamilton
1870 School teacher in Allegheny, PA. Died young.
~1844
William
J.
Hamilton
1870 Jeweller in Allegheny, PA. Married; had no children.
1838 - 1917
Jane
Adams
79
79
1900 wd, Crafton, PA.
1839 - 1861
Alexander
H.
Adams
21
21
1841 - 1932
Catherine
Adams
90
90
1900 none, with Jane, Crafton, PA. 1920 none, Crafton, PA. 1930 none, Crafton, PA.
1843 - 1890
William
John
Adams
47
47
1845 - 1895
Hugh
Adams
49
49
1849 - 1873
Elizabeth
Adams
24
24
1838 - 1914
John
Patrick
Hamilton
75
75
1870 Book keeper for R.R. depot in Pittsburgh with parents. 1880 R/R clerk in Allegheny, PA. 1900 in Pttsburgh, PA. 1910 In Pittsburgh, retired, living with Anna Gibbs.
~1840
Margaret
Hamilton
1844 - 1921
Elizabeth
"Lisa" J.
Hamilton
77
77
1910 none, with Sarah, Exeter Twp, Fillmore, NE. 1920 Living with Sarah in Omaha, NE. died young; never married.
~1844 - 1864
Melinda
Hamilton
20
20
Cause of death: tuberculosis
~1847
Eleanor
"Ellen"
Hamilton
1870 Public school teacher in Pittsburgh, with parents.
~1849 - 1927
Robert
Lincoln
Hamilton
78
78
1870 Clerk in Depot in Pittsburgh, with parents. 1880 clerk, railroad, Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 R/R clerk in Emsworth, PA. 1920 in Pittsburgh, PA.
1855
Sarah
Agnes
Hamilton
1870 Cashier in Pittsburg, with parents. 1880 in Allegheny, PA. 1900 Dressmaker in Exeter, NE. 1910 wd, Exeter Twp, Fillmore, NE. 1920 wd, none, Omaha, NE. 1930 in Omaha, NE. married; family out west.
1857
William
Erskine
Hamilton
1900 Book keeper in Knoxville, PA.
1860 - 1939
James
A.
Hamilton
79
79
1880 Dry good store salesman in Allegheny, PA, with parents. 1900 commercial transp., St. Joseph, MO. 1910 Omaha, NE 1920 commercial trucker, Omaha, NE. 1930 salesman, wholsale millnery, Omaha, NE.
1854 - 1934
Lydania
Frances
Robinson
80
80
1910 mother of 7, 5 still living. 1930 wd, none, with Ada.
James
Hamilton
Erskine
Hamilton
1846 - 1910
Sarah
Eleanor
Merledge
64
64
1900 Mother of 8, 5 still living.
~1876 - ~1923
Charles
Merledge
Hamilton
47
47
Died at age 47 years
Alice
Martem
1786 - 1861
Job
Staples
75
75
Dexter, Franklin Bowditch, Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale College : with annals of the college history New York: H. Holt and Co., 1885-1912, 4752 pgs. Biographical Sketches, 1808 229 JOB STAPLES, the eighth child and fifth son of the Rev. John Staples (Princeton 1765) and of Susannah (Perkins) Staples, of Westminster Parish, in Canterbury, Connecticut, was born on August 23, 1786. Two brothers were graduated here in 1797 and 1809 respectively. His father died some months before he entered College. He taught school for a short time in Chester, Orange County, New York. In 1816 he settled in Cranberry, a township in the southwestern corner of Butler County, Pennsylvania, about fifteen miles northwest of Pittsburgh, where the rest of his life was spent on a farm. He died in Cranberry, in September or October, 1861, in his 76th year. By his wife, Susan, a native of the vicinity, he had five sons and eight daughters. AUTHORITIES. Perkins Family, pt. 3, 38.
1872 - 1923
Minnie
Estella
Hamilton
51
51
1861 - 1954
Marlinda
Margaret
Marsh
93
93
1930 wd, none, with Frank.
1887 - 1916
Effie
M.
Hamilton
28
28
Never married.
1888 - 1955
Frank
B.
Hamilton
67
67
1920 farmer, general farm, with parents. 1930 farmer, general farm, Forward Twp, Butler, PA. Invalid from crippling disease.
1890 - 1977
Walter
Marsh
Hamilton
87
87
1920 auto mechanis, auto factory, with parents.
1895 - 1974
Edward
Dale
Hamilton
79
79
1920 clerk, steel ?, with parents. 1930 farmer, general farm, Forward Twp, Butler, PA.
1894 - 1989
Rena
Peters
95
95
1922
Dale
Eugene
Hamilton
1929 - 1930
Mona
May
Hamilton
9m
9m
Living
Hamilton
1897 - 1990
Florence
Brown
93
93
1927
Betty
Margaret
Hamilton
Living
Hamilton
Living
Hamilton
Living
Harbusch
Living
Hamilton
Living
Hamilton
Living
Hamilton
Living
Hamilton
Living
Moesta
Living
McGraw
Living
Green
N.n.
Of
Galicia
Paule
Du
Maine
Geoffroy
De
Gastinois
Rolbold
II
D'arles
D. 0868
Bernard
I
D'auvergne
Luitgarde
~0821 - 0886
Bernard
II
D'auvergne
65
65
D. 0856
Guerin
De
Chƒlons
~0804
Avane
~0825
Ermengarde
D. 0920
Raculfe
De
Macon
Etolane
De
Macon
D. 0911
Mayeul
De
Narbonne
Raymonda
D. 0948
Alberic
I De
Narbonne
D. 0971
Letalde
I De
Macon
Richilde
~0940 - 0997
Ives I
De
Belesme
57
57
~0944
Godchilde
De
Ponthieu
Hildeburge
De
Belesme
Simon De
Chƒteau
Du Loire
Hardouin
D. 1092
Boso II
De
Chastellerault
D. 1136
Aimery
I De
Chastellerault
Dangerose
D. 1075
Hugues
I De
Chastellerault
Gerberge
De La
Rochefoucauld
D. 1012
Boso I
De
Chastellerault
Amelia
D. 1037
Foucould
I De La
Roche
Gersinde
D. ~1030
Regnier
V
Maud
Of
Lorraine
Hermann
Maud
Of
Dasbourg
Louis
Of
Dasbourg
1334 - 1368
Pedro I
'the Cruel'
Alfonsez
33
33
Peter the Cruel (Spanish Pedro el cruel) (1334-69), king of Castile and León (1350-69), the son of King Alfonso XI, born in Burgos. Peter owes his sobriquet "the Cruel" to his ready use of murder and execution to eliminate his political opponents, including, reportedly, several of his ambitious half brothers. His principal conflict was with his older half brother, Henry of Trastamara, who also claimed the throne. Henry enlisted the aid of King Charles V of France, who in 1365 sent troops through Spain under the command of Bertrand Du Guesclin. Overthrown, Peter left the country and requested aid from Edward III of England, at that time engaged in fighting the Hundred Years' War with France; Edward sent an army commanded by his son Edward, prince of Wales, known as the Black Prince. The forces of Peter and Edward defeated those of Henry, the French, and other allies at the Battle of NÏjera in 1367, and Henry fled to France. Political differences between Peter and Edward resulted in the latter's withdrawal from Spain with his army. Henry then hastened back and with Du Guesclin's help engaged Peter and his supporters in a civil war. Peter was defeated and killed at Campo de Montiel in 1369; Henry assumed the throne as King Henry II.
D. ~0880
Nu¤o
(Belchides)
Of Leon
N.n.
Of
Castile
Nu¤o
Fernandez
Adelreco
Of
Gascony
Munia
~0897
Sancha
Sanchez
Nu¤a
De
Lara
Adele
Of
Holland
Hildeburge
De
Beaumont
~0915
Fulk
De
Belesme
Rolais
D. 1028
Guillaume
I De
Belesme
~0969
Maud
De
Ganelon
D. 1147
Guy II
De
Ponthieu
Ida
1052/53 - 1131
Robert
II De
Montgomery
~1060 - 1103
Agnes
De
Ponthieu
43
43
~1030 - 1101
Guy I
De
Ponthieu
71
71
~1034
Ada
D'amiens
D. 1052
Hugues
II De
Ponthieu
Berta
D'aumale
D. 1045
Enguerrand
I De
Ponthieu
Guirinfroi
D'aumale
Hermengarde
D'auvergne
Hugues
I De
Ponthieu
Gisele
Of
France
0779 - 0853
Angilbert
74
74
0795 - 0883
Nithard
'the
Chronicler'
88
88
~0816 - 0864
Helgaud
I
48
48
D. ~0878
Herlouin
I
D. 0926
Helgaud
D. 0945
Herlouin
II
D. 0987
Roger
D. 0965
Guillaume
I De
Ponthieu
D. 0981
Hilduin
De
Ponthieu
Hersende
D. ~0923
Fernando
Gonsalez
De Lara
1797 - 1859
Susanna
Hays
62
62
Sancha
Gonsalo
Tellez
De Lara
Nu¤a
De
Amaya
Tello
Tellez
Argonata
De
Lara
Nu¤o
Rodriguez
Tello
Of
Galicia
Gonsalo
Fruela
D. ~0762
Rodrigo
Frolaz
Sancha
~1012 - 1061
Geraud
I
49
49
~1040
Tetburge
Von
Rheinfelden
D. 1060
Maud
Of
Germany
D. 1080
Rudolph
Of
Rheinfelden
Cuno
Of
Oeningen
D. 0999
Richilda
Richilda
Of
Oeningen
D. 1016
Cuno
Of
Rheinfelden
Beatrice
De
Valperge
Rency
Arsende
D. 0650
Tassilon
II
D. 0695
Grimaldo
I
D. 0728
Grimaldo
II
Veletrude
~0700 - 0741
Suanhilde
Of
Bavaria
41
41
~0728
Landrade
Sigirami
D. 0778
Gunderland
0570 - 0596
Childebert
II Of
France
26
26
D. 0596
Failende
0586 - 0613
Theodebert
II
27
27
D. 0609
Bilichidis
~1020 - 1088
Alberic
III
68
68
~1070 - 1116
Aumondis
De La
Marche
46
46
Ponce
~1080 - ~1122
Raymond
I De
Turenne
42
42
~1120
Margret
De
Turenne
~0980
Beatrice
Of
Normandy
Guillaume
De
Turenne
Matilde
D. ~1030
Ebles
De
Turenne
Fulk
De
Limoges
D. ~0876
Adalbert
De
Limoges
Adaltrude
0865 - 0940
Eldegaire
II De
Limoges
75
75
D. 0988
Geraud
De
Limoges
Radulf
De
Brosse
Rotilde
De
Brosse
Almode
De
Limoges
Gerfroy
De
Charroux
Sulpice
De
Charroux
D. 0968
Boso I
De La
Marche
Gersinda
Emme
De
Perigod
D. 0995
Adalbert
I De La
Marche
~0730 - 0812
St.
William
82
82
~0770 - >0804
Guiburic
34
34
~0695 - 0722
Gui Of
Trier
27
27
~0730 - ~0783
Lambert
53
53
D. 0927
Ermengaud
De
Rouerge
Adelaide
Hugues
I De
Quercy
Gudinidle
Hugues
II De
Comborn
D. 0992
Archembaud
II De
Comborn
D. ~0980
Bernard
I De
Turenne
Deda
Sulpice
De
Turenne
Ardueno
De
Canavese
D. 1158
Guido
De
Canavese
Tetone
De
Saluzzo
Elena
De
Ventimiglia
Manfredo
De
Saluzzo
Gerberga
De
Saluzzo
Guy
De
Valperge
Adzon
De
Visconti
Beatrice
De
Visconti
1743 - 1804
John
Staples
60
60
A.B. College of New Jersey (later Princeton) 25 SEP 1765; Ordained 17 APR 1772 Pastor Second Congregational Church (Westminster Society), Canterbury, CT; Buried Westminster Congregational Church.
Albert
Of
Geneva
Eldegarde
~0966 - 0991
Manfred
I
25
25
Prangaida
Of
Reggio
D. 0588
Ella
Acha
Of
Deira
D. 0559
Ida
Bearnach
D. 0594
Ethelric
D. 0617
Ethelfrith
Eanfrith
Brother of Saint Oswald.
N.n.
Of The
Picts
Daughter
Of
Eanfrith
Sister of Talotcan, King of the Picts.
Domnall
D. 0663
Garnard
D. 1118
Gerard
I Of
Guelders
D. 1134
Ermengarde
Of
Zutphen
Louis
Of
Arnstein
Judith
Of
Arnstein
D. 1089
Godachalk
Adelheid
Of
Zutphen
D. 1113
Otto II
Of
Zutphen
N.n.
Of
Molsberg
D. 1092
Gerard
III Of
Wassenberg
D. 1031
Ludolph
Of
Zutphen
Maud
Of
Zutphen
Tugor Kahn
(Tergahe Cawn)
Of Polawzes
N.n.
Of
Kiev
Mstislav
Vladimirski
Theodul
Synadenos
~1100 - 1154
Islaslav
II
54
54
N.n.
Of
Argyra
Thrando
Of
Sula
~0907
Gunhild
Astrid
Of
Sandnes
~0975
Edla
Niall
Of
Sandnes
D. 0612
Gundwald
D. 0661
Aripert
I
D. 0662
Godepert
Reginpert
Of
Turin
D. 0712
Aripert
II Of
Turin
Petrussa
Of The
Lombards
D. 0700
Vislas
I
D. 0724
Aribert I
Of The
Obotrites
Mandana
Billung
Of The
Obotrites
Hildegarde
D. 0798
Billung
Of The
Obotrites
Jutta
D. 0811
Mieceslas
Of The
Obotrites
Antonia
D. 0840
Rodigastus
Of The
Obotrites
D. 0864
Mistui I
Of The
Obotrites
1753 - 1810
Susannah
Perkins
57
57
Buried: Grove Street Cemetery.
D. 0934
Mieceslas
I Of The
Obotrites
Eric
Of
Pluffow
Daughter
Of
Eric
<0934 - 0985
Mistui II
Of The
Obotrites
51
51
Converted to Christianity 973 and settled in Mecklenburg.
Poppo
II Of
Istria
D. ~1040
Weriguad
Of
Istria
Wiliburg
Of
Geisenheim
~0990 - >1051
Luitgard
Of
Istria
61
61
Wichburg
Of
Saxony
D. <1025
Engilbert
II
Adela
N.n.
Of
Chiemgau
Albuin
Von
Juan
Hildegarde
Hartwig
Frederick
Englebert
D. 1039
Eberhard
Von
Spondheim
Hedwig
Von
Nullenburg
~1000 - 1065
Sigfrid
Von
Spondheim
65
65
~1008 - 1064
Richarda
(Richardis)
Von Lavant
56
56
~1030 - 1096
Engelbert
I Von
Spondheim
66
66
Bernard
Von
Flinsbach
Cecilia
~1040 - 1112
Hedwig
Von
Flinsbach
72
72
Richardis
Von
Spondheim
D. 1128
Sophia
Of
Istria
Ropold
I Of
Andech
Frederic
I Of
Andech
Cuningunda
Of
Wohlfartshaussen
Arobo
Of
Andech
Adelheid
Frederic
II Of
Andech
Cunigunda
Of
Oeningen
Leopold
Of
Andech
D. 1104
Arnold
Of
Andech
>0900 - 0950
Adalbert
III
50
50
Oberto
I
D'este
Boniface
I Of
Spoleto
Guilla
Of
Spoleto
Riprandi
(Wiprand)
0947 - 1014
Oberto
II
D'este
67
67
Ralende
(Railende)
D. 1035
Olric
Manfred
D. 1037
Bertha
(D'yvres)
D'este
D. 1078
Ermengarde
Di
Suza
~1000 - 1057
Otto III
Von
Schweinfurt
57
57
D. 1100
Gisela
Von
Schweinfurt
D. 1150
Berthold
I Of
Andech
1096 - 1151
Berthold
IV Of
Meraine
55
55
Agnes
De
Rotlechs
D. 1188
Berthold
V Of
Meraine
D. 1174
Hedwig Von
Formbach-
Puttin
1699 - 1778
Seth
Staples
79
79
Deacon of first church in Taunton; died of smallpox; buried Soper Farm Cem. Williams Street, Taunton, MA
D. 1114
Wilibirg
Von
Steirmark
D. 1140
Eckbert
II Of
Formbach
~0915 - 0971
Eberhard
III
56
56
0937 - 0991
Mangold
I
54
54
0970 - 1041
Eberhard
IV
71
71
Hedwig
D. 1075
Eberhard
'the
Blessed'
Poppo
I Of
Laufen
Arnold
Of
Laufen
Ida
Von
Alshausen
Adelaide
Von
Nellenburg
Henry
Of
Laufen
Adalbert
Von
Sommerschenburg
D. ~1088
Oda
Of
Groseck
D. ~0922
Bernard
I
Hermann
II Von
Werl
Henry
II Von
Werl
~1005 - 1063
Bernard
III
58
58
~1043
Ida
Von
Werl
Adelaide
Von
Laufen
D. 1120
Frederick
I Von
Sommerschenburg
Oda
Von
Walbeck
D. <1104
Goswin
I
~1090 - 1167
Goswin
II
77
77
~1100 - ~1180
Aleidis
Von
Sommerschenburg
80
80
Albert
Von
Ravenstein
~0773 - 0807
Wittekind
'the
Great'
34
34
Svatana
Of
Saxony
Wittekind
II
Theodoric
Of
Rochlitz
Juliana
~0793 - 0850
Thiadmark
Von
Wettin
57
57
~0900 - 0957
Dedo
Von
Wettin
57
57
~0794
Bossena
Von
Plessen
~0875
Otto
Of
Raveningen
~0902
Willa
Of
Raveningen
~0925 - 0970
Dietrich
I Von
Wettin
45
45
Bion
Of
Merseburg
D. >0976
Jutta
Von
Merseburg
D. 0985
Dietrich
I Of
Haldensleben
D. 0982
Gonthier
Of
Merseburg
~0930 - 0977
Pabrowka
Of
Bohemia
47
47
~0950 - 1009
Dedo I
Von
Wettin
59
59
Thetburge
Of
Haldensleben
0922 - 1002
Echard
I Of
Meissen
80
80
~0976 - 1034
Dietrich
II Von
Wettin
58
58
Mathilda
Of
Meissen
D. 1083
Otto I
Von
Northeim
Richenza
D. 1252
Alonso
Tellez II De
Menses
D. ~1242
Maria
Anez
De Lima
D. 1252
Rui
Martinez De
Henestrosa
Elvira
Carillo
~1220 - 1252
Pedro
Riuz De
Henestrosa
32
32
Fortun
Ortiz De
Zu¤iga
Teresa
De
Rada
~1225 - 1300
Maria
De
Zu¤iga
75
75
D. 1300
Gonzalo
Perez De
Henestrosa
1703 - 1744
Hannah
Standish
41
41
Buried: Summer Street Cemetery
D. 1250
Diego
Gonsalez
De Ceballos
Maria
Ordon
De Aza
~1230
Gonsalo
Diaz De
Ceballos
Martin
Antolinez
De Hoces
Goda
Galindez De
Hordesuela
~1230
Antolina
De
Hoces
Teresa
De
Ceballos
Fernan
Gonsalez De
Henestrosa
D. 1223
Fruela
Ramirez De
Cifontes
Sancha
Fernandez
De Tovar
~1196 - 1240
Ramiro
Fruelas De
Cifontes
44
44
~1200 - 1246
Diego
Fruelas De
Cifontes
46
46
Martin
Gomez
De Silva
Urraca
Ruiz De
Cabrera
~1200
Aldonza
Martinez
De Silva
D. 1234
Gonsalo
Ruiz II
Giron
~1160
Sancha
Rodriguez
De Lara
~1200
Aldonza
Gonzalez
Giron
D. >1253
Arias
Diaz De
Asturias
Aldonza
Ramirez De
Alcenices
Maria
Arias De
Asturias
Cadelon
III Of
Aubnay
Ramon
De
Pallars
Valencia
Acibella
Garcia
Sanchez
Aminiana
D. 1154
Ermengaud
Vi De
Urgel
Arsende
De
Ager
Estephania
De
Urgel
Pedro
De
Azazuri
Toda
Perez De
Azazuri
Christina
Pedro
De
Asturias
D. ~1050
Rodrigo
Diaz De
Asturias
D. 1011
Gundemaro
~1005
Fernando
Gundemariz
D. 1107
Elvira
Of
Castile
Liubigotona
Of
Spain
Alfonso
I Of
Cantabria
~0499 - 0531
Clotilde
Of
France
32
32
D. 0531
Amalaric
D. 0601
Recared
Of
Spain
D. 0610
Clodoswindis
Of
France
D. 0631
Suintilo
Of
Spain
Sisibuto
Of
Spain
Theodora
Of
Spain
Sisalda
D. 0789
Mauregato
Of
Leon
Alonso
De
Braga
Marquesa
Creosa
De
Braga
Hermengild
D. ~0863
Mendo
Hermengildez
D. ~0910
Hermengild
Mendez
Hermensinde
De
Aldana
Gutierre
Arias De
Celanova
Ilduara
~0715
Leuthergis
~0739
Bertha
Milo
Of
Angleria
D. 0777
Roland
'the
Palain'
Valdo
Diaz De
Valdes
Faralando
Flora
Valdes
D. 0900
Diego
Valdes
D. ~0930
Garcia
Diaz
Valdes
Nunila
Ximena Of
Navarre
Fruela
II Of
Leon
D. ~0940
Ordono
'el
Ciego'
D. 0955
Alfonso
Ordonez
Justa
D. 1011
Rodrigo
Alfonso
Gonia
1672 - 1755
Ebenezer
Standish
83
83
Gonsalo
Fernandez
Nu¤a
Of
Amaya
D. ~1034
Fernan
Gonsalez
De Aza
Nu¤o
Gutierrez
De Solrado
D. ~1024
Nu¤a
Nu¤ez De
Solrado
Garcia
Fernandez
De Aza
Orondo
Maria
Ordonez
D. 1087
Garcia II
Garciez
De Aza
Ladron
Velez De
Guevara
Gontrode
De
Asturias
Fernan
Garcia
De Aza
D. 1103
Gonsalo
Nu¤ez
De Lara
1633 - 1655
Mary
Dingley
21
21
~1020 - 1109
Gonsalo
Salvdores
89
89
~1024 - 1109
Sancha
85
85
Goda
Gonsalez De
Salvdores
Teresa
Gonsales
Giron
Teresa
De
Mauleon
D. ~1143
Vera
Landron De
Guevara
Urraca
Alfonsez
Sancha
Garcias
Juan
Velez De
Guevara
Alvaro
De
Arazuri
1658
Martha
Standish
Maria
Alvarez
De Arazuri
Teresa
Yanez De
Guevara
Goda
Gonsalez
De Lara
Nu¤o
Rodrequez
De Guzman
Elvira
Gonsalez De
Manzanedo
D. 1156
Rui
Nu¤ez De
Guzman
Maria
Ruiz De
Guzman
Estephania
Giron
Gutierre
Fernandez
De Aza
Rodrigo
Gutierrez
De Buelna
1662
Miles
(Myles)
Standish
N.n.
De
Buelna
D. 1194
Rodrigo
Gutierrez
De Ceballos
D. ~1198
Gonsalo
Ruiz De
Ceballos
<1670
Josiah
Standish
D. ~1064
Oveso
Cesaviz
D. ~1079
Gotina
Garcia
~1064 - 1130
Bermudo
Uvequiz
66
66
Aldonza
Ordonez
D. ~0923
Fernan
Ansurez
D. ~0998
Diego
Gonsalez
~1675
Isreal
Standish
Guisualdo
Leutina
Ximena
Aznar
Fruelez
Fruela
Aznares
Pelay
Fruelas 'el
Diacono'
Elvira
Pelayez
Pedro
Pelayez
D. ~1111
Pelayo
Pelayez De
Cisneros
Maria
Diaz De
Moncon
1680
Samuel
Standish
Ansur
Diaz De
Moncon
Ansur
Perez
Juliana
Cifontes
Juliana
Ansures
De Moncon
~1070
Diego
Ansures
De Cifontes
Mayor
Gonsales
Maria
Pelayez De
Cisneros
Sancho
Garcias
D. 1105
Alfonso
Bermundez
Fruela
Diaz
~1685
Mercy
Standish
1679 - 1759
Hannah
Sturtevant
80
80
Constance
Estephania
Sanches
D. 1180
Pedro
Alfonso
Maria
Fruela
Pedro
Arnulfo De
Miranda
D. ~1160
Pelayo
Perez
D. ~1163
Maria
Arnulfo De
Miranda
~1685
Lois
Standish
Fernan
Pelayez
D. ~1153
Martin
Fernandez
De Hita
Maria
Martinez
De Hita
Rui
Gonsalez
De Ceballos
Maria
De
Pallars
Lope
Garciez
De Alagon
Topa
Lopez De
Alagon
Pedro
De
Azagra
D. ~1140
Rodrigo
Perez De
Azagra
Fernan
Ruiz De
Azagra
1659/60
Mary
Standish
Teresa
Fernandez
De Azagra
Ximena
Gomez De
Carrion
Maria
Rodrequez
De Asturias
Urraca
Diaz De
Cifontes
D. ~1090
Alvaro
Rodrequez
De Asturias
Maria
Pelayez De
Cisneros
Diego
Alvarez De
Asturias
D. 1115
Diego
Ruiz De
Velasco
Sancha
Diaz De
Velasco
Tiella
Diaz De
Asturias
1653
James
Carey
Fortun
Sanchez
De Najera
Toda
Ortiz De
Najera
D. 0930
Lope
Ortiz
Fortunez
Nu¤a
Gonsalez
D. 0981
Nu¤o
Lopez
Velasquita
Sanchez
Lope
Nu¤ez
Usendo
Alboazar
D. ~1076
Inigo
Lopez
D. 1093
Lope
Inequez
1670
Sarah
Carey
D. 1134
Diego
Lopez
D. 1111
Gomez
Gonsalez
Salvdores
Diego
Gomez De
Sandoval
D. ~1042
Ordo¤o
Ordo¤ez
De Lemos
Urraca
De
Aza
Maria
De
Lemos
D. 1127
Fernan
Diaz De
Sandoval
D. 1150
Alonso
Ramiras
Nu¤o
Diaz De
Henestroso
Elvira
Gil De
Ansurez
~1683
Elizabeth
Richards
Rodrigo
Nu¤ez De
Henestroso
D. 1227
Martin
Ruiz De
Henestroso
Rodrigo
Fernanda
De Sandoval
Gutierre
Ruiz De
Sandoval
Inez
De
Rada
Mayor
Gutierrez De
Sandoval
1706
Elizabeth
Standish
Garcia
Gomez
Carillo
1709
Miles
Standish
D. ~1117
Inigo
De
Zu¤iga
Teresa
Sancha
De
Zu¤iga
1711
Amy
Standish
Maria
Alverez
De Castro
Fernando
Garcia
Rodrigo
Fernandes De
Castro 'el Calvo'
D. 1071
Pedro
Fruelas
De Trava
Mayor
De
Urgel
Estephania
Perez De
Trava
Rodrigo
Gomez De
Sandoval
Elvira
Prudence
Standish
Gonsalo
Rodrequez
De La Bureba
Rodrigo
Gonsalez De
La Bureba
Aldonza
Rodriquez
De Castro
D. 1170
Lope
Diaz
Diego
Lopez
Pedro
Ruiz De
Azagra
Toda
Perez De
Azagra
Fernan
Perez De
Trastamare
Sancha
Gonsalez
De Lara
D. ~1154
Gonsalo
Fernandez De
Trastamare
1709
Jerusha
Fuller
1627 - 1702
Alexander
Standish
75
75
Freeman of Duxbury 7 JUN 1648; member of Grand Inquest there 1658; Town Clerk 1695-1700.
Rodrigo
Alvarez
D. ~1164
Elvira
Rodriquez
D. 1189
Arias
Peres De
Saavedra
Itana
Nu¤ez De
Baticela
Fernan
Dias De
Saavedra
Bermudo
Perez De
Trastamare
Urraca
Of
Portugal
Teresa
Bermudez De
Trastamare
D. ~1164
Gomez
Gonsalez De
Trastamare
Maria
Fernandez
De Saavedra
1710
Simon
Huntington
Maria
Gomez De
Trastamare
Pedro
Ruiz De
La Bureba
D. 1215
Inigo
Ortiz
Toda
Dias De
Biscay
D. 1212
Pedro
Ruiz De
La Bureba
Alfonso
Urracca
Alfonso
D. 1230
Diego
Lopez De
Zu¤iga
Urraca
Perez De
Bureba
D. 1239
Lope
Ortiz De
Zu¤iga
1754
Amy
Huntington
Osurio
Gutierrez
Egilona
Ervigio
Of
Spain
Cixila
D. 0701
Egika
Of
Spain
D. 0710
Witika
Of
Spain
D. ~0714
Sisibuto
Atulpho
D. ~0760
Theudo
Ildonca
Menendez
1711
Jacob
Sawyer
Gutierre
Osoriz
D. ~0941
Adosinda
Gutierrez
D. 0967
Sancho
I
Ramirez
1670
Mehitable
Standish
Teres
Fernandez
De Moncon
D. 0982
Ramiro
III
Sanchez
1679
Elizabeth
Thatcher
Sancho El
Vellos De
Cabrera
~0968 - ~0997
Fruelo
Beremudez De
Trastamare
29
29
Sancha
Rodrequez
Monina
Fruelez De
Trastamare
Rodrigo
Vellosa De
Cabrera
1683
Deborah
Gates
D. ~1088
Osorio
Gutierres
De Cabrera
Urraca
Martin
Osoriez
Pedro
Ansurez
Ella De
Semur
Mayor
Perez De
Valladolid
D. ~1100
Pedro
Rodriquez
Vellosa
Rodrigo
Perez
Vellosa
Elvira
Rodrequez
Vellosa
D. 1139
Rodrigo
Martinez
De Osorio
1711
Deborah
Standish
Fernan
Garcia
Estephania
Urraca
Fernandez
De Castro
Osorio
Rodriquez
De Torono
Elvira
Osoriez
De Lemos
Ramiro
Fruelaz De
Campos
N.n.
De
Navia
Rodrigo
Alvarez
De Tovar
D. 1179
Alvar
Rodrequez
De Tovar
1713
Samuel
Standish
D. 1215
Fernan
Alverez
De Tovar
Pedro
Paez De
Ambia
Maria
Fernandez
De Gundiaez
Gutierre
Pelayez
De Silva
1716
Lois
Standish
Maria
Perez De
Ambia
Juan
Ramiriez
De Montor
Suero
Guedas
Bayham
1716
Abigail
Standish
1629 - 1674
Sara
Alden
45
45
Turner, Violet Main, Alden genealogy New York: The Alden Kindred of New York City and Vicinity, 1935, 273 pgs.
Pelayo
Gutierrez
De Silva
Sancha
Anez De
Montor
Nu¤o
Suarez
Vello
Elvira
Touriz
D. 1170
Gomez
Paez
De Silva
Urraca
Nu¤ez
Vello
Ponce
De
Gerona
Letgarde
De
Pallars
Guerao
Ponce
Ponce
Guerao
1719
Sarah
Standish
Pedro
Bermudez
De Minerva
Ermengarde
De
Montpellier
Everosa
De
Minerva
Alfonso
Of
Astorga
Elvira
Gomez De
Carrion
Inez
Alfonso De
Astorga
Fernando
Rodrequez
De Cabrera
Elvira
Rodrigo
Fernandez
De Cabrera
Pedro
Ponce De
Minerva
1721
Israel
Standish
Ramiro
Fruelas De
Cifontes
Estephania
Ramirez De
Cifontes
Elvira
Ponce De
Minerva
D. 1133
Gonsalo
Pelayez
D. ~1145
Rodrigo
Gonsales
Giron
D. 1102
Ermengaud
V De
Urgel
Maria
Perez De
Valladolid
Estephania
De
Urgel
D. 1156
Gonsalo
Ruiz I
Giron
D. 1195
Rodrigo
Gonsalez
Giron
1724 - 1798
Thomas
Standish
73
73
Private in Revolutionary War from MA Source: DAR Patriot Index
D. 1130
Pedro
Gonsalez
De Lara
Eva
Perez De
Trava
D. 1177
Nu¤o
Perez
De Lara
Mayor
Nu¤ez
De Lara
1122
Rodrigo
Rodrequez
De Lara
Garcia
De
Azagra
Gil
(Egidias)
De Rada
Teresa
De
Beumont
D. ~1150
Ordo¤o
Garciez
De Najera
1683
Ralph
Wheelcock
Maria
Garcia De
Villamayor
Diego
Ordo¤ez
De Aza
1659
Hugh
Calkins
Boniface
Lancia
Bianca
1154 - 1198
Constanza
Of
Sicily
44
44
Adalberto
II Of
Tuscany
Adalberto
III Of
Tuscany
1685
John
Sprauge
Aleramo
I Di
Montferrat
Helen
Of
Verona
D. 0998
Anselmo
I Di
Saluzzo
Gisela
Of
Tuscany
Conrad
I Di
Ventimiglia
Anselmo
II Di
Saluzzo
Enrico
Adelina
Guiditta
Rochilde
1726
Abigail
Brown
Conrad
II Di
Ventimiglia
Adela
Anselmodis
Di
Saluzzo
Adelaide
Di
Savona
~1031 - 1101
Roger
I De
Hauteville
70
70
Roger I (circa 1031-1101), Norman conqueror of Sicily. Born in Normandy, Roger joined his elder brother Robert Guiscard in southern Italy (1057), helping him to win control of that region from the Byzantines. In 1061 he and Robert captured the Sicilian town of Messina from its Muslim rulers, and over the next three decades Roger gradually extended Norman power at the expense of the various Muslim states on the island, completing conquest of Sicily in 1091. While Robert was alive, the brothers shared control of both Sicily and the Italian mainland; after his death in 1085, Roger made himself ruler of Sicily, leaving the other Norman domains to Robert's son, Roger of Apulia. He adopted the title of count and was made papal legate in Sicily by Pope Urban II in 1098. Roger introduced Catholicism into Sicily but was tolerant of his Muslim and Greek Orthodox subjects. His son, Roger II, founded the kingdom of Sicily.
1095 - 1154
Roger
II De
Hauteville
59
59
Roger II (1095-1154), first king of Sicily (1130-54), who created a state in which Arabs, Greeks, Italians, and Jews lived together in peace and in which the arts and letters flourished. The second son of Roger I, the Norman conqueror of Sicily, Roger succeeded his brother Simon as count of Sicily in 1103. When his cousin Duke William of Apulia died, Roger laid claim to that duchy; by 1129 he had compelled the Norman barons on the Italian mainland to acknowledge him as their ruler. In 1130 he adopted the title of king of Sicily, with sovereignty also over the southern Italian regions of Apulia, Calabria, Capua, and Naples, establishing a monarchy that survived for more than seven centuries. He was recognized as king by Pope Innocent II in 1139. Roger made his court at Palermo one of Europe's foremost cultural centers, and he erected throughout Sicily numerous buildings that were a striking blend of Norman, Arabic, and Byzantine architectural styles.
Beatrice
De
Rethel
Gauthier
De
Rethal
1719
Rufus
Rood
Beatrice
De
Namur
Flavius
Juliana
Paulus
Of
Arabisso
Joanna
Pedro
Augusto
D. 0419
Wallia
D. 0481
Theodorick
I Of
Spain
D. ~0400
Winithar
D. 0409
Wandalar
~0950 - 1024
Gerard
Of
Alsace
74
74
1722
Dorcas
Bellows
~0954
Eva
Of
Luxembourg
Heinrich
Of
Verdun
Daughter
Of
Conrad
1762
Silas
Standish
1584 - 1656
Myles
Standish
72
72
Myles Standish was born probably in Lancashire, England, probably in the vicinity of Chorley and Duxbury. There have been several attempts, generally unsuccessful, to place his origins on the Isle of Man, but the weight of the historical evidence leans towards the more probable Lancashire origin. Myles Standish is alleged to have joined Queen Elizabeth's army and attained the rank of Lieutenant, but the documentation for this claim was lost in the 1920s without having been published or transcribed, so may be suspect. In any case, Standish was certainly a part of Queen Elizabeth's army, and was stantioned for a time in Holland where he eventually met and became well acquainted with John Robinson and the Pilgrims who were living in Leiden. Standish was hired by the Pilgrims to be their military captain, to establish and coordinate the Colony's defense against both foreign (French, Spanish, Dutch) and domestic (Native American) threats. Standish led or participated in all the early exploratory missions sent out to explore Cape Cod, and was heavily involved in selecting the site where the Pilgrims would settle. He was one of the few who did not get sick at all the first winter, and is recorded as having greatly helped and cared for those who were sick. He organized the deployment of the colony's cannons and the construction of the fort at Plymouth. He led both trading expeditions and military expeditions to the various Indian groups in the region. He led the party that went in pursuit of the alleged killers of Squanto (who was later discovered to be safe). He led the revenge attacks on the Indians in the Massachusetts Bay after they were caught in a conspiracy planning to attack and destroy the Plymouth and Wessagussett colonies; several Indians were killed or executed, for which Standish received some criticism, even from his friends, for being too heavy-handed. Standish was heavily involved in numerous aspects of Plymouth Colony, from defense to keeping the law. He was on the receiving end of John Billington's verbal wrath in 1621 (Billington refused to follow the captain's orders), and was called a "silly boy" in a letter that was sent out during the Oldham-Lyford scandal of 1624, and was noted for his short stature and for his quick temper. He was sent to arrest Thomas Morton in 1628, for which he received the nickname "Captain Shrimp" from Morton. William Hubbard reported Standish's temper was like a "chimney soon fired". Despite the heavy criticism by his enemies, Standish was well respected within the Plymouth Colony, and held a number of positions of authority. He made several trips to England to bring trading goods back and to negotiate with the Merchant Adventurers who had financially sponsored the joint-stock company that funded the Pilgrims' voyage. In the mid-1630s, Standish moved his family and helped found the town of Duxbury, which may have been named after his ancestral home. Standish was an heir to a fairly sizeable estate in Lancashire, but his lands were lost during the English Civil War, and neither he nor his son Alexander were ever able to legally regain control of the estate. Myles Standish's first wife Rose came with him on the Mayflower, and died the first winter. His second wife, Barbara, arrived on the ship Anne in 1623, and they were apparently married before the year was out. Nothing is known about either of his wives: there is absolutely no indication they were his cousins, as has sometimes been claimed. Standish lived out his later years in Duxbury, dying in 1656 "after his suffering of much dolorous pain," apparently from kidney stones.
Beala
Of
Hohenworth
~0765
Irmentrudis
Of
Swabia
Asa
D. 0744
Gerold
Of
Mayence
Marozie
~0769 - 0846
Bonifacio
II Of
Tuscany
77
77
1764
Levi
Standish
D. 0884
Bertha
Adalbert
I Of
Lucca
1012 - 1075
Dedo II
Of
Lausnitz
63
63
Adelaide
Grimelda
(Maria) Of
Hungary
D. 0959
Pietro
III
Candiano
Arcielda
1766
Sarah
Standish
Maria
Candiana
0960 - 1009
Pietro
III
Orseolo
49
49
0923 - 0994
Leopold
I
71
71
Ernst
Of
Sualafed
Richenza
Henry
I Of
Austria
1768
Dorcas
Standish
D. 1030
Otto
Orseolo
D. 1059
Adele
Orseolo
D. 1055
Adelbert
Of
Schweinachgau
~0995 - 1026
Sancha
Sanchez
31
31
~0995 - 1035
Berenger
Raymund
40
40
D. 0990
Guillaume
II
Arsinde
Boso
V Of
Provence
Daughter
Of
Boso
D. 0948
Rotbold
II
D'arles
1724
Content
Ellis
Borel
Of
Ansona
Raoul
Of
Anson
Sunifred
Of
Urgel
Bellon
Of
Carcassonne
Erminsinde
Of
Carcassonne
D. 0954
Richilde
D. 0992
Borrel
II Of
Barc
Luitgarde
Of
Toulouse
~0972 - 1019
Raymond
III
Borrell
47
47
~0810 - ~0836
Louis
Eliganius
26
26
1746
Hannah
Standish
Richilde
~0830 - 0877
Oliba II
47
47
~0766
Adeleme
Of
Poitiers
~0860 - 0934
Alfred
Of
Carcassonne
74
74
~0864
Adelaide
D'auvergne
~0902
Arsinde
De
Comminges
Asnarius
De
Comminges
~0898 - 0957
Arnaud
I De
Comminges
59
59
~0975 - 1058
Ermensinde
De
Carcassone
83
83
Urraca
Garcias
1748
Israel
Standish
Garcia
Ordo¤ez
De Aza
Martin
Diaz De
Sandoval
D. 1108
Garcia
Fernandez
De Villamyor
1750
Elisha
Standish
Mayor
Perez De
Carrion
Maria
Garcia De
Villamyor
D. 1176
Diego
Martinez De
Villamyor
Maria
Ponce De
Minerva
D. 1017
Eudes
De
Rasez
Raymonde
II De
Rouerge
1751
Jonas
Standish
Berthe
Ermegaud
D'alby
Gersende
Amelia
D'alby
D. 1010
Ermengaud
I Of
Urgel
1009 - 1040
Ermengaud
II Of
Urgel
31
31
Constantia
1033 - 1065
Ermengaud
III Of
Urgel
32
32
Meron
Gerberto
Guila
1753
Nathan
Standish
Adelaide
(Clemence)
Luciana
De
Rasez
1756 - 1847
Amasa
Standish
91
91
Private during Revolutionary War. Source: DAR Patriot Index
1590 - 1659
Barbara
Allen
69
69
1734
Sarah
Williams
1762
Maria
Slingerland
1762
Ester
Hull
D. ~0899
Osario
Gutierrez
Urraca
Nu¤ez
D. ~0941
Gutierre
Osoriez
1764
Eunice
Fellows
Aldonza
Of
Tuy
D. 0980
Osorio
Gutierrez
El Santo
Nu¤o
Osoriez
D. ~0990
Gutierrez
Osoriez
Pelayo
Sancha
Pelayez
Urraca
Nu¤ez
D. 0466
Theodorick
II Of
Spain
N.n.
Of
Spain
1764
Eunice
Chapman
D. 0460
Maidra
Of
Galicia
Remismond
Of
Galicia
Hermirik
II
Remila
II
Rekiar
II
D. 0570
Theodemir
I
D. 0583
Ario
Miro
N.n.
Of
Galicia
Ariomito
De
Deza
Severino
1764
Susan
Fitch
Arseciunda
D. 0712
Melendo
Areo De
Deza
Ilduara
De Riba
De Nevra
Sancho
Mendez
De Deza
Evancio
Brother of Saint Eugenius
Reciberga
Cheteno
Nu¤o
Sanchez De
Dezabaldana
Sorred
Fernandez
Elvira
Sorred
1746
Benjamin
Fillmore
Arias Nu¤ez
'el Godo' De
Dezabaldana
Aldara
Osotez
Mendo
Arias De
Dezabaldana
Urraca
Ansurez
Arias
Mendez
De Aldana
D. ~0926
Sarracino
Sylez
Mayor
Sarracinez
1747
Lydia
Smith
Aurembiaz
De
Aza
D. 1071
Fruelo
Perez De
Trava
Briolania
D. 1126
Pedro
Fruelas De
Trastamare
1751
Mary
Chapman
Arias
Diaz De
Atranga
Fruelo
Arias
Urraca
Frolaz
Atranga
D. 1195
Pedro
Ruiz De
Guzman
Uncle of Saint Dominic.
1749
Esther
Smith
1958 - 1996
John
August
Brhely
37
37
Maud
Elvirƒ De
Manzanedo
N.n.
Gundemarez
1754
Zerviah
Smith
Rodrigo
De
Guzman
D. ~1040
Nu¤o
Rodriquez
De Guzman
Ordo¤o
Bermudez
Pelayo
Rodriquez
Fromilde
Pelayez
Ximena
Of
Leon
D. 1086
Rodrigo
Nu¤ez De
Guzman
Diego
Nu¤ez
Elvira
Diaz
1768 - 1828
Asa
Standish
59
59
Private in Revolutionary War. Source: DAR Patriot Index
D. ~1120
Gonsal
Gomez De
Manzanedo
D. 1164
Manrique
Gonsalez
De Lara
D. 0924
Franco
De
Narbonne
D. 0915
Suniaite
II De
Roussillon
Erscende
De
Roussillon
D. 0933
Odon
De
Narbonne
Richilde
De
Barcelona
D. ~0970
Manfred
De
Narbonne
D. 0990
Adelais
Of
Alby
D. ~1018
Raymond
I De
Narbonne
1765
Rebecca
Sherwood
Hugues
De
Rodez
D. ~1032
Richarde
De
Rodez
D. 1066
Berenger
De
Narbonne
D. 0990
Oliba
Cabreta
D. 1020
Bernard
Taillifer
De Bezalu
Toda
(Adele) Of
Barcelona
1614
Susanna
Smith
Gersende
De
Bezalu
D. ~1078
Bernard
De
Narbonne
D. ~1010
Raymonde
III De
Rouerge
Richarde
De
Milhaud
D. ~1053
Hugues
De
Rouerge
Foi
Foi De
Rouerge
D. 1105
Aimeri
I De
Narbonne
Maud
De
Hauteville
D. 1134
Aimeri
II De
Narbonne
1660
Thomas
Standish
Hermensinde
Hermensinde
De
Narbonne
Mayor
Manriquez
De Lara
Alvar
Fernandez
De Aza
D. ~1062
Nu¤o
Alvarez
De Aza
Gomez
Nu¤ez
De Aza
Gomez
Gonsalez De
Manzanedo
Maria
Rodriquez
Vellosa
Ortiga
D. 0965
Alboazar
(Andonio)
Ramirez
~1635
Lydia
Standish
Zadan
Zada
Godino
Elena
Godez
1665
Mary
Church
Trastamare
Alboazar
Gonsalo
Nu¤ez
Mendola
Gonsalez
D. ~1040
Gonsalo
Trastamarez
De Maya
Rodrigo
Bermudez
Menzia
Rodrequez
Mendo
Gonsalez
De Maya
Leonguido
Suarez
Bayham
Gonsalo 'el
Lidiador' Mendez
De Maya
Eg„s
Monez
Ogasco
~1694
Thomas
Standish
Toda
Hermiquez
Alboazar
Leonata
Venegas
Ogasco
Gocoy
'el
Nonnato'
Munia
De
Novelas
~1696
John
Standish
D. ~1000
Echigas
Gocoy
Fernando
Ansurez
Nu¤o
Mayor
Diaz
Suaro
De
Novelas
Aragonta
Suarez De
Novelas
Gomez
Echigas
N.n.
De
Saboya
Martin
Fernandez
De La Toro
~1698
Eunice
Standish
Living
Brhely
Gontrada
Mu¤iz De
La Toro
D. ~1090
Egas
Gomez
De Sousa
Gontina
Gonsales
De Maya
D. 1130
Mendo
Venegas
De Sousa
D. ~1035
Fernando
Gonsalez
De Marnelo
Urraca
Gonsalez
D. 1127
Teresa
Fernandez
De Marnelo
D. ~1180
Gonsalo
Mendez
De Sousa
Teresa
Of
Portugal
Sancha
Gomez
De Sousa
1701
Josiah
Standish
Sancho
Nu¤ez De
Barbosa
Urraca
Sanchez
De Barbosa
Mendo
Gonsalez
De Sousa
Mujahid
Ben
Yusuf
Was an enfranchised slave, born at Cordova; became King or Governer of Denia and Almeria, and conquered and became King of the Balearic Isles in 1015.
D. ~0960
Arnoldo
Garcias
Lopa
Sanchez
D. ~0940
Dato II
D. 0947
Raymund
Of
Bigorre
Gersinda
1705
Hannah
Butler
D. ~1000
Arnold I
(Arnaud)
Of Bigorre
D. 0819
Luop
IV
Centulle
D. 0820
Donat
Loup
Agnes
De
Vemandois
D. <0969
Aleramo
Di
Liguria
D. <1014
Anselmo
II Di
Savona
D. 1000
Gisela
Of
Tuscany
1735
John
Standish
D. ~1035
Otberto
I Di
Savona
Olderico
Di
Ramaznano
D. 1062
Otberto
II Di
Savona
Beatrice
Di
Ramaznano
D. 1064
Bertha
Di
Suza
D. <1064
Teto II
Di
Savona
Bonifacio I
Di Savona
Vasto
Almode
De
Toulouse
1735
Josiah
Standish
D. 1085
Guillaume
III De
Montpellier
Ermengarde
De
Melguer
D. 1121
Guillaume
V De
Montpellier
1739
Hannah
Standish
D. 1079
Raymund
I De
Melguer
Beatrice
D. ~1090
Pierre
De
Melguer
Ermensinde
De
Melguer
Daughter
Of
Thibault
Milon I
De La
Ferte
1742
James
Standish
Guillaume
De
Gometz
Lisiard
De
Sceaux
Ansaud
I 'la
Riche'
N.n.
De
Dijon
D. 0958
Raingarde
D. <0954
Raingarde
De
Dijon
1727
Jonathan
Porter
Bodo I
D. 1028
Landry
IV
Mathilde
Of
Lombard
~0993 - 1040
Renaud
I
47
47
~1000 - 1063
Adelaide
Of
France
63
63
~1030 - 1100
Guillaume
I Of
Nevers
70
70
~1598 - 1687
John
Alden
89
89
John Alden appears to have originated from an Alden family residing in Harwich, Essex, England, that was related by marriage to the Mayflower's master Christopher Jones. He was about 21 years old when he was hired to be the cooper, or barrel-maker, for the Mayflower's voyage to America. He was given the option to stay in America, or return to England; he decided to stay. At Plymouth, he quickly rose up from his common seaman status to a prominent member of the Colony. About 1622 or 1623, he married Priscilla, the orphaned daughter of William and Alice Mullins. They had their first child, Elizabeth, around 1624, and would have nine more children over the next twenty years. John Alden was one of the earliest freemen in the Colony, and was elected an assistant to the governor and Plymouth Court as early as 1631, and was regularly re-elected throughout the 1630s. He also became involved in administering the trading activities of the Colony on the Kennebec River, and in 1634 witnessed a trading dispute escalate into a double-killing, as Moses Talbot of Plymouth Colony was shot at point-blank range by trespasser John Hocking, who was then shot and killed when other Plymouth men returned fire. John Alden was held in custody by the neighboring Massachusetts Bay Colony for a few days while the two colonies debated who had jurisdiction to investigate the murders. Myles Standish eventually came to the Bay Colony to provide Plymouth's answer in the matter. Alden, and several other families, including the Standish family, founded the town of Duxbury in the 1630s and took up residence there. Alden served as Duxbury's deputy to the Plymouth Court throughout the 1640s, and served on several committees, including the Committee on Kennebec Trade, and sat on several Councils of War. He also served as colony treasurer. In the 1650s, he build the house at left, in Duxbury, which still stands today. By the 1660s, Alden's frequent public service, combined with his large family of wife and ten children, began to cause his estate to languish, so the Plymouth Court provided him a number of land grants and cash grants to better provide for his family. Throughout the 1670s, Alden began distributing his land holdings to his surviving sons. He died in 1687 at the age of 89, one of the last surviving Mayflower passengers.
~0920 - 0993
Gui II
Of
Tonnerre
73
73
Adela
~0950 - 0998
Milon
IV Of
Tonnerre
48
48
1601 - >1680
Priscilla
Mullins
79
79
One of the first Pilgrims to be married in America.
~0990 - 1039
Renaud
Of
Tonnerre
49
49
~0994
Hervise
~1030 - ~1080
Ermengarde
Of
Tonnerre
50
50
~1624 - 1707
Elizabeth
Alden
83
83
Living
Couppee
~1029 - 1085
Artaud
V De
Forez
56
56
~1033
Ida
~1148 - 1192
Hugues
III Of
Burgudy
44
44
1165
Andre
Guigues
Vi
Beatrix
De
Montferrat
Ida De
Vienne
D. 1190
Humbert
II De
Coligny
~1620 - 1707
William
Pabodie
87
87
1649 - 1728
Mercy
Pabodie
79
79
~0870 - 0950
Fortun
Zuria
80
80
Aurea
Teresa
Pelayez
Diego
Fernandez
De Carrion
Gomez
Diaz De
Carrion
Urracca
Osoriez
Cristina
Pelayez
1647 - 1715
John
Simmons
68
68
Alfonso
Ralph
Picot
1669 - <1739
John
Simmons
70
70
~1090
Robert
De
Ferrers
~1010 - 1089
Walkeline
De
Ferrers
79
79
~1020
Goronwy
Ap
Ednowain
~0979
Eva
Verch
Gergant
Ynyr
Ap
Cadfarch
1671 - 1765
William
Simmons
94
94
Rheingar
Verch
Lluddocaf
~1000 - 1046
Alan
Of
Brittany
46
46
~1034 - ~1094
Emma
De
Normandy
60
60
~1030
Robert (De
Brussi) De
Brus
1679/80 - 1720
Abigail
Church
Arnoul
De
Picqugny
~0949
Touroude
De
Harcourt
Lancelot
De
Bricquibec
Drew
De
Baalun
Daughter
Of Robert
De Essex
1007 - 1071
Robert
De
Essex
64
64
Concubine
3
Concubine
2
Ada
De
Hugelville
1697 - 1768
Mercy
Simmons
71
71
Renaud
I De St.
Valerie
Emma
De St.
Valerie
Bernard
I De St.
Valerie
Gilbert
De St.
Valerie
Herlouin
De
Hugleville
~0935
Concunbine
1
D. 1057
Guillaume
D'eu
Gui Of
Soissons
Regenald
D. ~0950
Archard
De La
Ferte
1699
William
Simmons
D. 1003
Nocher I De
Bar-Sur-
Seine
Giselbert
Of
Soissons
D. 1047
Adelaide
D. >1019
Nocher II De
Bar-Sur-
Aube
Aelis
Of
Soissons
Renaud
Of
Soissons
Aelis
(Adelayde)
De Roucy
D. 1066
Aelis
(Adelaide)
Of Soissons
N.n.
De
Turqueville
1700
Lydia
Simmons
Ansohetil
De
Harcourt
D. 1057
Lanceline
De
Harcourt
D. >1076
Guillaume
D'eu
Lithuise
De
Troyes
D. 1118
Miles 'le
Grand' De
Montlhery
Elizabeth
De
Montlhery
Sybilla
1701
Joseph
Simmons
Living
Couppee
D. ~1079
Thibaud
I De
Dampierre
D. 1110
Thibaud
II De
Dampierre
Gui I
De
Dampierre
~1060
Andre
De
Baudmont
~1064
Agnes
De
Braine
D. 1165
Helvide
De
Baudmont
1704
John
Simmons
~1145 - 1195
Helvide
De
Dampierre
50
50
~1150 - 1180
Vulgrin
III De
Taillefer
30
30
Ponce
De
Lusignan
D. 1060
Hugues
V De
Lusignan
~1039 - 1110
Hugues
Vi De
Lusignan
71
71
1706
Abigail
Simmons
Geoffrey
III De
Rancon
Fossessie
Raoul I
De
Thouars
Aldearde
De
Thouars
D. ~0967
Hugues III
'le Blanc' De
Lusignan
Arsendis
D. ~1030
Hugues IV
'le Chiliarque'
De Lusignan
D. 1181
Agnes
De
Montfort
1708
Rebecca
Simmons
Isabeau
De
Meulan
Maurice
II De
Craon
Amury
I De
Craon
D. 1222
Guillaume
Des
Roches
Marguerite
De
Sable
Jeanne
Des
Roches
~1220
Isabel
De
Craon
Guillaime
De
Fougeres
Agatha
De
Humet
~1184 - 1222
Geoffroi
De
Fougeres
38
38
1709
Mary
Simmons
D. 1231
Eudes
III De
Porhoet
Marguerite
~1184
Maud
De
Porhoet
D. 1256
Raoul
III De
Fougeres
1712 - 1788
Benjamin
Simmons
76
76
D. 1020
M‚en I
De
Fougeres
D. 1048
Alfred
De
Fougeres
D. 1092
M‚en II
De
Fougeres
D. 1124
Raoul I
De
Fougeres
Henri
De
Fougeres
1716 - 1796
Mercy
Taylor
80
80
Olive
De
Penthievre
D. 1194
Raoul
II De
Fougeres
Jeanne
De Dol
D. 1139
Geldouin
I De
Dol
Noga
1735
Peter
Simmons
1736 - 1775
Cornelius
Simmons
39
39
1739
Benjamin
Simmons
D. ~0986
Ramelon
II De
Crequy
Alice
D'oisy
D. ~1007
Baudouin
De
Crequy
D. 1038
Henry
I De
Louvain
Maud
Of
Lorraine
Marguerite
De
Louvain
Anne
De
Crequy
1742
Samuel
Simmons
Suhard
De
Craon
D. ~1030
Guerin
De
Craon
Bertha
De
Craon
Martin
I De
Vitre
Ruivallonde
De
Vitre
Genergan
De La
Vicaire
Trestan
De
Vitre
1744 - 1821
Hannah
Simmons
76
76
Ennoguende
De
Fougeres
Robert
De
Vitre
Ennoguende
De
Vitre
Hugh
De
Chantoce
Elvira
Tiphanie
De
Chantoce
D. 1098
Robert
De
Nevers
Avise
De
Sable
Renaud
De
Craon
1747
Abigail
Simmons
Maurice
I De
Craon
Hugues
De
Craon
Isabel
(Marquise)
Ivar-
Deinlaus
D. 0896
Sigtryoor
D. 0940
Harold
I
D. 0989
Godfred
I
Harold
'the
Black'
D. 1092
Godfred
II
D. 0551
Echoaid
1750
Ivory
Simmons
D. 0577
Aodh
D. 0601
Vadhach
D. 0649
Raghalach
1753
Mercy
Simmons
~1105
Adelhyde
Geoffrey
Murdac
Juliane
Murdac
Hugh
IV De
Monfort
Adeline
De
Beaumont
1868 - 1942
Edwy
Rolf
Brown
73
73
BROWN, EDWY ROLFE (1868-1942). Edwy Rolfe Brown, oilman, son of John A. and Isabel (Shaw) Brown, was born in Little Hocking, Ohio, on December 4, 1868. He attended Marietta Academy and received a B.A. degree from Marietta College in 1894. From 1894 to 1898 he worked for the Standard Oil Company of New York, first as yardman and later as superintendent of the refinery. He moved to Texas with Joseph Stephen Cullinanqv in April 1898 and established a refinery at Corsicana. In 1901 or 1902 Brown became general manager of the Corsicana Refining Company, the Corsicana Pipe Line Company, and the Corsicana Petroleum Company; in 1911 he became vice president of the Magnolia Petroleum Company and in 1914 moved to Dallas as general manager. He was director and vice president of Standard Oil Company of New York from 1925 to 1929 and chairman of the board after 1932. He was a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas from 1930 to 1935 and was city commissioner of Dallas in 1931-32. He served as president of the Dallas Chamber of Commerce, as a director of the Southwestern Life Insurance Company and of the Gulf Insurance Company, and as trustee of the University of Dubuque and of Marietta College in Ohio. He was one of the organizers of the Texas Centennialqv Central Exposition in Dallas in 1936. On November 14, 1900, Brown married Nelle Loraine Hamilton; they had one daughter. Nelle died in 1911. On April 30, 1913, Brown married Florrie Bess McCrery. He died in New York City on January 25, 1942, and was buried in Grove Hill Cemetery, Dallas. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Who's Who in America, 1938-39. Dallas Morning News, January 28, 1942.
1874 - 1950
Ralph
Clinton
Holmes
76
76
President of Texas Company 1930's; of Binghamton, NY 1917 Houston, Texas City Directory, 1917 Vice president and manager refining department, The Texas Company (Inc). res: 815 Hadley av : 1920 V.P. of Texas Co. Manhattan, NY. PRESIDENTS OF INDIAN REFINING COMPANY, INCORPORATED RALPH C. HOLMES (ALSO PRESIDENT OF THE TEXAS CORPORATION) 14 JANUARY 1931 - 24 APRIL 1933 The OLEANDER REVIEW & OUTLOOK OLEAN 1922-1923 Mark M. Holmes, especially qualified by business experience and financial ability, was born in Sharon Township, Potter County, Pa., January 8, 1876. He came to Page: 39 Olean’s Banking Institutions ~ Continued Olean as a boy with his parents and went to school in this city. He worked for two years in order to provide the money to go through high school and graduated from the Olean High School in the class of 1895. In the same graduating class were his two brothers, Ralph C. Holmes, now vice-president of the Texas Oil Co., and Earl D. Holmes who is in the hardware business in Caspar, Wyo. ChevronTexacoDayOneBrochure 1918 The Texas Co. employees Ralph Holmes and Fred Manley develop the first commercial process for the synthetic production of gasoline from heavy oil.
1888
William
Oscar
Woods
1930 salesman, insurance, Houston, TX.
~1130 - ~1182
Thomas
Basset
52
52
~1134 - >1186
Alice
De
Dunstanville
52
52
1756 - 1841
Ichabod
Simmons
85
85
~1158 - 1217
Alan
Basset
59
59
~1159
Alice
De Gai
~1172
Aline
Basset
1173 - 1216
Drew
De
Montagu
43
43
~1010
Manasses
De
Dammartin
Constance
~1070
Hugues
II De
Dammartin
~1074
Rothride
~0920 - 0997
Conrad
Of
Swabia
77
77
Jutta
1761
Ruth
Simmons
~0959 - <0995
Richilde
Of
Metz
36
36
~0965 - 1032
Dietrich
I
(Thierry)
67
67
~1000
Hildegarde
D'egisheim
~0975 - 1026
Frederick
II De
Bar
51
51
~0988
Mathilda
Of
Swabia
~0987
Eberhard
V
Thibaut
Sconehilde
~0960 - >1022
Louis I
De
Mousson
62
62
~0990 - >1028
Richwin
(Richuris)
38
38
1782
Dianna
Simmons
~1019 - ~1071
Louis
II De
Mousson
52
52
~1020 - ~1092
Sophia
De
Bar
72
72
~1045 - 1115
Thierry II
(Thibaud)
De Mousson
70
70
~1012 - 1075
Gerard
III
63
63
~1016
Petronilla
Of
Verdun
D. ~0910
Eudes
De
Gournay
Hugh
De
Gournay
Renaud
De
Gournay
Alberada
Hugh I
De
Gournay
1785
George
Pearce
Simmons
~0998 - 1074
Hugh II
De
Gournai
76
76
~1026 - 1093
Hugh
III De
Gournai
67
67
~0980
Gerard
Flaitel
~1026
Basilia
Flaitel
D. 1104
Gerard
De
Gournai
~1084 - 1096
Edith
De
Warrene
12
12
~1073 - 1129
Thomas
De
Coucy
56
56
~1080 - >1147
Melisinde
De
Crecy
67
67
~1112
Millicient
De Coucy
De Maria
~1091 - 1180
Hugh
IV De
Gournai
89
89
1787
Caleb
Simmons
1715
Ichabod
Simmons
D. 1217
William
De
Montagu
Isabel
~1122
Philip
Fitzrobert
~1138
N.n.
De
Berkeley
1716 - 1807
Peleg
Simmons
90
90
Rhys
Vychan
Griffith
Hir
Efa
Ednyfed
1717
Mary
Brownell
Sionet
Verch
Rhiwallon
Rhys
Sais
Tudor
De
Whittington
Sionet
Ranulphus
De
Whittington
Ingelric
Peverel
Maud
Peverel
Miletta
De
Whittington
1741 - 1833
Thomas
Simmons
91
91
~1080 - 1150
Geoffroy
II De
Dinan
70
70
Radegonde
D. ~1154
Joyce
De
Dinan
Hawise
De
Dinan
D. ~1100
Fulk I
~1743 - <1769
Martha
Hart
26
26
Warine
II
D. 1219
Fulk II
Fitzwarine
~1160 - 1231
Robert
Vavasour
71
71
~1164
Juliana
De
Ros
Llywarch
Gam
Letitia
Verch
Gwerystan
Elizabeth
Manchester
D. 1045
Hamon
De
Creully
Killed in Battle.
~0967 - 1047
Hamon
De
Creully
80
80
~0971 - 1035
Godchild
De
Belesme
64
64
~1089
Agnes
De
Gant
~1082
Magdaline
~1060
Nigel
Of
Chester
Geoffrey
Of
Brittany
Kadwidge
Of
Normandy
~1025
Emma
Of
Brittany
~1020
Ebon
De
Contentin
1761 - 1841
Ichabod
Simmons
80
80
~1040
Lucia
Of
Mercia
D. 1094
Ivo De
Tailboys
Elstrude
De
Flanders
Sigefred
'the
Dane'
Heloise
De
Bec
Grimald
Of
Monaco
Crispina
Crispin
De
Bec
Gilbert
Crispin
1764 - 1846
Anna
Thomas
82
82
Fulk
D'anjou
Gunnore
D'anjou
Elise
Crispin
Robert
Malet
Philippa
Malbeck
~1156
Thomas
Basset
1787
Mahalah
Simmons
D. 1307
Margaret
De
Grey
Beatrice
De St.
Liz
William
De St.
Liz
Henry
De
Grey
Hawise
D. 1306
Ralph
Fitzbarnard
Agatha
De La
Lee
1788
Burgess
Thomas
Simmons
D. 1078
Pietro
De
Maurienne
D. ~1111
Alicia
De
Maurienne
1796 - 1885
Anna
(Annie)
Simmons
89
89
Eleanor
Of
Arborea
Bonifacio
De
Saluzzo
~1020
Guillaume
II De
Montferrat
1790 - 1863
Joseph
King
72
72
Otta
D'aglie
Alice
De
Montferrat
Gonario
Eleanor
Of
Arborea
D. 1175
Manfredo
I De
Saluzzo
D. 1215
Manfredo
II De
Saluzzo
N.n.
De
Saluzzo
~1145 - 1197
Guglielmo
De
Ceva
52
52
N.n.
De
Vento
1816 - 1909
Henry
Fales
King
92
92
~1180 - 1219
Guglielmo
De
Ceva
39
39
~1210 - 1268
Giorgio
I De
Ceva
58
58
Menzia
~1084
Gunnora
Bigod
<1107
Cicely
Bigod
Suain
De
Essex
~1080
Robert
De
Essex
~1110 - 1163
Henry
De
Essex
53
53
1817 - 1902
John
T.
King
85
85
<1120 - 1194
Aubrey
De
Vere
74
74
~1152
Lucia
(Agnes)
De Essex
~1164 - 1221
Robert
De
Vere
57
57
Walter
Bolebec
Helawise
~1140 - <1187
Hugh
(Walter) De
Bolebec
47
47
~1142
Sibil
De
Vesey
~1164 - 1205
Isabel
De
Bolebec
41
41
~1211
Lota
(Lora) La
Zouche
John
De
Sandford
1821 - 1893
Anna
S.
King
72
72
D. 1250
Gilbert
De
Saundford
Guillaume
De
Leuchers
Ness
De
Leuchers
~1056
Avise
Fitzosbern
Osgod
Clopa
Ermenfroi
Of
Amiens
Landry
De
Dreux
Erneburge
De
Caux
Asperling
De
Vaudreuil
Camville
De
Caux
1823 - 1891
Charles
C.
King
68
68
~1117 - ~1166
Gundred
De
Warenne
49
49
Hugh
De
Beauchamp
1824 - 1910
Rachel
S.
King
86
86
~0738 - 0810
Gudrod
Halfdansson
72
72
~0770 - 0840
Olaf
Gudrodsson
70
70
1826 - 1846
David
King
19
19
Sigurd
'dragon
In Eye'
Thora
Helfi
Ingiald
Ketel
Flatness
1828 - 1920
Albert
H.
King
92
92
Inguild
D. 0871
Olaf
'the
White'
D. >0892
Auda 'the
Deep-
Minded'
After her husband's death settled at Hvamm, near Broadfirth in the N.W. of Iceland in 892.
D. 0890
Thorstein
'the
Red'
Eyvind
'the
Eastman'
Thurid
Groa
Ragnvald
I
Turf
Einat I
~0894 - 0963
Thorfin
I
69
69
1830 - 1861
Ichabod
S.
King
31
31
Duncan
Of
Caithness
Grelod
Of
Caithness
D. 0980
Hlodver
Kiarval
(Carroll)
Audna
Of
Ireland
Hvarflad
Of
Orkney
Gille
Of
Colonsay
Gille
Adomnan
Gillebridge
~1020 - 1083
Somerlan
I
63
63
1832 - 1876
Betsey
Wilcox
King
43
43
Godfrey
Mac
Fergus
Daughter
Of
Alpin
Daughter
Of
Godfrey
Gille
Adomnan
D. ~1165
Ranulph
Of
Moray
Bethoc
~0960 - 1014
Sigurd
II
54
54
1833 - 1875
Amanda
Maria
King
41
41
Buried: Pleasant View Cemetery, near Stone Church
~0984
Anleta
Of
Scotland
~1042 - 1064
Thorfinn
II 'the
Dane'
22
22
Heraud
Thora
Alaf
Hundar
Steinar
Biorn
Audun
Skokul
Thora
Moshale
1836 - 1888
Timothy
Tripp
Brayton
51
51
Buried: Pleasant View Cemetery, near Stone Church
Gudbiorg
Ulfhild
Gudbrand
Kula
Ulfhild
Biorn
D. 0960
Gudrod
1858 - 1901
Rodney
Durfee
Brayton
42
42
Arne
D. 1062
Finn
Arneson
Asted
Of
Uplands
Sigurd
Halfdan
Sigurdson
Thorbiorg
D. 0998
Harold
'the
Greenlander'
~0992 - 1030
Saint
Olaf II
Haroldsson
38
38
Olaf II, also called St. Olaf, king of Norway (1015-28). A Viking (full name Olaf Haraldsson), he was converted to Christianity in Rouen, Normandy, in the service of the exiled King Ethelred II of England. He returned to Norway in 1015 and, as a descendant of King Harold I, quickly won recognition, displacing the ruling earls. He introduced a strong central administration, completed the conversion of the Norwegians begun by Olaf I, and built churches throughout the land. Many local chieftains, alienated by Olaf's domineering ways, sided with Canute II, king of Denmark and England, when he invaded Norway in 1028; Olaf was compelled to take refuge with his brother-in-law, Grand Duke Yaroslav of Novgorod (978-1054). Returning with a force to Norway in 1030, he was defeated by a peasant army and killed at the Battle of Stiklestad. Olaf was subsequently worshiped as Norway's patron saint and was canonized in 1164. He was also revered throughout Scandinavia and in England, Germany, and the Baltic countries. His feast day is July 29.
Astrid
Sophia
W. Pettey
Chace
1024 - 1047
Magnus
I 'the
Good'
23
23
Magnus I (of Norway and Denmark), called The Good, king of Norway (1035-47) and Denmark (1042-47). The son of Olaf II, he grew up in Russia but was accepted as king in Norway on the death of Canute II. He helped King Hardecanute of Denmark against the Wends in return for the agreement that if either of them died without heir, the other would succeed him. Magnus accordingly became king of Denmark in 1042, and the following year he won a decisive victory over the Wends. He laid a claim to the English throne, too, but could not follow it up. He was succeeded in Norway by his uncle, Harold III.
~1032
Ingebiorg
~1059 - 1103
Paul I
Thorfinsson
44
44
Ivar-
Hviti
D. 1079
Hakon
Ivarsson
Raginhild
Magnusdatter
Ragnhild
Of
Sweden
D. 1122
H†kon
Moddan
Of
Caithness
Helga
Of
Caithness
1860 - 1941
Jennie
Betsey
Brayton
80
80
Raverta
Of
Ireland
~0987 - 1043
Gonselon
I 'le
Grand'
56
56
Marg
Of
Antwerp
~0982
Adeline
Of
Holland
~0950
Arnouf
De
Boulogne
~0976
Ernicule
De
Boulogne
~1180 - ~1276
Devorgilla
Of
Galloway
96
96
Hugh
De
Talbot
Jeanne
De
Talbot
Robert
D'estouteville
Andrew
Lake
Manchester
Baldric
A Saxon Thane.
Hugh
Baldric
~1100 - 1183
Robert
De
Stuteville
83
83
~1092
Gerard
De
Glanville
1861 - 1937
Charles
Benjamin
Brayton
76
76
~1096
Emma
De
Cukeney
~1104
Helewise
~1124 - 1203
Guillaume
De
Stuteville
79
79
~1124
Bertha
De
Glanville
~1146
Nicolas
De
Stuteville
Fannie
B.
Durfee
~1150
Gunnora
De
Gourny
1864 - 1958
Caroline
Maria
Brayton
93
93
~1113
Isabel
De
Say
~1137 - 1210
William
Fitzalan
73
73
D. ~0890
Malahuc
D. ~0933
Richard
I De St.
Sauveur
1853 - 1922
Frederick
Agustus
Dammon
68
68
Niel I
De St.
Sauveur
Roger
De St.
Sauveur
D. ~1066
Niel III
De St.
Sauveur
Adela
D'eu
D. ~1066
William
D'aubign‚
N.n.
De
Plessis
1102 - 1198
Harvey
Walter
Fitzrobert
96
96
~1006 - 1063
Osborne
II De
Bolebec
57
57
Geoffrey
De
Bolebec
1891 - 1931
Lillian
Brayton
Dammon
40
40
Geoffrey
D'arques
Raoul
De
Tankerville
D. 1130
Guillaume
De
Tankerville
Amelie
Guillaume
D'arques
Beatrice
De
Bolebec
Maud
D'arques
D. 1140
Renebault
De
Tankerville
Chester
Brown
Hammond
Odon
Stigand
Agnes
Stigand
D. ~1125
Geoffrey
De
Clinton
Agnes
Lesceline
De
Clinton
D. ~1080
Bertram
De
Verdon
~1115 - ~1140
Norman
De
Verdon
25
25
~1145 - 1192
Bertram
De
Verdon
47
47
Rohesa
~1167 - 1231
Nicolas
De
Verdon
64
64
Clarence
Eliott
Hammond
Joane
Fitzpiers
D. 1246
Rohesi
De
Verdon
~1098
Gilbert
De
Becket
~1099
Rohese
'the
Saracen'
~1120
Maud
De
Becket
1165 - 1205
Theobald
Fitzwalter
40
40
1200 - 1230
Theobald
Le Butzllen
De Verdon
30
30
~1012
Adele De
Bar-Sur-
Aube
~0980
Adele De
Notcher
De Bretuil
D. <1040
Nocher III De
Bar-Sur-
Aube
1893 - 1981
Nina
May
Dammon
88
88
Buried: Oak Grove Cemetery
Fouche
De
Chƒrtres
~0960
Emmeline
De
Chƒrtres
~0960
Hildouin
De
Breteuil
Dau
~0515
Oengus
Fergne
Mac
Fergusa
~0520
Lassi
Ingen
Fergna
Nannid
Baeth
Eochu
Mac
Báeth
1888 - 1987
Richard
Leonard
Bailey
98
98
Buried: Oak Grove Cemetery
Blathmac
Mac
Eogain
Etain
Ingen
Mongáin
~0640
Cellach
Cualann Mac
Gerthide
~0645 - 0715
Mugain
Ingen
Faílbe
70
70
Gerthilde
Mac Dícolla
Dánae
Failbe
Mac
Domnaill
Ethne
Ingen
Crundmáel
Donal
Mideach
Indellach
Mac
Meic
Fidcossa
1912
Florence
Carrie
Bailey
~0950 - 1018
Donncuan
Mac Dúnlaing
O'toole
68
68
Acceded 1014.
~0980 - 1041
Gilla
Comgaill
O'toole
61
61
~1005 - 1056
Gilla
Coemgin
O'toole
51
51
~1030
Doncuan
O'toole
D. ~1115
Donal
O'bryne
D. 0526
Ailill
Macd¹nlainge
Baptized by St. Patrick in 460.
D. 0896
Murchada
Mac
Maenaig
D. 0945
Aurchad
Mac
Murchada
Olioll
Fionn
Cearbhall
1911 - 1983
Gordon
Fraser
72
72
Emmelina
Patrick
De
Chaworth
Payne
De
Mundabliel
~0951
Turchetil
De
Harcourt
~0953
Adeline
De
Montfort
~0971 - ~1024
Anchetil
De
Harcourt
53
53
First to assume the name Harcourt from the bough of Harcourt near Brionne; occurs in Charter Bernay 1014 when was very young.
~1000
Eve
De
Boissay
Walter
Maltravers
1914
Richard
Frederick
Bailey
John
Maltravers
Alice
Turberville
~1080 - 1191
Alice
(Helen) De
Bourgogne
111
111
Robert
De
Vitre
~0973 - 1008
Geoffroi
I
35
35
~0977 - 1034
Havoise
Of
Rennes
57
57
~0980 - 1051
Alain
Canhiard
71
71
1912
Mildred
Isadore
Collins
~0984 - 1064
Judith
De
Nantes
80
80
~0999 - 1079
Eudon
80
80
~1018
Agnes
De
Cornoualle
~1060 - 1135
Etienne
75
75
Havoise
Of
Guingamp
Agnorie
De
Bretagne
D. 1150
Oliver II
(Alan)
De Dinan
Living
Bailey
D. ~1094
Gaultier
De La
Guerche
Basilie
Emma
De La
Guerche
D. 1202
Gilbert
Basset
D. ~1074
Turstain
Haldub
Emma
Living
Shooshan
D. ~1066
Eudo
Al
Chapel
Muriel
De
Conteville
Muriel
Richard
De St.
Sauveur
Anna
Ralph
De La
Haye
Oliva
D'aubign‚
Robert
De La
Haye
D. 1186
Richard
De La
Haye
Maud
De
Vernon
Living
Cardoza
Nicola
De La
Haye
D. ~1190
Richard
De
Camville
Gerald
De
Camville
~0896
Editha
Of
England
Hinguar
D. 0926
Sitric II
Sitric
Of
Desmond
Aulaf
V
Curaran
Living
Bailey
D. 1023/30
Gormflath
~0915 - 0972
Murchad
Mac
Finn
57
57
Brychon
Gwired
Daughter
Of
Wibba
Cunebald
D. 0593
Crida
First king of Mercia.
D. 0606
Wibba
Living
Bailey
Gwenwenen
D. 0596
Domangart
Loefric
D. ~0830
Alfgar
D. 0870
Alfgar
II
Leofric
II
Living
Williams
Blaidd
'rudd'
Angharad
Verch
Rhys
D. 1216
William
Martin
Living
Williams
Maud
Peverell
Rogerus
Magnus
Roger
Rogerus
Magnus
Roger
(Hugh) De
Montgomery
Living
Riggle
~0961
Senfrie
De
Crepon
Rolf
De
Beaumont
Daughter
Of
Rolf
Arnulf
De
Beaumont
Milo
De
Cogan
Christiana
Painel
William
De
Cogan
Richard
De
Cogan
Amabilis
Living
Williams
~1120 - >1145
Walter
De
Ridelisford
25
25
~1145
Basile
De
Ridelisford
Philip
De
Pendergast
Maud
De
Quincy
~1150
Gerald
De
Pendergast
Maud
Fitzwalter
D. 0918
Eadwulf
Ealdred
N.n.
De
Nogent
Living
Williams
Amaury
De
Montfort
Daughter
Of
Isaac
~1030
Isabel
De
Broyes
~1065
Isabel
De
Montfort
~1035 - 1101
Ralph
De
Toeni
66
66
~0974
Renart
De
Broyes
Heloise
De
Blois
~0992 - >1028
Isembert
De
Broyes
36
36
~1012 - >1058
Hugh
Bardoul
De Broyes
46
46
William
Fitzosborne
1895 - 1922
Mildred
Dammon
27
27
William
De
Cheney
Alice
De
Cheney
Osbert
De
Cundi
D. 1205
Fulk
Painel
Aude
William
Painel
D. ~1136
Robert
De
Bampton
Juliana
De
Bampton
Earl H.
Davis
~1023
Gerberge
De
Boulogne
~1005 - 1065
Frederic
II
60
60
~0977 - ~1052
Adela
Of
Lorraine
75
75
Konrad
Of
Arlon
D. 1052
Walrem
I 'the
Old'
D. 1094
Judith
Von
Schweinfurt
Reting
I
D. <0994
Reting
II
Earl H.
Davis
Immed
II
Glismode
Of
Saxony
Frideruna
D. ~1020
Aribo I
Adela
D. 1026
Hartwig
II
1865 - 1950
Timothy
Tripp
Brayton
84
84
Buried: Pleasant View Cemetery, near Stone Church
~0994 - >1064
Rogelinde
De
Lorraine
70
70
~1000 - 1063
Albert
II
63
63
Baldwin
De
Clermont
~1095 - <1144
Gui De
Baudmont
49
49
Alice
Thomas
De St.
Valerie
D. 1231
Adela
De
Pontheiu
Eunice
E.
Orswell
Eudes
Of
Cambrai
Thibaud
Odele
D. 1067
Roger
De St.
Pol
Hadwide
De
Houchin
D. ~1070
Hugues
I De
St. Pol
Clememtina
D. ~1030
Hugues II
'candavaine'
De St. Pol
Elisenda
(Helensinde)
~1100 - 1141
Hugues
III De
St. Pol
41
41
1868 - 1950
Albert
King
Brayton
82
82
Beatrice
~1130 - 1164
Anselme
Candavaine
De St. Pol
34
34
~1138
Estachie
De
Champagne
D. 0963
Geoffrey
I De
Chƒteaudun
Hermengarde
D. <0989
Hugues
I De
Chƒteaudun
Hildegarde
De
Blois
D. ~1005
Geoffrey
II De
Chƒteaudun
Rotrou
De
Nogent
Melesinde
Marrian
A.
Dioelley
~0990 - 1038
Geoffrey
III De
Chƒteaudun
48
48
D. >1031
Fulbert
De
Montague
Heloise
De
Mortaigne
Guerin
De
Domfort
Baudouin
Des
Roches
D. 1110
Robert
II De
Sable
1835
Abby
G.
King
Hersende
De La
Suse
D. 1145
Lisiard
De
Sable
Tephanie
De
Briolš
D. ~1151
Robert
III De
Sable
D. ~1151
Hersende
D'anthenaise
D. 1196
Robert
IV De
Sable
Clemence
De
Mayenne
1841 - 1927
Clark
Green
King
86
86
1791
Pardon
Simmons
D. 1161
Juhel II
De
Mayenne
1794
Abel
Simmons
Clemence
D'alencon
Savaric
D'anthenaise
1794
Martha
Simmons
Geoffroy
'le Vieux'
De Sable
Adelais
D. ~1105
Geoffroy
De
Briolš
Garnoise
De
Jarzš
~1795
Phebe
Simmons
Herbert
De La
Suse
~0615 - 0718
Clodulphe
103
103
Bishop of Metz.
Son
Of
Guerin
Hunfrid
Of
Istria
D. 0814
Gui
~1798
Permilla
(Pamelia)
Simmons
1803 - 1831
Ichabod
Simmons
28
28
Landelaja
Of
Capua
Guaimer
Of
Salerno
D. 0901
Gauimar
I Of
Salerno
1809
William
L.
Simmons
Gui Of
Salerno
Lambert
Of
Spoleto
D. 0999
Giovanni
II
Sikelgatia
Of
Salerno
D. 1027
Guaimar
III
D. 1014
Pandulf
III 'the
Old'
D. 1027
Gaitelgrima
Of
Benevento
~1013 - 1052
Guaimar
IV
39
39
1762
Abner
Simmons
D. 1027
Pandulf
Gemma
Of
Teano
~1070 - 1138
Henri
De La
Roche
68
68
Mathilde
De
Limburg
Godfrey
De
Guise
Guy
De
Guise
Bouchard
IV De
Montmorency
Agnes
De
Beaumont
Adeline
De
Montmorency
1769
Pardon
Simmons
Savory
I De
Thouars
~0895 - >0955
Aimery
II De
Thouars
60
60
~0899
Altanore
D. 0924
Maingaud
D'aunay
D. 0949
Cadelon
I
D'aunay
Gisela
~0900
Cadelon
II
D'aunay
1770
John
Simmons
Remi
Odulgarde
~0904 - <0992
Senegonde
88
88
Hildegarde
De
Beaugency
Lancelin
II De
Beaugency
Adelberge
~1000 - 1040
Alain
III
40
40
D. 1084
Berthe
De
Blois
D. 1072
Havoise
De
Bretagne
~1010 - 1084
Hoel
De
Cornouaille
74
74
~1780
Edward
Simmons
~1780
Amasa
Simmons
~1780
Stephen
Simmons
D. ~1126
Louis
De
Bournonville
Herald
De
Furnes
~1780
George
Simmons
Adelle
De
Selvesle
Adelle
De
Selvesle
Eustache
I De
Finnes
~1099 - 1112
Conan
De
Finnes
13
13
D. 1126
Silvie
Alix
De
Bournonville
D. ~1137
Eustache
II De
Finnes
Francoise
De
Miraumont
~1062 - 1100
Geoffrey
Of
Bouillon
38
38
Godfrey of Bouillon, French nobleman, soldier, and Crusader. In 1082 he was created duke of Lower Lorraine by Henry IV, Holy Roman emperor, and had his capital at Bouillon. He and his brother Baldwin I, later king of Jerusalem, led an army from the Low Countries in the First Crusade. Arriving in Constantinople in December 1096, he succeeded in establishing relations with the Eastern Roman emperor Alexius I Comnenus. In 1099 Godfrey participated in the siege and capture of Jerusalem; offered the title of king of Jerusalem, he refused it for religious reasons and was instead named baron and defender of the Holy Sepulcher. In August 1099, when Egyptian forces moved to attack Jerusalem, Godfrey defeated them at Ascalon (now Ashquelon, Israel). As the first Christian ruler of Jerusalem, Godfrey later became the hero of many songs, legends, and literary works, including several of the French medieval epics known as chansons de geste and of the epic poem Jerusalem Delivered (1575; trans. 1884), by the Italian poet Torquato Tasso.
~1064
Beatrice
De
Mandeville
~1780
Hannah
Simmons
~1081 - ~1130
Guillaume
De
Boulogne
49
49
~1110 - ~1183
Guillaume
'farramus'
73
73
~1112
Matilda
Daughter
Of
Eustace
D. 1230
Nicolas
De
Conde
Isabel
De
Moreaumes
Eustace
III De
Roeux
Daughter
Of
Baldwin
~0982
Luitgard
Von
Habsburg
D. 0911
Adalbert
III
~1780
Ruth
Simmons
~0890
Eberhard
II
Gisela
0970 - 1015
Ernst I
45
45
D. 1005
Ernst II
Elisabeth Of
Lower-
Alsace
0974 - 1024
Berthold
Becelin
50
50
D. ~0830
Erlafried
II
Albert
D. ~0868
Albert
D. ~0902
Gozbert
~1780
Rachel
Simmons
D. ~0960
Burkard
D. ~1003
Albert
I Of
Calw
Bertha
Of
Calw
Sister of Pope Victor II.
0980 - 1040
Leopold
Of
Chalm
60
60
1002
Egon I
1027
N.n.
Of
Urach
1055
Egon II
Cunigunde
~1085 - 1158
Egon
III
73
73
Edith
1780
Thomas
Simmons
D. 1196
Egon
IV
Kunigunde
D. 1111
Berthold
II
D. 1111
Agnes
Von
Rheinfelden
D. 1152
Conrad
Of
Zahringen
D. 1154
Clemence
De
Namur
Berthold
IV
Edith
Von
Froburg
Amatrada
Of
Ringleheim
Everhard
Of
Niederlahngau
1742
Moses
Simmons
D. 0966
Everhard
II Of
Niederlahngau
0966 - 0990
Otto I
Of
Zutphen
24
24
N.n.
Of
Pont
Hroar
Valladar
Of
Roeskilde
Halfdan
Of
Roeskilde
D. 0750
Ivar
(Vidfadmi)
Of Roeskilde
~0633
Auda
Of
Roeskilde
Frode
Of
Lethra
Halfdan
Of
Lethra
1744
Gideon
Simmons
Hraeric
Of
Lethra
D. 0770
Harold
I
D. 0806
Halfdan
(Sigfrid)
Of Jutland
D. 0837
Hemming
Of
Jutland
D. ~0852
Harold
Of
Jutland
Vandalmode
D. 0961
Umberto
Of
Tuscany
Valdrada
Of
Tuscany
D. 0996
Pietro
Candiano
Elvira
Giron
1746
Mary
Simmons
D. 1230
Alonso Tellez
'el Viejo' De
Meneses
Telperez
De
Meneses
Gontrode
Garcia De
Villamayor
D. ~1124
Pedro
Bernardo De
St. Fagundo
Maria
Suerez
De Maya
D. ~1119
Bernardo
Diaz De
Asturias
N.n.
De
Montealgre
Alonso
Tellez De
Montealgre
D. ~1094
Suero Mendez
'el Bueno' De
Maya
Ervigilde
Nu¤ez De
Asturias
1749
Phebe
Simmons
Nu¤o
De
Asturias
D. ~1170
Garcia
Ordo¤ez De
Villamayor
Maria
De
Almenara
D. 1188
Ermengaud
Vii De
Urgel
D. ~1200
Juan
Fernandez 'el
Bueno' De Lima
Maria
Paes De
Ribera
~0795
Garcia
Iniquez
Urraca
D. ~0852
Iniga
Ximinez
Arista
Ximena
1751
Rhoda
Simmons
Galindo
Of
Gascony
Moninho
Osoriez De
Cabrera
Maria
Nu¤ez
Payo
Moniz De
Ribera
Nu¤o
Suarez
Urraca
Nu¤ez De
Bragancon
Frole
Sanchez
De Barbosa
Pedro
Fernandez De
Bragancon
Nu¤o
Perez De
Bragancon
1753
Unis
Simmons
Hermigo
Alboazar
D. ~1085
Egas
Gosendez
Bayham
Valida
Trocosendez
Bayham
Manenho
Venegas
Ogasco
Hermigo
Venegas
Ogasco
Useo
Venegas
Sancha
Venegas
Bayham
Teresa
Suarez
De Maya
1755
Peleg
Simmons
Mendo
Alao De
Bragancon
Fernan 'el
Viejo' Mendez
De Bragancon
Men
Fernandez De
Bragancon
Fernan 'el
Bravo' Mendez
De Bragancon
Elvira
Gualtar
Teresa
Alfonso
Oroana
Mendez
De Sousa
Moninho
Hermiquez
Ogasco
Oroana
Men Moniz
De
Riba-Duero
1757
Benjamin
Simmons
Elvira De
Riba-
Duero
D. 0735
Eudes
D'aquitaine
Valtrude
D. 0774
Hunold
D'aquitaine
D. 0763
Waiffre
D'aquitaine
Adele
Of
Gascony
D. 0778
Loup II
D. 0813
Aldalric
D. 0812
Centulle
Hatton
1760
Joseph
Simmons
D. 0774
Loup I
Walchigise
Valtrude
0608 - 0631
Charibert
II Of
France
23
23
Gisele
Of
Gascony
D. 0688
Boggis
D'aquitaine
Oda
~1173 - 1227
Beatrice
De
Chƒlons
54
54
D. ~1197
Etienne
II
D'auxonne
Judith
De
Lorraine
1673
Isaac
Simmons
D. 1203
Guillaume
III De
Chƒlons
Beatrice
Of
Germany
D. 0957
Humbert
I De
Salins
D. 1028
Humbert
II De
Salins
D. ~1028
Ermengarde
De
Semur
D. ~1044
Gauthier
I De
Salins
Aremburge
D. 0990
Geoffroy
I De
Semur
Maud
De
Chƒlons
Lambert
De
Semur
1677
Martha
Simmons
D. 1176
Matthieu
I De
Lorraine
D. ~1195
Bertha
(Judith) Of
Swabia
Robert
D'autun
D. 0978
Lambert
D'autun
D. 0956
Arlebaud
De
Semur
D. 1065
Thibault
De
Chƒlons
Ermentrude
D. 1080
Adelaide
De
Chƒlons
Arnauli
D'auvergne
Bertilde
~1678 - 1748/49
Benjamin
Simmons
D. ~0947
Matfroy
D'auvergne
D. ~0955
Etienne
I De
Thiers
Ermengarde
D. 1031
Guy II
De
Thiers
D. ~1043
Reclinde
D. ~1046
Guillaume
I De
Thiers
Ponce
D. ~1065
Etienne
II De
Thiers
Blanche
Guillaume
II De
Thiers
1679 - 1761
Moses
Simmons
82
82
D. 1113
Guy
De
Thiers
D. 1166
Guillaume
I De
Chƒlons
D. 0832
Childebrande
Dyname
D. ~0880
Theodore
I De
Chƒlons
Daughter
Of
Conrad
D. 0919
Manasses
'the Old' De
Chƒlons
Ermengarde
1682/83 - 1761
Joseph
Simmons
D. ~1158
Thibault
II De
Trave
Alice
Poncette
De
Trave
Alice
De
Beauffou
Emme
De
Bayeux
D. ~1066
Raoul
De
Beauffou
D. ~1081
Richard
De
Beauffou
D. ~1037
Hugh I
De
Montfort
1684
Rebecca
Simmons
Olympia
Folkington
Dermot
D. 0876
Calybre
D. 0933
Cinaeth
D. 0947
Caellach
D. 0974
Donal
D. 0989
Dermot
1687/88 - 1774
Joshua
Simmons
D. 1006
Donehad
Maolrainbo
D. 1072
Dermot
D. 1064
Donnchad
O'brien
Acceded 1014, abdicated 1063.
D. 1080
Dearbforgail
O'brien
D. 1090
Murchad
D. ~0420
Conall
Natfraich
D. 0490
Aonghus
D. 0523
Eschaid
D. 0542
Creomthann
~1626 - 1701
John
Alden
75
75
John Alden. Perley cites him as the son of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins. This John was, at the time, 70 years of age, wealthy and resided in Boston. He was sent for on May 28th and arrived May 31st. Gedney, Hawthorne and Corwin conducted his examination. When the accusing girls discovered that it was John Alden, of Plymouth fame, they cried out against him, "there stands Alden, a bold fellow, with his hat on before the judges, he sells powder and shot to the Indians and French and lies with the Indian squaws, and has Indian papooses." The magistrates "bid Alden look upon the accusers, " which he did, and they fell down. Alden asked Mr. Gedney what reason there was why his looking at Mr. Gedney did not strike him down as well, but no answer was forthcoming. Alden was sent to jail, but escaped therefrom.
D. 0571
Cairbre
Aodh
D. 0615
Cathal
D. 0665
Cuigenmathair
D. 0696
Finguine
D. 0742
Cathal
D. 0749
Tualath
Of
Munster
D. 0737
Faelan
Mac
Murchada
D. 0789
Ruaidri
Mac
Faelain
Acceded 0776.
D. 0831
Diarmait
Mac
Ruadrach
<1640 - 1695
Elizabeth
Everill
55
55
D. 0862
Muirecan
Mac
Diarmata
Acceded 0862.
D. 0917
Mael
Morda Mac
Muirecin
0791 - 0846
Niall Caille
Macaedo
Oirdnide
55
55
Deposed his cousin Murchad in 823 and became king of the North; in 827 he defeated the men of Oriel who had opposed the election in of his personal confessor as Archbishop of Armagh; routed the Norse invaders at Lough Foyle in 823, and defeated the Danes twice more in 835 and 843; defeated Feidhlimidh (k. of Munster) in 840 and defeated the Danes againn in 846, but during the pursuit of the latter he was drowned in the flooded river Callain while trying to rescue on of his men.
D. 0859
Gormlaith
Of
Meath
Joan
O'neill
D. 0921
Finn Mac
Mael
Morda
D. 0970
Morugh
Macfinn
Acceded 0965.
Cas
Becbhionn
Eochaidh
Cruadh
First Christian of this line.
1627 - 1696
Joseph
Alden
68
68
Criomhthan
D. ~0520
Aodh
Uargarbh
Tighernach
D. ~0583
Fedlemidh
Fergus
D. ~0675
Bece
Ferdaleithe
Conaicce
Olioll
Cueongeilt
~1632 - 1697
Jonathan
Alden
65
65
Coneobhar
Cathniath
Spellan
D. 0903
Cian
Bron
(O'mahony)
Daughter
Of
Bron
D. 1014
M el M¢rda
Macfinn
O'f el im
Acceded 1003.
D. 1062
Bran Mac
M el M¢rda
O'f el im
Acceded 1016. Deposed 1018.
Donchad
Of
Leinster
D. 0480
Muredach
Eloped with Eirc, wife of Saran, a British king.
~1644 - 1725
Abigail
Hallett
81
81
Loarn
Moy
Eirc
D. 0534
Murcertac
I
One of the victors in the battle of Ocha 482; defeated and killed Oengus (king of Munster) in 489; likewise Duach Teangumha in 504, extended the kingdom of Ailech into Derry by conquest and defeated the Leinsterman, 524; killed Sighe mac Dian, whose daughter, Sin, became his concubine to avenge her father; he was killed when she set fire to the house where he lay drunk, All Hallow's Eve.
D. 0504
Duach
Teangumha
'brazen-Tongued'
First king of Connaught. Slain by Muircheartach.
Duabsech
Eochan
D. 0566
Domnall
Ilcealgach
'the Decetful'
Ruled jointly with his brother, Fergus, who may have been his twin. They campaigned together, defeating and mortally wounding Eogan (K. of Connaught) in 558 on the river Sligo; defeating Ailill (k. of Connaught), who tried to escape battle in his war chariot in 549 and was killed; and winning the battle of Cul-Dreimhe in 561 against their kinsman, Diarmaid (k. of Ireland) because Diarmaid had offended their cousin St. Columba; also defeated the Irish Picts in 562, and the Leinstermen in 563; died of the plague.
Carthan
Orca
Erica
1634/35 - 1674
Ruth
Alden
D. 0612
Aedh
Uairdhnach
'with The Ague'
Friend and benefactor of his cousin, St. Mura; defeated the Leinstermen and exacted the famous cattle-tribute (the "borama")- which the Leinstermen never paid without a fight; died of ague at the Ford of the Two Graves in Louth.
D. ~0630
M el Fithrich
Macaedo
Uaridnaig
Called by the chroniclers Chief of the Cenel-mac-Earca; succeeded his cousin Suibhne Menn, as ruler of Ailech, but was killed in battle by Suibhne's brother Ernaine.
D. 0681
M el D¹in
Macm el
Fithrich
Succeeded his kinsman Fergus in 671; killed Dunchad (k. of Oriel) in 677 and burned Dun-Ceithirn 9and with it Dunghal (k. of the Irish Picts), and also Cenndaeladh (k. of Keenaght)); was killed in battle at Leathairbhe in rivalry against his kinsman Congal (k. of Tir Cinaill)
D. 0464
Conal
Gulban
Now Tyrconnell of "land of Conall" in Donegal which was his share of the family's conquests in Ulster after 425; the ritual sacrfice of a white mare figured in the inauguration of their kings until the 12th century. Conall was slain by the Fibolgs in 464.
D. ~0500
Fergus
Cennfada
'long-Head'
Seadhna
Of
Tirconnel
Became a powerful prince in northern Ireland.
D. 0571
Ainmire
Slain by Fergus MacNelline, but avenged by his son Aedh, who also invaded Leinster to avenge his own son's death.
Cobthaigson
Of
Oiliolla
Bridget
D. 0598
Aedh
II
Invaded Leinster to avenge his son's death by extracting the famous cattle tribute, but was suprised at night in his camp at Dunbolg in 598 by Bran Dubh "the Black" (King of Leinster); though defended by his men with a wall of sheilds and spears, was unhorsed and beheaded during the withdrawl.
~1630 - 1716
John
Bass
86
86
He was a wheelwright. He was elected fenceviewer 1695, tithingman 1701, constable 1710 but refused it. S.P. 19-202: Will of John Bass of Braintree, wheelwright, Jun.25,1716 - Oct.22,1716: To son John who is to be executor 1 acre called calf pasture & all other estate not here disposed of to him for life, then to his son John or the next heir if he does not survive. To son Samuel all lands at Stand Brook in Salter's Farm, part of the four score acres & half my land at Rye Island (whole is 10 acres) on the N. side and a strap of land in the house lot in Salter's Farm near 2 a. of the plain lot as far as the fence goes etc. To son Joseph I have already given his full part and add 5/. To two daughters Mary Copeland & Sarah Thayer 1 acre each salt marsh for life, then to son John etc. and ¹10 and the household moveables. To grand daughters that are children of my two deceased daughters Ruth & Hannah 10/ each, at age. To grandson John Bass a spot of land where he built a house, 1/2 my barn etc. Witness: Susanna Webb, Jonathan Webb, Benjamin Webb. 19-270 Inventory of John Bass Feb.11,1716 by Solomon Vesey, John Cleverly, Peter Adams: 14 acres in Captains Plain 10 a. in pasture & Stoney field 1 lot in the 600 acres 1 share in the Pine Swamp 10 a. at Rye Island 4 a. in the Farm S.P. 8-326-7 New Series: Joseph Bass & Ephraim Thayer object to probate of will of John Bass 1716 & say he was insane and non - compos etc. Oct.22,1716. Several reasons given in petition.
D. 0643
Domnall
II
D. 0616
Malcova
Cacht
Of
Tirconnel
D. 0722
Fergal
Macm ele
D¹in
Defeated the Southern Ui Neill of Meath in 710 at Armagh and banished his eldest heir to Britain for committing a homicide at the annual festival assembly at Taltiu (the "Fair of Teltown"), 1 Aug 716; exacted the cattle tribute from Leinster in 721 and was killed in battle in 722, leading 21,000 men against the Leinstermen at Allen Kildare.
Conor
Cian
Athiochta
0718 - 0778
Niall Frasach
'of The
Showers'
60
60
Saw his reign open with three months of snow and continue with famine, earthquakes, and pestilence. Taking this as a bad sign, he abdicated in 770 and retired to Iona as a monk where he died
Crimthann
D. 0619
Aodh
1646 - 1719
David
Alden
73
73
Mor
Of
Desmond
Aonghus
Of
Tirconnel
D. 0704
Loing
Beach
Muiriore
D. 0784
Flaherty
Dunflaith
Of
Tirconnel
D. 0819
Aedh
Oirdnidhe
'the Dignified'
Devastated Meath in 798 and Leinster in 804; punished the Ulaid in 805 for profaning St. Patrick's shrine; drove the Connaught invaders out of Meath in 808 "as if they were goats and sheep"; sent ambassadors to Charlemagne; was prevented from celbrating the Fair of Taltiu in 811 by the monks of Tallaght, whose territory had been violated, but made ample reparations; defeated the Cenel Conaill in 815.
Muredac
Fergus
Son
Of
Inreachtach
D. >1718
Mary
Southworth
Maeve
Of
Connaught
D. 0797
Donchad
I
D. 0480
Conal
Cremthoinn
Was the ancestor of the kings of Brega and the kings of Usinech, who formed the principal branch of the southern Ui Neill. From him descended 17 kings of Ireland.
D. ~0500
Fergus
D. 0440
Maine
Was the ancestor of the dynasty of Teffia in Meath, which took the name O'Catharnaign.
Corbhach
D. 0554
Dermont
Congearvin
Mungan
D. 0581
Colman
<1643 - 1688
Rebecca
Alden
45
45
D. 0600
Suibne
D. 0634
Conal
Airmeadhac
D. 0689
Dermot
Congal
Alpin
D. 0715
Murcertac
D. 0758
Donal
Maelfebhall
Torf "Den
Tause" Of
More
1642 - 1723
Thomas
Delano
81
81
1212 - 1272
Hugues
IV De
Bourgogne
59
59
Geoffroy
III De
Thouars
Ameline
Aimery
V De
Thouars
Guillaume
V De
Thouars
Aenor
De
Lusignan
D. 1213
Gui De
Thouars
D. 1146
Alain II
'le
Noir'
~1120
Berthe
De
Bretagne
1138 - 1171
Conan
IV 'le
Petit'
33
33
1648 - 1688
Priscilla
Alden
40
40
~1154 - 1201
Margaret
Of
Huntington
47
47
1162 - 1201
Constance
De
Bretagne
39
39
1201 - 1221
Alix
De
Thouars
20
20
~1187 - 1250
Pierre
De
Dreux
63
63
1218 - 1272
Yolanda
Richemont
De Dreux
54
54
~1144
Alix
De
Lorraine
1166 - 1218
Eudes
III De
Bourgogne
52
52
~1178 - 1218
Alice
De
Vergy
40
40
1020 - 1072
Gertrude
Of
Haldensleben
52
52
Hannah
Wood
Anselmo
Di
Ceva
Guy
De
Brien
Guy
De
Brien
D. 1272
Henry
De
Tracy
Peter
Taylor
Maud
De
Braose
Eva
De
Tracy
D. 1209
William
Martin
Avicia
~1179 - 1210
William
De
Braose
31
31
Maud
De
Fay
D. ~1186
Ralph
De
Fay
D. 1222
Ralph
De
Fay
Robert
De
Turnham
Beatrice
De
Turnham
~1695
Mary
Crandall
~1200 - 1281
Eleanor
De
Baliol
81
81
~1140 - 1194
Bernard
De
Baliol
54
54
~1152
Agnes
De
Picquigny
~1178
Ingelram
De
Baliol
~1098
Elias
Fitzharding
De Barclay
~1695
Thomas
Brownell
Morice
Walter
De
Barclay
Eva
Agnes
De
Barclay
Joanna
De
Meschines
Lesceline
Garvaise
Paganel
~1050 - 1080
Adam
De
Brus
30
30
William
Ramsay
Emma
Ramsay
Mercy
Tripp
~1076
Agnes
Paganel
~1072 - 1141
Robert
De
Brus
69
69
~1099 - 1164
Adam
De
Brus
65
65
Stephen
~1103
Agnes
~1126 - 1196
Adam
I De
Brus
70
70
William
De
Arches
Ivetta
~1130
Ivetta
De
Arches
D. 1186
Adam
De
Brus
1706
Jonathan
Hart
Living
Sacchi
Isabel
De
Brus
~1246
Isabel
Fitzjohn
~1195
Sybil
De
Ferrers
Maud
De
Morville
1116 - 1179
Richard
De
Bulsi
63
63
Hawise
Espec
Abigail
Macumber
D. 1115
William
I De
Busli
1090 - 1164
William
II De
Busli
74
74
Cicely
De
Busli
Emma
1145 - 1213
John
De
Bulsi
68
68
D. ~1140
William
Vipont
Mathilde
St.
Andrew
William
Vipont
1749
Godfrey
King
D. ~1227
Robert
Vipont
D. 1241
Idonea
De
Bulsi
~1190 - 1241
John
Vipont
51
51
~1220 - 1265
Robert
III
Vipont
45
45
John
Botterell
~1088
William
De
Percy
~1090
Alice
De
Roos
1795 - 1863
Eunice
Tripp
68
68
Buried: Cemetery on Brayton farm
~1034 - 1096
Guillaume
De
Percy
62
62
~1045
Emma
De
Port
Maud
De
Glouchester
D. 0681
Cenn
Fáelad Mac
Colgan
Amalgaid
Mac Cind
Fáelad
Flann
Rodba Mac
Amalgada
Fiangalach
Mac Flainn
Rodba
Flaithnia
Mac
Fiangalaig
1792 - 1876
David
Brayton
83
83
Buried: Cemetery on Brayton farm
Maenach
Mac
Flaithna
Giolla
Bridget
1822
Hannah
C.
Snell
Dermont
D. 0888
Ceardhall
D. 0848
Maolruanaia
Cabel
Arog
D. 0863
Mailsechlain
D. 0886
Flanna
D. 0886
Maclfebhull
1821
Silas
D.
Dammon
D. 0907
Ceallagh
Sabh
D. 0907
Murcertac
D. 0974
Donchad
D. 0996
Giollapatrick
D. 1021
Maclmuir
D. ~1027
Tadhg
Of
Ossary
D. 1065
Dermot
Of
Ossary
Clemence
Des
Roches
D. 1249
Geoffrey
IV De
Chƒteaudun
1867
Carrie
R.
Strong
D. 0940
Guigues
III De
Vion
D. 0996
Guigues
IV
Adelaide
1863
Hiram
Alfred
Bailey
Richard
Of
Provence
D. ~0991
Fredeburga
D. 1009
Guigues
V
Silvion
De
Clerieu
Willa
Gotilenne
Bernard
II De St.
Valerie
D. ~1066
Gauthier
De St.
Valerie
Elizabeth
De
Montlhery
D. ~1096
Bernard
III De St.
Valerie
1889 - 1950
Verna
Albert
Sanford
61
61
D. 1166
Renaud
II De St.
Valerie
D. 1190
Bernard
IV De St.
Valerie
Eleanor
De
Dommart
D. 0725
Alberic
Eberhard
I
D. 0777
Elizabeth
De
Luneville
D. 0864
Eberhard
II
Alice
De
Hainaut
Waifre
De
Aquitaine
Estrude
De
Aquitaine
1872 - 1957
William
Robert
Collins
85
85
Living
Hamilton
D. ~1000
Louise
De
Gavre
D. ~1030
Rasse
I De
Gavre
D. 1056
Rasse
II De
Gavre
Catherine
De
Cysoing
Jean
De
Gavre
Isabel
D'alost
Rasse
III De
Gavre
Arnulph
De
Hainaut
Gauthier
De
Roeux
Ida De
Roeux
1672 - 1751
Sarah
Bass
79
79
Beatrice
De
Roeux
~0956
Rudolph
De
Mons
Adele
De
Vienne
~0997
Gossuin
I De
Mons
Benoite
D. ~1096
Gossuin
II De
Mons
D. ~1096
Jeanne
(Irmengarde)
N.n.
De
Mons
D. ~1140
Issac
De
Mons
Ida
Gossuin
III De
Mons
D. ~1100
Hugues
De
Rumigny
Beatrice
De
Rumigny
Alice
De
Mons
D. ~1200
Roger
De
Conde
Arnoul
De
Moreaumes
D. 1192
Eustace
I De
Roeux
Jean
De
Mons
Marie
De
Mons
Eustace
II De
Roeux
D. 1150
Bertrand
(Rasse Iv)
De Gavre
Guy
De
Chievres
D. ~1126
Ida De
Chievres
Bertha
De
Gavre
Baldwin
I De
Mortaigne
Hidegarde
De
Wavrin
D. ~1101
Heinrich
Von
Nordheim
D. ~1117
Gertrude
Liudolfing
D. ~1063
Ecbert
I
Liudolfing
1729 - 1792
Deborah
Arnold
63
63
Bertha
D'italia
D. ~1038
Ludolphe
Liudolfing
Gertrude
De
Frisia
~0960 - ~1015
Ardoino
D'ivree
55
55
Bertha
Di
Toscana
D. ~1006
Brunon
II
D. 1043
Gisele
Von
Schwabien
~1115 - 1170
Renaud II
De
Bar-Le-Duc
55
55
~1137 - 1197
Agnes
De
Champagne
60
60
~1150 - ~1193
Adelaide
Laurette
Von Loos
43
43
~1158 - 1214
Thibaut I De
Bar-Le-Duc
56
56
Luitfried
Of
Burgelm
Adalbert
Of
Burgelm
N.n.
Von
Nellenburg
D. 1124
Albert
Of
Morsburg
Thibauld
III Of
Bar
Ermentrude
Mathilda
De
Bar
Siegbert
II Of
Saargau
N.n.
Von
Eppenstein
~1095 - 1135
Frederick
Of
Saarbrcken
40
40
~1108
Gisela
De
Lorraine
D. 1118
Stephen
Of
Spondheim
Sophia
~1100 - 1155
Meginhard
I Of
Spondheim
55
55
~1102
Mechtild
Von
Morsburg
~1120 - 1181
Simon
I Of
Saarbrcken
61
61
~1127
Mathilda
Von
Spondheim
~1150 - ~1215
Sophia
Von
Saarbrcken
65
65
~1140 - 1221
Henry
III
81
81
~1113 - 1196
Henri I
'coecus'
De Namur
83
83
~1155 - ~1186
Agnes
Of
Guelders
31
31
Thurstan
De
Montfort
Alberic
De
Montmorency
D. 0978
Bouchard
I De
Montmorency
Ildegarde
De
Blois
~0975
Lesceline
(Alice) De
Harcourt
Guillaume
'le
Batard'
Guillaume
D'eu
Ada
De
Soissons
1811 - 1891
Irene
Thayer
80
80
Agnes
D'eu
Bouchard
II De
Montmorency
D. 1031
Bouchard
III De
Montmorency
Herve
De
Montmorency
Ermentrude
De
Verdun
Avise
De
Roucy
Godfrey
I De
Rumigny
Alpaide
De
Hougaerde
D. 1010
Arnoul
De
Rumigny
1804 - 1880
Nahum
Bunker
76
76
Living
Fredericksen
D. ~1018
Godfrey
II De
Rumigny
Godfrey
III De
Rumigny
Uralan
De
Vergy
Judith
De
Fonvens
Gerard
De
Vergy
1834 - 1909
Nathaniel
Emmons
Bunker
75
75
Elisabeth
De
Chƒlons
Robert
De
Vergy
Gerard
De
Vergy
Elisabeth
De
Vergy
1847 - 1924
Elizabeth
Bridgham
Dunning
77
77
Geoffrey
I De
Donzy
Matilde
D. 1114
Savorie
De
Vergy
Simon
De
Vergy
Elisabeth
D. ~1170
Guy
De
Vergy
1873 - 1945
William
Edwin
Bunker
71
71
D. ~1147
Hugh
V De
Beaumont
Maud
Adele
De
Beaumont
Hugues
De
Vergy
1871 - 1967
Rose
Theresa
Pfitzer
96
96
D. 1194
Garnier
II De
Trainel
N.n.
De
Marigny
Gisele
De
Trainel
Etienne
De
Gevaudan
Philippe
De
Gevaudan
Ithier I
De
Mercouer
Ithier II
De
Mercouer
Arsinde
Bernard
De
Mercouer
Gerberge
1907 - 1989
John
Pfitzer
Bunker
82
82
~0921
Algarde
De
Mercouer
~0920 - >0962
Robert
I
D'auvergne
42
42
~0950 - >0980
Robert
II
D'auvergne
30
30
Ingleberg
De
Beaumont
~0978 - 1016
Guillaume
IV
D'auvergne
38
38
D. 1060
Guillaume
Vii
D'auvergne
Rotilde
De
Limoges
1909
Margaret
Hedwig
Diehl
D. ~0953
Aymon
I De
Bourbon
Aldesinde
D. 0999
Archambaud
I De
Bourbon
D. 1023
Archambaud
II De
Bourbon
D. ~1067
Umbald
De
Sully
D. 1049
Ermengarde
De
Sully
Living
Bunker
D. 1078
Archambaud
III De
Bourbon
Aurea
D. 1099
Ulrich
Of
Passau
D. 1100
Adelaide
Von
Frantenhausen
1927
Thomas
Charles
Wieser
D. 0928
Rotbold
I
D'arles
~0967
Mauger
De
Corbeil
Osmand
'the
Dane'
D. ~0960
Aymon
De
Corbeil
Elizabeth
(Vendome)
Albert
De
Corbeil
~0971
Germaine
De
Corbeil
~0993 - ~1060
Guillaume
De
Corbeil
67
67
D. ~1095
Bouchard
De
Corbeil
Adelaide
De
Crecy
Living
Wieser
Adele
Robert
Whitney
Eleanor
Whitney
John
Poleston
John
Poleston
Gainor
Roberts
Jane
Poleston
Rhys
Thomas
Gainor
Thomas
Living
Pazo
Living
Fredericksen
Richard
Pugh
Elizabeth
Pugh
Rowland
Owen
Thomas
Owen
Harry
Thomas
Owen
Hugh
Harry
He immigrated to Pennsylvania.
Elizabeth
Brinton
John
Harry
Frances
Miriam
Harry
Living
Pazo
D. 1784
Record
Hussey
1757 - 1843
Lydia
Hussey
86
86
1757 - 1841
Jacob
Griffith
84
84
~1798 - 1871
Amos
Griffith
73
73
1801 - 1873
Edith
Price
72
72
1827 - 1923
Elizabeth
Price
Griffith
96
96
1820 - 1893
Joshua
Vickers
Milhous
72
72
1848 - 1919
Franklin
Milhous
70
70
1849 - 1943
Almira
Park
Burdg
93
93
1885 - 1967
Hannah
Milhous
82
82
Living
Pazo
1878 - 1956
Francis
Anthony
Nixon
77
77
1913 - 1994
Richard
Milhous
Nixon
81
81
1912 - 1993
Thelma
Catherine
(Pat) Ryan
81
81
Living
Pazo
~1171 - ~1241
Robert
Peck
70
70
Living
Pazo
~1175
N.n.
Tunstall
~1150
Thomas
Peck
~1152
N.n.
Middleton
~1126
John
Peck
~1129
N.n.
Melgrave
~1216 - 1271
Nigel
De
Plumpton
55
55
~1217
Avicia
De
Clare
~1217
Serlonis
De
Westwick
~1187 - 1244
Robert
De
Plumpton
57
57
Living
Wieser
~1190
Lady
Mowbray
~1168 - 1205
Nigel
De
Plumpton
37
37
~1170 - >1213
Juliana
De
Warwick
43
43
~1133
Peter
De
Plumpton
~1136
Helena
~1144
Richard
De
Warwick
~1107
Eldredus
De
Plumpton
~1353
Alice
De
Bury
~1277
Henry
De
Worsley
Isabel
(Albrida)
Biset
Living
Punty
Maud
Fitzrobert
D. 1155
William
D'aubigny
William 'le
Breton'
D'aubigny
~1256 - ~1316
Rohese
De
Clare
60
60
1924 - 1992
Edward
John
Spencer
68
68
Viscount Althorp.
Living
Roche
1892 - ~1970
Albert
John
Spencer
78
78
1897 - 1972
Cynthia
Elinor Beatrix
Hamilton
75
75
1908
Ruth
Sylvia
Gill
Woman of the Bedchamber to the Queen Mother Elizabeth since 1960.
D. 1922
Charles
Robert
Spencer
Living
Salter
1868 - 1906
Margaret
Baring
38
38
1828 - 1897
Edward
Charles
Baring
69
69
1839 - 1892
Louisa Emily
Charlotte
Bulteel
53
53
1798 - 1857
Frederick
Spencer
59
59
D. 1877
Adelaide Horatio
Elizabeth
Seymour
1830 - 1914
George
Bingham
84
84
Living
Punty
D. 1910
Cecilia
Catherine
Lennox
1735 - 1799
Charles
Bingham
63
63
D. 1814
Margaret
Smith
1764 - 1848
Richard
Bingham
83
83
D. 1831
Lavinia
Bingham
D. 1819
Elizabeth
Belasyse
1800 - 1888
George
Charles
Bingham
88
88
D. 1877
Anne
Brudenell
1758 - 1834
George
John
Spencer
76
76
~1060
William
De
Mortaigne
Living
Punty
D. <1182
Richard
I De
Comyn
Hextilda
Of
Tynedale
D. ~1233
William
De
Comyn
Marjory
De
Buchan
Elizabeth
De
Comyn
D. ~1291
William
Of
Mar
D. ~1297
Donald
Of
Mar
Helen
Of
Wales
Walter
De
Comyn
Isobel
De
Comyn
Living
Wieser-
Punty
~1201 - ~1280
Gilchrist
Mure
79
79
D. ~1297
Archibald
Mure
William
Mure
N.n.
Lindsay
Adam
Mure
Janet
Joana
Stewart
Elizabeth
Stewart
D. 1441
James
Douglas
D. 1456
James
Douglas
Living
Wieser
Elizabeth
Gifford
D. 1492
James
Douglas
D. 1550
John
Douglas
Janet
Crichton
D. 1550
James
Douglas
Katherine
Stewart
~1470 - 1549
Henry
Somerset
79
79
~1450 - 1526
Charles
Somerset
76
76
D. ~1514
Elizabeth
Herbert
~1436 - ~1464
Henry
Beaufort
28
28
Died; beheaded
Living
Galatro
N.n.
~1406 - 1455
Edmund
Beaufort
49
49
Count of Mortain; regent of France; killed in Battle of St. Albans, War of the Roses.
1407 - 1466
Eleanor
De
Beauchamp
58
58
1381 - 1439
Richard
Xiii De
Beauchamp
58
58
~1385 - 1422
Elizabeth
De
Berkeley
37
37
1352 - 1417
Thomas
De
Berkeley
65
65
~1359 - 1391
Margaret
Lisle
32
32
~1330 - 1368
Maurice
De
Berkeley
38
38
Elizabeth
Le
Despenser
~1293 - 1361
Thomas
'the Rich'
De Berkely
68
68
Living
Dunn
1308 - 1337
Margaret
Mortimer
29
29
1373 - 1399
Thomas
Le
Despenser
25
25
Baron Despencer; Baron Burghersh; was beheaded.
1271 - 1326
Maurice
De
Berkeley
55
55
D. 1314
Eva
La
Zouche
1335 - 1375
Edward
(Hugh)
Despencer
40
40
~1342 - 1409
Elizabeth
Burghersh
67
67
~1245 - 1321
Thomas 'the
Wise' De
Berkeley
76
76
~1248 - 1309
Joan
De
Ferrers
61
61
~1255 - ~1298
Eudo
La
Zouche
43
43
~1250 - 1298
Millicent
De
Cantilupe
48
48
Living
Dunn
~1312 - 1342
Edward
Le
Despencer
30
30
~1337
Anne
Ferrers
~1194 - 1255
William
De
Cantilupe
61
61
~1220 - 1255
Eva
De
Braose
35
35
~1292 - 1320
Hugh
Le
Despenser
28
28
Hanged.
~1292 - ~1337
Eleanor
De
Clare
45
45
1262 - 1326
Hugh
Le
Despenser
64
64
Despenser, Hugh Le, English nobleman, son of Hugh Le Despenser. A supporter of the king against the barons, he fought under Edward I, for whom he secured a papal release from an oath to refrain from excessive taxation. When the barons forced Edward's son and successor, Edward II, to banish his favorite, Piers Gaveston (1284?-1312), Le Despenser supported Gaveston and in 1312 succeeded him as the royal favorite. Edward II made him earl of Winchester in 1322, and Le Despenser, together with his son, Hugh (1285?-1326), acquired vast wealth. The elder Le Despenser became virtual ruler of England, instituted several important administrative reforms, and concluded peace with Scotland in 1323. In 1326 Isabella, queen consort of England (1292-1358), formed an alliance with the barons against Edward and the Le Despensers. Both father and son were captured and hanged.
<1223 - 1265
Hugh
Le
Despencer
42
42
Despenser, Hugh Le, one of the English barons who participated in the so-called Mad Parliament, which in 1258 formulated the Provisions of Oxford, a plan of government reform. During the period of truce (1258-63) between the barons and King Henry III, Le Despenser became (1260) chief justiciar of England. Upon the outbreak of the Barons' War, however, he sided with the barons' leader, Simon de Montfort, serving as Montfort's justiciar in 1264. Le Despenser was killed in the Battle of Evesham; in that battle the barons were defeated by Henry's son, Prince Edward, who later became king as Edward I.
Maud
De
Clifford
~1170 - 1243
Thomas
De
Berkeley
73
73
Living
Wieser
~1174 - 1276
Joan
De
Somery
102
102
1218 - 1281
Maurice
De
Berkeley
63
63
Maurice
IV De
Craon
Jeanne
Maurice
V De
Craon
Jean
De
Chƒtelleraud
Agatha
De
Dammartin
Jeanne
De
Chƒtelleraud
Isabel
De
Valance
~1223 - 1276
Isabel
De
Craon
53
53
Living
Wieser
~1002 - 1093
Roger
(Robert)
D'eu
91
91
~1020 - 1085
Beatrice
65
65
~1055 - <1100
Guillaume
D'eu
45
45
Robert
(Roger)
De Bushli
Muriel
Chapel
~1075
Beatrice
De
Bushli
~1086
Guillaume
'simplex' De
Champagne
Gilon
De
Sully
Agnes
De
Sully
Living
Wieser
~1102 - 1140
Henri I
D'eu
38
38
~1106 - 1145
Margaret
De
Champagne
39
39
~1128 - 1170
Jean
D'eu
42
42
~1132 - 1188
Alice
D'aubigny
56
56
~1154 - 1182
Henri II
D'eu
28
28
Living
Wieser
~1163 - ~1209
Maud
Plantagenet
De Warren
46
46
~1179 - 1246
Alice
D'eu
67
67
~1167 - 1219
Raoul
De
Lusignan
52
52
~1200 - 1241
Maud
De
Lusignan
41
41
~1090 - 1197
Beatrice
De
Mandeville
107
107
~1094
Geoffrey
De
Say
Hawise
De
Clare
~1112 - 1144
William
De
Say
32
32
~1087
Humphrey
II De
Bohun
Living
Wieser
~1089
Maud
D'evreux
~1137 - 1177
William
De
Say
40
40
Ermengarde
De
Beaumont
~1141
Anfrica
Of
Scotland
~1169 - <1197
Beatrix
De
Say
28
28
~1200 - 1236
Maud
Fitzgeoffrey
36
36
~1120 - 1187
Humphrey
III De
Bohun
67
67
~1126 - 1146
Margaret
Fitzmiles
20
20
~1150 - 1182
Humphrey
IV De
Bohun
32
32
~1176 - 1220
Henry
De
Bohun
44
44
1st Earl of Hereford; Lord Consatble of England; died on pilgimage.
Living
Bunker
1198 - 1275
Humphrey
V De
Bohun
77
77
~1224 - 1265
Humphrey
Vi De
Bohun
41
41
Killed in Battle.
~1224 - ~1251
Alianore
(Eleanor)
De Braose
27
27
1248 - 1298
Humphrey
Vii De
Bohun
50
50
Killed in battle.
~1250 - 1290
Maud
De
Fiennes
40
40
1756 - 1818
John
Douglas
61
61
D. 1817
Frances
Lascelles
D. 1768
James
Douglas
D. 1805
Bridget
Heathcote
~1662 - 1738
George
Douglas
76
76
Living
Maguire
Frances
Adderly
D. 1686
James
Douglas
Anne
Hay
~1582 - 1648
William
Douglas
66
66
D. 1648
Anne
Keith
D. <1587
Robert
Douglas
Jean
Lyon
D. 1578
John
Lyon
Elizabeth
Abernathy
D. 1559
John
Lyon
Living
Maguire
Janet
Keith
D. 1528
John
Lyon
Janet
Douglas
D. ~1500
John
Lyon
Elizabeth
Gray
D. 1497
John
Lyon
Elizabeth
Scrymgeour
D. 1459
Patrick
Lyon
D. ~1484
Isabel
Ogilvy
D. ~1435
John
Lyon
Living
Maguire
Elizabeth
Graham
D. 1382
John
Lyon
Was murdered.
Jean
Stewart
D. 1413
Patrick
Graham
Was murdered.
D. 1415
Euphemia
Stewart
D. 1389
David
Stewart
D. ~1397
Euphemia
Of
Ross
~1267 - 1325
Hugh
De
Aldithley
58
58
~1265 - 1342
Isolda
Mortimer
77
77
D. ~1623
George
Kieth
Margaret
Home
William
Keith
D. ~1581
William
Keith
Margaret
Keith
D. 1513
Robert
Keith
Killed in battle.
Beatrice
Douglas
William
Keith
Elizabeth
Gordon
William
Keith
Muriella
Erskine
D. 1502
George
Gordon
Elizabeth
Hay
Thomas
Erskine
Janet
Douglas
D. 1470
Alexander
Seton
Elizabeth
Crichton
D. ~1462
William
Hay
Beatrix
Douglas
Alexander
Seton
Elizabeth
Gordon
D. 1436
Gilbert
Of
Hay
Alice
Of
Yester
D. ~1402
Adam
Gordon
Killed in battle.
Jean
De
Keith
D. ~1437
William
De La
Hay
Margaret
Gray
William
Hay
Alice
Hay
Robert
Keith
Elizabeth
Lindsay
D. 1406
Thomas
De La
Haye
Elizabeth
Stewart
~1366 - 1406
David
Lindsay
40
40
Catherine
Stewart
D. 1346
David
De La
Haye
Killed in batttle.
N.n.
Keith
D. ~1332
Nicholas
De La
Haye
Killed in Battle.
D. 1333
Gilbert
De La
Haye
D. 1306
Nicholas
De La
Haye
Joan
1669 - 1763
Mary
Bass
94
94
Gilbert
De La
Hay
Idoine
De
Comyn
Elizabeth
Hay
D. 1567
Helen
Stuart
Was killed by poisoning.
John
Stewart
Was murdered.
Elizabeth
Stewart
D. 1513
Matthew
Stewart
Killed in battle.
D. >1531
Elizabeth
Hamilton
D. 1709
William
Hay
~1256 - 1325
John
De
Segrave
69
69
1663 - 1690
Christopher
Webb
27
27
~1263 - 1331
Christine
De
Plessey
68
68
~1204
John
De
Braose
~1220 - 1291
William
De
Braose
71
71
Thomas
De
Multon
Maud
De
Vaux
~1230
Aline
De
Multon
~1251 - 1326
William
De
Braose
75
75
~1275 - 1313
Richard
(Roger)
Halys
38
38
Alice
1688 - 1711
Sarah
Webb
22
22
~1302 - 1327
Alice
Hayls
25
25
~1320 - 1399
Margaret
Plantagenet
79
79
~1310
Alice
Fitzalan
~1280 - 1325
Stephen
De
Segrave
45
45
~1315 - 1353
John
De
Segrave
38
38
1338
Elizabeth
De
Segrave
Bardolf
Revensworth
D. 1135
Stephen
I
Hawise
Of
Guincamp
Maud
Of
Brittany
1689 - 1743
Samuel
Arnold
54
54
~1107
Walter
De
Gant
~1120
Alice
De
Gant
Gundred
De
Gournai
Nele
(Nigel)
D'aubigny
~1119 - ~1188
Roger
De
Mowbray
69
69
~1146 - 1191
Nele
(Nigel) De
Mowbray
45
45
Willam
Fitzpatrick
Eleanor
De
Maniers
~1148 - 1203
Mabel
Fitzpatrick
55
55
1172 - 1223
William
De
Mowbray
51
51
1665 - 1739
Elizabeth
Alden
74
74
~1125 - 1207
Simon
De
Beauchamp
82
82
Isabel
William
De
Beauchamp
~1176
Avice
~1218 - ~1266
Roger
De
Mowbray
48
48
Avice
~1236 - 1273
Matilda
(Maud) De
Beauchamp
37
37
~1254 - ~1296
Roger
De
Mowbray
42
42
1286 - 1322
John
De
Mowbray
35
35
Was executed.
~1255 - 1317
Elizabeth
Sully
62
62
1676 - 1702
Simon
Willard
25
25
~1286 - 1331
Aline
De
Braose
45
45
1310 - 1361
John
De
Mowbray
50
50
Died of the plague.
~1334 - 1368
John
De
Mowbray
34
34
Catherine
Cecil
~1619 - ~1659
Charles
Cecil
40
40
D. 1675
Diana
Maxwell
1591 - 1668
William
Cecil
77
77
Catherine
Howard
1561 - 1626
Thomas
Howard
64
64
D. 1633
Catherine
Knevet
1702
Abigail
Willard
1536 - 1572
Thomas
Howard
36
36
English soldier and politician, son of Henry Howard, earl of Surrey. Thomas inherited the dukedom from his grandfather the 3d duke of Norfolk. In 1559 he commanded an English army sent to Scotland, and in 1568 he became president of the commission appointed by Elizabeth I, queen of England, to investigate the affairs of Mary, queen of Scots. The following year he was arrested and imprisoned, by order of Elizabeth, for plotting to marry Mary, who was at that time in his custody. After his release in 1570 he began negotiations with Philip II of Spain in regard to a plan for a Spanish invasion of England. the plot was discovered in 1571, and he was arrested and beheaded the following year.
D. 1563
Margaret
Audley
~1517 - 1547
Henry
Howard
30
30
English soldier and poet, son of Thomas Howard, 3d duke of Norfolk. He was given his title by courtesy in 1524, when his father became duke of Norfolk. Howard served in the war with Scotland in 1542, and in 1543 he fought in Flanders with the English army on the side of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, who was seeking to acquire the Netherlands. The following year he was wounded at the siege of Montreuil; in 1545 and 1546 he was commander of the garrison of Boulogne. Quick-tempered and quarrelsome, he made many enemies and was imprisoned several times for misconduct. Arrested with his father on trumped-up charges of treason, he was condemned and executed in 1547. Although not primarily a man of letters, Howard greatly enriched English literature by his introduction of new verse forms. His love poems, like those of his contemporary Sir Thomas Wyatt, show the influence of Italian models. The two share the distinction of having introduced the sonnet to English literature. Howard's translation of the second and third books of the Aeneid by Vergil was written in blank verse of five iambic feet, the first use of this form in English. Forty of his poems were printed posthumously in 1557 in Songs and Sonettes, Written by the Ryght Honorable Lorde Henry Howard, Late Earle of Surrey, and Others, and in the same year his translations from Vergil appeared as Certain Bokes of Virgiles Aeneis Turned into English Meter.
D. 1577
Frances
De
Vere
~1473 - 1554
Thomas
Howard
81
81
Thomas Howard, English nobleman and court intriguer during the reign of Henry VIII. The eldest son of Thomas Howard, 2d duke of Norfolk, he commanded the English vanguard at Flodden Field and was made earl when his father regained the family dukedom. On the death of his father he succeeded to the dukedom and became the most powerful peer in England. Norfolk led the party opposed to the policies of the lord chancellor, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey. He favored Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and his marriage to Anne Boleyn, who was Norfolk's niece. As Henry's pliant tool, however, he also presided at Anne's trial and execution in 1536. That same year he repressed the rebellion of the Pilgrimage of Grace, a protest against the confiscation of monastic properties, from which he profited handsomely. In 1540 Norfolk arrested Henry's secretary, Thomas Cromwell, earl of Essex, who had lost favor with the king. With the execution of his niece, Catherine Howard, Henry's fifth wife, in 1542, Norfolk lost his influence at court. When his son, the poet Henry Howard, earl of Surrey, was arrested for treason, Norfolk was charged with complicity; and was condemned and attainted with his son. His son was executed in 1547, but the subsequent death of the king prevented Norfolk's execution. He remained a prisoner until the accession of Mary I in 1533, when his lands and titles were restored.
~1497 - 1558
Elizabeth
Stafford
61
61
D. 1539
John
De
Vere
Elizabeth
Trussel
1443 - 1524
Thomas
Howard
81
81
Thomas Howard, English military commander and courtier, the only son of John Howard, 1st duke of Norfolk. He was created earl of Surrey in 1483 when his father was made duke of Norfolk. At the Battle of Bosworth Field, where his father was killed, he was wounded and taken prisoner. As he had fought on the losing side, his titles were attainted and he was imprisoned until 1489. on his release his earldom was restored; he was placed in command of the defense of the Scottish border and soon recognized as the chief general in England. in 1513 he led the forces that defeated the invading Scots at Flodden Field, and in the following year he became duke of Norfolk. When King Henry VIII went to the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520, Norfolk was left to guard the kingdom. the following year he presided at the trial for treason of his friend Edward Stafford, 3d duke of Buckingham, on whom he passed a sentence of death. He retired in 1523.
~1465 - 1497
Elizabeth
Tilney
32
32
1701 - 1754
Joseph
Bridgham
53
53
~1478 - ~1521
Edward
Stafford
43
43
Political rival of Henry VIII of England. The eldest son of Henry Stafford, 2d duke of Buckingham, Edward Stafford inherited his father's title when Henry VII became king in 1485. Under Henry VIII he became a privy councillor and lord high constable, but because he had a claim to the throne as a descendant of Edward III, Henry regarded him as a potential threat. Having also aroused the enmity of Henry's chief minister, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, Buckingham was arrested and imprisoned in the Tower of London in April 1521. He was convicted of plotting against the king and was beheaded the following month.
N.n.
John
De
Vere
Alice
Kilrington
~1430 - 1485
John
Howard
55
55
John Howard, also known as Jack of Norfolk, English nobleman and military commander, who took part, on the Yorkist side, in the Wars of the Roses. He was knighted by King Edward IV shortly after his accession in 1461, and although he was created a baron by the Lancastrian Henry VI on his restoration in 1470, Howard did not abandon the Yorkist cause; he fought in France for King Edward in 1475. Upon Edward's death in 1483, however, he supported Edward's younger brother, Richard, duke of Gloucester, later King Richard III, who usurped the throne from Edward's son. Richard III made Howard duke of Norfolk and earl marshal of England in 1483. He was killed with Richard in the battle at Bosworth.
~1424
Catherine
Moleyns
1455 - 1493
Henry
Stafford
38
38
English nobleman prominent during the reign of Richard III. A descendant of King Edward III on both his father's and his mother's side, Stafford became duke of Buckingham in 1460. When Edward IV died in 1483, Buckingham supported the deposition of Edward's young son Edward V by Richard, duke of Gloucester, and was named lord high constable of England when Gloucester became king as Richard III. In October of the same year, Buckingham led a rebellion against Richard, perhaps intending to seize the throne for himself. He was captured and executed for treason the following month.
~1458 - 1525
Catherine
Wydville
67
67
Robert
De
Vere
Jeane
Courtenay
1729 - 1804
John
Bridgham
74
74
~1384 - ~1436
Robert
Howard
52
52
~1387
Margaret
De
Mowbray
~1424 - 1455
Humphrey
Stafford
31
31
Killed in Battle of St. Albans, War of the Roses.
~1437
Margaret
Beaufort
~1385 - 1417
Richard
De
Vere
32
32
Alice
Serjeaux
Hugh
Courtenay
Philippe
Arcedekene
1402 - 1460
Humphrey
57
57
Earl of Stafford; killed in battle.
~1411 - 1480
Anne
Neville
69
69
Joanna
Comer
~1338 - 1400
Aubrey
De
Vere
62
62
Alice
Fitzwalter
D. <1372
Edward
Courtenay
Emmeline
Dawnay
1377 - 1403
Edmund
Of
Stafford
26
26
Killed in Battle.
1383 - 1438
Anne
Plantagenet
55
55
~1375 - 1440
Joan
Beaufort
65
65
1311 - 1359
John
De
Vere
47
47
Killed in battle.
Maud
De
Badlesmere
1326 - 1349
Hugh
Courtenay
23
23
D. 1851
Joseph
Bridgham
Elizabeth
De
Vere
1356 - 1397
Thomas
Of
Woodstock
41
41
Was murdered.
D. 1399
Eleanor
De
Bohun
Alphonsus
De
Vere
Jane
Foliot
1303 - 1337
Hugh
Courtenay
33
33
Baron of Okehampton
D. 1391
Margaret
De
Bohun
Will dated January 28, 1390-1.
D. ~1372
Humphrey
X De
Bohun
D. 1340
Hugh
De
Courtenay
Agnes
St.
John
1770 - 1840
Betsy
Lane
70
70
D. ~1361
Humphrey
Ix De
Bohun
1248 - 1291
Hugh
De
Courtenay
42
42
~1240 - 1328
Eleanor
Le
Despencer
88
88
D. ~1335
John
De
Bohun
~1218 - 1274
John
De
Courtenay
56
56
~1186
Isabel
De
Vere
~1170 - 1242
Robert
De
Courtenay
72
72
~1196
Maud
De
Reviers
~1125 - 1194
Renaud
II De
Courtenay
69
69
Hawise
De
Couci
1795 - 1836
Betsy
Bridgham
41
41
Guillaume
De
Couci
~1050
Margaret
(Maud)
D'avranches
~1025 - ~1082
Richard
De
Gernon
57
57
Vicomte le Goz - COMYNI.GED (Compuserve)
~1032
Emma
De
Conteville
Anne
Douglas
D. 1644
George
Hay
D. 1677
William
Hay
1710 - 1771
John
Howland
Russell
60
60
1680 - 1711
Wriothesley
Russell
30
30
Elizabeth
Howland
1787 - 1846
James
Dunning
58
58
1613 - 1700
William
Russell
87
87
Earl of Russell
1615 - 1684
Anne
Carr
68
68
~1590 - 1645
Robert
Carr
55
55
Frances
Howard
1710 - 1735
Diana
Spencer
25
25
1739 - 1767
Francis
Russell
27
27
D. 1768
Elizabeth
Keppel
1766 - 1839
John
Russell
73
73
D. 1853
Georgiana
Gordon
1682 - 1745
Charles
Spencer
63
63
1823 - 1910
Edwing
Dunning
86
86
1682 - 1716
Anne
Churchill
34
34
1641 - 1702
Robert
Spencer
61
61
1646 - 1715
Anne
Digby
69
69
1620 - 1643
Henry
Spencer
22
22
Killed in Battle of Newberry.
1617 - 1684
Dorothy
Sidney
67
67
1595 - 1677
Robert
Sidney
81
81
1598 - 1659
Dorothy
Percy
61
61
1563 - 1626
Robert
Sydney
62
62
~1564 - 1621
Barbara
Gamage
57
57
1564 - 1632
Henry
Percy
68
68
1827 - 1903
Emily
Adeline
Bither
75
75
~1568 - 1619
Dorothy
Devereux
51
51
1529 - 1586
Henry
Sidney
56
56
~1533 - 1586
Mary
Dudley
53
53
1522 - 1585
Henry
Percy
63
63
Was murdered.
1546 - 1596
Catherine
Nevill
50
50
~1508
William
Sydney
Anne
Brandon
~1502 - 1553
John
Dudley
51
51
English courtier and military commander. His father, Edmund Dudley, a lawyer involved in tax extortion under King Henry VII, was executed upon the accession of King Henry VIII. Dudley's mother remarried, and his stepfather gained him favor at court. He was made governor of Calais in 1538 and warden of the Scottish marches in 1542, the year he was elevated to the peerage as Viscount Lisle. He was created earl of Warwick in 1546. Upon the accession of King Edward VI, a minor, in 1547, Dudley became joint regent and lord chamberlain of England. After subduing a Scottish rebellion in 1547, he embarked on a struggle for power with the Seymour family, headed by Edward Seymour. Dudley was created duke of Northumberland in 1550 and two years later disposed of his rival, Seymour, by having him tried and executed on false charges. Subsequently, he conspired to gain the succession to the English throne for his heirs by marrying his son, Guildford (died 1554), to Lady Jane Grey. His resistance to the accession of Queen Mary I led to his execution in 1553.
1504 - 1555
Jane
Guilford
51
51
~1504 - 1537
Thomas
Percy
33
33
Was beheaded.
~1462 - 1510
Edmund
Dudley
48
48
A lawyer involved in tax extortion under Henry VII, was executed upon the accession of Henry VIII.
~1470 - >1530
Elizabeth
Grey
60
60
1478 - 1531
Henry
Algeron
Percy
53
53
1477
Catherine
Spencer
~1427 - 1503
John
Dudley
76
76
~1440 - 1499
Elizabeth
Bremshot
59
59
~1449 - 1489
Henry
Percy
40
40
Was murdered.
~1453 - ~1485
Maud
Herbert
32
32
~1430
Robert
Spencer
~1431 - 1501
Eleanor
Beaufort
70
70
1400 - 1487
John
Sutton
87
87
~1400 - 1478
Elizabeth
Berkeley
78
78
~1380 - 1406
John
Sutton
26
26
~1380 - 1432
Constance
Blount
52
52
1351 - ~1428
John
Berkeley
77
77
~1353
Elizabeth
Betteshorne
~1392 - 1429
Richard
Poynings
37
37
~1400 - 1455
Alianore
Berkeley
55
55
~1350 - 1403
Walter
Blount
53
53
~1360 - ~1418
Sancha
De
Ayala
58
58
~1310 - 1385
Katharine
Clivedon
75
75
1382 - 1446
Robert
Poynings
63
63
~1388 - ~1443
Isabella
Eleanor
Grey
55
55
~1298 - ~1358
John
Blount
60
60
~1307 - 1391
Eleanor
Beauchamp
84
84
~1362 - 1440
Reynold
De
Grey
78
78
~1366 - <1414
Margaret
De
Ros
48
48
~1270
Walter
Blount
~1274
Johanna
De
Sodington
1306 - 1343
John
Beauchamp
36
36
~1308 - 1361
Margaret
St.
John
53
53
~1332 - 1388
Reginald
De
Grey
56
56
Eleanor
Le
Strange
~1368 - 1414
William
De
Ros
46
46
~1372 - 1439
Margaret
Fitzalan
67
67
1274 - 1336
John
De
Beauchamp
62
62
~1279 - 1327
Joan
(Chenduit)
Cheney
48
48
1273 - 1329
John
St.
John
55
55
~1283
Isabel
Courtenay
~1270 - 1352
Roger
De
Grey
82
82
1833 - 1919
Teresa
Mayer
86
86
Elizabeth
Hastings
1336 - 1383
Thomas
De
Ros
47
47
~1339 - 1415
Beatrice
Stafford
76
76
~1348 - 1379
John
Fitzalan
31
31
Second son; drowned in Irish Sea.
~1367 - 1405
Elizabeth
Despencer
38
38
~1248 - 1283
John
De
Beauchamp
35
35
~1252 - 1320
Cecelia
De
Vivonia
68
68
~1240 - 1323
John
De
Grey
83
83
Maud
Basset
~1285 - 1342
William
De
Ros
57
57
1831 - 1891
Antone
Pfitzer
60
60
~1306 - 1363
Margaret
De
Badlesmere
57
57
~1338 - 1379
John
Fitzalan
41
41
Drowned in Irish Sea.
ABT 1345/46 - 1404
Eleanor
Maltravers
Giles
De
Beauchamp
N.n.
~1242 - 1265
Ralph
Basset
23
23
~1251 - 1293
Margaret
De
Somery
42
42
D. ~1306
Walter
De
Beauchamp
Alice
De
Toeni
~1235 - 1264
Roger
V De
Toeni
29
29
1886 - 1979
Ida
Mabel
Koetting
93
93
~1228
Alice
De
Bohun
~1189 - ~1239
Ralf Vi
De
Toeni
50
50
~1208
Petronilla
De
Malmains
~1160 - 1209
Roger
IV
Toeni
49
49
Constance
De
Beaumont
D. ~1162
Ralf V
De
Toeni
Margaret
De
Beaumont
~1104 - ~1176
Roger
III De
Toeni
72
72
Ida
D'hainault
<1270
Matilda
De
Vaux
1882 - 1982
Paul
Louis
Diehl
99
99
1743 - 1827
Alexander
Gordon
83
83
D. 1812
Jane
Maxwell
D. 1779
Cosmo
George
Gordon
D. 1779
Catherine
Gordon
D. 1728
Alexander
Gordon
D. 1760
Henrietta
Mordaunt
D. 1716
George
Gordon
Marquess of Huntley
D. 1732
Elizabeth
Howard
D. ~1653
Lewis
Gordon
Mary
Grant
1899
Johanna
Heinz
1628 - 1683
Henry
Howard
54
54
D. ~1662
Anne
Somerset
D. 1649
George
Gordon
D. 1638
Anne
Campbell
1608 - 1652
Henry
Frederick
Furnivall
43
43
D. 1673
Elizabeth
Stuart
D. 1667
Edward
Somerset
D. 1635
Elizabeth
Dormer
D. 1636
George
Gordon
Henrietta
Stewart
1896
Guy
Wieser
1585 - 1646
Thomas
Howard
61
61
D. 1654
Alathea
Talbot
Baroness Strange; Baroness Talbot; Baroness Furnivall.
~1579 - 1624
Esm‚
Stuart
45
45
Earl of March
D. 1637
Katherine
Clifton
D. 1646
Henry
Somerset
Earl of Somerset
D. 1639
Anne
Russell
~1542 - 1583
Esm‚
Stuart
41
41
D. ~1631
Catherine
De
Balsac
1557 - 1595
Philip
Howard
38
38
Anne
Dacre
Living
Rosado
1552 - 1616
Gilbert
De
Furnivall
63
63
Mary
Cavendish
D. 1627
Edward
Somerset
D. 1621
Elizabeth
Hastings
D. 1567
John
Stuart
Anne
De La
Quelle
D. 1557
Mary
Fitzalan
~1528 - 1607
George
Talbot
79
79
D. ~1566
Gertrude
Manners
D. 1588
William
Somerset
Living
Pazo
Christian
North
D. 1604
George
Hastings
Dorothy
Port
~1500 - 1560
Francis
De
Furnivall
60
60
Mary
Dacre
D. 1543
Thomas
Manners
D. ~1550
Eleanor
Paston
~1514 - 1561
Francis
Hastings
47
47
Katherine
Pole
~1468 - 1538
George
Talbot
70
70
1893
Catherine
Perrygrove
Anne
Hastings
D. 1513
George
Manners
~1474 - 1526
Anne
St.
Leger
52
52
~1489 - 1544
George
Hastings
55
55
~1493
Anne
Stafford
Henry
Pole
N.n.
1448 - 1473
John
De
Furnivall
24
24
D. 1476
Catherine
Stafford
Robert
Manners
1889
Thomas
Patrick
Maguire
D. ~1487
Eleanor
De
Ros
~1419 - 1483
Thomas
St.
Leger
64
64
1439 - 1475
Anne
Plantagenet
35
35
~1467 - 1533
Mary
Hungerford
66
66
Baroness Moleyns; Baroness Hungerford; Baroness Botreaux.
D. 1504
Richard
Pole
1473 - 1521
Margaret
Plantagenet
47
47
Married by King Henry VII to Sir Richard Pole. Given the family lands of the earldom of Salisbury in fee by King Henry VIII who was desirous to atone for the executiuon of her brother, Edward, Earl of Warwick. Created Countess of Salisbury and Governess to Princess Mary Tudor. Refused on marriage of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn to give up the Prioncesses jewels. Returned to court after Anne's fall in 1536. Compromised by her son Reginald's book "De Unitate Ecclesiastica". For which, despite her comdemnation of the work, Henry VIII resolved to destroy the whole family. She was included in the Act of Attainder May 1539 and beheaded May 1541, leaving issue.e Plantagenets. The last of the Plantagenets. Beatified by Pope Leo XIII on 20 Dec 1880. {Dictionary of National Biography and Burke's Peerage}
~1411 - 1460
John
Earl
Talbot
49
49
Knight; Killed in battle.
~1426 - 1473
Elizabeth
Butler
47
47
1427 - 1464
Thomas
De
Ros
36
36
Was beheaded.
Philippa
Tiptoft
~1437 - 1468
Thomas
Hungerford
31
31
Was executed.
~1436 - 1522
Anne
Percy
86
86
1449 - 1477
George
Plantagenet
27
27
George Plantagenet, son of Richard, duke of York, and brother of Edward IV, king of England, born in Dublin. The title duke of Clarence was revived for him in 1461 by Edward, and the following year he became lord lieutenant of Ireland. In 1469, in defiance of his brother, he married a daughter of Richard Neville, earl of Warwick. During the Wars of the Roses, Clarence first supported Warwick and the deposed Lancastrian king, Henry VI, against his brother Edward IV, but he later turned to aid Edward and the Yorkist faction. After the death of his father-in-law in 1471, Clarence shared the Warwick estates with his brother Richard, duke of Gloucester (later King Richard III), but retained the title earl of Warwick. Suspected of seeking the crown, Clarence was imprisoned, convicted by Parliament, and murdered in the Tower of London. His only son, Edward, earl of Warwick (1475-99), was imprisoned in the tower at the age of ten and was beheaded on the order of the Tudor king Henry VII. Shakespeare recounted the story of Clarence in Henry VI, Part III and Richard III.
1451 - 1476
Isabel
Neville
25
25
~1383 - 1453
John
Earl
Talbot
70
70
Knight; killed in Battle of Chastillon.
~1391 - <1421
Maud
Neville
30
30
1610 - 1688
James
Butler
77
77
1619 - 1684
Elizabeth
Preston
64
64
D. 1431
Thomas
De
Ros
1428 - 1471
Richard 'the
Kingmaker'
Neville
42
42
Warwick, Richard Neville, Earl of (1428-71), English statesman, called the Kingmaker, eldest son of the 1st earl of Salisbury. In 1449, Henry VI, king of England, granted Neville the earldom of Warwick, which had belonged to Neville's wife's family. During the Wars of the Roses, he supported the Yorkist faction. He was rewarded with the governorship of Calais in France in 1456. He took part in the Yorkist victories at Northampton in 1460 and at Towton in 1461. Henry was deposed from the throne of England and the Yorkist Edward IV was proclaimed king in 1461. Warwick then virtually ruled the kingdom until 1464. Increasingly at odds with Edward, he fled to France in 1470 and allied himself with Margaret of Anjou, whose husband, the deposed Henry VI, was being held prisoner in the Tower of London. That same year Warwick invaded England as a Lancastrian and defeated Edward IV. Warwick had Henry released from imprisonment in September 1470 and restored him to the throne. When Edward IV returned and the Yorkists rallied to his banner, Warwick was outmaneuvered. He was slain in the Battle of Barnet.
Anne
De
Beauchamp
D. 1396
Richard
Talbot
Thomas
Neville
Joane
De
Furnivall
D. 1619
Thomas
Butler
Drowned.
Elizabeth
Poyntz
~1400 - 1460
Richard
Neville
60
60
Was beheaded.
~1405 - ~1462
Alice
Montagu
57
57
D. 1387
Gilbert
De
Talbot
Petronilla
Botiler
D. 1632
Walter
Butler
D. 1631
Helen
Butler
~1388 - 1428
Thomas
Montagu
40
40
D. ~1356
Richard
De
Talbot
Elizabeth
De
Comyn
~1305 - 1337
James
Butler
32
32
D. 1363
Eleanor
De
Bohun
D. 1570
John
Butler
Katherine
Macartie
D. 1305
John
'the Red'
Comyn
Was murdered by The Bruce.
Joan
De
Valence
D. 1321
Edmund
Le
Botiler
Joan
Fitzgerald
D. 1646
James
Butler
Joan
Fiitzgerald
D. ~1274
John 'the
Black'
Comyn
Marjory
(Alianora)
De Baliol
~1242 - 1285
Theobald
Le
Botiler
43
43
1250 - ~1302
Joan
Fitzgeoffrey
52
52
D. 1539
Piers
Butler
Hannah
Scott
Margaret
Fitzgerald
John
'the Red'
Comyn
D. 1268
John
De
Baliol
Baliol, John de, English nobleman and patron of learning. Married to the wealthy Scottish heiress Dervorguilla (1213?-90), who had family connections with the royal house, he was a member of the Scottish regency council during the minority of Alexander III. In 1263 he awarded benefactions to a group of scholars and donated lands for the endowment of a school at Oxford that became known as Balliol College. His son, John de Baliol, became king of Scotland in 1292. The name is also spelled Balliol.
D. 1290
Devorguilla
Of
Galloway
~1216 - ~1248
Theobald
Le
Botiler
32
32
Margery
De
Burgh
James
Butler
Sabh
Kavanagh
D. 1513
Gerald
Fitzgerald
D. 1516
Elizabeth
St.
John
Christopher
Webb
Rickard
De
Burgh
N.n.
Madden
Richard
Butler
Catherine
O'reilly
D. 1477
Thomas
Fitzgerald
D. ~1486
Joan
Fitzgerald
N.n.
De
Burgh
N.n.
Mary
Arnold
~1362 - 1382
James
Butler
20
20
~1359 - >1396
Anne
De
Wells
37
37
D. 1427
John
Fitzgerald
Margaret
De La
Herne
~1467 - ~1487
Ulick
De
Burgh
20
20
N.n.
D. 1382
James
Butler
Elizabeth
Darcy
~1318 - 1390
Maurice
Fitzgerald
72
72
Elizabeth
Burghersh
1664 - 1697
Ephriam
Arnold
33
33
Several
Generations
De Burgh
N.n.
D. 1328
Thomas
Fitzgerald
D. 1359
Joan
De
Burgh
William
Uachtar
De Burgh
N.n.
~1290 - 1313
John
De
Burgh
23
23
1295 - 1360
Elizabeth
De
Clare
65
65
Founded Clare College at the University of Cambridge.
William
De
Burgh
N.n.
Abigail
Sherman
~1259 - 1326
Richard
De
Burgh
67
67
y
~1262 - ~1303
Margaret
De
Burgh
41
41
~1200 - 1243
Richard
De
Burgh
43
43
Govenor of Ireland
~1200
Gille
De
Lacy
1232 - 1271
Walter
De
Burgh
39
39
~1248 - 1274
Aveline
Fitzjohn
26
26
D. ~1279
John II
De
Burgh
D. <1273
Cecily
De
Baliol
1177 - ~1205
William
Fitzadelm
De Burgh
28
28
~1186 - 1237
Joan
(Isabel)
Plantagenet
51
51
Samuel
Willard
~1210 - ~1275
John I
De
Burgh
65
65
D. ~1249
Hawise
De
Lanvallei
Adelm
De
Burgo
Agnes
De
France
1197 - ~1243
Hubert
De
Burgh
46
46
Burgh, Hubert de (flourished 1197-1243), English statesman. He was in the service of King Richard I, and by 1201 he had become chamberlain to King John. According to Ralph of Coggeshall, a contemporary English chronicler, after the English subjugated Normandy, Burgh, as jailer, refused to obey a royal order to mutilate his prisoner Arthur, duke of Brittany. Burgh also is said to have urged John to grant the Magna Carta. In 1215 the king appointed Burgh chief justiciar, or justice, of England, an office he held for 17 years. In 1217, after Louis VIII of France had invaded England, Burgh won a naval victory that forced Louis to withdraw and renounce his claims to the English crown. From 1219 until 1227 Burgh was virtual ruler of England as regent for John's successor, Henry III. When Henry attained his majority in 1227, he made Burgh earl of Kent. Later the two men quarreled about a military expedition to France and royal subservience to the papacy. Charged with treason in 1232, Burgh was jailed and stripped of his title and estates. These were restored in 1234, when he received a full pardon.
D. 1214
Beatrice
De
Warenne
John
De
Burgh
Alice
Beatrix
De
Pierrepont
Mercy
Wensley
D. 1208
William
De
Warren
Elizabeth
Browne
1631 - 1709
Joseph
Bridgham
77
77
~1110
John
D'estouteville
Alice
Of
Durham
~1135 - 1183
Maldred
Fitzdolfin
48
48
Agnes
N.n.
D'estouteville
~1150 - 1193
Geoffrey
De
Neville
43
43
1767 - 1825
Agnes
(Anna)
Thoms
58
58
~1154
Emma
De
Bulmer
~1170 - ~1242
Robert
Fitzmaldred
72
72
~1175 - 1254
Isabel
De
Neville
79
79
~1207 - 1242
Geoffrey
Fitzrobert
De Neville
35
35
Ribald
Of
Middleham
Beatrice
Ralph
Talybois
1765 - 1839
James
Dunning
73
73
~1110
Agatha
De
Brus
~1145
Robert
Talybois
~1112 - 1190
Ranulph
De
Glanville
78
78
~1120
Bertha
Valoines
Helewise
De
Glanville
~1186
Cecilia
De
Fontaines
~1182 - 1228
Hugh
De
Baliol
46
46
1788 - 1861
Sarah
Or Sally
Killbrath
72
72
~1206 - 1251
Ada
De
Baliol
45
45
~1195 - 1240
John
Fitzrobert De
Warkworth
45
45
~1186
Mary
Bigod
~1182 - 1251
Ranulf
Fitzrobert
69
69
John
De
Longvillers
D. 1319
Margaret
(Joan) De
Longvillers
Joan
Monmouth
~1241 - 1285
Geoffrey
De
Neville
44
44
~1229 - 1282
Robert
De
Neville
53
53
Robert
Bertham
1787 - 1877
Peter
Bither
89
89
~1220
Ida
Bertham
~1216
Ralph
Fitzrandolph
~1220
Anastasie
De
Percy
~1228 - 1249
Roger
Fitzjohn
21
21
~1300 - 1373
Alice
De
Audley
73
73
~1240 - 1271
Robert
De
Neville
31
31
~1244
Mary
Fitzrandolph
Isabel
1247 - 1310
Robert
Fitzrobert
63
63
~1251
Margaret
La
Zouche
1673 - <1757
Elizabeth
Alden
84
84
1262 - 1331
Ralph
(Randolph)
De Neville
68
68
~1267
Anastasia
(Euphemia)
Fitzrobert
~1290 - 1367
Ralph
De
Neville
77
77
1649 - 1711
Joseph
Ball
62
62
1665 - 1743
Mary
Montague
78
78
1670 - 1717
Edmund
Chandler
47
47
~1491 - 1554
Robert
Dymoke
63
63
~1472
Jane
Sparrow
~1428 - 1471
Thomas
Dymoke
43
43
~1434 - 1480
Margaret
De
Welles
46
46
~1402 - 1443
Philip
Dymoke
41
41
~1365
Joane
Conyers
~1406
Lionel
De
Welles
~1406
Joan
De
Waterton
~1340
Christopher
Conyers
Anne
Dacre
~1387 - 1421
Eudo
De
Welles
34
34
~1388 - ~1418
Maud
De
Greystoke
30
30
D. ~1524
William
Conyers
Anne
Neville
~1350 - 1421
John
De
Welles
71
71
1364 - 1417
Margaret
(Alianor) De
Mowbray
53
53
1353 - 1418
Ralph
De
Greystoke
64
64
~1358 - 1418
Katherine
De
Clifford
60
60
D. ~1470
John
Conyers
Killed in battle.
Alice
Neville
D. ~1523
Ralph
Neville
Isabel
Booth
John
De
Welles
Maud
De
Ros
1333 - 1389
Roger
De
Clifford
56
56
~1340 - 1402
Maud
De
Beauchamp
62
62
D. 1462
William
Neville
Joane
De
Fauconberg
D. 1461
John
Neville
Killed in battle.
Anne
De
Holland
1305 - 1344
Robert
De
Clifford
38
38
~1307 - 1362
Isabella
De
Berkeley
55
55
1313 - 1369
Thomas
De
Beauchamp
56
56
Marshall of England.
~1309
Catherine
Mortimer
~1319 - 1362
Walter
De
Fauconberg
43
43
Maud
Patshull
D. ~1420
John
Neville
Elizabeth
De
Holland
~1374 - 1400
Thomas
De
Holland
26
26
Earl of Kent; Was beheaded.
~1382 - 1425
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
43
43
~1278 - ~1315
Guy
De
Beauchamp
37
37
Knight.
~1283 - 1324
Alice
De
Toeni
41
41
~1290 - ~1349
John
De
Fauconberg
59
59
N.n.
D. ~1318
Walter
De
Fauconberg
Isabel
De
Ros
1235 - 1264
Ralph
De
Toeni
29
29
~1228
Alice
(Isabel)
De Bohun
1255 - 1295
Roger Vii
(Ralph)
De Toeni
40
40
Mary
~1451 - 1534
Robert
Tailboys
83
83
~1442
Elizabeth
Heron
~1418 - 1461
John
Heron
43
43
Killed in battle.
~1422 - 1438
Elizabeth
Heron
16
16
~1400 - 1425
William
Heron
25
25
~1401
Anne
Ogle
~1369 - 1438
Robert
Ogle
69
69
~1382 - 1451
Maud
Grey
69
69
1384 - 1415
Thomas
Grey
30
30
~1369
Alice
Neville
D. 1400
Thomas
Grey
~1363
Catherine
(Joan) De
Mowbray
~1439 - ~1463
William
Gascoigne
24
24
~1443
Joan
Neville
~1416 - 1481
John
Neville
65
65
Elizabeth
Newmarch
~1386 - 1457
Ralph
Neville
71
71
<1394 - 1457
Mary
De
Ferrers
63
63
~1373 - 1396
Robert
De
Ferrers
23
23
1791 - 1860
Charles
Lennox
69
69
Duke of Lennox; Duke of Richmond.
~1764 - 1819
Charles
Lennox
55
55
D. 1842
Charlotte
Gordon
D. ~1805
George
Henry
Lennox
D. ~1830
Louisa
Kerr
D. 1750
Charles
Lennox
D. ~1751
Sarah
Cadogan
~1710 - 1775
William
Henry
Kerr
65
65
D. 1778
Caroline
D'arcy
1672 - 1723
Charles
Stuart
50
50
D. 1722
Anne
Brunenell
D. 1767
William
Kerr
D. 1759
Margaret
Nicholson
1681 - 1721
Robert
Darcy
39
39
D. 1751
Fredrica
Von
Schomberg
D. 1734
Louise
De
Keroua
Duchess d'Aubigny; Duchess of Portsmith.
D. 1722
William
Kerr
D. 1712
Jane
Campbell
D. 1688
John
Darcy
Bridget
Sutton
D. 1702
Robert
Kerr
D. 1700
Jean
Campbell
~1620 - ~1692
Conyers
Darcy
72
72
Frances
Howard
~1599 - 1689
Conyers
Darcy
90
90
Grace
Rokeby
D. 1668
Thomas
Howard
Elizabeth
Cecil
~1570 - 1653
Conyers
Darcy
83
83
Dorothy
Balasyse
D. 1605
Thomas
Darcy
Elizabeth
Conyers
D. 1584
Mark
Kerr
Helen
Leslie
D. ~1631
John
Herries
Elizabeth
Maxwell
D. 1557
John
Conyers
Maud
Clifford
D. 1558
George
Leslie
Agnes
Somerville
D. 1604
William
Herries
D. 1600
Catherine
Kerr
D. 1513
William
Leslie
Killed in Battle.
Margaret
Balfour
D. ~1490
George
Leslie
Christian
Halyburton
Norman
Leslie
Christian
Seton
D. ~1411
George
Leslie
Elizabeth
Hay
D. 1910
Caroline
Paget
D. 1783
John
Spencer
D. 1814
Georgiana
Poyntz
1708 - 1746
John
Spencer
38
38
D. 1780
Georgina
Carteret
~1696 - 1749
John
Bingham
53
53
D. 1761
Anne
Vesey
Agmondesham
Vesey
Charlotte
Sarsfield
William
Sarsfiled
He Was the elder Brother of Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, who was killed at the Battle of Landen, in Flandres.
Mary
Crofts
Lucy
Walters
1791 - 1851
Horace
Beauchamp
Seymour
60
60
D. 1827
Elizabeth
Malet
Palk
~1759 - 1801
Hugh
Seymour
42
42
D. 1801
Anna
Horatia
Waldegrave
1718 - 1794
Francis
Seymour
75
75
1726 - 1782
Isabella
Fitz
Roy
56
56
1679 - 1732
Francis
Seymour
52
52
D. 1715
Jane
Bowden
1683 - 1757
Charles
Fitzroy
73
73
D. 1726
Henrietta
Somerset
~1633 - 1707
Edward
Seymour
74
74
D. 1724
Laetitia
Popham
~1663 - ~1690
Henry
Fitzroy
27
27
Earl of Euston
D. 1723
Isabella
Bennett
1660 - 1693
Charles
Somerset
32
32
D. 1712
Rebecca
Child
D. 1688
Edward
Seymour
Anne
Portman
D. 1709
Barbara
De
Grandison
~1629 - 1699
Henry
Somerset
70
70
Marquess of Somerset
D. 1714
Mary
Capel
D. 1659
Edward
Seymour
Dorothy
Killegrew
D. 1613
Edward
Seymour
Elizabeth
Champernowne
~1529 - ~1593
Edward
Seymour
64
64
Margaret
Walsh
~1500 - 1551
Edward
Seymour
51
51
Seymour, Edward, protector of England (1547-50). Said to have attended both the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, he gained the favor of King Henry VIII and was created earl of Hertford in 1537. Upon the king's death in 1547, Seymour assumed the protectorate with the consent of Henry's 9-year-old son and successor, Edward VI, who was Seymour's nephew. With almost absolute authority, he also assumed the title duke of Somerset. During his years as protector, he went to war against Scotland, winning the Battle of Pinkie in 1547. Seymour's influence brought Protestant reforms into the Church of England, including the adoption in 1549 of the Book of Common Prayer, but his sympathy with the peasant class eventually led to his overthrow by John Dudley, duke of Northumberland and earl of Warwick. Seymour was imprisoned by Northumberland in 1549. He was released in 1550, was imprisoned again in 1551, and was finally beheaded in 1552.
Katherine
Fillol
John
Seymour
D. ~1550
Margaret
Wentworth
John
Seymour
Elizabeth
Darrel
Henry
Wentworth
Elizabeth
Neville
~1433
Margaret
Stourton
D. ~1464
Philip
Wentworth
Mary
De
Clifford
~1404 - 1462
John
Stourton
58
58
~1414
Marjory
Wadham
D. >1452
Roger
Wentworth
Margery
Le
Despenser
~1373 - 1413
William
Stourton
40
40
~1373
Elizabeth
Moyne
John
Stourton
~1354 - 1435
Catherine
De
Beaumont
81
81
~1340 - 1369
Henry
De
Beaumont
29
29
Maud
De
Vere
~1318 - ~1342
John
De
Beaumont
24
24
D. 1340
Henry
De
Beaumont
He was 1st Baron de Beaumont, Lord of the Isle of Man, and Constable of Scotland.
Alice
De
Comyn
William
De
Lanvallei
Gunnora
St.
Clare
D. 1204
William
II De
Lanvallei
D. >1176
Hugh
Bocland
Hawise
De
Bocland
Alice
Fitzrobert
D. 1217
William
III De
Lanvallei
D. 1212
Gilbert
Peche
Maud
Peche
1163 - 1230
Berengaria
Sanchez
67
67
Berengaria (1165?-1230), queen consort of King Richard I of England. She was the daughter of Sancho VI, king of Navarre, and was betrothed to Richard shortly after his accession to the English throne in 1189. She joined him in Italy in 1191, while he was traveling to Palestine on the Third Crusade, and they were married later the same year in Limassol, Cyprus. From 1191 to 1192, while Richard campaigned against the Saracens, she lived in Acre in Palestine, and from 1192 to 1194, while he was a prisoner in Germany, she lived in Poitou (now in France). After Richard's release from captivity the couple appear to have become estranged, and modern historians agree that they were probably never reunited. After Richard's death in 1199, Berengaria spent most of her last years in Le Mans, France, where she died.
1650 - 1722
John
Churchill
72
72
Marlborough, John Churchill, 1st Duke of (1650-1722), English general, considered one of the greatest military commanders in history. Churchill was born in Musbury on May 26, 1650. From 1672 to 1673 he served with distinction under his patron, the duke of York, later James II, king of England, who commanded the English troops sent to assist France in a war against the Netherlands. In 1682 Churchill, then a colonel, was raised to the peerage. During the rebellion of 1685, which was led by James Scott, duke of Monmouth, Churchill was second in command of the forces of James II and was made a major general. Later, fearing that James intended to make Roman Catholicism the state religion of England, Churchill joined the conspiracy to replace James with the Dutch prince William of Orange. When William landed in England in 1688, Churchill was promoted to lieutenant general by James and sent to fight William, but instead he deserted to the latter. William was crowned king as William III, and in 1689 he made Churchill a privy councillor and earl of Marlborough. In 1692 and again in 1696 Marlborough was charged with treason because he corresponded with James, who was then living in exile in France; Marlborough was not imprisoned, but he lost favor at the royal court. When James's daughter, Anne, succeeded as queen of England in 1702, Marlborough regained his position at court. That same year, during the War of the Spanish Succession(see Spanish Succession, War of the), he was commander in chief of the armies of England and the Netherlands, and he was created 1st duke of Marlborough as a reward for his brilliant victories over the French. Marlborough's greatest triumphs were in the battles of Blenheim (1704), Ramillies (1706), and Oudenarde (1708). In 1711 Marlborough was falsely accused of embezzling public funds, removed as commander in chief, and stripped of the public offices that he had been given in gratitude for his military exploits. He lived abroad in self-imposed exile from 1712 to 1714. After the accession of George I as king of Great Britain, Marlborough returned to England in 1714, and his military rank was restored to him. He died June 16, 1722, at Windsor.
~1640
Sarah
Jennings
Winston
Churchill
Elizabeth
Drake
~1621
Richard
Jennings
~1625
Frances
Thornhurst
~1600
John
Jennings
~1600
Alice
Spencer
~1598
Giffard
Thornhurst
~1600
Susan
Temple
1559 - 1624
Richard
Spencer
65
65
~1574 - 1614
Helen
Elinora
Brocket
40
40
1517 - 1586
John
Spencer
69
69
~1521 - 1586
Catherine
(Katherine)
Kitson
65
65
1528/38 - 1598
John
Brockett
1540
Helen
Lytton
~1496 - 1532
William
Spencer
36
36
~1498 - 1532
Susan
(Susanna)
Knightley
34
34
1485 - 1540
Thomas
Kitson
55
55
1509 - 1561
Margaret
Donington
52
52
~1470 - 1552
John
Spencer
82
82
~1474
Isabel
Graunt
~1455 - 1534
Richard
Knightley
79
79
~1461 - 1539
Jane
Skenard
78
78
~1427 - 1476
Richard
Knightley
49
49
~1404 - <1502
Eleanor
Throckmorton
98
98
~1435
Henry
Skenard
~1439 - ~1492
Margery
Harwedon
53
53
~1395 - 1442
Richard
Knightley
47
47
~1400 - 1474
Elizabeth
Purefoy
74
74
~1496 - 1567
Eleanor
Harbottle
71
71
1392 - 1452
James 'the
White Earl'
Butler
60
60
~1396 - 1430
Joan
Beauchamp
34
34
~1358 - 1411
William
Beauchamp
53
53
~1365 - 1435
Joan
Fitzalan
70
70
~1338 - 1401
Thomas
De
Beauchamp
63
63
~1347 - 1406
Margaret
Ferrers
59
59
~1538
John
Gamage
1885 - 1955
Edmund
Maurice
Roche
70
70
1851 - 1920
James
Boothby
Burke Roche
69
69
Died at the Artillery Mansion.
1857 - 1947
Frances
Ellen
Work
89
89
One of Mrs. Astor's "400"
1815 - 1874
Edmund
Burke
Roche
59
59
1821 - 1897
Eliza
Caroline
Boothby
75
75
1819 - 1911
Frank
Work
92
92
Millionaire speculator, broker, banker, horseowner, and protege of Commodore Vanderbuilt.
1831 - 1877
Ellen
Wood
45
45
~1788
John
Work
(Wark)
1790 - 1860
Sarah
Duncan
Boude
70
70
1785 - 1848
John
Wood
62
62
1802 - 1863
Eleonor
Strong
61
61
~1764 - 1802
George
Wood
38
38
1766 - 1818
Elizabeth
Conner
52
52
1770 - 1812
Joseph
Strong
42
42
1779 - 1862
Rebecca
Young
83
83
1740 - 1809
Benajah
Strong
69
69
Selectman of Coventry and member of Connecticut General Assembly in 1781 who responded to the Lexington Alarm under Capt. Elias Buell of Coventry and served as a private and corporal.
1747 - 1783
Lucy
Bishop
35
35
1739 - 1784
Peter
Young
45
45
~1741 - 1796
Eleanor
55
55
1701 - 1773
Joseph
Strong
71
71
1704 - 1792
Elizabeth
Strong
87
87
1715 - 1785
Caleb
Bishop
69
69
1722 - ~1776
Keziah
Hibbard
54
54
1672 - 1763
Joseph
Strong
91
91
1672 - 1724
Sarah
Allen
52
52
1680 - 1765
Preserved
Strong
85
85
1677 - 1750
Tabitha
Lee
73
73
1682 - 1732
Ebenezer
Hibbard
50
50
1686
Margaret
Morgan
1633 - 1689
Thomas
Strong
55
55
Thomas was a trooper under Capt. Mason of Windsor; removed with his father to Northampton 1659.
~1645 - 1714
Rachel
Holton
69
69
1636 - 1684
Nehemiah
Allen
48
48
1649 - 1713
Sarah
Woodford
63
63
1637 - 1733
Jedediah
Strong
96
96
~1641 - 1681
Freedom
Woodward
40
40
1634 - 1690
John
Lee
56
56
1664 - 1710
Mary
Hart
46
46
1648 - 1710
Robert
Hebard
62
62
~1654 - 1736
Mary
Walden
82
82
1605 - 1699
John
Strong
94
94
Hingham 1635 - 1st to draw house lots. Freeman 1637, moved Taunton. Rep 1641- 4. Abt 1648 mvd to Windsor, Ct. made freeman of Ct. may 1651 - soon after 1660 was inhabitant of northampton, ma. Came with John 1635 on "Hopewell". !st wife died in Hingham, Ma. right after landing. Had 8dau and 7sons by 3 wives. John Strong was born in Tauton, England, in 1605, whence he removed to London and afterwards to Plymouth. Having strong Puritan sympathies he sailed from Plymouth for the new world, March 20, 1630, in company with 140 persons and arrived at Nantasket, Mass. (Hull), about twelve miles southeast of Boston, after a passage of more than seventy days in length, on Sunday, May 30, 1630. After searching for a few days, they decided upon the spot which they called Dorchester, in memory of the endeared home in England. In 1635, after having assisted in founding and developing the town of Dorchester, John Strong removed to Hingham, Mass. and on March 9, 1636, took the freeman's oath at Boston. On Dec. 4, 1638, he is found to have been an inhabitant and proprietor of Tauton, Mass., and to have been made that year a freeman of Plymouth Colony. From Tauton, he moved to Windsor, Ct. and then in 1659 he removed from Windsor to Northampton, Mass., of which he was one of the first and most active founders. In Northampton he lived for forty years. He was a tanner and very prosperous in his business. He owned at different times some two hundred acres of land in and around Northampton. His first wife he married in England. She died on the passage or soon after landing; and in about two months her infant offspring, a second child, died also. He married in December, 1630, for a second wife, Abigal Ford of Dorchester, Mass., with whom he lived in wedlock for fifty-eight years. She died, the mother of 16 children, July 6, 1688, aged about 80; he died April 14, 1699, aged 94. He had had, up to the time of his decease, 160 descendents, viz: eighteen children, fifteen of whom had families; one hundred and fourteen grandchildren and thirty-three great grandchildren, at least. -The History of the Descendents of Elder John Strong. Benjamin W. Dwight
1610 - 1691
William
Holton
81
81
1612 - 1691
Mary
Winche
79
79
D. 1688
Abigail
Ford
1561 - 1612
John
Strong
51
51
Will of John Stronge of Chard, Proved 22 Sept. 1612 Where as the said John Stronge lieth sick of body but of good and perfect memory....to the poor of Chardland 4 shillings ....to the Church 2 shillings.... to my son John Strong, 10 pounds...to my child that my wife goeth with all 10 pounds....If either of them die it shall remain to the other, until they be of lawful year....To my brother Thomas Strong's daughter, my godaughter, 2 shillings. I give the other two, 1 shilling each....I make my wife whole executor of such goods as I have....I make my overseers My father george strong, John Bowbridge, Walter Strong. John Warry.... Witnesess:Henry Warry.
1568
Thomas
Houlton
~1586
N.n.
~1588 - 1676
Thomas
Ford
88
88
Thomas Ford and his family came on the MARY AND JOHN, 1630. The passage costs were 5 pounds per adult, 10 pounds per horse, 3 pounds per ton of freight. Thomas requested admission as a freeman 19 Oct. 1630 and took the oath 18 May 1631 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. To become a freeman at that time you had to be a member of the Church. 3 Apr. 1633 - "It is agreed that a doble rayle with morteses in the posts, of 10 foote distance one from the other, shall be set up on the marish.....by the owners of the Cowes vnder named, p'portionally. 20 foote to everye cowe." Thomas Forde owed two cows. The last record of Thomas Ford in Dorchester, Massachusetts was 5 Jul. 1636. 1637 - Thomas was one of four men who purchased a large tract from Sachem Tehano, which now includes Windsor Locks, the northern third of Windsor and the southern part of Suffield. 1637 - Granted fifty acres - Simsbury, Connecticut. Feb. 1639/40 - George Hull, "moved the court in behalf of Thomas Ford of Windsor, that in regard the workmen are much taken up and emplyed in making a bridge and meetinghouse with them, and his work hindered of impaling in the ground which was granted him by the court for a hog-park, that there may be granted him a year longer time for the fencing it in; which was upon the reasons aforesaid, condescended to." 1644 - Thomas removed to Hartford, Connecticut. He ran an "Ordinary", as an accomodation for strangers passing through. It was located in the Scott house located on the southwest corner of State and Front Streets. Diary of John Winthrop, Jr. - "reached the Inn of Thomas Ford at Hartford", 17 Nov. 1645. The Inn was sold to Thomas Cadwell in 1652. 1656 - Thomsa bought the homelot of William Hosford. 1658/59 - Thomas bought th Arthur Williams house and lot. 1667 Thomas helped settle the estate of Nicholas Denslow. 1669 - Thomas helped settle the estate of Elizabeth Denslow's. 1670 Apr. - Thomas Inventoried the estate of Rev. John Warham. Thomas removed to Northampton, Massachusetts bef. 1672 where he spent the rest of his life.
1589 - 1643
Elizabeth
Charde
54
54
1556 - ~1634
George
Strong
78
78
Manor Court Rolls - Chardstock Sept. 1596 - Paying homage to the manor court. May 3, 1604 - George Strang - Assessor to view commons July 13, 1604 - "The water in George Stronge's ditch is not able to pass but run out in the way and he must scower the same." 1629 - "We do present George Stronge for that he dothe sell fuell furses in the commons and carry them into another parish and burn them contrary to the customs of the our manor, therefore he is fined ten shillings; and that George Stronge hath pulled downe a barne builded upon posts upon his cottage and carryed the tymber into another manor and hath also rooted upp certayne apple trees growing uppon his said cottage and carryed the same out of the manor". 1631, 1632, 1633 - Fined for not cleaning his ditch. May 20, 1635 - Presentment of the death of George Stronge since the previous court and that he was tenant of TWO COTTAGES in Chardstock towne, to which Thomas Stronge was thereupon admitted as the next tenant. [Robin Bush, pub. By M&J Clearinghouse] 1636 - "That George Stronge, tenant since the last court to the cottage in Chardstock town and doth happen to the lord for a death duty, and that Thomas Strong is the next tenant".
~1563
Elizabeth
1542
Thomas
Houlton
~1546
N.n.
1566
John
Ford
~1560
Ellynor
Waldron
1515
John
Strong
1879 - 1964
Ruth
Littlejohn
84
84
1841 - 1924
David
Littlejohn
83
83
1843 - 1917
Jane
Crombie
74
74
1803 - 1888
William
Littlejohn
84
84
1811 - 1848
Janet
Bentley
37
37
1810 - 1878
James
Crombie
67
67
1812 - 1893
Katherine
Scott
Forbes
80
80
1771/72 - 1858
John
(James)
Crombie
1786/87 - 1864
Catherine
Harvey
1788 - 1820
Theodore
Forbes
32
32
Buried at sea.
~1790
Eliza
Kewark
1758 - 1824
John
Forbes
66
66
1757 - 1832
Katherine
Morison
75
75
1715 - 1794
George
Forbes
79
79
~1715 - 1763
Janet
Keith
48
48
~1727 - 1801
Alexander
Morison
74
74
1732 - 1803
Catharine
Duff
71
71
~1691
Theodore
Morison
~1695
Catharine
Maitland
1701 - 1743
John
Duff
42
42
~1703 - 1767
Helen
Gordon
64
64
~1675
Alexander
Duff
~1677
Katharine
Duff
~1678
James
Gordon
~1686 - <1720
Helen
Fraser
34
34
~1652
John
Gordon
~1654
Helen
Ogilvie
1654 - 1715
William
Fraser
60
60
1664 - 1734
Margaret
Sharpe
69
69
~1630 - 1682
Alexander
Fraser
52
52
1631 - 1658
Anne
Kerr
26
26
1618 - 1679
James
Sharpe
60
60
~1622
Helen
Moncrieff
1604 - 1693
Alexander
Fraser
89
89
~1592 - >1617
Elizabeth
Seton
25
25
~1605 - 1675
William
Kerr
70
70
~1618 - 1667
Anne
Kerr
49
49
1578 - 1654
Robert
Ker
76
76
~1582 - <1620
Elizabeth
Murray
38
38
~1592 - 1624
Robert
Kerr
32
32
Committed suicide.
~1594 - 1652
Annabella
Campbell
58
58
1558 - 1609
Mark
Kerr
51
51
~1538 - 1617
Margaret
Maxwell
79
79
~1364
Thomas
Ap
Llywelyn
~1368
Margaret
Verch
Philip
~1330
Llywelyn
Ap
Hywel
~1329
Mawd
Verch
Ieuan
~1304
Hywel
'fychan'
Ap Hywel
~1306
Alice
Verch
Llywelyn
~1281
Hywel
Ap
Einion
~1285
Letis
Verch
Cadwaladr
~1240
Cadwaladr
Ap
Gruffudd
~1202
Gruffudd
Ap
Cadwaladr
~1255 - >1281
Einion
'sais' Ap
Rhys
26
26
1865 - 1957
William
Smith
(Twin) Gill
92
92
Alexander
Ogston
Gill
D. 1898
Barbara
Smith
Marr
Eneco
Arista
Ximenes
Innigo
~1135 - <1162
Guillaume
I De
Dampierre
27
27
~1135
Ermengarde
De
Mouchy
Richilde
De
Clermont
Dreux
I De
Mello
N.n.
De
Beaumont
D. 1136
Dreux
II De
Mello
D. 1153
Dreux
III De
Mello
Dreux
IV De
Mello
Ermengarde
De
Roucy
Richard
Poynings
~1327
John
Betteshorne
~1329
Goda
<1260
John
De
Vaux
~1295 - 1322
Ela
(Milicent)
De Berkeley
27
27
~1290 - ~1343
John
Maltraves
53
53
Alianor
De
Gorges
D. 1365
John
Maltraves
~1319 - 1350
John
Maltraves
31
31
~1321 - 1375
Wensliana
(Gwenthlian)
54
54
~1591 - 1636
William
Spencer
45
45
1570 - 1627
Robert
Spencer
57
57
~1571 - 1597
Margaret
Willoughby
26
26
~1551 - 1599
John
Spencer
48
48
~1555 - 1619
Mary
(Margaretta)
Catlin
64
64
~1557 - 1596
Francis
Willoughby
39
39
~1546 - 1594
Elizabeth
Lyttleton
48
48
~1504 - 1574
Robert
Catlin
70
70
~1508
Anne
Boles
~1517 - 1551
Henry
Willoughby
34
34
~1520
Anne
Grey
1523 - 1589
John
Littleton
66
66
~1522
Bridget
Pakington
~1471
Edward
Willoughby
~1475
Anne
Filliol
1477 - 1530
Thomas
Grey
53
53
~1481
Margaret
Wotton
~1502 - 1534
John
Littleton
32
32
1502
Elizabeth
Talbot
~1488 - 1560
John
Pakington
72
72
~1484 - 1563
Anne
Rolle
Dacres
79
79
~1461 - 1501
Thomas
Grey
40
40
~1451 - 1530
Cicely
Bonville
79
79
1475 - 1507
William
Littleton
32
32
1477
Mary
Elizabeth
Whittington
~1468 - 1542
Gilbert
Talbot
74
74
1472
Anne
(Agnes)
Paston
1432 - 1460
John
Grey
28
28
Killed at Battle of St. Albans.
~1437 - 1492
Elizabeth
Woodville
55
55
Elizabeth Woodville, b. 1437, d. June 8, 1492, was the wife of King Edward IV of England. Married to Edward in 1464, she was unpopular at the Yorkist court because of the many favors bestowed on her family, previously Lancastrian supporters. When Edward died (1483), his brother Richard, duke of Gloucester, claimed that Elizabeth's two sons by Edward--Edward V and Richard of York--were illegitimate. He imprisoned them in the Tower of London (where they were murdered) and became king as Richard III. One of Elizabeth's daughters later married Henry VII.
1432 - 1460
William
Bonville
28
28
Killed at Battle of Wakefield.
~1435 - 1504
Catherine
Neville
69
69
1434 - 1496
William
Paston
62
62
~1435
Anne
Beaufort
1415 - 1457
Edward
Grey
42
42
~1418 - ~1483
Elizabeth
Ferrers
65
65
~1412 - 1469
Richard
Wydeville
57
57
Was executed.
1416 - 1472
Jacquette
De
Luxembourg
56
56
~1416
William
Bonville
~1418 - <1457
Elizabeth
Harington
39
39
~1413
William
Paston
~1417
Agnes
Berry
~1381 - 1448
Joan
Astley
67
67
~1390 - 1463
Henry
Ferrers
73
73
~1396 - 1452
Isabel
De
Mowbray
56
56
~1395
Blanche
Vache
<1344 - 1404
William
Astley
60
60
~1348
Joan
Willoughby
1372 - 1445
William
Ferrers
73
73
~1371 - 1441
Philippa
Clifford
70
70
1598 - 1667
Penelope
Wriothesley
68
68
1573 - 1624
Henry
Wriothesley
51
51
~1572 - 1655
Elizabeth
Vernon
83
83
D. 1581
Henry
Wriothesley
~1550 - 1607
Mary
Brown
57
57
1546 - 1592
John
Vernon
46
46
~1541 - 1583
Elizabeth
Devereux
42
42
1505 - 1550
Thomas
Wriothesley
44
44
~1509 - 1574
Jane
Cheney
65
65
~1527 - 1592
Anthony
Brown
65
65
1532 - 1552
Jane
Radcliff
20
20
~1520 - 1553
George
Vernon
33
33
~1522
Elizabeth
Pigot
~1519
Richard
Devereux
~1520
Dorothy
Hastings
1500 - 1568
Anthony
Brown
67
67
~1506 - 1540
Alice
Gage
34
34
~1483 - 1542
Robert
Radcliffe
59
59
~1505 - 1533
Margaret
Stanley
28
28
1488 - 1558
Walter
Devereaux
70
70
~1491 - 1537
Mary
Grey
46
46
~1443
Anthony
Brown
~1466 - 1534
Lucy
Neville
68
68
~1479 - 1557
John
Gage
78
78
~1480
Philippa
Guldeford
1451 - 1496
John
Radcliffe
45
45
~1453 - ~1534
Margaret
Whetehill
81
81
~1484 - 1521
Thomas
Stanley
37
37
~1486
Anne
Hastings
~1461 - 1501
John
Devereux
40
40
~1464 - 1492
Cecily
Bourchier
28
28
1466 - 1506
Edward
Hastings
39
39
~1402 - 1460
Thomas
Browne
58
58
~1418
Eleanor
Fitzalan
~1431 - 1471
John
Neville
40
40
~1435 - 1476
Isabel
Ingaldesthorpe
41
41
~1460 - 1497
George
Stanley
37
37
1463 - 1513
Joan
Strange
50
50
1432 - 1485
Walter
Devereux
53
53
1438 - 1468
Anna
(Agnes)
Ferrers
29
29
~1433 - 1471
William
Bourchier
38
38
Killed at Battle of Barnet.
~1440 - 1489
Anne
Wydeville
49
49
~1431 - 1483
William
Hastings
52
52
~1371
Robert
Brown
~1375
N.n.
~1400 - ~1431
Thomas
Fitzalan
31
31
~1402
Joane
Moyns
~1409
Edmund
Ingaldesthorpe
~1413
Joan
Tiptoft
~1438 - 1504
Eleanor
Neville
66
66
1444 - 1479
John
Ix Le
Strange
35
35
~1444 - <1479
Jacquetta
Wydeville
35
35
1404 - 1483
Henry
Bourchier
79
79
1411 - 1484
Isabel
Plantagenet
73
73
1396 - 1455
Leonard
Hastings
59
59
~1400
Alice
(Philipa)
Camoys
~1376
Henry
Moyns
1381 - 1449
Richard
Le
Strange
68
68
~1404
Elizabeth
Cobham
~1386 - 1420
William
Bourchier
34
34
1383 - 1438
Anne
Plantagenet
55
55
1431 - 1464
Robert
Hungerford
33
33
1426 - 1476
Eleanor
De
Moleyns
50
50
1593 - 1641
Francis
Russell
48
48
~1562 - 1613
William
Russell
51
51
~1562 - 1611
Elizabeth
Long
49
49
1527 - 1585
Francis
Russell
58
58
~1524 - 1562
Margaret
St.
John
38
38
~1532
Henry
Long
~1556
Dorothy
Clarke
~1485 - 1554
John
Russell
69
69
~1489 - 1558
Anne
Sapcote
69
69
~1498
John
St.
John
1485
Margaret
Walgrave
~1509
Richard
Long
~1506
Nicholas
Clarke
~1508
Elizabeth
Ramsay
~1465
John
St.
John
~1462
Sybil
Verch
Morgan
~1457 - 1526
William
Walgrave
69
69
1453 - 1540
Margery
Wentworth
87
87
~1450 - ~1510
Thomas
Long
60
60
~1452
Margery
Darell
~1426
John
St.
John
~1438
Alice
Bradshaw
1436
Morgan
Ap
Jenkyn
1438
Jane
Mathew
~1425 - 1500
Thomas
Waldegrave
75
75
~1445 - 1478
Elizabeth
Fray
33
33
~1426 - 1482
Henry
Wentworth
56
56
~1413
Elizabeth
Howard
~1419
John
Long
~1423
Margaret
Wayte
~1419 - 1474
George
Darrel
55
55
~1414 - <1440
Oliver
St.
John
26
26
~1416 - 1482
Margaret
Beauchamp
66
66
~1412
Thomas
Bradshaigh
~1416
N.n.
Sherburne
~1415 - 1454
William
Waldegrave
39
39
~1397 - 1450
Joane
De
Durward
53
53
1419
John
Fray
~1430 - 1478
Agnes
Danvers
48
48
~1397 - 1461
William
Darrell
64
64
1400 - 1464
Elizabeth
Calston
63
63
~1392
John
St.
John
~1396
Elizabeth
De
Umfreville
~1381 - ~1412
John
Beauchamp
31
31
~1375 - 1441
Edith
Stourton
66
66
1365 - 1436
John
Howard
71
71
1365 - 1467
Alice
Tendring
102
102
1344
William
Verney
Elizabeth
~1375
Alice
Verney
1583 - 1652
Catherine
Brydges
69
69
1548 - 1593
Giles
Brydges
45
45
1553 - 1623
Frances
Clinton
(Fiennes)
70
70
~1516 - 1572
Edmund
Brydges
56
56
1530 - 1605
Dorothy
Bray
75
75
1512 - 1584
Edward
Clinton
(Fiennes)
72
72
1518 - 1551
Ursula
Stourton
33
33
1491 - 1557
John
Brydges
66
66
~1497 - 1559
Elizabeth
Grey
62
62
~1484 - 1539
Edmund
Bray
55
55
~1486 - 1558
Jane
Halighwell
72
72
1490 - 1517
Thomas
(Fiennes)
Clinton
27
27
~1490 - 1553
Joan
(Mary)
Poynings
63
63
1505 - 1548
William
Stourton
43
43
~1488 - 1560
Elizabeth
Dudley
72
72
~1462 - 1511
Giles
Brugge
49
49
~1475 - >1511
Isabell
Baynham
36
36
~1469 - 1511
Edmund
Grey
42
42
~1473 - 1511
Florence
Hastings
38
38
1471 - 1514
John
(Fiennes)
Clinton
43
43
~1474 - <1501
Elsbeth
Morgan
27
27
~1465 - 1523
Edward
Poynings
58
58
~1460
Edward
Stourton
~1462
Agnes
Fauntleroy
~1466 - >1500
Anne
Windsor
34
34
~1439 - 1499
John
Grey
60
60
~1450
Anne
Grey
~1435 - ~1495
Ralph
Hastings
60
60
~1439
Anne
Tattershall
1434 - 29 FEB 1487
John
Clinton
~1452
Elizabeth
Fiennes
D. 1488
Elizabeth
Paston
~1430 - 1478
William
Stourton
48
48
~1438 - 1503
Margaret
Chidiocke
65
65
~1420 - 1493
Reynold
(Reginald)
Grey
73
73
~1430 - 1469
Tacyn
(Thomasine,
Tacine) Beaufort
39
39
1416 - 1490
Edmund
Grey
73
73
1423 - >1475
Catherine
Percy
52
52
1401 - ~1450
John
Chidiocke
49
49
~1403 - 1461
Catherine
Lumley
58
58
~1384 - 1439
John
Grey
55
55
1387 - 1437
Constance
De
Holland
50
50
>1350 - 1399
John
De
Holland
49
49
1362/63 - 1425
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
~1616 - 1696
Anne
Russell
80
80
1586 - 1652
John
Digby
65
65
1574 - 1658
Beatrice
Walcott
84
84
1612 - 1676
George
Digby
63
63
~0785 - ~0828
Konstantinos
43
43
Of Adrianople. Father may be Hmayeak
~1576
N.n.
1611 - 1685
Isaac
Perkins
74
74
~1614
Susanna
Wise
1642
Rebecca
Perkins
29 FEB 1634 - 1706
John
Hussey
1675 - 1732
John
Hussey
57
57
Ann
Inskeep
>1703 - 1770
John
Hussey
67
67
1868 - 1951
Nellie
Howard
Ripley
83
83
1894 - 1961
Margaret
E.
Wallace
67
67
~1895
Dorothy
Wallace
1930 living with parents.
~1901
Helen
Wallace
1874 - 1957
Grace
Irma
Scott
82
82
1904 - 1998
Thomas
Cushing
Wallace
94
94
Name: Thomas C. Wallace SSN: 018-10-4797 Last Residence: 24503 Lynchburg, Lynchburg City, Virginia, United States of America Born: 6 Aug 1904 Died: 23 Dec 1998 State (Year) SSN issued: Massachusetts (Before 1951 )
1901 - 1993
Eleanor
Hamilton
Wallace
91
91
1877 - 1935
William
Clyde
Grubbs
58
58
1930 attorney, general practice, Allegheny, PA.
1910 - 1951
Elizabeth
Hamilton
Grubbs
41
41
1912 - 1958
Catherine
Curtis
Grubbs
46
46
1874 - 1950
Frank
Gillman
Allen
76
76
Frank G. Allen (1874-1950) Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1929-1931 Frank Allen served as Alvan T. Fuller's Lieutenant Governor and over the next two years continued the decade long succession of Republican executive leadership. Governor Allen established the Massachusetts Transit Authority, the state's Industrial Commission, and he appointed several women to judgeships. Allen married Clara Winslow in 1897, after working for Winslow Brothers and Smith Company since 1893. He served as the company's president from 1912 to 1929. He entered public service serving on the Norwood Board of Assessors (1910-1915) and was chairman of the Board of Selectman (1915-1922). He was elected a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1918-1919) and served in the Massachusetts Senate (1921-1922). He served as Lieutenant Governor during Governor Fuller's administration (1925-1929), becoming Governor in 1929. As Governor, Fuller established the Massachusetts Transit Authority, created the Port Authority, expanded facilities to care for the sick and indigent, as well as appointed two women to judgeships. Mr. Fuller was defeated in reelection by Democrat Joseph Ely. He returned to Winslow and Smith Company, where he served as Chairman of the Board until 1950.
1928
Frank
Gillman
Allen
1866 - 1942
Catherin
"Cassie"
M. Romack
76
76
1892
Gertrude
M.
Cashdollar
1893 - 1964
Ethel I.
Cashdollar
70
70
1920 none, with parents.
~1889
Carl J.
McFarland
1930 superintendant, coal mine, Smith Twp, Washington, PA.
1894 - 1950
Gilbert
Mason
Geyer
56
56
1930 farmer, own farm, Adams Twp, Butler, PA.
1879 - 1968
Ella
Mae
Fife
88
88
Name: Ella Cashdollar SSN: 208-10-7167 Last Residence: 15216 Pittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 6 Dec 1879 Died: Mar 1968 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1901 - 1988
Hazel
M.
Cashdollar
86
86
Name: Hazel C. Thomas SSN: 161-50-4974 Last Residence: 15102 Bethel Park, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 23 May 1901 Died: 5 May 1988 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1973 )
1904 - 1963
Jeannette
B.
Cashdollar
59
59
1911 - 1969
Carl E.
Cashdollar
58
58
Name: Carl Cashdollar SSN: 300-07-1301 Born: 19 Mar 1911 Died: Aug 1969 State (Year) SSN issued: Ohio (Before 1951 ) Name: Carl E Cashdollar Birth Year: 1911 Race: White, citizen Nativity State or Country: Pennsylvania State: Pennsylvania County or City: Allegheny Enlistment Date: 21 Jul 1942 Enlistment State: Pennsylvania Enlistment City: Pittsburgh Branch: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA Branch Code: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA Grade: Private Grade Code: Private Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law Component: Selectees (Enlisted Men) Source: Civil Life Education: 1 year of high school Civil Occupation: Actor (Motion picture actor. ) or Director, Motion Picture (Motion picture director.) or Entertainer Marital Status: Married Height: 70 Weight: 203
1866 - 1918
Harry H.
Berrigan or
Berringer
51
51
1900 merchat, general store, North Adams Twp, Butler, PA. Died during flu epidemic.
1893 - 1968
Edna
Marie
Berrigan
74
74
Name: Edna Patch SSN: 169-03-1690 Last Residence: 15145 Turtle Creek, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 13 Jun 1893 Died: Mar 1968 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951
1905 - 1966
William
Walter
Beringer
60
60
1930 auto mechanic, auto garage, with Edna.
1885 - 1938
George
Henry
Phipps
52
52
1920 shipping clerk, W.E & M Co., Turtle Creek, PA. 1930 shipping clerk, electricl co. Turtle Creek, PA.
Charles
Patch
1904 - 1978
Edna
Lenora
Ifft
73
73
Name: Edna Beringer SSN: 159-38-7547 Last Residence: 15146 Monroeville, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 1 Sep 1904 Died: Apr 1978 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1963 )
1871 - 1937
Joseph
Allen
Humes
66
66
1910 farmer, Adams Twp, Butler, PA.
1900 - 1985
Howard
Renwick
Humes
85
85
Name: Howard Humes SSN: 194-01-6160 Last Residence: 16046 Mars, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 28 Jun 1900 Died: Sep 1985 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1904 - 1970
Ralph
Hamilton
Humes
66
66
Name: Ralph Humes SSN: 160-34-5684 Last Residence: 16046 Mars, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 29 Feb 1904 Died: Nov 1970 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1958-1960 )
1906 - 1974
Helen
Josephine
Humes
67
67
1902 - 1987
Vera
Victoria
Hyett
84
84
Name: Vera Humes SSN: 204-22-8572 Last Residence: 16046 Mars, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 4 Oct 1902 Died: Aug 1987 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1905
Mary
Ellen
Crawford
1900 - 1970
Robert
France
Crawford
70
70
1877 - 1956
Anna
Reichle
79
79
1908 - 1960
Howard
L.
Cashdollar
52
52
1930 none, with parents.
1917 - 1982
Bernard
W.
Cashdollar
65
65
FBI agent; Co-ordinator of the Beaver county, PA. Police Center; in charge of the county's Major Crimes Task Force; member of the Governor's Justice Commision and the Western Pennsylvania Chief's of Police Association. Name: Bernard Cashdollar SSN: 211-01-8752 Last Residence: 15009 Beaver, Beaver, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 4 Jan 1917 Last Benefit: 15009 Beaver, Beaver, Pennsylvania, United States of America Died: Jul 1982 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1910
Margaret
Hawliser
Jean
Stone
1903 - 1999
Oliver
William
Ralston
95
95
1930 principal, mission school, Frenchburg, Menifee, KY. Name: Oliver W. Ralston SSN: 199-30-9829 Last Residence: 16057 Slippery Rock, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 19 Aug 1903 Died: 26 Jul 1999 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1955-1956 )
1909 - 1955
Edwin
Stanley
Ralston
45
45
1930 none, with parents.
1914 - 1967
Louis
George
Ralston
52
52
Name: Louis Ralston SSN: 277-14-0812 Born: 10 Oct 1914 Died: Mar 1967 State (Year) SSN issued: Ohio (Before 1951 ) Name: Louis G Ralston Age at Death: 52 Date of Death: 14 Mar 1967 City of Death: Warren County of Death: Trumbull Volume: 18813 Certificate: 24567 Date of Birth: Est. 1915 Gender: Male Marital Status: Married Race: White City of Residence: Niles County of Residence: Trumbull State of Residence: Ohio Country of Residence: United States Hospital of Death: Forum Health Trumbull Memorial Certifier: Physician Autopsy: No autopsy
1910
Rosaline
Wilhemina
Holly
1915
Eleanor
Ruth
Whan
1882 - 1919
Josephine
Ann
Leise
36
36
1905 - 1979
Dorthea
Ruth
Cashdollar
74
74
Name: Ruth Post SSN: 198-36-3247 Born: 3 Mar 1905 Last Benefit: 17011 Camp Hill, Cumberland, Pennsylvania, United States of America Died: Jul 1979 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1963 )
1915
Susan
Elizabeth
Cashdollar
1903
Mclain
Post
1910
John
Clark
Farr
1891 - 1968
Christine
A.
Besnecker
77
77
1926
Oliver
Francis
Cashdollar
Living
Cashdollar
1927
Geraldine
Fay
Walker
1929
Elmer
G.
Beahm
1883 - 1952
Floella
"Floe" Sloan
Forsyth
68
68
1906
Margaret
Isabelle
Cashdollar
1930 postal clerk, post office, with parents.
1908 - 1987
Lester
William
Cashdollar
78
78
1930 none, with parents. Name: Lester Cashdollar SSN: 173-18-8309 Last Residence: 16046 Mars, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 25 Dec 1908 Died: Jan 1987 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1908 - 1959
Joseph
J.
Balbier
50
50
1899
Ray
G.
Miller
1912 - 1999
Elva
McCandless
86
86
Name: Elva I. Cashdollar SSN: 194-01-6146 Last Residence: 16433 Saegertown, Crawford, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 31 Aug 1912 Died: 26 Jul 1999 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1870 - 1958
Lewis
W.
Kaufman
88
88
1920 farmer, general farm, Adams Twp, Butler, PA.
1906 - 1998
Margaret
Matilda
Kaufman
91
91
Name: Margaret Zinkham SSN: 206-24-0045 Last Residence: 16033 Evans City, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 1 Nov 1906 Last Benefit: 16033 Evans City, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Died: 15 Apr 1998 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1918
John
Oliver
Kaufman
1904 - 1985
Earl
Ray
Zinkham
80
80
Name: Earl Zinkham SSN: 208-10-9725 Last Residence: 16033 Evans City, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 26 Nov 1904 Last Benefit: 16033 Evans City, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States of America Died: Feb 1985 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1919
Mary
Eby
Living
Bell
Living
Ferguson
1288
Elana
La
Zouche
D. 1360
Alan
De
Charlton
~1318 - 1349
Alan
De
Charlton
31
31
1314 - 1349
Margery
Fitzar
35
35
1345 - 1387
Thomas
De
Charlton
42
42
<1380 - <1399
Anna
De
Charlton
19
19
William
De
Knightley
1394 - 1459
Thomas De
Knightley
De Charlton
65
65
Elizabeth
Francis
~0528
Helgi
Halfdansson
~0503
Halfdan
Frodasson
~0507
Sigris
~0479
Frodi
Fridleifsson
~0456
Fridleif 'the
Valiant'
Frodasson
~0433
Frodi 'the
Peaceful'
Dansson
~0412
Dan
Olafsson
~0391
Olaf
Vermundsson
~0369
Vermund
'the Wise'
Frodasson
~0347
Frodi
Havarsson
~0325
Havar
'strong Hand'
Fridleifsson
~0303
Fridleif
Frodasson
~0281
Frodi
Fridleifsson
~0259
Fridleif
Skjoldsson
~0237
Skjold
~0241
Gefion
~0219
Frigg
Cadwalladr
1729 - 1815
Ruth
Hall
86
86
Buried in Northford Cemetery.
1332
Isabella
Plantagenet
1334 - 1348
Joan
Plantagenet
14
14
1344
Mary
Plantagenet
1346
Margaret
Plantagenet
Pitzias
D. 0561
Audoin
Rodelinde
N.n.
Of The
Lombards
D. 0511
Theodon
I
0796 - 0903
Oda
Billung
107
107
1478 - 1506
Philip I
'the
Handsome'
28
28
Philip I, called The Handsome (1478-1506), king of Castile (1504-6), son of Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, born in Bruges, Flanders (now in Belgium). He became duke of Burgundy in 1482. In 1496 he married Joanna the Mad (1479-1555), daughter of the Castilian monarchs, Ferdinand V and Isabella I. On Isabella's death in 1504, Joanna became queen of Castile. Because Joanna and Philip were absent in Flanders, however, Ferdinand was the actual ruler until 1506, when the couple returned to Castile to claim the throne jointly. Philip died a few months after his return. His sons became Holy Roman emperors as Charles V and Ferdinand I. Philip was the founder of the Habsburg dynasty in Spain.
1479 - 1555
Joanna
'the
Mad'
76
76
1459 - 1519
Maximilian
I
59
59
Maximilian I (1459-1519), German king (1486-1519) and Holy Roman emperor (1493-1519), who established the Habsburg dynasty as an international European power. Maximilian, the eldest son of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III, was born in Wiener Neustadt, Austria, on March 22, 1459. In 1477 he married Mary (1457-82), daughter of Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy, but his right to the Burgundian realmùwhich included the present Benelux countries and considerable portions of what is now northern and eastern Franceùwas challenged by the French king, Louis XI. Maximilian successfully defended his wife's inheritance in a war with France that lasted until 1493, and he subdued the rebellious cities of the Netherlands. In 1490 he recovered Austria, which had been occupied by Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary, and by the Treaty of Pressburg (1491) secured the right of succession to the thrones of Hungary and Bohemia, which were held by the Habsburg family for the next four centuries. Succeeding his father as king and emperor in 1493, he embarked on a war to prevent France from acquiring territory in Italy two years later. In 1496 he arranged the marriage of his son Philip to Joanna (1479-1555), heiress to the thrones of Castile and Aragon, thus laying the basis for two centuries of Habsburg rule in Spain. Maximilian made peace with Louis XII of France in 1504, and four years later joined Louis in the League of Cambrai against Venice. In 1511, however, he again opposed France in an alliance (the Holy League) with England, Spain, and the pope, and he was largely responsible for the imperial and English victory over the French in the Battle of the Spurs (1513). Maximilian was a patron of the arts; his writings include two autobiographical poems. He died at Wels, Austria, on January 12, 1519.
1457 - 1482
Mary
Of
Burgundy
25
25
Mary, b. Feb. 13, 1457, d. Mar. 27, 1482, was duchess of Burgundy and wife of the Austrian archduke Maximilian (later Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor). After the death of her father, Charles the Bold, in January 1477, Mary was threatened by Louis XI of France's seizure of Burgundy and Picardy and his imminent invasion of the Low Countries and the rest of her inheritance. In the same year she concluded her previously arranged marriage to the Habsburg heir, Maximilian, who helped her defeat Louis in 1479. The marriage ultimately gave the Habsburgs control of the Burgundian territories, including the Netherlands.
1379 - 1406
Henry
III
27
27
Henry III (of Castile and León) (1379-1406), king of Castile and León (1390-1406), the son and successor of King John I. Although at the beginning of his reign the country was plagued with continual disorder and violent anti-Semitism, Henry was soon able to placate the nobility and restore royal authority. He won victories over the English at sea, and the conquest of the Canary Islands began under his sponsorship in 1402.
1405 - 1454
John II
49
49
John II (of Castile and León), in Spanish, Juan II (1405-54), king of Castile and León (1406-54), the son of Henry III. He reigned under the regencies of his mother and his uncle, King Ferdinand I of Aragón, until 1419. John entrusted the government to Don Alvaro de Luna (1388?-1453), his chief counselor. In 1450, after the death of John's wife, Luna arranged the king's marriage with a Portuguese princess, who promptly broke Luna's power by encouraging the king to assert his independence. In 1453 John ordered Luna's execution. John reportedly died of remorse over this treachery.
Isabella
Of
Portugal
1451 - 1504
Isabella
I 'la
Cat¢lica'
53
53
Isabella I (1451-1504), queen of Castile, called la Católica ("the Catholic"). She was the daughter of John II of Castile and León by his second wife, Isabella of Portugal. In 1469 Princess Isabella married Ferdinand of Aragón, known also as Ferdinand V, The Catholic, and on the death of her brother, Henry IV, Isabella and Ferdinand jointly succeeded (1474) to the throne of Castile and León. Isabella's succession was contested, however, by Alfonso V of Portugal, who supported the claim of Henry's daughter Juana la Beltraneja (1462-1530). Alfonso attacked Castile and León but was defeated by the Castilian army in 1476. Three years later Ferdinand succeeded to the throne of Aragón. This union of the two main Spanish kingdoms laid the foundation of Spain's future greatness. Isabella and her husband (known together as "the Catholic kings") are remembered for completing the reconquest of Spain from the Moors, for initiating the Inquisition, and for their ruthless expulsion of the Spanish Jews. They are perhaps best known, however, for having sponsored the voyages of Christopher Columbus.
1397 - 1479
John II
82
82
John II (of Aragón and Navarre), in Spanish, Juan II (1397-1479), king of Aragón (1458-1479) and Navarre (1425-1479), the son of King Ferdinand I of Aragón and father of King Ferdinand V. John represented his brother King Alfonso V of Aragón, Naples, and Sicily in Aragón as lieutenant general and succeeded him to the throne of Aragón. In 1420 John married Blanche of Navarre, who inherited the throne of Navarre in 1425. For many years, John struggled with his son, Charles, later King Charles IV of Navarre for control of the two kingdoms. After Charles's death in 1461, John was faced with a series of revolts in the province of Catalonia led by Charles's former supporters. He did not regain control of the province until 1472. During the latter part of his reign, John engaged in war against King Louis XI of France and was forced to cede to him the provinces of Cerdagne and Roussillon.
1385 - 1441
Blanche
Of
Navarre
56
56
1452 - 1516
Ferdinand
V 'the
Catholic'
64
64
Ferdinand V, called The Catholic (1452-1516), king of Castile (1474-1504); as Ferdinand II he was also king of Sicily (1468-1516) and of Aragón (1479-1516); as Ferdinand III, king of Naples (1504-16). He was the son of King John II of Aragón. The union of the Spanish kingdoms of Aragón and Castile was effected in 1469 by Ferdinand's marriage to his cousin Isabella I, queen of Castile. Ferdinand had hoped by this alliance to obtain the Castilian crown for himself, but his high-spirited and politically astute wife firmly retained sovereign authority in her own realm. The political philosophies of the two rulers were almost identical, however, and their reign was inaugurated with the promulgation of energetic and sweeping measures designed to strengthen the royal authority and to curb the power of the nobles, who had usurped many privileges and functions of the Crown. To this end, Ferdinand organized (1476) the Santa Hermandad, or Holy Brotherhood, a kind of national military police. Insistence on religious conformity was one of their basic policies. In 1478 a bull issued by Pope Sixtus IV empowered the king and queen to appoint three inquisitors to deal with heretics and other offenders against the church; this marked the beginning of the Spanish Inquisition (see Inquisition). Although founded to further religious ends, the Inquisition in Spain became a political instrument of the absolute monarchy, further abridging the power of the nobles. The year 1492 was the most notable of Ferdinand's reign. It opened with the conquest of Granada, which marked the victorious conclusion of the long struggle against the Moors. In August Christopher Columbus, sponsored by Ferdinand and Isabella, set sail from the small Spanish seaport of Palos on his epoch-making voyage to America, which was the first step in the creation of the Spanish overseas colonial empire. In 1493, by the terms of a treaty between Spain and France, Ferdinand recovered from King Charles VIII of France the ancient province of Roussillon (now forming the French department of Pyrénées-Orientales), which Ferdinand's father had mortgaged to King Louis XI of France. Because his daughter Joanna the Mad (1479-1555) became insane after the death of Isabella, Ferdinand assumed the regency of Castile in 1506. He joined the League of Cambrai against the republic of Venice in 1508, and conquered Oran and Tripoli on the North African coast in 1509. He annexed the kingdom of Navarre in 1512, thereby extending the borders of Spain from the Pyrenees Mountains to the Rock of Gibraltar. Ferdinand was in many ways a competent ruler. His reign, however, was characterized by an insatiable thirst for power, and he was both cruel and perfidious. He was succeeded by his grandson Charles (Holy Roman Emperor Charles V).
1371 - 1419
John
'the
Fearless'
48
48
John the Fearless, b. May 28, 1371, d. Sept. 10, 1419, was the oldest son of Philip the Bold and the first cousin of King Charles VI of France. In 1396 he was a leader of a crusade against the Turks that ended disastrously at Nicopolis (now in Bulgaria). John succeeded his father as duke of Burgundy in 1404 and became count of Flanders on his mother's death (1405); he was thus the leading prince of the Low Countries. He also struggled with his cousin Louis of Orleans for control of the resources of the French Government. Virtually excluded from power in Paris, he had Louis murdered in 1407, provoking a disastrous civil war. After a period of dominance in France (1408-13), he was again excluded from power until 1418. In that year he took advantage of French defeats by the English in the Hundred Years' War to seize Paris. The following year, however, he was assassinated while negotiating with the dauphin (the future Charles VII)
1396 - 1467
Philip
'the
Good'
71
71
Philip the Good (1396-1467), duke of Burgundy (1419-65), creator of one of the most powerful states in 15th-century Europe. Born in Dijon, Philip succeeded as duke when his father, John the Fearless (1371-1419), was killed by a group of French nobles. In retaliation, Philip allied himself with Henry V of England, France's enemy in the Hundred Years' War. In 1430 he captured Joan of Arc, who had been leading the French, and turned her over to the English. Later, when the war began to go against England, he changed sides, concluded the Treaty of Arras (1435) with Charles VII of France, and received in return most of the province of Picardy. Philip extended Burgundian rule in the Netherlands, acquiring Holland, Zeeland, and Hainaut in 1428; Brabant and Limburg in 1433; and Luxembourg in 1443. In 1453 he conquered the rebellious towns of Flanders. By 1460 he ruled what is now Belgium and Luxembourg, together with most of the Netherlands and large areas of northern and eastern France. Philip's court was the most brilliant of its time. Known for his lavish entertainments and his devotion to the rituals of chivalry, he instituted (1430) the Order of the Golden Fleece, one of Europe's most prestigious knightly brotherhoods. In 1465 he handed the dukedom over to his son, Charles the Bold.
1397 - 1471
Isabella
Of
Portugal
74
74
1433 - 1477
Charles
'the
Bold'
44
44
Charles the Bold (1433-77), last duke of Burgundy, the son of Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, and Isabella of Portugal (1397-1471), born in Dijon. In 1452 he became count of Charolais. When King Louis XI of France forced Philip to cede some towns on the Somme River, Charles formed the League of the Public Weal, an alliance of noblemen. League forces threatened Paris and defeated the king at Montlhéry, near Paris, in 1465. The result was the Treaty of Conflans, by which the towns on the Somme were restored and the counties of Boulogne, Guines, and Ponthieu were granted to Charles. Succeeding his father as duke in 1467, he became ruler of the territories that constitute the Low Countries as well as the duchy of Burgundy and Franche Comté, or the Free County of Burgundy. In 1468, Charles married his third wife, Margaret of York (1446-1503), and formed an alliance with her brother, Edward IV, king of England. Richer and more powerful than any other prince, Charles planned to restore the old kingdom of Burgundy and fought a series of intermittent wars with France. In 1475 Charles made himself master of Lorraine. In March of the following year he invaded Switzerland and was defeated at Grandson. Three months later he suffered a still more severe defeat at Morat (now Murten). Nevertheless Charles refused to agree to peace terms and laid siege to Nancy in October 1476. There he was defeated and killed on January 5, 1477. His daughter and heiress, Mary of Burgundy (1457-82), soon thereafter married Maximilian of Habsburg, but Maximilian was forced to relinquish all the Burgundian lands except Flanders.
1391 - 1465
Charles
Of
Orl‚ans
73
73
D. 1562
Antoine
De
Bourbon
1528 - 1572
Jeanne
D'albret
44
44
1553 - 1610
Henry
IV
56
56
Henry IV (of France) (1553-1610), first Bourbon king of France (1589-1610), who restored stability after the religious wars of the 16th century. Henry was born at Pau in Navarre on December 13, 1553. His father, Antoine de Bourbon (died 1562), was descended in the ninth generation from the 13th-century king of France, Louis IX. His mother, Jeanne d'Albret (1528-72), was queen of Navarre and niece of King Francis I of France. The Wars of Religion Although baptized a Roman Catholic, Henry was brought up as a Calvinist by his strong-minded mother, a leader of the French Protestant (Huguenot) movement, which during the 1560s became involved in a series of civil wars with the Catholics. Henry's wedding in 1572 to Margaret of Valois, sister of the reigning monarch, Charles IX, was followed by the Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, in which thousands of Huguenots were slain on the king's order. Henry saved his own life by converting to Roman Catholicism, but he remained a prisoner at court until 1576. After his escape he repudiated his conversion and assumed the leadership of the Huguenot movement. Although he accepted his unwilling wife at his court in Navarre, neither respected the marriage vows. Military Leader Henry's storming of the fortress town of Cahors in 1580 launched his career as an intrepid military leader. In many subsequent battles his white plume was to be found wherever the fighting was fiercest. He won another brilliant victory at Coutras in 1587, and two years later formed an alliance with Charles IX's successor, Henry III, against the Catholic League, which was dominated by the Guise family. When Henry III (the last king of the Valois dynasty) was murdered by a league fanatic in 1589, the Huguenot leader, who was next in line for the throne, proclaimed himself king as Henry IV. Backed by Spain and the pope, however, the league refused to acknowledge a Protestant as king of France, and many Catholic nobles who had served Henry III against the league deserted the royal army. Henry won victories over the league at Arques and Ivry and besieged the league stronghold, Paris, which was eventually relieved by a Spanish army from the Netherlands. Henry skillfully exploited divisions among the leaguers, and in 1593 he disarmed his opponents by announcing his reconversion to Catholicism. A year later he bribed the league commander of the capital to admit his army. One by one, he defeated or bought over the magnates of the house of Guise who continued to resist. In 1595, when he officially declared war on Spain, the pope granted him absolution. He could no longer rely on the Huguenots, who drove a hard bargain to secure a new edict of toleration. This was granted at Nantes in 1598, and it was followed by a peace treaty with Spain. After that, serious resistance to his rule ended. Henry as King In 1599 Henry secured papal annulment of his first marriage, and the year after he married Marie de Médicis, a distant cousin of the mother of the last Valois kings. His leading minister, Maximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully, reorganized the finances and promoted the economic recovery of France after decades of civil war. Agriculture, manufacturing, and commerce were encouraged, the burden of taxation upon the peasantry reduced, and the nobility relieved from the pressure of debt by declaring a moratorium. The system by which officials in finance and the judiciary purchased their offices from the Crown was formalized in 1604 by a tax on office known as the paulette. At the same time Sully pursued a policy of substituting royal officers for those employed by local representative bodies. Until 1609 these measures were accompanied by an external policy of peace. In that year Henry began preparations to intervene in Germany against the Catholic Habsburg dynasty, a move that was opposed by some French Catholics. The king was about to join his army when he was assassinated by a Catholic extremist on May 14, 1610, in the Rue Saint-Honoré in Paris. Henry IV's genial informality, bravery, gallantry, perseverance in adversity, and readiness to bend religious principle to political advantage have earned him a special place in French history. Not only did he restore order and prosperity to his ruined kingdom but he also ensured that the monarchy would be Catholic and absolutist.
1573 - 1642
Marie
De
M‚dicis
69
69
Marie de Medicis, b. Apr. 26, 1573, d. July 3, 1642, was the second wife of Henry IV of France and regent after his death. She was the daughter of Grand Duke Francesco I of Tuscany and a member of the Medici family. On her marriage in 1600 she came to France with a large Italian retinue. She and Henry quarreled constantly, and Marie had to share the king's affections with his mistresses. She has been accused of knowing of the plot behind her husband's assassination (1610), which occurred on the day after her coronation as queen. Her complicity, however, remains uncertain. As regent during the minority of her son, Louis XIII, she reversed Henry's anti-Habsburg policy. She came to rely on the Italian statesman Concino Concini, marquis d'Ancre, whom she made (1613) a marshal of France; Concini was the husband of her confidante, Leonora Galigai. Although Louis came of age in 1614, Marie's regency remained in effect until 1617, when Concini was murdered at the king's direction. Thereafter Marie frequently plotted armed resistance to her son. She regarded Cardinal Richelieu as her protege when he entered the royal council in 1624, but he proved to be her implacable foe. Soon after her unsuccessful effort in November 1630 to secure Richelieu's dismissal, Louis banished her to Compiegne, but she fled to Brussels in the Spanish Netherlands.
Elizabeth
Bushnell
John
Perkins
Bethia
Baker
Dyer
Perkins
Charlotte
Sophia
Woodbridge
Elizabeth
Rogers
Perkins
Harvey
Humphrey
John
Perkins
Humphrey
Frances
Churchill
Maud
Humphrey
Belomont
Deforest
Bogart
1899 - 1957
Humphrey
Deforest
Bogart
58
58
Bogart, Humphrey Deforest (1899-1957), American film actor, who achieved outstanding success in gangster and tough-guy roles. He was born in New York City. Bogart began his acting career on the New York City stage, on which his appearances included Meet the Wife (1923), Cradle Snatchers (1925), and Saturday's Children (1928). His first notable success in films was in The Petrified Forest (1936), in which he portrayed the gangster Duke Mantee, a role he had created two years earlier on Broadway. Bogart appeared in more than 50 films. These include The Maltese Falcon (1941), Casablanca (1942), To Have and Have Not (1944), The Treasure of Sierra Madre (1948), The Desperate Hours (1955), and The Caine Mutiny (1954). He won an Academy Award for his role as the jungle tramp in The African Queen (1951).
Susanna
Cogswell
Benjamin
White
~1651 - 1732
Edward
Fobes
81
81
1656
Elizabeth
Fobes
~1656
Elizabeth
Howard
1677 - >1759
Elizabeth
Fobes
82
82
1674
Joseph
Keith
1713
Mary
Keith
Johnathan
Kingman
1732 - 1813
Martha
Kingman
80
80
D. 1810
James
Alger
1771 - 1844
James
Alger
73
73
1771 - 1845
Hannah
Bassett
73
73
1806
Horatio
Alger
Olive
Augusta
Fenno
1834 - 1899
Horatio
Alger
65
65
Alger, Horatio (1834-99), American writer of juvenile fiction, born in Revere, Massachusetts, and educated at Harvard College and Harvard Divinity School. Ordained (1864) a Unitarian minister, in 1866 he became chaplain of a lodging house for newsboys in New York City. In Alger's first volume of fiction, Ragged Dick (1867), and in similar works, he portrayed underprivileged youths who win fame and wealth by practicing such virtues as honesty, diligence, and perseverance. Luck and Pluck and Tattered Tom appeared in 1869 and 1871, respectively. Alger wrote more than 100 such works. Although of little literary significance, his novels influenced American youth by emphasizing merit, rather than mere social status, as the chief determinant of success.
Joseph
Russell
Mary
Russell
John
Lapham
Joshua
Lapham
Hannah
Sherman
Hannah
Lapham
Humphrey
Anthony
Daniel
Anthony
Lucy
Read
1820 - 1906
Susan
Brownwell
Anthony
86
86
Anthony, Susan B(rownell) (1820-1906), outstanding American reformer, who led the struggle to gain the vote for women. She devoted 50 years to overcoming the nation's resistance to woman suffrage, but died before the 19th Amendment was adopted (August 26, 1920). Early Life Anthony was born on February 15, 1820, in the village of Adams, Massachusetts, the second of eight children. In 1827 her family moved to Battenville, New York, and in 1845 settled permanently in Rochester, New York. Encouraged by her father, a onetime schoolteacher, Anthony began teaching school when she was 15 years old and continued until the age of 30. A liberal Quaker and dedicated radical reformer, Anthony opposed the use of liquor and advocated the immediate end of slavery. From 1848 to 1853 she took part in the temperance movement and from 1856 to 1861 worked for the American Anti-Slavery Society, organizing meetings and frequently giving lectures. In 1863, during the American Civil War, she founded the Women's Loyal League to fight for emancipation of the slaves. After the end of Reconstruction she protested the violence inflicted on blacks and was one of the few to urge full participation of blacks in the woman suffrage movement. Fight for Women's Rights Anthony's work for women's rights began in 1851, when she met Elizabeth Cady Stanton. From 1854 to 1860 the two concentrated on reforming New York State laws discriminating against women. Anthony organized women all over the state to campaign for legal reforms. She would often deliver speeches written by Stanton, who was occupied with her young children. Anthony and Stanton became convinced that women would not gain their rights or be effective in promoting reforms until they had the vote, and nationwide suffrage became their goal after the Civil War. In 1869 they organized the National Woman Suffrage Association to work for a constitutional amendment giving women that right. Although the newly freed slaves were granted the vote by the 15th Amendment, women of all races continued to be excluded. From 1868 to 1870 Anthony and Stanton published a newspaper, Revolution, focused on injustices suffered by women. To dramatize her fight, Anthony defiantly registered and cast a ballot in the 1872 presidential election and, when arrested and convicted, refused to pay the $100 fine. She went to Europe in 1883, met women's rights activists there, and in 1888 helped form the International Council of Women, representing 48 countries. At the age of 80 she resigned as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, but she continued to be a regular speaker at its conventions until her death in Rochester, New York, on March 13, 1906. Evaluation Anthony always acknowledged Stanton as the founder of the women's rights movement. Her own achievement lay in her inspiration and perseverance in bringing together vast numbers of people of both sexes around the single goal of the vote. On July 2, 1979, the U.S. Mint honored her work by issuing the Susan B. Anthony dollar coin.
1617
Joseph
Wise
1647 - 1728
Sarah
Wise
81
81
1640 - 1720
Stephen
Williams
79
79
1681 - 1720
Joseph
Williams
39
39
Abigail
Davis
1708 - 1798
Joseph
Williams
90
90
Martha
Howell
1733 - 1811
Abigail
Williams
78
78
~1731
Samuel
May
1760 - 1841
Joseph
May
81
81
Dorothy
Sewall
1800 - 1877
Abigail
May
77
77
1799 - 1888
Amos
Bronson
Alcott
89
89
1832 - 1888
Louisa
May
Alcott
55
55
Alcott, Louisa May (1832-88), American writer, whose books for children are characterized by their intimate depiction of family life and loyalties. The daughter of the educator and philosopher Bronson Alcott, she was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania. She was raised in Boston and was tutored by the American writers Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. While serving as a nurse during the American Civil War, Alcott wrote letters to her family that were later published as Hospital Sketches (1863). Her most famous worksùLittle Women (1868-69), an autobiographical novel of her childhood, and its sequels, Little Men (1871) and Jo's Boys (1886)ùare considered classics. In order to support her own often poverty-stricken family, Alcott also wrote a number of thrillers. These well-crafted, suspenseful yarns were published pseudonymously in various magazines.
George
Denison
Sarah
Denison
Thomas
Stanton
William
Stanton
Anna
Stanton
Joshua
Stanton
Hannah
Randall
Robert
Stanton
Elizabeth
Palmer
Oliver
Stanton
Rhoda
Underwood
Cynthia
Ann
Stanton
Benjamin
Ward
Baum
1856 - 1919
L(yman)
Frank
Baum
63
63
Baum, L(yman) Frank (1856-1919), American writer, born in Chittenango, New York. From 1880 to 1902 he was a newspaperman and began a series of books in which he created an original fairyland, the land of Oz, a world of fantastic characters and lighthearted adventure. The most famous of these books was The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900). In 1901 Baum adapted it as a musical extravaganza entitled The Wizard of Oz, and before his death Baum wrote 14 books about Oz. After his death various writers continued the series, producing scores of volumes. A musical film, The Wizard of Oz (1939), based on the original books by Baum, has become a classic.
Hannah
Cogswell
Cornelius
Waldo
Daniel
Waldo
Susanna
Adams
Bethiah
Waldo
Edmund
Littlefield
Ester
Littlefield
Samuel
Soper
Ester
Soper
Silas
Briggs
Asa
Briggs
Elizabeth
Paul
Sally
Briggs
Israel
Putnam
Brown
Sally
Brown
Israel
C.
Brewer
Sarah
Almeda
Brewer
Calvin
Galusha
Coolidge
John
Calvin
Coolidge
Victoria
Joseph
Moor
1872 - 1933
John
Calvin
Coolidge
60
60
~1685
John
Bishop
1704
Temperance
Lathrop
1733 - 1803
Temperance
Bishop
69
69
1720 - 1779
David
Holmes
58
58
1763 - 1837
Abiel
Holmes
73
73
Sarah
Wendall
1809 - 1894
Oliver
Wendall
Holmes
85
85
Holmes, Oliver Wendell (1809-94), American writer and physician, whose wit and intellectual vitality are representative of cultivated Boston society of the era. Holmes was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on August 29, 1809, and was educated at Harvard College. He studied in Europe, and in 1836 he received a medical degree from the Harvard Medical School and began to practice in Boston. From 1847 to 1882 he taught at the Harvard Medical School. His essay The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever (1843) advanced the use of aseptic techniques in obstetrics and surgery. Holmes was one of the so-called Boston Brahmins, a circle of intellectually and socially cultivated Bostonians. His fame as a writer of light, witty verse and as a raconteur was purely local until 1857, when he began writing a series of papers, The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table, for the Atlantic Monthly magazine. These essays, published in book form in 1858, achieved immediate popularity for their lively expression of ideas. Over the Teacups, published when he was 80 years old, shows the same wit and vitality. Although he was less successful as a novelist, his first novel, Elsie Venner (1861), achieved some measure of success. In this depiction of the New England character, Holmes attacked the stern Calvinistic dogmas of earlier days. Many of Holmes's poems became well known, including ôOld Ironsides÷ (1830), ôThe Chambered Nautilus÷, and ôThe Deacon's Masterpiece; or, The Wonderful One-Hoss Shay÷ (both 1858). Other writings by Holmes include the essays Pages from an Old Volume of Life (1883) and a biography of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1885). He died in Cambridge on October 7, 1894.
Amelia
Lee
Jackson
1841 - 1935
Oliver
Wendall
Holmes
94
94
Holmes, Oliver Wendell (1841-1935), American jurist, associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1902-32), distinguished for his great legal learning, sound judgment, humor, and power of expression. Holmes was born in Boston and given the same name as his father, the writer. After graduating from Harvard College, he served for three years in the American Civil War, fighting with the Union army at Ball's Bluff, Antietam, and Fredericksburg and attaining the rank of captain. In 1867 he was admitted to the bar and began to practice law in Boston. He edited the American Law Review from 1870 until 1873. In 1880 he was a lecturer on common law at the Lowell Institute in Boston. His lectures, collected as The Common Law (1881), became internationally renowned. Holmes became professor of law at Harvard Law School in 1882, but resigned in the same year to accept an appointment as associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court. He served in that position until 1899 and as chief justice from 1899 until 1902. In 1902 he was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by President Theodore Roosevelt, and he held that position until his retirement in 1932. Holmes became famous for his liberal interpretations of the U.S. Constitution and was known as the ôGreat Dissenter÷ because of his disagreement with the views of his colleagues on the Court. He was later supported in his minority opinions by Justice Louis D. Brandeis. His Collected Legal Papers was published in 1920 and The Dissenting Opinions of Mr. Justice Holmes, in 1929.
Jonathan
Waldo
Hannah
Mason
Jonathan
Waldo
Susanna
Blaque
Mary
Waldo
Gilbert
Colesworthy
Jonathan
Waldo
Colesworthy
Hepzibah
Gardner
Nancy
Colesworthy
Andrew
Bunker
Charles
Waldo
Bunker
Lydia
Starbuck
Nelson
Waldo
Bunker
Sarah
Rebecca
Hunnicutt
Lydia
Bunker
H(aroldson)
L(afayette)
Hunt
1926
Nelson
Bunker
Hunt
1929
William
Herbert
Hunt
Living
Hunt
Bethia
Gager
Joshua
Abell
Elizabeth
Abell
John
Lathrop
Azell
Lathrop
Elizabeth
Hyde
Erastus
Lathrop
Sarah
Bailey
Caroline
Cushman
Lathrop
Charles
Rollin
Post
1854 - 1914
Charles
William
Post
60
60
Pioneer of the prepared food industry.
1853 - 1912
Ella
Letitia
Merriweather
59
59
1887 - 1973
Marjorie
Merriweather
Post
86
86
Founder of General Foods Inc.
Hannah
Gore
Stephen
Gifford
Samuel
Gifford
Mary
Calkins
Hannah
Gifford
Samuel
Leffingwell
Elizabeth
Leffingwell
William
Morgan
Temperance
Avery
Israel
Morgan
Mary
Williams
Samuel
Choate
Elizabeth
Choate
1698 - >1732
Pelatiah
Fitch
34
34
1732 - 1776
Elizabeth
Fitch
44
44
1668 - 1712
Ebenezer
Witter
43
43
1702 - 1779
Dorothy
Witter
76
76
Joseph
Brewster
1724 - 1803
Elijah
Brewster
79
79
1757 - 1816
Elizabeth
Brewster
59
59
1785 - 1808
Amy
Morgan
23
23
Amos
Chapman
1807 - 1886
Francis
Morgan
Chapman
79
79
John
Willet
Mary
Willet
Jonathan
Truman
Lucy
Anne
Truman
Abbey Pearce
Truman
Chapman
1841 - 1915
Nelson
Wilmarth
Aldrich
74
74
Abbey
Greene
Aldrich
1641 - 1689
Mary
Vine
48
48
1669 - 1750
William
Morgan
81
81
1674 - 1755
Margaret
Avery
81
81
1704 - 1763
Jerusha
Morgan
59
59
1699 - 1788
Humphrey
Avery
88
88
1729 - 1798
Solomon
Avery
69
69
1733 - 1775
Hannah
Punderson
41
41
1760 - 1850
Miles
Avery
89
89
1774 - 1827
Malinda
Pixley
53
53
1786 - 1867
Lucy
Avery
81
81
1783 - 1857
Godfrey
Rockefeller
74
74
1810
William
Avery
Rockefeller
Eliza
Davison
1839 - 1937
John
Davison
Rockefeller
97
97
Rockefeller was born in Richford, New York, on July 8, 1839, and educated in the public schools of Cleveland, Ohio. He became a bookkeeper in Cleveland at the age of 16. In 1862 he went into business with Samuel Andrews, the inventor of an inexpensive process for the refinement of crude petroleum. After rapid expansion, the firm was superseded in 1870 by the Standard Oil Company, organized by Rockefeller, his brother William (1841-1922), and several associates. In early 1872 Rockefeller helped form the South Improvement Company, an association of the largest oil refiners in Cleveland, arranging with the railroads for substantial rebates on shipments by members of the association. The arrangement was cancelled in three months, after popular protest, but most of Rockefeller's competitors in Cleveland had already been forced to sell out to his combine. By 1878 Rockefeller had control of 90 percent of the oil refineries in the U.S. and soon afterward a virtual monopoly of the marketing facilities. In 1882 Rockefeller formed the Standard Oil Trust. This, the first corporate trust, was declared an illegal monopoly and ordered dissolved by the Ohio Supreme Court in 1892, but actual dissolution was not effected until 1899. In that year, Rockefeller established the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, remaining its president until he retired in 1911. In 1911 the company was broken into separate corporations by an antitrust decision of the U.S. Supreme Court. At its peak, Rockefeller's personal fortune was estimated at almost $1 billion. The total amount of his philanthropic contributions was about $550 million. Some 80 percent of these funds was given to four charitable organizations founded by Rockefeller. These were the Rockefeller Foundation; the General Education Board; the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (now Rockefeller University); and the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, established in 1918 and incorporated into the Rockefeller Foundation in 1929. Rockefeller died at Ormond Beach, Florida, May 23, 1937.
1841 - 1922
William
Rockefeller
81
81
Laura
Celestia
Spelman
1874 - 1960
John
Davison
Rockefeller
86
86
1906 - 1978
John
Davison
Rockefeller
72
72
1908 - 1978
Nelson
Aldrich
Rockefeller
69
69
1915
David
Rockefeller
1912 - 1973
Winthrop
Rockefeller
61
61
1910
Laurence
Spelman
Rockefeller
1661 - 1740
Joseph
Lathrop
78
78
1659 - 1733
Israel
Lathrop
73
73
John
Waldo
Rebecca
Adams
Edward
Waldo
Thankful
Dimmock
Shubael
Waldo
Abigail
Allen
Jesse
Waldo
Bridget
Thompson
Charles
Waldo
Elizabeth
Besley
William
Besley
Waldo
Jane
Anne
Bruce
John
Bruce
Waldo
Helen
Brett
Lewis
Howell
Waldo
Gertrude
Duffield
Gertrude
Margaret
Waldo
Frank
E.
Remick
Living
Remick
Martha
Holgrave
Theoda
Parke
Samuel
Williams
Martha
Williams
Jonathan
Hunt
Elizabeth
Hunt
Ebenezer
Pomeroy
Ebenezer
Pomeroy
Mindwell
Lyman
Eunice
Pomeroy
Ebenezer
Clark
Jersusha
Clark
Samuel
Gates
George
Williams
Gates
Sarah
D.
Todd
George
Porterfield
Gates
Elizabeth
Emery
Margaret
"Madge"
Gates
David
Willock
Wallace
1885 - 1982
Elizabeth
Virginia "Bess"
Wallace
97
97
1884 - 1972
Harry
S.
Truman
88
88
Hannah
Denison
Joseph
Saxton
Mercy
Saxton
William
Dewey
Simeon
Dewey
Anna
Phelps
William
Dewey
Rebecca
Carrier
Simeon
Dewey
Pudence
Yeamans
Julias
Yemans
Dewey
Mary
Perrin
1837 - 1917
George
Dewey
79
79
Elizabeth
Gager
John
Allyn
Elizabeth
Allyn
Thomas
Waterman
Daniel
Waterman
Mary
Gifford
Benjamin
Waterman
Experience
Hyde
Hannah
Waterman
Elijah
Dewey
Granville
Dewey
Abigail
Williams
Experience
Porter
John
Porter
Abigail
Arnold
Sarah
Porter
Edmund
Freeman
Otis
Freeman
Amy
Dewey
N.n.
Capron
Theoda
Capron
Harriet
B.
Freeman
George
Martin
Dewey
Emma
Bingham
George
Martin
Dewey
Annie
Thomas
1902 - 1971
Thomas
Edmund
Dewey
69
69
Rebecca
Waldo
Edward
Emerson
Joseph
Emerson
Mary
Moody
William
Emerson
Phebe
Bliss
William
Emerson
Ruth
Haskins
1803 - 1882
Ralph
Waldo
Emerson
78
78
~1650 - 1712
William
Fobes
62
62
1650 - 1711
Martha
Pabodie
60
60
1686 - 1771
Constant
Fobes
85
85
John
Little
Fobes
Little
Sarah
Baker
Ruth
Little
Jonathan
Head
Jonathan
Head
Hepzibah
Livermore
Orson
Sherman
Head
Mary
Jane
Treadwell
Mary
Blanch
Head
Richard
Jones
Welles
Richard
Head
Welles
Beatrice
Ives
1915 - 1985
George
Orson
Welles
70
70
Sarah
Freeman
Dan
Wright
Dan
Wright
Catherine
Reeder
Milton
Wright
Susan
Catharine
Koerner
1867 - 1912
Wilbur
Wright
45
45
1871 - 1948
Orville
Wright
76
76
1672 - 1726
Elizabeth
Waterhouse
54
54
Frank
S.
Prescott
Living
Prescott
1872 - 1945
Elizabeth
Matthews
73
73
1904 - 1979
Helen
Gilleland
74
74
1905 - 1976
Elizabeth
Gilleland
70
70
1911 - 1988
Walter
Hamilton
Gilleland
77
77
Name: Walter H. Gilleland SSN: 174-03-6616 Last Residence: 34994 Stuart, Martin, Florida, United States of America Born: 3 Jun 1911 Died: 15 Oct 1988 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1902 - 1975
George
Patterson
Graham
73
73
Living
Graham
Living
Graham
1928
Anthony
Schylur
Arrott
Living
Johnston
1908
Denzel
Wesley
Reed
Living
Reed
Living
Reed
Living
Lange
Living
Dau
1913 - 1944
Dorothy
Lee
31
31
1938 - 1961
Walter
Hamilton
Gilleland
22
22
1920 - 1962
Ruth
Yops
41
41
Living
Gilleland
Living
Weil
1877 - 1927
Jane
Stafford
Matthews
50
50
1909 - 1989
Frank
Wallace
Gilleland
80
80
Name: Frank W. Gilleland SSN: 527-05-7519 Last Residence: 85014 Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States of America Born: 28 Apr 1909 Died: 6 Dec 1989 State (Year) SSN issued: Arizona (Before 1951 )
1882
Mae
Doig
1928
Wanda
Jane
Gilleland
1928
Walter
Crawford
Gilleland
1912
Evangeline
Medcraft
Living
Gilleland
Living
Gilleland
Living
Mullens
1951 - 1970
Melissa
Jane
Mullens
18
18
Living
Mullens
Living
Mullens
Living
Mullens
Living
Peaslee
Living
Via
Living
Gilleland
Living
Gilleland
Living
Gilleland
Living
Allen
~1883
Amelia
Miller
Name: Amelia Gilleland Place of Death: Seattle Date of Death: 06 Jun 1971 Residence: Seattle Gender: F Certificate: 013237 Name: Amelia Gilleland SSN: 531-03-0690 Last Residence: 98119 Seattle, King, Washington, United States of America Born: 14 Aug 1879 Died: Jun 1971 State (Year) SSN issued: Washington (Before 1951 )
1905
Mary
Rena
Gilleland
1911
Margaret
Louise
Gilleland
Willam
Erskine
1826 - 1916
Alexander
Erskine
90
90
1860 tailor, Pitt Twp, Allegheny, PA. 1870 tailor, Pittsburgh, PA. 1880 tailor, Pittsburgh, PA. 1900 tailor, retired, Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 none, Pittsburgh, PA.
1836
Eliza
McWhinney
1900 mother of 8, 8 still living.
1864 - 1923
Robert
J.
Erskine
58
58
1880 office boy, living with parents.
Son Of
Alexander
Erskine
said to be a sea captain and lived on Long Island, NY.
Son Of
Alexander
Erskine
Said to be a sea captain, lived in New York.
~1827
Robert
J.
Boggs
1860 teacher, Forward Twp, Butler, PA. 1870 dry goods salesman, Allegheny, PA.
Bryan
Boggs
1860
Hamilton
Delarma
Boggs
1880 Carpenter, living with Nora in North Mahoning, Indiana, PA. 1900 packer for glass, Fallston Borrough, Beaver, PA 1910 wd, packer, Coraopolis Boro, Allegheny, PA. 1920 wd, packer, glass house, Coraopolis, PA.
~1862
James
Pride
Boggs
1855 - 1938
Mora Rose
Alpha
Boggs
82
82
1900 mother of 7, 4 still living.
1837
Robert
or John
Stevenson
1880 farmer Robinson Twp, Washington, PA.
~1871
Sarah
"Sadie"
Stevenson
~1875
Elizabeth
"Bessie" J.
Stevenson
Martha
Stevenson
~1872
John
Stevenson
~1869
Mary
Stevenson
1834 - 1895
Richard
Brankston(e)
61
61
1876 - 1958
Robert
Brankstone
82
82
1910 New South Memphis, TN. 1920 wd, vice-president, factory, Shelby, TN. 1930 secratery, bucket & tub factory, Memphis, TN. Name: Robert Brankstone SSN: 408-16-8282 Born: 28 Feb 1876 Died: Dec 1958 State (Year) SSN issued: Tennessee (Before 1951 )
1878 - 1946
Hugh
Adams
Brankstone
68
68
1900 clerk on books, with mother. 1920 accountant, plate glass co., Crafton, PA. 1930 none, Crafton, PA.
1874 - 1874
Eleanor
Brankstone
3m
3m
1885 - 1917
Ada
Prys
31
31
Name: Adah L Brankstone Death Date: 5 August , 1917 Death Place: Jefferson Age: 032 Volume: 46 Certificate: 22561
1904 - 1994
Robert
M.
Brankstone
89
89
1930 civil engineer, U.S. eng off., with father. Name: Robert M. Brankstone SSN: 412-01-2365 Last Residence: 38115 Memphis, Shelby, Tennessee, United States of America Born: 21 Aug 1904 Died: 30 May 1994 State (Year) SSN issued: Tennessee (Before 1951 )
1907 - 1991
Verna
Lee
Easley
83
83
Name: Verna L. Brankstone SSN: 412-01-1142 Born: 22 Apr 1907 Died: 9 Apr 1991 State (Year) SSN issued: Tennessee (Before 1951 )
Living
Brankstone
Living
Brankstone
Living
Thomas
Living
Evans
1881 - 1930
Keturah
Rene
49
49
1905 - 1977
Hugh
R.
Brankstone
71
71
1930 none, with parents. Name: Hugh Brankstone SSN: 168-09-3149 Last Residence: 77340 Huntsville, Walker, Texas, United States of America Born: 31 Dec 1905 Died: Apr 1977 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1908
Mary
Jane
Brankstone
1930 none, with parents.
1912 - 1990
Eleanor
Brankstone
78
78
Cordelia
Rosetta
Dawson
1875 - 1875
Son
Adams
1851 - 1924
Isabella
Noble
73
73
1900 wd, none, mother of 2, 2 still living, Allegheny, PA. 1920 wd, none, Pittsburgh, PA.
1884 - 1884
Katie
Adams
19d
19d
1885
Frank
Noble
Adams
1920 engineer, mechanical, with mother. 1930 sales engineer, fire alarm systems, with sister.
1890 - 1938
Isabella
Hamilton
Adams
47
47
1920 none, with mother.
~1878
Edward
Reif
1930 teacher, university, Bellevue, PA.
1869 - 1938
Sameul
E.
Crow
69
69
1920 farmer, own farm, Forward Twp, Butler, PA.
~1893
Carrie
S.
Bricker
Living
Druschel
1926
Clarence
Wilbur
McKibbin
Living
McKibbin
Living
McKibbin
Living
McKibbin
Living
Stefanski
Living
Koski
1927
Wilmerdean
V.
Huselton
Living
Huselton
Living
Huselton
Living
Huselton
Living
Huselton
Living
Huselton
Living
Huselton
Living
Fennell
Living
Jaksec
Living
Russell
Living
Hays
Living
Garison
Living
Plaisted
Living
Flinn
Living
Ferguson
Living
Ferguson
Living
Ferguson
1852 - 1910
Charles
Weigman
58
58
Immigrated to US in 1881.
1862 - 1931
Clifton
C.
Newell
69
69
Buried in Hillside Cemetery.
1905 - 1983
Frederick
Hamilton
Holmes
78
78
1930 chemist, oil company in Port Arthur, TX. Worked for Texas Company; was in France in 1930s showing the French how to run a refinery; creamated.
1927 - 2002
William
Ralph
Woods
75
75
Never married; retired. Name: William R. Woods SSN: 461-28-9025 Last Residence: 75773 Mineola, Wood, Texas, United States of America Born: 12 Aug 1927 Died: 22 Dec 2002 State (Year) SSN issued: Texas (Before 1951 )
1901 - 1957
Isabelle
Breckenridge
Brown
55
55
Living
Holmes
1919
Boyd
Boitnott
1771
Hugh
Wilson
1772
James
Wilson
1778
Sarah
Wilson
1781
Robert
Wilson
1802
Elizabeth
Wilson
1860 wd, farmer in Robison Twp. Allegheny, PA. 1870 keeping house, Stowe Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1880 with Thomas.
1804
Robert
Wilson
1850 farmer in Moon Twp, Allegehy, PA. 1860 farmer in Moon Twp, Allegehy, PA. 1870 farmer in Moon Twp, Allegehy, PA. 1880 farmer in Moon Twp, Allegehy, PA.
1807 - 1872
George
Wilson
65
65
Jane
Wilson
~1814 - BET 1870 AND 1880
John
Wilson
1860 chandler in Pittsburgh, PA. 1870 soap mfg. in Pittsburgh, PA. Age 56.
James
Wilson
1823 - 1855
Eliza
Craig
32
32
1826
Nancy
Craig
1828 - 1898
Esther
Craig
70
70
1831 - 1889
James
W.
Craig
58
58
1860 living with Alexander and Mary Wilson in Pittsburgh, PA. 1870 retail grocer in Pittsburgh, PA. 1880 grocer in Pittsburgh, PA.
1835 - 1861
John
Craig
26
26
1836 - 1872
Sarah
J.
Craig
36
36
1842
William
Craig
1860 carpenter living with Alexander and Mary Wilson in Pittsburgh, PA. 1870 carpenter in Pittsburgh, PA. 1880 grocery store in Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 watchman, electrical mfg. co. in Pittsburgh, PA.
1842 - >1920
Susan
Craig
78
78
1860 living with Alexander and Mary Wilson in Pittsburgh, PA. 1900, mother of 8 children, 7 still living, wd, in Addison Twp. Somerset, PA. 1910 wd, farmer, in Addison Twp. Somerset, PA 1920 wd, none, with Ulysses.
Mary
Daughter and heir of Gilbert, Earl of Strathearn in Scotland.
Gilbert
De
Hamildon
The first of the family that settled in Scotland in the reign of Alexander II, who granted him considerable lands.
Isabella
Daughter of Sir James Randolph of Strathdon, and sister of Thomas, Earl of Murry.
Walter
Fitz
Gilbert
Walter fitz Gilbert, featured on the Ragman Rolls in 1292 and 1296 as de Hamildon and de Homildon, and elsewhere as de Hambleton, witnessed a Stewart charter to Paisley Abbey 1294 as Walterus filius Gilberti, tenant in the royal barony of Cadzow, received grants of Dalserf (previously held by his stepmother) and later of the barony of Kinneil. He m 1st Helen; and m 2nd Mary dtr of Sir Adam Gordon of Gordon by whom he had issue:
Mary
Daughter of Adam, Lord of Gordon.
~1310 - 1374
David
Fitz
Walter
64
64
David fitz Walter fitz Gilbert, Knight, granted the royal barony of Cadzow by David II, not known to have used the surname de Hamilton (or any other), fought at Halidon Hill and Durham where he was taken prisoner 1346, one of the Scottish magnates who arranged the settlement of the Crown on Robert III 1371, d 1374. He m Margaret dtr of William de Ross, 5th Earl of Ross by whom he had three sons:
John
Fitz
Walter
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Innerwick and of the Hamilton Earls of Haddington
Margaret
Daughter of William de Ross, 5th Earl of Ross.
~1335 - <1388
David Fitz
David De
Hamyldon
53
53
David fitz David fitz Walter fitz Gilbert de Hamyldon, baron of Cadzow, Knight, received further grants of land from the Crown in 1375 and 1378, and d ante 14 May 1392. He m Jonetta (Janet, Joan) dtr of Sir William Keith of Galston by whom he had issue:
John
Hamilton
of Fingaltoun; ancestor of the Hamiltons of Preston.
Walter
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Cambuskeith in Ayr.
~1340
Jonetta
(Janet,
Joan) Keith
Daughter of William Keith of Galston
~1371 - 1402
John
Hamilton
31
31
John Hamilton of Cadzow, Knight, witnessed a charter 14 May 1392, captured by the English but freed 28 Oct 1398. He m Janet (Jacoba) dtr of Sir James Douglas of Dalkeith and by her had issue:
~1379
Janet
(Jacoba)
Douglas
Daughter of Sir James Douglas of Dalkeieth
~1413
David
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Dalserf
~1392
Thomas
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Raploch
William
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Bathgate
Andrew
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Bruntwood
George
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Boreland
David
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Bardowie
~1398 - >1441
James
Hamilton
43
43
Hostage in 1424 and 1426 for the ransoms of King James I from his English captivity.
~1400
Janet
Linvingston
Daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar
Alexander
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Silvertonhill
D. 1455
John
Hamilton
Had charter of Whitecampand Kirkhope 18 June 1449, had two sons William and Robert.
Gavin
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Orbiston; provost of the collegiate church of Bothwell, father of a natural son Thomas.
D. ~1522
Margaret
Gavin
Hamilton
Helen
Hamilton
Jean
Hamilton
Barbara
Hamilton
D. 1468
Euphemia
Daughter of Sir Patrick Graham and Eupheme, Countess of Strathern.
D. >1516
Elizabeth
Hamilton
D. >1574
Anne
Hamilton
Gavin
Hamilton
Died young
D. 1611
David
Hamilton
Sarah
Warner
Lawrence
Towneley
Alice
Towneley
D. 1709
John
Grymes
of Grymesby, VA
~1697 - ~1753
Charles
Grymes
56
56
of Morattico, VA
Frances
Jennings
Lucy
Grymes
1729 - 1787
Henry
Lee
58
58
of Leesylvania
1756 - 1818
Henry
"Light
Horse" Lee
62
62
Henry Lee was born on his family's estate in Prince William County, Virginia on 29 Jan 1756. He graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1773 and intended to make a career at law. This course was interrupted by the outbreak of the Revolution in 1775. He became a captain in the cavalry, later rising to the rank of major and then lieutenant colonel. His troops fought in both the Northern and Southern theatres of the war and took part in the final victory at Yorktown, Virginia. After the war, Lee served in the Virginia legislature and the Continental Congress and was Governor of his state from 1792 to 1795. In 1794 he commanded the troops that put down the "Whiskey Rebellion" in western Pennsylvania. He retired from politics after one term in the United States House of Representatives. In the next several years he was ruined financially by bad investments and was put into debtors' prison for a few years. After 1812 his health deteriorated. He spent a few years in the West Indies, hoping to recover, but died at Cumberland Island, Georgia on 25 Mar 1818, while on his way home. {Chamber's Biographical Dictionary}
Anne
Hill
Carter
1807 - 1870
Robert
Edward
Lee
63
63
The Confederacy's greatest soldier, Robert E. Lee, was descended from an old and honoured family. Several of Lee's forebears had played distinguished roles in Virginia's history. His father was the Revolutionary War hero Light-Horse Harry Lee, a friend of George Washington. Robert Edward Lee was born in Stratford, Virginia, the fourth of five children. Robert was educated at the US Military Academy, West Point. He graduated second in his class in 1829; being commission as Second Lieutenant in the US Army Engineers. On 5 Jul 1831, he married Mary Custis, great-granddaughter of Washington's wife and heiress of the estate of Arlington, across the Potomac from Washington. The Lees had seven children. He was promoted First Lieutenant in 1836, and Captain in 1838. He distinguished himself in the battles of the Mexican War, was wounded in the storming of Chapultepec in 1847; his meritorious service earned him brevet promotion to Major. He became Superintendent of West Point. Later he was appointed Colonel of cavalry. He was in command of the Department of Texas in 1860. Early the following year, was summoned to Washington, DC, when war between the states seemed imminent. President Abraham Lincoln offered him the field command of the Union forces, but Lee declined. On 20 Apr, three days after Virginia seceded from the Union, he submitted his resignation from the US Army. On 23 Apr 1861, he became Commander-in-Chief of the military and naval forces of Virginia. For a year, he was military adviser to Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States of America, and was then placed in command of the Confederate army in Northern Virginia. In February 1865 Lee was made commander-in-Chief of all Confederate Armies; two months later the war was virtually ended by his surrender to General Ulysses S Grant at Appomattox Court House. His great battles included those of Antietam, Chancellorsville, Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg. The masterly strategy of Lee was overcome only by the superior resources and troop strength of the Union. His campaigns are almost universally studied in military schools as models of strategy and tactics. He had a capacity for anticipating the actions of his opponents and for comprehending their weaknesses. He made skillful use of interior lines of communication and kept a convex front toward the enemy, so that his reinforcements, transfers, and supplies could reach their destination over short, direct routes. His greatest contribution to military practice, however, was his use of field fortifications as aids to maneuvering. As a trained military engineer, he recognized that a small body of soldiers, protected by entrenchments, can hold an enemy force of many times their number, while the main body outflanks the enemy or attacks a smaller force elsewhere. In his application of this principle, Lee was years ahead of his time; the tactic was not fully understood or generally adopted until the 20th century. Lee applied for but was never granted the official post-war amnesty. He accepted the presidency of Washington College, now Washington and Lee University, in 1865; within a few years it had become an outstanding academic institution. He died there on 12 Oct 1870. Lee has long been revered as an ideal by southerners and as a hero by all Americans. His antebellum home is now known as Arlington House, the Robert E. Lee Memorial, and is a national memorial. In 1861, after the outbreak of the American Civil War, the mansion and grounds were confiscated by the Union government. The house was converted to a hospital, and in 1864 the grounds were first used as a military cemetery. After the Civil War, the US Supreme Court ruled that the house was the property of George Washington Custis Lee (1832-1913), son of Robert E. Lee. He sold it to the federal government in 1883, who developed it as Arlington National Cemetery, a federal burial ground administered by the US Army. In 1975, Lee's citizenship was restored posthumously by an act of the US Congress. {Chamber's Biographical Dictionary}
1806 - 1873
Mary
Randolph
Custis
67
67
~1776 - ~1840
George
Washington
Parke Custis
64
64
>1832 - ~1902
George
Washington
Custis Lee
70
70
Served in the Confederate Army, rising to the rank of Major General and commanded a division in 1864. Succeeded his Father as President of the Washington and Lee University. {Chamber's Biographical Dictionary}
~1834 - ~1904
William
Henry
Fitzhugh Lee
70
70
Served in the Confederate Army, rising to Major General commanding the Confederate cavalry. Was later elected to the US Congress. {Chamber's Biographical Dictionary}
~1836 - ~1901
Robert
E. Lee
65
65
1885 - ~1957
Alice
Battenberg
72
72
1854 - 1921
Louis
Battenberg
67
67
Naturalised a British subject 31 Oct 1868. Admiral of the Fleet.
1863 - 1950
Victoria
Of
Hesse
87
87
Discontinued title of Princess in June 1917. Died leaving issue. {Burke's Peerage}
1823 - 1888
Alexander
Battenberg
65
65
1825 - 1885
Julia
Von
Hauke
60
60
1837 - 1892
Ludwig
IV
Hesse
55
55
1843 - 1878
Alice
Maud
Mary
35
35
1809 - 1877
Charles
68
68
1815 - 1885
Elizabeth
70
70
1882 - 1944
Andrew
62
62
1845 - 1913
George
I
67
67
George I (of Greece) (1845-1913), king of Greece (1863-1913), the first Greek monarch of the house of Glücksburg. The second son of King Christian IX of Denmark, he was known as Prince William and was nominated for the Greek throne by the British government after the revolution that deposed his predecessor, King Otto, in 1862. The Danish prince was elected to the throne by the Greek National Assembly and was crowned as George I, king of the Hellenes, after being approved by the Great Powers. In 1867 he married Olga, niece of Alexander II of Russia. George followed a consistent expansionist policy; the Ionian Islands, part of Epirus, and most of Thessaly were joined to Greece during his reign. After winning a victory over Turkey in the First Balkan War, he was assassinated in Salonika in 1913. He was succeeded by his son, Constantine I.
1851 - 1926
Olga
Constantinova
Romanov
75
75
1818 - 1906
Christian
Ix
87
87
Christian IX (1818-1906), king of Denmark (1863-1906), a direct descendant of Christian III through the Glücksburg line. In 1852, with the consent of the reigning Frederick VII, a council of the great powers recognized Christian as heir apparent to the Danish throne. On the death of Frederick in 1863, Christian became king. The following year, after a war with Prussia and Austria, Denmark was forced to renounce its claims to Schleswig-Holstein by the Treaty of Vienna. In domestic affairs, Christian IX's reign was marked by a struggle between liberal and conservative elements for control of the Folketing, the lower house of the Danish Rigsdag, the legislature. Christian sided with the conservatives, but when the liberals gained control of the Folketing, he consented to the formation of a liberal ministry. By his wife, Louise, princess of Hesse-Cassel, he had six children. Of these, his eldest son succeeded him as Frederick VIII; his daughter Alexandra married the prince of Wales, later King Edward VII of Great Britain and Ireland; another daughter, Dagmar, married Grand Duke Alexander of Russia, later Czar Alexander III; and a younger son, George, became George I, king of Greece. Christian was sometimes called the Grandfather of Europe.
1817 - 1898
Louise
Wilhelmina Of
Hesse-Cassel
81
81
Louise Wilhelmina Frederica Caroline Augusta Julie. {Burke's Peerage}
1827 - 1892
Constantine
Nikolaievitch
Romanov
65
65
In the Crimean War, he commanded the Russian fleet and held the British and French in check before Kronstadt. In 1865 and 1878 he became President of the Council. In 1882 he was dismissed for revolutionary views.
1787 - 1867
William
Hesse-
Cassel
79
79
D. 1864
Louise
Charlotte
Daughter of Frederick, Crown Prince of Denmark. {Burke's Peerage}
1796 - 1855
Nicholas I
Petrovich
Romanov
59
59
Nicholas I (1796-1855), emperor of Russia (1825-55), third son of Emperor Paul I, born in Tsarskoye Selo (now Pushkin). On the death of his eldest brother, Emperor Alexander I, Nicholas came to the throne after suppressing the Decembrist revolt, staged by reform-minded army officers who favored the accession of his brother Constantine. His domestic policy was autocratic and his foreign policy aggressive. He introduced military discipline into the civil service, tried to prevent the spread of revolutionary ideas by rigid censorship and strict state control of universities, and sought to promote the Russian language and religion among his non-Russian subjects. He waged war successfully against Iran (1826-28) and Turkey (1828-29). During 1830-31 Nicholas crushed Polish revolts against Russian authority and abolished the Polish constitution. In 1849 he aided Austria in the suppression of uprisings in Hungary. His schemes to add more Turkish territory to his domain alarmed the Western European powers and led to the Russian defeat in the Crimean War.
1747 - 1837
Frederick
Hesse-
Cassel
89
89
1762 - 1823
Caroline
Polixene
Orange-Nassau
61
61
Eldest daughter of Prince Charles William of Orange Nassau.
1754 - 1801
Paul I
Petrovich
Romanov
47
47
The second son of Tsar Peter III and Catherine II, he suceeded his Mother in 1796. He led Russia into alternative alliance during the Napoleonic Wars; in 1801 his convention with Sweden and Denmark in alliance with France was broken by the British fleet under Admiral Nelson. His own officers conspired against him to compel Paul to abdicate. In a scuffle he was strangled.
D. 1785
Frederick II
Hesse-
Cassel
1723 - 1772
Mary
Hanover
48
48
1837 - 1900
Francis
Alexander
63
63
Baptised Francis Paul Charles Louis Alexander. A serving British Army officer who reached the rank of Major General. {Burke's Peerage}
1833 - 1897
Mary Adelaide
Wilhemina E.
Hanover
63
63
Batised Mary Adelaide Wilelmina Elizabeth.
1774 - 1850
Adolphus
Frederick
Hanover
76
76
The titles became extinct upon his death. {Burke's Peerage}
1797 - 1889
Augusta
Wilhelmina Louise
Hesse-Cassel
91
91
1855 - 1944
Claude
George
Bowes-Lyon
89
89
14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne. Amongst other issue, his youngest daughter was Elizabeth. {Burke's Peerage}
~1859 - 1938
Nina Cecilia
Cavendish-
Bentinck
79
79
Daughter of Reverend Charles William Cavendish-Bentinck of the family of the Duke of Portland. {Burke's Peerage}
1824 - 1904
Claude
Bowes-
Lyon
79
79
13th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne
1832 - 1922
Frances
Dora
Smith
90
90
1794 - 1863
Oswald
Smith
69
69
of Blendon hall, near Bexley, Kent
1805 - 1891
Henrietta
Mildred
Hodgson
86
86
1773 - 1844
Robert
Hodgson
71
71
The Right Reverend Robert Hodgson, Dean of Carlisle.
Mary
Tucker
1740 - 1808
Robert
Hodgson
68
68
1744 - 1815
Mildred
Porteus
71
71
~1705 - 1754
Robert
Porteus
49
49
Judith
Cockayne
~1679 - 1758
Robert
Porteus
79
79
of Virginia, later moved to Ripon, Yorkshire, England
~1680 - ~1745
Mildred
Smith
65
65
John
Smith
~1673 - ~1738
Mary
Warner
65
65
Lousia
Kirkland
Daniel
Kirkland
Joseph
Kirkland
Joseph
Kirkland
Sarah
Backus
1813 - 1890
Junius
Spencer
Morgan
76
76
Junius Spencer Morgan, b. West Springfield, Mass., Apr. 14, 1813, d. Apr. 8, 1890, was an important financial link between the United States and Britain during the middle of the 19th century. After some experience in American mercantile firms, he joined the London-based international banking house of George Peabody & Co., becoming a partner in 1854. When Peabody retired, Morgan took over, changing the firm's name to J. S. Morgan & Co. He directed this company until his death. His best-known transaction involved a $50-million loan to France during the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71).
Juliet
Pierpont
Deborah
Williams
Joseph
Warren
Joseph
Warren
Mary
Stevens
1741 - 1775
Joseph
Warren
34
34
A Massachusetts physician and American Revolutionary patriot, Joseph Warren, b. Roxbury, Mass., June 10, 1741, d. June 17, 1775, drafted (1774) the Suffolk Resolves in protest against the British Intolerable Acts. On Apr. 18, 1775, he sent Paul Revere and William Dawes on their famous ride to Lexington. He was killed at the Battle of Bunker Hill.
1721 - 1791
Thankful
Cooper
70
70
1683 - 1747
Joseph
Cooper
64
64
1683
Abigail
Smith
1642 - 1703
John
Cooper
61
61
1652 - 1714
Mary
Thompson
62
62
1634 - 1724
Thomas
Smith
90
90
1644 - 1727
Elizabeth
Patterson
83
83
~1612 - 1689
John
Cooper
77
77
~1614
Mary
Woolen
1641 - 1674
John
Thompson
32
32
~1620 - 1666
Dorothy
46
46
~1618
George
Smith
1601 - 1670
Edward
Patterson
69
69
1622
Elizabeth
~1580
Thomas
Cooper
~1589 - 1679
John
Thompson
90
90
Phebe
Ives
D. 1682
John
Ives
~1646
Martha
Ives
1673 - 1751
Joseph
Ives
77
77
1674
Mary
Ives
Died young
1678 - 1727
Martha
Ives
48
48
1680 - 1704
Lazarus
Ives
24
24
1683 - 1767
Thomas
Ives
83
83
1685
Abigail
Ives
Died young
1686 - 1690
John
Ives
4
4
1692 - 1759
Ebenezer
Ives
67
67
Haninai
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #637;
Kafnai
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #637;
Huna
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #637;
~0460
Mar
Zutra
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #637, 700;
Haninai
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Maremar
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
~0340
Mar
Zutra
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Markahana
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Mar
Abba
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Ukba
Mar
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Nehemiah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Nathan
Ukba
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Hanan
Married daughter of Rav Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Shaphat
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Johanan
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Akkub
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Elioenai
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Neanah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Shemaiah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Shecanian
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Obadaiah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Amay
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Rephaiah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Isaiah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Hananian
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Zerubbabel
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Pediah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
Jeconiah
Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #700;
D. 0475
Uther
Pendragon
Ygerne
(Eigr)
Constantine
Amlawdd
Gwen
Cunedda
Ednowen
Colwyn
Of
Anglesea
1622 - 1676
John
Fowler
54
54
He was in the list of planters in Milford in 1639, but removed and settled in Guilford in 1649. He was a Deacon in the church, and a deputy to the General Court at New Haven in 1661, 1663 and 1664, and 27 times delegate to the General Court at Hartford after the union of the colonies. He was one of the first deacons in the church in Guilford, beginning about 1662/5. For his services, the Legislature granted him 100 acres of land in Cochin-chaug(Durham). In 1672, his list was L160, the largest in the town of Guilford. He died in 1776 leaving property to the amount of L 612. He was also listed as an Ensign in the Colonial Militia, from Guilford, Record C.2, p. 14 of the Colonial Records.
1634 - 1713
Mary
Hubbard
79
79
1653 - 1742
Elizabeth
Bartlett
89
89
D. 1776
Hannah
Baldwin
1697 - 1749
Caleb
Hall
51
51
1670 - 1730
John
Hall
59
59
1668 - 1740
Mary
Lyman
72
72
1648 - 1725
Samuel
Hall
76
76
1646 - 1728
Hannah
Walker
82
82
1623 - 1690
John
Lyman
66
66
1635 - 1725
Dorcas
Plumb
90
90
1606 - 1676
John
Hall
70
70
~1615 - 1690
Jeanne
(Jane)
Wellen
75
75
1618 - 1652
John
Walker
34
34
~1620 - 1660
Grace
40
40
1580 - 1642
Richard
Lyman
61
61
1589 - 1642
Sarah
Osborne
53
53
1594 - 1648
John
Plumb
53
53
1596 - >1669
Dorothy
Wood
73
73
1552 - 1605
Henry
Lyman
53
53
1559 - 1587
Elizabeth
Rande
28
28
1561
Roger
Osborne
~1557 - 1628
Robert
Plumb
71
71
~1565 - 1615
Grace
Crackbone
50
50
1516 - 1587
John
Lyman
71
71
~1518
Margaret
Gerard
~1526 - 1578
Peter
Rande
52
52
1559
Joan
~1533
Robert
Crackbone
1496 - 1507
Henry
Lyman
11
11
~1492
Alicia
Hyde
1485
William
Gerard
~1494 - 1560
William
Rande
66
66
~1470 - 1509
Thomas
Lyman
39
39
~1474
Elizabeth
Lambert
~1466
Simon
Hyde
<1430 - >1470
John
Lyman
40
40
~1430
Joanna
Trethewy
<1447 - >1474
Henry
Lambert
27
27
~1404
Saloman
Lyman
~1414
William
Lambert
~1383 - <1446
Thomas
(William)
Lambert
63
63
~1387
Joane
De
Umfreville
D. <1399
Allan
Lambert
~1361 - 1391
Thomas
De
Umfreville
30
30
~1365 - 1420
Agnes
55
55
D. >1377
Nicholas
Lambert
~1324 - 1387
Thomas
De
Umfreville
63
63
~1328
Joan
De
Roddam
~1583
John
Wellen
~1569
John
Wood
1700 - 1770
Damaris
Atwater
70
70
1649 - 1739
Jonathan
Baldwin
90
90
1658 - 1693
Hannah
Ward
34
34
1609 - 1684
Joseph
Baldwin
75
75
Baldwin, Charles Candee, The Baldwin genealogy from 1500 to 1881 Cleveland: unknown, 1881, 991 pgs.
1613 - 1661
Hannah
Whitlock
48
48
~1630
John
Ward
~1550 - 1570
Thomas
Baldwin
20
20
~1552
Jane
Tyndall
~1500 - ~1563
John
Baldwin
63
63
~1490 - ~1552
Robert
Baldwin
62
62
~1493
Agnes
Dolte
1576 - 1632
Richard
Baldwin
56
56
Isabella
Harding
~1585 - 1658
John
Whitlock
73
73
~1740
Richard
Harding
1630 - 1669
George
Bartlett
39
39
New England Historical and Genealogical Register, volume 56, April 1902, page 155-156 Deacon George Bartlett is said to have been a brother of John Bartlett who lived in Windsor. He was at Guilford soon after the settlement of the plantation. His name appears as a witness in the first court record, August 14, 1645, and it would seem as if he had been there then a considerable time. At a Court, Oct. 9, 1945, he was appointed with three others, "to make and finish ye pound within ye time of 3 weeks under ye fine of 20 shillings." He seems to have been a man of education and consequences in the community, and was frequently a witness in the Courts. At a General Court, on May 22, 1648, "Mr." Bartlett was given the "Freeman's Charge." In the book of "Terriers," his name is tenth with a homelot containing four and a half acres, allowed for four, at the South-west corner of the Green. He was chosen overseer of highways, on May 22, 1649, and on June 9, 1653, one of the townsmen. He succeeded Gov. William Leete as Secretary of the Plantation, on June 5, 1662, and at the same time became one of the Deputies to hold the Particular Courts. He was chosen on April 23, 1665, with John Fowler, as one of the representatives sent by Guilford to the General Assembly of Connecticut, by which colony the New Haven jurisdiction had just been absorbed. On July 6, 1665, he was appointed Lieutenant of the Train Band at Guilford. Prior to that date, but after 1660, he and John Fowler were made the first deacons of the Guilford Church. On June 23, 1654, New Haven Jurisdiction raised a company numbering 133, commanded by Capt. Seeley, to cooperate with an army of 800 from all the United Colonies of New England, and George Bartlett was appointed to command the Guilford contingent of 17, with the rank of Sergeant. On June 9, 1651, he was elected Marshal of the Plantation, succeeding Thomas Jones. In 1665 he was appointed, with Robert Kitchel, as "commissioner" of Guilford, and "invested with magistratical power." In 1649, he and John Hoadley were appointed by the town of Guilford to build a cart bridge over East River, receiving 3 pounds in English commodities, the rest in "country pay or worke." A year previously he had been one of the three men appointed to build a fence to keep the young cattle from the "herd's walk." Deacon Bartlett was married, by Mr. Samuel Desborough (my 10th great grand-uncle), to Mary, daughter of Abraham Cruttenden (founder of Guilford and my 10th great-grandfather) , on Sept. 14, 1650. He died Aug. 2, 1669, and was buried the next day. His wife did not long survive, but died on Sept. 10, 1669.
1632 - 1669
Mary
Cruttenden
37
37
1610 - 1683
Abraham
Cruttenden
73
73
1612 - ~1663
Mary
Hinkson
51
51
~1584 - 1683
Abraham
Cruttenden
99
99
~1588
Elizabeth
Roberts
1601 - 1683
George
Hubbard
82
82
Mr. Hubbard was one of the earliest settlers in Wethersfield, CT, 1635. He was appointed as one of the two men permitted to trade with the Indians. From 1637 to 1640 he was a member of the General Assembly. According to Vol.1, of the Colonial Records of Conn., he was appointed by the General Court "to gather passages of God's providence which have been remarkable since the first of the Plantation". He removed to Guilford in 1648, and represented that settlement as "Deputy of the Colony" in 1657-60, 1662 and 1665. He practiced surveying both at Wethersfield and at Guilford. He was a magistrate from 1670 to 1676 "History of New Haven to it's Absorption Into Connecticut", Atwater George Hubbard was in Wethersfield in 1636, probably came there from Watertown, and was a representative from Wethersfield in the first General Assembly in 1643. He removed to Milford and is recorded on the Milford map of 1646. (there is a map on p 155 of the book). In 1650 he was in Guilford, where his wife Mary died Sept 16, 1676. He d Jan, 1683. From hjis seven or more children,a large number of people have descended. (See the Hubbard Genealogy, 1895, 512 pages, NY) George was in Wethersfield 1636, probably went from Watertown, representative 1638 in the first General Assembly and several times thereafter, removed to Milford 1643, then to Guilford 1650, where he was of importance, representative to New Haven 1665 and 1666, after the union of the two colonies. His will of May 1683, preceded with a codicil of Dec 30 preceeding names sons John, Daniel, and William; with daughters Mary, wife of John Fowler, Sarah, wife of Harrison or Morrison, Abigail, wife of Humphrey Spinning, Hannah, probably wife of Jacob Melyne or Meleyn, and Elizabeth, unmarried. Daniel, Abigail, and Hannah were baptized 26 May 1644 at Milford. George Hubbard,- (c1594-Jan 1683) married c1627 Mary Bishop (c1610-73) in Glastonbury, Somerset, England. She was the daughter of John (-14 Sep 1676) and Ann Bishop, who also immigrated. George and Mary immigrated by 1633 to Watertown, MA and were among that town's settlers of Wetherfield, CT in 1635. In 1636, the governing commission assigned George to survey the boundaries of Wetherfield and Windsor, CT. George represented Wetherfield on the commission 1638-42 (he was fined one shilling for coming to his first meeting late). In 1638, he also became one of the two Wetherfield resident authorized to trade with local Indians; 11 years later, George would be fined ¹10 for trading a gun to an Indian. In 1640, George was granted 195 acres at Naubuc Farms, present-day Glastonbury. However, George also appears among the 44 original settlers of Milford, 20 November 1639, for an allotment of ten acres. George Hubbard was admitted 15 January 1644 to the Milford church. They moved to Guilford by 1648, where Mary's parents also settled. George was admitted to the Gilford church 6 October 1650. His name appears on a freeman's list for Gilford c1650-52, and as having moved from Milford. He served eight years as a deputy magistrate 1652-66, assembly member 1666- 67, and justice 1670. George Hubbard's estate was inventoried 30 May 1683 and valued at ¹564.8.6 sterling. He was buried in Guilford.
~1633 - 1675
Mary
Bishop
42
42
1573 - 1646
Edmund
Hubbard
73
73
1574 - 1649
Margaret
Dewey
75
75
1590 - 1660
John
Bishop
70
70
"A History of the Plantation of Menunkatuck" by Bernard Christian Steiner 1897 page 88 As early as October 9, 1645, four men are fined for neglecting to keep up a fence against cattle, and on May 28, 1646, the second civil case recorded was heard, that of Relf vs. Bishop & Jordan, for trespass by "hoggs" on the plaintiff's corn. Thomas Relf claimed that he was damnifyed to the value fo fifty shillings, by injury done by the defendants' animasl to 2 acres of Indian Corn in the East Creek quater. John Bishop confessed that the hogs were his and was fined 5 bushels of Indian corn and 7 shillings in wampum; but Thomas Jordan denied ownership of the hogs and was, apparently, acquitted. This suit led to another, Bishop vs. Sheaffe, in which the plaintiff claimed that the hogs had gotten into Relf's corn, through the "default" of Mr. Sehaffe's fence, and that the fine should be repaid him by the defendant. Mr Sheaffe, by his attorneys, Messrs. Kitchel and Chittenden, acknowledged that his fence was unmade, but claimed that Mr. Bishop;s "hoggs were disorderly, viz: unyoked, &c." As no proff of neglect on Mr. Bishop's part was given, the Court sentenced Mr. Sheaffe to repay the fine. page 247 (chapter on fences) At the same meeting (December 30, 1647), "the Court", being willing to show tenderness & respect to Mr. Bishop", granted for a year his petition to be "foreborne fencing of the way (Boston Street) from his lands by Thomas Relfe's," provided "he be carefull to keep convenient gates for passage." Title: The Bishop Genealogy pages ix thru xi. The vessel St. John, carrying John Bishop and his family, together with 24 other original settlers of Guilford, sailed from London 20 May 1639. They landed at Quinnipiack around 10 Sep 1639. His name is the second signature on the Guilford Compact. They then relocated to Menunkatuck, now Guilford. John Bishop was on the the six original trustees of the community land, and one of the four original justices of the peace. His date of birth is not known, but he is assumed to have been near 50 when he came to America since he already had grandchildren. He was a farmer and owned a large tract of land in addition to his seven acre home lot. He died in Jan 1660. He will was probated 7 Feb 1660 (New Haven Colonial Records, p 449 and Guilford Records, Book A page 185). He wife died at the home of her son-in-law, John Steele in Hartford in April 1676. Title: The Guilford Covenant - 1639 We whose names are here underwritten intending by God's gracious permission to plant ourselves in New England,and if it maybe in the southerly part of Quinnipiack ,do faithfully promise each, for ourselves and those that belong to us that we will the Lord assisting us sit down and form ourselves together in one entire plantation and be helpful each to the other in any common work according to everyman's ability and as need shall require and we promise not to desert or leave each other or the plantation but with the consent of the rest or the greater part of the company who have entered into this engagement. As to our gathering to be joined together in that way we do refer ourselves, until such time, as it shall please, God to settle us in our plantation. In witness where of we subscribe our names, this first of June , 1639. Robert Kitchell - Thomas Jones - William Plane - John Mepham - Thomas Naish JOHN BISHOP - John Jordan - Richard Guttage - Thomas Norton - Henry Kingnoth - Francis Bushnell - William Stone - John Housefol - Abraham Cruttenden - Henry Dowde - William Chittenden - John Hoadely - William Dudley - Francis Chatfield - Thomas Cooke - William Leete - John Stone - John Pemely - William Halle - Henry Whitfield.
~1604 - 1676
Ann
Stevens
72
72
Some information from the will of Mrs. Ann Bishop, made 12 June 1673, in which she gave twenty shillings to her grandchild Elizabeth Hubbard. Mrs. Bishop gave her eldest son John Bishop 5 pounds above "his equal proportion with my other Too children," and she willed that the residue of her estate should be divided "Betwixt my three children, viz., John and Steuen Bishop and James Steele." Further she called James Steele her son-in-law, and the inventory mentioned property in Mr. Steele's hands "which his wife claims as given to her by her Mother." The terms used in the will prove conclusively that Mrs. Bishop had but three living children in 1673: John, Stephen, and Bethia wife of James Steele
1563 - 1625
Henry
Hubbard
62
62
1572 - 1641
Dorothy
Bell
68
68
~1548 - 1600
Robert
Dewey
52
52
~1553
Margaret
Stasye
~1555 - 1674
Richard
Bishop
119
119
D. 1658
Dolabelle
Or
Dulzabella
~1537 - 1600
Thomas
Hubbard
63
63
~1541
Audrey
Hare
1539 - 1577
Robert
Bell
38
38
1538 - 1603
Dorothy
Beaupre
65
65
~1524
Richard
Bishop
~1479
Miles
Hubbard
~1507
Ellinor
Blaverhasset
~1515
William
Hare
~1517
Alice
Rugge
~1513
Robert
Bell
1480 - 1568
Edmunde
Beaupre
88
88
~1520 - 1603
Catherine
Bedingfield
83
83
~1436 - 1517
James
Hubbard
81
81
~1440 - 1494
Margery
Lyhart
54
54
~1481
John
Blaverhasset
~1483
Jane
Tindall
~1465 - 1513
Nicholas
Thomas
Beaupre
48
48
~1473 - 1513
Margaret
Dorwood
Forderinghay
40
40
~1533
Henry
Bedingfield
~1532
Elizabeth
Walshingham
~1409 - >1494
Thomas
Hubbard
85
85
~1437 - 1541
Thomas
Beaupre
104
104
~1439
Margaret
Ashfield
~1446 - 1491
Thomas
Fotheringhaye
45
45
~1473
Elizabeth
Doreward
~1445
Philip
Bedingfield
~1447
Agnes
or Anne
Yaxley
~1447
William
Walsingham
~1388 - 1479
William
Hubbard
91
91
~1410 - ~1459
Thomas
Beaupre
49
49
~1414 - ~1439
Margaret
Meers
25
25
~1409
Robert
Ashfield
~1416
Gerard
Fotheringhaye
~1405
Sibyl
~1418
William
Dorward
~1420
Margaret
Harsyke
~1419
John
Bedingfield
~1421
Alice
Stonham
~1421
John
Busard
~1370 - ~1458
Thomas
Hubbard
88
88
~1364
Ellinor
~1379
Nicholas
Beaupre
~1381
Margaret
Holdich
~1388
John
Meers
~1386
Thomas
Fotheringhaye
~1388
Agnes
Le
Stange
~1390 - 1462
John
Doreward
72
72
~1380 - 1460
Blanche
Coggeshall
80
80
~1394 - 1453
Roger
Harsyke
59
59
~1396
Alice
Witchingham
~1395
Walter
Stonham
~1349
John
Hubbard
~1351
Allinor
Taylor
~1325 - <1392
Thomas
De
Beaupre
67
67
~1327 - <1392
Joan
Holbeach
65
65
~1355
Richard
Holdich
~1362
John
Le
Stange
~1366
Elizabeth
Botelea
~1366
William
Doreward
~1368
Katherine
Wallcott
~1359
William
Coggeshall
~1351
Antiocha
Hawkwood
~1368 - 1401
John
Harsyke
33
33
~1370
Agnes
Caley
~1370
Nicholas
Witchingham
1571 - 1645
John
Fowler
74
74
John Fowler, of Dalbury Lees, m. Frances, daughter of William Webb, Sr., of Burntwood, Staffordshire, as we learn from the following document in Vol. IV, N. S., Wm. Salt, Archaeoligical Journal, Staffordshire, p. 38: "Octave of St. Michael, 10 James I, 1612, William Webb the younger, Humphrey Chrichtley and Alice his wife; John Fowler and Frances his wife, Complaints, and Richard Webb and Isabella his wife, Defendants. Amicable suit to tansfer to complainant's lawful heirs of William Webb, Sr., all right, title and interest in and to 3 cottages, 3 gardens, 4 acres of meadow, 30 acres of pasture in Pipe Ediall and Burntwood for the consideration of L41." William Webb, Sr. also had a son Joseph who m. Mary, daughter of William Amphlet. Mr. Fowler d. in 1645, his will proved by son Joseph who was sole executor; it is dated 20 June, 1639; proved in London, 1645, mentions wife Frances, son William, not then in England, son Joseph to whom he leaves the lands bought from his brother Henry, daughter Anne, wife of William Brown, son Richard, neice Rebecca, orphan daughter of brother William, daughters Isabel, Margaret, Alice, and Judith; son Joseph, sole executor.
~1584
Frances
Webb
~1550 - 1626
William
Fowler
76
76
William Fowler, was b. at Bisley, Co. Glouchester, about 1550-51; removed to an estate at Dalbury Lees, in Derbyshire, evidently the lands referred to in the will of his grandfater, Roger Fowler of Bisley. We have been unable to ascertain the name of his wife, but her christian name was possibly Edith as his only daughter was so named. He d. in 1626; will provided at Litchfield, 1626; makes his only daughter, Edith, sole executrix.
~1558 - 1617
Ann
(Anne)
Heawood
59
59
~1558
William
Webb
~1520
Thomas
Fowler
<1500 - 1540
Roger
Fowler
40
40
Removed to Bisley, Co. Glouchester, where he d. in 1540. Wife's name was Johanna Harman as we learn from his will, as he speaks of his wife's brother, Thomas Harman, also mentions his brother Richard Fowler of Stonehouse who was considerably younger than himself. He speaks of lands he owns in Salop, Derby, Bucks, Berks, and Glouchester; mentions the following children: Thomas, son and heir, William, Giles, Henry, Francis, Roger, Katharine, Alice, Elizabeth, and Agnes, also wife Johanna.
~1500
Joanna
Harmon
~1445
William
Fowler
William Fowler, was b. in Foxley, Co. Bucks, about 1445. The only thing about him we know of, is, that he was a joint tenant or owner of the Manor of Cleware, Co. Berks, which formerly belonged to his anccestor, Sir John Foxley, of Foxley, and by him willed to his daughter Katharine, who m. John Warbleton and who in turn passes it to their daughter Elizabeth who m. John Syferwadte and they in turn passed it to their daughter and co-heiress Margaret who m. David Breknoke and had two sons, John and Richard. The two following papers tell the story: 1 Calender of ancient deeds, Vol 2, B. 3690, p. 430. "Grant by Margaret, late wife of David Breknoke, deceased, and daughter, and Co-heiress of John Syferwaste, to Richard Fowler, Thomas Fowler, William Fowler, Richard Chamberlaine, Thomas Rookes, Thomas Danvers and John Breknoke; of a moiety of Cleware Manor, Co. Berks: also Letter of Atty. to Thomas Wellesbourne, John Blackpall and William Rabbes, to deliver seisin of the same, 5 March, 16 Edward IV, 1475." 2 In Vol. 1, B. 1112, p. 320, some of the above mantioned parties transferred their interest to Richard breknoke. "Demise by Richard Chamberlaine, Thomas Fowler, Thomas Danvers, and John Breknoke and Elizabeth his wife, to Richard Breknoke, brother of said John, of a moiety of the manor of Cleware, Co. Berks, which they had of the late Margaret Breknoke, widow of David Breknoke, one of the daughters and co-heiresses of John Syferwaste, dated 9 May, 1 Henry VII, 1485." Vol. I B. 1454, p. 354, we find the following: "Letter of Attorney issued by Thomas Broune, Clerk, to William Fowler and Nicholas Basewyk, joint tenants, to deliver to John Cotesmour Seisin of the Manor of Eselburgh, Co. Bucks, dated 16 May, 8 Henry VII, 1492." This William Fowler had issue, two sons and one daughter. He was also of Hambledon, Co. Rutland, in 1500. Mis. Gen. et Her., N. S., Vol I, p. 450.
1400 - 1452
William
Fowler
52
52
Buried: St. Dunstan'S Chapel, Westminster Abbey
1403
Cecily
Englefield
<1380
Henry
Fowler
Used the barton arms as those of Fowler as did his heirs until 1520, viz: Ermine on a canton, gules, an owl argent.
~1382
Isabel
Barton
~1378 - 1415
Nicholas
Englefield
37
37
~1380 - <1411
Joane
Clark
31
31
~1350 - 1412
John
Fowler
62
62
Acquired an estate in Buckinghamshire which he named Foxley.
~1352
Margaret
Loveday
~1340
John
Barton
~1348 - ~1380
Philip
Englefield
32
32
~1352
Joan
~1354
Nicholas
Clark
~1356
Katherine
Rycote
<1320 - 1361
John
Fowler
41
41
Mentioned in the will of Richard de Hartlegh (evidently his brother in law), Marshal and Citizen of London, who lived in the parish of St. Sepulchre- without-Newgate; will dated 23 April, 1361, entered on roll 89, folio 68, Hustings Court of London; made bequest of 100 Geneva Florins to his brother John to assist him in finding his (John's) son if living.
~1322
N.n.
De
Hartleigh
~1326
Henry
Loveday
~1292 - ~1362
Roger
Englefield
70
70
~1304
Joan
Sarah
1905 - 1908
Laurence
Wilson
Hamilton
2
2
Buried Allegeheny Cemetery, Section 16 - Wison lot
Living
Hamilton
Sarah
Fowler
Died young.
William
Fowler
Sarah
Fowler
Ambrose
Fowler
1648 - 1651
Abigail
Fowler
3
3
1650 - 1670
Mary
Fowler
19
19
1654 - 1735
John
Fowler
81
81
1656 - 1751
Mehitable
Fowler
95
95
1658 - 1676
Elizabeth
Fowler
18
18
1679 - 1757
Abigail
Fowler
78
78
1681 - 1717
Mary
Fowler
36
36
1683 - 1754
Abraham
Fowler
71
71
1684 - 1768
Ebenezer
Fowler
84
84
1686 - 1776
Daniel
Fowler
90
90
1690 - 1724
Caleb
Fowler
34
34
1694 - 1794
Elizabeth
Fowler
100
100
1725
Hannah
Fowler
1727 - 1807
Caleb
Fowler
80
80
1728 - 1810
Elizabeth
Fowler
82
82
1730 - 1816
Jonathan
Fowler
85
85
Timothy
Fowler
Died young.
Sarah
Fowler
Aaron
Fowler
Imbecile.
Elihu
Fowler
1753
Josiah
Fowler
1754 - 1755
Elihu
Fowler
11m
11m
1758
Isaac
Fowler
1760
Ruth
Fowler
1760 - 1825
Solomon
Fowler
65
65
Abigail
Fowler
1924 - 1956
Marian
Ruth
Woods
32
32
Was married; desceased.
1907 - 1980
Dorothy
Hoyt
72
72
Name: Dorothy Holmes SSN: 455-76-2767 Last Residence: 77006 Houston, Harris, Texas, United States of America Born: 22 Aug 1907 Died: Apr 1980 State (Year) SSN issued: Texas (1962 )
1832
Samuel
or Lemuel
McCormick
1880 farmer, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI. 1900 farmer, Riga Twp, Lenawee, MI.
~1842
Serena
E.
1920 wd, none, with Sadie.
N.n.
Hunter
~1848
George
Williams
1870 tabacconist, Allegheny, PA. 1880 cigar manufacturer, Allegheny, PA. 1900 cigar mfg., Allegheny, PA.
~1135 - 1159
William
Of
Blois
24
24
1366 - 1413
Henry
IV
46
46
Henry IV, b. April 1366, d. Mar. 20, 1413, was the first English king of the house of Lancaster. Known as Bolingbroke after his birthplace, he was an active opponent of King Richard II and was in forced exile when he succeeded his father, John of Gaunt, as duke of Lancaster in 1399. Richard promptly confiscated his lands and ordered him exiled for life. Later in 1399, however, Henry returned, forced Richard's abdication, and ascended the throne, claiming the right of inheritance from Henry III (through his mother). Many questioned his claim, and Henry's reign was troubled by revolts. In Wales, Owen Glendower led a rebellion; in the north the Percy family, which had helped Henry in 1399 and also defeated the Scots for him at Homildon Hill (1402), turned against him. The king defeated his enemies at Shrewsbury (1403) and Bramham Moor (1408) and finally overcame these threats. Henry's parliaments were also critical of his management of finances and forced him to accept nominated councils. In his later years his control of affairs was weakened by bad health and rivalries among Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury; Thomas Beaufort, earl of Dorset; and the prince of Wales, who succeeded him as Henry V.
1360 - 1415
Philippa
Of
Lancaster
55
55
1357 - 1433
John
'the
Great'
76
76
John I, b. Apr. 11, 1357, d. Aug. 14, 1433, ruled Portugal from 1385 to 1433, a period that saw the beginning of Portuguese overseas expansion. The illegitimate son of Peter I, John came to the throne in a revolt against the regency established by the widow of his half brother, Ferdinand I on behalf of Ferdinand's daughter Beatrice, the wife of John I of Castile. John's defeat of the Castilians in the Battle of Aljubarrota in 1385 assured Portuguese independence, although a formal peace was not concluded until 1411. In 1387, John married Philippa of Lancaster, daughter of John of Gaunt. Ably advised by his chancellor, Joao das Regras, and his military commander, Nuno Alvares Pereira, John strengthened the powers of the monarchy and of the merchants and lesser nobles at the expense of the higher aristocracy. Not content with ruling a stable and prosperous, albeit small, kingdom, John took advantage of Portugal's maritime position to encourage shipbuilding and overseas trade. In 1415 a major expedition seized the strategic harbor and trading city of Ceuta on the coast of Morocco, and in the 1420s the Portuguese began to settle the Madeira Islands, stepping-stones toward the South Atlantic. John was succeeded as king by his eldest son, Edward I; John's sons, especially Henry the Navigator, continued Portuguese patronage of overseas exploration.
1320 - 1367
Peter I
'the
Severe'
46
46
Before he was crowned (1357) king of Portugal, Peter I, b. Apr. 8, 1320, d. Jan. 18, 1367, was a participant in an episode that has been frequently romanticized in Portuguese literature. His father, Alfonso IV (r. 1325-57), caused the murder (1355) of Peter's mistress (and perhaps later wife), Inez de Castro, and the prince subsequently led a brief revolt against him. After Peter became king, he condemned the murderers to horrible deaths; in his pursuit of justice, he earned the epithet Peter the Severe.
D. 1394
Mary
De
Bohun
1387 - 1422
Henry
V
34
34
The English king Henry V, b. Sept. 16?, 1387, was a brilliant military organizer who conquered France. After succeeding his father, Henry IV, in 1413, he quelled minor revolts by the Lollard heretic Sir John Oldcastle (1414) and by nobles supporting the claim of the Mortimer family to the crown (1415). He then united the country in a revival of the Hundred Years' War against France. On his first campaign, in 1415, Henry inflicted a crushing defeat on the divided French nobility in the Battle of Agincourt. In 1417 he started an ambitious war of conquest that led to the occupation (1419) of Normandy. By the Treaty of Troyes (1420), Henry was recognized as heir of Charles VI of France and married Charles's daughter Catherine. With only the resistance of the dauphin (the future Charles VII) impeding the complete conquest of France, Henry died on Aug. 31, 1422. He was succeeded by his 9-month-old son, Henry VI.
Thomas
Of
Clarence
John
Of
Bedford
Humphrey
Of
Glouchester
1401 - 1437
Catherine
Of
Valois
35
35
Catherine of Valois (1401-37), queen consort of England (1420-22), wife of Henry V, king of England, and daughter of Charles VI, king of France, born in Paris. When she was 12 years old, Henry V renewed the negotiations begun by his father for a marriage with Catherine. Henry demanded a large dowry and the French regions of Aquitaine and Normandy. The proposition was rejected, and in 1415 Henry invaded France and forced compliance with his terms. When he married Catherine in Troyes, France, in June 1420, he received the provinces claimed, the regency of France during the life of Charles, and the right to succeed to the French throne after Charles's death. In February 1421 Catherine was crowned at Westminster Abbey, and in December she bore a son, later King Henry VI. After the death of Henry V in 1422, Catherine's union with the Welsh squire Owen Tudor produced four children. One of her sons, Edmund Tudor, earl of Richmond, married Margaret Beaufort; their son became Henry VII, the first Tudor king of England.
1421 - 1471
Henry
Vi
49
49
Henry VI, b. Dec. 6, 1421, d. May 21, 1471, Lancastrian king of England (1422-61, 1470-71), succeeded as a baby to the crowns of England and France after the death of his father, Henry V. English-occupied France was governed until 1435 by his uncle John, duke of Bedford, as regent; England, until 1437, was governed by a minority council, often disrupted by the rivalries of Cardinal Henry Beaufort and Humphrey, duke of Glouchester After the defeat by Joan of Arc at Orleans in 1429, English power in France waned. From 1437, Henry himself ruled England, influenced at first by Beaufort and later by William de La Pole, duke of Suffolk. In 1445, Henry married Margaret of Anjou as part of a truce with France. Suffolk, the architect of this unpopular truce, was impeached in Parliament and murdered in 1450. In the same year the uprising led by Jack Cade revealed widespread social discontent. The influence of the Beaufort family, the king's bouts of insanity, and the loss of the last French lands by 1453 led Richard, duke of York, to seek power. In 1461, during the ensuing Wars of the Roses (between the houses of York and Lancaster), Henry was deposed by Edward IV. Henry fled to Scotland; he returned to England in 1464, but was captured in 1465 and imprisoned in the Tower of London. In 1470 he was restored to the throne by Richard Neville, earl of Warwick. The following year, however, he was defeated again, captured, and murdered.
1319 - 1364
John II
'the
Good'
44
44
John II, b. Apr. 16, 1319, d. Apr. 8, 1364, the elder son of Philip VI, assumed a major role in French government by 1348 and became king in 1350. John waged war against both England and domestic rebels led by his son-in-law, Charles the Bad, king of Navarre. He was criticized for his lowborn and corrupt advisors. In September 1356, John was captured by Edward, the Black Prince in the battle of Poitiers. To ransom him from the English under the terms of the Treaty of Bretigny (1360), the French paid the first regular peacetime taxes in their history. When his hostage son broke parole, John returned to England late in 1363 and died there.
1338 - 1380
Charles
V 'the
Wise'
42
42
Charles V, or Charles the Wise, b. Jan. 21, 1338, d. Sept. 16, 1380, king of France from 1364 to 1380, was the oldest son of John II of France. Exploited by the opponents of his inept father and forced to head the government during the latter's captivity (1356-60), Charles struggled against domestic brigandage and the peasant revolt called the Jacquerie. He emerged from this ordeal with increased political maturity and ensured the success of his reign by winning the support of the influential (and previously hostile) northwestern nobles. The development of France's first regular system of taxation in the 1360s enabled Charles to finance the armies that won the first major French victories in the Hundred Years' War. Charles supported currency reform and patronized artists and intellectuals, but his policies helped bring about (1378) the Great Schism in the papacy. Just before his death, he canceled a tax that was particularly unpopular with the nobles.
1368 - 1422
Charles
Vi 'the
Mad'
53
53
Charles VI, b. Dec. 3, 1368, d. Oct. 21, 1422, was the son of Charles V and king of France from 1380 to 1422. Still a child when he succeeded his father, he was dominated by his selfish uncles (notably Philip the Bold of Burgundy) until they were ousted in 1388 by a coalition of royal officials and northwestern nobles led by the constable Olivier de Clisson. In the next four years, Charles instituted governmental reforms and economies, but after 1392 he suffered from recurrent insanity. The dukes of Burgundy and Orleans struggled for power, and in the ensuing civil war Henry V of England successfully invaded France (1415) and forced Charles to disinherit his remaining son and accept Henry as his heir.
1409 - 1480
Rene
Of
Anjou
71
71
King of Naples (1435-42), Rene of Anjou, b. Jan. 6, 1409, d. July 10, 1480, occupies a place in both the political and the literary history of his time. Rene inherited (1434) from his brother Louis III of Anjou the French lands of Provence and Anjou, as well as a claim to the throne of Naples. In 1435, on the death of Joan II of Naples, he became titular king but was driven out (1442) by a rival claimant, Alfonso V of Aragon. He then turned his attention to his interests in France. He fought (1449-50) alongside Charles VII of France against the English in Normandy and in 1466 accepted the title king of Aragon from the Catalans rebelling against John II of Aragon. He was the author of two romances in prose and verse.
1429 - 1482
Margaret
Of
Anjou
53
53
Margaret of Anjou, b. Mar. 23, 1429, d. Apr. 25, 1482, was queen consort of Henry VI of England (1445-61) and Lancastrian leader in the Wars of the Roses. The daughter of Rene of Anjou, later king of Naples, she married Henry as part of the Anglo-French peace settlement in 1445. Strong-willed in contrast to her feeble husband, she established an ascendancy at the court together with the Beaufort family. Her position was reinforced by the birth of a son, Edward, in 1453. She led the Lancastrian resistance to the claims to power of Richard, duke of York. After the victory of Richard's son Edward IV in 1461, Margaret fled with Henry to Scotland. She traveled several times to France in search of help. Margaret was in France during Henry's brief restoration (1470-71). In 1471 her son and husband died, and she was captured following another Yorkist victory. She was freed, however, and allowed to retire to France in 1476.
D. 1471
Edward
Lancaster
1372 - 1407
Louis
Of
Orl‚ans
35
35
D. 1813
Augusta
Hanover
Charles
William
Ferdinand
1768 - 1821
Caroline
Of
Brunswick
53
53
Caroline of Brunswick (1768-1821), queen consort of Great Britain as wife of King George IV. She was the daughter of Charles William Ferdinand, duke of Brunswick; her uncle King George III arranged her marriage to his son, George, then prince of Wales, in 1795. George, however, disliked her and, after the birth of their daughter, Charlotte Augusta, deserted her; from 1813 on, she lived much of the time in Italy. She returned to England in 1820, when George ascended the throne. Accused of adultery, she was tried by the House of Lords but drew such enthusiastic crowds at her public appearances that the trial was abandoned. Her husband, however, would not be reconciled with her, and she was forcibly prevented from attending his coronation in 1821. She died shortly afterward.
1796 - 1817
Charlotte
Augusta
Hanover
21
21
~0995 - 1035
Canute
II
40
40
Canute, b. c.995, son of King Sweyn Forkbeard of Denmark, was king of England (1016-35), of Denmark (1019-35), and of Norway (1028-35), as well as lord of the Orkney and Shetland Islands and of Scotland. He became ruler of England as a result of military victory over Aethelred II. However, after the death (1016) of AEthelred's son, Edmund Ironside, he won acceptance by the English nobility, to whom he promised, and gave, strong government. He regarded himself as a successor to previous English kings and married AEthelred's widow, Emma. Canute's replacement of the Wessex dynasty by his own had no lasting consequences in England; nor can his rule of England be isolated from his wider rule of a Scandinavian political complex. He established close ties with the Normans, who were also Vikings. He was the first Viking chieftain welcomed as an equal to Christian kings by the church; indeed, he became a Christian and was a founder and patron of monasteries. On Canute's death (Nov. 12, 1035), a succession dispute occurred between his sons, Harold Harefoot and Harthacanute. The latter was succeeded (1042) by Edward the Confessor, marking the restoration of the house of Wessex.
~1019 - 1042
Hardecnute
23
23
Hardecanute (Danish Hardeknud) (circa 1019-42), king of Denmark (1035-42) and last Danish king of England (1040-42), probably born in Denmark. He was the son of King Canute and Emma of Normandy and thus the heir to the English realm. When Canute died, however, Hardecanute was in Denmark, and his illegitimate half brother, Harold Harefoot, who was then in England, took control of that country; he was accepted as King Harold I by the witenagemot (royal council) in 1037. The ensuing struggle between the two brothers was ended only by the death of Harold in 1040. Hardecanute, then officially chosen as king by the witenagemot, was unpopular with his subjects and left the control of the realm to his mother and the powerful Godwin, earl of Wessex. Hardecanute was succeeded in Denmark by Magnus I (the Good), king of Norway, and in England by his half brother Edward the Confessor.
D. 1040
Harold
Harefoot
Harold I (of England), called Harold Harefoot (died 1040), king of England (1037-40), illegitimate son of Canute II, king of Denmark, Norway, and England. On his father's death in 1035, Harold claimed the English crown, despite Canute's designation of Hardecanute, Harold's legitimate half brother, as the successor. The English witenagemot (royal council) settled the rival claims by giving Mercia and Northumbria to Harold, and Wessex to Hardecanute. Hardecanute remained in Denmark, however, and Wessex gave its allegiance to Harold, who became king of all England in 1037. His reign was oppressive and was marked by continual struggle with Hardecanute.
1198 - 1249
Alexander
II
51
51
Alexander II (of Scotland) (1198-1249), king of Scotland (1214-49), the son of William the Lion. He supported the English barons in their rebellion against King John, helping them to secure the Magna Carta (1215), but in 1217 he recognized John's successor, Henry III, as his overlord, and in 1221 he married Henry's sister, Joan. After Joan's death in 1238, he took a second wife, Mary of Coucy, who bore him a son in 1241. By the Peace of York (1237), Alexander and Henry established the permanent boundary between England and Scotland. At home, Alexander imposed his rule over outlying parts of Scotland and strengthened the power of the monarchy.
1241 - 1286
Alexander
III
44
44
Alexander III, b. Sept. 4, 1241, d. Mar. 18-19, 1286, king of Scotland, succeeded his father, Alexander II, in 1249 while still a young boy. Henry III of England took advantage of the situation by trying to establish suzerainty (political control) over Scotland, but the bishop of St. Andrews, with help from the papacy, prevented it. In 1263 the Scottish king confronted Haakon IV of Norway concerning the possession of the Hebrides and defeated the Norwegians in the Battle of Largs. Alexander established a united and economically prosperous Scotland. His sudden death, however--followed by that of his heir, Margaret, maid of Norway--opened the way for Edward I of England to intervene drastically in Scottish affairs.
Isabella
Of
Bavaria
1403 - 1461
Charles Vii
'the
Well-Served'
58
58
Charles VII, b. Feb. 22, 1403, d. July 22, 1461, was king of France from 1422 to 1461. He was the fifth son of Isabella of Bavaria and, presumably, of her husband, Charles VI of France. He became dauphin and heir to the throne in 1417, following the deaths of his brothers. In 1419, Charles was involved in the murder of John the Fearless, duke of Burgundy. Henry V of England, who was rapidly conquering northwestern France, concluded a treaty in 1420 with the deranged Charles VI and the new duke of Burgundy, Philip the Good, disinheriting the dauphin. Therefore, when Charles VI died in 1422, only the southern part of France recognized Charles VII as king. His cause seemed hopeless until 1429, when a French force inspired by the presence of St. Joan of Arc stopped the English at Orleans. Accompanied by Joan, Charles went to Reims for his coronation as king (July 1429). Despite the intrigues of competing royal favorites, Charles proved skillful at court politics. He became much stronger after making peace with Burgundy (1435) and recapturing Paris (1436). In the next decade he reestablished regular taxation and instituted (1445) a permanent army. The English were expelled from most of France by 1453.
1423 - 1483
Louis
Xi 'the
Spider'
60
60
Louis XI was a highly successful French monarch whose enemies dubbed him the Spider. He was born on July 3, 1423, when his father, Charles VII, was at the nadir of his political fortunes. Louis did not get along with his father, and at the age of 17 he joined an unsuccessful princely revolt called the Praguerie. In the 1440s he held a number of important commands, but in 1447 he retired to the Dauphine, the province that he held as heir to the throne He ruled efficiently there until Charles seized the land in 1456 and drove him into exile at the Burgundian court. Louis's continuing feud with his father was partly the product of misunderstandings purposely encouraged by their respective advisors. Louis returned from exile in 1461 to succeed Charles as king. Reversing many of his father's policies, he soon antagonized a large part of the kingdom. A princely coalition called the League of the Public Weal rebelled in 1465, and Louis had to make significant concessions to dissolve this group. He then realized that an effective monarchy required the weakening of the princes and that this goal could be achieved more easily by capitalizing on their mutual jealousies than by resorting to force. In general he endeavored to cooperate with the families of Bourbon and Anjou, to isolate Brittany, to crush the dissident Gascon lords, and to break the power of the duke of Burgundy by subsidizing the latter's other enemies, notably the Swiss. Louis's greatest successes derived from the death of Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy, in 1477 and the extinction of the princely house of Anjou in 1481, both of which brought the crown substantial territory and eliminated dangerous rivals. These successes were largely a matter of luck, a fact that makes assessing the importance of Louis XI difficult. His reign is rich in narrative sources--mainly chronicles, memoirs, and the reports of Italian ambassadors. These writings portray a king with many bizarre characteristics who enhanced the greatness of his realm through guile and cunning; he appears as an inveterate schemer who earned the hatred of his subjects by tripling taxes but who was able to liquidate serious threats to the monarchy without recourse to costly wars. Yet the vast administrative documents of Louis's reign have not been carefully studied, and the memoirs of Philippe de Commynes, long the most respected narrative source, has been discredited by recent scholarship. Louis, who died on Aug. 30, 1483, remains an enigma.
1470 - 1498
Charles
Viii
27
27
Charles VIII, b. June 30, 1470, king of France (1483-98), was the only son of Louis XI. Becoming king at the age of 13, he faced an immediate challenge from the princes. Charles's capable sister, Anne, and her husband, Pierre de Beaujeu, retained custody of the young king, reduced taxes, and skillfully pacified opponents at the States General of 1484. Despite a brief rebellion by the princes the next year, Anne and her husband kept intact the power of the monarchy. Charles gradually took over the government and married (1491) Anne of Brittany. Charles is most famous for laying claim to the throne of Naples and invading Italy in 1494, inaugurating the Italian Wars. After a quick initial victory, which led to his coronation in Naples on May 12, 1495, Charles fought his way out of Italy against a hostile coalition. He was planning a new invasion when he died suddenly on Apr. 7, 1498, following an accidental blow on the head.
1477 - 1514
Anne
Of
Brittany
36
36
Anne of Brittany, b. Jan. 25, 1477, d. Jan. 9, 1514, inherited the French duchy of Brittany in 1488 and took care to preserve its autonomy in her two marriages to kings of France: Charles VIII (1491) and Louis XII (1499). An earlier proxy marriage (1490) to Maximilian of Austria (later Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I) was broken off when Charles VIII attacked Brittany. Anne's daughter by Louis, Claude, married the future Frances I of France in 1514, and Brittany was finally incorporated into the French kingdom in 1532.
1499 - 1524
Claude
Of
France
25
25
Charles
Of
Angoulˆme
Louise
Of
Savoy
1494 - 1547
Francis
I
52
52
Francis I, the autocratic king who ruled France from 1515 to 1547, personified the splendors of the Renaissance. He was born at Cognac on Sept. 12, 1494, the son of Charles of Angouleme and Louise of Savoy. His marriage (1514) with Claude, daughter of Anne of Brittany and his predecessor, Louis XII, continued the association of Brittany with the crown. In July 1515, seven months after his accession, Francis led an army across the Alps and conquered Milan with his victory at Marignano. Four years later his rivalry with the house of Habsburg intensified when he became a candidate for the imperial crown in Germany. The election was won by the Habsburg king of Spain, who became Holy Roman emperor as Charles V. Francis's subsequent war against Charles ended in total defeat at the Battle of Pavia (1525), in which Francis himself was captured. Released in 1526, he disavowed his promise to cede Burgundy and began a new war, which lasted until the Peace of Cambrai in 1529. Francis sought alliances with the German Protestant princes and the Turkish sultan, and he fought further wars against Charles V in 1536-38 and 1542-44. Like his elder sister, Margaret of Angouleme, the king became a patron of the arts and humanist learning. He founded (1529) the College de France, brought Leonardo da Vinci to Amboise, and built magnificent chateaus, such as Chanbord and Fontainebleau. Francis's concordat with the papacy at Bologna in 1516 gave him control of church appointments, but the church became increasingly corrupt under the government of his chancellor, Cardinal Duprat, himself a great pluralist. Until 1534, the king was tolerant of Protestantism, but in that year a series of extremist Protestant placards gave him personal offense. Persecution increased toward the end of his reign. At the same time, the royal court was divided into factions under the influence of Francis's favorites and his mistress, the duchesse d'Etampes. War and patronage so strained the royal resources that Francis had to adopt devices such as the sale of government offices and the prosecution of his own financiers. By the time of the king's death at Rambouillet on Mar. 31, 1547, the early glamour of his reign had become tarnished.
1519 - 1559
Henry
II
40
40
Henry II of France, b. Mar. 31, 1519, d. July 10, 1559, initiated a period of monarchical weakness in his country's history. He succeeded his father, Francis I, in 1547. Henry had married (1533) Catherine de Medicis, but he was dominated by his mistress, Diane de Poitiers. His court became a center of rivalry between the families of Montmorency and Guise, and his administration, which expanded the practice of selling government offices, brought the crown to bankruptcy. Although he persecuted the Huguenots (Protestants) in France, Henry allied himself with the German Lutheran princes and occupied part of Lorraine in 1552. Holy Roman Emperor Charles V counterattacked, but failed to dislodge Francois, duc de Guise, from Metz. Subsequently, a French army under Anne de Montmorency was disastrously defeated by the Spanish at Saint-Quentin (1557), though national pride was somewhat restored by Guise's capture of Calais from the English (1558). In April 1559 a peace treaty was signed with Spain at Cateau-Cambresis. During the celebrations the king was accidentally wounded in a joust, and he died soon after. Henry was succeeded in turn by three of his sons: Francis II, Charles IX, and Henry III.
1519 - 1589
Catherine
De
Medicis
69
69
Catherine de Medicis, b. Florence, Apr. 13, 1519, was the mother of the last Valois kings of France and guardian of the royal authority in the Wars of Religion. Her parents died soon after her birth, and she was brought up by her Medici relatives during a period when their rule in Florence was marked by violence and intrigue. In 1533 she went to France as the bride of the future king Henry II, who became heir apparent in 1536 and king in 1547. Until her husband's death in 1559 she endured the domination of his mistress, Diane de Poitiers. Seven of Catherine's children survived infancy, and three of her sons were successively kings of France as Francis II, Charles IX, and Henry III. As queen mother, Catherine played a major part in French government and on two occasions ruled officially as regent. She relied on an inner group of experienced bureaucrats and tried to balance the noble factions against each other to preserve the authority of the crown in the civil wars. Despite her penchant for astrology, she was a political realist who sought compromise between the Roman Catholics and Huguenots (Protestants). The ST. Bartholomew's Day Massacre (1572) of the Huguenots was caused in part by her political miscalculation. Catherine's critics accused her of following Italian practices, especially the doctrines of Niccolo Machiavelli. After the accession (1574) of Henry III, her favorite son, Catherine frequently negotiated with the Catholic League, which sought to control the crown. Appalled by the king's murder in December 1588 of the league leaders, she died at Blois 2 weeks later, on Jan. 5, 1589.
1553 - 1615
Margaret
Of
Valois
61
61
Margaret of Valois, b. May 14, 1553, d. Mar. 27, 1615, was the youngest daughter of Henry II of France and Catherine de Medicis. On Aug. 18, 1572, six days before the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre, she was forced to marry the Protestant Henry of Navarre (later Henry IV) to seal a Catholic-Protestant reconciliation. Margaret was involved in a number of extramarital love affairs at the courts of both her brother Henry III at Paris and her husband at Nerac. Expelled from the royal court for her political intrigues, she returned to the unwilling Navarre in 1584. After taking up arms against her husband Margaret was banished (1586) to the castle of Usson in Auvergne, where she soon took control. In 1599, ten years after Henry of Navarre's accession to the throne, she consented to the annulment of her marriage. In 1605, Henry IV allowed her to return to Paris. Margaret's charm and literary talent were admired by the leading writers of the age. Her memoirs were translated in 1892.
D. 1708
George
Of
Denmark
1342 - 1404
Philip
'the
Bold'
62
62
Philip the Bold, b. Jan. 17, 1342, d. Apr. 27, 1404, the youngest son of John II of France, served as a regent for his nephew, King Charles VI, and was virtual ruler of France after Charles became insane (1392). Philip was captured (1356) with his father at the Battle of Poitiers, and became duke of Burgundy in 1363. Six years later he married Margaret, heiress to the counties of Flanders, Burgundy, Artois, and Nevers. He ruled these lands as count after 1384, beginning a system of marriage alliances that was to bring important parts of the Low Countries adjacent to Flanders into his family's realm. In this way he created the Burgundian state that brought nominal unity to the Netherlands. Philip was the dominant figure at the French court, although he was strongly challenged in his later years by his nephew and rival, Louis, duc d'Orleans
1832 - 1833
Charles
Fowler
1
1
1834
Mary
Eliza
Fowler
1900 mother of 4, 3 still living.
1836 - 1844
Sarah
Ives
Fowler
8
8
1840 - BET 1920 AND 1930
John
Strong
Fowler
1860 with parents. 1870 editor, single, New Haven, CT. 1880 court clerk, New Haven, CT. Had malaria 1900 city court clerk, New Haven, CT. 1910 lawyer, New Haven, CT. 1920 lawyer, New Haven, CT.
1845 - BET 1920 AND 1930
Charles
Ives
Fowler
1900 bookkeeper, Little Falls, NY. 1920 accountant, Little Falls, NY.
D. ~0784
Duke
Bernard
Sister
Of
Bertha
Sister of Bertha, wife of Pepin 'the Short'
0715 - 0754
Carloman
39
39
Entered monastary in 0747.
0751 - 0771
Carloman
20
20
~0812
Hildegarde
0980 - 1002
Otto III
21
21
Otto III, b. July 980, succeeded his father, Otto II, as German king in 983 and was crowned emperor in 996. Not yet 4 years old when his father died, Otto faced only minor opposition to his succession. Until 995, guardians ruled for him: his Byzantine mother, Theophano, his grandmother Adelheid, and Archbishop Willigis of Mainz. After coming of age he was strongly influenced by the churchmen Adalbert of Prague and Gerbert of Aurillac. Highly educated and emotionally receptive to exotic influences, Otto gave more attention to imperial and Italian affairs than to Germany. Proclaiming the restoration of the ancient Roman Empire, he settled in Rome in 998 and surrounded himself with antique artifacts and Byzantine ceremony. Confusion in the papacy and Rome embroiled Otto in controversy. In 996 he appointed the first German pope, Gregory V; in 999 he made Gerbert pope as Sylvester II. Otto visited Poland in AD 1000; he had good relations with Boleslaw I and gave Poland a native church organization by creating the archbishopric of Gniezno. While facing a rebellion in Rome, he died on Jan. 23, 1002. Otto left no descendants and was succeeded by his third cousin Henry II.
1293 - 1348
Jeanne
'la
Boiteuse'
55
55
1315 - 1349
Jutte
(Bona) Of
Bohemia
34
34
1296 - 1346
John
Of
Bohemia
50
50
John (of Bohemia) (1296-1346), king of Bohemia (1310-46), the son of Holy Roman Emperor Henry VII of Luxembourg. He became count of Luxembourg in 1309. In the struggle between Austria and Bavaria for the crown of the Holy Roman Empire, John gained victory for Emperor Louis IV of Bavaria in the Battle of Mühldorf in 1322. From 1333 to 1335, John waged an unsuccessful campaign in Italy on behalf of the Guelphs. He became blind about 1340 but continued his active life. He was killed while assisting the French against the English at the Battle of Crécy. His son became Holy Roman emperor as Charles IV and king of Bohemia as Charles I.
1292 - 1330
Eliska
Of
Bohemia
38
38
~1274 - 1313
Henry
Vii
39
39
Henry VII, or Henry of Luxemburg, born c.1274, d. Aug. 24, 1313, was the first Holy Roman emperor of the Luxemburg dynasty, which was to remain prominent for a century. He grew up under French cultural influence. This made him acceptable to the aggressive Philip IV of France, and he was therefore elected (1308) German king as a compromise candidate after the assassination of Albert I. Since 1250 no German ruler had worn the crown of Holy Roman emperor. Henry determined to acquire it, to rebuild imperial power, and thus to pacify Germany. First, he laid the territorial foundation for his family's strength by acquiring (1310) the kingdom of Bohemia for his son John. Then, in October 1310, he entered Italy. Hoping to end the strife between Guelphs and Ghibellines, Henry was crowned (1311) king of the Lombards at Milan. After encountering opposition, however, he openly embraced the Ghibelline (traditionally proimperialist) cause and made Pisa his base. Henry was crowned emperor by cardinals in Rome on June 29, 1312, but he immediately found Pope Clement V in Avignon, Philip of France, and Robert of Naples allied with the Guelph cities against him. He was moving south to attack Robert when he died. Henry was greatly admired by Dante.
~1274
Marguerite
Of
Brabant
1271 - 1305
Vaclav
II
33
33
1271 - 1297
Jutte
Of
Austria
26
26
~1246 - 1285
Kunegunda
Rostislavna
39
39
1218 - 1291
Rudolf
I
73
73
The first German king after the chaotic Interregnum (1254-73), Rudolf I, b. May 1, 1218, d. July 15, 1291, established the Habsburg dynasty in Austria, where it ruled until 1918. A son of Albert IV, count of Habsburg, Rudolf held scattered lands in the Upper Rhineland and Switzerland. After the Hohenstaufen king Conradin died (1268), Rudolf was elected his successor. Crowned at Aachen (1273), he launched a campaign to revive the monarchy's prestige and to recover alienated fiefs. King Ottokar II of Bohemia, who had sought to succeed Conradin, refused to surrender the duchies of Austria, Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola, prompting Rudolf to declare war in 1276. Ottokar quickly came to terms with Rudolf, but two years later he rebelled and was killed in the Battle of the Marchfeld near Durnkrut, Aug. 26, 1278. Rudolf gave most of the new territory to his own sons in 1282, thus raising the Habsburg family to the rank of a major German dynasty. In Germany, Rudolf is credited with quelling internal unrest as he strove to spark urban prosperity. He had difficulty checking French expansionism on his western frontier, and he lacked a firm policy toward Italy and the papacy. Unable to arrange for his own imperial coronation, Rudolf also failed to persuade German electors to pass the crown to his son, who finally succeeded to the German throne (as Albert I) in 1298.
~1225 - 1281
Gertrude
Von
Hohenberg
56
56
1350 - 1405
Marguerite
Of
Flanders
54
54
1330 - 1384
Louis
III
53
53
1323 - 1368
Marguerite
Of
Brabant
45
45
1200 - 1227
Ludwig
IV 'der
Heilige'
26
26
1207
Erzsebet
Of
Hungary
1224 - 1275
Sofie
Of
Thuringia
51
51
1363 - 1423
Margarethe
Of
Bavaria
60
60
1336 - 1404
Albrecht
I
68
68
~1340 - 1386
Malgorzata
Of
Brieg
46
46
1282 - 1347
Louis
IV
65
65
Louis, or Ludwig, IV, b. Apr. 1, 1282, d. Oct. 11, 1347, overcame a disputed election to the German kingship and intense papal opposition in the last major medieval church-state conflict. When Emperor Henry VII of the house of Luxemburg died, the German electors sought a king from another dynasty. They divided, however, between Louis, who was duke of Bavaria and a member of the Wittelsbach family, and the Habsburg Frederick the Fair of Austria. Both were elected king in 1314, and a long war ensued. Louis finally won with a decisive victory in the Battle of Muhldorf in 1322. At this point Pope John XXII, living in Avignon, intervened, claiming the right to veto Louis's election. When Louis denied this right, John excommunicated him. Supported by philosophers Marsilius of Padua and John of Jandun, as well as by some disaffected Franciscan friars, Louis entered Italy in 1327. He had himself crowned emperor by lay officials in Rome in 1328 and set up an antipope, Nicholas V. Most of the German princes came to back Louis against increasingly fierce papal denunciations, and in 1338, by the Declaration of Rense, the electors asserted that they alone had the power to elect the German kings, who automatically became emperors-elect. Louis's decree Licet juris enacted that statement as law. Louis continued to negotiate, to no avail, with John's successors, Benedict XII and Clement VI. In the meantime he alienated his German supporters by his expansion of his family's domains. To acquire the Tyrol he annulled (1341) the marriage of its heiress, Margaret Maultasch, by royal decree and induced her to marry his own son, thus contravening canon law. In 1346 the electors finally accepted the papal deposition of Louis and elected Charels IV of the house of Luxemburg as king. Louis was preparing to fight when he died while hunting.
1311 - 1356
Margaretha
Of
Holland
45
45
1274 - 1319
Rudolf
I 'der
Stammler'
44
44
<1280 - 1323
Mathilde
43
43
1229 - 1294
Ludwig
II
65
65
~1251 - 1304
Mathilde
Of
Austria
53
53
~1255 - 1298
Adolf
Of
Nassau
43
43
~1259 - 1313
Imagine
54
54
D. 0851
Nominoe
De
Vannes
Ruled 0826-0851.
Argentakl
D. 0857
Erispok
De
Vannes
Ruled 0851-0857
1125 - 1152
Alix
(Peronnelle)
Of Aquitaine
27
27
1152 - 1221
Elenore
De
Vermandois
69
69
1574 - 1610
Friedrich
IV
36
36
1576 - 1644
Louisa
Juliana
67
67
1539 - 1583
Ludwig
Vi
44
44
1539 - 1582
Elisabeth
43
43
1533 - 1584
Willem
I 'the
Silent'
51
51
1546/47 - 1582
Charlotte
De
Bourbon
1515 - 1576
Friedrich
III
61
61
1519 - 1567
Marie
Of
Brandenburg
48
48
1504 - 1567
Philip
'the
Magnaminous'
62
62
Philip the Magnanimous (1504-67), landgrave of Hesse; German prince who helped ensure the survival of Protestantism in the early years of the Reformation. Philip became a Lutheran in 1524; two years later, he and other Lutheran princes formed the League of Torgau to protect themselves against a coalition of German states loyal to Roman Catholicism. In 1529 he sponsored the Colloquy of Marburg, a conference that tried unsuccessfully to unite the Protestants of Germany and Switzerland. Philip was one of the principal organizers of the Schmalkaldic League (1531), which opposed efforts by Holy Roman Emperor Charles V to eradicate Lutheranism. Defeated by Charles in 1547, he remained the latter's prisoner until 1552. Philip's efforts were rewarded in 1555, when Lutherans were granted equality with Roman Catholics in Germany.
1505 - 1549
Christine
Of
Saxony
43
43
1487 - 1559
Wilhelm
I 'the
Rich'
72
72
1506 - 1580
Juliane
Of
Stolberg
74
74
1513 - 1582
Louis
II 'le
Bon'
69
69
~1520 - 1561
Jacqueline
De
Longvey
41
41
1492 - 1557
Johann
II
65
65
1492 - 1535
Beatrix
Of
Baden
43
43
1481 - 1527
Kasimir
45
45
1502 - 1543
Susanne
Of
Bavaria
41
41
1469 - 1509
Wilhelm
II 'der
Mittlere'
40
40
1485 - 1525
Anna
Of
Mecklenburg
39
39
1471 - 1539
Georg
'the
Bearded'
67
67
1478 - 1534
Barbara
Of
Poland
55
55
1455 - 1516
Johann
V
60
60
1466 - 1523
Elisabeth
Of Hesse
Marburg
56
56
1467 - 1538
Botho
71
71
1482 - 1538
Anna
Von
Eppenstein
56
56
1459 - 1509
Johann
I
49
49
1464 - 1521
Susanne Of
Nassau-
Saarbrucken
57
57
1453 - 1527
Christof
I
73
73
1453 - 1517
Ottilie
Of
Katzenelnbogen
64
64
1460 - 1536
Friedrich
V
75
75
1464 - 1512
Zofia
Of
Poland
48
48
1447 - 1508
Albrecht
III (Iv)
60
60
1465 - 1520
Kunegunde
Of
Austria
55
55
1438 - 1471
Ludwig
II 'der
Freimutige'
33
33
1444 - 1495
Matilde
Of
Wurttemberg
51
51
1441 - 1503
Magnus
II
62
62
~1458 - 1504
Sofie
Of
Pomerania
46
46
1443 - 1500
Albrecht
'the
Courageous'
57
57
1449 - 1510
Zdenka
Of
Bohemia
60
60
1427 - 1492
Casimir
IV 'the
Jagellonian'
64
64
Casimir IV (1427-92), king of Poland (1447-92) and grand duke of Lithuania, third ruler of the Jagiellon dynasty. A younger son of King Wladyslaw II, Casimir succeeded his brother Wladyslaw III. Unpopular in Poland, where he was thought to be too favorable to Lithuanians, he courted the support of the lower nobility by giving them the right to refuse taxation. He fought a long war against the Teutonic Knights, winning a great victory over them at Zarnowiec (Puck) in 1462. Four years later, by the second treaty of Torun (Thorn), he regained from the knights the extensive territory on the Baltic coast that became known as West Prussia; the order also acknowledged him as its overlord in East Prussia. From 1485 to 1489 Casimir aided his vassal, Prince Stephen of Moldavia, in his struggle against the Ottoman Turks. Casimir's son Wladyslaw was elected king of Bohemia in 1471 and of Hungary in 1490.
1437 - 1505
Elisabeth
Of
Austria
68
68
1410 - 1475
Johann
IV
64
64
1424 - 1502
Marie
Of Looz
Heinsberg
78
78
1441 - 1483
Heinrich
III 'der
Reiche'
41
41
Line 728 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Heinrich III "Der Reiche", Landgrave of /Hesse Marburg/ Line 738 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: BURI PLAC St. Elisabethkirche, Marburg, Hessen-Nassau, Prussia
1443 - 1494
Anna
Of
Katzenelnbogen
50
50
1436 - 1511
Heinrich
'the
Elder'
75
75
~1436
Margarethe
Of
Mansfeld
~1440 - 1481
Philipp
Von
Eppenstein
41
41
~1454 - 1524
Louise De
La Marck
Rochefort
70
70
1417 - 1480
Friedrich
I
63
63
~1436 - 1486
Margaretha
Of
Guelders
50
50
1423 - 1472
Johann
II
49
49
1443 - 1469
Johanne
Of
Looz
26
26
~1424
Karl I
1420 - 1493
Katharine
Of
Austria
73
73
1402 - 1479
Philipp
Of
Katzenelnbogen
77
77
1408 - 1471
Anna
Of
Wurttemberg
63
63
1414 - 1486
Albert
III
'achilles'
71
71
Albert III (1414-1486), elector of Brandenburg (1470-86), born in Tangermünde, Germany. He was nicknamed Achilles and Ulysses, because his unusual physical strength and extraordinarily shrewd mind gave him in contemporary eyes a resemblance to these Greek heroes. In 1440, on the death of his father, Frederick I, the territorial possessions of the Hohenzollerns were divided among Frederick's three sons. Albert received the principality of Ansbach, and John, the principality of Bayreuth; Frederick became Elector Frederick II of Brandenburg. His brothers' lands eventually came into Albert's possession; he inherited Bayreuth from John and received Brandenburg through the abdication of Frederick II in 1470. Albert strengthened the Hohenzollern hold on Brandenburg by warring against independent towns and princes and by providing against dispersal of the family lands after his death. His Dispositio Achillea (The Political Testament of Achilles), made public in 1473, provided that at his death Brandenburg should go intact to his oldest son, and the Hohenzollern lands in Franconia go intact to his two younger sons, and that in all succeeding generations both parts of the family holdings should descend only to oldest sons.
1437 - 1512
Anna
Of
Saxony
75
75
1401 - 1460
Albrecht
II (III)
58
58
~1414 - 1474
Anna Of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen
60
60
1415 - 1493
Fredrick
III
77
77
Frederick III, b. Sept. 9, 1415, d. Aug. 19, 1493, German king from 1440, was the first Habsburg to be crowned Holy Roman emperor by the pope and the last emperor to be crowned in Rome (1452). Aware of the limitations of his authority within Germany and always short of funds, he concentrated his energies on family matters. Early in his reign he lost control of both Bohemia and Hungary, which his cousin and predecessor, Albert II, had acquired. By the Concordat of Vienna (1448) Frederick regulated control of church offices and helped force dissolution of the Council of Basel, which was asserting conciliar supremacy over the popes. He hired as a secretary Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini (later Pope Pius II), who first brought Renaissance influences to Germany. Frederick's greatest dynastic achievement was to arrange the marriage (1477) of Mary of Burgundy to his son Maximilian (later Emperor Maximilian I), thus setting the stage for the Habsburg domination of Europe in the 16th century.
1436 - 1467
Leonor
Of
Portugal
31
31
1402 - 1458
Ludwig
I 'der
Friedsame'
55
55
1420 - 1462
Anna
Of
Saxony
42
42
1412 - 1450
Ludwig
I
38
38
1419 - 1482
Mathilde
63
63
1417 - 1477
Heinrich
II 'the
Fat'
60
60
1420 - 1491
Dorothea
Of
Mecklenburg
70
70
~1425 - 1474
Erich II
49
49
~1435 - 1497
Sofie
Of
Pomerania
62
62
1412 - 1464
Friedrich
II 'the
Gentile'
52
52
1416 - 1486
Margarethe
Of
Austria
69
69
1420 - 1471
Jiri I
50
50
1425 - 1449
Kunhuta
Ze
Sternberka
24
24
~1351 - 1434
Wladyslaw
II
Jagiello
83
83
Wladyslaw II, original name Jagiello (1350-1434), grand duke of Lithuania (1377-1401) and king of Poland (1386-1434), who founded the Jagiellon dynasty and made Poland a great power in eastern Europe. The son of Olgierd, grand duke of Lithuania, Jagiello succeeded his father in 1377. Lithuania was then a pagan country, but in 1386, when Jagiello married Jadwiga, queen of Poland, and ascended the Polish throne, he accepted the Roman Catholic faith of the Poles, taking the name Wladyslaw II. The following year Christianity was officially introduced in Lithuania, and Wladyslaw himself destroyed the idols he had worshiped. In 1392 Wladyslaw made his cousin and rival Witold vice-regent of Lithuania, and in 1401 he recognized him as duke, forming a firm alliance with him. With Witold's help, he fought the Teutonic Knights for many years, inflicting on them a major defeat at the Battle of Tannenberg in northeastern Poland in 1410. The wars lasted intermittently until 1432, irreversibly weakening the order's military and financial power.
~1405 - 1461
Sofiya
Of
Holszany
56
56
1397 - 1439
Albert
II
42
42
Albert II, b. Aug. 10, 1397, d. Oct. 27, 1439, king of Germany (1438-39), succeeded his father-in-law, Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, as king of Hungary and Bohemia as well as Germany. His brief reign was devoted to suppressing a revolt in Bohemia and fighting the Turks in Hungary, where he died from dysentery.
1409 - 1442
Eliska
Of
Bohemia
33
33
~1370 - 1442
Engelbert
I
72
72
1392 - 1445
Johanna
Van
Polanen
53
53
~1364 - 1438
Johann
II
74
74
~1366
Anna
Of
Solms
~1380 - 1455
Botho
Of
Stolberg
75
75
1416 - 1481
Unna
Of
Schwarzburg
65
65
~1376
Volrath
Of
Mansfeld
~1412
Anna
Of
Gleichen
~1413 - 1475
Eberhard
III Von
Eppenstein
62
62
~1420 - 1465
Anna
Of
Wiesbaden
45
45
~1420 - 1498
Louis I
78
78
Line 1375 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Louis I Count de La /Marck/ Line 1376 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: TITL [COUNT DE Rochefort]/
~1432
Nicole
D'aspremont
1385 - 1459
Stefan
73
73
~1390 - 1439
Anna
Of
Veldenz
49
49
1409 - 1473
Arnold
Of
Guelders
64
64
1417 - 1479
Katherine
Of
Kleve
61
61
1368 - 1429
Philipp
I
61
61
~1397 - 1455
Isabelle
Of
Lorraine
58
58
Line 1476 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: BIRT PLAC of, Nancy, Meurthe-Et-Moselle, FRA
~1416 - 1448
Johann
IV
32
32
1423 - 1472
Johanna
Van
Diest
49
49
1377 - 1427
Ernst I
'ironside'
50
50
~1391 - 1429
Cymbarka
Of
Czersk
38
38
~1363 - 1444
Johann
IV
81
81
~1368 - 1439
Anna
Of
Katzenelnbogen
71
71
1388 - 1419
Eberhard
V
30
30
1387 - 1446
Henriette
Of
Montbeliard
59
59
1372 - 1440
Friedrich
I
68
68
1383 - 1442
Elisabeth
Of
Bavaria
59
59
1373 - 1438
Ernst
Of
Bavaria
65
65
~1374 - 1432
Elisabetta
Visconti
58
58
~1380 - 1427
Erich Of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen
47
47
~1389 - 1444
Elisabeth Of
Brunswick
Gottingen
55
55
1391 - 1438
Duarte
I
46
46
1402 - 1445
Leonora
Of
Aragon
43
43
~1344 - 1413
Hermann
II 'der
Gelerte'
69
69
~1359 - 1406
Margarethe
Of
Nurnberg
47
47
1370 - 1428
Friedrich
I (Iv) 'the
Warlike'
57
57
~1389 - 1442
Katharine Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
53
53
1378 - 1436
Ludwig
III
58
58
~1390 - 1438
Matilde
Of
Savoy
48
48
~1365 - 1422
Johann
I
57
57
~1380 - >1448
Katharine
Of Saxony
Lauenburg
68
68
~1400 - 1457
Wartislaw
Ix
57
57
~1400 - 1462
Sofie Of
Saxony
Lauenburg
62
62
~1407 - 1446
Bogislaw
Ix
39
39
~1409 - 1449
Maria
Of
Czersk
40
40
1296 - 1377
Olgiera
Of
Lithuania
81
81
~1331 - 1392
Yuliyana
Aleksandrovna
61
61
~1374
Andrej
Of
Gol'shany
~1380
Aleksandra
Dymitrovna
1377 - 1404
Albrecht
IV 'the
Patient'
26
26
~1377 - 1410
Johanne
Sofie
33
33
1368 - 1437
Sigismund
69
69
Sigismund, b. Feb. 15, 1368, d. Dec. 9, 1437, was the last of the Luxemburg dynasty of Holy Roman emperors. He inherited (1378) Brandenburg from his father, Emperor Charles IV, and became king of Hungary (1387) through marriage to the Hungarian princess Mary. When the Turks threatened Hungary, Sigismund called for a crusade but was defeated resoundingly at Nicopolis (1396). Four years later he cooperated with German electors in the deposition of his half brother, Emperor Wenceslas, and in 1410-11 procured his own election as German king. In his most significant success and greatest contribution to European Christendom, Sigismund facilitated the organization of the Council of Constance (1414-18) and the resignation of "Antipope" John XXIII, thus ending the Great Schism of 1378-1415. His refusal at the council to protect the condemned heretic John Huss caused Sigismund much grief after he became Bohemian king (1419) and was drawn into the devastating Hussite Wars. A new crusade (1426-27) against the Turks also ended in defeat. Finally crowned as Holy Roman emperor in 1433, Sigismund proposed (1434-37) badly needed reforms but could not persuade the German princes to adopt them. In bestowing the electorate of Brandenburg on the Hohenzollern princes and that of Saxony on the Wettin family, Sigismund elevated two dynasties that flourished in Germany until 1918. Before his death he arranged for the succession of his titles to his son-in-law, Albert II, thus passing the crown of the Holy Roman Empire to the Habsburgs.
1392 - 1451
Barbara
Of
Cilly
59
59
~1330 - 1395
Gottfried
II
65
65
~1335 - 1390
Philippa
Of
Julich
55
55
~1323
Heinrich
'the
Younger'
~1340
Elisabeth
Of
Mansfeld
1388 - 1444
Heinrich
Xxiv
56
56
Count of Schwarzburg Blankenburg.
~1388 - 1439
Katharine Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
51
51
~1380 - 1442/43
Eberhard II Von
Eppenstein
Konigstein
~1384 - 1442
Anna
Von
Cronberg
58
58
1386 - 1426
Adolf
II
40
40
1404 - 1442
Margarethe
Of
Baden
38
38
1352 - 1410
Ruprecht
III
'clem'
58
58
1358 - 1411
Elisabeth
Of
Nurnberg
53
53
~1372
Friedrich
III
~1372 - 1427
Margarethe
Of
Nassau
55
55
~1385 - 1451
Jan II
Heer Van
Egmond
66
66
~1389 - 1415
Maria
Van
Arkel
26
26
1309 - 1371
Johann
I
62
62
~1330 - 1381
Johanne
Of
Saarbrucken
51
51
~1371 - 1415
Ferry
V
44
44
~1373 - ~1418
Marguerite
De
Joinville
45
45
1351 - 1386
Leopold
III
34
34
~1352 - 1414
Verde
Visconti
62
62
~1350 - 1426
Ziemowit
IV
76
76
~1365 - 1434
Aleksandra
Of
Lithuania
69
69
~1342 - 1402
Diether
Viii
60
60
~1343 - 1389
Elisabeth
Of Nassau
Wiesbaden
46
46
~1322 - 1402
Eberhard
V
80
80
~1324 - 1399
Agnes
Dietz
75
75
1364 - 1417
Eberhard
IV
53
53
1360 - 1402
Antonia
Di Milano
Visconti
42
42
~1361
Henri
Of
Montbeliard
~1363
Marie
De
Castillon
~1332 - 1398
Friedrich
V
66
66
1329 - 1375
Elisabeth
Of
Thuringia
45
45
~1339 - 1393
Friedrich Of
Bavaria-
Landshut
54
54
~1366 - 1404
Maddalena
Visconti
38
38
~1341 - 1397
Johann
II
56
56
~1350 - 1391
Katharine
Of
Gorz
41
41
~1317
Barnabo
Di'
Visconti
~1321 - 1384
Beatrice
Della
Scala
63
63
~1339 - 1383
Albrecht
II
44
44
~1356 - 1410
Agnes I Of
Brunswick
Wolfenbuttel
54
54
~1340 - 1394
Otto
'der
Quade'
54
54
~1364 - 1442
Margarethe
Of
Berg
78
78
~1303 - 1345
Ludwig
'der
Junker'
42
42
~1310
Elisabeth
Of
Spanheim
1332 - 1381
Friedrich
III 'der
Strenge'
48
48
~1332 - 1397
Katharine Of
Henneberg
Schleusingen
65
65
~1364 - 1416
Heinrich
II
52
52
~1370 - 1406
Sofie
Of
Pomerania
36
36
~1345 - 1384
Magnus
I
39
39
~1347 - 1377
Elisabeth
Of
Pomerania
30
30
1354 - 1411
Erich
IV
57
57
~1358 - 1416
Sofie
Of
Brunswick
58
58
~1365 - 1405
Barnim
Vi
40
40
~1375
Veronika
Of
Nurnberg
~1363 - 1418
Bogislaw
Viii
55
55
~1373 - >1451
Sofie Of
Schleswig-
Holstein
78
78
~1260 - 1341/42
Gediminas
~1270
Olga
Vsevolodna
1316 - 1378
Charles
IV
62
62
Charles IV, b. May 14, 1316, d. Nov. 29, 1378, king of the Germans (1346-78) and Holy Roman emperor (1355-78), was also the king of Bohemia from 1346. Charles contributed immensely to the evolution of Czech culture. Born in Prague on May 14, 1316, and educated in Paris, he rejected the ebullient chivalry of his father, John of Luxemburg, king of Bohemia (1310-46), and ruled with practical realism and sound political sense. He became German king through the deposition of Louis IV. In 1355 he visited Rome for his coronation as emperor, but he had no desire to recover already lost Italian jurisdictions. Charles always preferred diplomacy to war. He checked the efforts of Louis's family, the Wittelsbachs, to regain power and placated the powerful Habsburgs by the Treaty of Brunn (1364). After a century of fragmentation, Germany needed a new legal framework to achieve stabilization; this Charles provided by the Golden Bull of 1356. He also strove to maintain good relations with the popes and to curtail their encroachments on German rights. To his Luxemburg patrimony he added Brandenburg and Lusatia, and he procured the election of his own son Wenceslas to succeed him--the first imperial father-son succession since the Hohenstaufen period. In his Bohemian realm Charles stimulated cultural growth. He founded (1348) in Prague the first university east of the Rhine; built a magnificent castle, cathedral, and bridge; encouraged artists of all kinds; and promoted the writing of historical chronicles. Without ethnic biases, he encouraged Czech national sentiment. He died in Prague on Nov. 29, 1378.
1345/47 - 1393
Elisabeth
Of
Pomerania
~1365 - 1435
Hermann
II
70
70
~1358 - 1396
Anna
Of
Schaunberg
38
38
~1304
Johann
I
~1306 - 1366
Catharina
Van
Voorne
60
60
~1315 - 1361
Wilhelm
V
46
46
~1315 - 1374
Johanna
Of
Holland
59
59
~1298 - <1341
Otto I
43
43
~1307
N.n.
Of
Honstein
~1294
Gebhard
III
~1286
Luitgard
Of
Valkenstein
1352 - 1416
Gunther
Xxix
64
64
1354 - 1423
Anna
Of
Leuchtenberg
69
69
~1357 - 1400
Friedrich
43
43
1372 - 1440
Anna Of
Saxony
Wittenberg
68
68
~1331 - >1391
Eberhard
I Von
Eppenstein
60
60
~1357 - >1391
Luitgard
Von
Falkenstein
34
34
~1358
Walter
Von
Cronberg
~1362
Elisabeth
Von
Runkel
1354 - 1393
Walram
II
39
39
~1356 - 1418
Berta
Of
Westerburg
62
62
Bernhard
I
~1382 - 1442
Anna
Of
Oettingen
60
60
1325 - 1398
Ruprecht
II
72
72
1326 - 1365
Beatrice
Of
Sicily
39
39
1337 - 1409
Arend
Heer Van
Egmond
72
72
~1350 - 1434
Jolanthe
Of
Leingen
84
84
1363 - 1428
Jan Heer
Van
Arkel
65
65
~1363
Johanna
Of
Julich
~1286 - 1361
Gerlach
I
75
75
~1292 - 1332
Agnes
Of
Hesse
40
40
~1304
Johann
II
~1306
Gislette
De
Bar
~1345
Jean
Of
Lorraine
1343 - 1369
Sofie
Of
Wurttemberg
26
26
~1347
Henri
V De
Joinville
~1351
Marie
Of
Luxembourg
~1316 - 1381
Ziemowit
III
65
65
~1319 - <1362
Eufemia
Of
Troppau
43
43
~1303 - 1357
Johann
II
54
54
~1294 - 1347
Elisabeth Von
Isenburg-
Limburg
53
53
1307 - 1370
Adolf I
63
63
~1316 - 1382
Margarethe
Of
Nurnberg
66
66
~1263 - 1331
Wilhelm
I
68
68
~1285 - 1329
Adelheid
Of
Waldeck
44
44
~1298 - 1343
Gerhard
Vii
45
45
~1301 - 1370
Jutte
Of
Nassau
69
69
1342 - 1388
Ulrich
Of
Wurttemberg
46
46
1329 - 1402
Elisabeth
Of
Bavaria
73
73
~1310 - 1357
Johann
II
47
47
~1289 - 1377
Elisabeth
Of
Henneberg
88
88
1310 - 1349
Friedrich
II 'der
Ernsthafte'
39
39
~1309 - 1346
Mathilde
Of
Bavaria
37
37
1313 - 1375
Stefan
II
61
61
~1309 - 1349
Elisabetta
Of
Sicily
40
40
~1324
Meinhard
Vii
1297 - 1361
Ernst Of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen
64
64
~1315 - 1373
Adelheid
Of
Everstein
58
58
~1328 - 1373
Magnus
II
45
45
~1332 - 1390
Katharine
Of Anhalt
Bernburg
58
58
~1305 - 1367
Ernst Of
Brunswick
Gottingen
62
62
~1324 - 1390
Elisabeth
Of
Hesse
66
66
~1340 - 1408
Wilhelm
II
68
68
1346 - 1415
Anna
Of
Palatine
69
69
~1272 - 1328
Otto
Of
Hesse
56
56
~1270 - 1339
Adelheid
Of
Ravensberg
69
69
~1292
Simon
II
~1294
Elisabeth Von
Montjoye-
Falkenberg
~1288 - 1347
Heinrich
Xii
(Viii)
59
59
~1301
Judith
Of
Brandenburg
~1345 - 1394
Wartislaw
Vi
49
49
~1350 - >1397
Anna Of
Mecklenburg
Stargard
47
47
1318 - 1379
Albrecht
I
61
61
1317 - 1416
Eufemia
Of
Sweden
99
99
1317 - 1365
Barnim
IV
48
48
1320 - 1364
Sofie Of
Werle
Gustrow
43
43
~1318 - 1368
Erich II
50
50
~1330 - >1387
Agnes Of
Holstein-
Plon
57
57
~1318 - 1373
Bogislaw
V
55
55
~1341 - 1406
Adelheid Of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen
65
65
~1317 - 1390
Heinrich
II 'der
Eiserne'
73
73
~1339 - >1395
Ingeburg
Of
Mecklenburg
56
56
1271 - 1318
Mikhail
I
Yaroslavich
47
47
~1278 - 1368
Anna
Dmitrievna
90
90
~1311 - 1398
Ludwik
I
87
87
~1321 - 1362
Agnieszka
Of Glogau
Sagan
41
41
~1327 - 1361
Elzbieta
Of
Poland
34
34
~1270 - 1328
Gerhard
V
58
58
~1273
Elizabeth
De
Brabant
~1242 - <1344
Heinrich
Of
Stolberg
102
102
~1265
Jutta
Von
Hadmersleben
~1281 - 1330
Dietrich
III
49
49
~1281
Elisabeth
Of
Waldeck
~1331 - 1368
Gunther
Xxv
37
37
~1332 - ~1381
Elisabeth
Of
Honstein
49
49
~1330 - 1407
Johann
I
77
77
~1332 - 1380
Mecela
Of
Rozmberka
48
48
1337 - 1388
Wenzel
Of
Saxony
51
51
~1356
Cecilia
Of
Carrara
~1308 - 1339
Gottfried
V Von
Eppenstein
31
31
1310
Luitgard
Von
Breuberg
~1331
Philipp
Vi Von
Falkenstein
~1335
Agnes
Von
Falkenstein
1332 - 1370
Johann
I Von
Westerburg
38
38
~1334 - 1383
Kunigunde
Of
Sayn
49
49
~1330 - 1396
Otto Heer
Van
Arkel
66
66
~1335 - 1410
Elisabeth
De
Bar
75
75
~1318 - 1393
Wilhelm
II (Vi)
75
75
1338 - 1397
Marie
Of
Guelders
59
59
~1265 - 1298
Heinrich
'der
Jungere'
33
33
ABT 1276/77 - 1345
Agnes
Of
Bavaria
~1319
Raoul
Of
Lorraine
~1323
Marie
De
Chatillon
1315 - 1392
Eberhard
III
77
77
~1320 - 1389
Elisabeth
Of
Henneburg
69
69
1248 - 1308
Albert
I
59
59
Albert I, b. c.1250, king of the Germans (1298-1308), was the son of Rudolf I, the first Habsburg to wear the German crown. In 1282 Rudolf granted Albert the duchies of Austria and Styria. When Rudolf died in 1291, however, the German princes, fearful of the growing Habsburg power, denied Albert the crown and instead elected Adolf of Nassau as king. Discontent with Adolf soon enabled Albert to win over the princes, who deposed Adolf in 1298 and elected Albert king. The new king defeated the old at Gollheim (July 1298), where Adolf was slain. As king, Albert attempted to add Holland and Zealand to the Habsburg domains. This unsuccessful effort, coupled with his alliance with the French king Philip IV, provoked a revolt in the Rhineland that was backed by Pope Boniface VIII. The revolt was finally crushed in 1302, and the following year Albert secured papal confirmation of his election in return for an oath of obedience to the pope. Albert was assassinated on May 1, 1308, by accomplices of his nephew, John "Parracide" of Swabia. He was succeeded by Henry VII.
1263 - 1313
Elisabetah
Of
Carinthia
50
50
1287 - 1332
Friedrich
IV
44
44
~1290 - 1348
Margarethe
Of
Carinthia
58
58
~1225 - 1276
Diether
V
51
51
~1238 - 1293
Margarethe
Of
Julich
55
55
~1262
Otto I
~1264 - 1331
Sofie
Of
Hesse
67
67
~1271 - 1334
Emich
I
63
63
~1280 - >1355
Anna
Of
Nurnberg
75
75
~1271 - 1340
Berthold
Vii
69
69
~1268 - 1317
Adelheid
Of
Hesse
49
49
1257 - 1323
Friedrich
I 'der
Freidige'
66
66
~1286 - 1359
Elisabeth Of
Lobdaburg
Arnshaugk
73
73
~1293 - 1322
Beatrycza
(Beatrix)
Of Glogau
29
29
1271 - 1336
Federico
II
65
65
1289 - 1341
Eleanora
Of
Naples
52
52
1267 - 1322
Heinrich
I
55
55
<1264 - 1336
Agnes
Of
Thuringia
72
72
<1305 - >1350
Hermann
Of
Everstein
45
45
~1298 - 1324
Adelheid
Zur
Lippe
26
26
~1304 - 1369
Magnus
I
65
65
~1303 - 1356
Sofie
Of
Brandenburg
53
53
~1291 - 1348
Bernhard
III
57
57
~1309 - 1338
Agnes Of
Saxony
Wittenberg
29
29
~1268 - 1318
Albert
II 'der
Grosse'
50
50
~1268 - 1312/17
Richsa
Of Werle
Gustrow
~1299 - 1376
Henry
II 'der
Eiserne'
77
77
1306 - 1367
Elisabeth
Of
Thuringia
61
61
~1312 - 1360
Gerhard
Vi
48
48
~1314 - 1384
Margarethe
Of
Ravensberg
70
70
1244 - 1308
Henry
I 'das
Kind'
64
64
~1244 - 1274
Adelheid Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
30
30
~1238
Otto III
Of
Ravensberg
~1238 - 1315
Hedwig
Zur
Lippe
77
77
~1271 - 1308
Hermann
Of
Brandenburg
37
37
~1278 - 1327
Anna
Of
Austria
49
49
1267
Heinrich
II 'der
Low'
1282 - 1327
Anna Of
Saxony
Wittenberg
45
45
~1282 - 1318
Erik Of
Sweden
36
36
~1293
Ingeborg
Of
Norway
1291 - 1326
Wartislaw
IV
35
35
~1296 - 1350/56
Elzbieta Of
Breslau
Liegnitz
1260 - 1337
Johann
II
77
77
1295/98 - 1344
Mechtild Of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen
~1282 - 1359/61
Erich I
~1294 - 1349
Elisabeth
Of
Pomerania
55
55
~1297 - 1359
Johann
III 'the
Milde'
62
62
~1300
Miroslawa
Schwerin
Branden
~1293
Gerhard
III 'der
Grosse'
1295 - 1339
Sofie Of
Werle
Parchim
44
44
1253 - 1293/94
Dmitrij
Borisovi
~1256
N.n.
Of
Rostov
Line 6608 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Mrs-Dmitrij Borisovich Duchess of /Rostov/ Line 9596 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Mrs-Dmitrij Borisovich Duchess of /Rostov/
1291 - 1352
Boleslaw
III
60
60
1296 - 1322
Marketa
Of
Bohemia
26
26
~1292 - 1342
Henryk
II (Iv)
50
50
1296 - 1321
Mathilde
Of
Brandenburg
25
25
~1224 - 1290
Otto I
66
66
~1244 - 1299
Agnes
Of
Leingen
55
55
~1244 - 1309
Dietrich
II
65
65
ABT 1259/70 - 1330
Sofie Of
Anhalt
Bernburg
~1298 - 1336
Heinrich
X
38
38
~1300 - 1362
Elisabeth
Of
Orlamunde
62
62
~1286 - 1356
Heinrich
V
70
70
~1302 - >1356
Matilde Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
54
54
~1285 - 1334
Ulrich I
49
49
~1314 - >1340
Anna
Of
Nurnberg
26
26
~1291 - 1347
Petr
Pan Z
Rozmberka
56
56
~1297 - 1355
Katerina
Z
Vartemberka
58
58
1274 - 1356
Rudolf
I
82
82
~1308 - 1343
Agnes Of
Lindau-
Ruppin
35
35
~1291
Jutte
Von
Eppenstein
~1284
Eberhard
III Von
Breuberg
~1288
Mathilde
Of
Waldeck
~1306 - 1355
Johan
Heer Van
Arkel
49
49
~1300 - 1362
Irmgard
Of
Kleve
62
62
~1314
Thibauld
De
Bar
1322 - 1353
Marie
De
Namur
31
31
~1312
Reinald
II
1298 - 1344
Ulrich
III
45
45
~1298 - 1334
Sofie
Of
Pfirt
36
36
~1600 - 1694
Samuel
Bass
94
94
Dea. Samuel1 Bass and wife and at least two children came to Massachusetts about 1631 or 32. Samuel Basse was married to Anne Savell 25th April 1625 at St. Mary's Church, Saffron Walden, Co. Essex. His baptism is not on record there but that of Ann Savell is there in the parish register as were also two other children. Ann, daughter of William Savell was baptized 25th April 1601 at Saffron Walden. William Savell also had Elizabeth bapt. 10 Dec.1598 and Susan bapt. 4 June 1609. He also had a son William bapt. 24 Feb.1604/5 since the will of William of Braintree Mass. calls Deacon Samuel Bass his brother. (See Register Vol. 107-198). Samuel Bass & wife were members of the church at Roxbury at an early date, probably by 1632 though no date is given. He is said to have settled near Hog Bridge there. He was made freeman of the colony May 14,1634. He received no grant of land in Braintree and must have purchased of someone else. He came here previous to July 6,1640 at which time he was elected the first deacon of the church, having been dismissed and recommended to them from Roxbury (Hancock's Century Sermons, 1739 p.28). His homestead was at the N.W. corner of Granite and Hancock Sts., Quincy and parts of the land on Granite St. remained in the male line of descent until 1951 when Alva Morrison Bass died there single, a space of over 310 years. No records show how this land was acquired. The Braintree records give the following account of his death: - "Deacon Samuel Bass, aged 94 departed this life upon the 30th day of December, 1694, who had been a Deacon of the Church of Braintree for the space of above 50 years and the first Deacon of that church, and was the father and grandfather and great grandfather of a hundred and sixty and two children before he died, the youngest whereof was Benjamin Bas, son of Joseph Bas and Mary his wife born seven days before his death". Mrs. Ann Bas, the wife of Deacon Samuel Bas, died the 5th of September 1693, aged 93. So says the town record but the ancient rough gravestone in Hancock Cemetery says Mrs. Ann Bass died 1692 aged 92. He held numerous town offices, was selectman as early as 1642 and as late as 1673, many years not being recorded in the earliest records, and was Representative twelve years. He is recorded as selectman 1642,1645,8,51,52,53,1670,72, but the records are incomplete in early years. Samuel Bass and son Thomas Bass both lived in Bogastow or Natick (now Sherborn) for some time in the 1660's as both signed the petition of the inhabitants there to be set up as a separate town May 7,1662 (Mass. Archives 112-136). In 1672 he sold 140 acres there to John Hull, called himself of "Brantery, yeoman, and wife Ann did not sign the deed", she being aged and blind", says the deed. (S.D. 10-15). S.P. 13-539: Will of Samuel Bass of Braintry, dated May 11,1694: To son John 10 a. salt marsh & a woodlot in Captain's Plain already set out to him & my malt house & orchard before it, 1/2 a well, 1/2 kitchen & some lands in Stoney Field he hath in his possession, 1/4 of my upland in the Farme after paying legacies to my two daus. Mary Capen & Sarah Penniman & if there is any marsh after the 10 a. apiece given to my 3 sons, to be son John. To son Thomas 10 a. salt & a woodlot in Captain's Plain already laid out to him, 1/4 of upland at the Farm. To son Joseph 10 a. salt valued at ¹100, & the house he liveth in & orchard on the back side of it & fresh meadow at E. of it & a bed etc. he lieth upon at ¹100 and my barne & 2 a. on which it sets reserving liberty for yard room & passage for son John to his barn, and 2 a. at head of the home lot, & 1 a. joining the 2 a. which was John Dassets, being part of a 5 a. lot, & 1/2 my kitchen & 1/2 well & 7 a. in Stoney Field where my cows use to pasture valued at ¹100, and a woodlot already set out to him at Captain's Plain & stock, and moveables etc. at ¹100 & 1/4 upland at the Farme, & he is not to sell it away without the approbation of his two brothers & if he have children he may give it to them or if he have need to spend it, he may, for his own comfort & supply and if he marry a wife he may give her ¹100 of it and the rest to any of his blood relations. 4thly. To Samuel Bass, carpenter, 7 a. pasture in Stony Field & salt he already has in possession & 1/4 part of upland in the Farm, also 1/2 the woodlot in Captain's Plain given my son Joseph & ¹60 out of Joseph's estate if he have no children nor spend it. To Joseph Bass Jr. ¹50 out of son Joseph's estate except he have children & spend it, & ¹40 to my grandson Samuel Bass, cooper, out of Joseph's estate etc, all this after son Joseph's decease. To dau. Mary Capen ¹40 & to dau. Sarah Penniman ¹20 out of my upland at the farm & 5 cows. To John Bass Jr. my malt house if he out live his father & 2 a. planting land in Stoney Field & 4 a. pasture about 1/4 a. at his door where barn stands. To my grand daus., excepting Sarah Biling all moveables goods & Hannah Walsbey is to share with them. All remainder of my estate to sons John & Thomas who are to be executors. Witness: Robert Field, William Thayer, Samuel Tompson. S.P. 18-4 New Series - Witnesses swear to the will Jan.31,1694/5. S.P. 13-541, Inventory of Samuel Bass who deceased 30 Dec.1694 apprized Jan.3,1694/5: House & orchard behind it, fresh meadow at the end of it, with kitchen & well ¹96. Malt house & orchard before it etc. ¹70. Barn & 2 a. & 2 a. at head of lot & 1 a. bought of John Dosset & 7 a. in Stoney Field. 60 a. in Captain's Plain ¹90. 6 a. in Stoney Field ¹18 20 a. at ye Farm at ye 4 score acres 21 a. at ye Farm at Great Island 18 a. at ye Farm at the ox pasture 11 a. in 3 parcels at the farm 4 cows, 8 a. swamp Total ¹942/1/6 Taken by Samuel Tompson, Samuel Penniman, James Brackett Jan.31,1694(5).
~1601 - 1693
Anne
Savell
92
92
~1219 - 1297
Friedrich
III
78
78
1667 - 1705
Hannah
Bass
38
38
~1253 - 1309
Helen
Of
Saxony
56
56
~1264 - 1292
Albert
Of
Gorz
28
28
~1264 - 1293
Agnes
Of
Hohenberg
29
29
~1238 - 1267
Heinrich
III
29
29
~1240
Mathilde
Of
Arnsberg
~1248 - 1284
Berthold
V
36
36
~1246 - 1279
Sofie
Of
Schwarzburg
33
33
1240 - 1315
Albrecht
'der
Entartete'
75
75
1654 - 1736
Joseph
Adams
81
81
1241 - 1270
Margarethe
Of
Austria
28
28
~1253 - 1309
Henryk
I (III)
56
56
~1276 - 1319
Mathilde Of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen
43
43
1236 - 1279
Albert
I 'der
Grosse'
43
43
~1237 - 1285
Alessina
Of
Montferrat
48
48
~1260 - 1318
Heinrich
I
58
58
1690 - 1761
John
Adams
71
71
Living
Hamilton
~1264 - 1318/24
Bernhard
II
~1272 - 1315
Helene
Of
Rugen
43
43
~1234 - 1291
Henry
I
57
57
~1234 - 1263
Richiza
Birgersdotter
29
29
~1287 - 1328/29
Otto
IV
~1289 - >1329
Margarethe
Von
Windeck
40
40
~1310 - 1336
Alfonso
IV
26
26
~1310 - 1336
Leonor
Of
Castile
26
26
1204 - 1252
Otto I
'das
Kind'
48
48
~1209 - 1261
Mathilde
Of
Brandenburg
52
52
1708 - 1797
Susanna
Boylston
89
89
~1246 - 1299
Otto V
'der
Lange'
53
53
~1247 - 1327
Jutte
Of
Henneberg
80
80
~1230 - 1302
Heinrich
I
72
72
~1245 - 1317
Anastasie
Of
Pomerania
72
72
1243 - 1298
Albert
II
55
55
~1247 - 1322
Agnes Gertrude
Princess
Austria
75
75
Line 8703 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Agnes Gertrude Princess of /Austria/ Line 5481 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Agnes Gertrude Princess of /Austria/
1735 - 1826
John
Adams
90
90
2nd President of the United States Graduated Harvard 1755
1240 - 1290
Magnus
I
50
50
Magnus I (of Sweden), called Barnlock (1240-90), king of Sweden (1275-90). Son of the powerful Earl Birger of the Folkung family, Magnus usurped the throne from his older brother, Waldemar. He was an outstanding ruler, who enhanced the unity of his realm, strengthened the monarchy, and, collaborating with the church, provided internal security and peace by humane legislation. By giving lands to his younger sons, however, Magnus sowed the seeds of a long dynastic struggle.
~1257 - ~1325
Hedwig
Of
Holstein
68
68
~1276
H†kon
V
~1276 - 1312
Eufemie
Of
Rugen
36
36
~1255 - 1309
Bogislaw
IV
54
54
~1265 - 1320
Margarethe
Of
Rugen
55
55
~1253 - 1301
Boleslaw
(Bolko)
I
48
48
ABT 1270/77 - 1316
Beatrix
Of
Brandenburg
~1236 - 1283
Johann
I
47
47
~1238
Sofie Of
Lindau-
Ruppin
1744 - 1818
Abigail
Smith
73
73
D. 1285
Johann
I
~1253 - 1302
Ingeborg
Of
Sweden
49
49
1254 - 1312
Gerhard
II
58
58
~1257 - 1304
Agnes
Of
Brandenburg
47
47
~1267
Nikolaus
I
~1267 - 1328
Miroslawa
Of
Pomerania
61
61
1258 - 1304
Heinrich
I
46
46
1258 - 1310
Heilwig
Van
Bronckhorst
52
52
1767 - 1848
John
Quincy
Adams
80
80
6th President of the United States Graduated Harvard 1787
1191 - 1246
Yaroslav
II
Vsevolodovich
55
55
~1194 - 1244
Fedosiya
Igorevna
50
50
1775 - 1852
Louisa
Catherine
Johnson
77
77
~1248 - 1296
Henryk
V 'the
Stout'
48
48
1263 - 1304
Elzbieta
Of
Kalisch
41
41
1801 - 1829
George
Washington
Adams
28
28
1803 - 1834
John
Adams
31
31
1807 - 1886
Charles
Francis
Adams
79
79
~1226 - 1284
Heinrich
II
58
58
~1227 - 1287
Mathilde
Of
Regenstein
60
60
~1218 - 1286/87
Bernhard
I
~1240 - >1284
Sophie
Of
Denmark
44
44
1765 - 1813
Abigail
Adams
48
48
~1244 - 1305
Heinrich
III
61
61
~1249
Jutte
Of
Ravensberg
~1256 - 1293
Gebhard
Vi
37
37
~1260 - 1309
Jutte
Von
Schlusselberg
49
49
1770 - 1800
Charles
Adams
30
30
~1282
Gunther
II
~1284
Luitgard
Of
Mecklenburg
1772 - 1832
Thomas
Boylston
Adams
60
60
Chief Justice of Massachusetts
1737/38 - 1823
Peter
Boylston
Adams
of Braintree
1740/41 - 1776
Elihu
Adams
of Randolph, Mass.
1267 - 1330
Jean I
De
Dampierre
63
63
~1292
Marie
D'artois
1634 - 1692
Abigail
Baxter
57
57
1625 - 1694
Joseph
Adams
69
69
1685 - 1772
Ann
White
86
86
~1186 - 1260/61
Konrad
I (III)
~1196
N.n.
Of
Nurnberg
~1180 - 1261
Albert
I
81
81
~1231 - 1273
Helene Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
42
42
~1673 - 1743
Peter
Boylston
70
70
~1215 - 1288
Heinrich
'der
Erlauchte'
73
73
D. 1775
Elizabeth
Quincy
1212 - 1243
Konstantie
Of
Steiermark
31
31
~1226 - 1273
Konrad
I
47
47
~1221 - 1265
Salomea
Of
Kalisch
44
44
~1202 - 1253/55
Bonifacio
III
~1215
Margherita
Of
Savoy
1706 - 1783
William
Smith
77
77
Graduated Harvard 1725
~1213 - 1266
Johann
I
53
53
~1228 - 1267
Jutte
Of
Saxony
39
39
~1240 - 1302
Wizlaw
II
62
62
~1246 - >1302
Agnes Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
56
56
Sarah
Allen
~1264 - 1327
James
II 'the
Just'
63
63
James II (called James the Just), b. 1264, d. Nov. 2, 1327, was king of Aragon (1291-1327) and king of Sicily (1285-95). His father, Peter III, seized Sicily from Charles I of Naples in 1282 during the revolt known as the Sicilian Vespers. After Peter's death (1285), James's older brother, Alfonso III, became king of Aragon, and James became king of Sicily. On Alfonso's death (1291), James became king of Aragon. He continued to rule Sicily until 1295, when he signed an agreement with Pope Boniface VIII and Charles II of Naples exchanging Sicily for Corsica and Sardinia, ending French claims in Aragon, and arranging a marriage with Charles's daughter Bianca.
~1285 - 1310
Bianca
Of
Anjou
25
25
1184 - 1213
Wilhelm
Of
Saxony
29
29
~1186 - 1233
Helene
Of
Denmark
47
47
~1174 - 1220
Albert
II
46
46
~1184 - 1255
Mathilde
Of Lower
Lusatia
71
71
Experience
Holms
~1213 - 1267
Otto III
54
54
~1228 - 1286
Bozena
Of
Bohemia
58
58
~1224 - 1290
Hermann
I
66
66
~1230 - 1277
Margaretha
Of
Holland
47
47
~1202 - 1264
Johann
I
62
62
Hannah
Parke
~1211 - 1267
Luitgard
Of
Henneberg
56
56
~1210
Barnim
I
~1225 - 1246
Marie
Anna Of
Saxony
21
21
1232 - 1290
Gerhard
I
58
58
~1231 - 1280
Elisabeth
Of
Mecklenburg
49
49
~1230 - 1261
Margarethe
Of
Brunswick
31
31
~1225 - 1278
Boleslaw
II 'the
Bald'
53
53
~1228 - 1259
Hedwig
Of
Anhalt
31
31
~1227
Erik Xi
1154 - 1212
Vsevolod
III
58
58
~1156 - 1206
Mariya
Marfa Of
Ossetian
50
50
~1153 - 1194
Igor
Glebovich
41
41
~1154 - 1237
Agrafina
Rostislavna
83
83
~1222 - 1279
Boleslaw
'the
Pious'
57
57
~1238 - 1298
Ilona
(Jolan) Of
Hungary
60
60
~1170 - 1251/52
Heinrich
I Of
Anhalt
~1186 - ~1244
Irmgard
Of
Thuringia
58
58
1218 - 1252
Abel
Of
Denmark
34
34
1225 - 1288
Mathilde
Of
Holstein
63
63
~1379
Adolf
Of
Kleve
~1388 - 1463
Marie
Of
Burgundy
75
75
1380 - 1416
Fernando
I
35
35
1374 - 1435
Leonor
Urraca
61
61
1301 - 1339
Aleksandr
I
Mikhailovich
38
38
~1295 - 1365
Anastasiya
Yurevna
70
70
1358 - 1390
John I
32
32
John I (of Castile and León), in Spanish, Juan I (1358-1390), king of Castile and León from 1379 to 1390. He was the son of King Henry II, who founded the house of Trastamara. John attacked Portugal to defeat the alliance created by King Ferdinand I of Portugal and John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, who had a claim to the throne of Castile through his wife. Ferdinand submitted in 1382 and made peace, giving his daughter to John I in marriage. On Ferdinand's death in 1383, John I again made war on Portugal, but was defeated at Aljubarrota in 1385 by King John I of Portugal. From 1386 to 1387 John I repulsed John of Gaunt's invasion of Spain and settled their differences by a treaty and by arranging the marriage of one of John of Gaunt's daughters to his son Henry, later King Henry III of Castile and León.
1358 - 1382
Leonor
Of
Aragon
24
24
1342 - 1374
Sancho
Alfonso
32
32
~1347 - 1381
Brites
Of
Portugal
34
34
~1264
Eufemia
Of
Rujavia
1333 - 1379
Henry
II 'the
Merciful'
45
45
Henry II (of Castile and León) (1333?-79), known as Henry (Enrique) of Trastamara, king of Castile and León (1369-79), born in Seville. He was the illegitimate son of Alfonso XI of Castile, who made him count of Trastamara. After the accession of Alfonso's legitimate son, Peter the Cruel, to the throne of Castile and León in 1350, Henry fled to France. With an army of mercenaries financed by the kings of France and Aragón, Henry invaded Castile in 1366 and drove Peter from the throne. Edward, prince of Wales, intervened for Peter, however, and defeated Henry at Nájera in 1367. Henry defeated and killed Peter in 1369, becoming king and continuing his alliance with Charles V of France in the Hundred Years' War. In 1372 his navy destroyed an English fleet off La Rochelle. He was succeeded by his son John I.
1339 - 1381
Juana Manuel
De Villena
Escalona
42
42
~1340 - 1387
Peter
IV 'the
Ceremonious'
47
47
~1336
Leonora
Of
Sicily
~1320 - 1355
Inez
De
Castro
35
35
Castro, Inés de (1320?-55), Spanish noblewoman, descended from the Castilian line, whose unhappy fate has been the subject of tragedies and poems. After 1340, Inés lived with her cousin Constantia (died 1345), who was later the wife of Dom Pedro, son of Alfonso IV, king of Portugal. After the death of Constantia, Dom Pedro secretly married Inés. Alfonso feared that this union might affect the claim to the throne of his grandson, Constantia's son, and he therefore had Inés executed. Dom Pedro declared civil war against Alfonso, but they were soon reconciled. According to legend, when Pedro became king (as Pedro I) he established the legality of his marriage with Inés and had her body exhumed and placed on the throne.
~1228 - 1271
Yaroslav
III Afanasij
Yarosovich
43
43
~1243 - 1313
Kseniya
Yurevna
70
70
1313
Juan
Manuel
De Castile
1317
Blanca De
La Cerda
Y Lara
~1301
Pedro
Fernandez
De Castro
~1305
Aldonca
De
Valladarea
~1217
Yurij
Mikhailovich
~1221
N.n.
Of
Tarusa
Line 13264 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Mrs-Yurij Mikhailovich Duchess of /TARUSA/ Line 13618 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Mrs-Yurij Mikhailovich Duchess of /TARUSA/
1582 - 1641
George Of
Brunswick
Kalenberg
59
59
1601 - 1659
Anna
Eleonore
57
57
1535 - 1592
Wilhelm Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
57
57
1546 - 1617
Dorothea
Of
Denmark
70
70
1577 - 1626
Ludwig
V 'the
Faithful'
48
48
1582 - 1616
Magdalene
Of
Brandenburg
34
34
1497 - 1546
Ernst Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
48
48
1508 - 1541
Sofie Of
Mecklenburg
Schwerin
33
33
1503 - 1559
Christian
III
55
55
Christian III, b. Aug. 12, 1503, d. Jan. 1, 1559, was king of Denmark and Norway from 1534 to 1559. A zealous Protestant, he had to overcome opposition in the so-called Count's War (1533-36) to succeed his father, Frederick I, to the throne. His Diet of Copenhagen (1536) established a state Lutheran church. In a dynastic struggle with Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, who supported the claims of the daughters of deposed Christian II, Christian III barred the Habsburg Netherlands' shipping from the Baltic Sea, and Charles made peace with him in 1544. Christian left Denmark a well-administered state when he died.
1511 - 1571
Dorothea
Of Saxony
Lauenburg
60
60
1547 - 1596
Georg
I
48
48
1552 - 1587
Magdalene
Of
Lippe
35
35
1525 - 1598
Johann
Georg
72
72
1563 - 1607
Elisabeth
Of
Anhalt
44
44
1468 - 1532
Heinrich Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
63
63
1469 - 1528
Margarethe
Of
Saxony
59
59
1479 - 1552
Heinrich
III 'the
Peaceful'
72
72
1488 - 1510
Ursule Of
Mecklenburg
Schwerin
21
21
1471 - 1533
Frederick
I
61
61
Frederick I (of Denmark and Norway) (1471-1533), king of Denmark and Norway (1523-33), son of Christian I and brother of King Hans. He was elected to succeed his deposed nephew, Christian II. Owing his throne to the nobles, Frederick granted them many privileges, thereby diminishing the royal power. A sympathizer of Lutheranism, he facilitated the spread of that faith in his dominions.
1487 - 1514
Anna Of
Schleswig
Holstein
26
26
~1467 - 1543
Magnus
I
76
76
1488 - 1563
Katharine Of
Brunswick
Wolfenbuttel
75
75
1527 - 1563
Bernhard
Viii
35
35
~1524 - 1583
Katharine Of
Waldeck-
Eisenberg
59
59
1505 - 1571
Joachim
II
65
65
1507 - 1534
Magdalene
Of
Saxony
26
26
1536 - 1586
Joachim
II Ernst
50
50
1540 - 1569
Agnes
Of
Barby
29
29
1439 - 1471
Otto II
32
32
1440/41 - 1514
Anna Of
Nassau
Dillenburg
1441 - 1486
Ernst
Of
Saxony
45
45
1443 - 1484
Elisabeth
Of
Bavaria
41
41
1455 - 1499
Johann
Cicero
43
43
1449 - 1501
Margarethe
Of
Saxony
52
52
1426 - 1481
Christian
I
55
55
Christian I, b. 1426, d. May 21, 1481, king of Denmark (r. 1448-81), Norway (r. 1450-81), and Sweden (r. 1457-64), founded the Oldenburg dynasty. Christian was dominated by the nobility, who deposed (1464) him in Sweden. His attempt to regain the throne there led to his defeat (1471) at Brunkeberg, near Stockholm.
1430 - 1495
Dorothea
Of
Brandenburg
65
65
1439 - 1507
Johann
IV (V)
68
68
1446 - 1519
Dorothea
Of Saxony
Lauenburg
73
73
1463 - 1514
Heinrich
I
50
50
~1463 - 1526
Katharine
Of
Pomerania
63
63
1471 - 1536
Simon
V
65
65
~1505 - 1540
Magdalene
Of
Mansfeld
35
35
1486 - 1539
Philipp
III
52
52
~1488
Anna
Of
Kleve
1484 - 1535
Joachim
I
Nestor
51
51
1485 - 1555
Elisabeth
Of
Denmark
70
70
1504 - 1551
Johann
V
46
46
1511 - 1577
Margarethe
Of
Brandenburg
66
66
~1502
Wolfgang
I
~1506
Agnes
Of
Mansfeld
~1408 - 1478
Friedrich
'the
Pious'
70
70
~1412 - 1454
Magdalene Of
Brunswick
Luneburg
42
42
1431 - 1457
Margarethe
Of
Baden
26
26
1425 - 1482
Wilhelm
III 'the
Brave'
57
57
1432 - 1462
Anna
Of
Austria
30
30
~1380 - 1440
Dietrich
Of
Oldenburg
60
60
~1395 - 1436
Hedwig
Of
Holstein
41
41
1406 - 1464
Johann
'the
Alchimist'
58
58
~1405 - 1465
Barbara
Of
Saxony
60
60
~1392 - 1463
Bernhard
II (Iv)
71
71
~1404 - >1445
Adelheid
Of
Pomerania
41
41
1413 - 1471
Friedrich
II
57
57
1421 - 1476
Katharine
Of
Saxony
55
55
1425 - 1503
Wilhelm
II
78
78
~1438 - 1520/21
Elisabeth
Of
Stolberg
1453 - 1524
Philipp
II
71
71
~1458 - 1492
Katharine
Of
Solms-Lich
34
34
1455 - 1513
John
Of
Denmark
58
58
1461 - 1521
Christine
Of
Saxony
59
59
~1455 - 1516
Ernst I
61
61
1473 - 1530
Margarethe
Of
Munsterberg
56
56
~1362 - 1434
Bernhard
I
72
72
1376 - 1418
Margarethe
Of Saxony
Wittenberg
42
42
~1400 - 1453
Jakob
I
53
53
~1402 - 1439
Catherine
Of
Lorraine
37
37
~1340 - >1399
Christian
V
59
59
~1340 - 1404
Agnes
Of
Honstein
64
64
~1367
Gerhard
Vi
~1332 - 1390
Katharine Of
Anhalt-
Bernburg
58
58
1392 - 1482
Wilhelm
I 'the
Old'
90
90
~1407 - 1449
Cacilie
Of
Wolfenbuttel
42
42
~1400 - 1475
Wolrad
I
75
75
~1422
Barbara
Of
Wertheim
~1432 - 1477
Kuno Of
Solms-
Lich
45
45
~1435 - 1493
Walpurgis
Of
Dhaun
58
58
~1390 - 1474
Georg
I
84
84
~1430 - 1511
Anna Of
Lindau
Ruppin
81
81
1448 - 1498
Heinrich
I
50
50
1450 - 1508
Ursule
Of
Brandenburg
58
58
~1378 - 1431
Charles
I
53
53
1376 - 1434
Margarethe
Of
Palatine
58
58
~1300 - 1347
Konrad
I
47
47
~1316 - <1340
Ingeburg
Of
Holstein
24
24
~1306 - 1378
Dietrich
V
72
72
ABT 1295/99 - 1349/50
Adelheid
Of
Holstein
~1367 - 1442
Heinrich
Vii
75
75
~1375 - >1432
Margarethe Of
Nassau-
Wiesbaden
57
57
~1393 - 1440
Michael
I
47
47
1395 - 1465
Sofie
Of
Henneberg
70
70
~1392 - 1457
Johann
V
65
65
~1396 - 1438
Elisabeth
Katharine
Von Cronberg
42
42
~1409 - 1476
Johann
IV
67
67
1416 - 1446
Elisabeth
Of Hanau
Muzenbnberg
30
30
~1337 - 1397
Heinrich
Vi
60
60
~1344 - 1388
Elizabeth
Of
Julich
44
44
~1334 - 1407
Johann
I
73
73
~1356 - 1409
Uta Of
Teck
53
53
1367 - 1422
Friedrich
I
55
55
~1376 - 1444
Elisabeth Of
Henneberg
Schleusingen
68
68
~1371 - 1428
Johann
III
57
57
~1389 - 1438
Adelheid
Of
Kyrburg
49
49
~1370 - 1451
Reinhard
II
81
81
~1384 - 1459
Katharine Of
Nassau-
Beilstein
75
75
~1311 - 1373
Eberhard
I
62
62
~1312 - >1373
Katharina
Of
Nurnberg
61
61
~1339
Friedrich
IV
~1341 - 1392
Anna
Of
Helfenstein
51
51
~1334 - 1380
Ulrich
IV
46
46
1347 - 1378
Elisabeth
Of
Wertheim
31
31
~1340 - 1410
Heinrich
II
70
70
~1362 - ~1415
Katharine
Von
Randerath
53
53
~1292 - 1355
Rudolf
III
63
63
~1296 - 1358
Elisabeth
Von
Breuberg
62
62
~1311 - 1370
Ulrich
III
59
59
~1312 - 1344
Adelheid
Of
Nassau
32
32
~1206
Agnes
Of
Thuringia
~1210 - 1261
Jaromar
II
51
51
~1224 - 1270
Eufemie
Of
Pomerani
46
46
1140 - 1212
Bernhard
III
72
72
~1152 - 1201
Judyta
Of
Poland
49
49
~1178 - 1220
Bogislav
II
42
42
~1181 - 1240
Miroslawa
Of
Pomerania
59
59
~1191 - 1241
Henryk
II 'the
Pious'
50
50
1204 - 1265
Anna
Of
Bohemia
61
61
~1236 - 1306
Rudolf
II
70
70
~1259 - 1310
Kunigunde
Of
Baden
51
51
Lenora
De
Guzman
1102 - 1139
Henry
'the
Proud'
37
37
Duke of Bavaria; Count of Brunswick; Count of Toscana
1075 - 1137
Lothaire
II (III)
62
62
Lothair II (sometimes called Lothair III), b. 1075, d. Dec. 4, 1137, was German king (1125-37) and Holy Roman emperor (1133-37). The son of Gebhard, count of Supplinburg, Lothair was made duke of Saxony by Holy Roman Emperor Henry V in 1106. When Henry died in 1125, the electors chose Lothair as his successor rather than Henry's nephew. Lothair had led the opposition against Henry, and his election thus represented a victory of princely independence over heredity. He encouraged the eastward expansion of Germany and the spread of Christianity. Compliant toward the church and his advisor Bernard of Clairvaux, Lothair supported Innocent II after the disputed papal election of 1130. Until 1135 he battled the Hohenstaufens and strengthened his son-in-law, Henry the Proud of Bavaria, by grants of Italian and Saxon lands. On his deathbed, Lothair designated Henry as his successor, but the princes chose instead his former rival Conrad III of Hohenstaufen.
~1105
Gertrude
Richenza
Of
Meissen
1129 - 1195
Henry
'the
Lion'
66
66
Henry the Lion (circa 1129-95), duke of Saxony (1139-80) and duke of Bavaria (1156-80), a powerful German prince, who became a rival of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa. The only son of Henry the Proud, duke of Bavaria and Saxony, Henry was probably born in Ravensburg. At the age of ten he succeeded his father to the duchy of Saxony, which his mother and grandmother administered for him until 1146. In 1147 Henry demanded that the Diet of Frankfort restore to him the duchy of Bavaria, which had been taken from his father. When refused, Henry began an unsuccessful war against Holy Roman Emperor Conrad III. After Conrad's death, however, Henry's duchy was restored to him by the imperial successor, Frederick Barbarossa. Henry subsequently aided Frederick in wars in Poland and Italy between 1157 and 1159. Possessing both German and Italian territories, Henry was a formidable figure within the Holy Roman Empire. To curb him, a league of nobles and prelates was formed in 1166; after two years of war, Henry was triumphant. In 1168 he took as his second wife Matilda, the daughter of Henry II, king of England. In 1172-73 he made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. By refusing to aid Frederick I in an Italian expedition, Henry instigated a quarrel (1175-76) between himself and the emperor. As a result, he was placed under the ban of the empire. He was deprived of most of his possessions in 1180 and twice forced into exile, in 1182 and 1189, spending most of his time in England. When he returned to Germany shortly after the second exile, Henry took part in a rebellion of German nobles against Frederick's successor, Emperor Henry VI. He made peace with the emperor, however, at Fulda in 1190. Henry was a capable ruler, one of his greatest accomplishments being the colonization of previously Slavic territories east of the Elbe River. He died at Brunswick, August 6, 1195.
N.n.
1547 - 1578
Don
John Of
Austria
31
31
Don John of Austria, b. Feb. 24, 1547, d. Oct. 1, 1578, was the illegitimate son of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and the half brother of King Philip II of Spain. After fighting against the Moriscos in Granada (1569), he commanded the naval force of Spain, Venice, and the papacy that crushed the Turkish fleet in the Battle of Lepanto on Oct. 7, 1571. Appointed Spanish governor of the Low Countries in 1576, Don John could not subdue the Dutch Revolt either by concessions or by war. He was succeeded on his death by Alessandio Farnese.
~1200 - 1231
Guilaume
II De
Dampierre
31
31
1225 - 1305
Guy
De
Dampierre
80
80
~1247 - 1298
Isabelle
Of
Luxembourg
51
51
Mary
Of
Coucy
1601 - 1666
Anne
Of
Austria
65
65
Anne of Austria (1601-1666), queen of France. She was born in Madrid, the daughter of Philip III, king of Spain, and Margaret of Austria, both descendants of the Habsburg family. In 1615 she married Louis XIII of France. The marriage was unhappy, and from 1620 until the death of Louis in 1643, the couple lived in virtual separation. The king's chief minister, Cardinal Richelieu, doubted Anne's loyalty to France because of her Spanish origin. He accused her of complicity in several treasonable conspiracies against Louis, but her guilt was never proved. After Louis died, Anne assumed the regency for her five-year-old son, King Louis XIV, but entrusted the government to the prime minister, Jules Mazarin. Together, they upheld the authority of the Crown during the civil wars of the Fronde from 1648 to 1653. In 1661, when Louis XIV assumed power, Anne retired to a convent. Queen Anne is the central figure of Alexandre Dumas's Three Musketeers (1844; translated 1846).
1638 - 1715
Louis
Xiv
76
76
Louis XIV (1638-1715), king of France (1643-1715), known as the Sun King, who imposed absolute rule on France and fought a series of wars trying to dominate Europe. His reign, the longest in European history, was marked by a great flowering of French culture. Louis was born on September 5, 1638, at Saint Germain-en-Laye. His parents, King Louis XIII and Anne of Austria, grateful for an heir after 20 barren years of marriage, christened him Louis Dieudonné (literally, the "gift of God"). Early Reign In 1643 Louis XIII died. Anne of Austria, aided by her minister, Cardinal Mazarin, ruled France as regent. His father's death spared Louis XIV the beatings and abuse usually given French princes; kindly but mediocre tutors gave him a feeble education. His mother formed his rules of conscience, teaching him a simple kind of Roman Catholicism laced with superstition. Mazarin instructed him in court ceremony, war, and the craft of kingship. The Fronde-two rebellions against the Crown between 1648 and 1653-impressed upon Louis the need to bring order, stability, and reform to France and also fostered in him a deep suspicion of the nobility. In accordance with the Franco-Spanish Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659), Louis married his Spanish cousin, Marie-Thérèse, in 1660. When Mazarin died the following year, Louis shocked France by refusing to name a first minister; he decided to rule alone and select Jean Baptiste Colbert as his financial adviser. Colbert encouraged domestic industry and foreign exports and rebuilt the French navy. Despite his rakish youth, Louis XIV proved a hardworking king. Every Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday he presided at a council meeting in which he and a select group of ministers formulated policies that affected the lives of his 20 million subjects. Louis developed two effective new instruments of power: a corps of professional diplomats and a standing, uniformed army. After 1682 the king spent most of his time at Versailles, near Paris, where he had built a magnificent palace that became the showplace of Europe. Foreign Wars In foreign affairs, Louis's consistent aim was to glorify France, to gird its defenses on the northern and eastern frontiers, and to prevent any resurgence of the power of the Habsburg dynasty, which had formerly threatened France on two sides by its control over Spain and Germany. In four wars he displayed before all of Europe his prowess as a military leader. In 1667, claiming his wife's right of inheritance (jus devolutionis), Louis invaded the Spanish Netherlands. His quick victories prompted England, Holland, and Sweden to check France and force the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle (1668). Louis gained 12 fortresses in Flanders and soon isolated the Dutch by buying English and Swedish neutrality. In 1672 he hurled an army against Holland. For six years the Dutch, aided by Spain and Austria, staved off French attacks. The treaties signed at Nijmegen (1678) did not dismantle Holland but gave Louis the Franche-Comté region and more forts in Flanders. While his armies were battling Dutch Protestants, Louis had been denying religious liberty to the Protestants (Huguenots) of France and tightening control over his Roman Catholic clergy. In 1685, determined to force conversion of the Huguenots, he revoked their charter of liberties, the Edict of Nantes, forcing more than 200,000 into exile and igniting the Camisards' revolt. Although applauded by his Roman Catholic subjects, the revocation stiffened resistance to Louis in Protestant Europe. Overconfident and ill-advised, he sent an army into the Rhineland in 1688 to claim the Palatinate for his sister-in-law Elizabeth Charlotte of Bavaria. This War of the League of Augsburg (1688-97) revealed serious deficiencies in Louis's army. Despite the devastation of the Rhineland, the Peace of Ryswick (1697) did not improve French defenses or add to the glory of the monarchy. Louis's last military venture, the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-13), stemmed from his acceptance of the Spanish throne on behalf of his grandson, Philip. Louis's armies, opposed by an alliance of the European powers, lost most of the major battles, but won control of Spain. The Treaty of Utrecht (1713), which awarded several French territories in North America to the British, also recognized Philip as king of Spain. Louis ruled a war-weary France until his health broke in 1715. Suffering from fever and gangrene, he mustered enough strength to say, "I depart, France remains," before dying on September 1, 1715, at Versailles. Achievements Parallel to Louis's quest for glory in war was his patronage of glory in the arts. Molière and Jean Baptiste Racine wrote plays performed at his court. Paintings by French masters ornamented his palaces, where the music of Jean Baptiste Lully charmed his guests. Louis founded the academies of Painting and Sculpture (1655), Science (1666), and Architecture (1671), and in 1680 he established the Comédie Française. His grand palace at Versailles afforded the ideal setting for his lavish court. After Queen Marie-Thérèse's death in 1683, Louis secretly married a pious and previously obscure woman, Françoise d'Aubigné, known as Madame de Maintenon; she urged him to suppress spectacles and sin. Louis's interest in improving Paris, however, never waned. He razed the city's medieval walls, built the Invalides as a home for disabled veterans, planned the great avenue of the Champs-Élysées, and refurbished the Cathedral of Notre Dame. Louis XIV was never able to resolve the tensions between a governing elite committed to efficiency and a society organized by rank, birth, and privilege, which explains many of the failures of his reign. His personal example of long, dedicated rule, however, made France the bureaucratic model for 18th-century, absolutist Europe.
1578 - 1621
Philip
III
43
43
Philip III (of Spain and Naples) (1578-1621), king of Spain, Naples, and Sicily (1598-1621), and, as Philip II, king of Portugal (1598-1621), the son of Philip II, king of Spain, born in Madrid. In contrast to his father, Philip pursued a policy of peace in western Europe, concluding a treaty with England in 1604 and with the Dutch republic in 1609. After 1618, however, he backed Austria in the Thirty Years' War. He entrusted the government to his prime minister, Francisco Gómez de Sandoval y Rojas, duque de Lerma, and later to Lerma's son, Cristobal, duque de Uceda. In 1609 he expelled from Spain the last of the Moriscos (Christian converts from Islam).
1584 - 1611
Margaret
Of
Austria
27
27
Thomas
Boleyn
1807 - 1890
Sidney
Smith
Slocum
83
83
SLOCUM, Sidney, was born in Cambridge, N.Y., in 1807, and came with his father, Samuel, to this town in 1809, and located northwest of Russia Corners. He was married in 1836 to Mary A., daughter of Jesse PAYNE. They have eight children. When a young man he worked for W. BURRELL, of Salisbury, for several years. Since 1837 he has followed farming, and also dealt in horses and cattle. [ref #2, pg 278] 2) "1879 History of Herkimer County", published by Beers Slocum, Charles Elihu, A short history of the Slocums, Slocumbs and Slocombs of America, genealogical and biographical, embracing eleven generations of the first-named family from 1637 to 1881 : with their alliances and the descendants in the female lines so far as ascertained ... Syracuse, N.Y.: Slocum, 1882, 659 pgs.
1813 - 1895
Mary
Ann
Payne
82
82
Buried: Swezey-Bromley Cemetery
1832
Ruth
Tyrphena
Slocum
1834
Lot
Dean
Slocum
Resided in San Francisco, CA
1838
Sarah
Jane
Slocum
1840
Julia
Elizabeth
Slocum
1843 - 1866
Elon
Morell
Slocum
23
23
Buried: Swezey-Bromley Cemetery.
1845
Volney
Morrison
Slocum
1847
Sidney
Payne
Slocum
1449 - 1492
Lorenzo 'the
Magnificent'
De'medici
43
43
1851
John
Henry
Slocum
1853 - 1859
Emily
Elida
Slocum
5
5
Buried: Swezey-Bromley Cemetery
~0958 - 1025
Basil II
67
67
Basil II (958?-1025), Byzantine emperor (976-1025), the greatest ruler of the Macedonian dynasty. The son of Emperor Romanus II, he reigned jointly with his brother Constantine VIII after the death of the usurper John I Tzimisces in 976, but Constantine never took an active role in government. Basil's greatest achievements were the conquest of Armenia in the east and the destruction of the Bulgarian Empire, which threatened Byzantium on the west. He waged war on the Bulgars for nearly two decades. Defeating (1014) the Bulgarian czar Samuel, he subjected his people to Byzantine rule and was given the surname Bulgaroctonos (Slayer of Bulgars). The Byzantine Empire began to decline after Basil's death.
1728 - 1762
Peter
III
34
34
Peter III (1728-62), emperor of Russia (1762), son of Duke Charles Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp and his wife, Anna, daughter of Peter I of Russia. He was born in Kiel, Germany. In 1741, after the death of his father, he was adopted by his aunt, Empress Elizabeth Petrovna. On his accession in 1762, Russia was at war with Prussia, whose ruler, Frederick II, the Great, Peter so greatly admired that he quickly concluded a peace treaty. He thereby sacrificed all the advantages Russia had gained during the Seven Years' War and antagonized many Russian nobles. The nobles, aided by Catherine, Peter's wife, deposed him on July 9, 1762. He abdicated the following day in favor of Catherine and was murdered on July 17.
1729 - 1796
Catherine
'the
Great'
67
67
Catherine the Great (1729-96), empress of Russia (1762-96), the second of that name, who continued the process of Westernization begun by Peter the Great and made Russia a European power. Originally named Sophie Fredericke Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst, Catherine was born in Stettin (now Szczecin, Poland) on May 2, 1729, the daughter of a minor German prince. In 1745, she married Grand Duke Peter of Holstein, heir to the Russian throne. The marriage was an unhappy one, but the intelligent and ambitious Catherine soon managed to build up a circle of supporters in Saint Petersburg. In 1754 she gave birth to a son, the future emperor Paul. Catherine's husband succeeded to the throne as Peter III in 1762. Erratic, unstable, and contemptuous of his Russian subjects, he soon alienated several important groups in Russian society. On July 9, 1762, following a pattern well established in 18th-century Russia, the Imperial Guards overthrew him and placed Catherine on the throne in his stead. Catherine and the Enlightenment Catherine was well acquainted with the literature of the French Enlightenment, which was an important influence on her own political thinking. She corresponded extensively with Voltaire and Denis Diderot, gave financial support to them and a number of other French writers, and played host to Diderot at her court in 1773. Although this activity was partly aimed at creating a favorable image in Western Europe, she was probably sincere in her interest and her hope to apply some of the ideas of the Enlightenment to rationalize and reform the administration of the Russian Empire. Despite her interest in legal reform, however, the commission she appointed for that purpose in 1767 failed to accomplish its goals. Among Catherine's more benevolent achievements were the foundation of the first Russian schools for girls and of a medical college to provide health care for her subjects. In the early years of her reign, Catherine sought to win the support of the Russian gentry, and, in particular, of a small group of nobles. She confirmed Peter III's emancipation of the gentry from compulsory military service, granted them many other privileges, and showered her supporters with titles, offices, state lands, and serfs to work their fields. Thus, despite a professed abhorrence for serfdom, she did much to expand that institution by transferring state-owned serfs to private landowners, extending serfdom to newly acquired territories, and greatly increasing the legal control of the gentry over their serfs. Later Conservatism Peasant unrest culminated in a great revolt (1773-75), led by the cossack Yemelyan Pugachov, that raged over much of the Volga River Basin and the Urals before it was finally crushed by military force. The revolt marked a turn toward a more reactionary internal policy. The cossack army was disbanded, and other cossacks were granted special privileges in an effort to transform them into loyal supporters of the autocracy. In 1775 a major reform of provincial administration was undertaken in an effort to ensure better control of the empire. A major reform of urban administration was also promulgated. The French Revolution increased Catherine's hostility toward liberal ideas. Several outspoken critics of serfdom such as Nikolay I. Novikov and Aleksandr N. Radishchev, were imprisoned, and Catherine seems to have been planning to join a European coalition against France when she died on November 17, 1796, in St. Petersburg. Under Catherine, the territory of the Russian Empire was greatly expanded. As a result of two wars against the Ottoman Empire (1768-74 and 1787-91) and the annexation of the Crimea (1783), Russia gained control of the northern coast of the Black Sea. Russian control over Poland-Lithuania was also greatly extended, culminating in the annexation of large tracts of territory in the three partitions of Poland (1772, 1793, 1795). Character of the Reign One characteristic of Catherine's reign was the important role played by her lovers, or favorites. Ten men occupied this semiofficial position, and at least two, Grigory Orlov and Grigory Potemkin, were important in formulating foreign and domestic policy. Although assessments of Catherine vary, she undoubtedly played a key role in the development of Russia as a modern state.
D. 1739
Charles
Frederick
1708 - 1728
Anna
Petrovna
20
20
1672 - 1725
Peter
'the
Great'
52
52
Peter the Great or Peter I (1672-1725), czar of Russia (1682-1725), whose military campaigns and modernization efforts transformed Russia into an empire to be reckoned with in European affairs. Peter was born in Moscow on June 9, 1672, the son of Czar Alexis I Mikhailovich. In early childhood he was taught by private tutors; later, with the aid of palace masters and various foreigners living in Moscow, he taught himself technical and mechanical arts, especially in relation to military and naval science. From 1682 to 1689, under the regency of his half sister Sophia Alekseyevna, Peter shared the throne with his older half brother Ivan V, but in 1689 Peter's partisans at court overthrew Sophia and installed him as sole authority (formally, Ivan continued to reign until his death). During Peter's reign Russia emerged as a great European power, in part because of his introduction of many Western European scientific, technological, cultural, and political conceptions and practices. In 1696, after creating a river fleet, the first Russian navy, Peter captured from the Turks the important fortress of Azov, which commanded the Sea of Azov and gave Russia access to the Black Sea. The following year, in an effort to secure allies among the European powers against the Turks and the Swedes and in order to acquaint himself with Western technology, Peter accompanied a diplomatic mission to the principal capitals of Western Europe. During his travels he induced about 900 artisans, craftsmen, technical advisers, and other experts to emigrate to Russia. Later he sent many young Russians abroad to learn Western crafts and trades. On his return to Moscow in 1698 Peter, determined to gain control of the eastern part of the Baltic Sea, began military preparations for an attack on Sweden. Although the Great Northern War (1700-21) that ensued began inauspiciously for him, with a devastating setback at Narva (1700), he went on to win one of the greatest military victories in Russian history at the Battle of Poltava in 1709. By the terms of the Treaty of Nystadt (1721) that concluded the war, Russia gained control of a considerable area of the Baltic littoral, later called the Baltic Provinces. In 1703, during the war, Peter founded Saint Petersburg as a "window to Europe" and made it his capital. Peter was proclaimed emperor in 1721 and thus established the Russian Empire. He introduced such internal reforms as abolition of the power of the boyars, or aristocrats, and the subordination of those nobles and of the church to the throne; the encouragement of industry, trade, and education; and the reorganization of the administrative apparatus of the state to make it more modern and efficient. During Peter's reign the Russian alphabet was simplified, Arabic numerals were introduced, the first newspaper in the Russian language was published, schools were founded, and an Academy of Sciences was established. Under Peter, Russia became a regimented state. His police-state philosophy was based on the conviction that, just as he spent his life unceasingly in service for the state, so his subjects, whose welfare was his object, should discharge their obligation to the state. Both his reforms and his swift, often cruel, reprisals for infractions of his regulations made indelible impressions upon Russian life. He died in St. Petersburg on February 8, 1725.
~1682 - 1727
Catherine
I
45
45
Catherine I, real name Marta Skavronskaya (1682?-1727), empress of Russia (1725-27). Of peasant origin, she was born in Jakobstadt (now Jekabpils, Latvia) but was orphaned early in life and reared by a pastor in Marienburg (now Malbork, Poland). When the Russians captured Marienburg in 1702, she was taken prisoner by the Russian commander, who sold her to Prince Aleksandr Menshikov, a close adviser of Peter the Great. She soon became Peter's mistress and most influential counselor. Peter, who had divorced his first wife in 1699, married Catherine in 1712. After his son Alexis died, Peter issued an ukaz ("imperial order") declaring his right to name his own successor; he died in 1725 without doing so. Catherine, however, had been crowned empress-consort in 1724, and on Peter's death she was proclaimed his successor; the claims of Alexis's son (later Peter III) were bypassed. Shrewd and courageous, Catherine defended Peter's advisers against his rages, and in her own reign she established, and concentrated power in, the supreme privy council. Two of her eight children by Peter survived, Anna (mother of Peter III) and Elizabeth Petrovna (empress 1741-62).
1629 - 1676
Alexis
I
Mikhailovich
46
46
Alexis I (1629-76), second Russian czar (1645-76) of the house of Romanov, and father of Peter the Great. He succeeded his father Michael. As a result of two campaigns by Alexis against the Poles (1654-56 and 1660-67), Russia gained Smolensk, Kyyiv, and the lands east of the Dnepr River. The war with Sweden (1656-58) was not as successful; Alexis was forced to withdraw from the lands he had taken. The reign of Czar Alexis was also marked by internal revolt, a schism in the Russian Orthodox church, and the formulation of a legal code that extended the serfdom of the Russian peasants.
1597 - 1645
Michael
Romanov
48
48
Michael (Mikhail Fyodorovich Romanov), b. 1596, d. July 23, (N.S.), 1645, tsar of Russia (1613-45), founded the Romanov dynasty. To end the chaos of the period known as the Time of Troubles, the zemsky sobor (assembly of the land) offered the throne to Michael, a grandnephew of Tsar Ivan IV. Michael was dominated first by his mother, Ksenia Ivanovna Shestova, and her relatives and later by his father, Fyodor Nikitich Romanov, who was released from Polish captivity in 1619 and served as patriarch of the Russian Orthodox church and coruler until he died in 1633. Under Michael's rule domestic disorder was checked, and peace was established with Sweden (1617) and Poland (1618, 1634). He was succeeded by his son Alexis.
~1177 - 1249
Wizlaw
I
72
72
~1183 - 1237
Margarethe
Of
Rugen
54
54
~1200 - 1266
Swatopolk
I
66
66
~1201 - 1235
Eufrozyna
Of
Pomerania
34
34
~1160 - 1220
Mestwin
I
60
60
~1166 - 1240
Zwinislawa
Of
Poland
74
74
1131 - 1182
Valdemar
I 'the
Great'
51
51
~1141 - 1198
Sofiya
Vladimirovna
57
57
1126 - 1184
Otto I
57
57
~1132 - ~1170
Judyta
Of
Poland
38
38
~1160 - 1210
Konrad
Of
Lusatia
50
50
~1153 - 1209
Elzbieta
Of
Poland
56
56
~1130 - 1178
Sobieslav
I
48
48
~1136
N.n.
~1126 - 1202
Mieszko
III 'the
Old'
76
76
~1131
Evdokiya
Izyaslavna
1096 - 1131
Knut
Of
Denmark
35
35
~1099
Ingeborga
Of
Kiev
~1123 - >1141
Vladimir
Dmitrij
Vsevolodich
18
18
1116 - 1155
Ryksa
Of
Poland
39
39
1085
Albrecht
I
1100
Sofie
Of
Brandenburg
~1128 - 1155
Erzsebet
Of
Hungary
27
27
1096 - 1154
Izyaslav
II
58
58
~1107 - 1151
Daughter
Of
Conrad
44
44
~1019 - 1103
Erik I
'the
Evergood'
84
84
~1068 - 1103
Bothild
Of
Denmark
35
35
~1102 - 1136
Vsevolod
Gavriil
34
34
~1103
Svyatoslavna
Of
Chernigov
1093 - 1152
Conrad
III
59
59
Conrad III (1093-1152), king of Germany (1138-52), founder of the Hohenstaufen dynasty of Holy Roman emperors, a younger son of Frederick I, duke of Swabia, who was count of Hohenstaufen. Conrad's uncle, Holy Roman Emperor Henry V, appointed him duke of Franconia in 1115 and a regent of Germany in 1116. Upon Henry's death in 1125 Conrad joined his brother Frederick II, duke of Swabia, in unsuccessfully disputing the imperial election of Lothair II, duke of Saxony, who was also elected king of Germany. Conrad was elected king (or so-called antiking) of Germany in 1127. A war between the rivals ensued. Conrad went to Milan, where he was crowned king of Italy in 1128. The pope crowned Lothair as Holy Roman emperor in 1133 and two years later Conrad acknowledged Lothair as emperor. After Lothair's death in 1137 Conrad was again elected king of the Germans. Although the pope no longer rejected him, events in the empire prevented Conrad from receiving a formal coronation as Holy Roman emperor. Conrad's chief enemy was Lothair's son-in-law, Henry the Proud, duke of Bavaria and Saxony, who refused to submit to Conrad's authority. The centuries-long war between the Welf family, to which Henry belonged, and the Hohenstaufen family, also known as the Waiblingen, originated during Conrad's reign. Conrad's struggle with the Welfs and his other unsuccessful efforts to consolidate the empire were interrupted by the calling of the Second Crusade (1147-49), in which he took a leading part. He was succeeded by his nephew, Duke Frederick of Swabia, who became emperor as Frederick I (Frederick Barbarossa).
~1085
Gertrud
Of
Komburg
~0988 - 1076
Svend
II
'estridsen'
88
88
~0994
N.n.
~1032
Thorgaut
(Thaugot)
'fagrskinna'
~1036
Thorugnn
Vognsson
~1080 - 1142
Svyatoslavich
Davidovich
'the Holy'
62
62
~1073 - >1136
Anna
Svyatopolkovna
63
63
~1055 - 1123
David
Svyatoslavich
68
68
~1060
Feodosiya
Of
Chernigov
1027 - 1076
Svyatopolk
I (II)
49
49
~1031
Killikiya
Of
Dithmarschen
~1099 - 1144
Salome
Of
Schelklingen
45
45
~1073
Heinrich
Of
Berg
~1077
Adelaide
Of
Monchenthal
1206 - 1226
Agnes
Of
Austria
20
20
~1179 - 1246
Theodora
Angelina
67
67
~1179 - 1230
Leopold
Vi 'the
Gloriuos'
51
51
~1158 - 1199
Ilona
Of
Hungary
41
41
~1108 - 1184
Theodora
Comnenus
76
76
~1157 - 1194
Leopold
V
37
37
~1108 - 1142
Andronikos
Comnenus
34
34
~1109 - 1150
Irini
41
41
~1094 - 1136
Wartislav
I
42
42
~1105
Helia
Of
Pomerania
~1130 - 1187
Bogislav
I
57
57
~1161 - >1240
Anastazja
Of
Poland
79
79
~1125
Adelheid
Of
Sultzbach
~1168 - 1238
Henryk
I 'the
Bearded'
70
70
~1167 - 1243
Hedwig 'the
Saint' Of
Andechs
76
76
~1155 - 1230
Premysl
Otakar
I
75
75
1180 - 1240
Konstancia
Of
Hungary
60
60
~1117 - 1174
Vladislav
II
57
57
~1131 - 1174
Jutte
Of
Thuringia
43
43
~1147 - 1195
Sofie
Of
Sommerschenburg
48
48
~1147
Hermann
I
1205 - 1253
Vaclav
I
48
48
Wenceslas I, b. 1205, d. Sept. 22, 1253, king of Bohemia (1230-53), succeeded his father, Ottokar I, founder of the Bohemian kingdom. He added Austria to the possessions of the Premysl dynasty by compelling the Austrians to recognize his son Ottokar II as duke. The influx of German colonists into Bohemia continued under Wenceslas and brought prosperity, although Moravia was attacked by the Mongols in the 1240s and the Bohemian nobles rebelled from 1248 to 1250. Ottokar II succeeded Wenceslas.
~1200 - 1248
Kunigunde
Of
Swabia
48
48
Frances
Aylesbury
1874 - 1965
Winston Leonard
Spencer
Churchill
90
90
Winston Churchill, born 30 Nov 1874 at Blenheim Palace, where his parents were guests of his Uncle, was the eldest son of Lord Randolph Churchill and the American heiress Jennie Jerome (1854-1921). He graduated from the Royal Military College at Sandhurst into the 11th Hussars, but having served in India and the Sudan, he resigned his cavalry commission in 1899 to become a correspondent during the Boer War. A daring escape after he had been captured made him a national hero, and in 1900 he was elected to Parliament as a Conservative. Despite his aristocratic background, he switched in 1904 to the Liberal party. In 1908, he became President of the Board of Trade in Herbert Henry Asquith's Liberal cabinet. Then, and later as Home Secretary (1910-11), he worked for special reform in tandem with David Lloyd George. As First Lord of the Admiralty (1911-15), Churchill was a vigorous modernizer of the Royal Navy. He married an American heiress, had one son (Randolph Churchill MP) and three three daughters. Churchill's role in World War I was controversial and almost destroyed his career. Naval problems and his support of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign forced his resignation from the Admiralty. Following service as a battalion commander in the Royal Highland Fusiliers in France, he joined Lloyd George's coalition Cabinet, and from 1917 to 1922 he filled several important positions, including Minister of Munitions and Secretary for War. The collapse of Lloyd George and the Liberal party in 1922, left Churchill out of Parliament between 1922 and 1924. Returning in 1924, he became Chancellor of the Exchequer in Stanley Baldwin's Conservative government (1924-29). As such he displayed his new conservatism by returning Britain to the gold standard and vigorously condemning the trade unions during the General Strike of 1926. During the depression years (1929-39) Churchill was denied cabinet office. Baldwin and later Neville Chamberlain, who dominated the National Government from 1931 to 1940, disliked his opposition to self-government for India and his support of Edward VIII during the abdication crisis of 1936. His insistence on the need for rearmament and his censure of Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler at Munich in 1938 also aroused suspicion. When Britain declared war on Germany in September 1939, however, Churchill's views were finally appreciated, and public opinion demanded his return to the Admiralty. The signal went out to the the Fleet - "Winston's back". Churchill succeeded Chamberlain as Prime Minister on 10 May 1940. During the dark days of World War II that followed the ecacuation of the BEF from Dunkirk, the fall of France, and the blitz, Churchill's pugnacity and rousing speeches rallied the British to continue the fight. He urged his compatriots to conduct themselves so that, "if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, æThis was their finest hour.'" By successful collaboration with President Franklin D. Roosevelt he was able to secure military aid and moral support from the United States. After the Soviet Union and the USA entered the war in 1941, Churchill established close ties with leaders of what he called the "Grand Alliance". Traveling ceaselessly throughout the war, he did much to coordinate military strategy and to ensure Hitler's defeat. His conferences with Roosevelt and Stalin, most notably at Yalta in 1945, also shaped the map of postwar Europe. By 1945 he was admired throughout the world, his reputation disguising the fact that Britain's military role had become secondary. Unappreciative of the popular demands for postwar social change, however, Churchill was defeated by the Labour Party in the election of 1945. Churchill criticized the Welfare State reforms of Labour under his wartime deputy and successor as Prime Minister, Clement Attlee. He also warned in his "Iron Curtain" speech in Fulton, Missouri, in 1946, of the dangers of Soviet expansion. He was Prime Minister again from 1951 to 1955, but this time age and poor health prevented him from providing dynamic leadership. Resigning in 1955, Churchill devoted his last years to painting and writing. He died on 24 Jan 1965, at the age of 90. Following a state funeral, he was buried at Bladon near Blenheim Palace. Churchill was also an able historian. His most famous works are "The World Crisis" (4 vols, 1923-29), "My Early Life" (1930), "Marlborough" (4 vols, 1933-38), "The Second World War" (6 vols, 1948-53), and "A History of the English-Speaking Peoples" (4 vols, 1956-58). He received the Nobel Prize for literature and a knighthood in 1953. Churchill's death in 1965, like that of Queen Victoria in 1901, marked the end of an era in British history. Born into a Victorian aristocratic family, he witnessed and participated in Britain's transformation from empire to welfare state, and its decline as a world power. His true importance, however, rests on the fact that by sheer stubborn courage he led the British people, and with them, the democratic Western world, from the brink of defeat to a final victory in the greatest conflict the world has ever seen. {Burke's Peerage and Chamber's Biographical Dictionary}
1849 - 1895
Randolph
Churchill
45
45
Churchill, Randolph Henry Spencer, usually called Lord Randolph Churchill (1849-95), British statesman, born at Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire, England, and educated at Eton College and the University of Oxford. Churchill entered the House of Commons as a Conservative in 1874 and was a passive member until 1880, when the Conservative defeat roused him to action as leader of the so-called Fourth party, a small band of independents of the Conservative and Tory parties. They advocated a progressive program for the Conservative party known as "Tory democracy." Churchill distinguished himself as a ready unconventional debater, attracting particular attention by his criticism of the foreign and domestic policy of Prime Minister William E. Gladstone. When the Conservatives returned to power in 1885, Churchill became secretary of state for India. His period of office was marked by the annexation of Burma. For six months in 1886 he was leader of the House of Commons and chancellor of the Exchequer, but he resigned because he opposed increased military expenditures. Thereafter he was inactive in public life. In 1874 Churchill married the American heiress Jennie Jerome. Their son, Sir Winston Churchill, was British prime minister during and after World War II.
D. 1921
Jennie
Jerome
Daughter of Leonard Jerome of New York.
1822 - 1883
John Winston
Spencer-
Churchill
61
61
Lord Lieutenat for Oxfordshire, MP for Woodstock 1840 - 1845 and 1847 - 1857 when he succeeded to his Dukedom. Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 1876 - 1880. Knight of the Garter and Privy Councillor. Succeeded by his eldest son. He had four other sons (including Lord Randolph CHURCHILL) and six daughters. {Burke's Peerage}
D. 1899
Frances
Anne Emily
Vane
Daughter of 3rd Marquess of Londonderry, K.G. Frances was appointed to the order of Victoria and Albert for services to the Royal household. {Burke's Peerage}
1793 - 1857
George
Spencer-
Churchill
63
63
Lord Lieutenant for Oxfordshire and High Steward of Oxford and Woodstock. He died leaving as issue his eldest son and successor, two other sons and a daughter by his first marriage, a surviving daughter of his 2nd marriage and a son by his 3rd marriage. {Burke's Peerage}
D. 1844
Jane
Stewart
Daughter of 8th Earl of Galloway and cousin to her husband. {Burke's Peerage}
1766 - 1840
George
Spencer
73
73
5th Duke of Marlborough who obtained a Royal Licence to assume and bear the additional surname and arms of his illustrious predecessor, John CHURCHILL, 1st Duke of Marlborough. He died leaving his eldest son as successor and two other sons as issue. {Burke's Peerage}
D. 1841
Susan
Stewart
Daughter of 7th Earl of Galloway. {Burke's Peerage}
1739 - 1817
George
Spencer
78
78
4th Duke of Marlborough appointed Knight of the Garter. Died leaving his eldest son as successor and another son and five daughters as issue. {Burke's Peerage}
D. 1811
Caroline
Russell
Only daughter of 4th Duke of Bedford. {Burke's Peerage}
1706 - 1758
Charles
Spencer
51
51
Succeeded as 3rd Duke of Marlborough 24 Oct 1733. Installed as Knight of the Garter 21 Apr 1741. A Brigadier General who commanded a Brigade at Dettingen in 1743. He was appointed CinC of British forces serving in Germany in 1758 when he died of a fever. He was succeded by his eldest son; leaving as issue two other sons and two daughters. {Burke's Peerage}
D. 1761
Elizabeth
Trevor
Daughter of Thomas, Lord Trevor. {Burke's Peerage}
1882 - 1951
Frederick
William Victor
Hohenzollern
69
69
1859 - 1941
William
II
82
82
William II (of Germany and Prussia), full name Friedrich Wilhelm Viktor Albert (1859-1941), emperor of Germany and king of Prussia (1888-1918), whose policies helped bring about World War I (1914-1918). William, also known as Kaiser Wilhelm, was born in Berlin and educated at the University of Bonn. He was the son of Prince Frederick William, later German emperor as Frederick III, and Victoria Adelaide Mary Louise, eldest daughter of Queen Victoria of Great Britain. In 1881, after a period of military service, he was married to Augusta Victoria, princess of Schleswig-Holstein. He became emperor in 1888 upon the death of his father, who had reigned for only three months. William II's first major action as emperor was his dismissal in 1890 of the aged chancellor Prince Otto von Bismarck, who had been largely responsible for the growth of the German Empire under the emperor's grandfather, William I. Thereafter William II participated significantly, often decisively, in the formulation of foreign and domestic policies. His administration of internal affairs was marked by the rapid transformation of Germany from an agricultural to a major industrial state and by the accompanying development of serious problems in capital-labor relations. William was only partially successful in his attempts to curb the growth of Germany's Social Democratic party, which ultimately became the largest political group in the empire. The emperor believed that he ruled by divine right. Foreign affairs interested him, but his policies were contradictory and confused. He professed deep friendship for Great Britain but drove that country into an alliance with France and Russia by his aggressive program of colonial, commercial, and naval expansion. Similarly, his policy of friendship with Russia and support of Russian ambitions in East Asia was negated by his encouragement of Austro-Hungarian actions in the Balkans. He believed firmly in the efficacy of the Triple Alliance of Germany with Austria-Hungary and Italy as a deterrent to war. Imperial policy under his impulsive guidance severely aggravated the international frictions that culminated in World War I. During the war William's position became increasingly that of a figurehead. Realizing his own incapacity as a military leader, he left the responsibility for military decisions increasingly to the German generals Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff. He ignored the 1917 peace resolutions submitted by the Reichstag and urged continuation of the war. After the German offensive of 1918 failed, unrest mounted among the German armies and people, and William left his country and went to the Netherlands. He was forced to abdicate his throne on November 9, 1918. During the peace negotiations at Versailles, various representatives of the victorious Allies urged vainly that William be extradited and tried as a war criminal. He spent his remaining years in complete seclusion at Doorn Castle in the Netherlands. After the death of the former empress in 1921, William married Hermine, princess of Schönaich-Carolath. He lived to see the resurgence of German armed power; and after his death he was buried with military honors by order of Adolf Hitler.
1858 - 1921
Augusta
Victoria
62
62
Augusta Frederica Louisa Feodora Jenny eldest daughter of Frederick, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenborg. {Chamber's Biographical Dictionary
1831 - 1888
Frederick
III
56
56
Frederick III (of Prussia) (1831-1888), king of Prussia and emperor of Germany from March 9 to June 15, 1888, and the son of Emperor William I. Frederick was born in Potsdam, Germany. When his father succeeded to the throne of Prussia in 1861, Frederick became Frederick William, crown prince of Prussia. Liberal in his political views, Frederick opposed the conservative policies of the German chancellor, Prince Otto von Bismarck. Although Frederick opposed war, he became commander of an army and led Prussian forces to victory over the Austrians at the Battle of Sadová (also known as Sadowa) in 1866, which terminated the Seven Weeks' War. During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 and 1871, Frederick commanded the armies of the southern German states, participating in the Battle of Sedan and the siege of Paris, France. A man of learning and culture, Frederick patronized art and literature and encouraged the work of the royal museums. As Crown Prince Frederick William, he was genially called "Our Fritz" by the German people, most of whom anticipated with pleasure his accession to the throne. Frederick became ill, however, in 1887 and lived only three months after succeeding to the throne on his father's death in 1888. He was in turn succeeded by his son, William II.
1840 - 1901
Victoria
Adelaide
60
60
Christian names also Mary Louisa. Known as Adelaide.
1797 - 1888
William
I
90
90
William I (of Germany and Prussia), full name WILHELM FRIEDRICH LUDWIG (1797-1888), emperor of Germany (1871-88) and king of Prussia (1861-88), who reigned during the unification of Germany under the Prussian crown. William was born on March 22, 1797, in Berlin, the second son of Frederick William III of Prussia and his queen Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. He entered the Prussian army in 1807 and served in the Napoleonic Wars. In 1829 he married Augusta of Saxe-Weimar, by whom he had two children. Upon the accession of his childless brother Frederick William IV in 1840, William became heir presumptive to the Prussian throne. In 1858, after the king was declared insane, William became regent, and three years later he succeeded to the throne. A firm believer in the divine right of kings, he declared at his coronation that he "ruled by favor of God, and of no one else." In 1862 William appointed the Prussian statesman Otto von Bismarck his chief minister. Subsequently they embarked upon a program of unifying the German states under Prussian leadership. Their policies involved Prussia in war with Denmark in 1864 and with Austria in 1866. In 1867, after the defeat of Austria, William became head of the newly established North German Confederation. During the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71) he took personal command at the decisive Battle of Sedan. He was proclaimed German emperor in the palace at Versailles on January 18, 1871, while his troops were laying siege to the city of Paris. During his reign William firmly supported the militarism espoused by Bismarck as well as the latter's antidemocratic and anti-Catholic policies. Two attempts to assassinate the emperor were made in 1878; on the second occasion he was seriously wounded. On his death in Berlin on March 9, 1888, his son Frederick William succeeded him as Frederick III.
1770 - 1840
Frederick
William
69
69
He was the son of Frederick William II, born in Potsdam. He was given military training in his youth and from 1792 to 1794 fought against France during the French Revolution. In 1797 he succeeded to the throne and set about rebuilding the economy and the army, which had suffered during the reign of his father. He kept Prussia neutral in the Napoleonic Wars until 1805, when persuaded by Russia and the aroused spirit of his people, he joined the Grand Alliance against France. Prussia was defeated at Jena and Auerstadt in 1806. By the Treaty of Tilsit in 1807, various Prussian territories were ceded to France. Through the efforts of the administrators the Prussian army was reconstituted between 1807 and 1812 and participated in the victorious campaigns against Napoleon from 1813 until 1815. In this period Frederick William promised the Prussian people a constitution. At the close of the war in 1815, however, he joined the Holy Alliance and participated in the Alliance's repression of liberal movements in Europe. Within Prussia, he accomplished the reorganization of parts of the administrative system and consented to formation of the Zollverein, or customs union.
D. 1810
Louise Augusta
Meckelburg-
Strelitz
Louise Augusta Wilhelmina Amalia, daughter of Charles Louis Frederick, Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. {Burke's Peerage}
1744 - 1797
Frederick
William
53
53
Frederick William II (1744-97), king of Prussia (1786-97), grandson of Frederick William I and nephew of Frederick II, born in Berlin. He succeeded to the throne in 1786 upon the death of his uncle. In 1792 he made an alliance with Leopold II, Holy Roman emperor, to support Louis XVI of France in the French Revolution. As a result of Frederick's participation in the ensuing wars, he was forced in 1795 by the Treaty of Basel to cede to France Prussian territories west of the Rhine River. He secured territory from Poland, however, by participating in the Polish partitions of 1793 and 1795. Influenced during his reign by the Rosicrucian order, of which he was a member, he suppressed the ideas of the Enlightenment, imposing censorship on religion, education, and the press. He lacked interest in military affairs and allowed a supreme college of war to supervise the army, which declined markedly during his reign. Through his own ineptitude and that of the favorites he appointed to administrative positions, the treasury of Prussia was bankrupted and the reputation of the country diminished by the end of his reign.
D. 1805
Frederica Louise
Hesse-
Darmstadt
Daughter of Louis IX, Duke of Hesse-Darmstadt. {Burke's Peerage}
1722 - 1758
Augustus
William
Hohenzollern
35
35
D. 1780
Louis Amelia
Brunswick-
Woelfenbuttel
Daughter of Ferdinand Albert, Duke of Brunswick-Woelfenbuttel.
1688 - 1740
Frederick
William
I
51
51
Frederick William I (1688-1740), king of Prussia (1713-40), who during his reign made his kingdom into a major European state. Frederick William was born on August 15, 1688, in Berlin, the son of King Frederick I. He succeeded his father in 1713 and for the next seven years was involved in a dispute with Sweden over Pomerania, a part of which he finally received by the Treaty of Stockholm in 1720. In return for recognizing (1726) the Pragmatic Sanction, by which Maria Theresa, archduchess of Austria, was given the Austrian Habsburg dominions, he hoped to gain support for his claim to the Lower Rhine duchies of Jülich and Berg, but his expectations were dashed. Frederick William's greatest accomplishment was in the internal development of Prussia. Contemptuous of the luxury of his father's reign, he instituted a system of rigid and efficient economy at court and transferred public financial administration from local governments to the central royal authority. He was thus able to repay the debts incurred by his father and greatly improve the financial condition of Prussia. He built up industry by forbidding the importation of finished goods and the exportation of raw materials, and directed the colonization of nonpopulous areas, especially in East Prussia. He also instituted compulsory elementary education in Prussia. The development of the army was his fondest achievement; he was particularly proud of the Potsdam Guard, composed of exceptionally tall men hired, and sometimes kidnapped, from all parts of Europe. Under his supervision the number of soldiers in the army was increased from about 38,000 to some 83,500 and Prussia became the third ranking military power in Europe. Frederick William died at Potsdam on May 31, 1740, and was succeeded by his son, Frederick II, the Great.
1687 - 1757
Sophia
Dorothea
Hanover
70
70
1657 - 1713
Frederick
I
55
55
Frederick I (of Prussia) (1657-1713), first king of Prussia (1701-13), and as Frederick III, elector of Brandenburg (1688-1701), son of Frederick William, the Great Elector, born in Königsberg, Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). Frederick endeavored to establish a court modeled on that of Louis XIV of France. He wished to secure a royal title for himself, but could not do so as ruler of Brandenburg, as the title king was forbidden to princes of the Holy Roman Empire. Prussia, however, which was part of Frederick's domain, lay outside the empire, and in 1701 Emperor Leopold I recognized Frederick as king of Prussia in return for his military support in the War of the Spanish Succession. Frederick crowned himself at Königsberg, expending vast sums of money on his coronation. Although he depleted the public treasury during his reign, he undertook some projects beneficial to the welfare of Prussia, such as the establishment in 1694 of the University of Halle and the founding in 1707 of the Academy of Sciences, Berlin. He patronized scholars, including the German philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, and encouraged persecuted Protestants from other countries to settle in Prussia.
1668 - 1705
Sophia
Charlotte
Hanover
36
36
1620 - 1688
Frederick
William
68
68
Frederick William (1620-1688), elector of Brandenburg (1640-1688), called the Great Elector, who laid the foundations for a strong Prussia in the 18th century. The son of Elector George William, Frederick William was born in Berlin. He succeeded to the electorate during the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), when Swedish forces were occupying Brandenburg. Concluding an armistice with Sweden, he was able to repair some of the war's damage to the country. He remained neutral until the Peace of Westphalia ended the war in 1648; by that treaty he received eastern Pomerania, along the Baltic Sea, and some smaller territories. Over the next 30 years, by alliances, wars, and systematic strengthening of his army, Frederick William acquired more lands and power for Brandenburg. In 1656, during the war between Sweden and Poland, he switched his allegiance from Poland to Sweden and back to Poland in return for the latter's recognition of his suzerainty over East Prussia, until then a Polish dependency. In the Treaty of Oliva of 1660, France recognized his sovereignty over the Duchy of Prussia. In 1675 he defeated invading Swedish forces at Fehrbellin and conquered western Pomerania, long coveted for its important seaports, but at the insistence of France, Sweden's ally, he relinquished the territory at the Peace of Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1679. Frederick William centralized government administration by removing the taxation of the estates and giving them to the government, and improved almost every area of public affairs, especially industry and commerce. After he revoked the Edict of Nantes in 1685, he admitted large numbers of Huguenots, who used the technological skills they had acquired in France, to develop Prussian industry. He also created the Prussian navy, founded colonies in western Africa, and established the Royal Library in Berlin. When he died, he left a well organized state for his son Frederick I.
Augusta Of
Saxe-
Weimar
1847 - 1928
Dagmar
(Marie) Of
Denmark
81
81
1872 - 1918
Alix
Of
Hesse
46
46
1818 - 1881
Alexander
II
63
63
Alexander II (of Russia) (1818-81), emperor of Russia (1855-81), son of Emperor Nicholas I and nephew of Alexander I. He ascended the throne during the Crimean War and in 1856 signed the Treaty of Paris, which brought the hostilities to an end. After establishing committees to study the need for reform, Alexander II abolished serfdom throughout Russia in 1861. He also abolished corporal punishment, established local self-government, initiated judicial reform, revised the educational system, and developed a system of universal military service. Under his rule the administration of the police was greatly improved, and military operations in Central Asia and in a war with Turkey (1877-78) were highly successful. The Russian possessions in North America, now constituting the state of Alaska, were sold to the United States in 1867. Alexander was assassinated by a bomb thrown into his carriage by a member of a revolutionary group, the Narodnaya Volya (People's Will).
1845 - 1894
Alexander
III
49
49
Alexander III (of Russia) (1845-1894), emperor of Russia (1881-1894), who ended the liberal reforms implemented by his father, Alexander II. In reaction to the assassination of his father, Alexander restored much of the absolutism of the reign of Nicholas I and sternly repressed all revolutionary agitation. He tried to impose the Russian language on all of his subjects, persecuted the Jews, and restricted education. His foreign policy was marked by a close union with France in opposition to the Triple Alliance. Alexander was succeeded by his son, Nicholas II, who was the last of the Russian czars.
1824 - 1880
Marie Of
Hesse-
Darmstadt
56
56
1868 - 1918
Nicholas
II
50
50
Nicholas II (1868-1918), last emperor (czar) of Russia (1894-1917); one of the major European leaders of the pre-World War I era, he was deposed by the Russian Revolution of 1917. The eldest son of Emperor Alexander III, Nicholas was born at Tsarskoye Selo (now Pushkin). Educated privately, he was married in 1894 to Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt, a German princess who took the name Alexandra when she converted to Russian Orthodoxy. In the same year his father died, and he succeeded to the throne. Believing firmly in his duty to preserve absolute power in the Russian monarchy, he opposed any concessions to those favoring more democracy in government, but had little talent for leadership himself. By 1905, the people of Russia had little faith in Nicholas's leadership. The defeat of the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War in 1904 had strained the Russian economy and Russian workers. In January 1905 Saint Petersburg was paralyzed by strikes. When workers and their families marched to Nicholas's home, the Winter Palace, to present their grievances to the czar, soldiers fired into the crowd, giving the day the name "Bloody Sunday." Throughout Russia strikes, demonstrations, violence, and rioting took place. The czar's authority over the country was gone. Nicholas placed Sergei Witte in control of the government. Witte had been the former minister of finance and was largely responsible for the program of industrialization that Russia had followed since the 1890s. He knew that the czar would either have to quell the revolts with total repression or lead the reform movement. Nicholas agreed to reform Russia from an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy with an elected assembly, the Duma. However, Nicholas manipulated the Duma to reduce its effectiveness, still believing that he was responsible only to God. In 1906 Prime Minister Peter Stolypin introduced a land reform that would have allowed the peasants to own the land they farmed. However, the reform was never fully implemented, and the agricultural system in Russia faced many problems, including overpopulation in cities, resistance to change, and lack of technology. Stolypin repressed any signs of discontent with terror and executions. Between the revolutions of 1905 and 1917, the royal family began to rely on the advice of a mystic named Rasputin. Rasputin had gained influence in the royal court because he was able to help Alexis, the heir to the throne, who suffered from hemophilia. Alexandra was so impressed by his abilities, she kept him at court, and he became the most influential person in her entourage. Because Nicholas was devoted to his wife and relied on her advice, he also was influenced by Rasputin. By 1911 Rasputin had appointed many of the high government officials, and most of his appointees were incapable. He was notorious throughout the country for his bizarre and flamboyant lifestyle. The royal family's close connection with Rasputin further alienated the monarchy from the Russian people. An advocate of international cooperation, Nicholas supported the Hague Conferences in 1899 and 1907, which created the Permanent Court of Arbitration and formulated rules for the humane conduct of war, but failed to check Europe's growing arms race. Despite his personally friendly relations with his cousin, William II of Germany, their two countries were on opposite sides when World War I broke out in 1914. Russia was unprepared for the war; there were shortages of ammunition and of officers to command the soldiers, as well as problems transporting food throughout Russia. After 1915, when Nicholas assumed personal command of the army, military failures were blamed on him, further damaging his reputation. In addition, while he was away from the royal court, his wife and Rasputin were in charge of internal affairs, which angered the people. Nicholas was forced to abdicate the throne after the Russian Revolution of March 1917, and Russia became a democratic republic. Nicholas and his family were held captive by the Bolsheviks until July 16, 1918, when they all were executed.
D. 1751
Louisa
1723 - 1766
Frederick
V
42
42
Frederick V (1723-66), king of Denmark and Norway (1746-66), son and successor of Christian VI. Little interested in the affairs of state, he left control of the government largely to his foreign minister, Count Johann Hartwig Ernst von Bernstorff, who served Frederick in that capacity from 1751 until 1770. Frederick was a patron of learning. He founded a military academy in Soro, Denmark, and established schools in Bergen and Trondheim, Norway, for the education of Laplanders. In Copenhagen he established academies of printing and sculpture. During Frederick's reign, trade in Asia and the Americas was stimulated and the national wealth was increased.
1699 - 1746
Christian
Vi
46
46
D. 1775
Caroline
Matilda
1749 - 1808
Christian
Vii
59
59
1768 - 1839
Frederick
Vi
71
71
Frederick VI (1768-1839), king of Denmark (1808-39) and of Norway (1808-14), born in Copenhagen, the son and successor of Christian VII. He was made head of the state council in 1784, when his father became insane, and acted as regent until Christian's death in 1808. Aided by Count Andreas Peter Bernstorff, Frederick instituted such reforms as civil rights for Jews, the abolition of the slave trade, and freedom of the press. In 1800, because of British failure to respect the rights of free ships during the French Revolution, Frederick joined the armed neutrality of the northern European states formed against Great Britain by Russia, Sweden, and Prussia. As a result, all Danish vessels in British ports were seized; in the next year, when Frederick refused to withdraw from the neutrality convention, the Danish fleet was virtually destroyed by the British navy under Lord Horatio Nelson. Although Denmark remained neutral, Frederick continued to stand firm against the British during the Napoleonic Wars, and the British bombarded Copenhagen in 1807. In that year Frederick became an ally of Napoleon. When Napoleon was defeated in 1814, Frederick was compelled to cede Norway to Sweden under the Treaty of Kiel. The war left his country bankrupt, and Frederick devoted several years to the restoration of financial order. Toward the end of his reign he yielded to the demand for constitutional government and consented to the establishment of provincial councils.
1766 - 1828
Charlotte
Hanover
62
62
1754 - 1816
Frederick
I
62
62
Frederick I (of Württemberg) (1754-1816), king of Württemberg (1806-16). As Frederick II he was duke of Württemberg from 1797 to 1805. He fought against France during the early phase of the Napoleonic Wars and lost part of his duchy in 1801. Frederick later supported Napoleon, who by 1805 restored to Frederick the lost territory and increased the size of his dukedom. With Napoleon's permission, Frederick proclaimed himself King Frederick I in 1806. After Napoleon's defeat at the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, Frederick shifted sides again and joined the allied coalition against France.
1781 - 1864
William
I
83
83
William I (of Württemberg) (1781-1864), king of Württemberg (1816-64), son of Frederick William Charles, duke of Württemberg, later King Frederick I, born in Lüben, Silesia (now Lubin, Poland). In 1814-15 William commanded an allied army corps in the last phase of the Napoleonic Wars. After he ascended the throne, he proved to be a progressive ruler, and in 1819 he granted a liberal constitution that abolished serfdom and class privileges and encouraged education and industry. He defended the rights of the small German states against Austrian and Prussian aggression and championed Germanic union. Between 1828 and 1830 William worked for the formation of the German Zollverein, or customs union. After 1848 fear of Prussian power led him gradually into an alliance with Austria.
1577 - 1648
Christian
IV
70
70
Christian IV (1577-1648), king of Denmark and Norway (1588-1648), the son of Frederick II. His first years on the throne were dominated by regents, but after 1596 he ruled in his own right. An independent but not always judicious ruler, he was above all a man of action. He built up the Danish navy, encouraged industry and commerce, established a regular postal service, and founded a series of new towns; as a builder he left a lasting mark on Copenhagen. His foreign ventures were less fortunate. Despite personal bravery, he was an undistinguished military leader, and his war against Sweden from 1611 to 1613 succeeded in halting Swedish expansion into northern Norway mainly because the Swedes were otherwise engaged. His participation in the Thirty Years' War was disastrous, although he managed to win a lenient peace at Lübeck in 1629. Even worse was the second war with Sweden (1643-45) in which Denmark lost forever considerable territories in the Scandinavian Peninsula and the Baltic.
1609 - 1670
Frederick
III
60
60
Frederick III (of Denmark and Norway) (1609-70), king of Denmark and Norway (1648-70), born in Haderslev, Denmark, the second son of King Christian IV. He became king in 1648 after he signed a charter greatly restricting the royal authority. But the power of the nobles was soon undermined by charges of improper self-enrichment against their leaders, many of whom were forced to leave the country. In 1657 Frederick began a war against Sweden to regain provinces lost by his father. He was defeated and in 1658 signed the Treaty of Roskilde, ceding a portion of Norway and some Danish islands to Sweden. Shortly after the conclusion of peace the Swedes reopened the war and besieged Copenhagen. With aid from the German region of Brandenburg, the Danes expelled the Swedes from the Jylland (Jutland) Peninsula. In 1660, however, deserted by his allies, Frederick was obliged to make peace, relinquishing all claims to the territories possessed by Denmark in southern Sweden. In that year both the commons and the clergy agreed to the transformation of the kingship from an elective to an absolute and hereditary monarchy.
1646 - 1699
Christian
V
53
53
1671 - 1730
Frederick
IV
59
59
Frederick IV (1671-1730), king of Denmark and Norway (1699-1730), son of Christian V. In 1700 Frederick allied himself with Russia and Poland in the Great Northern War against Sweden, but he was soon compelled by Charles XII, king of Sweden, to withdraw from the conflict and to promise not to reenter it. After the defeat of Charles at Poltava (now in Ukraine) in 1709, however, Frederick again declared war on Sweden, subsequently taking the German duchy of Schleswig and participating with the Poles in the invasion of the Swedish portion of Pomerania. By treaty in 1720 Frederick agreed to return to Sweden all conquests made in the war, except for Schleswig. Among the accomplishments of his reign was the freeing of the peasants from serfdom in 1702.
1503 - 1565
Ferdinand
I
62
62
Ferdinand I (Holy Roman Empire) (1503-64), Holy Roman emperor (1558-64), king of Bohemia (1526-64), and king of Germany (1531-64). The son of Philip I, king of Castile, and Joanna the Mad, queen of Castile, he was born on March 10, 1503, at Alcalá de Henares, Spain. In 1521, he became governor of the duchy of Württemberg and of the Habsburg hereditary lands, where he sought to check the spread of the Reformation. When his brother-in-law, King Louis II of Hungary, died in 1526, Ferdinand claimed through his wife the thrones of Bohemia and Hungary. He was crowned king by the Bohemians early in 1527. Although crowned almost simultaneously in Hungary, he was rejected there by the nobles, who were led by John I Zápolya and supported by the Turks. A long series of indecisive wars ensued against the Ottoman Turks and the forces of John I and his son, John II. A truce finally concluded in 1562 gave Ferdinand sovereignty over a small part of Hungary, for which he was obliged to pay tribute to the Turks. Meanwhile, in 1531, Ferdinand had been elected king of Germany as a reward for his loyalty to his brother, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. Good relations between the brothers, however, did not continue because Charles reserved the imperial crown for his son Philip, later King Philip II of Spain, instead of for Ferdinand. Friendly feeling was restored in 1555, largely because Ferdinand successfully arranged the Treaty of Passau in 1552 and the peace of Augsburg in 1555. On Charles's abdication in 1556 of the Spanish crown, Philip was made king of Spain, while Ferdinand assumed the duties of emperor; he was not crowned, however, until after Charles's formal abdication as emperor in 1558. Subsequently Ferdinand attempted to effect a reunion of Roman Catholics and Protestants but failed because he insisted that bishops retain their secular authority. He died on July 25, 1564, in Vienna.
1527 - 1576
Maximilian
II
49
49
Maximilian II, b. July 31, 1527, d. Oct. 12, 1576 was Holy Roman emperor (1564-76) and king of Bohemia (1562-76) and Hungary (1563-76). The nephew of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and the eldest son of Ferdinand I, Maximilian was educated in Spain. Before his succession was assured, he and his father had to resolve a Habsburg family dispute over the order of succession. It was finally agreed that Maximilian rather than Charles's son, Philip II of Spain, would succeed Ferdinand as emperor. Maximilian disliked Spain and all it stood for; he leaned toward Lutheranism but agreed to remain a Roman Catholic in order to safeguard his succession. As emperor he advocated compromise and kept a balance between the two confessions. He refused to invest Protestant administrators of bishoprics with the fiefs that the Protestant princes of Germany tried to give them. At the same time, he allowed the nobility of the Austrian duchies and of his kingdoms of Bohemia and Hungary freedom of worship. This toleration was the more necessary as he needed their support against the Turks, who continued to threaten his empire. Maximilian did not extend imperial authority nor was he successful against the Turks but he maintained his crowns and possessions as well as peace in the empire. In 1573 he was offered the throne of Poland, but the proposal collapsed because of some Polish opposition. Maximilian was succeeded by his son Rudolf II.
1552 - 1612
Rudolf
II
59
59
Rudolf II (1552-1612), Holy Roman emperor (1576-1612), king of Hungary (1572-1608), and king of Bohemia (1575-1611), born in Vienna, the son and successor of Emperor Maximilian II. Rudolf's ability to rule was impaired by frequent fits of insanity and by a passionate interest in science, to which he devoted most of his time. He was the patron of the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe and the German astronomer Johannes Kepler. His sanction of religious persecution aroused bitter discontent, and in 1604 an insurrection broke out in Hungary. By 1608 Rudolf's brother Matthias had assumed control of both Hungary and Bohemia, and in 1609 Rudolf was compelled to grant a charter of religious liberties to the Bohemians.
1557 - 1619
Matthias
62
62
Matthias, b. Feb. 24, 1557, d. Mar. 20, 1619, was Holy Roman emperor (1612-19), king of Hungary (1608-18), and king of Bohemia (1611-17). As the third son of Emperor Maximilian II, he for a long time had no dominions to rule; he had great ambition but little political capacity. In 1577, Matthias accepted the invitation of the States-General of the Netherlands to become governor-general, but he became a pawn in Netherlands power politics and resigned in 1581. Between 1605 and 1611 he led the opposition to his elder brother Rudolf II, whom he succeeded on the thrones of Hungary and Bohemia and, later, as emperor. Unable to cope with the Bohemian Protestant rebellion of 1618, which initiated the Thirty Years' War, Matthias was pushed aside as king of Bohemia and Hungary by his cousin Ferdinand, who succeeded him as Emperor Ferdinand II on his death.
Karl
Of
Styria
Marie
Of
Bavaria
1578 - 1637
Ferdinand
II
58
58
Ferdinand II (Holy Roman Empire) (1578-1637), Holy Roman emperor (1619-1637), king of Bohemia (1617-1619), and king of Hungary (1621-1625). He was born in Graz, Austria, the grandson of Emperor Ferdinand I, and was educated by Jesuits, from whom he acquired a deep antipathy toward Protestantism. In 1618, in protest against Ferdinand's efforts to restore Catholicism, Bohemian rebels threw two of Ferdinand's ministers out of a window. This incident, known as the Defenestration of Prague, was the immediate cause of the Thirty Years' War. The Bohemians replaced Ferdinand with Frederick V, elector of the Rhenish Palatinate. Ferdinand, as a Habsburg, became Holy Roman emperor in 1619 and, allied with Bavaria and the Catholic League, defeated the Bohemians at the Battle of White Mountain in 1620. He deposed Frederick and sent him into exile. Ferdinand was waging war simultaneously against a force of Hungarian Protestants led by Gabriel Bethlen. Following his victory Ferdinand negotiated with Bethlen and secured the title of king of Hungary. The imperial forces, commanded by the count of Tilly and Albrecht von Wallenstein, were successful in the war against the Protestant forces in Germany in 1625. By 1627 Ferdinand had outlawed all religions but Roman Catholicism and had banished the Protestant laity and clergy from Bohemia. In 1629 the Edict of Restitution empowered the Roman Catholic church to recover all property seized by Protestants since the Treaty of Passau had imposed a religious settlement on Germany in 1552. The edict, however, alienated some of Ferdinand's allies, and this, together with the assumption of Protestant King Gustav II Adolph of Sweden and the assassination of Wallenstein, weakened the imperial authority. Although his armies won the Battle of Nördlingen in 1634, Ferdinand was unable to carry out his plan to repress Protestantism throughout the empire. The termination of the Thirty Years' War was left to his son Ferdinand III.
1605 - 1665
Philip
IV
60
60
Philip IV (of Spain, Naples, and Sicily) (1605-65), king of Spain, Naples, and Sicily (1621-65), and, as Philip III, king of Portugal (1621-40), the eldest son of Philip III, king of Spain, born in Valladolid. A weak ruler, like his father, he entrusted the administration of affairs to others, initially to his prime minister, Gaspar de Guzmán, conde de Olivares. During Philip's reign the political and economic decline of Spain was accelerated by exhausting wars with Portugal, the Netherlands, and France and by the policy of supporting the Habsburg cause in Germany during the Thirty Years' War. His reign was marked by the loss of Portugal in 1640, by revolt in Catalonia from 1640 to 1653, and by a rebellion in Naples in 1647. By the Peace of Westphalia (1648), Spain was forced to recognize the independence of the United Provinces of the Netherlands, which consisted of the seven northern provinces. In 1659 Spain ceded Roussillon and part of the Spanish Netherlands to France under the terms of the Peace of the Pyrenees. A patron of arts and letters, Philip encouraged the work of the painter Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez, the dramatist Lope de Vega, and the poet Pedro Calderón de la Barca.
Isabella
D. 1683
Marie
Th‚ršsa
1661 - 1711
Louis
De
France
50
50
1683 - 1746
Philip
V
62
62
Philip V (of Spain) (1683-1746), king of Spain (1700-46), during whose reign French ideas prevailed at his court, and French institutions were introduced into Spain. The first of the Spanish Bourbons, he was the grandson of Louis XIV, king of France, and the son of the dauphin Louis de France, born in Versailles, France. Charles II, the last Habsburg king of Spain, dying without issue, bequeathed Spain, the Spanish Netherlands, and his Italian possessions to Philip, then duke of Anjou, in 1700. Philip's accession, by uniting the French and Spanish thrones in the same family, threatened to disturb the balance of power in Europe. This resulted in the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-14), in which France and Spain were matched against an alliance formed by England, the Netherlands, Austria, and several of the German states and subsequently joined by Portugal and Savoy. The Peace of Utrecht secured the throne of Spain to Philip but stripped Spain of Sicily, which passed to Savoy; the Spanish Netherlands, which passed to Sardinia; and Milan and Naples, which passed to Austria. Philip attempted to regain the lands in Italy that he had lost, and war ensued from 1718 to 1720 against the Quadruple Alliance of Great Britain, France, Austria, and the Netherlands. Through this war and also through the War of the Polish Succession (1733-35) and War of the Austrian Succession (1740-48), Philip gained territory for his sons. In January 1724 he abdicated in favor of his eldest son, but after his son's death the following August he resumed the crown. Philip was dominated by his wife, Isabella Farnese, and in the last decades of his life he was mentally incompetent.
1688 - 1714
Maria
Louisa
Of Savoy
26
26
1713 - 1759
Ferdinand
Vi 'the
Learned"
45
45
Ferdinand VI, called The Learned (1713-59), king of Spain (1746-59). He was the son of King Philip V. Although he was the first Ferdinand of the united kingdom of Spain, he numbered himself after Ferdinand V, king of Castile. Ferdinand VI abandoned the old Spanish policy of foreign entanglements and kept Spain neutral during the early part of the Seven Years' War. He also promoted internal welfare by encouraging industry, and he reorganized the navy.
1692 - 1766
Isabella
Farnese
73
73
Farnese, Isabella (1692-1766), queen of Spain (1714-46). A niece of the Italian prince Francesco Farnese, duke of Parma, Isabella married King Philip V of Spain in 1714 and had a major influence on Spanish policy for more than three decades. In collaboration with her uncle and his agent, Giulio Alberoni, she used Spanish power to reduce Austrian influence in Italy and to win Italian territories for her sons. Initially blocked by an alliance among Austria, France, and Great Britain, Isabella eventually succeeded in gaining the kingdom of the Two Sicilies for her son Charles (later Charles III of Spain) and the duchy of Parma for her son Philip.
1716 - 1788
Charles
III
72
72
Charles III (of Spain) (1716-88), king of Spain (1759-88) and, as Charles IV, king of the Two Sicilies (1734-59). He was the son of Philip V, king of Spain. Charles became duke of Parma in 1731. In that capacity he conquered the kingdom of the Two Sicilies, which he ruled as Charles IV. During his rule of Spain, Charles promoted agriculture and commerce, established military academies, strengthened the navy, reformed the fiscal administration, curbed the Inquisition, and expelled the Jesuits. His friendship with France and hostility toward Great Britain led to the alliance in support of the American Revolution.
1748 - 1819
Charles
IV
70
70
Charles IV (of Spain) (1748-1819), king of Spain (1788-1808). He was the son of Charles III. His wife, Princess Maria Louisa of Parma, and ministers, especially Manuel de Godoy, his wife's paramour, profoundly influenced Spanish foreign policy during his reign. Consequently, Spain became involved disastrously in the Wars of the French Revolution (1792-95) and was forced to cede (1800) to France the territory of Louisiana in America. In addition, the Spanish navy was destroyed (1805) at Trafalgar, and the French under Napoleon invaded Spain two years later. In 1808 Napoleon deposed Charles and made Joseph Bonaparte king of Spain. Charles spent the rest of his life in Rome.
Maria
Luisa Of
Parma
Carlos
1784 - 1833
Ferdinand
Vii
48
48
Ferdinand VII (1784-1833), king of Spain (1808 and 1814-1833), whose reign was one of the most disastrous in Spanish history. Born in the Escorial, near Madrid, Ferdinand was the son of Charles IV. He opposed the powerful Spanish minister Manuel de Godoy, who, after the death of Ferdinand's first wife in 1806, tried to force him to marry a daughter of the late Louis XVI of France. When Ferdinand instead proposed to a niece of Napoleon, Godoy persuaded Charles to arrest his son for plotting to overthrow him. Napoleon used the situation as an excuse to invade Spain. When a mob stormed the royal palace, demanding the death of Godoy, the king, wholly dependent on his minister, abdicated in favor of Ferdinand. Napoleon, however, had other plans. Intending the Spanish crown for his brother, Joseph Bonaparte, he invited Ferdinand to France, where he imprisoned Ferdinand and forced him to return the throne to his father. Charles IV then obsequiously presented the Spanish crown to Napoleon. Ferdinand remained a prisoner until 1814, when Napoleon, after the Peninsular War, realized that Spain was lost to him. He then released Ferdinand, who reascended the throne in 1814. Ferdinand's rule was harsh and oppressive. In 1814 he revoked the liberal constitution of 1812 and ruled for the next six years as an absolute monarch. In 1820, after several revolts, a full-scale revolution broke out, instigated by liberal elements and aided by the army. The constitution of 1812 was restored and Ferdinand was imprisoned. In 1823, however, Louis XVIII of France sent a powerful French army to Spain, which restored Ferdinand to the throne. In 1829 Ferdinand married his fourth wife, Maria Christina of Naples. Under her influence he abolished the pragmatic sanction of the Salic Law, which forbade the succession of a woman to the throne. This act gave the throne to Ferdinand's daughter Isabella instead of to his brother, Don Carlos. On Ferdinand's death in Madrid, Isabella II, was proclaimed queen, with her mother, Maria Christina, as regent. Isabella's succession led to years of civil war. During Ferdinand's reign, Spain lost its colonies in North and South America (except for Cuba and Puerto Rico) and suffered great loss of prestige as a European power.
1806 - 1878
Maria
Cristina
72
72
1830 - 1904
Isabella
II
73
73
Isabella II (1830-1904), queen of Spain, (1833-68), the daughter of King Ferdinand VII by his fourth wife, born in Madrid. She was made heir apparent by a decree that set aside the Salic Law forbidding the succession of a woman, and ascended the throne on the death of her father in 1833, her mother Maria Christina being appointed queen regent. An insurrection in favor of her uncle, Don Carlos, raged with great violence until the Carlists were defeated in 1839. In 1846 the queen married her cousin, Don Francisco de Asís. From the time she was declared of age in 1843, Isabella's reign was troubled by intrigues, civil strife, and great political instability. Deposed in the Revolution of 1868, she escaped to France. In 1870 Isabella abdicated in favor of her son, Alfonso, who eventually succeeded to the throne in 1875 as Alfonso XII.
1608 - 1657
Ferdinand
III
48
48
Ferdinand III (Holy Roman Empire) (1608-1657), Holy Roman emperor (1637-1657), king of Hungary (1625-1657), and king of Bohemia (1627-1657). He was born in Graz, Austria, the son of Emperor Ferdinand II. He was educated by Jesuits and was a noted scholar and musician. Two years after being crowned king of Hungary, Ferdinand was made king of Bohemia. He became the nominal commander of the imperial armies fighting the Thirty Years' War after the Austrian general Albrecht von Wallenstein was assassinated in 1634. In that capacity he headed the forces that defeated the Swedes at Nördlingen later in the year. Ferdinand became Holy Roman emperor upon his father's death in 1637. He was willing to end the Thirty Years' War but he did not want to proceed without his ally, Spain. He refused to accept the proposal made by the diet of Regensburg in 1640 for a general amnesty to Protestants. In 1648, however, he signed the Peace of Westphalia, which decreed that the prevailing religion in each part of the empire should be determined by the ruler of that part. This solution was based on the Peace of Augsbury (1555), which helped to resolve religious conflict by recognizing Roman Catholicism and Lutheranism and allowing states to decide which religion could be practiced. The Peace of Westphalia considerably weakened the Holy Roman Empire because it recognized the sovereignty and independence of the individual states. Because Ferdinand was a Roman Catholic, and his religion was permitted by the terms of the peace to dominate in his hereditary dominions, the Protestants there were not accorded religious freedom. In 1656 he dispatched an army to Italy to aid Spain against France and in the following year entered into an alliance with Poland against Sweden.
1640 - 1705
Leopold
I
64
64
Leopold I (Holy Roman Empire) (1640-1705), Holy Roman emperor (1658-1705), king of Bohemia (1656-1705), and king of Hungary (1655-87), who extended the Habsburg possessions, created a standing imperial army, and consolidated the central Austrian administration. He was born in Vienna, the son of Emperor Ferdinand III. His reign was marked by wars, particularly against the Ottoman Turks and France. The first war against the Turks was concluded by a compromise in 1664, but when the Turks besieged Vienna in 1683, they were defeated by John III Sobieski of Poland, leading the combined Polish and imperial forces. Leopold's general, Prince Eugene of Savoy, finally defeated the Turks at Senta in 1697, and the Treaty of Karlowitz (1699) acknowledged Habsburg control over virtually all Hungary. Leopold's wars with France were less successful. The first ended in the Treaty of Nijmegen (1679), which enhanced Louis XIV's power. Leopold later joined the League of Augsburg and the Grand Alliance against France. Peace was ultimately made by the Treaty of Ryswick (1697), but four years later Leopold was again embroiled with France in the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-14). He did not, however, live to see it to a conclusion; he died on May 5, 1705, and was succeeded by his son, Joseph I.
Mariana
Of
Austria
1661 - 1700
Charles
II
38
38
Charles II (of Spain) (1661-1700), king of Spain (1665-1700). He was the son of Philip IV. Spain was controlled by a regency during the decade of his minority and then alternately by French or Austrian factions in his court. During his reign Spain rapidly declined as an international power. Charles willed the throne to Philip of Anjou, the grandson of Louis XIV of France, thus precipitating the War of the Spanish Succession.
1678 - 1711
Joseph
I
32
32
Joseph I (1678-1711), Holy Roman emperor (1705-11). The eldest son of Emperor Leopold I, Joseph was crowned king of Hungary in 1687 and succeeded to the imperial throne and that of Bohemia when his father died. He continued the War of the Spanish Succession, begun by Leopold, against Louis XIV of France, in a fruitless attempt to make his brother Charles (later Charles VI, Holy Roman emperor) king of Spain; in the process, however, owing to the victories won by his military commander, Prince Eugene of Savoy, he did succeed in establishing Austrian hegemony over Italy. Joseph also had to contend with a protracted revolt in Hungary, fomented by Louis XIV. Neither conflict was resolved until after his death.
1685 - 1740
Charles
Vi
55
55
Charles VI (Holy Roman Empire) (1685-1740), Holy Roman emperor (1711-1740) and, as Charles III, king of Hungary (1712-1740), the son of Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I, born in Vienna. When Charles II, king of Spain, died childless in 1700, Leopold proclaimed his son king of Spain in opposition to Duke Philip of Anjou, who had been willed the Spanish throne. Philip became king as Philip V and thus precipitated the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714). Charles had numerous allies and Philip was aided only by France, but after alternate successes and reverses Charles renounced his claim to Spain in the treaties of Rastatt and Baden (1714). In 1711 Charles had succeeded his brother Joseph I as Holy Roman emperor; in 1713 he issued the Pragmatic Sanction to secure the succession of his daughter Maria Theresa in the event that he should die without a male heir. In 1716 the emperor renewed an alliance with Venice and entered into successful warfare against the Turks, with the help of his able general, Prince Eugene of Savoy. By the 1718 Treaty of Passarowitz, Charles gained control of parts of Serbia and Walachia. In 1733, he engaged unsuccessfully in the War of the Polish Succession. Under the Treaty of Vienna, which terminated the war in 1735 (but was not ratified until 1738), Charles ceded the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily to Spain in exchange for the duchies of Parma and Piacenza. During a second war with the Turks from 1737 to 1739, Charles lost most of the territory he had won in 1718. He was succeeded by Maria Theresa, but her right to the throne was contested in the War of the Austrian Succession.
1717 - 1780
Maria
Theresa
63
63
Maria Theresa (1717-80), archduchess of Austria and queen of Hungary and Bohemia (1740-80), who strengthened and unified the Austrian monarchy in the 18th century. Born in Vienna on May 13, 1717, she was the daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI. In 1736 she married Francis Stephen of Lorraine (later Holy Roman Emperor Francis I), and the couple eventually had 16 children, including two future emperors, Joseph II and Leopold II, and Marie Antoinette, later queen of France. Succession and Rule Charles VI's efforts to guarantee Maria Theresa's succession as ruler of the Habsburg dominions led to the War of the Austrian Succession (see Austrian Succession, War of the). The war lost her Austrian Silesia, but she was able to retain her other dominions, and in 1745 she acquired the title of Holy Roman emperor for her husband. In the years after the war Maria Theresa accomplished sweeping internal reforms that strengthened her central administration and revitalized the army. With her state chancellor, Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz, she also drastically reordered Austria's foreign policy, abandoning the traditional alignment with Great Britain in favor of collaboration with France and Russia against Prussia. After trying without success to reconquer Silesia in the Seven Years' War (1756-63), she turned to a more pacific policy. On the advice of Kaunitz and her son Joseph, however, she participated in the first partition of Poland (1772), thereby acquiring Galicia. After Francis's death in 1765 Maria Theresa recognized Joseph as coregent but retained ultimate authority for herself. She largely resisted her son's desires for further internal reforms, although she did abolish serfdom on crown lands. Often pondering abdication, she always demurred because she considered Joseph too rash, particularly in his religious policies. She died on November 29, 1780, in Vienna. Evaluation Pious and faithful but unfriendly toward the Enlightenment, Maria Theresa has often been dismissed as a traditional dynast. Her actions derived from a conviction that she held a trust from God and from a maternalistic conception of her responsibilities. She was, however, intensely pragmatic, conscious of the obligations of power, and a shrewd judge of her ministers.
1708 - 1765
Francis
I
56
56
Francis I (Holy Roman Empire), originally Francis Stephen (1708-65), Holy Roman emperor (1745-65), born in Nancy in the duchy of Lorraine, and educated in Vienna. The son of Leopold, duke of Lorraine (reigned 1697-1729), Francis succeeded his father in 1729, but ceded Lorraine in 1737 to Stanislas I Leszczynski, king of Poland, in exchange for the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Francis married Maria Theresa, archduchess of Austria, in 1736 and with her ruled (1740-45) the Habsburg hereditary dominions. In 1745, through the influence of his wife, he became Holy Roman emperor. Francis took little active part, however, in government, leaving that to Maria Theresa. From the time of their marriage, the Austrian dynasty became known as the house of Habsburg-Lorraine.
1755 - 1793
Marie
Antoinette
37
37
Marie Antoinette (1755-93), queen consort (1774-92) of Louis XVI of France; her unpopularity helped discredit the monarchy in the period before the French Revolution. Born in Vienna on November 2, 1755, Marie Antoinette was one of the daughters of Holy Roman Emperor Francis I and Empress Maria Theresa. Her marriage (1770) to Louis, the heir to the French throne, was intended to cement an alliance between France and her parents' dynasty, the Habsburgs of Austria. She and her husband had a daughter and two sons after he succeeded to the throne in 1774. Disliked by the French as a foreigner, she made herself more unpopular by her devotion to the interests of Austria, the bad reputations of some of her friends, and her extravagance, which was mistakenly blamed for the financial problems of the French government. Especially damaging was her supposed connection with the so-called Diamond Necklace affair (see Diamond Necklace, Affair of the), a scandal involving the fraudulent purchase of some jewels (1785). After the outbreak of the Revolution in 1789, Marie Antoinette sided with the intransigents at court who opposed compromise with the moderate revolutionaries, and began appealing for help to her brother, Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II. Marie and Louis tried to escape from Paris with their surviving son in 1791, but they were captured and brought back prisoners. In 1792 the monarchy was overthrown, and after the execution of the king and separation from her son, she was sent before the revolutionary tribunal the following year. Sentenced to death for treason, she was guillotined in Paris on October 16, 1793.
1741 - 1790
Joseph
II
48
48
Joseph II (1741-90), Holy Roman emperor (1765-90), who tried unsuccessfully to reform and unify the Austrian Habsburg domains. The eldest son of Emperor Francis I and Empress Maria Theresa, Joseph was born in Vienna on March 13, 1741. He became emperor and coruler of the Austrian lands with his mother when Francis died in 1765. During this period he worked with state chancellor W. A. von Kaunitz to expand Habsburg power, acquiring Galicia from Poland (1772) and Bukovina from Turkey (1775). His attempt to annex Lower Bavaria, however, was thwarted by Frederick II (the Great) of Prussia. As sole ruler after Maria Theresa's death in 1780, Joseph embarked on a thorough reform of church and state in accordance with the rational principles of the 18th-century Enlightenment. He granted religious toleration to Protestants, ended discriminatory laws against Jews, and drastically reorganized the predominant Roman Catholic church, closing many monasteries, subjecting the education of priests to state control, and limiting the power of the pope to intervene in Austria. Joseph eliminated most forms of censorship, freed the serfs, separated the executive from the judiciary, and promulgated a new law code. To unify the administration of the various Habsburg realms, he abolished numerous organs of local government and tried to impose the German language on his Hungarian and Slavic subjects. In foreign affairs Joseph maintained close ties with Russia. Joseph's reforms met with resistance in many quarters, and before his death in Vienna on February 20, 1790, he was forced to rescind many of them.
1747 - 1792
Leopold
II
44
44
Leopold II (Holy Roman Empire) (1747-92), Holy Roman emperor (1790-92), son of Emperor Francis I and Maria Theresa and brother of Emperor Joseph II and Queen Marie Antoinette of France. He was born in Vienna. On the death of his father in 1765, he became the grand duke of Tuscany. Imbued with the ideas of the Enlightenment, he reformed the government of the grand duchy, dismantling feudal institutions and rationalizing taxation and finances. In 1790 he succeeded his brother as emperor. During his brief reign, his sister was deposed by the French revolutionists, and he formed (1792) a military alliance with Prussia against France. He was succeeded by his son Francis II.
1768 - 1835
Francis
II
67
67
Francis II (Holy Roman Empire) (1768-1835), last Holy Roman emperor (1792-1806) and, as Francis I, first emperor of Austria (1804-35). Born in Florence, Italy, and educated in Vienna, he succeeded his father Leopold II as Holy Roman emperor. From the start of his reign until 1815 Francis was involved in the wars of the French Revolution and in the Napoleonic Wars. After the extension of French control over western Germany and the reorganization of the German states by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1803, Francis consolidated his power in Austria, Hungary, Bohemia, and northern Italy and proclaimed himself emperor of Austria in 1804. Two years later he formally dissolved the old Holy Roman Empire. As emperor of Austria, Francis gave Prince Klemens von Metternich almost complete control of foreign affairs after 1809 and devoted himself to the internal administration of the empire. The marriage of his daughter Marie Louise to Napoleon in 1810 earned for Francis three peaceful years in which to re-create Austrian strength for participation in the campaign that would bring about (1814-15) Napoleon's downfall. By the decisions of the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Francis recovered most of the territory Austria had lost to Napoleon. The last 20 years of his reign were marked by paternalistic measures, reactionary tendencies, and repression of liberalism.
1822 - 1902
Don
Francisco
De Asis
80
80
1857 - 1885
Alfonso
Xii
27
27
King Alfonso XII, b. Nov. 28, 1857, d. Nov. 25, 1885, is remembered for bringing peace to Spain after years of civil war. Exiled with his mother, Isabella II, in 1868 he returned as king in January 1875. His second wife, Maria Cristina of Austria, bore him two daughters and a son (later Alfonso XIII). Alfonso, a weak monarch, left politics to his premiers, especially Antonio Canovas del Castillo (1828-97). During his reign the constitution of 1876 was enacted, the Carlists were defeated, and the Ten Years' War in Cuba ended (1878) in a truce.
1858 - 1929
Maria
Christina
Of Austria
71
71
1886 - 1941
Alfonso
Xiii
54
54
Alfonso XIII, king of Spain from 1886 to 1931, lost his throne because he became too involved in politics. Born on May 17, 1886, a few months after his father, Alfonso XII, had died, he was proclaimed king at birth, with his mother Maria Cristina of Austria as regent. He grew up amid officers and learned to love the army. In 1906 he married Victoria Eugenia of Battenberg, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of Britain. At age 16 Alfonso began to impose his views on his ministers. Because Spanish political life was unstable and corrupt, his influence was often decisive. During World War I he kept Spain strictly neutral. In 1921 he appointed his friend Gen. Fernandez Silvestre to a high command in Morocco. When Silvestre was defeated at Anual (1922) by Moroccan rebels under Abd-el-Krim, an investigation revealed that the king had encouraged his general to move rashly into the rebels' territory. To hide the scandal, Alfonso supported the 1923 coup d'etat of Gen. Miguel Primo de Rivera and the dictatorship that followed. After Primo de Rivera left Spain in 1930, Alfonso tried to remain king, but his popularity was damaged by his association with the dictator. A republican landslide in municipal elections in 1931 convinced him that he should leave Spain. Alfonso died on Feb. 28, 1941, having abdicated his rights to his third son, Juan, whose son Juan Carlos was restored to the throne in 1975.
1754 - 1793
Louis
Xvi
38
38
Louis XVI (1754-93), king of France (1774-92), who lost his throne in the French Revolution and was later beheaded by the revolutionary regime. Louis was born at Versailles on August 23, 1754, the grandson of Louis XV. The deaths of his two elder brothers and of his father, only son of Louis XV, made the young prince the Dauphin of France in 1765. In 1770 he married Marie Antoinette, youngest daughter of Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria. On Louis's accession, France was impoverished and burdened with debts, and heavy taxation had resulted in widespread misery among the French people. Immediately after he was crowned, aided by such capable statesmen as Finance Minister Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, baron de l'Aulne, Interior Minister Chrétien Guillaume de Lamoignon de Malesherbes, and Foreign Minister Charles Gravier, comte de Vergennes, Louis remitted some of the most oppressive taxes and instituted financial and judicial reforms. Greater reforms were prevented, however, by the opposition of the upper classes and the court. So strong was this opposition that in 1776 Turgot was forced to resign and was replaced by financier Jacques Necker. After Louis granted financial aid (1778-81) to the American colonies revolting against Great Britain in the New World, Necker proposed drastic taxes on the nobility. He was forced to resign in 1781, and statesman Charles Alexandre de Calonne, appointed finance minister in 1783, borrowed money for the court until 1786, when the borrowing limit was reached. The anger of the French people against taxes and the lavish spending of the court resulted in 1788 in the recall of Necker, who, however, could not prevent the bankruptcy of the government. In 1788 Louis was forced to call for a meeting of the representative governmental body called the Estates-General, the first gathering of that assembly in 175 years. Once in session, the Estates-General assumed the powers of government. On July 14, 1789, the Parisian populace razed the Bastille, and a short time later imprisoned the king and royal family in the palace of the Tuileries. In 1791 the royal family attempted to escape to Austria, but they were caught and brought back to Paris. Louis swore obedience to the new French constitution in 1791, but continued secretly to work against the revolution and to plot intrigues with France's enemies. In 1792, when the National Convention, the assembly of elected French deputies, declared France a republic, the king was tried as a traitor and condemned to death. Louis XVI was guillotined on January 21, 1793, in the Place de la Révolution (now Place de la Concorde) in Paris. Historians consider Louis XVI a victim of circumstances rather than a despot similar to the former French kings Louis XIV and Louis XV. He was weak and incapable as king and not overly intelligent. He preferred to spend his time at hobbies, such as hunting and making locks, rather than at his duties of state, and he permitted his wife to influence him unduly.
1785 - 1795
Louis
Xvii
9
9
Louis XVII (1785-95), titular king of France (1793-95). The son and Dauphin (heir) of King Louis XVI, eight-year-old Louis XVII was recognized as king by French Royalists after his father's execution during the French Revolution. According to official reports, he died of tuberculosis while a prisoner of the Republican government in Paris. Many believed that he had escaped, however, and more than 30 people later claimed to be the "Lost Dauphin."
1677 - 1766
Stanislas
I
88
88
Stanislas I Leszczynski (1677-1766), king of Poland (1704-09; 1733-35). A member of an influential old Polish noble family, Stanislas became king in 1704 with the support of Charles XII of Sweden, in opposition to Frederick Augustus of Saxony (Augustus II of Poland, 1670-1733), who was backed by Russia. In 1709, when the armies of Charles XII were defeated by the Russians, Stanislas went into exile. His daughter Maria Leszczynska married Louis XV of France in 1725. This alliance enabled Stanislas to obtain reelection to the Polish throne when Augustus died in 1733. Russia and Austria intervened against him, and despite French aid he was again expelled from Poland in 1735 (see Polish Succession, War of the). Stanislas was given the duchies of Lorraine and Bar, and he maintained a royal court at Lunéville and Nancy until his death. He was celebrated as a patron of learning and literature.
1710 - 1774
Louis
Xv
64
64
Louis XV (1710-74), king of France (1715-74), whose failure to provide strong leadership and badly needed reforms contributed to the crisis that brought on the French Revolution. Louis was born at Versailles on February 15, 1710, the great-grandson of Louis XIV, whom he succeeded at the age of five. Philippe II, duc d'Orléans, governed as regent until Louis reached his legal majority in 1723. In 1725 the king married Maria Leszczynska, daughter of Stanislas I of Poland. The following year he appointed his former tutor, André Hercule de Fleury, as prime minister. Fleury gave France a stable administration until his death 17 years later. Thereafter Louis himself was in nominal control, but he took only a sporadic interest in government and never followed any consistent policy at home or abroad. He was frequently influenced by his mistresses, the most powerful of whom was the marquise de Pompadour. France was involved in three wars during Louis's reign. As a result of the first, the War of the Polish Succession (1733-35), France gained the province of Lorraine. The second, the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-48), which marked the beginning of a colonial struggle with Great Britain, was indecisive. In the last, the Seven Years' War (1756-63), France, crippled by corruption and mismanagement, lost most of its overseas possessions to the British. French foreign policy in this period was made chaotic by Louis's "secret diplomacy," as his agents in other countries sometimes pursued aims that were in conflict with those of his own ministers. The situation improved somewhat in the 1760s, when a new minister, the duc de Choiseul, restored some order to the government and tried to repair the damage done by the Seven Years' War. In the last years of his reign, Louis cooperated with his chancellor, René de Maupeou, in an effort to reform the country's inequitable and inefficient system of taxation. In 1771 the parlements, or sovereign courts, which had opposed reform, were reorganized and stripped of their power to obstruct royal decrees. Measures were then implemented to tax the previously exempt nobility and clergy, but these were reversed after the king's death at Versailles on May 10, 1774. Louis XV's reported prophecy, "After me, the deluge," was fulfilled in the overthrow of the French monarchy less than two decades later.
D. 1765
Louis
Of
France
Only son of Louis XV.
1755 - 1824
Louis
Xviii
68
68
Louis XVIII (1755-1824), king of France (1814-15, 1815-24); he ascended the throne when the monarchy was restored after the overthrow of Napoleon and ruled as a constitutional sovereign. Born in Versailles, he was the brother of Louis XVI of France and in early life was known as the comte de Provence. He remained in Paris after the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 but escaped to Belgium two years later. After Louis XVI's execution in 1793 he proclaimed himself regent, and after the death of his brother's heir, Louis XVII, in 1795, he took the title Louis XVIII. He lived as an exile in various European countries until he became king after Napoleon's first abdication in 1814. On Napoleon's return to power in 1815, however, Louis again fled to Belgium; later the same year he was restored to the throne after Napoleon's final defeat at Waterloo. The Charter, or constitution, that he promulgated in 1814 established a bicameral legislature, property qualifications for voters, and limitations on freedom of the press. Beginning in 1816, Louis, influenced by his liberal minister Élie Decazes, experimented with extending the franchise and easing censorship. After 1820 he was increasingly dominated by the reactionary Ultras, led by his brother, who succeeded to the throne as Charles X on Louis's death.
1757 - 1836
Charles
X
79
79
Charles X (1757-1836), king of France (1824-30). He was the grandson of Louis XV and younger brother of kings Louis XVI and Louis XVIII. Charles was known as Charles Philippe, comte d'Artois, until he became king. During the French Revolution he was one of the leaders of the émigrés. He subsequently lived (1795-1814) in Great Britain. After the accession (1814) of Louis XVIII to the French throne, Charles returned to France, where he headed the ultraroyalist party of reaction. His favoritism during his reign toward the Roman Catholic church and the aristocracy aroused great opposition, leading to the revolution of July 1830. Charles was forced to abdicate and again went into exile in Great Britain. Later he lived on the Continent.
1887 - 1969
Victoria
Eugenia
82
82
Granddaughter of Queen Victoria of England.
1913
Don
Juan Of
Spain
Third son.
Living
I
Living
Greece
Living
Carlos
1868 - 1923
Constantine
I
54
54
Constantine I, b. Aug. 2, 1868, d. Jan. 11, 1923, became king of Greece in March 1913 after the assassination of his father, George I. During World War I he advocated the maintenance of Greece's neutrality and was accused of pro-German sentiments by his political critics, led by Eleutherios Venizelos, who favored Greek entry into the war on the side of Britain and France. In June 1917 these two powers forced Constantine to abandon his throne to his son, Alexander. Venizelos was reinstated as prime minister, and Greece soon entered the war on the Allied side. After the death of Alexander in October 1920 and the unexpected electoral defeat of Venizelos and his Liberal party in November 1920, a plebiscite on December 5 restored Constantine to the throne. Greece's defeat by Turkey in Anatolia forced him to abdicate in September 1922.
1870 - 1932
Sophia
Of
Prussia
61
61
1890 - 1947
George
II
56
56
The eldest son of King Constantine I, George II, b. July 20, 1890, d. Apr. 1, 1947, was king of the Hellenes from 1922 to 1924 and again from 1935 to 1947. He went into exile after the British and French forced his father to abandon the throne in June 1917. Constantine returned in late 1920, and when he was compelled to abdicate after Greece's defeat by Turkey in Asia Minor, George became king on Sept. 27, 1922. In the aftermath of an abortive military revolt (October 1923) involving proroyalist officers, republicans in military and civilian circles pressed George into leaving Greece. In the early spring of 1924, a republic was declared. The republic fell when ardent royalists engineered the restoration of the monarchy in the autumn of 1935. George II returned in November 1935, hoping to reconcile opposing factions. When moderate methods failed to improve conditions, he approved the establishment of a dictatorship under Ioannis Metaxas in August 1936. The German invasion of Greece in the spring of 1941 drove George into exile. A plebiscite on Sept. 27, 1946, approved his return, but he died soon after.
1901 - 1964
Paul I
62
62
Paul I, b. Dec. 14, 1901, d. Mar. 6, 1964, king of the Hellenes (1947-64), was the third son of King Constantine I. He joined his father in exile in 1917, returned with him to Greece in 1920, and left again when republican sentiments flared in 1923. When the monarchy was restored in 1935, Paul returned to Greece as crown prince. He married (1938) Princess Frederika-Louise, daughter of the duke of Brunswick and granddaughter of German emperor William II. When the Germans invaded (April 1941) Greece, Paul escaped, taking refuge in South Africa. He returned home in September 1946 and ascended the throne (Apr. 1, 1947) after the death of his elder brother King George II. As king he was criticized for intervening in political affairs. He was succeeded by his son Constantine II.
1917 - 1981
Frederika-
Louise Of
Brunswick
63
63
1843 - 1912
Frederick
Viii
68
68
Frederick VIII (1843-1912), king of Denmark (1906-12), born in Copenhagen, and educated at the University of Oxford. He succeeded to the throne on the death of his father, Christian IX. His son, Prince Charles, became Håkon VII, king of Norway, in 1905. Frederick was a brother of Alexandra, queen consort of Great Britain, and of George I, king of Greece.
1870 - 1947
Christian
X
76
76
Christian X (1870-1947), king of Denmark (1912-47) and Iceland (1918-44), son and successor of Frederick VIII, born near Copenhagen. Notable events of his reign were his approval in 1915 of a new constitution that gave women the right to vote and in other ways broadened suffrage; the sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States in 1917; the granting of sovereign rights to Iceland in 1918; the entrance of Denmark into the League of Nations in 1920; and the return of North Schleswig from Germany to Denmark in 1920 after a plebiscite. Under his rule vast areas of wasteland were reclaimed to agriculture, a Danish merchant marine was developed, and worldwide Danish commercial enterprises were launched. In World War II, during the German occupation of Denmark from 1940 to 1945, Christian was the dignified if powerless symbol of national unity, but the story that he wore a star of David to express solidarity with his Jewish subjects is without foundation. Christian X ceased to be king of Iceland when the Republic of Iceland was established in 1944. He was succeeded as king of Denmark by his son, Frederick IX.
1872 - 1957
H†kon
Vii
85
85
Håkon VII (1872-1957), king of Norway (1905-57), the second son of Frederick VIII, king of Denmark, born in Charlottenlund, Denmark. Originally named Charles, the Danish prince was chosen king of Norway by the Storting, or parliament, a choice reaffirmed by a plebiscite. The Norwegian throne had become vacant when the union between Norway and Sweden was dissolved; the Swedish throne was retained by Oscar II, king of Sweden. During World War II, after the Germans invaded Norway in 1940, Håkon led the resistance for two months, then went to Great Britain to head the Norwegian government-in-exile. He returned to Norway in 1945. He was succeeded by his son Olaf V.
1899 - 1972
Frederick
Ix
72
72
Frederick IX (1899-1972), king of Denmark (1947-72), son and successor of King Christian X, born near Copenhagen. Frederick was educated at the Danish Naval Academy and the University of Copenhagen. He broke the Danish royal tradition by choosing a naval instead of an army career. During the German occupation of Denmark in World War II, Frederick was virtually interned in the palace. Because he had no male heir, Denmark's succession law was changed during his reign, and he was succeeded by his eldest daughter, Margaret II.
Living
Living
Andr‚
Living
Living
1903 - 1991
Olaf V
87
87
Olaf V, original name Alexander Edward Christian Frederik of Glücksburg (1903-91), king of Norway (1957-91), the son of King Håkon VII, born at Sandringham, England. He went to Great Britain with his father after the German invasion of Norway in 1940, during World War II. Olaf was commander in chief of the Norwegian armed forces fighting with the Allies in 1944-45; he returned to Norway after the defeat of Germany in 1945. Upon his death, Olaf's son Harald, the crown prince, became king of Norway as Harald V.
Living
V
Living
Haraldsen
1901 - 1954
Martha
53
53
Living
Living
1784 - 1844
Ernest
I
60
60
Living
1930 - 2002
Margaret
Rose
71
71
Living
Armstrong-
Jones
Living
Charles
Living
Elizabeth
1800 - 1831
Louise Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Altenburg
31
31
1869 - 1938
Maud
Charlotte
Mary
68
68
1857 - 1944
Beatrice
Mary
Victoria
87
87
Alexander
Of
Hesse
Julia
Of
Battenberg
1858 - 1896
Henry
Maurice
38
38
Charlotte
Of
Prussia
1759 - 1828
Maria
Feodorovana
69
69
Louis
II
Wilhelmina
Of
Baden
1851 - 1926
Louise
Of
Sweden
74
74
1875 - 1938
Marie Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
62
62
1865 - 1927
Ferdinand
I
61
61
Ferdinand, b. Aug. 24, 1865, d. July 20, 1927, succeeded his uncle, Carol I, as king of Romania in October 1914, shortly after the outbreak of World War I. Although a Hohenzollern, and thus related to the German royal family, he was induced to enter (August 1916) the war on the Allied side by promises of major territorial concessions as well as by the influence of his English wife, Marie. Romania was soon overrun by Austro-German forces, and Ferdinand was forced to conclude a separate peace in May 1918. However, he reentered the war on Nov. 10, 1918 just before its conclusion and thus won the promised territories--Transylvania, and much of the Hungarian plain--in the peace settlement. Ferdinand was crowned king of Greater Romania in 1922.
1893 - 1953
Carol II
59
59
Carol II, b. Oct. 15, 1893, d. Apr. 4, 1953, king of Romania, was the son of King Ferdinand and Queen Marie. After his morganatic marriage, soon dissolved, to Zizi Lambrino, he married (1921) Princess Helen of Greece. In 1925, because of his liaison with Magda Lupescu (1896?-1977), Carol was forced to abdicate his rights to the throne. Returning from exile, he was proclaimed king on June 8, 1930. Carol soon decided to rule by undermining the political parties, and in February 1938 he set up a personal dictatorship. After the outbreak of World War II, powerless to resist the territorial claims on Romania by Hungary, Bulgaria, and the USSR, Carol was forced to abdicate on Sept. 6, 1940. In 1947 he married Magda in Brazil.
Charles
Louis
Frederick
Elizabeth
Albertin
1750 - 1806
Francis
Frederick
56
56
1757 - 1831
Augusta
Reuss-
Ebersdorf
74
74
Frederick
William
Louise
Caroline Of
Hesse-Cassel
1896 - 1982
Helen
Of
Greece
86
86
1921
Michael
Hohenzollern
Leopold
Of
Hohenzollern
Antonia
Of
Portugal
1700 - 1770
Sophie
Magdalene
69
69
1910
Maria
De Las
Mercedes
1774 - 1837
Wilhelmina
62
62
1772 - 1843
William
I
71
71
William I, b. Aug. 24, 1772, d. Dec. 12, 1843, prince of Orange-Nassau and first king of the Netherlands, renounced the throne when he was forced to accept a constitutional monarchy. He was the son of stadholder William V Commander of the Dutch army during the French Revolutionary Wars, he went into exile after the downfall of the Dutch Republic in 1795. After briefly coming to terms with Napoleon I in 1802, he was captured in Germany (1806) while leading Prussian troops against the French emperor. He was paroled and joined the Austrian service in 1809. Returning to the Netherlands as sovereign prince in 1813, he accepted a mildly liberal constitution the following year, and with the assent of the Congress of Vienna, became (1815) king of a United Netherlands, including Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. He governed with a strong hand, encouraging economic growth by attempting to spur the expansion of industry and trade. His policies in the provinces, offending both the Roman Catholic church and liberals, led to the Belgian Revolution of 1830. When revision of the constitution became necessary after the recognition of Belgian independence in 1839, he had to accept biennial budgets and ministerial responsibility. He abdicated on Oct. 7, 1840, in favor of his son William II.
1792 - 1849
William
II
56
56
The reign of William II, b. Dec. 6, 1792, d. Mar. 17, 1849, was marked by the adoption of a new constitution, which gave the Netherlands the political institutions by which it is still governed. Exiled to England in 1795 with his father, who later became King William I, he served in the duke of Wellington's army and commanded Dutch troops at Waterloo (1815). In 1831 he again commanded an army, defeating the separatist Belgians. In October 1840 he succeeded to the throne on the abdication of his father. Hoping to keep his country free from the revolutionary ferment of 1848, William took the initiative in the enactment of a new constitution, written by the liberal statesman Johan Thorbecke, which firmly established the supremacy of the States-General. He was succeeded by his son William III.
1751 - 1820
Wilhelmine
69
69
1784 - 1806
William
V
22
22
Marie-
Josephe
De Saxe
1711 - 1751
William
IV
40
40
1817 - 1890
William
III
73
73
Although King William III, b. Feb. 19, 1817, d. Nov. 23, 1890, was unhappy with the advanced liberal constitution adopted in 1848, it was under his reign that parliamentary government was consolidated in the Netherlands. After opposing the constitution sponsored by his father and predecessor, William II, he accepted it when he ascended to the throne in 1849. He opposed the liberal statesman Johan Thorbecke and played a crucial role in Thorbecke's resignation as head of the government in 1853. An anti-Catholic, William was able to retain political influence through the cabinet, giving special attention to religious matters. His attempt in 1867 to sell France the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg met Prussian hostility and had to be abandoned. As a result, his political stature at home suffered irreparably. William's personal life was troubled, first by separation from his wife, Sophia of Wurttemberg, and then by plans to divorce her and marry his mistress, a French actress. In 1879, after Sophia's death, he married Emma of Waldeck-Pyrmont. He was succeeded by his daughter Wilhelmina.
D. 1879
Sophia
Of
Wurttemberg
1880 - 1962
Wilhelmina
82
82
Queen Wilhelmina, b. Aug. 31, 1880, d. Nov. 28, 1962, reigned over the Netherlands for more than half a century. In 1890 she succeeded her father, William III, to the throne under the regency of her mother, Emma of Waldeck-Pyrmont. She assumed personal rule on Sept. 6, 1898, and married Duke Henry (1876-1934) of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in 1901. Although committed to observation of the constitution, she considered herself a ruler by divine right and frequently intervened in political affairs. After the German invasion on May 10, 1940, Wilhelmina fled to England, leading a government in exile from London and becoming very popular as a rallying point for Dutch freedom. She returned to the liberated Netherlands on Mar. 13, 1945. In declining health, she abdicated in favor of her daughter Juliana on Sept. 4, 1948, after celebrating the 50th anniversary of her reign. Her autobiography was translated as Lonely but Not Alone (1960)
1876 - 1934
Henry Of
Mecklenburg-
Schwerin
58
58
1909
Juliana
Juliana, b. Apr. 30, 1909, succeeded to the throne of the Netherlands on Sept. 6, 1948, following the abdication of her mother, Queen Wilhelmina. She married (1937) Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld; they had four daughters. The eldest, Beatrice, became queen when Juliana abdicated on her 71st birthday, Apr. 30, 1980.
1911
Bernhard Of
Lippe-
Biesterfeld
Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld, b. June 29, 1911, is the consort of Juliana, former queen of the Netherlands, and father of the present queen, Beatrice. The nephew of Leopold IV, the last reigning prince of the German state of Lippe, he married Juliana on Jan. 7, 1937. Becoming a Dutch citizen, Bernhard fought against the invading Germans in 1940 and was appointed commander of the Dutch resistance fighters who helped liberate the Netherlands in 1944-45. After Juliana's accession to the throne in 1948, Bernhard used his status to encourage cultural activities and international trade. In 1976 he was implicated in a bribery scandal involving the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation. An official commission concluded that Prince Bernhard had "showed himself open to dishonorable requests and offers"; he then resigned from his military and business positions. In 1980, Juliana abdicated in favor of Princess Beatrice.
Living
1878 - 1958
Ingeborg
Of
Denmark
80
80
1861 - 1951
Charles
Of
Sweden
90
90
1905 - 1935
Astrid
Of
Sweden
29
29
1901 - 1983
Leopold
III
81
81
Leopold III, b. Nov. 3, 1901, d. Sept. 25, 1983, succeeded his father, Albert I, to the Belgian throne in 1934. A strong-willed monarch, he refused to go into exile after the German conquest of Belgium in 1940 and became the target of criticism so bitter that he abdicated in 1951. An advocate of a more independent foreign policy for Belgium before World War II, Leopold twice urged mediation of the conflict between Nazi Germany and the Western Allies in the months immediately before and after the outbreak of war in 1939. After the German invasion in May 1940, he took command of the army and led its resistance for 2 weeks before surrendering. He rejected the government's appeal to join them in a government-in-exile and stayed in Belgium as a self-proclaimed prisoner of war in his castle at Laken. After the Allied invasion in June 1944, Leopold was taken to Germany. He was liberated by American troops in Austria in May 1945. Much bitter opposition to his return existed in Belgium because of his wartime conduct. When finally the Catholic People's party obtained a majority in his favor in a referendum in 1950, he went home. He met such fierce hostility, however, manifested in strikes and other protests, that he abdicated on July 16, 1951, in favor of his son Baudouin.
1930 - 1993
Baudouin
I
62
62
Baudouin I, b. Sept. 7, 1930, d. July 31, 1993, was the oldest son of King Leopold III and Queen Astrid and the fifth king of the Belgians. On Aug. 11, 1950, the Belgian parliament granted him royal prerogatives, as regent, and after his father's abdication on July 16, 1951, Baudouin took the oath as king. On Dec. 15, 1960, in Brussels, he wed a Spanish noblewoman, Fabiola de Mora y Aragon. The couple was childless. On Baudouin's death his brother Albert assumed the throne.
1879 - 1852
Alexandrine Of
Mecklenburg-
Schwerin
26
26
1910
Ingrid
Victoria
Rachel
Deming
Frederick
Francis
Anastasia
1826 - 1872
Charles
Xv
46
46
Charles XV (1826-72), king of Sweden and Norway (1859-72), the son of King Oscar I, born in Stockholm. During his liberal and popular rule, numerous reforms were instituted. The most important was in 1867 when the Riksdag, the Swedish legislature, became a bicameral body, with the upper house chosen by provincial representatives and the lower house by popular election (although suffrage was based on property and earnings). Charles was interested in literature and the arts and wrote a volume of poems. Having no male heirs, he was succeeded by his brother Oscar II.
1828 - 1871
Louise
42
42
1875 - 1934
Albert
I
58
58
Albert I, b. Apr. 8, 1875, d. Feb. 17, 1934, king of the Belgians (1909-34), is remembered especially for his strong leadership during World War I. He married (1900) Elizabeth, daughter of the duke of Bavaria, and succeeded Leopold II, his uncle, to the Belgian throne in 1909. In August 1914, when the German armies demanded right of passage through Belgium, Albert refused the ultimatum and assumed personal command of the Belgian armed forces in resisting the German advance. He remained in the small, unoccupied area of Belgium throughout the war, and in September 1918 led Belgian and French troops in the final Allied offensive. After the war, Albert promoted the economic reconstruction of Belgium and helped introduce (1926) a new monetary system. His death in a mountain-climbing accident (1934) was deeply mourned. He was succeeded by his son, Leopold III.
1876 - 1965
Elisabeth
Of
Bavaria
89
89
1829 - 1907
Oscar
II
78
78
Oscar II (1829-1907), king of Sweden (1872-1907) and of Norway (1872-1905), third son of King Oscar I, and brother of King Charles XV, born in Stockholm. The chief event of his reign was his sophisticated response to increasing tension between Sweden and Norway; in 1905 he decided to relinquish the throne of Norway, thus severing the union between the two countries that had existed since the Napoleonic era. Oscar II encouraged industrial progress in Sweden. He was a naval authority and a writer; in addition, as an expert in international affairs, he served as arbitrator of several international disputes.
Sophia
1799 - 1859
Oscar
I
59
59
Oscar I (1799-1859), king of Sweden and Norway (1844-59), second of the Bernadotte monarchs, son and successor of Charles XIV John, born in Paris. In 1810 Oscar was made duke of Södermanland when his father was elected crown prince of Sweden. In 1823 he united the Bernadotte and Bonaparte families by marrying Joséphine de Beauharnais, the granddaughter of Joséphine de Beauharnais, wife of Napoleon. Oscar I is noted for the economic and social reforms that he instituted.
1667
John
Morgan
1807 - 1876
Jos‚phine
De
Beauharnais
69
69
Granddaughter of Josephine, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte.
1795 - 1865
Anna
Pavlovna
70
70
1703 - 1768
Maria
Leczinska
65
65
~1424
Catherine
Cotton
~1489 - 1552
Edmund
Molyneux
63
63
Graduated B.A., July 10, 1510. Nov. 25 1542, called to the degree sergent at law and on the coronation of Edward VI made Knight of Bath, Oct. 22, 1550. Created justice of common pleas. Lord of the Manor Thorp, near Newark, and lands adjoining, which belonged to the Knights Hospitallers of the Preceptory Eagle.
~1489
Jane
Cheny
D. 1591
John
Molyneux
~1586
Anne
Lascelles
Flannigan
1669
Samuel
Morgan
~1332
Thomas
Urswick
1549 - 1580
Anne
Of
Austria
31
31
Anne
Beauchamp
1808 - 1870
Louisa
Of
Prussia
62
62
Frederick
Of The
Netherlands
1882 - 1973
Gustav
Vi
Adolf
91
91
Gustav VI Adolph (1882-1973), king of Sweden (1950-73), son of King Gustav V, born in Stockholm, and educated at the universities of Uppsala and Oslo. He entered the army in 1902, served with both the Swedish and Norwegian forces, and obtained the rank of general in 1932. Known as a patron of the arts, Gustav was a serious collector of Chinese art. He also won an international reputation as a classical archaeologist, having worked in the field in Greece, Cyprus, and Italy. Gustav was succeeded by his grandson, King Carl XVI Gustaf.
Margaret
Eudoxia
Streshniev
1670
Isaac
Morgan
1552 - 1633
Fyodor
Nikitch
Romanov
81
81
~1565 - 1631
Ksenia
Ivanovna
Shestova
66
66
Lucas
Streshniev
Anne
Volkonska
1682 - 1712
Louis
Of
Burgundy
30
30
1685 - 1712
Marie
Adelaide
Of Savoy
27
27
1667 - 1721
Louise
53
53
1650 - 1714
Charlotte
Amelia
63
63
1628 - 1685
Sophia
Amelia
56
56
1674
Hannah
Morgan
1575 - 1612
Anne
Catherine
36
36
Maria
Eleanor
Of
Neuburg
1660 - 1690
Mary
Anne Of
Bavaria
30
30
1544 - 1560
Francis
II
16
16
Francis II (of France) (1544-60), king of France (1559-60), born in Fontainebleau, the eldest son of Henry II. In 1558 Francis married Mary, queen of Scots. Francis was a mental and physical weakling and was dominated by François, duke of Guise, and Cardinal Charles of Lorraine, the uncles of his wife. These two men, who in effect were the rulers during Francis's brief reign, tried to repress the growing political power of the Protestants in France. His death ended the ascendancy of the Guises at court.
1550 - 1574
Charles
Ix
23
23
Charles IX (of France) (1550-74), king of France (1560-74), born in Saint-Germain-en-Laye. The son of Henry II and Catherine de Médicis, he succeeded his older brother, Francis II. During his minority and after 1563, when he assumed active rule, Charles remained under the domination of his mother. Intrigues and religious wars between Roman Catholics and Huguenots (Protestants) marked the entire course of his reign. In 1572 he was persuaded by Catherine to approve the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre, in which thousands of Huguenots were killed. Charles was succeeded by his brother Henry III.
1551 - 1589
Henry
III
37
37
Henry III (of France) (1551-1589), king of France (1574-1589), the last of the Valois kings. Despite his considerable gifts, he failed to resolve the religious civil wars in his country and brought it close to bankruptcy. Henry was born at Fontainebleau on September 19, 1551, the third son of Henry II and Catherine de Médicis. He was the leader against the Huguenots (French Protestants) and took part in the victories over them at Jarnac and at Moncontour in 1569. In 1572 he aided his mother in planning the Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day. He was elected king of Poland in 1573, but after one year returned to France to ascend the throne on the death of his brother, Charles IX. The wars between the Roman Catholics and Protestants continued throughout Henry's reign. In 1576 Henry issued the Edict of Beaulieu, which accorded more privileges to the Huguenots. Displeased with the edict, the Roman Catholics, under the leadership of Henri I de Lorraine, 3rd duc de Guise, then formed the Holy League and renewed the war with the Huguenots. The war ended in 1577 with the Peace of Bergerac and the king dissolved the league after revoking some of the concessions made to Protestants. The league was revived in 1584, however, when the king's younger brother died, leaving Henry III of Navarre (a Huguenot, later Henry IV of France) legal heir to the throne of the childless king. In 1585, when the king, forced by the league, excluded Henry of Navarre from the succession and repealed all the privileges granted to the Huguenots, Henry of Navarre began the so-called War of the Three Henrys against the league and the king. Defeated at Coutras in 1587, the king found his power rivaled by that of the duc de Guise. In 1588, on the Day of Barricades, the citizenry of Paris, led by the duc de Guise, revolted against the king, forcing him to flee the city. The king subsequently had Henri de Lorraine and his brother Louis de Lorraine assassinated and allied himself with Henry of Navarre, whom he declared his successor. The two Henrys then became joint leaders of a Huguenot army. While attempting to regain Paris on August 1, 1589, the king was stabbed by Jacques Clément, a fanatical Dominican friar, and died the next day.
1289 - 1316
Louis
X 'the
Headstrong'
26
26
Louis X, called The Headstrong (1289-1316), king of France (1314-16), the son of Philip IV. Influenced by his uncle, Charles de Valois, he was preoccupied for much of his short reign with unrest among his nobles, to whom he granted charters confirming their privileges, and with an indecisive campaign against Flanders that he led in 1315. Louis's posthumous son, John I, born in 1316, died shortly after his birth, and the succession went to Louis's brother, Philip V.
~1293 - 1328
Clemence
Of
Hungary
35
35
1316 - 1316
John I
5d
5d
1675 - 1754
Mercy
Morgan
79
79
1288 - 1342
Charles
I
54
54
~1294 - 1322
Philip
V 'the
Tall'
28
28
Philip V (of France), called The Tall (circa 1294-1322), king of France (1317-22), the second son of King Philip IV. He became regent for his infant nephew John, king of France, and after the death of John proclaimed himself king. In 1320, at the conclusion of the war against Flanders begun during the reign of Philip IV, France acquired some Flemish territory. Philip frequently convoked the Estates-General. He made administrative reforms and attempted to unify coinage, weights, and measures but encountered strong opposition in the Estates-General. He imposed heavy fines on Jews. Philip died without a male heir.
1294 - 1328
Charles
IV 'the
Fair'
34
34
Charles IV (of France) (1294-1328), king of France (1322-28) and, as Charles I, king of Navarre (1322-28). Called Charles the Fair, he was the third son of Philip IV, king of France. In 1327 Charles helped his sister Isabella to dethrone her husband, King Edward II of England. During his reign Charles increased taxation, exacted burdensome duties, debased the coinage, and confiscated estates. He died without a male heir, thus ending the direct line of the Capetian dynasty.
1338 - 1378
Joan
Of
Bourbon
40
40
1404 - 1463
Mary
Of
Anjou
59
59
~1445 - 1483
Charlotte
Of
Savoy
38
38
1724 - 1760
Mary
Amalia
36
36
1498 - 1558
Eleanor
60
60
1469 - 1521
Emanuel
(Manuel
I)
52
52
Emanuel, called Manuel I (1469-1521), king of Portugal (1495-1521), great-grandson of King John I. During his reign, called the golden era of Portuguese history, great explorations and discoveries took place. He sponsored the epoch-making expedition of the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama, which resulted in the opening of a sea route to India around the Cape of Good Hope; the voyage of Pedro Alvares Cabral, on which Cabral reached Brazil, claimed it for Portugal, and then sailed westward to India, where he established a trading post on the site of Calicut (now Kozhikode); the exploration of Gaspar Corte-Real of the coasts of Labrador and Newfoundland; and the expedition of Afonso de Albuquerque, who established the Portuguese empire in the Far East. During Emanuel's reign, commercial relations were established with Persia and China, and great wealth was acquired from New World possessions. Emanuel made his court a center of the arts and sciences and issued a code of laws that bears his name. His great religious zeal led him to sponsor missionary enterprises in his overseas possessions and endeavor to promote a crusade against the Turks. It also, however, led him to persecute the Jews in Portugal and to expel them from the country in 1497-98, an act that deprived Portugal of many brilliant people. He has sometimes been called Emanuel the Great or Emanuel the Fortunate.
1091 - 1157
Yuril
'longhanded'
66
66
1678
Sarah
Morgan
Olga
Of
Greece
1219 - 1263
Alexander
Nevsky
44
44
Alexander Nevsky (1220?-63), Russian national hero and saint. The son of Yaroslav Vsevolodovich, grand prince of the medieval Russian state of Vladimir, Alexander was elected prince of the state of Novgorod in 1236. In 1240 he won a victory over the Swedes on the Neva River near present Saint Petersburg, thus acquiring his surname, Nevsky ("of the Neva"). The following year, he led the army of Novgorod against the Teutonic Knights, driving them from Russian soil and defeating them in a battle at Lake Peipus, Estonia, in April 1242. Later generations viewed this victory as having saved Russia from Western domination. When the Mongols invaded Russia from the east, Alexander collaborated with them, acting as mediator between his people and the Mongol Golden Horde. In 1246 the Mongols made him grand prince of Kyyiv, and in 1251 they installed him as prince of Vladimir, replacing his brother Andrei. As ruler of Vladimir, Kyyiv, and Novgorod, he did much to unify the principalities of northern Russia. Alexander is recognized as a saint by the Russian Orthodox church; his feast day is September 12.
1261 - 1303
Daniil
Aleksandrovich
42
42
Elisabeth
~1304 - 1341
Ivan I
'kalita'
Danilovich
37
37
Ivan I Danilovich, called Kalita ("Moneybags") (1304?-41), grand prince, or duke, of Moscow (1328-41). The grandson of Alexander Nevsky, he initiated the expansion that eventually left Moscow in control of Russia. As a vassal of the Golden Horde Tatars, he collected taxes for the khan and thus earned his epithet. At the same time he doubled the territory of his realm; moved his court from Vladimir to Moscow, merging the two administrations; and persuaded the metropolitan of Kyyiv, the leading ecclesiastic of the Russian Orthodox church, to transfer his see to Moscow. Thus sanctioned by the church, Ivan began to style himself Prince of All Russia.
~1304 - 1331
Helene
27
27
1326 - 1359
Ivan II 'the
Meek'
Ivanovich
33
33
~1326 - 1364
Alexandra
Of
Moscow
38
38
1349 - 1389
Dmitri
Donskoi
39
39
Dimitry Donskoi, b. 1350, d. May 19, 1389, grand duke of Moscow (1359-89), first broke the tradition of submission to the Khanate of the Golden Horde. On Sept. 8, 1380, Dimitry led the Russian princes to victory over the Tatars on the plain of Kulikovo on the upper Don River. Although this victory did not end the Tatar domination over Russia, it enhanced the prestige of the grand duke of Moscow. Dimitry, the son of Ivan II (r. 1353-59), also enlarged the territory of Moscow considerably and helped prevent an invasion by Lithuania.
~1680 - <1721
James
Morgan
41
41
Died before 7 Nov 1721 when inventory of estate was taken.
1372 - 1424
Vasily
II
Dmitrivich
52
52
1440 - 1505
Ivan III 'the
Great'
Vasilyevich
65
65
Ivan III Vasilyevich (1440-1505), called The Great, grand duke of Moscow (1462-1505) who strengthened the hegemony of Moscow over the other Russian principalities, and was the self-described Sovereign of All Russia. He was born in Moscow on January 22, 1440, the son of Basil II, whom he succeeded. In 1470 he launched a war against Novgorod, which he conquered and annexed in 1478, thereby acquiring all of northern Russia from Lapland to the Ural Mountains. In 1480, by refusing to make the customary payment of tribute to the Tatar khan, Ivan ended the formal subservience of the Muscovite rulers to the Tatars. Subsequently, he further increased his domain by conquest, by purchases of territory, and by exacting allegiance from weaker princes. Ivan invaded Lithuania in 1492 and again in 1500 and forced Alexander (reigned 1501-06), the ruler of that country and king of Poland, to cede (1503) a score of Lithuanian towns to him. By his marriage in 1472 to Zoë (Sophia), niece of the last Byzantine emperor, Constantine XI Palaeologus, Ivan also made creditable his claim to be the protector of the Orthodox church. Soon after his marriage Ivan added the two-headed eagle of the Byzantine escutcheon to his own coat of arms and, modeling his regime on that of the autocratic Byzantine rulers, drastically curtailed the powers and privileges of the other Russian princes and the Russian aristocracy. Ivan also issued the first Muscovite legal code in 1497. He died on October 27, 1505, in Moscow.
~1448 - 1503
Zo‰
(Sophia)
Palaiologina
55
55
1479 - 1533
Vasily
III
Ivanovich
54
54
Vasily III, b. 1479, d. Dec. 2, 1533, grand duke of Moscow (1505-33), succeeded his father, Ivan III. He annexed to Moscow the remaining independent Russian principalities (1510-23) and captured Smolensk from Lithuania (1514). He was succeeded by Ivan IV (the Terrible), his son.
1530 - 1584
Ivan IV 'the
Terrible'
Vasilyevich
53
53
Ivan IV Vasilyevich, called The Terrible (1530-84), grand duke of Moscow (1533-47) and czar of Russia (1547-84), one of the creators of the Russian state. Ivan was born in Moscow on August 25, 1530, the grandson of Ivan III and the son of Basil III, whom he succeeded at the age of three. He was the first Russian ruler to be formally crowned as czar. The first 13 years of Ivan's reign constitute one of the greatest periods of internal reform, external expansion, and centralization of state power in the history of Russia. In 1549 Ivan convoked the Zemsky Sobor, the first national representative assembly ever summoned by a Russian ruler. In the same year he initiated a comprehensive revision and modernization of the Russian law code. He conquered and annexed the Tatar khanates of Kazan' (1552) and Astrakhan' (1556), bringing the entire Volga River within the borders of Russia and ending the threat of these Tatar areas to Russia. The long Livonian War (1558-83), an attempt to gain a foothold on the Baltic coast, was, however, ultimately unsuccessful. Ivan's reign after 1560 is remarkable more for the czar's repeated displays of erratic behavior and wanton brutality than for his statesmanship. He surrounded himself with a select group of noblemen, whom he allowed to exercise despotic power over his entire domain. In 1570 he ravaged the town of Novgorod and ordered the slaying of thousands of its inhabitants because they had been reported, on dubious authority, to be conspiring against him. Ten years later Ivan brought personal tragedy upon himself when, in a fit of anger, he struck and killed his eldest and favorite son. In his later years, Ivan began the acquisition of Siberia after most of the Ob' River Basin had been brought under Russian control (1581-83) by the cossack leader Yermak Timofeyevich. Ivan died on March 18, 1584.
~1508 - 1538
Yelena
Glinskaya
30
30
Nikita
Romanovich
Yuriev
~1530 - 1560
Anastasia
Romanov
30
30
1791 - 1848
Mary
Louise
57
57
Elizabeth
Jones
1769 - 1821
Napoleon
Bonaparte
51
51
In February 1804 a British-financed plot to assassinate Bonaparte was uncovered by the former police minister Joseph Fouche (who recovered his job as a result of this discovery). Of the leading conspirators, Jean Charles Pichegru died in prison, Jean Victor Moreau fled the country, and Georges Cadoudal was executed. Another victim was the duc d'Enghien, a Bourban-Conde prince who was kidnapped from the German state of Baden and executed in France. In the wake of these events, which revived royalist hostility, the Senate petitioned Bonaparte to establish a hereditary dynasty. On Dec. 2, 1804, therefore, Napoleon crowned himself emperor in a ceremony presided over by Pope Pius VII. Napoleon created a titled court that included many of his statesmen and generals as well as ex-royalists. Believing that family ties were more durable than treaties, in the next few years he placed members of his family on the thrones of several satellite states--Naples, Holland, Westphalia, and Spain--and married his relatives to some of the most distinguished families in Europe. Dynastic considerations also caused Bonaparte to divorce Josephine in 1809 because she had borne him no male heir. He then married (Apr. 2, 1810) Marie Louise, daughter of Austrian Emperor Francis I; within a year a son, the king of Rome, was born. In 1805, Britain organized the Third Coalition against France, but Napoleon's new Grand Army swept through Germany into Austria destroying both Austrian and Russian armies at Ulm and Austerlitz. Austria signed (Dec. 26, 1805) the Treaty of Pressburg, by which Venice and Dalmatia were annexed to Napoleon's Kingdom of Italy, and in 1806, Napoleon organized the Confederation of the Rhine, a grouping of German states under French protection. Soon after, the Holy Roman Empire was formally dissolved. Prussia helped organize the Fourth Coalition against Napoleon late in 1806, but its forces were destroyed by Napoleon in the Battle of Jena-Auerstadt (October 1806). After defeating the Russians at Eylau (Feb. 8, 1807) and Friedland (June 14, 1807), Napoleon forced the allies to sign (July 7-9, 1807) the Treaties of Tilsit, which resulted in the creation of the Grand Duchy of Warsaw and the Kingdom of Westphalia. Dominant in Europe, Napoleon was obsessed with Britain's defiance and role as the commercial "paymaster of Europe." To subdue Britain, Napoleon committed his most serious blunders. He imposed (1806) the Continental System, a blockade of British trade, on Europe to undermine the British economy. The refusal of Portugal to observe the blockade led to French intervention in Iberia and embroilment in the Peninsular War. While the Peninsular War raged, Austria mobilized and began the War of the Fifth Coalition. A series of hard-fought battles culminated in final French victory (July 5-6, 1809) at Wagram, and Austria lost Illyria and Galicia by the Treaty of Schonbrunn (Oct. 14, 1809). Although French control in Iberia was eroding by 1812, Napoleon invaded Russia on June 23-24 of that year. One major reason for the attack was the Russian refusal to accept the Continental System. The Russian armies withdrew, drawing Napoleon deep into Russia. Napoleon defeated them at Borodino on Sept. 7, 1812, and a week later reached Moscow. There he waited in vain for Emperor Alexander I's surrender, while Russian arsonists set the city on fire. With reinforced Russian armies attacking his outlying positions and signs of winter's approach, Napoleon ordered a retreat in October. Despite the deprivations suffered by his troops, the miserable weather, and the pursuing Russian army, Napoleon held the nucleus of his army together and managed to escape Russian encirclement. After crossing the Berezina River he left his ravaged army and hurried back to Paris on learning of an abortive coup in Paris by the demented general Claude Malet. After Napoleon's Russian debacle the Prussians deserted their alliance with the French, and in 1813 the Sixth Coalition was formed among Prussia, Russia, Britain, and Sweden (ruled by the erstwhile Napoleonic general Bernadotte, later to be King Charles XIV John). Napoleon soon formed a new army and defeated the allies at Lutzen (May 2) and Bautzen (May 20-21). After a short armistice, hostilities again began in August, when Austria joined the coalition. Although Napoleon was victorious (August 26-27) at Dresden, the French were outnumbered two to one and defeated in the so-called Battle of Nations at Leipzig on October 16-19. Withdrawing across the Rhine, Napoleon refused to surrender any conquered territory, convinced that such a concession would cost him his crown in France. In 1814, France was invaded, and Napoleon again demonstrated his military genius by defeating each enemy army as it advanced on Paris. Hopelessly outnumbered he attempted to negotiate, but the allies continued to advance and took Paris on March 31. The Hundred Days On April 6, Napoleon abdicated in favor of his son. When the allies refused to accept this, he made his abdication unconditional on April 11. He then was exiled to the island of Elba, where he was given sovereign power and introduced administrative, economic, and political reforms. Aware of France's dissatisfaction over the restoration rule of the Bourbon dynasty, Napoleon decided to return to France in 1815. Landing at Cannes on March 1, he marched triumphantly through sympathetic areas of France and was greeted as the returning hero. King Louis XVIII fled abroad, and Napoleon occupied Paris on March 20, beginning the period called the Hundred Days. Although Napoleon proclaimed peaceful intentions, the allies, who were meeting in Vienna, immediately outlawed him and prepared for war. Before massive Russian and Austrian forces could reach France, Napoleon resolved to separate and defeat the Prussian and Anglo-Dutch armies in what is now Belgium. Despite several initial victories he was defeated by the duke of Wellington and Gebhard von Blucher at Waterloo on June 18, 1815 Napoleon returned to Paris, where he abdicated for the second time on June 23. Fleeing to Aix, he surrendered to the captain of the British warship Bellerophon and was exiled to the island of Saint Helena. Living with his secretary and a few loyal friends, he dictated his memoirs, laying the foundation of the Napoleonic legend. He died on May 5, 1821. The Napoleonic legend was embellished by his followers in the succeeding decades of turbulent French politics. It facilitated the rise of Napoleon's nephew, who eventually founded a Second Empire as Napoleon III in 1852. Allowing for the exaggerations of the legend, there remains no question that Napoleon I was a military genius. Although his ambition to dominate Europe cost France hundreds of thousands of lives, he left to that country many of the institutions that form its modern basis. His tomb in the Invalides in Paris is a national shrine.
1746 - 1785
Carlo
Marie
Bonaparte
38
38
~1750 - 1836
Letizia
Ramolino
86
86
~1690
Elizabeth
Morgan
Died young
1811 - 1832
Napoleon
II
21
21
1693
William
Morgan
1793 - 1875
Ferdinand
I
82
82
Ferdinand I (of Austria and Hungary) (1793-1875), emperor of Austria (1835-48) and king of Hungary (1830-48). He was the son of Francis I, emperor of Austria, who was also Holy Roman emperor as Francis II. Ferdinand was completely controlled by the reactionary Austrian statesman Prince Klemens von Metternich; and, after the revolutionary outbreak of December 1848 forced Metternich from office, Ferdinand abdicated in favor of his nephew Francis Joseph I.
1802 - 1878
Francis
Charles
76
76
1830 - 1916
Francis
Joseph
I
86
86
Francis Joseph I (German Franz Josef) (1830-1916), emperor of Austria (1848-1916) and king of Hungary (1867-1916), the last important ruler of the Habsburg dynasty; his policies played a major role in the events that led to World War I (1914-1918). Francis Joseph was born in Vienna, the eldest son of Archduke Francis Charles, who was brother and heir of Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I. Because Francis Charles renounced his right to the throne, Francis Joseph became emperor when Ferdinand abdicated during the revolution of 1848. With Russian help, he and his prime minister, Felix, prince zu Schwarzenberg, restored order in the empire and reestablished Austrian dominance in the German confederation. In 1854 he married Elizabeth, daughter of Duke Maximilian of Bavaria, with whom he had one son and three daughters. Francis Joseph's failure to support Russia in the Crimean War (1853-1856) permanently damaged Austro-Russian relations. In the decade that followed, Austria lost most of its Italian possessions, as well as its position of leadership in Germany. Weakened by these reverses, Francis Joseph began to negotiate with Hungary on its demands for autonomy. In 1866 Transylvania was reunited with Hungary. In 1867 Austria and Hungary agreed to create a dual monarchy in which the two countries would be equal partners. Under the empire of Austria-Hungary, as it was known after 1867, Hungary had complete independence in internal affairs, but the two countries acted jointly in foreign affairs. The same year, Francis Joseph and Elizabeth were formally crowned king and queen of Hungary. As the dual monarch, Francis Joseph planned to grant some form of self-government to the Austrian Slavs, but the German and Hungarian elites who controlled the empire opposed the plan. The resulting dissatisfaction among Francis Joseph's Czechoslovakian and Serbian subjects further weakened the Habsburg realms and caused increased friction with Russia, which championed the cause of Europe's Slavic peoples. Beginning in the 1870s, Austria-Hungary gradually became subservient to its powerful neighbor and ally, the Prussian-dominated German Empire. Francis Joseph's later years were marked by a series of tragedies in his family. In 1889 his only son and heir to the throne, Archduke Rudolf, committed suicide; in 1898 his wife was assassinated by an Italian anarchist; and in 1914 his nephew, Francis Ferdinand, who had replaced Rudolf as heir to the throne, was assassinated by a Serbian nationalist. The murder of Francis Ferdinand precipitated the crisis between Austria-Hungary and Germany on the one hand, and Serbia and Russia on the other, that led to World War I. Francis Joseph did not live to see Austria's defeat in the war and the extinction of the Habsburg monarchy.
1832 - 1867
Maximilian
35
35
Maximilian (1832-67), archduke of Austria and emperor of Mexico, younger brother of Francis Joseph I, emperor of Austria. He became an admiral of the Austrian navy and governor from 1857 to 1859 of the Lombardo-Venetian territory. In 1863 the French emperor Napoleon III persuaded Maximilian to accept the crown of Mexico. Believing that they had the support of the people, he and his wife, Carlotta, went to Mexico in 1864. Backed by French troops, they were installed as the country's rulers over the opposition of the republicans. After 1865, the United States, which objected to France's intervention but had been distracted by its own civil war, began pressuring the French to pull out. When they did withdraw in 1867, Maximilian refused to go with them. After that, republican forces under Benito Juárez quickly regained control of Mexico. Captured by the republicans at Querétaro, Maximilian was tried by court-martial and shot in June 1867.
1833 - 1896
Charles
Louis
63
63
1837 - 1898
Elizabeth
Of
Bavaria
61
61
1858 - 1889
Rudolf
31
31
Rudolf (1858-89), archduke and crown prince of Austria, only son of Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria. He was a patron of literature and the arts and traveled extensively. He wrote about his travels in Travels in the East (1884; translated 1884). In 1881 he married Princess Stephanie of Belgium. His romantic attachment with a young Austrian noblewoman, Baroness Marie Vetsera, ended in the violent death of both. Their bodies were found in a hunting lodge at Mayerling, near Vienna. Although the Austrian government officially announced that the lovers had committed suicide, unsubstantiated rumors of foul play have persisted to the present day, chiefly because of the archduke's sympathy with the cause of Hungarian nationalism.
1835 - 1909
Leopold
II
74
74
Leopold II (of Belgium) (1835-1909), king of Belgium (1865-1909). The son of King Leopold I, he was born in Brussels and originally named Louis Philippe Marie Victor. At an early age he entered the Belgian army, and in 1853 he married Maria Henrietta, daughter of Joseph, archduke of Austria. In 1876 Leopold organized an international association to develop central Africa, and he financed the expedition to the Congo River led by the British-American explorer Sir Henry Morton Stanley from 1879 to 1884. At the Berlin Conference of 1884 and 1885, Leopold was recognized as sovereign of the Congo Free State, annexed to Belgium as the Belgian Congo in 1908, and now Zaire. Leopold incurred widespread criticism for his exploitation of the people and natural resources of Congo, and, because of international protests, he was forced to institute modest reforms. He was succeeded by his nephew Albert I.
Henrietta
Marie
1864 - 1945
Stephanie
81
81
Rachel
Morgan
Maximilian
1840 - 1927
Marie
Charlotte
87
87
1790 - 1865
Leopold
I
74
74
Leopold I (of Belgium) (1790-1865), king of the Belgians (1831-65). The son of Francis Frederick, duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Leopold was born in Coburg, Germany; he was originally named Georges Chrétien Frédéric. As a youth during the Napoleonic Wars, Leopold fought in the Russian army. In 1816 he married Princess Charlotte Augusta, daughter of Prince George, later King George IV of Great Britain. In 1830 Leopold refused the Greek throne but the following year was elected the first monarch of Belgium after that country was separated from the Netherlands. The first eight years of his reign were marked by differences with the Dutch that were settled in 1839 by a treaty reaffirming the neutrality of Belgium. The remainder of his reign was marked by peaceful development of the country. He was succeeded by Leopold II, a son by his second marriage in 1832 to Louise d'Orléans, daughter of Louis Philippe, king of France.
1812 - 1850
Louise
Marie
D'orl‚ans
38
38
1863 - 1914
Francis
Ferdinand
51
51
Francis Ferdinand (German Franz Ferdinand), (1863-1914), archduke of Austria, born in Graz, son of Archduke Charles Louis and nephew of Emperor Francis Joseph. In 1875 he inherited the title archduke of Austria-Este. After the deaths of his cousin, Crown Prince Rudolf, in 1889, and of his father, in 1896, Francis became heir to the Austro-Hungarian crown. Because of his morganatic marriage in 1900 to Countess Sophie Chotek, duchess of Hohenberg, Francis relinquished all claim to the throne for his children. Although he was favorably inclined toward the aspirations of the Slavs, he and his wife were assassinated in Sarajevo, Bosnia (now in Bosnia and Herzegovina), on June 28, 1914, by a Serb nationalist. The incident precipitated World War I.
1865 - 1906
Otto
41
41
1887 - 1922
Charles
I
35
35
Charles I (of Austria) (1887-1922), emperor of Austria (1916-1918) and, as Charles IV, king of Hungary, born in Persenbeug, Austria. He was the last Austro-Hungarian monarch and the last of the Habsburg rulers. Charles was the eldest son of Archduke Otto and grandnephew of Emperor Francis Joseph I. Following the assassination of his uncle, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, and the death of Francis Joseph, Charles succeeded as emperor of Austria and king of Hungary. During World War I, in a secret letter, he supported the claims of France against those of the Austrian ally Germany in Alsace-Lorraine and proposed that Germany withdraw from Belgium. Charles disavowed the letter when it was published in April 1918, but it had a disheartening effect on the Central Powers. Upon the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire on November 11, 1918, Charles abdicated the throne of Hungary. In March 1919 he left Austria, and in April the Austrian parliament formally deposed him. Twice in 1921 Charles launched unsuccessful attempts to regain the Hungarian throne. Banished from Hungary, he went into exile on the island of Madeira, where he died.
1848 - 1907
Roberto
I
59
59
Andrea
Morgan
1892 - 1989
Zita
96
96
1751 - 1825
Ferdinand
I
74
74
Ferdinand I (of Two Sicilies) (1751-1825), king of the Two Sicilies (1816-25); as Ferdinand IV, he was also king of Naples (1759-1806, 1815-25), and as Ferdinand III, king of Sicily (1806-15). He was the third son of Charles IV, king of the Two Sicilies, who became Charles III, king of Spain, in 1759. At the same time Ferdinand became king of Naples. He ruled for eight years under the regency of his father's chief minister Bernardo Tanucci. In 1768 he married the daughter of Maria Theresa, empress of Austria, and replaced Tanucci with John Francis Edward Acton, an Englishman. Influenced by his wife and by Acton, Ferdinand allied Naples with the coalition opposing France in the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. The French captured Naples in 1799 and there set up the Parthenopean Republic. Ferdinand found refuge in Palermo, Sicily, until an army under Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo recovered Naples later that year. Ferdinand's return was marked by mass executions of Neapolitans who had sided with the French. In 1806 he fled once more to Sicily before the advance of Joseph Bonaparte, who had been made king of Naples by his brother, Napoleon, and who captured Naples soon thereafter. Ferdinand's authority was limited to Sicily from 1806 until 1815; his reign was unpopular, and for a time (1812) his son acted for him as regent. Ferdinand returned to Naples after Napoleon's overthrow in 1815. The following year, against the will of most of his subjects, he reconstituted the kingdom of the Two Sicilies along autocratic lines with the aid of Austria. He was succeeded by his son, Francis I.
1652 - 1722
Elizabeth
Charlotte
70
70
1674 - 1723
Philippe
49
49
1677 - 1749
Francoise
Marie
De Blois
72
72
D. 1752
Louis
D'orleans
D. 1785
Louis-
Philippe
1747 - 1793
Louis-
Philippe
Joseph
46
46
Orléans, Louis Philippe Joseph, Duc d' (1747-93), French nobleman, cousin of King Louis XVI, who during the French Revolution adopted the name Philippe Égalité. Before the Revolution, he distributed books and papers throughout France advocating liberal ideas. In June 1789, during the meeting of the Estates-General summoned by the king, he led the 47 nobles who seceded from their own order to join the revolutionary third estate. He was elected to the National Convention and voted for the death of Louis XVI. In 1793, during the Reign of Terror, he was guillotined. His son Louis Philippe became king of France in 1830.
Louis
Adelaide
1773 - 1850
Louis
Philippe
77
77
Louis Philippe, called the Citizen King (1773-1850), king of France (1830-48). He was the son of Louis Philippe Joseph, duc d'Orléans (called Philippe Égalité), and was born in Paris. Louis Philippe belonged to the house of Bourbon-Orléans, a branch of the French royal family stemming from Philippe I, duc d'Orléans, the brother of King Louis XIV. From his birth until 1785 Louis Philippe was known as the duc de Valois and subsequently as the duc de Chartres until 1793, when his father was guillotined, and he succeeded him as duc d'Orléans. Like his father, he was in sympathy with the French Revolution, the upheaval in France that resulted in the establishment of the First Republic, and in 1790 he joined the Jacobins, members of a French radical political club. Two years later, at the age of 18, he was given a command in the revolutionary army and, as a colonel, fought at the battles of Valmy and Jemappes. After the defeat of the French army by the Austrians at the Battle of Neerwinden, Holland, in 1793, Louis Philippe was implicated with his superior officer, the French general Charles François Dumouriez, in a plot against the republic, and he fled to Switzerland. After the execution of his father by the French Revolutionary Tribunal, Louis Philippe became the central figure about whom his supporters, the Orléanist party, rallied; he did not actively enter into the intrigues for restoring the monarchy, however, and during the regime of the Directory and that of Napoleon, Louis Philippe remained outside France, traveling in Scandinavia, the United States (where he lived for four years in Philadelphia), and England. He also visited Sicily at the invitation of Ferdinand I, king of the Two Sicilies, and in 1809 he married the king's daughter Maria Amelia. In 1814, after the abdication of Napoleon, he returned to France and was welcomed by King Louis XVIII, who restored to him the Orléans estates. By the late 1820s, however, under the autocratic rule of Louis XVIII's brother and successor, Charles X, the last of the Bourbon monarchs, the French middle and lower classes were growing restive. Louis Philippe was by this time the favorite of those Republican leaders who feared to arouse the opposition of all Europe by establishing a republic, and hoped that Louis Philippe would govern according to popular will. In 1830, by the July Revolution that overthrew Charles X and the Bourbon dynasty in France, Louis Philippe was proclaimed king by the Chamber of Deputies. At first Louis Philippe was content to rule as a "citizen king" and to conciliate the Republicans who had helped bring him to power; he also dispensed with many royal privileges. Gradually, however, while remaining a constitutional monarch, he became more authoritarian, seeking not only to establish the Bourbon-Orléans dynasty in France but also to consolidate his position among the sovereigns of Europe. He arranged for the marriage of his daughter Louise to Léopold I, king of the Belgians. The last years of his reign were marked by corruption in domestic affairs and by lethargy in foreign affairs. Louis Philippe, having tried to win the favor of both the democratic and authoritarian elements, was at last deserted by both sides and was deposed by the Revolution of 1848, which led to the formation in France of the Second Republic (1848-52) and the rise of Louis Napoleon, later Napoleon III, emperor of France. After his abdication Louis Philippe lived with his family in England.
Margery
Morgan
1782 - 1866
Marie
Amelie
84
84
1837 - 1905
Philip
68
68
1811 - 1885
Charles
Anthony
Hohenzollern
74
74
Josephine
Of
Baden
1845 - 1912
Marie
Hohenzollern
67
67
Sophie
Chotek
1777 - 1830
Francis
I
53
53
Francis I (of Two Sicilies) (1777-1830), king of the Two Sicilies (1825-30), the son of King Ferdinand I. Francis was viceroy of Sicily from 1812 to 1816 and duke of Calabria from 1817 to 1825. In the former post he granted the Sicilians a constitution, but when he became king, he renounced his former liberalism.
Daughter
Of Maria
Theresa
1810 - 1859
Ferdinand
II
49
49
Ferdinand II (Two Sicilies), known as King Bomba (1810-59), king of the Two Sicilies (1830-59), son of King Francis I, whom he succeeded. His reign was marked by numerous insurrections, including one in Sicily early in 1848, which was followed by revolutions against autocratic rule in most parts of Europe. Although Ferdinand attempted at first to placate the insurgents by granting a reformed constitution, the failure of the revolutions in other countries encouraged him to reverse his stand. In 1849 he dissolved the parliament, and later that year he authorized the bombardment of the rebellious cities of Sicily, an atrocity that earned him the nickname of King Bomba. His rule, characterized by terror and deceit, was supported by Austria but aroused protests from the governments of France and Great Britain. He was succeeded by his son Francis II, the last Bourbon ruler of Naples and Sicily.
1836 - 1894
Francis
II
58
58
Francis II (of Naples) (1836-94), king of Naples (1859-61). Son of Ferdinand II, king of the Two Sicilies, and grandson of Francis I, he was the last Bourbon ruler of the Two Sicilies. He tried to continue the autocratic policies of his father, but his kingdom was lost in the unification of Italy. In 1860 the kingdom was invaded by revolutionary troops under the Italian nationalist leader Giuseppe Garibaldi, and it was forced to capitulate the following year. Compelled to abdicate in 1861, Francis lived thereafter in various European countries, from which he occasionally organized abortive conspiracies against the new kingdom of Italy.
Joseph
Morgan
1822 - 1899
Theresa
Christina
77
77
1605 - 1656
John
IV
51
51
John IV, in Portuguese, Joao IV, called The Fortunate (1605-56), king of Portugal (1640-56), the first of the Braganza kings. He governed Portugal with energy and ability, restoring finances and promoting commerce and agriculture. He proclaimed himself king after driving out the Spanish usurpers in 1640 and finally routing them at the Battle of Montijo (1644). In 1649 and 1654 the Portuguese won important naval victories over the Dutch off the coast of Brazil, thereby regaining their possessions in South America. By his capable administration, John succeeded in restoring Portugal to a respected place in Europe.
Luiza
Maria De
Guzman
1638 - 1705
Catherine
Of
Braganza
67
67
Thephilus
Morgan
1798 - 1834
Pedro
I
36
36
Pedro I (1798-1834), emperor of Brazil (1822-31), the second son of King John VI of Portugal, born in Lisbon. To escape a French invasion of Portugal, Pedro and his parents fled to Brazil in 1807. In 1821, when his father returned home, Pedro became prince regent of Brazil. The following year he proclaimed Brazilian independence and was crowned emperor of Brazil. Proclaimed king of Portugal in 1826, he abdicated that same year in favor of his daughter Maria II. Pedro's arbitrary rule and his involvement in the internal affairs of Portugal caused his popularity to wane in Brazil. He abdicated as emperor of Brazil in 1831 and returned to Portugal, where he supported Maria against his brother Miguel, her rival for the throne.
1825 - 1891
Pedro
II
66
66
Pedro II (1825-91), emperor of Brazil (1831-89). The son of Pedro I, he succeeded to the throne at the age of five, on his father's abdication, and was subject to a regency until he reached his majority in 1840. In 1843 he married Teresa Christina, daughter of King Francis I of the Two Sicilies. The early years of his reign were marked by revolts in various parts of the country. Pedro had a lifelong interest in science and was a patron of the arts. He opposed slavery, which he gradually phased out of Brazilian life-outlawing the slave trade in 1850, initiating a process of emancipation in 1871, and finally abolishing slavery altogether in 1888. Under his rule Brazil fought a costly but successful war with Paraguay (1864-70), gaining some territory as a result. Although impartial toward Brazil's rival political groups, Pedro's use of the wide powers given to him by the imperial constitution caused resentment, which, along with dissatisfaction among slave owners, led to his overthrow and the establishment of a republic in 1889.
Mary
Morgan
John
Goerge
Lascelles
~1482
Vasilij
Lvovich
Anna
Stepanova
~1410 - 1465
Thomas
Palaiologos
55
55
~1424
Ekaterini
Asanina
Zachariaina
1350 - 1425
Manuel
II
75
75
Manuel II Palaeologus (1348?-1425), son and successor of the Byzantine emperor John V Palaeologus. In 1391 he escaped from the court of the Ottoman sultan Bayazid I, who was holding him hostage, to take the crown. Thereupon Bayazid laid siege to Constantinople. The city was in danger of falling when the sultan was forced to raise the siege and defend his country against the Mongol conqueror Tamerlane. Manuel then traveled to Europe to gain help from the western kingdoms but was unsuccessful. In 1402, however, Tamerlane defeated Bayazid at Ankara, and consequently Manuel enjoyed 20 years of peace. In 1422 the Byzantine Empire was attacked by the new Turkish sultan, Murad II, who conquered the Peloponnesus (modern Greek Pelopónnisos) and forced Manuel to pay tribute for the remaining three years of his reign. Manuel was succeeded by his son John VIII Palaeologus, who had been coemperor since 1421.
~1372 - 1450
Jelena
Dragas
78
78
1332 - 1391
Ioannis
V
58
58
1333 - 1396
Eleni
Kantakuzene
63
63
Ruth
Shapley
~1346
Konstantin
Dragas
1296 - 1341
Andronikos
III
45
45
1306 - 1359/60
Jeanne
Anna De
Savoie
1295 - 1383
John
Vi
88
88
John VI Cantacuzene (circa 1292-1383), Byzantine emperor (1347-55). He was the friend and first minister of the Byzantine emperor Andronicus III Palaeologus, after whose death he claimed the throne and went to war against the defenders of the legitimate heir, nine-year-old John V Palaeologus. Cantacuzene triumphed through the aid of the Ottoman Turks and is considered responsible for their entry into Europe. He had reigned only seven years when Palaeologus, having come of age, enlisted the aid of the Genoese and forced him to abdicate. He subsequently became a monk and wrote his memoirs, one of the major documents of Byzantine history. Cantacuzene also wrote a defense of Hesychasm, a Greek mystical doctrine.
~1307 - BTW 1363/79
Irini
Asasina
1277 - 1330
Michael
Ix
53
53
~1278 - 1333
Rita
(Maria) Of
Armenia
55
55
1252/53 - 1323
Amadeo
V
~1284 - >1337
Marie
De
Brabant
53
53
1264 - 1294
Michael
Kantakuzenos
30
30
Hannah
Avery
~1272 - 1342
Theodora
Angelina
Palaiologina
70
70
~1281 - >1355
Andronikos
Palaiologos
Asanes
74
74
~1282
Glabaina
Tarchanetina
1259 - 1332
Andronikos
II
72
72
~1259 - 1281
Anna
Of
Hungary
22
22
~1254
Leon
III
~1226
Thomas
II Of
Savoy
~1230
Beatrice
De
Fieschi
1253 - 1294
Jean I
41
41
~1253 - 1285
Marguerite
Of
Flanders
32
32
Abigail
Skiffe
~1260 - 1302
Ivan
Asen
42
42
~1262
Irini
Palaiologina
~1256
Michael Dukas
Glabas-
Tarchaneitos
~1258
Maria
Palaiologina
Branaia
~1224 - 1282
Michael
Viii
58
58
Michael VIII Palaeologus (circa 1224-82), Byzantine emperor (1261-82), who restored Greek rule over the Byzantine Empire, which had been conquered by the Latins in 1204. An aristocrat, Michael served the emperors of Nicaea, a Greek principality established after the Latin victory. When Emperor Theodore II Lascaris died, Michael was named guardian of his son and successor, but soon seized (1259) power for himself. In 1261 Michael's army captured Constantinople from the Latins. With much of the Byzantine Empire now in his hands, he had himself crowned emperor. The last years of his reign were spent in a protracted struggle with Charles I, Angevin king of the Two Sicilies, who was covetous of his domain. Michael fomented a plot by Sicilian rebels in 1282-the so-called Sicilian Vespers-which finally turned the tide in his favor. He died later the same year on a campaign in Thrace.
~1240 - 1303
Theodora
Dukaina
Batatzaina
63
63
~1243 - 1270
Ivan
Mitso
Mytzes
27
27
Ephraim
Woodbridge
~1241
Marija
Of
Bulgaria
~1225 - 1263
Rostislav
Mikhailovich
38
38
~1227 - 1274
Anna
Of
Hungary
47
47
N.n.
Williams
~1190 - 1241
Ivan
Asen
51
51
~1218 - >1241
Irini
Komnene
Angelina
23
23
~1185 - 1246
Mikhail
Vsevolodovich
61
61
~1194
Mariya
Romanovna
Bridget
~1168
Roman
Mstislavich
~1172
Predslava
Ryurikovna
1705 - 1769
Samuel
Morgan
64
64
1552 - 1591
Dmitrij
Ivanovich
39
39
1554
Ivan
Ivanovich
1557 - 1598
Fyodor
I
Ivanovich
41
41
~1561
Irinia
Aleksandra
Sister of Boris Gudunov.
1592
Feodosya
1291 - 1316/20
Vasily
Konstantinovich
1312 - 1365
Konstantin
III
Vasilyevich
53
53
1707
James
Morgan
~1318 - 1365
Maria
Fetiniya
Ivanovna
47
47
~1329
Vladimir
Konstantinovich
~1347
Ivan
'bychok'
Vladimirovich
~1330 - 1409
Andrei
Afanasij
79
79
Vera
Andreevna
~1362 - 1418
Anastasia
Ivanovna
56
56
1708
Hannah
Morgan
~1310
Andrei
Ivanovich
Kobyla
~1344 - 1403
Fedor
Andreevich
Koshka
59
59
~1377 - ~1389
Ivan
Fedorovich
Koshkin
12
12
~1397
Zakharij
Ivanovich
Koshkin
~1440 - 1503
Yurij
Koshkin-
Zakharin
63
63
~1434
Ivan
'tuchko'
~1460
Irina
Ivanovna
~1486 - 1543
Roman
Yurevich
57
57
~1489
Yuliyan
Fedorvna
Ivan
Vasilevich
Shestov
1710
Rachel
Morgan
Mariya
~1535 - 1581
Feodosia
Aleksandrovna
46
46
~1201 - 1264
Daniil
Romanovich
63
63
~1205
Anna
Mstislavna
1712
Daniel
Morgan
~1225
Ustiniya
Daniilovna
~1222 - 1264
Andrei
II
Yaroslavich
42
42
~1257 - 1309
Vasily
Andreivich
52
52
~1299 - 1355
Konstantin
Vasilyevich
56
56
~1302
Elana
Mary
Avery
~1232 - 1383
Dmitri
IV
Konstantinovich
151
151
~1334 - 1406
Vasilissa
Anna
Konstantinovna
72
72
~1350 - 1402
Semen
Dimitrivich
52
52
~1360 - >1402
Aleksandra
42
42
~1380
Vasily
Semenovich
~1414 - >1478
Ivan
Vasilyevich
64
64
~1440
Ivan
Ivanovich
~1460 - 1536
Boris
Ivanovich
76
76
~1490 - 1566
Aleksandr
Borisovich
76
76
~1489
Peter
Ivanovich
Thomas
Curtis
~1493
Mariya
Vasilevna
~1515
Anastasia
Petrovna
~1398
John
Cotton
~1402
Jane
~1463
John
Cheny
~1345
Johanna
Hertforth
~1420 - 1485
Mariya
Yaroslavna
65
65
1327 - 1353
Andrei
Ivanovich
25
25
~1332 - 1390
Mariya
Marfa
Kostantinovna
58
58
~1352 - 1438
Elena
Of
Lithuania
86
86
Benjamin
Fowler
Residence Guilford
1353 - 1410
Vladimir
'the Brave'
Andreevich
56
56
1388 - 1426
Yaroslav
Vladimirovich
38
38
~1368
Fedor
'goltyaj'
Fedorovich
~1370
Mariya
~1394
Mariya
Fedorovna
~1352 - 1407
Evdokiya
Dmitrievna
55
55
Praskoviya
Aleksandra
Bryachislavna
Fyodor
Godunov
1712 - 1786
Frederick
II
74
74
Frederick II (of Prussia), called The Great (1712-86), king of Prussia (1740-86); during his reign, he was considered among the most notable of enlightened despots in 18th century Europe. Frederick was born in Berlin on January 24, 1712, son of King Frederick William I and grandson of Frederick I. As crown prince he was trained, under his father's supervision, to become a soldier and a thrifty administrator. Frederick, however, encouraged by his mother, Sophia Dorothea of Hannover, and his tutors, showed a preference for courtly life, music, and French literature. Frederick William, failing to understand the tastes of his son, developed an open dislike for him. At the age of 18, Frederick decided to escape to England; his proposed plan was discovered, and he was arrested, imprisoned, temporarily deprived of his status as crown prince, and forced to witness the execution of one of his two confederates. After he had subsequently applied himself diligently to fiscal and military affairs and had consented to a marriage in 1733 with Elizabeth Christine, daughter of Ferdinand Albert II of Brunswick, Frederick was reinstated to his position as crown prince. He then went to live for seven years on his estate at Rheinsburg, where, in his leisure time, he studied philosophy, history, and poetry and corresponded with the French philosophers, notably Voltaire. In his Antimachiavell, written during that period and published by Voltaire in 1740, Frederick idealistically opposed the political doctrines of the Italian statesman and philosopher Niccolo Machiavelli, favoring peaceful and enlightened rule. King and Military Leader On the death of his father in 1740 Frederick became king and embarked almost immediately on a policy of Prussian aggrandizement. When Maria Theresa became archduchess of Austria in that same year, Frederick demanded the cession of duchies of Silesia in return for Prussian recognition of the Pragmatic Sanction, which gave the Austrian Habsburg dominions to Maria Theresa. Refused by Austria, Frederick invaded Silesia, commencing the War of the Austrian Succession. He led his forces to victory at Mollwitz in 1741 and at Chotusitz in 1742; in the latter year, by the Treaty of Breslau, Maria Theresa was obliged to yield the Silesian territory demanded by Prussia. Frederick acquired East Friesland (now a region of Germany) in 1744, on the death of the last ruler without heirs of that principality, and in 1745 he fought and won a second war with Austria, terminated by the Peace of Dresden, which assured Prussia the possession of Silesia. By this time Frederick was recognized as an able military leader, and the position of Prussia in Europe had risen considerably. The military greatness of Frederick was demonstrated during the Seven Years' War, fought from 1756 to 1763. Frederick and his forces, aided only by financial assistance from Great Britain, which was at war with France, opposed the armies of Austria, Russia, Sweden, Saxony, and France. The Peace of Hubertusburg in 1763 awarded Prussia no new territory, as it merely confirmed the boundaries that had existed before the war; at the end of the war, however, Prussia was established as a rival to Austria for domination of the German states. Frederick made an alliance with Catherine II of Russia, in 1764, and by the first partition of Poland in 1772 he received Polish Prussia, exclusive of Gdansk (Danzig) and Torun (Thorn), thus uniting the regions of Brandenburg and Pomerania. By the Treaty of Teschen in 1779, after the War of the Bavarian Succession, a short conflict with Austria, Prussia was awarded the Franconian principalities of Bavaria; Austria retained only a part of Lower Bavaria. A further step was made toward destroying Austrian dominance in 1785, when Frederick gathered the German princes into a union of princes, the Furstenbund, to preserve the constitution of the Holy Roman Empire. Administrator Frederick was extremely sympathetic to the American Revolution and was an admirer of George Washington. He was one of the first sovereigns to conclude a commercial treaty with the United States. He did not, however, limit his activities to the international scene; internal affairs flourished during his reign. His rule was absolute; he was a ubiquitous administrator, constantly checking the work of his officials, from whom he exacted the utmost in conscientiousness. Under his rule new methods of agriculture and manufacturing were introduced. Marshes were drained, providing new lands for cultivation and colonization and the institution of serfdom, while not abolished, was somewhat liberalized. Under Frederick's personal supervision the efficiency and size of the army were increased. He reviewed the troops frequently, concerned himself with the discipline of his officers and men, and wrote works for his generals on the science of warfare. In 1747 Frederick, who was particularly interested in the equitable distribution of justice to all classes, issued a new codification of Prussian law, the Codex Fridericianus. Patron of Culture Frederick continued to patronize the arts and sciences throughout his life. The Academy of Sciences again became an important center of learning during his reign, and elementary education progressed as under no previous Prussian sovereign. In his favorite residence, the palace of Sans Souci, Frederick held court, but always entertained with judicious economy. Contemptuous of the German language and culture, Frederick spoke French at court and patronized French writers, many of whom, including Voltaire, paid him visits in Berlin. Frederick himself was a musician, spending many hours with his flute. He was also a prolific writer; his complete works were published in 30 volumes between 1846 and 1857. He died at Sans Souci on August 17, 1786.
Nathaniel
Johnson
Residence Guilford
1823 - 1891
Charles
Frederick
Alexander
68
68
Charles (of Württemberg), full German name Karl Friedrich Alexander (1823-91), king of Württemberg (1864-91). He was the son of William I, king of Württemberg. Charles aided Austria in the Seven Weeks' War but sided with Prussia and the other German states in the Franco-Prussian War. His reign was noted for liberal reforms.
D. 1860
Thomas
McCoy
1828
Sarah
King
McCoy
1910 living with Bessie in Wilkinsburg, PA.
1830 - BET 1900 AND 1910
John
Wilson
McCoy
1860 farmer in Robinson Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1870 farmer in Stowe Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1880 farmer in Washington Twp., Warren, IA. 1900 farmer in Licon Twp., Warren, IA. 1879 Directory of Washington Township (West). McCoy, John W., farmer, Sec. 27; P.O. Indianola.
Robert
McCoy
1836
William
McCoy
1860 with mother. 1900 farmer, Stowe Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1910 farmer, Kennedy Twp., Allegheny, PA.
1841
Mary
McCoy
1860 with mother.
1836
Nancy
McCoy
1860 with mother. 1870 with mother. 1880 epelepsy, with mother and brother.
1841
Thomas
McCoy
1860 with mother. 1870 farmer, with mother. 1880 farmer in Stowe Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1910 farmer in Kennedy Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1920 farmer in Kennedy Twp., Allegheny, PA.
1806
Isabella
Galloway
(Garaway)
Ruth
Brewster
~1847
John
Wilson
1880 on father's farm in Moon Twp, Allegheny, PA.
1849
Samuel
Huey
Wilson
1880 grocer in Pittsburgh, PA. 1900 coal merchant, living with his sister Mary. 1910 laborer, odd jobs living with his sister Mary.
~1851
Robert
Charles
Wilson
1852
Mary
Catherine
Wilson
~1856
Elizabeth
Wilson
Verner
~1858
Howard
Wilson
~1864
George
Sampson
Wilson
~1860
Martha
Wilson
Lawrence
~1866
William
James
Wilson
~1862
Nettie
Wilson
Elizabeth
Sherman
1814 - 1893
Susanna
Maffett
79
79
1880 in Pittsburgh, PA.
~1837
William
Wilson
~1845
George
Jackson
Wilson
1848
Robert
James
Wilson
1851
John
Hart
Wilson
1880 with mother.
1853
Sarah
Elizabeth
Wilson
1855
Anna
Mary
Wilson
1880 with mother.
1857
Calvin
Wilson
1880 with mother.
Mary
Jane
Lydia
Hemingway
William
Edie
~1817
Sarah
A.
Maginnis
1880 wd, chandler mfg. in Pittsburgh, PA.
~1844
Robert
Henry
Wilson
1870 clerk in store, living with parents.
1845
Mary
Wilson
1880 wd, living with mother. 1900 wd, living with her sister Sarah.
1846
Sarah
Louise
Wilson
1870 living with parents. 1900 wd, in Wilkinsburgh, PA. 1910 wd, in Wilkinsburgh, PA. 1920 wd, in Wilkinsburgh, PA.
1849
James
Dinwiddie
Wilson
1870 clerk in store, living with parents. 1880 clerk in Pittsburgh, PA. 1900 sales clerk in Tarentum, PA. 1910 president, glass works in Tarentum, PA.
~1851
Harvey
G.
Wilson
1870 salesman in store, living with parents. 1880 soap mfg, Pittsburgh, PA. 1900 bookkeeper, Elizabth Twp, PA. 1910 treasurer, glass co. in Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 treasurer, glass co. in Pittsburgh, PA.
Martha
Helen
Wilson
~1854
John
Albert
Wilson
1870 living with parents. 1880 bookkeeper, living with mother.
1859
Caroline
"Carrie"
Brown Wilson
John
Norton
Residence Guilford
1854 - 1900
James
Craig
Wilson
46
46
1846 - <1908
John
D.
Fagundus
62
62
11/24/1888 issued patent on 160 acres in Traill county. 1900 farmer, Hillsboro, Traill, ND.
1881 - 1960
Mary
W.
Fagundus
79
79
1910 mother of 2, 2 still living.
1884
Aimee
Josephine
Fagundus
1910 nurse in Anoka, MN. P.O.B. is PA. 1920 in Duluth, MN.
Lemoyne
Dawson
Fagundus
Not with family on 1900 census.
1887 - 1973
Elizabeth
Ruth
Fagundus
85
85
1910 none, with mother, Minneapolis, MN. 1920 superintendent, dry goods co, Grand Rapids, MI. 1930 personnel director, dept store, Baltimore, MD. Name: Ruth Fagundus Certificate: 019142 Death Place: Brookline Death Date: 31 May 1973 Birth Place: North Dakota
1852 - 1914
Lucy
Bell
Carlisle
62
62
1900 wd, none, mother of 6, 3 still living, Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 wd, none, mother of 6, 3 still living, with SIL Elizabeth.
1876
Alexander
Wilson
1900 carpenter living with mother. 1920 carpenter in Pittsburgh, PA.
1880 - 1923
James
Craig
Wilson
43
43
1900 errand boy, living with mother. 1910 clerk, ?, with mother. 1920 real estate agent in Pittsburgh, PA.
1882
Annie
C.
Wilson
1900 living with mother.
Elizabeth
Forsyth
1861
Stephen
Henry
Lloyd
1900 real estate, Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 agent, real estate, Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 agent, insurance co, Pittsburgh, PA. 1930 owner, real estate, Pittsburgh, PA.
Martha
Bynon
Lloyd
1901
Mary
Craig
Lloyd
1930 none, with parents.
1903
Jeanne
Bynon
Lloyd
1930 teacher, public school, with parents.
~1876
Ann
Rutledge
~1901
Mary
R.
Wilson
1876 - 1942
George
Ketcham
Hagaman
65
65
1910 physician, Anoka, MN. 1918 physician, Anoka, MN. 1920 doctor in St. Paul, MN. 1930 physician, private practice, St. Paul, MN. Name: DR. GEORGE K. HAGAMAN Death Date: 07/11/1942 00:00:00 Death Place: RAMSEY State File Number: 024856
1907
Martha
J.
Hagaman
1930 none, with parents.
1909
George
Hagaman
1930 office clerk, bonds broker, with parents.
1913 - 1988
Elizabeth
Hagaman
75
75
Name: Elizabeth H. Corning SSN: 072-52-1778 Last Residence: 28374 Pinehurst, Moore, North Carolina, United States of America Born: 25 Jun 1913 Died: 14 Dec 1988 State (Year) SSN issued: New York (1973 ) Name: ELIZABETH HAGAMAN CORNING Age: 75 Years Death Date: 14 December 1988 Place of Death: Pinehurst, Moore, North Carolina Birth Date: 25 June 1913 Gender: Female Race: White Marital Status: Married Autopsy: No Hospital: Home Bed Code: Attendant: Physician Burial: Cremation in state Father: HAGAMAN Place of Injury: State of Birth: Minnesota Residence: Pinehurst, Moore, North Carolina Social Security Number: 072521778
Elizabeth
Gates
William
Ives
Punky
Ives
Living
Ives
Living
Ives
1911 - 1995
Charles
Townsend
Corning
83
83
Name: Charles T. Corning SSN: 477-10-7609 Last Residence: 28388 Southern Pines, Moore, North Carolina, United States of America Born: 24 Jul 1911 Died: 5 Apr 1995 State (Year) SSN issued: Minnesota (Before 1951 ) Name: CHARLES TOWNSEND CORNING SR Age: 83 Years Death Date: 05 April 1995 Place of Death: Southern Pines, Moore, North Carolina Birth Date: 24 July 1911 Gender: Male Race: White Marital Status: Widowed Autopsy: No Hospital: Nursing and Rest Homes Bed Code: Attendant: Physician Burial: Cremation in state Father: TOWNSEND Place of Injury: State of Birth: Minnesota Residence: Southern Pines, Moore, North Carolina Social Security Number: 477107609
Living
Corning
Living
Corning
1927 - 1996
Barbara
H. Bell
68
68
Name: Barbara B. Beutell SSN: 149-20-1780 Last Residence: 07755 Oakhurst, Monmouth, New Jersey, United States of America Born: 22 Aug 1927 Died: Apr 1996 State (Year) SSN issued: New Jersey (Before 1951 )
1930 - 1993
William
Bell
63
63
Living
Hamilton
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
Living
Bell
1812 - >1900
William
Boston
88
88
1870 tipstave, Pittsburgh, PA. 1880 tipstave at court, Allegheny, PA. 1900 in Allegheny, PA.
1867
Mary
Emma
Boston
1862 - BET 1903 AND 1910
Eliza
"Lizzie"
J. Boston
1874
William
H.
Dyer
1900 toy manufactuer in Alleghny, PA. 1910 toys and notions merchant in Ben Avon, PA. 1920 merchant in Ben Avon, PA. 1930 toys and notions merchant in Ben Avon, PA.
1902 - 1977
William
B.
Dyer
74
74
1930 engineer, public utilities, living with parents in Ben Avon, PA.
1863
Robert
W.
Hastings
1900 carpenter in Ben Avon, PA. 1910 wd, clerk, iron & steel, Ben Avon, PA. Lived next to Clyde Hamilton. 1920 wd, clerk, steel company, Ben Avon, PA.
1894
Esther
H.
Hastings
1930 wd, in Ben Avon, PA.
James
Craig
1892
Dorothy
G.
Craig
1910 with grandparents.
1881
James
Lewis
O'neill
1917-18 banker, Guaranty Trust Company of New York, Newark, NJ. 1930 vice president, bank, Millburn, NJ.
~1917
James
Craig
O'neill
~1921
Martha
T.
O'neill
1822 - 1889
Thomas
B.
McGahan
67
67
1860 cooper, Moon Twp, Allegheny, PA. 1870 farmer, West Wheatfield, Indiana, PA.
1862
William
McGahan
1900 postal clerk, railroad in Pittsburgh. PA. 1930 clerk mail r/r in Pittsburgh, PA.
1896 - 1974
Helen
McGahan
78
78
Name: Helen Reese SSN: 262-80-9238 Last Residence: 14830 Corning, Steuben, New York, United States of America Born: 13 Feb 1896 Died: Jun 1974 State (Year) SSN issued: Florida (1962 )
1893 - 1976
Robert
Edgar
Reese
83
83
1930 clerical odd jobs, living with Helen's parents. Name: Robert Reese SSN: 113-01-2454 Last Residence: 14830 Corning, Steuben, New York, United States of America Born: 15 Aug 1893 Died: Oct 1976 State (Year) SSN issued: New York (Before 1951 )
1925
Robert C.
"Bobby"
Reese
1788 - 1859
James
Moreland
70
70
1797
Elizabeth
Moreland
1801
Rachel
(Cotter)
Moreland
1805 - 1854
Maria
(McGill)
Moreland
48
48
1846 - BET 1920 AND 1930
William
J.
Fullerton
1870 tailor, Pittsburgh, PA. 1880 tailor, Pittsburgh, PA. 1900 day laborer, Denver, CO. William J. Fullerton, enumerator. 1910 clerk, city ? dept, Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 no occupation, Springfield Twp, Delaware, PA. IGI DOB 31 MAR 1843 Pittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania.
1876
Harry
B.
Fullerton
1900 paint salesman, with parents, in Denver, CO. 1910 lawnkeeper, city ?, with parents, Pittsburg, PA.
1874
Alexander
W.
Fullerton
06/05/1900 clerk, Westinghouse, in Pittsburgh, PA with step grandmother, Mary Wilson. 06/09/1900 office clerk, with parents in Denver, CO. 1910 clerk, machine co, Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 official, electric co., Springfield Twp, Delaware, PA. 1930 purchasing agent in Swathmore, PA.
~1877
May
McClure
~1905
Alexander
Wilson
Fullerton
1930 clerk, living with parents.
~1910
Charlotte
Fullerton
~1912
Mary
Fullerton
1823 - 1901
Elizabeth
"Eliza"
Wilson
78
78
04/19/1850 entered Port of New York from Liverpool on the Princeton. 1860 living with parents in Pittsburgh, PA. 1870 in Pittsburgh, PA. Name: Mcmurray, Eliza Age: 25 Gender: Female Embarkation: Liverpool Ship: Princeton Occupation: house keeper Passengers: 430 Residence: Co.Down Native Country: Ireland Destination: New York Arrival Date: 19 April 1850
1831
Elizabeth
Mitchell
1900 wd, in Pittsburgh, PA.
1854 - 1912
Adam
Wilson
58
58
1880 carpenter, with parents. 1900 contractor in Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 president, contracting co., Pittsburgh, PA.
1857
Joseph
Charles
Wilson
1880 carpenter, with parents. 1900 contractor in Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 building contractor in Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 contractor, own business in Pittsburgh, PA. 1930 proprietor builder in Pittsburgh, PA.
1863 - 1920
Victor
Grant
Wilson
57
57
1900 bookkeeper living with in-laws in Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 clerk, lumber yard in Pittsburgh, PA.
1859
Mary
Wilson
1900 mother of 8, 5 still living. 1910 in Pittsburgh, PA.
1865
Clara
Wison
1900 living with mother.
1871
James
Wilson
1867 - 1962
Emma
Wilson
95
95
1900 living with mother.
1870
Harry
Wilson
1900 office clerk, living with mother. 1930 president, spring mfg, in Pittsburgh, PA.
1872
Oscar
Wilson
1900 bank clerk, living with mother. 1920 bank clerk in Pittsburgh, PA. 1930 asst cashier, bank in Pittsburgh, PA.
1861
Howard
H.
Wilson
1869
Agnes
"Aggie"
Wilson
1900 living with mother.
1865
Mary "Mamie"
(Dickson)
Dixon
1859
John
M.
Milholland
1900 machinist in Pittsburgh, PA.
1884
Charles
Milholland
1910 Harry C., engineer, water co., with mother.
1887
James
Milholland
James Milholland '11, president of the Board of Trustees when President Hetzel died, served as Acting President of Penn State for over two and a half years before the Board selected Milton S. Eisenhower to head the institution, which had become the twelfth largest in the country and was engaged in almost continuous expansion of enrollment, staff, buildings and services. During these years enrollment of veterans reached its peak, and construction of men's and women's residence halls in large units (Simmons, McElwain and West Halls) was undertaken on a self-amortizing basis to accommodate regular resident undergraduates as the "farming out" program ended. Mineral sciences, plant industries and a classroom building (Willard) also were completed. Name: MILHOLLAND, MARGARET Social Security #: 555288405 Sex: FEMALE Birth Date: 1 Jan 1893 Birthplace: CALIFORNIA Death Date: 8 Mar 1957 Death Place: SAN FRANCISCO Mother's Maiden Name: SHANK Father's Surname: JOHNSTON
1889
Mary
Helen
Milholland
1910 Mary H., nurse, hospital, with mother.
1886
Clara
J.
Milholland
1910 scholl teacher, with mother.
~1881
Emma
Myers
~1878
Juliet
P.
~1866
Fairene
F. Rena
Stone
~1901
Howard
H.
Wilson
~1897
Burnett
Wilson
N.n.
Caratone
Hilda
Hilderic
D. 0484
Hunneric
Eudoxia
Flavius
0400 - 0477
Gaiseric
77
77
Gaiseric, also Genseric (400?-77), king of the Vandals (428-77) at the time of their greatest power. The illegitimate son of Godigiselus, leader of the Vandals during the invasion of Gaul, Gaiseric succeeded his brother Gunderic (reigned 406-28) in 428. The next year he led all his people from Spain to Africa. The Roman general in Africa, Bonifacius, tried vainly to turn the Vandals back, but was defeated and forced to flee to Italy. After a triumphant progress across northern Africa, the Vandals captured Carthage in 439, and Gaiseric made the city his capital. Vandal fleets raided Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica. In 455 Gaiseric used the death of the Roman emperor Valentinian III as a pretext for the invasion of Rome. The city was undefended, and the Vandals entered it peacefully, pillaged it for 14 days, and carried away its treasures. When he withdrew, Gaiseric took as hostages Valentinian's widow, the empress Eudoxia, and her two daughters, along with Roman citizens, who were treated as slaves. He then led his armies eastward, laying waste to Greece and Dalmatia and threatening Constantinople. Two major attempts to subdue the Vandals, by the Western Roman emperor Majorian (reigned 457-61) in 457 and by the Eastern Roman emperor Leo I in 468, were unsuccessful. The Eastern emperor Zeno was forced to recognize Gaiseric and make peace with him in 476. Gaiseric was succeeded by his son Hunneric (reigned 477-84), under whom the African empire of the Vandals began to disintegrate.
0419 - 0455
Valentinian
III
36
36
Valentinian III (419-55), Western Roman emperor (425-55). He was put on the throne under the regency of his mother by Theodosius II, Roman emperor of the East. Valentinian was weak; from 433 to 454 his general Flavius Aetius was the actual ruler. During his reign, much of the Western Empire was ravaged by invaders; Africa was seized (429) by Gaiseric, king of the Vandals, and the Danubian provinces, Gaul, and Italy were overrun (441) by Attila, king of the Huns. Aetius won a great victory over Attila in 451 at Chalons-sur-Marne, Gaul. Valentinian killed Aetius in 454 but was murdered the following year by two of the general's supporters.
0422 - 0463
Eudoxia
Flavius
41
41
D. 0406
Godigiselus
D. 0421
Constantius
III
Constantius III (died 421), Western Roman emperor (421). A general in the service of the Western emperor Honorius, Constantius became virtual ruler of the western provinces in 414, when he forced the Visigoths out of Gaul into Spain. In 417 he married Honorius's sister, Galla Placidia. The next year he recalled the Visigoths from Spain and established a kingdom for them in southern Gaul under their ruler Wallia (reigned 415-19). During the last year of his life, Constantius was officially recognized by Honorius as co-emperor.
0392 - 0450
Galla
Placida
58
58
Sister of Western Emperor Honorius.
0317 - 0361
Constantius
II
44
44
Constantius II, full name Flavius Julius Constantius (317-61), Roman emperor (351-61), second son of Constantine the Great. On his father's death (337) Constantius was given the eastern provinces of the Roman Empire and became involved in a war with Shapur II, Sassanid king of Persia. When his brother, the Western emperor Constans I, was murdered by a usurper, Magnentius, in 350, Constantius led an army into the Balkans, where he defeated Magnentius at the Battle of Mursa (modern Osijek, Croatia) and became (351) sole ruler of the empire. After campaigning against the Germans and Sarmatians on the Danube River in 357, he returned to the East, where he continued the war against the Sassanids until his death. Constantius favored the Arian form of Christianity, and was an opponent of St. Athanasius, the orthodox bishop of Alexandria.
Fausta
0274 - 0337
Constantine
'the
Great'
63
63
Constantine the Great (about AD 274-337), Roman emperor (306-37), the first Roman ruler to be converted to Christianity. He was the founder of Constantinople (present-day Istanbul), which remained the capital of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire until 1453. Early Life Constantine the Great was born Flavius Valerius Constantinus at Nis, in what is now Serbia, son of the commander Constantius Chlorus (later Constantius I) and Helena (later Saint Helena), a camp follower. Constantius became co-emperor in 305. Constantine, who had shown military talent in the East, joined his father in Britain in 306. He was popular with the troops, who proclaimed him emperor when Constantius died later the same year. Over the next two decades, however, Constantine had to fight his rivals for the throne, and he did not finally establish himself as sole ruler until 324. Following the example of his father and earlier 3rd-century emperors, Constantine in his early life was a solar henotheist, believing that the Roman sun god, Sol, was the visible manifestation of an invisible "Highest God" (summus deus), who was the principle behind the universe. This god was thought to be the companion of the Roman emperor. Constantine's adherence to this faith is evident from his claim of having had a vision of the sun god in 310 while in a grove of Apollo in Gaul. In 312, on the eve of a battle against Maxentius, his rival in Italy, Constantine is reported to have dreamed that Christ appeared to him and told him to inscribe the first two letters of his name (XP in Greek) on the shields of his troops. The next day he is said to have seen a cross superimposed on the sun and the words "in this sign you will be the victor" (usually given in Latin, in hoc signo vinces). Constantine then defeated Maxentius at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, near Rome. The Senate hailed the victor as savior of the Roman people. Thus, Constantine, who had been a pagan solar worshiper, now looked upon the Christian deity as a bringer of victory. Persecution of the Christians was ended, and Constantine's co-emperor, Licinius, joined him in issuing the Edict of Milan (313), which mandated toleration of Christians in the Roman Empire. As guardian of Constantine's favored religion, the church was then given legal rights and large financial donations. Sole Ruler A struggle for power soon began between Licinius and Constantine, from which Constantine emerged in 324 as a victorious Christian champion. Now emperor of both East and West, he began to implement important administrative reforms. The army was reorganized, and the separation of civil and military authority, begun by his predecessor, Diocletian, was completed. The central government was run by Constantine and his council, known as the sacrum consistorium. The Senate was given back the powers that it had lost in the 3rd century, and new gold coins (solidi) were issued, which remained the standard of exchange until the end of the Byzantine Empire. Constantine intervened in ecclesiastical affairs to achieve unity; he presided over the first ecumenical council of the church at Nicaea in 325. He also began the building of Constantinople in 326 on the site of ancient Greek Byzantium. The city was completed in 330 (later expanded), given Roman institutions, and beautified by ancient Greek works of art. In addition, Constantine built churches in the Holy Land, where his mother (also a Christian) supposedly found the True Cross on which Jesus was crucified. The emperor was baptized shortly before his death, on May 22, 337. Evaluation Constantine the Great unified a tottering empire, reorganized the Roman state, and set the stage for the final victory of Christianity at the end of the 4th century. Many modern scholars accept the sincerity of his religious conviction. His conversion was a gradual process; at first he probably associated Christ with the victorious sun god. By the time of the Council of Nicaea (325), however, he was completely Christian, but still tolerated paganism among his subjects. Although criticized by his enemies as a proponent of a crude and false religion, Constantine the Great strengthened the Roman Empire and ensured its survival in the East. As the first emperor to rule in the name of Christ, he was a major figure in the foundation of medieval Christian Europe.
0289 - 0326
Fausta
37
37
0250 - 0306
Constantius
I
56
56
Constantius I, full name FLAVIUS VALERIUS CONSTANTIUS, called Constantius Chlorus (AD 250?-306), Roman emperor (305-06). He was a general and administrator under Emperor Maximian, who adopted him and gave him the government of Gaul and the rank of caesar in 293. When his coemperors, Maximian and Diocletian, abdicated in 305, Constantius became emperor in the West and prepared to conquer the Picts of Scotland. He died at Eboracum (modern York, England) during the campaign, after proclaiming his son Constantine the Great his successor as emperor.
0248 - 0328
H‚lšna
Flavia
Julia
80
80
Helena, Saint (248?-328?), concubine and possibly wife of the Roman emperor Constantius I, and mother of Constantine the Great, emperor of Rome. She was probably born in Drepanum, later called Helenopolis in her honor, in the ancient Roman province of Bithynia. When Constantius was named Caesar, or successor to the throne of the Roman Empire, in 293, he abandoned her to marry the stepdaughter of Maximian. She devoted the rest of her life to religious pilgrimages, visiting Jerusalem about 325 and founding there the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and the Church of the Nativity. According to later legends, in Palestine she discovered the cross on which Jesus was crucified. Her feast day is August 18.
~0240 - 0310
Maximian
70
70
Maximian, in Latin Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus (240?-310), Roman emperor (286-305, 306-08), born of humble parents in the Roman province of Pannonia (in present Slovenia). Because of his distinguished military service, the emperor Diocletian made him coruler of the Roman Empire with the title augustus. When Diocletian abdicated in 305, however, he compelled Maximian to do the same. Maximian retired to private life in Lucania, southern Italy, but returned to Rome in 306 to assist his son, the Roman emperor Marcus Maxentius. Two years later, however, he was driven from Italy by Maxentius, who wished to rule alone. He sought refuge in Gaul with his son-in-law,Constantine the Great. Maximian conspired to seize control of the government, but was forced by Constantine to commit suicide.
0347 - 0395
Theodosius
I
48
48
Theodosius I, full name Flavius Theodosius, called Theodosius the Great (346?-395), Roman emperor of the East (379-395) and of the West (394-395), the last man to rule a united Roman Empire. Theodosius was born in Spain, the son of the Roman general Theodosius. As a young man he accompanied his father on campaigns in Britain, but on his father's death he retired to Spain. When the eastern Roman emperor Valens was killed fighting the Visigoths at Adrianople in 378, the western Roman emperor Gratian chose Theodosius to rule in the East; he was crowned the following year. In 382, after numerous skirmishes, Theodosius negotiated a favorable peace with the Goths, permitting them to reside in his empire on the condition that they serve in his army. After the murder of Gratian in 383, Theodosius recognized the usurper Magnus Clemens Maximus as emperor of the West, with the exception of Italy, where Valentinian II continued to rule as Gratian's legal successor. When Maximus invaded Italy in 388, Theodosius defeated and killed him and restored Valentinian as Roman emperor of the West. Theodosius was a strong champion of orthodox Christianity; he persecuted the Arians and discouraged the practice of the old Roman pagan religion. In 390, however, he ordered the massacre of 7000 insurgent citizens of Thessoloníki, Greece, and was excommunicated by Bishop Ambrose of Milan, who demanded public penance before lifting the ban. In 392 Valentinian was murdered by his general Arbogast, who set up Eugenius as puppet ruler in his place. Theodosius again marched to Italy, where he defeated Arbogast and Eugenius in September 394. During the following four months he was the ruler of both East and West. After his death at Milan on January 17, 395, he was succeeded by his sons Arcadius in the East and Flavius Honorius in the West.
0384 - 0423
Honorius
38
38
Flavius Honorius, b. Sept. 9, 384, became coruler of the Roman Empire on the death of his father, Theodosius I, in 395. While his brother Arcadius became emperor in the East, Honorius assumed charge of the western half of the empire. However, real power in the West rested with Flavius Stilicho, the Vandal general whom Theodosius had appointed as regent. Territorial disputes, aggravated by ambitious regents, soon drove the brothers apart and effectively divided the empire. For more than a decade, Stilicho managed to preserve the West, which was besieged by barbarian invaders; but in 408 he was charged with high treason and executed on Honorius's orders. Two years later (410), Rome was sacked for the first time in 700 years by the Visigoths under Alaric. By the time Honorius died on Aug. 15, 423, the process of disintegration had become irreversible, and the future of Western Europe was in the hands of the Germanic tribes.
~0377 - 0408
Arcadius
31
31
Flavius Arcadius, b. c.377, d. May 1, 408, was the first emperor of the Eastern, or Byzantine, empire after the permanent division of the Roman Empire on the death (395) of Theodosius I. The oldest son of Theodosius, Arcadius inherited the east, and his brother Honorius received the west. Arcadius was a weak ruler dominated by his ministers, notably Rufinus and Eutropius, and by his Frankish wife, Eudoxia. In 395, Greece was overrun by the Visigoths under Alaric. A campaign against them by the general Flavius Stilicho was cut short when Arcadius ordered Stilicho out of the east. The emperor then made peace (397) with Alaric by making him supreme commander of Illyricum. Two years later the empire's Gothic mercenary troops revolted and held Constantinople for six months before they were defeated. Arcadius's court was repeatedly denounced for immorality by John Chrysostom, patriarch of Constantinople, whom the emperor banished in 404. Arcadius was succeeded by his son, Theodosius II.
Gala
0401 - 0450
Theodsius
II
49
49
Ruler (408-50) of the eastern Roman Empire, Theodosius II, b. Apr. 10, 401, d. July 28, 450, was the son and successor of Arcadius. Theodosius, basically a scholar, tended to let others--including his sister Pulcheria (399-453) and his wife, Eudocia (d. 460)--influence state decisions. Despite this weakness, he inspired his generals to repel invading Persians in 421, 422, and 441. His administration was highlighted by the Council of Ephesus (431; and publication of the Theodosian Code of laws (438). Theodosius was succeeded by Marcian (r. 450-57).
0394 - 0460
Eudoxie
66
66
0321 - 0375
Valentinian
I
54
54
Valentinian I (321-75), Western Roman emperor (364-75), born in Cibalae (near modern Osijek, Croatia). He was an important military figure under the emperors Julian and Jovian; upon the death of the latter, he was elected by the Roman army to succeed Jovian. Valentinian chose his brother Valens to share his rule, as Roman emperor of the East, and reserved for himself Illyricum, Italy, Gaul (roughly conforming to modern France), Britain, Spain, and north Africa. Under his administration, the Roman authority was restored in Gaul, Africa, and Britain, and victories were won over the Alamanni. Valentinian furthered education throughout his empire and provided medical care for the poor of Rome; although an orthodox Christian, he was tolerant in matters of religion.
0320S - 0388
Justine
Flavia
Augusta
Gervase
Abbo
Le
Breton
Arnold
Le
Gros
D. ~1020
Gerol
D'eschauffon
Gisele
De
Montfort
Ralph
De
Bayeux
Balso
De
Bayeux
Ancitel
De
Bayeux
Ring
Daggson
Alfhild
Alofo
Of
Norway
D. ~0970
Bergslioth
Toresdatter
D. 0900
H†kon
Of
Hlade
Sigurd
Of
Hlade
0935 - 0995
Hakon
Sigurdson
Lade Jarl
60
60
Daughter
Of
H†kon
Thora
Skagesdatter
Alice
De
Bouroogne
1150 - 1218
Simon
IV De
Montfort
68
68
Bouchard
V
D. 1221
Alix
De
Montmorenci
1209 - 1265
Simon
V De
Montfort
56
56
Montfort, Simon de, Earl of Leicester (1200?-65), English statesman and soldier, born of an Anglo-French family in Normandy, France. In 1229 he came to England from France, where two years later Henry III, king of England, confirmed his title and estates. He married Eleanor, the youngest sister of the king, in 1238. As a leader of the English barons, Montfort expressed their dissatisfaction with the arbitrary rule of the king. When Henry rejected the Provisions of Oxford, by which the barons had obtained a share in the government, Montfort took up arms; he captured the king in 1264 (see Barons' War). After his victory he established an assembly to assist the king's council; it included representatives of the gentry and the towns and is considered an ancestor to the later Parliament. The barons, however, became dissatisfied with Montfort, and he was killed in a battle against combined royal and baronial forces at Evesham on August 4, 1265.
Eleonore
De
Montfort
Senena
D. 1278
Llywelyn
Ap
Gruffydd
D. 1337
Gwenllian
Verch
Llywelyn
~1324 - 1404
Joan
Burghersh
80
80
1320
John
Mohun
~1357 - 1400
Matilda
Mohun
43
43
1282 - 1311
John
Vi Le
Strange
28
28
~1277 - >1311
Isolda
34
34
1301 - 1349
Roger
Le
Strange
47
47
<1305 - <1344
Maud
39
39
~1327 - 1382
Roger
Le
Strange
55
55
1314 - 1386
Aline
(Olive)
Fitzalan
72
72
1352 - 1397
John
Viii Le
Strange
45
45
~1265
Reginald
Cobham
~1269
Joan
De
Vere
~1295 - 1361
Reynold
Cobham
66
66
~1321 - 1369
Joan
De
Berkely
48
48
~1348 - 1403
Reynold
Cobham
55
55
1381 - 1446
Reginald
Cobham
65
65
~1351
Thomas
Colepepper
~1355
Eleanor
Greene
~1383 - 1420
Eleanor
Colepepper
37
37
~1417
Edward
Neville
~1414
Catherine
Howard
~1457
Anne
Neville
Joyce
Culpepper
D. 0805
Nivelon
I
Cyrid
Of
Sweden
~1334
Diego
Gomez
De Toledo
~1338
Inez
Alfons
De Ayala
Gauloise
De
Belgigue
0592 - 0652
Itte De
Nivelle
60
60
1430S - 1500S
Isabelle
De
Bourbon
1459 - 1516
Wladyslaw
II
Jagellon
57
57
Anne
Of
Bohemia
1482 - 1517
Marie
Of
Aragon
35
35
Marie
Of
Spain
1686 - 1747
Christian-
Auguste
D'anhalt-Zerbst
61
61
1713 - 1760
Johanna-
Elizabeth De
Holstein-Gottorp
47
47
1651 - 1694
Nathalie
Narichkine
43
43
Living
Fredericksen
Living
Fredericksen
Bertha
~1420
Thomas
De
Astley
Editha
Constable
Peter
Constable
~1290
John
Le
Fowler
Isabel
Foxley
~1228 - 1301
Reginaldus
Le
Fowler
73
73
Reginaldus Le Fowler, of Shryvenham, Co. Berks, is the first one of the line that can be definitely located. He d. 29 Edward I, 1301. In the Calendaium Genealogicum Henry III and Edward I., Master of the Rolls, Vol. 2, p. 602, we find the following: "Reginaldus Le Fowler de Shryvenham. Inquisition Post mortem: Johanes Le Fowler de Shryvenham filius praedicti Reginaldi est propinquior haeres ejus et est aetatis triginta duorum annorum amplius, 29 Edward I, 1301. Berks." Master of the Rolls, Vol. 2, p. 602... "According to certain accounts, the family of Fowler is of Norman descent and went into England with William the Conqueror in 1066. The earliest record of the name in England is that of Richard Fowler of Foxley, County of Buckingham, who accompanied Richard Coeur de Lion (Richard the Lionhearted) to the Holy Land in 1191. For his service he won the crest used with the family coat of arms and a a grant of lands at Abbey Cwm-Hir, County of Radnor, Wales. From Richard Fowler were descended the families of that name which were to be found at early dates in England, in the counties of Buckingham, Lancaster, Wilts, Stafford, Oxford, Gloucester, and Shrops, and also in Wales and Ireland. They appear to have been, for the most part, of the landed gentry and yeomanry of the British Isles."
~1269
Johannes
Le
Fowler
1305 - 1360
Thomas
De
Foxley
55
55
Purchased Foxley Manor from Sir Ralph Dayrell in 1314; knight of Foxley, Berks and Bramhill, Hants; M.P. for berks 1327-28, 1337-38.
John
Gernon
Elizabeth
Gernon
John
Rycote
D. 1292
Lora
De
Vere
~1173 - 1282
Giles
De
Argentine
109
109
~1217 - 1307
Reginald
De
Argentine
90
90
D. 1318
John
De
Argentine
Roger
Bryan
Joan
Bryan
Mercia
(Vercia)
~1595
Philip
Slocombe
Will of Phillip Slocombe, of Gotehurst, Somerset Obtained by Judy Slocum from Public Record Office Written 18 February 1624 PROB11/146 In the name of God Amen the eighteenth daie of Februarie Anno Domini 1624 I Philip Slocombe of Gotehurst in the countie of Somersett yeoman beinge sicke of bodie but in perfecte minde and memorie praised be god doe make this my laste will and testamente in manner and forme followinge First I bequeath my Soule to All mighty god my maker and redeemer and my bodie I committ to the earth from whence it came It[em] I give to the cathedrall church of welles Foure pence, It[em] I give to my sonne Gyles Slocombe three poundes, It[em] I give unto my childe that my wife now goes with if it live and survive Eight Poundes to be putt to intreast for them by my overseers hereafter named from the tyme of my death untill they come to the Age of one and twenty yeares It[em] my will is that if either of these my children doe dye before he or shee doe attaine to the Age of one and Twenty yeares then the moneyes before given shall remaine to the survivor of them. The rest of my goods and estate whether in chattelles money debtes or plate or whatsoever, not herein before given nor bequeathed my debtes paid and my funerall discharged I give and bequeathe unto Charitie my wife whome I make and ordaine my whole Executrix And I ordane and appointe Richard Linham Aldred Bickham John Studdier and William Bickham my brothers in lawe to be my overseers to see this my laste will and testament performed. In wittness hereof I have sett my hand in the presence of John Studdier Sig____ Thome Sully William Bickham. [Probate Statement in Latin] Transcription by: Carlene Morrison July13, 2003
~1600 - 1642/43
Charity
Bickham
D. 1682
Giles
Slocum
Giles Slocombe emigrated to America after his mother's death. He was the sole executor of her will dated November 21, 1642 and proved January 26,1643 in Old Cleeve, Somerset, England. His father had died earlier, so he assumed full adult responsibility at an early age. He married when he was eighteen and had his first child a year later. Upon immigration he first went to Taunton, Plymouth Colony where Anthony Slocum (possibly his uncle) lived. He owned land rights that he later sold in 1675. He then removed to Rhode Island. Gyles Slocum paid three pounds for thirty acres of land in Portsmouth, Rhode Island September 4, 1648 to William Baulston, Treasurer, and entered upon record by Richard Bulgar, recorder for ye towne of Portsmouth. In 1655 he was recorded as a freeman of Portsmouth as shown by "the Roule of ye Freemen of ye Colonie of everie Towne". Giles owned "ase, cowes, oxen, sheepe, horskine" and "the earemarke of Gyles Slocom is a Crope in the right eare anda hapeny under the same one the lime eare, with a slitt in the left eare and a hapeny under of thirty years standing and is entered upon record this 25th of April 1668 by me, Richard Bulger, towneclerk". Giles and Joan separated from the First Baptist Church of Newport, Rhode Island in 1673 when they went to the Quakers-Society of Friends. He deeded land for a meeting house in Portsmouth, Rhode Island. English Origins of New England Families, Vol 2 Etymology of the Surnames Slocomb, Slocumb, and Slocum Materials Toward a Hist of the Bapt. Vol 1, page 175, Morgan Edwards First Settlers of the Plantations of Piscataway and Woodbridge, Olde EastNew Jersey O.E. Monnette, Vol I, page 215 5-23-1667 Robert Carr to Giles Slocum, in Nevasinck, 1 share Arunson and Petapeck 2-28-1670 John Wood to Giles Slocum, in Nerwetacunck near New York, all his share 4-1-1672 Thomas Lawton to Giles Slocum, in Shrewsbury, New Jersey, 2 whole shares in Potapeck and gift lands 1676 Giles Slocum to John Slocum, in Nevasinck, 1 share Arunson and Petapeck 11-2-1676 Giles Slocum to John Slocum, in Shrewsbury, New Jersey, one share in Potapeck 11-2-1676 Giles Slocum to Peter Parker, in Shrewsbury, New Jersey, 1/4 share in Potapeck 11-2-1676 Giles Slocum to Joanna Mott, dau, in Shrewsbury, New Jersey, 1/4 share in Potapeck
~1570 - 1610
Aldred
Bickham
40
40
In the name of God: Amen: The one and twentithe daie of Julie in the yeare of our Lord God one thousand sixe hundred and tenne and in the eighth yeare of the raigne of our Soveraigne Lord King James of England I Aldred Byccombe of Oldclive with in the dioces of Bathe and Wells and Countie of Somersette Clothier beinge sicke in bodie but of perfect minde and memorie (praise be to Almightie god) consideringe the frailtie of mans mortall nature howe that nothinge is there wise more certaine then deathe althoughe nothinge more uncertaine than the time thereof have thought fitt to ordain and make my last will and testament in manner and forme followinge First comendinge my Soule into the handes of Almightie god hopinge assuredlie to receive pardon and remission of my sinnes only by the merritts deathe and passion of Christ Jesus my Saviour and to rest with him in glorie in the kingdome of heaven forever And my bodie I leave to be buried in the earthe by the discrecon and appointment of mine executrix and Overseers of this my Will And concerninge the disposicon of my temporall goodes and estate whereunto it hath pleased Almightie to endue me First I give and devise unto my daughter Charity the sume of Fiftie pounds beinge a debte due unto me by my brother William Biccombe upon twoe severall Bondes Item I give and devise unto my Daughter Mary the summe of Thirtye five poundes to be sett out and emploied at our Ladie daie next and soe from thereforthe untill her full age of one and twentith yeares to her best use and profitt Item I give and devise unto my daughter Joane the summe of thirtie poundes to be sett out and emploied to her best use and profitt within one yeare and quarter next after my deathe Item I give and devise unto my sonne William the summe of Twentie poundes in money to be sett out and imploied to his best use and profitt within three yeares next after my deathe And my further meaninge and intent is that if anie of my said three last named Children Marie Joane and William shall happen to die before they shall accomplish the age of one and twentie years That then his or her por'con soe dyinge shall remaine to the Survivors of them equallie to be devided Alsoe I give to my saide sonne William a standinge bedsteede in the lower Chamber with the bed perfourmed the newe Racke standing in the meadowe and a newe paire of Tuckers sheares in the shoppe Item my will purpose and intent is that my wife shall have the use custodie and occupa'con of all my housholde goodes stuffe and plate duringe her life And after her time I will that a good part thereof remaine to my sonne Aldred whoe is to succeede in the house and not be removed, but my will and meaning is that my wife at her discretion shall have power to dispose of anie parte of my said housholde goodes not exceedinge the value of Twenty poundes unto myne and her other children (except my silver salte and silver spoones which I will shall goe and remaine unto my said sonne Aldred) Item I give and devise unto Isot Lenham daughter of my late daughter Anne Lenham deceased the summe of Twentie shillings The residue of all my goodes and chattells not before by this my will geven or disposed I give and bequeathe unto Helen my wife whome I ordaine and appoint my sole Executrix of this my last will and testament And I doe further ordaine and appoint my brother William Biccombe my friend Andrewe Speede and my brother in lawe Thomas Cridland to be Overseers of this my Will and doe earnestlie entreate them to be carefull to see the same truelie executed and performed and in consideracon of their love and care in this behalfe to be taken I give unto everie of them three shillinges foure pence Signum Ald Byckham Wittnesses to the publishinge and declaringe of the above written will and testament of the said Aldred Biccombe Geo. Hooper, Signum Johannis Hopper Signum Rich Lanham Nicholas Bartlett
~1560 - 1642
Hellen
Cridland
82
82
In the name of God Amen The Foure and Twentith day of June in the yeare of our Lord Christ One thousand six hundred fortie and two I Ellen Bickham of Oldcleeve in the countie of Somersett Widdow within the dyoces of Bath and Wells beinge in reasonable health of bodie and perfect memorie (thankes be to God) and seeinge nothinge more certaine than deathe but the houre and time uncertaine have thought fitt to ordaine and make this my last Will & Testament in manner and forme following First comendinge my soule into the hands of Allmighty God, hopeinge assuredly to attaine pardone and omission of my sins by the death and passion of Christ Jesus, my Saviour and to rest with him in love in heaven for ever, and my bodie I leave to bee buried by the discretion and appointment of my Executor as the overseers of this my Will. As touching the disposall of my temporall goods and estate wherewith it hath pleased Allmighty God to endue mee First I give and devise unto my Sister Anne Ashe my best petticoate and best wastcoate, my best cloake my best hatt my best wifle band, my best Apron, my best Kercheife, my best smocke, best stockins and shooes. Item I give and devise unto Charitie Slocombe my daughter Twentie pounds, my greatest brasse pann, my third biggest crocke, one little brasse pann of the six suteable, six of my silver spoones, the featherbedd, boulster and bedstead in the parlor chamber performed, six bowles of pewter, Vizt. three platters, three potingers & halfe my wearing apparrell both Lynen and Woollen over and besides the apparrell bequeathed unto my Sister Ashe as aforesaid. Item I give and devise unto Joane Studdier my other daughter Twentie pounds, my second best brasse pann, my foureth biggest crocke, one small brasse pann of six that are suiteable, six pewter Vessells That is three potingers and three platters, the other halfondeale of my wearing apparrell both Lynnen and Woolen not formerly given and I give to John Studdier her husband Three pounds to buy him a silver boule. Item I give and devise unto Ellen daughter unto my sonne Aldred my best crocke, my best chest and one of my best brasse panns of the best suiteable. Item I give and devise unto the poorest people of the parrishes of Spaxton and Bishopes Liddierd Twenty shillings to each parrishe to bee distributed by my Executor by the advice of the Overseers of the poore in each parrishe for the time beinge. Item I give and devise to bee added to the Stocks for the poore of Old Cleeve Five pounds to bee employed by the Overseers and their Successors, and the increase to bee bestowed yearely uppon the poore of the parrishe Item I give to bee bestowed to ye poore people at my funerall Three pounds, Item I give and deviseth my couzen Nicholas Colles Twentie shillings, To his sonne John Twentie shillings, To my couzen Roger Colles Twentie shillings and to his now wife Tenn shillings, To my couzen William Colles Twentie shillings and to my Uncle John Colles his Widdow Tenn shillings. Item I give and deviseth unto everyone of my Godchildren Twelve pence, And it is my will and intent that all the former Legacies and gifts bee paid within one yeare and ahalfe next after my decease. The residue of all my goods and chattles of what nature or quallitie whatsoever aswell the chattle left unto mee by way of Executrixshipp by my sonne William Bickham called Soerchalfelax in the parrishe of Spaxton and one other chattle called Easelake in the parrishe of St Deacumans the Inheritance of George Trevelyan Esquire, with all appurtances within go & deede touching the same chattles I give assigne devise and bequeath unto my said sonne Aldred Bickham and him I make sole Executor of this my last Will and Testament And finally I ordaine and appointe my well beloved Francis Cridland and Humphrey Hooper Overseers of this my last Will and Testament desireinge them to see the same truly performed. And in consideration of their love and paines I give to every one of them five shillings. The signe of Ellen Bickham. Witnesses to the acknowledginge hereof John Jenkins Cler; Francis Cridland, Andrew Ian Md [Memorandum] that whereas by a former Will I did give diverse Legacies (Vizt) unto five children of my daughter Joan Studdier five pounde a peice, unto Giles Slocombe the sonne of my daughter Charitie Slocombe Tenn pounds, And unto Nine children of my sonne Aldred Bickham five pounds apeace; All which severall sumes I have already paid in manner followinge; Vizt unto John Studdier my said daughter Joans husband Twenty five pounds and unto my said daughter Charitie the said Tenn pounds and unto my said sonne Aldred Bickham fortie five pounds for the use and benefitt of the severall children and therefore in this last Will omitted Neverthelesse I doe devise that their parents should employ the said sumes of monie in the best manner that they may for their said childrens good untill they shall thinke fitt to devise it unto them to bee used by their owne discretions.
~1618 - 1679
Joan
Cook
61
61
Raised her children as Baptists, but about Jan. 1674, Giles, Joan, Giles Jr. and two other family members were excommunicated from the church. They became Quakers and in doing so, Giles recorded the births of all his children in the Friends' records though several were now grown, married and living in distant parts.
1652 - 1702
Nathaniel
Slocum
49
49
Moved to Shrewsbury Twp., New Jersey prior to 1679 in which year he received a grat of 240 acres of land. He purchased lands at Portipeck in Neck from Peter Tilton of Middletown, NJ on 27 SEP 1680. Several other grants and purchases resulted in a large landed estate. WILL of NATHANIL flocum, of ye town of fhrewsbury, Mon. Co., yeoman, "being fick and weak of body." Dated 23th day of Ju-y, 1702. Proved by dep. of Samuell Dennis and Robert parker, "two of ye within fubfcribing wittneffes," before Thomas Gordon, 29 die martij, 1703. Gives: "unto my louing wife hannah flocum During her Natural life this fhare of land where on I now live fcituate "... in ye fd fhrewsbury together with all ye houfeings and Improvements ... Except a certaine peice ... "of land being parte of ye fhare aforefaid begining at the brook yt parts ye fd fhare of land and George huletts land "Runing as ye pafture fence Runs fo Runing as the fence Runs to ye utter moft Exftent of ye fd fhare of land"; "unto "my fon Samvel flocum one fhare of land Joyneing to ye fhare aboue faid on ye fouth weft of ye brooke ... and "his heirs ... together alfo with all that fhare of land before mentioned & bequeathed Excepte before Excepted "after his louing mothers the faid hannah flocums Deceafe ... '; "unto my fecond fon John Slocum "yt certaine peice ... of land aboue mentioned and Excepted being part ... of ye fhare bequeath to my "louing wife hannah Slocum to him ... and his heirs;" "one hundred acre of land and meadow fcituate ... in "ye towne of freehold ... to my Daughter farah Slocum and to her heirs .... lying at ye weft end of a "certaine tract of land Containing two hundred acres ... and bounded as in and by ye patten ... bearing "Date ye thirteen day of January 1692"; "unto my Daughter meribah Slocum to her ... her heirs ... one "hundred acres of land & medow being part ... of the aboue mentioned tract ... being ye Eaft end of ye "fd tract together with ye one ... halfe part of a certaine peice of medow containing feven acres mentioned in ye "faid patten, the other halfe part is farah Slocum before mentioned"; "unto my Daughter Elizabeth Slocum twenty "pounds in Currant filver money to [be] paid unto her ... by my fon Samvel Slocum two years after my Deceafe"; "unto my Daughter neomie Slocum ten pounds in Currant filver money to be paid to her ... when fhe fhall come "to ye agee of Eighteen years by my Executrix ... "; "unto my Daughter mary Slocum ten pounds in Currant "filver money when fhe fhall attaine and come to the full agee of Eighteen years to be paid by my Executrix"; "unto my "fd eldeft fon Samll Slocum one Cow, one two year old horfe and one gunn ..."; "if any of my Daughters fhall Dy "before they are Come to agee to Receive their legacy ... that it fhall be Equally Deuided between her fifters that "furvive or are living." Residue of estate "unto my loving wife ye fd hannah Slocum whom I nominate ... to be Executrix together "with my fon Samvel Slocum Executor." Wits.: NATHANEL SLOCUM Roberrt parker [his mark] Meribah Slocum Saml Dennis Recorded in Lib. H., fol. 134-135.
1619 - 1694
Henry
Tucker
75
75
~1630 - 1697
Martha
67
67
1662 - >1702
Hannah
Tucker
40
40
1682 - 1733
Samuel
Slocum
51
51
Deborah
1756 - 1840
Ebenezer
Slocum
84
84
Ebenezer Slocum served in the 3rd regiment, Dutchess County militia, for which received land bounty. National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 81 page 120.
~1758
Sarah
Wood
~1780 - 1844
Samuel
Slocum
64
64
~1784 - ~1844
Sarah
Woodward
60
60
Agatha
Of
Brittany
Margaret
Of
Ireland
1893 - 1947
George
Terry
Lee
54
54
1930 lawyer in Dallas, TX.
Living
Lee
D. 1276
Robert
Le
Strange
Alianore
Whitechurch
1267 - 1324
Fulk
Le
Strange
57
57
~1271 - 1325
Alianore
Giffard
54
54
1306 - 1349
John
Le
Strange
43
43
D. 1361
Ankaret
Le
Boteler
1202
Joan
Marshall
Warin
Munchensy
D. 1307
Joan
Munchensy
1225 - 1296
William
De
Valence
71
71
1664 - 1742
Samuel
Atwater
78
78
1629 - ~1690
John
Alling
61
61
1631 - 1683
Ellen
Bradley
52
52
1666 - 1742
Sarah
Alling
75
75
1597 - <1653
William
Bradely
56
56
~1610 - 1682
Elizabeth
72
72
John
Belden
1658
John
Belden
1660
Jonathan
Belden
1663
Joseph
Belden
1665
Samuel
Belden
1668
Sarah
Belden
1670
Daniel
Belden
1672
Ebenezer
Belden
1675
Lydia
Belden
1677
Margaret
Belden
1653
Dorothy
Willard
1683
Josiah
Belden
1685
John
Belden
1687
Benjamine
Belden
1690
Lidia
Belden
1923
Paul
M.
Beutell
Living
Beutell
Living
Beutell
Living
Beutell
Living
Beutell
1692
Hannah
Belden
Living
Beutell
Living
Snider
Living
Keech
Living
Keech
Living
Andrews
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Buswell
1694
Lydia
Belden
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
1941 - 2004
Janet
Hausherr
63
63
Name: Janet Schaumberg SSN: 143-32-3623 Last Residence: 02828 Greenville, Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America Born: 9 Jan 1941 Died: 16 Jun 2004 State (Year) SSN issued: New Jersey (1957-1959 )
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Blynn
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
Living
Schaumberg
1697
Stephen
Belden
Living
Steen
Living
Steen
Living
Steen
Living
Steen
Living
Maze
Living
Maze
Living
Maze
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
1699
Ezra
Belden
Living
Collier
Living
Collier
Living
McDougal
Living
McDougal
Living
McDougal
1702
Dorothy
Belden
~1662
Mary
Wright
1779 - 1857
Thomas
Gregg
77
77
Moved out 9/3/1808, moved to Fayette Co., Pa. where he was living in 1850 with wife Margaret. He built iron clad boats for which he received patent in 1802. "Another pioneer family, very closely associated with the Gibsons, was that of Thomas Gregg. Gregg came to New Haven in 1799, at the solicitation of John Gibson, his uncle. Here he built the first nail factory of western Pennsylvania, and his old order books, still preserved by his daughter, show that he did a thriving business. He was of an inventive turn of mind patenting a turreted warship that is said to have given Ericsson his first conception of the Monitor. He also invented other useful articles. He married Margaret Moore, who bore him thirteen children, two of whom became Methodist ministers." Centennial history of the borough of Connellsville, Pennsylvania, 1806-1906 Evansville, Ind.: Unigraphic, 1978, 565 pgs. Pg. 41. C. Thomas Gregg, b. 1 Apr 1779 New Castle, DE ; married, abt. 1805, Margaret Moore (1789-14 Jan 1867); d. 3 Jan 1854. Although Thomas Gregg grew up as a Quaker on the old homestead in New Castle Co. DE, he left there about 1801 as a young man and moved to Fayette Co. PA and there is no evidence that he continued to long practice the Quaker faith. He is, though, perhaps one of the most fascinating members of the family. He was called "a man of many enterprises". He is known to have operated a rolling-mill, a nail factory and a grist mill where he first lived in the town of New Haven, Dunbar Twp, across the river from Connellsville. He filed 2 patents in the U.S. Patent office; one for an iron-clad warship similar in appearance to the Confederate Merrimac but dated 1814. In 1832 he also patented a "Method for Refining Iron," that is similar to the design of the Bessemer blast furnace that later revolutionized the steel industry. He is not known to have ever built either device, though the furnace was supposed to have been tested on a small scale. During his lifetime in the New Haven and Connellsville, PA area he is also known to helped Rev. War veterans file pension claims, made gunpowder during the War of 1812, drilled for salt water, bought and sold coal, and served as Justice of the Peace. In 1809 he listed his occupation as "philosopher." He was never a financial success and once declared "insolvency". His funeral was held in the Trinity Episcopal Church in Connellsville, PA (which he joined in 1847) and he and his wife are buried in Hill Grove Cemetery nearby. Thomas and Margaret Gregg are supposed to have had 13 children. Information about some of these has been difficult to determine. Although early census records (1810-20) show Thomas with several young children, most of the birth years that have been determined seem to be later than those years.
~1712 - 1767
Samuel
Gregg
55
55
Samuel was the owner of 600 acres of land in Deleware on the Brandywine Creek, at the original settlement area of the Greggs.
1717 - 1774
Ann
Robinson
57
57
Will dated 05 April 1774, Probated 18 May 1774
1668 - 1738
John
Gregg
70
70
1682 immigrated, will probated 27 APR 1738 Came to America with his parents in 1682. As eldest son of William Gregg, he administered the estate, dividing the land with his brothers. In 1694, he built a 2-story stone house on his property. According to Historic Houses and Buildings of Delaware, this house has a resident ghost, dressed in old Quaker garb. This house was one of the first in Deleware to demonstrate Georgian Archicture and was still standing as late as 1964. In 1702 John Gregg bought 200 acres, part of Letitia's Manor on the Brandywine and erected a mill as early as 1715, which was later conveyed to his son William. He also owned 300 acres of land in Chester Co. PA at Kennett and lived there for a time. During his lifetime he acquired about 5760 acres of land in Deleware and Chester Co. Pa.
1672 - >1738
Elizabeth
Cooke
66
66
1677/87 - 1754
Joseph
Robinson
1694 - 1712
Elizabeth
Harlan
18
18
1642 - 1687
William
Gregg
45
45
According to Kendall, he and his family were converted to the Society of Friends (Quakers) after the visit to Waterford by William Penn. in 1678. Immigrated to American in 1682, perhaps on the ship "Caledonia," settling in 1685 on 400 acre "Rockland Manor" Christiana Hundred, New Castle, DE. His land was on the West side of Brandywine Creek at the Pennsylvania border near the modern town of Centerville. He built his log cabin on a place he calledStrand Millas. He was the founder of the Center Monthly Meeting, in 1787. He died relatively young at about the age of 45.
~1646 - 1692
Ann
Wilkinson
46
46
~1642
William
Cooke
~1665
Mary
(Mercy)
Willard
~1650
Elizabeth
~1636 - 1693
George
Robinson
57
57
~1641
Ann
1649 - 1714
George
Harland
65
65
1660 - <1714
Elizabeth
Duck
54
54
1616 - 1672
William
Gregg
56
56
1625
James
Harland
~1628
Ezekeliah
Duck
~1695
Sarah
Belden
~1632
Hannah
Hoope
1576 - 1644
John
Gregg
68
68
~1594 - 1651
William
Harland
57
57
~1603
Deborah
1789 - 1867
Margaret
Moore
77
77
I have a family journal written by a descendant of Thomas and Margaret Moore Gregg that states that Margaret Moore's parents were Dr. William MOORE and Susan (or Susanna) DUNBAR MOORE. I have located a William Moore on the 1790 census on Ancestry.com (I don't know whether he is related to my family or not).
Joseph
Gregg
1827
John
Chandler
Gregg
Minister, Chaplain of 127 Reg't. Pa. Vols.
1835
Susan
Gregg
Albert
Gregg
1697
Joseph
Belden
Samuel
Gregg
1805 - 1910
George
Gregg
105
105
Genealogical and Personal History of Fayette County Pennsylvania, Vol I Fayette County Stillwagon (IV) William P. , son of Peter (2) and Margaret (White) Stillwagon , was born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania , in 1844 , died October 4, 1893 . He was educated in the public school, and in his early life was a contractor and coal operator, conducting the W. P. Stillwagon Coal Company; later Mr. Marictta was admitted as a partner and the name was changed to the Marietta & Stillwagon Coal Company. He also had interests in West Virginia coal lands. He was a Democrat in politics and a man of influence. He married Mary Gregg , born in Connellsville ; died there in the year 1908 , daughter of George and Susan Gregg , George Gregg , of Irish descent, was credited by his friends with being the real inventor of the armor-clad vessel which Ericsson later developed into the famous "Monitor" of civil war fame. Children of William and Mary Stillwagon : 1, Clair , died 1910 ; married Rose Hanlon . 2, Blanche , married (first) John Woodward (second), William Rice , of Connellsville . 3, Anna , married Thomas Crush , of Pittsburgh . 4, Larmer , of whom further. 5, Edna , married Harry Griffin , of Glassport . 6, Rose , married Thomas Maloney , of Pittsburgh . 7, William P. , now living in West Newton . 8, Rockwell , now living in Connellsville . 9, Ruth , now living in Connellsville .
Emeline
Gregg
1752 - 1830
Samuel
Gregg
77
77
He inherited part of his father's farm at the age of 15. Like his forbears Samuel Gregg II was a devout Quaker. During the American Revolution he was enrolled in the militia but could not serve for religious reasons. He is still considered a patriot because, by Delaware law, he contributed financially to the cause. The Battle of Brandywine was fought very close to his home in 1777. During the War of 1812, soldiers camped on his land to guard a gunpowder works. He became a prosperous farmer. Samuel was known to have been wealthy for the times, and was noted for raising livestock, including fine horses. At the time Deleware was a slave state, but Samuel Gregg freed his last two remaining slaves, a mother and son before he died. He, and his wife who died a year after him, were buried at the Centre Meeting House near his farm.
1754 - 1830
Dinah
Chandler
75
75
1704
Mary
Belden
1665
Hannah
Hendy
1689
Samuel
Belden
1690
Daniel
Belden
1692
Gideon
Belden
1697
Prudence
Beldon
1699
Richard
Belden
1701
Matthew
Belden
1704
Hannah
Belden
1631/36
Lorah
Standish
Nathan
Weston
Mary
Carver
William
Sargent
Thomas
Bradbury
Phebe
Gould
Henry
Bennett
Thomas
Boreman
Mary
Fisk
Elizabeth
Prythatch
Mary
Hooper
Nathaniel
Browne
Thomas
Wells
Elizabeth
Hamilton
Robert
Livingston
Margaret
Livingston
John
Annable
D. 1540
James
Hamilton
James Hamilton of Finnart, Knight, "the Bastard of Arran" m Margaret Livingston of Easter Wemyss, dtr of his father's new wife Janet [see above], and administered her lands to great personal advantage, becoming baron of Ochiltree. He was the murderer of John Stuart, 12th (or 3rd) Earl of Lennox, he instigated the death of his cousin, Patrick Hamilton, the Abbot of Fearn who was burnt at the stake, and he was executed for high treason 16 August 1540 after he lost a trial by combat to the Abbot's brother. By his wife Janet he had issue:
Patrick
Hamilton
1512 - 1571
John
Hamilton
59
59
John Hamilton, b 1512, Abbot of Paisley 1525, Lord High Treasurer 1545-54, Archbishop of St Andrews and Primate of All Scotland 1547, he was the principal opponent of John Knox after the murder of Cardinal Beaton and a leading supporter of Queen Mary. After accusations of complicity in the assassination of the Regent Moray he was in 1571 hanged, in his episcopal vestments, on the orders of the Regent Lennox. He cohabited with Grisel, divorced wife of James Hamilton of Stanehouse, Provost of Edinburgh, elder son of James Hamilton of Raploch, and dtr of Robert Sempill, 3rd Lord Sempill, and by her had issue (legitimated 9 Oct 1551, and captured at the battle of Langsyde in support of Queen Mary)
James
Hamilton
Ancestor of the Hamiltons of Gilkerscleugh.
Agnes
Hamilton
Married as his second wife James, 6th Lord Sommerville
Driella
Murchad
Macdonnchada
O'brien
Lorcan
Macdonnchad
O'brien
Esther
Burnham
~1240 - 1288
Henry Vi
(III) Of
Luxembourg
48
48
D. 1321
Beatrix
D'avesnes
1677 - 1721
Hannah
Lathrop
44
44
~1310 - >1381
Peter
Morley
Perkins
71
71
Agnes
Taylor
Wevia
De
Crepon
~1350
Henry
Perkins
~1370 - >1399
John
Perkins
29
29
1841 - 1927
Susanna
Hamilton
85
85
1910 mother of 12, 9 still living. Buried Old Union Cemetery; oil was discovered on the Cashdollar farm.
~1670
Elizabeth
~1698
Susannah
Belden
1698
Samuel
Fitch
~1674
Abigail
Graves
1668
Stephen
Kellog
1695
Stephen
Kellog
1697
Lydia
Kellog
1700
Moses
Kellog
1702
Abigail
Kellog
1704
Daniel
Kellog
1707
Ephraim
Kellog
1709
Mercy
Kellog
1711
Noah
Kellog
1714
Silas
Kellog
1716
Amos
Kellog
1718
Aaron
Kellog
1728 - 1825
Samuel
Morgan
97
97
Buried: Old 2nd Burial Ground SOURCE: "James Morgan and His Descendants" 1607-1869, by Nathaniel Morgan
D. 1804
Mary
Buried: Old 2nd Burial Ground
1748 - 1815
Samuel
Morgan
67
67
Death: At age 67
~1747 - 1810
Mehitable
63
63
!Death: At age 63
1777 - 1856
Mehitable
Morgan
79
79
Never married
1780
Samuel
Morgan
Clarissa
Wells
~1784
Gideon
Morgan
Residence: Went to Virginia, near Petersburg. No trace thereafter.
1786 - 1831
Amasa
Morgan
44
44
DEATH: Drowned at age 45. Residence: Settled in Wethersfield, Conn. Source: "James Morgan and His Descendants" 1607-1869, by Nathaniel Morgan
~1790 - 1856
Mary
Wether(h)
ill
66
66
1814
Eliza
Ann
Morgan
Salmon
Steele
1815
Chauncey
Morgan
Lois
Ann
Miller
C. M.
Lewis
1817
Lewis
Morgan
~1825
Jeannette
Pinney
1846
Eliza
Marie
Morgan
1847
Jeannette
Morgan
1849 - 1916
Lewis
Randolph
Morgan
67
67
1858
Ruhama
Marilla
Johnson
1875 - 1951
Frederick
Herbert
Morgan
75
75
1875 - 1937
Hortense
Fleet
Sammis
61
61
1900 - 1977
Maud
Estelle
Morgan
77
77
Education: Graduated 9th Grade - Dickinson Grammer School, Souhwick, Mass., June 18, 1914 Buried: Hillcrest Cemetery
1898 - 1987
Henry
Victor
Johnson
88
88
Military Service: Original Entry into service on Oct. 1, 1918 as a private at Ann Arbor, Mich. Date of Separation: Dec. 11, 1918 at Ann Arbor, Mich. Service Registration Number: 4538194 Buried: Hillcrest Cemetery
1929
Mary
Louise
Johnson
!MARRIAGE: Married in Parent's home.
1925
Samuel
Peter
Bennett
Living
Bennett
Living
Krogulski
Living
Bennett
Living
Bennett
Living
Bennett
Living
Arzoomanian
Living
Bennett
Living
Reichenbach
Living
Reichenbach
Living
Reichenbach
Living
Johnson
Living
Widmeyer
Living
Johnson
Living
Johnson
1907
Florence
Michels
SPRAGUEVILLE - Florence Helmle, 96 By: February 23, 2004 SPRAGUEVILLE - Florence Helmle, 96, of Spragueville, died Saturday at the Bluff Terrace Nursing Facility, Clinton. A funeral Mass will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Preston, with the Rev. Don Plamondon officiating. Burial will be in the St. Peter and Paul Catholic Cemetery, Springbrook. Visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Preston. The Miller-Law-Jones Funeral Home, Preston, is in charge of arrangements. She was born March 13, 1907, in Springbrook to John P. and Anna Entringer Michels. She married Leo Helmle on Nov. 8, 1927, in Bellevue. He died in 1983. The couple operated the general store in Spragueville from 1929 to 1946. She was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church, Preston, and the Elmer H. Brown American Legion Auxiliary Post 590. Survivors include a son, Larry (Donna) Helmle of Spragueville; 11 grandchildren; 27 great- grandchildren; and eight great-great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, one daughter, her parents and 13 brothers and sisters. Death Date: Feb. 21, 2004 ©Clinton Herald 2004
Living
Johnson
Living
Johnson
Living
Tait
Living
Johnson
Living
Johnson
Living
Johnson
1915
Bernard
Peter
Trenkamp
1902
Lillian
Louise
Morgan
!Residence: Radcliff, Kentucky
Ernest
Hardy
1918
Ernestine
Hardy
Raymond
Hardy
Ruth
Rebecca
Hardy
!Name: Nickname of Betty
Neal
Taylor
Louise
Hardy
1909
Nina
Frederica
Morgan
!Residence: Southwick, Mass.
Fred
Willis
Chestnut
Living
Chestnut
1927
William
Frasco
Living
Frasco
Living
Frasco
Living
Frasco
Living
Frasco
Living
Chestnut
Living
Ronzoni
Living
Ronzoni
Living
Ronzoni
1877
Jennie
Morgan
Anson
Holcomb
~1880
Edward
Morgan
~1882
Jessie
Morgan
Frank
Holcomb
~1884
William
Morgan
Beulah
Dibble
1851
Joseph
Turner
Morgan
BIRTH: Twin to Harriet Morgan
1851
Harriet
Morgan
BIRTH: Twin to Joseph Turner Morgan
1818
Samuel
Morgan
Adelia
A.
Clark
1821
Harriet
Morgan
E.
Boyington
L.
Adams
1822
Justus
Rockwell
Morgan
Henriette
Judd
1825
James
Henry
Morgan
Martha
Whitmore
1827
Mary
B.
Morgan
Henry
H.
Smith
1830
Joseph
Morgan
1920 - 2005
Corena
Marie
Keller
85
85
CNHI News Service — PRESTON — Correna M. Trenkamp, 85, of Preston, died Friday at Mercy Medical Center in Clinton. A funeral Mass will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church of Preston. Father Don Plamondon will officiate. Burial will be in the St. Joseph Catholic Cemetery, Preston. Visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, Preston. Miller-Law-Jones Funeral Home, Preston, is in charge of arrangements. She was born Nov. 22, 1920, to Everett and Anna Franzen Keller in Leeds. She married Bernard Trenkamp on June 5, 1939, at the St. Joseph Catholic Church in Sugar Creek. She was a homemaker. She and her husband operated the family farm in rural Preston for 30 years. She also did volunteer work with senior citizens and her church. Survivors include her husband, Bernard of Preston; three sons, Stephen (Doris) Trenkamp of Preston, James (Jean) Trenkamp of Preston and Richard (Cherylee) Trenkamp of Lombard, Ill.; a daughter, Mrs. Anna (Ferdinand) Klamik of Riverside, Ill.; a brother, Wesley Keller of Sioux City; a sister, Louise Beck of California City, Calif.; 18 grandchildren; and 26 great-grandchildren. She is preceded in death by two brothers. Memorials may be made to the family in Correna’s name. Condolences may be sent to the family at www.lawjonesfuneralhome.com. Death Date: Dec. 30, 2005 Copyright © 1999-2005 cnhi, inc
Living
Trenkamp
Sarah
Judd
~1750
Lydia
Morgan
Christopher
Brown
~1753 - <1816
Lucretia
Morgan
63
63
~1755 - <1816
Margaret
Morgan
61
61
N.n.
Douglas
~1757 - >1816
Louisa
Morgan
59
59
1760
Bridget
Morgan
N.n.
Darrow
~1698 - ~1745
Hannah
Perkins
47
47
1650 - 1732
Samuel
Lathrop
82
82
1653 - 1695
Hannah
Adgate
41
41
1713 - 1788
Lemuel
Bingham
75
75
1738
Hannah
Bingham
Had 8 Children.
1740 - 1821
Zeruiah
Bingham
81
81
1742 - 1777
Lucy
Bingham
34
34
1744/45
Faith
Bingham
1748 - 1825
Jedediah
Bingham
76
76
1750 - 1827
Anna
Bingham
76
76
1753 - 1829
Elias
Bingham
75
75
1756
Jerusha
Bingham
~1696 - 1745
Joshua
Huntington
49
49
1866 - 1951
Clarence
James
Geer
84
84
Merrickville, Montague; Wolford Twp, Lanark; Grenville Co 1910 teacher, private academy, Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 teacher, college, Pittsburgh, PA. 1930 teacher, academy, Shady Side Academy, OHara twp, Allegheny, PA
1872 - 1925
Jeannette
"Nettie"
Elizabeth Fowler
53
53
1917 - 1995
Richard
Fowler
Geer
78
78
Supervisor of manufacturing dept. Martin Sprocket & Gear Co. Died at his home of prostrate cancer. Name: GEER, RICHARD FOWLER Social Security #: 118109145 Sex: MALE Birth Date: 18 Sep 1917 Birthplace: PENNSYLVANIA Death Date: 3 Nov 1995 Death Place: SACRAMENTO Mother's Maiden Name: FOWLER Father's Surname Name: Richard F. Geer SSN: 118-10-9145 Last Residence: 95608 Carmichael, Sacramento, California, United States of America Born: 18 Sep 1917 Died: 3 Nov 1995 State (Year) SSN issued: New York (Before 1951 )
Virginia
Dew
Living
Geer
Living
Geer
1901 - 1983
Leo F.
Helmle
81
81
The funeral was at 10 a.m. today in St. Joseph Catholic Church, Preston, for Leo F. Helmle, 81, Spraugeville. He died Friday in Mercy Hospital, Clinton. The Rev. Donald R. Bruggeman officiated. Burial was in SS Peter and Paul Cemetery, Springbrook. Pallbearers were Alvin Zinnet, Dale Fowler, Merlin Hoffman, Emil Boyert, Allen Felderman and Lyle Duhme. The Miller Funeral Home, Preston, was in charge of the arrangements. Mr. Helmle was born July 12, 1902 in Springbrook, to Joseph and Anna Feil Helmle. He married Florence Michels Nov. 8, 1927, and operated the General Store in Spraugeville for more than 20 years and later farmed with his son until 1981. He was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church, a former city treasurer and councilman for 23 years. Survivors include his wife; a daughter, Mrs. Donald (Phyllis) Nielsen of Clinton; a son Larry of Spraugeville; 11 grandchildren; 12 great grandchildren; and two sisters, Mrs. Clara Ties of Springbrook, and Mrs. Harold (Agnes) Blitgen of Bellevue. He was preceded in death by two sisters and a brother.
Charity
Leonard
1699 - 1739
Jabez
Perkins
39
39
Rebecca
Leonard
May
1727 - 1798
Lydia
Huntington
71
71
1719 - 1802
Ephraim
Bill
83
83
1753 - 1838
Lydia
Bill
84
84
1749 - 1836
Joseph
Howland
86
86
1779 - 1852
Susan
Howland
73
73
1774 - 1847
John
Aspinwall
73
73
1809 - 1886
Mary
Rebecca
Aspinwall
76
76
1790 - 1863
Isaac
Roosevelt
73
73
1828 - 1900
James
Roosevelt
72
72
1854 - 1941
Sara
Delano
86
86
1882 - 1945
Franklin
Delano
Roosevelt
63
63
1884 - 1962
Anna
Eleanor
78
78
1703
Elizabeth
Perkins
~1705
Mary
Perkins
1709
Jacob
Perkins
Jemima
Leonard
1709
Lucy
Perkins
~1711
Luke
Perkins
1714
Judith
Perkins
~1692 - 1740
Hannah
48
48
1690 - 1753
Samuel
Bill
63
63
1718 - 1766
Abigail
Burt
48
48
1705 - 1766
Nathaniel
Howland
61
61
~1752
Rebecca
Smith
~1748
John
Aspinwall
~1768
Maria
Eliza
Walton
~1764
James
Roosevelt
1825 - 1896
Catherine
Robbins
Lyman
71
71
1809 - 1898
Warren
Delano
88
88
Anne
Staples
Mary
Staples
~1739 - ~1818
Zeruiah
Staples
79
79
D. <1778
Sara
Staples
D. 1785
Hannah
Staples
D. 1763
Susanna
Staples
1744 - 1832
Ruth
Staples
88
88
1740 - 1821
Oliver
Soper
81
81
D. 1692
Elizabeth
Sparks
Sarah
Treadwell
1685
Jacob
Perkins
Settled in Maine; left descendants.
1689 - 1758
John
Perkins
69
69
1690
Elizabeth
Perkins
Joshua
Perkins
Lydia
Mallsor
~1728 - 1778
John
Perkins
50
50
ABT 1774 attracted by the possibilities offered by the Wyoming Valley, then under the jurisdiction of Connecticut, now in Pennsylvania he moved from Hebron, CT. During the Indian warfare of the Revolution was slain at Kingston.
D. >1763
Jonathan
Perkins
D. <1763
Phillip
Perkins
Lydia
Perkins
D. <1763
Richard
Perkins
Martha
Perkins
Sarah
Perkins
1725 - ~1762
Sara
Thompson
37
37
1751
Sarah
Perkins
Mary
Perkins
Lydia
Perkins
Martha
Perkins
1730 - 1820
Hepzibah
(Ziba)
Griswold
90
90
D. 1777
John
Perkins
A Revolutionary soldier.
Aaron
Perkins
Revolutionary soldier, enlisted from Windsor in 1776, in Capt. Robert Durkee's Independent Company of the Wyoming Valley, Connecticut Line; was in the skirmish at Millstone, NJ and subsequently served against the Indians; Connecticut pensioner in Pennsylvania, under the Act of 1818.
D. 1768
Griswold
Perkins
1769 - 1854
David
Perkins
85
85
D. 1684
Elizabeth
Samuel
Perkins
Lydia
David
Burnham
Sarah
Ferrier
Living
Bronson
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Trenkamp
Living
Trenkamp
Edward
Hutchinson
Catherine
Hamby
1897 - 1974
Alfred
Stephen
Fredericksen
77
77
Buried: Springdale Cemetery. 1926 in Delmar, IA 1930 truck driver, butter co, Clinton, IA. 1935 in De Witt
1921 - 1999
Lois
Lucille
Wheeler
77
77
Lois Fredericksen 05/12/1999 CLINTON, Iowa -- Services for Lois L. Fredericksen, of 234 3rd Ave. N., will be 7 p.m. today at Pape Funeral Home, Clinton. Visitation is 2-7 p.m. today. Burial will be 10 a.m. Thursday in Springdale Cemetery, Clinton. Mrs. Fredericksen died Sunday, May 9, 1999, at Samaritan Hospital North, Clinton. She was a homemaker. Lois Wheeler was born Nov. 2, 1921, in Ogden. She married Alfred Fredericksen in 1946 in Olathe, Kan. He died in1974. Survivors include daughters, Charlotte Akin, Gulf Breeze, Fla., and Sonja Pine and Marsha Fredericksen, both of Clinton; sons, Donald, Gulf Breeze, William, Pensacola, Fla., Raymond and Dennis, both of Clinton, and Kenneth, Poway, Calif.; 21 grandchildren; 22 great-grandchildren; and brothers, Richard Wheeler, Boone, and Marion, Colorado Springs.
William
Hutchinson
Anne
Marbury
Elizabeth
Le
Strange
1304 - 1375
Robert
F.
Corbet
71
71
Moreton
Corbet
1768 - 1856
Roger
Sherman
88
88
Son of Roger Sherman, a signer of the Declaration of Indepenece.
Catherine
Wales
1783 - 1844
Charles
Sherman
60
60
1651
Hanna
Merriman
1669 - 1747
John
Ives
77
77
Mary
Gillet
1703 - 1775
Lazarus
Ives
72
72
1710 - 1777
Isabel
(Jearam)
Jerome
66
66
1734 - 1812
Lazarus
Ives
77
77
DAR L-5-G8
Lydia
Grimes
1764
Christopher
Ives
Mary
1794 - 1865
John
Ives
71
71
1795 - >1865
Mercy
Stoddard
70
70
1829 - 1908
Mercy
Ann
Ives
78
78
Buried: Evergreen Cemetery.
1649 - <1707
Elizabeth
Pabodie
58
58
D. 1732
John
Rogers
1677 - 1769/70
Sarah
Rogers
1662 - 1750
Nathaniel
Searle
88
88
1700 - 1783
Sarah
Searle
83
83
1704 - 1787
Thomas
Dring
83
83
1732 - 1826
Hannah
Dring
94
94
1730
Salisbury
Stoddard
1757 - 1832
Issac
Stoddard
75
75
Mercy
Babcock
1823 - 1901
Philander
Geer
78
78
1855 - 1925
Frances
Jane
Geer
70
70
Buried: St. Peters Cemetery.
1851 - 1925
Terrence
McMahon
73
73
Buried: St. Peter's Cemetery.
1893 - 1979
Mary Margaret
"Mayme"
McMahon
86
86
Buried: St. Ireanaeus Calvary
1895 - 1964
Gustav
Herman
Ruchotzke
68
68
Buried: St. Joseph Cemetery
1923
Ambrose
L.
Ruchotzke
Louis
Ruchotzke
Mary
Ohlrogge
Mary
Jane
Ruchotzke
Shirley
Ruchotzke
John
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Living
Bronosn
Slani
Ingen
Briain
D. 0927
Sitric
Ua
Imair
D. 0873
Imar
N.n.
Mac
Imar
~1540 - 1604
Nicolas
Chaundler
64
64
~1544 - 1623
Edith
Spratt
79
79
~1569 - 1629
Thomas
Chaundler
60
60
1573 - 1620
Anne
Downham
47
47
1602 - 1684
John
Chaundler
82
82
Anne
1633 - 1687
George
Chaundler
54
54
Died at sea enroute to America.
Jane
1674 - ~1742
Swithin
Chandler
68
68
Ann
1718 - 1782
Thomas
Chandler
63
63
D. 1799
Anne
Hickline
1837
Elizabeth
Sheridan
1910 wd, in Indianola, IA.
1860
Adam
W.
McCoy
1900 restraunt keeper in San Fransico, CA. 1910 poultry farmer, EdenTwp, Alameda, CA. 1920 butcher in Oakland, CA.
1817
John
Speer
1860 farmer in Robinson Twp., Allegheny, PA. 1870 farmer in Stowe Twp., Allegheny, PA.
1854
Vienna
S.
Speer
1900 mother of 11, 7 still living.
1856 - BET 1918 AND 1920
Elvader
K.
Speer
1910 farmer in Kennedy Twp., Allegheny, PA.
1865 - 1959
Mattie
J.
Sloan
94
94
1883 - 1925
Walter
Allen
Lytle
42
42
1910 lineman, telephone, with parents. 1920 super., oil lease co, Wellsville, KS.
1889 - 1965
Milton
Carl
Lytle
76
76
Graduated from Wellsville High School in 1910. 1920 accountant, Pittsburgh, PA. 1930 farmer, with parents.
1892 - 1968
Charles
Louis
Lytle
75
75
1930 farmer, general farm, Franklin Twp, Franklin, KS. Name: Charles Lytle SSN: 512-38-9528 Last Residence: 66092 Wellsville, Franklin, Kansas, United States of America Born: 3 Sep 1892 Died: Feb 1968 State (Year) SSN issued: Kansas (1955 )
1919
William
Allen
Lytle
Living
Lytle
Sadb Ingen
Mael Morda
O'domnail
1773 - 1849
Jesse
Payne
75
75
Buried: Swezey-Bromley Cemetery. Collector 12 yrs, constable 18 yrs, freemason
1772 - 1842
Mary
Munsey
70
70
1739 - 1780
Zachariah
Standish
40
40
Olive
Pool
1776 - 1853
Peleg
Standish
77
77
D. 1822
Sally\
sarah
Hamlin
1814 - 1866
Sally
Standish
51
51
1812 - 1902
Rueben
M.
Burras
90
90
1838 - 1860
Oscar
Burras
22
22
Annetta
Hakes
Delia
Burras
1864 - 1940
William
Oran
Cline
76
76
Marie
Cline
N.n.
Quayle
James
Cline
Quayle
Martha
Pullman
Living
Quayle
1747 - 1813
Daniel
Payne
66
66
Daniel Payne was born Jan. 23, 1747/8, in Lebanon, Conn., the son of Benjamin and Mehitable (Dimock) Payne; married, May 4, 1769, Elizabeth Wright of Lebanon, Conn., by Rev. ____ Stout. After his death she married again. She was considered the prettiest girl in Lebanon, Conn. She was of fleshy build and a great singer. They moved from Lebanon, Conn., to Spencertown, Columbia County, N.Y., and about 1798 moved to the Swezey Hill neighborhood. Daniel Payne served in the American Revolution in the 8th Co., 7th Regiment of Connecticut Troops. Daniel Payne died May 29, 1813, and is buried in the Swezey Hill Cemetery. Responded to the Lexington Alarm as a private in the 8th company, 7th regiment, Connecticut volunteers. The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 81 page 140
1750
Elizabeth
Wright
1727
Benjamin
Payne
1719
Mehitable
Dimmock
1680 - 1751
Benjamin
Dimmock
71
71
1682
Mary
Thatcher
1604 - 1653
Thomas
Dimmock
49
49
ORIGIN: Unknown MIGRATION: 1635 on the Hopewell of Weymouth FIRST RESIDENCE: Dorchester REMOVES: Barnstable 1639 CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admission to Dorchester church prior to 25 May 1636 implied by freemanship. Admitted to Barnstable church in 1639, during a period when admission records were not kept. On 7 August 1650, a day of humiliation was declared in Barnstable church "for the investing of my brother Dimmicke into the office of an Elder" [NEHGR 10:38]. FREEMAN: 25 May 1636 [MBCR 1:372]. Admitted Plymouth Colony freeman, 3 December 1639 [PCR 1:137]. In the Barnstable section of the 1639 (as "Mr. Thomas Dimmack") and 1658 (as "Mr. Tho[mas] Dimacke," with name crossed out) Plymouth Colony lists of freemen [PCR 8:176, 200]. EDUCATION: Sufficient to serve as magistrate and on council of war. OFFICES: Dorchester selectman (as "Mr. Democke," for terms of six months), 2 November 1635, 27 June 1636 [DTR 13, 16]. Committee to lay out land, 2 November 1635 [DTR 12]. Deputy from Barnstable to Plymouth General Court, December 1639, June 1640, June 1641, June 1642, October 1643, June 1648, June 1649 and June 1650 [PCR 1:126, 137, 155, 2:16, 40, 63, 123, 144, 154]. Commissioner to end small causes, June 1640, June 1644 [PCR 1:155, 2:73]. Petit jury, 1 March 1641/2 [PCR 7:28]. Plymouth Colony committee to negotiate with Massachusetts Bay over disputed territory, 1 June 1650 [PCR 2:158-60; MBCR 3:198-99, 4:1:17]. Plymouth Colony Council of War, 27 September 1642 [PCR 2:47]. In Barnstable section of 1643 Plymouth Colony list of men able to bear arms [PCR 8:193]. Lieutenant for Barnstable, 10 October 1643, 7 July 1646 [PCR 2:63, 105]. Barnstable committee to "appoint a place or places for their defense" (as "Mr. Thomas Dimmack") [PCR 2:65]. On 3 March 1645/6, "Lieutenant Dimmack, of Barnestable," was presented "for neglecting to exercise their men in arms," and was discharged [PCR 2:97]. ESTATE: Granted one of the "great lots at the bounds betwixt Roxbury and Dorchester at the great hill," twenty acres, 4 January 1635/6 [DTR 14]. Granted two acres of marsh, 18 February 1635/6 [DTR 15]. Granted "2 acres in the marsh next to Goodman Grenwayes," 27 June 1636 [DTR 17]. Granted "all the ground between his pale and Goodman Denslow and Bartholomew," 5 July 1636 [DTR 18]. Permitted to "have their portions in satisfaction of the Calve's Pasture in the marsh beyond the trees over against the Fox Point," two acres, 2 January 1637/8 [DTR 28]. In the division of 18 March 1637/8, received three acres, three-quarters and four rods, and four acres and twenty-four rods [DTR 31]. (In the 8 March 1663/4 accounting of the New Grant, at that date held entirely by William Stoughton, "Dimmock" was credited with having held at one time lot #13 [DTR 120].) In his undated nuncupative will, deposed to on 4 June 1658, "Mr. Thomas Dimacke of Barnstable" told "Anthony Annable and John Smith being with him the last summer some small space of time after he ... was taken sick they advised him to set his house in order to which he answered that little that God had given him he would leave to his wife for they were her children as well as his" [MD 14:230, citing PCPR 2:1:75]. BIRTH: By about 1610 based on estimated date of marriage. DEATH: Before 4 June 1658 (probate of will). MARRIAGE: By 1635 Ann ______ (assuming she was the wife who came to New England with him). (On 7 August 1650, Rev. John Lothrop referred to this immigrant as "my brother Dimmicke" [NEHGR 10:38]. Jacobus argued that the "likeliest solution is that Lothrop's second wife was a sister of Thomas Dimmock" [Granberry 209-10]. According to Otis, "the widow Ann Dimmock was living in October 1683.... She probably died before 1686" [Otis 339]. The evidentiary asis for these statements by Otis has not been found.) The Great Migration Begins Sketches PRESERVED PURITAN
1609
Ann
1644 - 1732
Shubael
Dimmock
88
88
D. 1729
Joanna
Bursley
1893 - 1974
Eula
Mae
Jenkins
80
80
Name: Eula Lytle SSN: 509-50-0018 Last Residence: 66092 Wellsville, Franklin, Kansas, United States of America Born: 17 Sep 1893 Died: Mar 1974 State (Year) SSN issued: Kansas (1963 )
1921 - 1977
Margaret
Jean
Fisher
56
56
Name: Margaret Lytle SSN: 510-18-5959 Last Residence: 66092 Wellsville, Franklin, Kansas, United States of America Born: 15 May 1921 Last Benefit: 66092 Wellsville, Franklin, Kansas, United States of America Died: Sep 1977 State (Year) SSN issued: Kansas (Before 1951 )
~1745 - 1784
Mary
Heaton
39
39
1714 - 1796
Seth
Heaton
82
82
1717
Sara
Morris
1872
Dasie
L.
Lytle
1663 - 1742
Thankful
Strong
78
78
1862
Abigail
Erskine
1860/1870 born in 1860. 1880 dress maker, living with parents. 1900 clerk, living with parents. 1910 dressmaker, with parents. 1930 none, Pittsburgh, PA.
1866
Mary
Erskine
1900 school teacher, living with parents.
1867
Joseph
W.
Erskine
1900 boilermaker, living with parents.
1868 - 1945
James
Erskine
77
77
1900 abstractor, living with parents. 1920 searcher records, abstact co., Visalia, CA. 1930 m, lodger, manager land tiltle co., Visalia, CA. Name: ERSKINE, JAMES Social Security #: 568127820 Sex: MALE Birth Date: 17 Jun 1868 Birthplace: PENNSYLVANIA Death Date: 15 Aug 1945 Death Place: TULARE Mother's Maiden Name: MCELHANY Father's Surname: ERSKINE
1871
Helena
Erskine
1900 school teacher, living with parents.
1874
Jane
Erskine
1900 stenographer, living with parents.
1858
William
A.
Erskine
1880 laborer, living with parents. 1900 carpenter, Pittsburgh, PA. 1920 carpenter, house, Pittsburgh, PA.
1664 - 1727
Eliezer
Slocum
62
62
Eliezer resided in Dartmouth as a yoeman. According to the History of the Slocums, "In the confirmatory deed of Governor William Bradford, 13 November, 1694, Eliezer Slocum and his brothers Giles and Peleg were named amoung the proprietors of Dartmouth which then included the present Townships of Dartmouth, New Bedford, Westport, and Fairhaven. He dealt quite extensively in lands, and was very successfull in the accumulation of property considering the newnewss of the country and the various unfavorable circumstances of his time. The oppressions of the New Plymouth and Massachusetts governments show a marked contrast between the civil standing of these brothers, and all other members of the Society of Friends, who settled in Dartmouth and thouse who resided in Rhode Island. The former were excluded from the rights of citizenship and the privilege of holding office, though they were obliged to bear their proportion of the governmental burden; while the prsence and counsel of the latter were much sought in directing public affairs. Elizer's will was proved 30 July , 1727 and his estate was appraised at L5,790. 18s. 11d." Eliezer Slocum died BEF 30 JUL 1727 in Dartmouth, Bristol County, RI A copy of Eliezer's will is in the History of the Slocums
1668 - 1748
Elephel
Fitzgerald
80
80
Pioneer Irish in New England CHAPTER IX page 152 In the case of Elephel Fitzgerald, there is an interesting but all too inadequate account of her in the genealogy of the Slocum family, in which it is said that about 1687, she married Eliezer Slocum of Dartmouth, Mass. (now New Bedford). Eliezer was a son of Giles Slocum of Portsmouth, R. I., who, on receiving a grant of a large tract of land in Dartmouth Township, removed to that place before 1682. Eliezer owned extensive properties at a place known as Slocums Neck on Buzzards Bay, and his will, dated March 1, 1727, still preserved in the probate office at Taunton, shows that he divided his estate, which was appraised at the immense sum for those days of œ5790, among his beloved wife, Elephel, and his sons, Eliezer and Ebenezer. The time of her arrival in this country is unknown, and among her New England descendants, there are partially conflicting opinions as to the circumstances of her departure from her native land. In one branch of the Slocum family, the tradition is, that although she was a lady of high birth, she was one of a number of young women who were forcibly brought to America and sold for wives to respectable purchasers, the purchase money in this instance amounting to about $600. Other branches apparently are unwilling to acknowledge that she could have occupied so lowly a station in life as to be sold as a wife to their Slocum ancestor. These Slocums probably are unacquainted with Englands methods of governing Ireland at that period, namely, in confiscating the property of the Irish and parcelling it out among the English adventurers and soldiers, rich and poor were treated with equal severity and some of the leading families of the island were thus reduced to the most extreme poverty. The tradition in these branches is to the effect that Elephel Fitzgerald was a daughter of Earl Edmund Fitzgerald of Dublin, whose sister became affianced to an English officer against her fathers will and eloped with him, taking with her a younger sister, this Lady Elephel, whom they brought to America, perhaps to further the success of their plans. In another account of the family, written by a descendant of Eliezer and Elephel Slocum, Collections, New Hampshire Historical Society, Vol. 4, p. 503; Vol. 5, p. 86; Vol. 7, p. 158; Vol. 31, p. 578.47 it is stated that she lived as a domestic in the household of Giles Slocum at Portsmouth, that Eliezer was born at Portsmouth in 1664, he and Elephel Fitzgerald having been married before they were twenty, and with his wife, Elephel, he was living at Slocums Neck prior to 1684. A romantic story has come down in the family of the courtship of Eliezer Slocum and the Irish maiden, but it has had no appeal for their descendant, and he not only treats it as a fable but seeks to cast ridicule on the tradition that she was of the noble family of the Geraldines. In what manner, he relates, our little Irish maid was separated from her sister and came to find a home in the simple household of Giles Slocum in Portsmouth, the tradition sayeth not. Irish maids were not commonly employed in those early days, and even in later times Irish maids were seldom Earls daughters. Nonetheless, it is probable that the Lady Elephel did in fact serve in a domestic capacity in the household of Giles Slocum. Elephel (Fitzgerald) Slocum was the mother of seven children, all born in Dartmouth Township between 1689 and 1703, and her will, proved October 4, 1748, shows that she divided among them a considerable estate. Her daughter, Joanna, married Daniel Weeden of Jamestown, R. I., and many of the Weeden, Slocum, Carpenter and other families now in Rhode Island and Massachusetts trace their descent back to the gentle Irish girl, Elephel Fitzgerald. Elephel, beloved wife, was bequeathed by her husband, Eliezer, the sum of twenty pounds annum of good and lawful money of New England to be paid every year for her natural life, an Indian girl named Dorcas during the time she had to serve by indenture, the great low room of his dwelling house with the two bedrooms belonging together with the chamber over it, the bedrooms belonging thereto and the garret, also what part of the N. addition she shall choose and one half of the cellar. The executors were to supply Elephel with firewood sufficient during her natural life and whatsoever provisions and corn were left after Eliezer's death, and hay sufficient for the support of the cattle. Elephel's will of considerable estate was proved October 4, 1748.
1693 - 1738
Eliezer
Slocum
45
45
Deborah
Smith
1733 - 1777
John
Munsey
44
44
Was lieutenant of a company of foot under Capt. Ebenezer Benjamin, Albany County, N. Y. He was killed at the capture of Burgoyne The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Vol 81 pg 141 State of New York: Albany County. On this twenty third day of November, 1835, personally appeared in open court before the Justice Court of the city of Albany, the same being a court of records, now sitting, John Wilcox, of the town of Coeymans, in said county, age 79 years. Who being first duly sworn, according to law, doth on his oath, make the following declaration, in order to obtain the benefits of the Act of Congress passed June 7, 1832. "...I was with the American army at the time of the surrender of Burgoyne. Whilst we were there, we had an engagement with a party of Indians and Tories not far from a place called Snootskill. In that engagement, Lieutenant Munsey was mortally wounded by a ball which entered his body just above his hips. I saw him fall, and helped carry him off the ground. He died a few hours afterward."
1717
John
Slocum
Resided in Dartmouth as a yeoman and merchat.
1719
Deborah
Almy
1696 - 1777
Job
Almy
80
80
1700 - 1774
Lydia
Tillinghast
74
74
1868
Harry
Y.
Reifsnyder
1900 bookkeeper in Pittsburgh, PA. 1910 secratery in Pittsburgh, PA.
1903
William
M.
Reifsnyder
Name: William M. Reifsnyder SSN: 192-10-6223 Born: 2 Dec 1902 Died: Feb 1991 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 ) Name: William Reifsnyder SSN: 176-07-2176 Born: 16 Aug 1903 Died: May 1966 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1906
Thomas
G.
Reifsnyder
1855 - 1929
Flora
A.
Cunningham
74
74
1920 wd, none, Connellsville, PA.
1883 - 1919
Beulah
Lytle
36
36
1885 - 1947
Emma
Jo
Lytle
62
62
1887 - 1977
Irene
Renee
Lytle
90
90
1910 living with parents. 1941 of Fox Chapel Pittsburgh.
1888 - 1980
Julia
Belle
Lytle
92
92
1910 living with parents. Name: Julia Brown SSN: 200-50-2205 Last Residence: 15116 Glenshaw, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 26 Mar 1888 Died: Sep 1980 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (1973 )
1896
Emma
L.
Lytle
1920 none, with parents. 1930 none, with parents.
1863 - 1938
Anna
Louisa
Root
75
75
1930 wd, none, Oriskany Fall, NY. Buried in Hillside Cemetery.
1888 - 1978
Ruth I.
Fowler
90
90
Buried in Hillside Cemetery. 1930 m, none, with mother. Name: Ruth Cox SSN: 105-36-8441 Last Residence: 13425 Oriskany Falls, Oneida, New York, United States of America Born: 8 Apr 1888 Died: May 1978 State (Year) SSN issued: New York (1962 )
1891 - 1918
Helen
L.
Fowler
27
27
Buried in Hillside Cemetery.
1890 - 1965
Joseph
J. Cox
75
75
1920 asst ?, knit mill, with in-laws. Name: Joseph Cox SSN: 107-09-5684 Last Residence: New York Born: 7 Oct 1889 Died: Oct 1965 State (Year) SSN issued: New York (Before 1951 )
1874 - >1930
Emma
Elizabeth
Cobb
56
56
N.N.
Spenser
Unk
1839 - >1920
Julia
M.
Spenser
81
81
1900 capitalist, wd, mother of 5, 3 still living, Ripon, WI. 1910 In Milwaukee living with son Paul and her daughter Nellie and husband, mother of 5, 3 still living. 1912 May, resided on Watson St., Ripon, with Nellie. 1920 in Ripon, WI with Nellie.
~1835 - 1895
Joseph
Powers
60
60
1870 Barrel maker in Syracuse, NY. 1880 Barrel maker in Ripon, WI. Wisconsin Vital Records Death Index. Name: Joseph J Powers Death Date: 08 Jul 1895 County: Fond Du Lac Volume: 02 Page: 0460 Reel: 027 Image: 2552 Index Volume: - Sequence #: 306533
1870
Nellie
Grace
Powers
1900 teacher, living with mother. 1920 m, none, with mother.
1879
Paul
B.
Powers
1900 type writer, with mother. 1910 broker, land, with mother.
1874 - BET 1920 AND 1930
Arthur
E.
Powers
1900 day loborer, Fon Du Lac, WI 1910 farming in Underwood, Redwood, MN 1920 in Rockford, Wright, MN
1873
Jennie
D.
1930 housekeeper, private family, wd, Fon Du Lac, WI.
1872
Harry
L.
Powers
1910 vice president, ?, Portland, OR. 1920 ? of lands, Lewiston, ID 1930 Civil engineer in Currie, Snohomish, WA.
1842 - 1861
Jeannette
Ives
Fowler
18
18
1860 with parents.
1860
Louisa
Volland
2nd marriage. 1900 mother of 12, 12 still living.
1892
Margaret
Lytle
Was living with grandparents 1900-1910. 1920 livng with her aunt Isabel in Pittsburgh, PA.
1894 - 1948
David
Porter
Lytle
54
54
1917 horse breaker, U.S. Gov. in Keogh, Miles City, MT. 1930 pumper, in Orange cty, CA. 2 step daughters. Name: LYTLE, DAVID PORTER Social Security #: 560012860 Sex: MALE Birth Date: 22 Apr 1894 Birthplace: KANSAS Death Date: 15 May 1948 Death Place: LOS ANGELES Mother's Maiden Name: GROBENGEISER Father's Surname: LYTLE
1896
Marie
Lytle
1897
William
J.
Lytle
1920 living with parents. 1930 carpenter, house living with parents.
1899
Isabel
L.
Lytle
1902
Nellie
Lytle
1920 living with parents. 1930 seamstress fashion shop, living with parents.
1766 - 1836
Mary
Strong
69
69
1836
Ruth
Ann
Burwell
~1831 - BET 1880 AND 1900
William
Speer
1870 painter in South Versailles, Allegheny, PA. 1880 painter in Westland, Guernsey, OH.
1866 - BET 1920 AND 1930
Ulysses
Speer
1910 living with mother. 1900 farmer in Addison Twp. Somerset, PA. 1920 farmer, general farm, East Lackawannock Twp, Mercer, PA.
1870
William
H.
Speer
1900 with mother. 1910 living with mother. 1920 farm laborer, at home, with Ulysses. 1930 none, inmate Mercer County Home.
1874
Ada
Ellen
Speer
1900 with mother. 1910 living with mother. 1920 none, with Ulysses. 1930 none, inmate, Mercer County Home.
1882
Elias
Preston
Speer
1900 with mother. 1910 house painter, with mother.
1880
Mary
Speer
1900 with mother.
1892
Jean
Milholland
1866
Annie
B.
Freeland
1892
Victor
Grant
Wilson
Name: Victor Wilson SSN: 167-10-7796 Last Residence: Florida Born: 31 Jan 1892 Died: Feb 1964 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 ) Name: Victor Grant Wilson Death Date: Feb 1964 County of Death: Broward State of Death: Florida Race: White Gender: Male
1893
Marie
F.
Wilson
1722 - 1766
Abraham
Hays
44
44
1725 - 1778
Frances
Little
52
52
1680 - 1741
Edmund
Hays
61
61
Mary
Mencham
1884
C. M.
Maxwell
1910 salesman electric co., living with Beulah's parents.
1902 - 1982
Roy
Cobb
Lytle
79
79
1906
Louise.
C.
Lytle
1930 living with parents.
1849
Kate
Richards
1910 Mother of 4 children, 2 still living.
1873
George
W.
Craig
1880
John
F.
McNeal
1900 oil well pumper, with parents.
1882
William
James
McNeal
1918 plasterer, married, Pittsburgh, PA.
1885
Ella A.
McNeal
1890 - 1974
Walter
Samuel
McNeal
84
84
1917 painter, married, Los Angeles, CA. Name: MCNEAL, WALTER S Social Security #: 552461094 Sex: MALE Birth Date: 5 Mar 1890 Birthplace: PENNSYLVANIA Death Date: 30 Jul 1974 Death Place: LOS ANGELES Mother's Maiden Name: Father's Surname: Name: Walter McNeal SSN: 552-46-1094 Last Residence: 90044 Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States of America Born: 5 Mar 1890 Died: Jul 1974 State (Year) SSN issued: California (1951 )
1891
Charles
A.
McNeal
Name: Charles McNeal SSN: 208-09-9251 Last Residence: 15210 Pittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States of America Born: 25 Dec 1891 Died: Nov 1969 State (Year) SSN issued: Pennsylvania (Before 1951 )
1893
Catherine
E.
McNeal
1809
Laura
Ann
Slocum
1811
Maria
Slocum
1823
Lydia
Slocum
1819
Robert
Owen
1825 - 1851
John
Russell
Slocum
26
26
1819
Sabrina
Edson
1827 - 1849
Mehitable
Catherine
Slocum
22
22
1828 - 1893
Samuel
Norton
Slocum
65
65
1821
Eliza
Lucinda
Sickles
~1871
Sarah
Slocum
1783
Lydia
Slocum
1875
Job
Slocum
1789
Lidia
Bolt
1847
Eugene
Slocum
1849
Imogene
Slocum
1851
Arline
Slocum
1841
Adelaide
Louise
Slocum
1843
George
Volney
Slocum
1845
Alice
Augusta
Slocum
1847
Mary
J.
Slocum
1850
Sidney
Mortimer
Slocum
1837
John
Mahary
1841
Ellen
Jane
Jones
Eleanor
Josephine
Slocum
1867
Charles
E.
Lamb
1893
Eleanor
Lamb
1895
Jeanette
Jones
Lamb
1841
William
H.
Graves
1843
C. C.
Bingham
1863
Lydia
Emerson
Bushnell
1884 - 1884
Burr
Howard
Slocum
6m
6m
1886
Elwyn
Griswold
Slocum
1887
Sidney
Ensign
Slocum
1892
Ray
Emerson
Slocum
John
M.
Payne
Martin
Payne
1804 - 1863
Hoxie
Payne
59
59
1797 - 1842
Jesse
Payne
45
45
Adolphus
Payne
Was a State Senator and Supreme Court Judge in the state of Colorado.
Fred
Payne
R. E.
Payne
Was School Commissioner for several years in Oneida County and is now postmaster of Clinton, and an active politician at all times.
1822
George
W.
Payne
After arriving at his majority, in 1843, he spent seven years as a carriage and sign painter, and in 1850 went to California, where he was two years employed at the same business, after which he returned and located in Newport, where he has since been engaged in the manufacture of wagons, carriages and sleighs.
J. J.
Payne
1825 - 1899
Laura
Ann
74
74
Alma
L.
Bailey
1599 - 1660
John
Bursley
61
61
ORIGIN: Unknown MIGRATION: 1623 FIRST RESIDENCE: Weymouth REMOVES: Barnstable 1639 CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: No evidence of church membership for John Bursley, but on 22 July 1643 "Mestresse Bursly" joined the Barnstable church [NEHGR 9:280]. FREEMAN: Requested 19 October 1630 (as "Mr. John Burslin") and admitted 18 May 1631 (as "Mr. Jo: Burslyn") [MBCR 1:79, 366]. OFFICES: Weymouth deputy to General Court, 25 May 1636 [MBCR 1:174]; on 8 September 1636 the General Court ordered that "whereas the town of Waimoth hath sent 3 deputies to this Court, being a very small town, at the request of the said deputies two of them were dismissed by the Court, viz: Mr. Bursley & John Upham" [MBCR 1:179]; committee to make colony rate [MBCR 1:175]; committee to survey colony boundary, 20 November 1637 [MBCR 1:211]; with Richard Collicott fined 6s. 8d. "for absence when the Court sat in the afternoon, being jurymen" [MBCR 1:232]. Dorchester committee to assess ¹30 for the captain of the train band, 2 June 1634 [DTR 7]. Barnstable constable, 4 June 1645 [PCR 2:83]. Plymouth grand jury, 1 June 1647 [PCR 2:116]. ESTATE: "John Busley, gent.," was one of the group of New England men on both the first and second patents for Agamenticus [York] granted by the Council for New England, 2 December 1631 and 2 March 1631/2 [Council NE 101, 105]. There is no evidence that he ever resided on or took advantage of this grant. "Mr. John Bursleye's inventory" was taken 21 August 1660 and totalled ¹115 5s., with no real estate included [MD 17:159; PCPR 2:2:63]. The following record, although ostensibly for a Thomas Bursley, must be for John, for it comes at the right time, it takes place in Barnstable, and the widow's names is Joanna: "Mr. Hinckley is appointed by the Court to treat with Joanna, the wife of Mr. Thomas Bursley, late deceased, concerning the disposing of some part of his estate unto his children, that so what is done on that behalf may be entered on the Court records," 2 October 1660 [PCR 3:201]. BIRTH: By about 1600 based on his appearance at Weymouth in 1623. DEATH: Barnstable before 21 August 1660 (date of inventory). MARRIAGE: Sandwich about 28 November 1639 "Mr. Hull's daughter" (Joanna Hull, daughter of Reverend Joseph Hull) [NEHGR 9:286]; she was born in England about 1620 [Hotten 283], and married (2) after 1660 Dolor Davis. CHILDREN: iv JOANNA, bp. Barnstable 1 March 1645/6 [NEHGR 9:283]; m. Barnstable [blank] April 1653 [sic] Shubael Dimmock [MD 4:221; in the margin beside this entry and the accompanying births of children is the note "These records perhaps 10 years too old"]. (Joanna is inadvertently called "Jemima" by Savage.) ASSOCIATIONS: In both the 1628 assessment for the removal of THOMAS MORTON and the 1631 patent for Agamenticus, Bursley is associated with WILLIAM JEFFREY. COMMENTS: Charles Francis Adams marshalled the evidence in favor of the position that John Bursley was part of the company of ROBERT GORGES which arrived in New England in the fall of 1623 and settled at the location that was to become Weymouth [MHSP 1:16:197]. One of the most important pieces of evidence in this argument is the list of those who contributed to the expenses involved in deporting THOMAS MORTON in 1628, which included an entry for "Mr. Jeffrey and Mr. Burslem, ¹2" [Bradford LB 43]. The identity of the John Bursley of Weymouth with the man of the same name in Barnstable is based on the marriage of Bursley to the daughter of Reverend Joseph Hull, at about the time the latter moved from Weymouth to Barnstable, and the disappearance of John Bursley from Weymouth about the time of this marriage. Both Pope and GDMNH have separate entries for the activities of this man in the two towns. That this same man was patentee of York is based on the continued association with WILLIAM JEFFREY, and with the Gorges family. The John Bursley who resided in Exeter, Hampton and Kittery was a different man, since he was of a lower social stratum, and there were chronological conflicts between him and the Barnstable man [GDMNH 122-23; Granberry 186]. On 14 May 1634 the General Court ordered that Wessaguscus [i.e., Weymouth] should bear the charges for "Thomas Lane, late servant to John Burslyn, [who], by the providence of God, is fallen lame & impotent, & hath since remained at Dorchester" [MBCR 1:121]. This record, and the service of John Bursley on the Dorchester committee to make a rate for the pay of the captain of the train band, have led some writers to state that Bursley lived for a time at Dorchester. However, since Weymouth was in these early years an appendage of Dorchester for church and military matters [GMN 1:29], the appearance of Bursley in association with Dorchester does not require that he ever lived there. The Great Migration Begins Sketches PRESERVED PURITAN
1620 - 1686
Joanna
Hull
66
66
1521 - ~1559
Richard
Hull
38
38
~1533 - >1559
Alice
26
26
~1552 - 1636
Thomas
Hull
84
84
~1544 - 1629
Joanne
Pyssing
85
85
1595 - 1665
Joseph
Hull
70
70
Rev. Hull always stayed loyal to the Anglican Church and this brought him into conflict with the Puritans of Massachusetts and Plymouth. The Separatist party increased, the outbreak of civil war in England checked immigration in 1639, and left Rev. Hull and his friends in a hopeless minority. He moved to Sir Fernando Gorges' Episcopal colony in Maine until 1653, when Massachusetts Bay Colony subjected the provinces of Maine to its jurisdiction. He returned to England when a puritan preacher was sent to supersede him. (York, ME was then known as Accomenticus, ME). 1633 16 Apr. Serves as curate of Broadway parish, Crewkerne Deanery, Somersetshire. Moved to Nantasket (now called Hull), then a part of Hingham. Twice elected to General Court. 1639 June. Moved to Plymouth Colony and there founded the town of Barnstable. 1641 Moved to Yarmouth. Excommunicated for leaving his church duties in Barnstable. Serves as minister at York and Isles of Shoals. 1643 Repents and returns to Barnstable and is received back. Moves family to York, Maine. 1645 Volunteers to serve in Narragansett War and received land, "Cedar Swamp", for his services. 1652 Returned to England, ministers for 10 years at St. Burien in Cornwall. 1662 Settled again in New England and settled at Oyster River where he had considerable trouble with the Quakers. 1665 19 Nov. Died intestate at Isles of Shoals, leaving an estate valued at 52 pounds, 5 shillings and 5 p. - 10 pounds of which were for books. Col. Weygant, Hull Family in America The Hull Family Association, 1913 p. 245.
1824
Sarah
1847 - <1920
Catherine
"Kate"
Wilson
73
73
1900 shows mother of 6, 2 still living. 1910 shows mother of 6, 4 still living.
1850
Agnes
Wilson
1853
Margaret
" Maggie"
J. Wilson
1870 with parents.
BET 1844 AND 1845
Joseph
Wilson
1847 - BET 1870 AND 1906
Mary
C.
Lytle
1844
Frederick
Merrick
1880 professor of Latin, living with Samuel. 1900 school teacher in Pittsburgh, PA.
1884
Roderick
Smith
Merrick
1910 school teacher in Nashville, Washington, IL. 1920 school teacher in Anne Arundel county, MD. 1930 insrtuctor at Naval Acadamey, living in Cedar Park, MD.
1895
Frederick
P.
Merrick
1930 manager for telephone company in Cleveland, OH.
1849
Edward
Keys
1870 at home.
1897
Edward
Wilson
1900
Mary
Wilson
1929 - 2000
Phyllis
M.
Helmle
70
70
Quad City Times Phyllis Nielsen CLINTON, Iowa -- Services for Phyllis M. Nielsen, Clinton, will be 10:30 a.m. Saturday at St. Irenaeus Catholic Church, Clinton. Burial will be in Clinton Lawn Cemetery. Visitation is 4-8 p.m. Friday at Lemke Funeral Home, Clinton, with a vigil at 4 p.m. Mrs. Nielsen died Monday, April 24, 2000, at Regional Medical Center, Hudson, Fla. She was a beautician for more than 40 years and was employed more than 20 years at the Alverno Nursing Facility, Clinton. Phyllis Helmle was born May 29, 1929, in Springbrook. She married Donald Nielsen in 1956 in Morrison. He died Jan. 2, 2000. Memorials may be made to Hospice. Survivors include daughters, Rhonda Kilburg, Cumming, Ga., Georgia Haus, New Port Richey, Fla., Annette Jackson, Clinton, Angela Eversoll, Bowling Green, Ky., and Donnell Hoffmann, Charlotte; sons, Mark Clark and Kris and Todd Nielsen, all of Miami; 17 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and her mother, Florence, and a brother, Larry Helmle, both of Spragueville. Was living in Spraugeville, IA during first marriage.
1928 - 2000
Donald
Edwin
Nielsen
71
71
Quad City Times Donald Nielsen CLINTON, Iowa -- Services for Donald Nielsen, of Clinton, will be 11:30 a.m. Wednesday at Lemke Funeral Home, Clinton. Burial will be in Clinton Lawn Cemetery. Visitation is 5-8 p.m. today at the funeral home. Mr. Nielsen died Sunday, Jan. 2, 2000, at Mercy Medical Center-North Campus, Clinton. He had worked 39 years at DuPont, Clinton. He was born Oct. 29, 1928, in Clinton. He married Phyllis Helmle in 1956 in Morrison, Ill. Memorials may be made to American Heart Association. Survivors include his wife; daughters, Rhonda Kilburg, Cumming, Ga., Georgia Haus, New Port Richey, Fla., Annette Jackson and Nancy Nielsen, both of Clinton, Angela Eversoll, Bowling Green, Ky., and Donnell Hoffmann, Charlotte; sons, Mark Clark and Kris and Todd Nielsen, all of Miami, and Randy Nielsen, Apollo Beach, Fla.; 20 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and a brother, Kenneth, Clinton.
Living
Nielsen
1902 - 1965
Perciville
"Percy"
M. Nielsen
63
63
CLINTON HERALD Wednesday 28 April 1965 CLINTON PERCY M. NIELSEN Word has been received by relatives in Clinton that Percy M. Nielsen, 63, of Miami Beach, Fla. and Peoria, Ill., died suddenly Monday in Miami Beach. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday in the Wilton funeral home, Peoria. Burial also will be there. Mr. Nielsen was born April 11, 1902 in Clinton county, the son of Hans and Jennie Watson Nielsen. He is survived by his wife, Paula; three sons, Kenneth, Lynn and Donald, all of Clinton; eight grandchildren; on sister, Mrs. H. N. (Beth) Struve of Clinton and one brother, Dr. Lynn Nielsen of Salinas, Calif. He was preceded in death by his parents and four brothers.
1904 - 1969
Florence
B.
Vining
64
64
Clinton Herald Thursday 24 April 1969 Mrs. Florence V. Mook Mrs. Florence Vining Mook 64, of 2425 N. 2nd St., died in Mercy Hospital this morning. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 pm Saturday in the Snell-Smith funeral home. Dr. Ralph Baker, pastor of the First Methodist Church will officiate. Burial will be in Clinton Memorial Park. Friends may call after 12 noon Friday in the funeral home. Florence Vining was born September 28, 1904 in Clinton, the daughter of Henry and Gertrude Mewherter Vining. She married Mr. Herman Mook in Clinton on December 23, 1933. Survivors include three sons, Kenneth, Donald and Lynn Nielsen, all of Clinton; 13 grand children; three brothers, Edwin, James and John Vining, all of Clinton; four sisters, Mrs. Sylvan (Verna) Meier, Mrs. Ray (Juanita) Vogel, Mrs. Ralph (Henrietta) Paulsen and Mrs. Axel (Norma) Martinsen, all of Clinton; and nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband and a brother.
D. 1967
Herman
Mook
Buried in Clinton Lawn Cemetery.
Kenneth
Nielsen
1926 - 1988
Lynn
W.
Nielsen
62
62
1883 - 1947
Henry
C.
Vining
64
64
Clinton Herald Thursday, 10/27/1948 Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining, 622 Thirteenth avenue, South, died in her home about 11:15 last night. She had been a resident of Clinton for about 50 years. She was born Dec. 14, 1883, the daughter of John and Ida Mae Mewherter. She married Henry C. Vining Feb. 23, 1904. She was a member of the First Methodist Church. Mrs. Vining is survived by three sons, Edwin C. and John H. of Clinton and James E. of Low Moor; five daughters, Mrs. Florence Mook, Mrs. Sylvan (Verna Mae) Meier; Mrs. Ray (Juanita) Vogel, Mrs. Charles (Henrietta) Jones and Mrs. Axel (Norma) Martinsen, all of Clinton; two brothers, Lyle Mewherter of Pennsylvania and Harry of Denver, Col., and nine grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, sister and one son. The body is in the Snell funeral home where friends may call, beginning this evening. Funeral arrangements are incomplete, but services are planned for Friday with burial in Springdale cemetery. The Rev. J.H. Machlan will officiate. Clinton Herald Friday 10/29/1948 Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining Funeral services for Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining, 622 Thirteenth avenue, South, were held this afternoon at Snell funeral home. The Rev. J. H. Machlan officiated. Burial was in Springdale cemetery. Mrs. Walter Bockel was organist and Mrs. Gilbert Henning was vocalist. Pallbearers were Gene Wells, Delbert Sanders, Harry Smith, John Dyke, Louis Schroeder and Keith Martindale. Attending from out of town were Lyle Mewherter and Daughter, Mrs. John Gardeneir of Cottersport, Pa., and Mrs. Evelyn Vogel of Dubuque.
1884 - 1948
Gertrude
D.
Mewherter
63
63
Clinton Herald Thursday, 10/27/1948 Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining, 622 Thirteenth avenue, South, died in her home about 11:15 last night. She had been a resident of Clinton for about 50 years. She was born Dec. 14, 1883, the daughter of John and Ida Mae Mewherter. She married Henry C. Vining Feb. 23, 1904. She was a member of the First Methodist Church. Mrs. Vining is survived by three sons, Edwin C. and John H. of Clinton and James E. of Low Moor; five daughters, Mrs. Florence Mook, Mrs. Sylvan (Verna Mae) Meier; Mrs. Ray (Juanita) Vogel, Mrs. Charles (Henrietta) Jones and Mrs. Axel (Norma) Martinsen, all of Clinton; two brothers, Lyle Mewherter of Pennsylvania and Harry of Denver, Col., and nine grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, sister and one son. The body is in the Snell funeral home where friends may call, beginning this evening. Funeral arrangements are incomplete, but services are planned for Friday with burial in Springdale cemetery. The Rev. J.H. Machlan will officiate. Clinton Herald Friday 10/29/1948 Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining Funeral services for Mrs. Gertrude D. Vining, 622 Thirteenth avenue, South, were held this afternoon at Snell funeral home. The Rev. J. H. Machlan officiated. Burial was in Springdale cemetery. Mrs. Walter Bockel was organist and Mrs. Gilbert Henning was vocalist. Pallbearers were Gene Wells, Delbert Sanders, Harry Smith, John Dyke, Louis Schroeder and Keith Martindale. Attending from out of town were Lyle Mewherter and Daughter, Mrs. John Gardeneir of Cottersport, Pa., and Mrs. Evelyn Vogel of Dubuque.
1906 - 1987
Edwin
C.
Vining
81
81
1924
James
E.
Vining
John
H.
Vining
1911 - 1997
Verna
Mae
Vining
86
86
Juanita
Vining
1918
Henrietta
Vining
1921
Norma
E.
Vining
1857 - 1924
Ida
May
Waterbury
66
66
Clinton Herald Friday 04/11/1924 Mrs. Ida May Mewherter. Mrs. Ida May Waterbury Hardy Mewherter passed away at 9 o'clock, April 10, at the home of her son, Lyle Mewherter, 1728 North Austin avenue, Chicago, after an illness of several months in length. Mrs. Mewherter was born near Follets on June 11, 1857; and had been a resident of Clinton Nearly all her life. Left to mourn her passing are four sons, Harry E. Mewherter of Pittsburgh, Pa., Roy Hardy and Lyle Mewherter of Chicago, and Frank Hardy of Clinton; two daughters, Mrs. Essie Day of Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. Gertrude Vining of Clinton. The Body will be brought to Clinton and funeral arrangements will be announced when word is received from relatives who live at a distance. Clinton Herald Saturday 04/12/1924 Mrs. Ida May Mewherter The body of Mrs. Ida May Mewherter, who passed away in Chicago, was brought to Clinton arriving this afternoon at 2:10 o'clock. It was taken to the home of her son Frank Hardy, 526 Tenth avenue. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Central Church of Christ, the Rev. A. C. Stone officiating.
1837 - 1917
John
Harrison
Mewherter
80
80
CLINTON HERALD Saturday June 9, 1917 J. H. Mewherter Dr. John Harrison Mewherter, aged 70 years, died at 11:45 o'clock this morning at the home of his son, Samuel Mewherter, 764 Camanche avenue, where he had made his home for the past three years. His illness was serious only for the past three weeks. The deceased was born June 2, 1837, in New Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania. After finishing his schooling in that city he began the study of medicine under Dr. Miller of the same place. This continued for two years and then went to the Cleveland, Ohio, Medical college, where he graduated in 1859. In the same year he was married to Miss Lucy Eleanor Nowel. He practiced his profession in the east for a few years, but in 1865 went west to live. He made his home for a short time in Port Byron, Ill., and then, hearing that a large number of his friends had settled in and near Elvira, he also moved to that place. Here he built up an extensive practice and became known as one of the best physicians in the country. He was called in consultation in a great many of the most critical cases, and his judgment was usually accepted and found correct. His wife died in 1889, leaving eight children, two of whom have passed away, Those surviving are Samuel Mewherter and Mrs. Thomas Mulligan, of Clinton. John Mewherter, of Tipton, and Frank and Beamer Mewherter, of Eveleth, Minn. A few years after the death of his first wife he married Mrs. Ida Hardy, of Low Moor. To this union were born five children, of whom four are living. They are Mrs. Henry Vining and Harry and Lyle Mewherter, of Clinton, and Mrs. John Day, of Akron, Ohio. When he began to feel the infirmities of old age, Dr. Mewherter retired, spending the rest of his days with his children. Funeral services will be held at the home of his son, Samuel Mewherter, 764 Camanche avenue, at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon with Carl Mead, of the Bible Students, officiating. Burial will be made in Springdale cemetery.
1886
Harry
E.
Mewherter
1889 - 1920
Fay
Edith
Mewherter
31
31
1893 - 1913
Verne
Mewherter
20
20
Buried in Springdale Cemetery.
1898 - 1970
Lyle
A.
Mewherter
72
72
Buried in Springdale Cemetery.
1852 - ~1879
William
Hardy
27
27
1876 - 1962
Frank
Hardy
85
85
1878 - 1936
Roy
Hardy
58
58
1886 - 1951
Albert
Haring
65
65
Living
Nielsen
Living
Nielsen
Living
Nielsen
Living
Nielsen
Living
Nielsen
Living
Nielsen
1850 - 1920
Isaac
Edwin
Vining
70
70
CLINTON HERALD Monday May 17, 1920 I. E. VINING I. E. Vining passed away Sunday morning about 1 o'clock at his home in Howes street. Funeral services were held this afternoon at 1 o'clock at the home of Rev. H. C. Culver of the First Methodist church officiating. Buried in Springdale Cemetery.
1852 - 1928
Mary
Elizabeth
Osborn
76
76
CLINTON HERALD Saturday October 13, 1928 MRS. MARY ELIZABETH VINING Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Vining, 316 Twenty-first place, died at 3:40 o'clock the afternoon of October 12. Funeral services will be held at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon at the First M. E. church and burial will be in Springdale cemetery. She was born January 20, 1852, at Cardington, Ohio, and was married in 1871 to Isaac Edward Vining. The family home had been in Clinton for many years. Mr. Vining passed away eight years ago and there is left their only child, Henry Vining. There are eight grandchildren and two great grandsons, also four brothers, residents of Ohio. A life long member and worker in the Methodist church, Mrs. Vining sustained a broken hip eighteen years ago, and much of the time since then had been a shut-in. That did not lessen her zeal for the work of the church nor her interest especially in foreign missions; many an hour has been prayful work carried on at her bedside and because of the inspiration of her quiet acceptance of a physical cross.
1819 - 1899
Jonathan
Waterbury
79
79
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF EDEN TWP. From the book "The History of Clinton County Iowa" by L. P. Allen (1879) JONATHAN WATERBURY, farmer, Sec. 4; P.O. Camanche; was born in Rensselaer Co., N. Y., in 1819, within ten miles of Albany, and had resided in various counties of the State till 1843, when he emigrated into Rock Island Co., Ill., settling at or near Cordova, where he resided four years; came to Iowa in 1848, settling in Jackson Co.; resided a short time: removed thence to Clinton Co. where he entered a tract of land and improved it, making the farm on which he now resides, consisting of 160 acres. He married, in Onondaga Co., N. Y., May 25, 1841, Miss Fannie L. Tripp, a native of that State; they have four children—Arthur, Homer B., Ida May (now Mrs. William Hardy) and Charley. They are members of the Baptist Church. Mr. W. is a member of A., F. & A. M. Mr. W. is a Republican. Mrs. W. died June 14, 1875, of apoplexy; she left a kind and loving husband and family to mourn their loss. Buried in Prarie Union Cemetery.
1821 - 1875
Fannie
L.
Tripp
54
54
Buried in Prarie Union Cemetery.
1854
Homer
Waterbury
1859 - 1915
Charles
H.
Waterbury
56
56
In 1900 was living in ,Pleasant Valley, Scott, IA.
1866
Henry
Waterbury
1854
Lavina
Kiethley
1862 - 1932
Ida B.
Marshall
70
70
Buried in Prarie Union Cemetery.
1879
Minnie
P.
Waterbury
1911 - 1984
Sylvan
A.
Meier
73
73
Ray
Vogel
Charles
Jones
Axel
Martinsen
1842
Arthur
J.
Waterbury
1847
Celesta
E.
Waterbury
Buried in Prarie Union Cemetery.
1884
Ida M.
Waterbury
1886
Myrtle
E.
Waterbury
1889 - 1967
Maud
R.
Waterbury
78
78
1880
Myron
?
Waterbury
1893 - 1934
Maurice
J.
Waterbury
41
41
Mrs.
John
Gardeneir
Of Cottersport, PA.
1798 - 1851
James
Mewherter
53
53
1799 - 1881
Mary
McChesney
82
82
1855 - 1926
Hans
M.
Nielsen
70
70
Clinton Advertiser Monday June 21, 1926 Hans Nielsen Passes Away at Hospital Hans M. Nieslen died at 3:45 Sunday morning at Jane Lamb hospital after a week's illness. Deceased was born in Hadersleven, Denmark, December 5 1854. At the age of 18 he came to America and frown that time has lived in Clinton county. About ten years ago he retired from his farm near Bryant to make his home in the city. His wife, Formerly Miss Jennie Watson to whom he was married January 26, 1887, preceded him in death February 4, 1917. One son Arthur passed away in 1911. Surviving are four sons and a daughter as follows: Dr. Perry Nielsen of Santa Maria, Cal.; Dr. Lynn Nielsen of Salinas, Cal.; Dr. Lyle Nielsen of San Lui Ovisto, Cal.; Percy Nielsen of Salinas, and Mrs. H. N. Struve of Lyons. A brother Peter Nielsen, lives in Clinton, and a sister, Mrs. John Fromm, lives at Port Afford, Oregon. There are four grandchildren. No definite funeral arrangements have been made, awaiting word from sons in the west.
1862 - 1917
Jennie
Watson
54
54
Clinton Advertiser Thursday February 15, 1917 LYONS RESIDENT IS SUMMONED After a illness of a couple of week's duration Mrs. Hans Nielsen of 300 Clinton street, was summoned by death, Wednesday evening, at her home where she has been suffering from paralysis. Miss Jennie Watson was born in Elk River township May 23, 1862 and resided in this county since that time. In 1887 she was united in marriage to Hans Nielsen and for some time have made their home in this city, after having retired from the farm. The deceased is survived by her husband a five sons, Perry of Clear Lake, Iowa, Noble and Leon, of Davenport and Lyle and Percy of this city, also one daughter, Miss Bessie at home. Funeral services will be held on Saturday morning at 11 o'clock from the Congregational church in Miles with burial in the Miles cemetery.
1888 - 1966
Carl
Dannatt
77
77
1913
Gladys
Dannatt
Living
Eversoll
Living
Hoffman
Marjorie
M.
Dyke
Living
Nielsen
Living
Hicks
Living
Nielsen
1915
Ruth
W.
Vining
1788 - 1849
Daniel
Waterbury
60
60
1787 - 1866
Amy
Dickerson
78
78
1766 - 1825
Jonathan
Waterbury
59
59
1770 - 1857
Sarah
Travis
87
87
15 FEB 1741/42 - 1798
Daniel
Waterbury
Was a Lieutenant in American Revolutionary Army
1739 - 1837
Anna
Bouton
97
97
1742 - 1801
Jacob
Travis
59
59
Sarah
~1702 - 1801
John
Bouton
99
99
19 MAR 1710/11 - >1794
Mary
Pettit
1684 - 1743
John
Bouton
59
59
1689 - 1729
Mercy
Hickock
40
40
1668 - 1715
John
Pettit
47
47
1683 - 26 JAN 1719/20
Anna
Gould
1659 - 1704
John
Bouton
44
44
1667 - 1692
Sarah
Gregory
25
25
1643 - 5 MAR 1694/95
Samuel
Hickock
1646 - 1707
Hannah
Upson
61
61
1636 - ~1720
John
Gregory
84
84
~1638
Elizabeth
Moulthrop
~1614 - <1689
John
Gregory
75
75
~1612 - 1668
Matthew
Moulthrop
56
56
~1617 - 1672
Jane
55
55
1614 - 1689
Sarah
St.
John
75
75
~1588
Matthew
St.
John
~1592
Elizabeth
~1586 - 1655
Henry
Gregory
69
69
~1590 - BET 1641 AND 1642
Abigail
Goody
~1709
Mary
Bouton
1684 - 1709
David
Waterbury
24
24
1685
Waitsill
Green
Generated by GenoPro®. Click here for details.
A 'genogram' depicting a family tree should appear here
If no diagram is shown then either of the following could be the cause:
The diagram has been produced as a PDF and either no PDF viewer has been installed or the diagram has been opened in another window.
The diagram has been produced in SVG format (Scaleable Vector Graphic) and either you are using Internet Explorer version 8 or below, in this case you should install the 'Adobe SVG Viewer', or you are using another browser that does not support SVG
You are using Google Chrome browser but are viewing the report locally on a PC directly from the generated files (i.e. via the 'File' protocol) rather than via a web/HTTP server