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Living
Newton
Living
Eschbaugh
Living
Sallee
Living
Eschbaugh
Living
Eschbaugh
Living
Marvin
Living
Marvin
Living
Sallee
Living
Newton
Living
Newton
1918
Gerald
Leonard
Newton
1917
Doris
Emily Mc
Gowan
1881 - 1951
William
Leonard
Newton
69
69
1884 - 1945
Nettie
Samantha
Hall
60
60
1861 - 1946
Mary
Caroline
Richardson
85
85
1861 - 1935
William
Walter
Newton
74
74
1854 - 1945
Virgil
Jackson
Hall
90
90
1859 - 1945
Cora
S.
Seeley
85
85
According to 1920 US Federal Census- Stanfield, Umatilla County, Oregon, she lists her birth place as Minnesota and her both her parents birth place as New York.
Living
Newton
Living
Newton
1832 - 1916
George
Washington
Richardson
83
83
A minister?? Story says that his father was on the stage when George Washington was elected President.
1831 - 1867
Harriet
Boster
36
36
1826
Thomas
Gibb
Hall
1827
Lydia
Samantha
Griswold
Envelope: Mrs. Thomas Hall Newberg County of Fillmore Minnesota Date on this letter is February 1? (smudged) 1859 My Dear Sister Lydia, I am ashamed of being so long in writing you. I can give no reason for it but hopes that you will forgive my negligence. But I take this opportunity of writing you a few lines to let you know that we are all in good health at present. Thanks be to God for it will be verry (sic) glad of hearing from you all enjoying the same. I was sorry to hear of your troubles and trials. We are sorry to hear of the death of your small son Daniel. I have no doubt but you would feel it heavy to commit the Body to the Deep but we have reason to rejoice that we are told in scripture that the sea shall give up its dead. We have very good land and well watered which is verry valuable. Last year we had a verry good crop of nearly everything we sowed or planted.. Our potatoes and corns (sic) was hurt a little with an early frost but we could not complain much for we planted about 12 bushels of potatoes and we had about 250 bushels again and we had about 30 bushels of corn from 9 quarts planting. We had above a hundred bushels wheat and rye and barley. We had a very good crop of turnips. The letters that you and Thomas sent had been very long on the way. It was about the end of February before I got them. We are in great hopes that you will be over to see us this spring. You mentioned in your letter that I should mention all particulars if any of our friends came out but you must excuse me at this time as I just had the opportunity of sending it over with a certain hand that was in a hurry. We hope that you will be out if you and yours are in any measure of health to see us all. Fathers health has not been as well as he has had bouts with the dysentery and he has been said to miss you terribly. It would give him great pleasure and joy I know to see you of this I know. Del sends his kind respects to you all as he is hear (sic) beside me. He does give me trouble as I keep riting (sic) you instead of send this on its way. I add no more at present but remain your affectionate brother Charley Griswold
Living
Newton
Living
Eschbaugh
Living
Madding
Living
Madding
1802 - 1868
Alexander
Wiley
Richardson
66
66
1804 - 1866
Sarah
Elizabeth
Gibbs
61
61
1774 - 1847
David
Gibbs
73
73
David Gibbs was born in 1774 in Orange County, North Carolina. He married Sarah Tillman in May of 1777. She was the daughter of Tobias and Catherine (Sharp) Tillman. They farmed 100 acres of land in Bold Valley. They returned to North Carolina where both are buried.
1777 - 1857
Sarah
Margaret
Tillman
80
80
[McGowan.FTW] Source: Vol II, "Our Union Co. Heritage" states her given name was CATHERINE TILLMAN.
1733 - 1814
Johann
"Nicholas"
Gibbs
80
80
See pg 139 of "KNOW YOUR RELATIVES - THE SHARPS" for additional info. Served in the American Revolution. Fought in the Battle at Kings Mtn., NC. Info shows that the family originally came from England to Germany - due to religious persecution. He also served as a Justice of the Peace in Knox Co., TN in 1796. Arrived on the Ship "Phoenix" from Rotterdam on 1 Oct 1754. Nicholas arrived in North Carolina before 1765 and moved to Harbinson's Cross Roads in Knox County Tennessee. Another distinguised settler at Sharp's Station was Nicholas Gibbs. Gibbs was born in the Duchy of Baden, German, on September 29, 1733. It is claimed that he saw service in the French and Indian War and during the American Revolution as an official of Orange County, North Carolina, under the Continental Government. The Gibbs family had once been courtiers at the royal court when the Stuart dynasty held power in England and held great estates there. Gen. G. W. Gibbs, a son of Nicholas, in a letter to the first William Gibbs McAdoo, in 1846,stated that his family left England to save their heads at the time their king lost his, and from this bit of information, we believe that the Gibbs family migratd to German when Cromwell came to power and caused King Charles I to be executed. Before migrating to Tennessee Nicholas Gibbs lived some four miles from present Burlington, North Carolina on Liberty Road. Stoner's Church at the confluence of the creeks that united to form Great Alamance, housed both the German Reform and the Lutheran congregations. Nicholas died from injuries suffered in the War of 1812. Nicholas held the rank of 2nd Liet. He died from wounds suffered in the Battle of Horseshoe in the Great War Against Great Brittain (War of 1812). Nicholas was a friend of Andrew Jackson. http://www.my-ged.com/db/page/fenimore/4116 Martin@@Fenimore.com It is believed that the forefathers of Nicholas Gibbs, because of religious and politcal reasons, migrated from England, their mother country in 1649. They sought refuge along the Rhine River in Germany. It was in the village Wallruth, Duchy of Baden, that Nicholas Gibbs was born in 1733. At the age of 21, Nicholas left his homeland and arrived at the port of Philadephia in 1754. He served in The French and Indian War under Captain Nicholas Weatherholt. He settled in Orange County North Carolina before 1764. He married Mary Efland about 1764. Nicholas purchased 600 acres of land in 1768, situated where Almance County is located now. He served as tax collector in 1778 and 1782. He sold his property in 1791 and moved to Knox County in Eastern Tennessee. According to Tennessee records, Nicholas bought 450 acres in what was then Hawkins County. Nicholas attended Millers church (first known as Lona Church). He was one of the first elders. Nicholas died in 1817, and Mary in 1833. They are both buried in an old Cemetery located Emergy Road near Knoxville, Tennessee.
1745 - 1834
Mary
Efland
89
89
1751 - 1842
Sarah
Efland
91
91
1675 - 1761
Johann
David
Efland
86
86
JOHANN DAVID IFFLANDT (Hunter Lists #341) David Yslant, his wife, and 1 child were on Capt. Jno. Unthank's ship in Holland in the 5th party of Palatines in 1709 (Rotterdam Lists). Johann David Ifflandt made his first appearance on the Hunter Lists 1 July 1710 with 2 persons over 10 years and 1 person under 10. The notation showed 2 over 10 and 2 under 10 25 March 1711, 3 over 10 years and 2 under 10 on 24 Jun 1712, and 2 over 10 and 3 under 10 years on 13 Sep 1712. Johann David Lieffland and his wife Anna Maria with 4 children were at Neu-Quunsberg ca. 1716/17 (Simmendinger Register). David Eveland settled on the Proprietor's land near John Readings's on the Rariton and desired a grant of about 200 acres, according to a notation dated 6 month 15th 1733 in Minute Bk. K of the Board of Property of the Province of PA. on 28 May 1737 he was deeded a track of land by the Penn family (Letter from Wayne V. Jones). David Eveline was a freeholder of Amwell in 1741 (Hunterdon County Freeholders). The will of David Eveland of Amwell Twp was dated 28 May 1753 and proved 9 Nov 1761 (NJ Wills: Lib. 11, p. 147). Baptismal sponsor: Johann Schack, forester from Ludersdorf b. in Thann (Dan). Johann David Ifflandt, son of Johannes Ifflandt of Mecklar in Hessen, married Rebecca, daughter of Johannes Schnneider, 2 Nov 1702 (Hochheim churchbook). Rebecca Schneider was confirmed 1693, aged 15 years at Hochheim. After their marriage, Johann David Ifflandt and Rebecaa resided at Morstadt. Much of the 2nd and 3rd generation material on this interesting family was supplied by Wayne V. Jones of Houston, TX; Mr. Jones has spent years collecting data on the family from old bibles and private sources and his contribution to this chapter is much appreciated (HJ). Source: New Jersey Colonial Documents - Calendar of Wills 1761-1770, page 137. Will of David Eveland. 1753, May 28. Eveland, David, of Amwell Twsp., Hunterdon Co.; will of. Personal and real to be sold and money put in interest, and the income given to my wife, Mary, while she is my widow, and after her death, money to go to my children, John, Peter, Frederick, Margreta, Magdelane, Catherine and Mary. Executors - friends, Adam Teach, Henry Graff and John Anderson. witnesses - George Reading, John Edmonds, John George Bender. Proved Nov . 9, 1761. (RCL Note: Pamala D. Linn provide me a copy of the complete handwritten will.) 1761, Oct 26. Inventory, (pounds) 145.3.1, made by Uriah Addoms and John Wolaver. Lib. 11, p. 147. On 31 Dec 1991, I found another source. It is Hopkinson and Allied Families, Ancestors and Descendants of Junius Greeley Hopkinson and Perry Hopkinson and their wives Jeanette Eveland and Lois Amanda Moffett, by Laura Huffman, Aura M. and Alsey E. Hopkinson, 1965. It is available on UMI microfiche G4190. References to it in later generations will be indicated by "See Hopkinson". It indicates that David Eveland was born about 1690 and settled on the Raritan River in New Jersey prior to 1733. He purchased a large tract of land in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, from the Penns, which at his death, by direction of his will, was sold to settle the estate. The land consists of much of the land that the county seat of Flemington now covers. He died in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, New Jersey, between 1753 and 1761. In his will he mentions his wife, "Mary Eveland and seven children". Here are some notes provide to me by Delores Eveland of Cerritos, CA in 1994: Johann David Iffland (aka Eveland), according to research done by Wayne Van Leer Jones (3), "was born in what is now Germany. He, with his wife and one child embarked at Rotterdam, Holland during the period July 3 to 10, 1709 and on July 15, 1709 they sailed for London, England in the 5th sailing of Palatines who were emigrating to England, at the invitation of Queen Ann, for later transfer to the English colonies in America. Undoubtedly they had come down the Rhine a month or two before and probably were in Rotterdam for several weeks before sailing. "His name was misspelled as 'David Yslant' in the embarkation list, a spelling which has been verified by examination of the original list (by Wayne). The Iffland family were some of the 'poor Palatines' who had embarked on a heart- rending experience which, through no fault of their own, was to really try their souls. driven to leave their homeland by the ravages of war (or much less probably by religious persecution) and by the hardships occassioned by the unusually bitter winter of 1708-09 they went down the Rhine to Rotterdam and thence to London where they lived in what today would be called a refugee camp. Just after Christmas 1709 they embarked on one of a group of ten ships to go to America. The departure of these ships from England was long delayed and after more than three months on shipboard they finally sailed in a convoy on Apr. 10, 1710 from Portsmouth. The first ship arrived in New York on June 13, 1710 and the last one on August 2, 1710." In New York "subsistence was provided to them by order of Queen Anne and under the local direction of Governor Hunter of New York ---." According to Wayne, detailed lists maintained during this period recorded each family, its size, the number of days subsistence and the amount. These lists have survived and track this family from June, 1710 through September, 1712. Those Journals and Ledgers are located in "CO 5/1230 Public Record Office, London, England. (3)" During the period of subsistance the family first resided on Nutten (now Governor's) Island where many of the immigrants "were recovering from the epidemic of 'Palatine Fever' (typhus) from which hundreds died on shipboard and after arriving in New York.(3)" Later they moved up the Hudson River to an area referred to as Livingston Manor near the current towns of Germantown and Rhinebeck. "The stay in the settlements along the Hudson was a period of continuing hardship. Each famlily lived in a hut constructed by itself as best it could and of its own design. They worked at times on the abortive Naval Stores scheme but had no real means of livelihood and were sustained most inadequately by a grafting contractor with the government funds which would have been inadequate under good management. In September, 1712 the funds for their support ran out and they were released from their obligations to the Crown and left to shift for themselves. Not only was this unfortuante for the individuals involved, but it brought to an end the fine record that had been kept of them.(3)" "Just when the Iffland family left the Hudson River settlements and moved to West Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, New Jersey is not known but it was during the period 1716-1722, since in 1722 David Eviland was one of the 'early settlers' of West Amwell Township.(3)" Though most records in New Jersey spell the family name "Eveland," Johann David always signed his name "David Iffland.(3)" Other variations in spelling found are: Ephlin, Efland, Ephland, Ifland, and Iffland. The German pronunciation is Eafulandt (2). Sources for (RIN 4698) Johann David Iffland Information: (1) Correspondence with Dorothy Pray Wilson, 11504 Nairn Rd., Wheaton, Maryland 20902; 25 Jan 1983 & 22 Feb 1983. (2) Correspondence with Mrs. Inez Albee, 108 Howell St., Bath, N.Y. 14810; 2 Dec 1982. (3) Correspondence with Wayne Van Leer Jones, 5672 Longmont Drive, Houston, Texas 77058, 20 April 1983 & 1 August 1983 (see Eveland family file for quote of his sources). Marriage to Rebecca: Batch #: 8424920, Sheet #: 59, Source Call #: 1395861 Additional Source: Eveland and Stull Family Bible Records, The New Jersey Genesis, Vol 10 No 1, October 1962, page 395. In June 1723 was granted 200 acres of land by Thomas Penn, son of William Penn in Hunterdon Co. Source: The Palatine Families of New York, Henry Z. Jones, Jr. 1985. JOHANN DAVID IFFLANDT (Hunter Lists #341) David Yslant, his wife, and 1 child were on Capt. Jno. Unthank's ship in Holland in the 5th party of Palatines in 1709 (Rotterdam Lists). Johann David Ifflandt made his first appearance on the Hunter Lists 1 July 1710 with 2 persons over 10 years and 1 person under 10. The notation showed 2 over 10 and 2 under 10 25 March 1711, 3 over 10 years and 2 under 10 on 24 Jun 1712, and 2 over 10 and 3 under 10 years on 13 Sep 1712. Johann David Lieffland and his wife Anna Maria with 4 children were at Neu-Quunsberg ca. 1716/17 (Simmendinger Register). David Eveland settled on the Proprietor's land near John Readings's on the Rariton and desired a grant of about 200 acres, according to a notation dated 6 month 15th 1733 in Minute Bk. K of the Board of Property of the Province of PA. on 28 May 1737 he was deeded a track of land by the Penn family (Letter from Wayne V. Jones). David Eveline was a freeholder of Amwell in 1741 (Hunterdon County Freeholders). The will of David Eveland of Amwell Twp was dated 28 May 1753 and proved 9 Nov 1761 (NJ Wills: Lib. 11, p. 147). Baptismal sponsor: Johann Schack, forester from Ludersdorf b. in Thann (Dan). Johann David Ifflandt, son of Johannes Ifflandt of Mecklar in Hessen, married Rebecca, daughter of Johannes Schnneider, 2 Nov 1702 (Hochheim churchbook). Rebecca Schneider was confirmed 1693, aged 15 years at Hochheim. After their marriage, Johann David Ifflandt and Rebecaa resided at Morstadt. Much of the 2nd and 3rd generation material on this interesting family was supplied by Wayne V. Jones of Houston, TX; Mr. Jones has spent years collecting data on the family from old bibles and private sources and his contribution to this chapter is much appreciated (HJ). Source: New Jersey Colonial Documents - Calendar of Wills 1761-1770, page 137. Will of David Eveland. 1753, May 28. Eveland, David, of Amwell Twsp., Hunterdon Co.; will of. Personal and real to be sold and money put in interest, and the income given to my wife, Mary, while she is my widow, and after her death, money to go to my children, John, Peter, Frederick, Margreta, Magdelane, Catherine and Mary. Executors - friends, Adam Teach, Henry Graff and John Anderson. witnesses - George Reading, John Edmonds, John George Bender. Proved Nov . 9, 1761. (RCL Note: Pamala D. Linn provide me a copy of the complete handwritten will.) 1761, Oct 26. Inventory, (pounds) 145.3.1, made by Uriah Addoms and John Wolaver. Lib. 11, p. 147. On 31 Dec 1991, I found another source. It is Hopkinson and Allied Families, Ancestors and Descendants of Junius Greeley Hopkinson and Perry Hopkinson and their wives Jeanette Eveland and Lois Amanda Moffett, by Laura Huffman, Aura M. and Alsey E. Hopkinson, 1965. It is available on UMI microfiche G4190. References to it in later generations will be indicated by "See Hopkinson". It indicates that David Eveland was born about 1690 and settled on the Raritan River in New Jersey prior to 1733. He purchased a large tract of land in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, from the Penns, which at his death, by direction of his will, was sold to settle the estate. The land consists of much of the land that the county seat of Flemington now covers. He died in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, New Jersey, between 1753 and 1761. In his will he mentions his wife, "Mary Eveland and seven children". Sources for (RIN 4699) Anna Maria "Mary" (???) Iffland Information: (1) Correspondence with Dorothy Pray Wilson, 11504 Nairn Rd., Wheaton, Maryland 20902; 25 Jan 1983 & 22 Feb 1983. (2) Correspondence with Mrs. Inez Albee, 108 Howell St., Bath, N.Y. 14810; 2 Dec 1982. Source: Eveland and Stull Family Bible Records, The New Jersey Genesis, Vol 10 No 1, October 1962, page 395. Anna Maria (Mary) died 1751 in Amwell Twp, Hunterdon, New Jersey. She married Johann David Eveland on 1715. Source: Eveland and Stull Family Bible Records, The New Jersey Genesis, Vol 10 No 1, October 1962, page 395. They had the following children: M i Peter Eveland was born 1718 and died 1793. M ii Frederick Eveland was born 1720. F iii Catherine Eveland was born 1726. F iv Mary Eveland was born 1728 in Amwell Twp, Hunterdon, New Jersey. Source: IGI - State: New Jersey, as of Apr 1988.
1751 - 1845
Tobias
Tillman
93
93
Note: Catherine Sharp married Tobias Tillman.... listed as a taxpayer in Botetourt County, VA, 1782-87. About Mar. 1803, he bought 197 acres of land in Anderson County, TN, according to minutes of the Anderson County court. Tobias and his wife Catherine "Nancy" with their children settled on Swamp Creek in Preble County,Ohio, in 1805. He had been a Revolutionary War soldier and was drafted into the War of 1812, but sent a substitute. His only possessions when he came to Ohio were a keg of powder and a horse. The family rode the horse turn-about. 7 children."
1761 - 1837
Catherine
"Nancy"
Sharp
76
76
Catherine Sharp married Tobias Tillman.... listed as a taxpayerin Botetourt County, VA, 1782-87. About Mar. 1803, he bought 197acres of land in Anderson County, TN, according to minutes ofthe Anderson County court. Tobias and his wife Catherine "Nancy" with their children settled on Swamp Creek in Preble County,Ohio, in 1805. He had been a Revolutionary War soldier and wasdrafted into the War of 1812, but sent a substitute. His only possessions when he came to Ohio were a keg of powder and a horse. The family rode the horse turn-about. 7 children."
1735 - 1814
Heinrich
Honas
"Henry" Sharp
79
79
TITL James Landrum Keller @@http://www.trailerpark.com/tango/1rnoah/noahged/d0000/g0000087.html#I8221 LDS Ordinance Data TITLhttp://www.familysearch.org/Search/af/pedigree_chart.asp?recid=6983836According to History of Preble Co., OH, 1881, Henry Sharp was a native of Scotland but lived in Germany before coming to America. He and Barbara lived in Orange Co., NC before 1785,and probably moved to Botetourt Co., VA about 1782. Heapparently left Virginia for Tennessee in 1789 and moved toPreble Co., OH in 1805, where he lived in 1814.Henry Sharp madedeeds to his sons called love deeds in Bold Valley in ClaiborneCounty. Henry, Sr., deeded land to five of his sons (the othersons were minor at this time, it seems). To Henry, he deeded200 acres in Claiborne County; to Daniel, 277 acres in ClaiborneCounty on the waters of Lost Creek; and similar amounts toConrad, Jacob, and George, in the surrounding community.HenrySharp, b. in Germany c1735, son of Isaac & Margaret Sharp. Isaac was b. 1712 and d. Mar. 8, 1783 in Lancaster (now Lebanon Co.) PA. He was tax collector for Hannover Twp. in 1756. This region suffered greatly during the French & Indian War, and many of the first settlers left the area. Henry and his brother, John, were made executors of their father's estate on Apr. 8, 1784, at which time Henry and his wife were apparently living inMontgomery Co., VA. The Potts Manuscripts, Vol. IX, Tulpehocken Accounts for 1744 list George, Ernst and Samuel Scherb (Sharp) as well as Johannes and Andreas Graff (Graves). About 1792 the Sharp, Graves, Gibbs, Snodderly and related families settled at Sharp's Station in what is now Union County, TN. This site is in Big Ridge State Park on the east shore of Norris Lake.Henry was a brother to John, Aaron and George Sharp and Mrs. Nicholas Countz (WCG)....Sometime prior to 1785 he lived in Orange Co., NC, as is indicated by a record stating that on June 3, 1785,Henry and Barbara sharp of Botetourt Co., VA, deeded to one Michael Holt land situated in Orange Co., NC. Henry's nameappears on tax lists for Orange Co. for 1799 on property valuedat $1480 and in 1780, 81 & 82 he was taxed on 225 acres of landin Orange Co. As his name does not appear on the tax lists after1782, it is probable that he left Orange Co. about this time for Virginia."In the Brief of Deeds of Montgomery Co., VA, Nov. 2,1795, appears this entry: 'Henry Sharp and wife, Barbara, toGeorge Williams, 112 acres on Sinking Creek.' At this time Henrywas a resident of Knox Co., TN. Tax records seem to indicatethat he left Virginia for Tennessee in 1789. He is believed tohave moved from Tennessee to Preble Co., Ohio, in 1805, where hedied in 1814.The first death in the township was that of HenrySharpe, a native of Scotland. After spending a great part of hislife in Germany, he came to Ohio and died in Harrison townshipabout 1814. He was buried in the Euphemia graveyard, and is saidto be the first man buried on the spot now covered withtombstones."2Note: Euphemia was on the National Road, whichwas constructed by the Federal government starting in 1811 fromCumberland, MD, to Vandalia, IL, at a cost of over seven milliondollars. Today Euphemia is in the NW corner of Lewisburg, onthe west side of SR 503. The cemetery is also calledRoselawn.Henry served with Count Pulaski's Light Dragoons during the American Revolution. His name during the time in the military was "Henry Shaup".
1740 - 1796
Barbara
Graves
56
56
Barbara Graves was born about 1740 in Greenwich Twp., Berks Co., PA, and died about 1800 in Preble Co., OH. She married Henry Honas Sharp about 1759 in PA. He was born 4 May 1735, possibly in Germany, died in 1814 in Harrison, Preble Co., OH, and was buried in Euphemia Cem. According to History of Preble Co., Ohio, 1881, Henry Sharp was a native of Scotland but lived in Germany before coming to America. He and Barbara lived in Orange Co., N.C. before 1785, and probably moved to Botetourt Co., Virginia about 1782. He apparently left Virginia for Tennessee in 1789, and moved to Preble Co., Ohio in 1805, where he died in 1814.
1702 - 1804
John
Sebastian
Graves
102
102
John Graves is believed to have been born about 1703 in the German Palatinate. William Carroll Graves, a greatgrandson of John, in a genealogical outline written in 1870, says that John died in 1804 at the age of 101. Although the date of his arrival in America is uncertain, it was probably 1730. According to Roy Stockwell, the following record is from Pennsylvania Colonial Records, vol. 3, p. 386: "At the courthouse in Philadelphia, Sept. 5, 1730, a list was presented of the names of forty-six Palatines who, with their families making in all 130 persons, were imported here in the ship Alexander and Ann, William Clymer, master, from Rotterdam, but last in Deal." In this list appears the name of Johann Sebastian Graff. It is probable that this is the man whose name is recorded as John Graff, the father of Jacob and Sebastian Graff, born in Berks Co., Pa., in 1746 and 1747. This may explain the origin of the name Boston, the anglicized form of the name Sebastian, which "Old John" gave to one of his children. The family name was probably not changed from Graff to Graves until the family moved to North Carolina. In what is now Alamance Co., but until 1848 was Orange Co., N.C., was a settlement of Pennsylvania Dutch. The prevailing sect was the German Reformed Church, and services continued in German until about 1800. On Stinking Quarter Creek, not far from the present Burlington, N.C., was the Graves Church about where "Old John of Stinking Quarter" lived. In the 1750's many "Pennsylvania Dutch" migrated to western North Carolina. Old John moved there prior to 1757 (presumably from Berks Co., Pa.), and settled on Stinking Quarter Creek, a branch of the Alamance. W. C. Graves says that John moved from North Carolina to East Tennessee when he was quite old. Records in Orange Co., N.C., show that John deeded property in Orange Co. to his son Jacob on Nov. 22, 1799, so it is probable he moved to Tenn. about 1800. He lived in Tenn. with his grandson John (son of Jacob). He died on his grandson's farm and was buried near the old Presbyterian church in Big Valley, Claiborne Co., Tenn. The name of John's wife is unknown. The list of arrivals contains nothing to indicate whether he was married or had children prior to his arrival in America. It is believed that John had a large family, perhaps 17 children. According to Roy Stockwell, the names of only five are known, not necessarily born in the order shown. However, T. H. R. Neal also names William. (R-200, R-203)
1705
Maria
Magdelen
1712 - 1783
Isaac
A.
Sharp
71
71
Unsure of the correctness of the 1712 birth date. Will filed ca1767, but actual death was in 1783. He resided in East HanoverTwnshp., Lancaster Co., PA. Some of the records show surname as"SCHERFF". Mr EUGENE L. SHARP, Spokane, WA has a document fromLancaster Co., PA, (now Lebanon Co.) showing his sons JOHN andHENRY being appointed as Administrators of his estate followinghis death.---------------------------------------------------------- TITLJames Landrum Keller @@http://www.trailerpark.com/tango/1rnoah/noahged/d0001/g0000067.html#I4343 TITL James Landrum Keller @@http://www.trailerpark.com/tango/1rnoah/noahged/d0001/g0000067.html#I4343Immigrated with his two brothers 9/16/1738 toPhiladelphia on the Queen Elizabeth.
1715
Margarette
A.
Webber
1705 - 1809
John
(Tillman)
Tilghman
104
104
1727
Eva
Dryden
1682 - 1730
Gideon
Tilghman
48
48
1680
Esther
Holland
1652 - 1720
Gideon
Tilghman
68
68
1659
Margaret
Maneux
1592
Christopher
Tilghman
[McGowan.FTW] [Neet3.FTW] His arrival in Virginia is listed in Greer's "Early Emigrants toVirginia," and "Patents of Virginia," May 9, 1635. In the "Visitationof Kent," is shown the fact that Christopher Tilghman came intopossession of Rhodes Court, formerly owned by Thomas Bealde, and thatChristopher sold this estate to Thomas Carter. The Court is describedas being a Manor situated in the Southeast extremity of the Parish ofSelling, in the borough of Rhodes. Selling and Boughton are twoparishes on the South or opposite side of the London road. Immigration - [date: 9 MAY 1635]
1600
Ruth
Devonshire
1570 - 1619
Christopher
Tilghman
49
49
1584 - >1619
Anna
Saunders
35
35
1515 - 1580
Nicholas
Tilghman
65
65
1519
Jane
Benson
1546 - <1636
Edward
Saunders
90
90
1550
Anna
Pandreth
~1505 - <1575
John
Saunders
70
70
~1505
Anna
Whetenhall
1524
Miles
Pandreth
1528
Elizabeth
Lowin
1720 - >1793
Catherine
"Catey"
Pickard
73
73
1695
Anna
Maria
1645 - 1721
Johannes
David
Ifflandt
76
76
Johannes Iffelandt born about 1645, and died September 12,1721, he was buried on Sunday September 14,1721, at the age of 76 years and 5 months. His burial record of Mecklar states that he was commonly called the "old Tailor". He was a tailor as early as 1675 when his son Johann David Iffland was born. Johannes married Mardt Lies, who was born about 1634/1635, in about 1669, this is based however on the birth of their first child. She was from Garderat (Gerterode) as shown by the baptismal record of her daughter, also named Mardt Lies. The names of Mardt Lies the wife of Johannes and also the daughter by the same name, may have instead been interpreted Margaretha Elizabeth. Her surname and family are not known. They lived for a time in Tann where their son was born in 1675. They later moved to Mecklar bei Bad Hersfeld in Hesse. While there is no record found of Mardt's death, it is assumed it was before 1696 when Johannes married Anna Catharina Cludlin (Cludl ?). They were married at the Evangelical Church of Mecklar. She died in may 1707 and was buried at Mecklar on May 22, 1707 at the age of 63 years. Johannes Iffelandt and his first wife Mardt, had six children: Elisabet, Margredt, Johann David, Ann Elss, Mardt Lies, and Johannes. source: http://www.geocities.com/lonadawn1/eveland_links.htm
1644 - 1707
Catherina
63
63
Living
Marvin
Thomas
Tilghman
~1480 - <1591
Nicholas
Tilghman
111
111
~1400 - ~1490
Richard de
Faversham
Tilghman
90
90
~1390
Dyonisia
Holloway
Nicholaus
Tilghman
~1350
Thomas
Tilghman
1313 - 1385
Richardus
Tilghman
72
72
~1225
Johannes
Tilghman
[McGowan.FTW] [Neet3.FTW] Notes for JOHANNES TILGHMAN: The name Tilghman is derived from the occupation of its first bearers, either as "tileman," one who covered roofs with tiles, or as "tillman" , a husbandman or farmer. The family motto of "Spes Alit Agricolam" (Hope sustains the farmer), would indicate the later origin. It is believed that the family originated in Southern France from whence they settled in the Reinland (territory along the River Rhine), as the Von Till family. This name later appeared in Germany as Tillman. When the first of the Tilghman family appeared in England it was Tilman. About the year 1000 it became Tilghman. In the absence of factual information on the family prior to 1225 A.D.,it may be assumed that the family came to Kent County,England, with the Jutes, one of the three great Teutonic Nations, in their invasion ofEngland in 449. As early as 690 (Volume 1, Beade's Opera Historical), theTilghman family was established in Kent County, for it is recorded that"Tilman was the name of one of the English priests who accompanied the ill-fated Hewalds in their mission to the Continental Saxons," and was a "man of great renown and also noble, as the world judgeth, who from athane (thegn) was become a monk." The dictionary states that in Anglo-Saxon England the word thegndenoted orginally a warrior companion of a King, assigned a particular military duty. A later meaning of the word is a "freeman who possessed five or more hides of land and had a special appointment in the King's Hall, and was bound to render services in war as a landowner." Thus it was found that "Tilman, the Thegnman," was in Kent County as early as 690. The records indicate that Johannes or John Tilghman lived in Snodland Parrish, Kent County, England. Several of the descendants settled in Faversham Hundred or Parrish, Kent County, England. "Tilghman- Tillman Family 1225-1945" by Col. Stephen Tillman, USAF. Published 1945.
1638 - BEF. 8 MAR 1685/86
William
Dryden
1469 - ~1549
Edward
Saunders
80
80
Joan
1445 - <1525
Robert
Saunders
80
80
Agricola
Living
Neet
Living
Newton
~1482
William
(Esq.)
Whetenhall
~1468
Anne
Cromer
~1433
William
Whetenhall
~1433
Margaret
Hexstall
~1445
James
Cromer
~1438
?
Hewett
1420
William
Cromer
~1429
? Say
~1395
William
Cromer
~1399
Margaret
Squirry
~1377
Thomas
Squirry
1669 - 1744
David
Dryden
75
75
Living
Bender
Living
Bender
Living
McNaughton
Living
Janet
Living
Bender
Living
Bender
Living
Newton
Living
Newton
~1698 - ~1777
William
Dryden
79
79
~1450
Anne
Coles
D. >1812
Margaret
"Peggy"
Whatley
D. BEF. 8 MAR 1685/86
Agnes
1605
William
Dryden
~1609
Janet
Hog
~1398 - >1449
William
Hextall
51
51
<1410
Margaret
Bromely
1382
Richard
Hexstall
~1619
Bernhard
Ifflandt
The Eveland Family has been charted back thus far to the early 1600's. The spelling of the name has gone through various changes down through the years because of German speaking immigrants coming into the colonies of America, where the spelling of the German sounding name was generally spelled like it sounded to those who were recording it. The earliest records of the name in Mecklar, Hessen was spelled Iffelandt and at times Eiffelandt, In Rhine country it was spelled Iffland or Ifland. For the most part the families that lived in the areas of New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Canada spelled the name Eveland, while in parts of Pennsylvania the name is spelled Eflin. Another group of the family that moved on into North Carolina spells the name Ephland and Efland, and there is there a town by the name of Efland. Bernhardt (Bernhard) Iffelandt is the earliest recorded family member and was living in Bebra,Hesse. There have been no details found on who Bernhard's wife and family were. He may have had other children, but there was a son Johannes Iffelandt and a daughter Elisabet. Johannes was born about 1645. No birth date has been found for Elisabet, but we know of her as she was listed as the Godmother to her nephew,Johann David Iffland,at his baptism in Mecklar on July 21,1675. In the book,"The Stull Family,Julia Ann Stull (1814-1872) and Her Ancestors",by Wayne V. Jones", there is mention of a possibility of another daughter named, Ottilia Iffelandt, from Weidrodt who married Hans Wilhelm Kohlmann, widower, on September 15,1677 at Mecklar. He was a shepherd.His first wife had been named Katherine and she had died January 30,1677, at the age of 37 years,3 weeks, and was buried at Mecklar. source: http://www.geocities.com/lonadawn1/eveland_links.htm
20 FEB 1697/98
Johann
Nicholas
Gibbs
1664
David
Holland
1665
Mary
Edgeworth
1553 - 1632
Erasmus
Dryden
78
78
1557 - 16 FEB 1629/30
Frances
Wilkes
1525 - 1584
John
Dryden
59
59
1529 - 1584
Elizabeth
Cope
55
55
1500 - >1540
David
Dryden
40
40
~1504
Isabel
Nicholson
~1475
William
Dryden
~1592
William
Wilkes
~1504 - 22 JAN 1557/58
John
Cope
1506 - 6 JAN 1558/59
Bridget
Raleigh
1470 - 1513
William
Cope
43
43
1465 - 12 FEB 1524/25
Jane
Spencer
~1437 - 1499
John
Spencer
62
62
~1450
Ann
Empson
~1418
John
Spencer
~1422
Missy
Warstead
1392 - 1476
Henry
Spencer
84
84
This is the line of Spenser's that Princess Diana of Wales is descended from.
~1397
Isabelle
Lincoln
~1366 - >1435
Thomas
Spencer
69
69
1340
Nicholas
Spencer
~1344
Joan
Polard
~1300 - >1386
John
Spencer
86
86
<1305
Alice
Deverell
~1263 - ~1328
William
Spencer
65
65
1235 - 1251
John
Le
Despencer
16
16
~1185 - 1242
Galfridus
(Geoffrey) Le
Despencer
57
57
~1206 - >1265
Emma
D'Harcourt
59
59
1169
Thomas
Le
Despencer
~1152 - ~1199
Hugh
Le
Despencer
47
47
~1122
Thurston
Le
Despencer
~1100
William Talvas
Montgomery
Le Despencer
1088 - 28 FEB 1141/42
Alix
Ala De
Burgundy
~1082
Robert
D'Arbetot Le
Despencer
1066
Amaury
Raoul
D'Arbetot
<1274
Giles
Deverell
~1348
Henry
Lincoln
~1414
Peter
Empson
~1418
Elizabeth
Joseph
~1473
Edward
Raleigh
~1478
Anne
Chamberlaine
~1434 - 1509
Edward
Raleigh
75
75
1445
Margaret
Verney
~1415 - ~1460
William
Raleigh
45
45
1421
Elizabeth
Greene
~1390
Johanes
Raleigh
~1410
Idon
Cotesford
~1375
Henry
Raleigh
Unknown
Bennell
~1345
Thomas
Raleigh
~1350
Agnes
Swinford
1315
John
Raleigh
~1320
Rose
Helion
~1285
John
Raleigh
~1290
Joan
Gray
~1255
Henry
Raleigh
~1260
Mabel
Pincherdon
10 FEB 1399/00 - 18 JAN 1460/61
Thomas
Greene
1394 - ~1457
Phillipa
Ferrars
63
63
~1369 - 1417
Thomas
Greene
48
48
1372 - 1433
Mary
Talbot
61
61
1343 - 1391
Thomas
De
Greene
48
48
Unknown
Mablethorpe
1310 - 1370
Henry
De
Greene
60
60
~1314
Catherine
De
Drayton
1292
Thomas
De
Greene
~1279
Lucy
La
Zouche
~1260
Thomas
De
Greene
~1264
Alice
Bottisham
~1244 - 1279
Eudo
La
Zouche
35
35
~1250 - 7 JAN 1297/98
Millicent
De
Cantilupe
~1203 - 1270
Allan
De La
Zouche
67
67
~1222 - 1296
Helen
De
Quincy
74
74
~1182 - 1238
Roger
La
Zouche
56
56
~1179 - 28 JAN 1231/32
Margaret
Annora
~1157 - 1190
Alan
La
Zouche
33
33
~1160
Adelisia
De
Belmeis
1126
Geoffrey
La
Zouche
~1130
Hawise
Fergan
~1093
Allan
La
Zouche
~1110
Constance
Princess of
Bretagne
1096 - 1148
Conan "Le
Gross" Duke
of Bretagne
52
52
~1091
Matilda (Maud)
Princess of
England
Matilda, also known as Maud, was the granddaughter of William the Conqueror. She retained the title Empress from her marriage to the German Emperor Henry V, who subsequently died. She decided to stake a claim for the English throne and wage war with her cousin Stephen of Blois. She personally commanded her army and accomplished a number of daring and wily escapes from besieged castles. At one point, she was under siege in London from troops commanded by Stephen's wife, who was also named Matilda.
1070
Alan
Fergent
1072
Hermangarde
Countess
of Bretagne
~1110
Phillipe
Guillaume
De Belmeis
~1126 - ~1190
Maud
De
Maschines
64
64
~1100
William
De
Maschines
~1100
Cecily
De
Rumilly
~1070 - ~1136
Lucy
Countess
of Chester
66
66
~1070 - JAN 1127/28
Ranulph De
Maschines
Earl of Chester
~1050 - 1129
Ranulf De
Maschines Viscount
De Bayuex
79
79
~1054
Maud
D'Avranches
~1017
Ranulf
Count De
Bayuex
~1021
Alix
De
Normandy
~0332
Ancitel
Count De
Bayuex
~1001 - 1028
Richard
De
Normandy
27
27
~1000
Concubine
De
Normandy
~0963 - 1027
Richard "The
Good" Duke
of Normandy
64
64
~0982 - 1017
Judith
De
Bretagne
35
35
William
Brown
0963 - 1031
Gonnor
De
Crepon
68
68
[Neet3.FTW] Her Scandinavian name was spelled Gunnvor; her Frankish name was Albereda.
~0911
Herbastus
de
Crepon
0962 - 29 JUN 992
Conan
Duke of
Bretagne
~0952 - 27 JUN 992
Ermangarde
D'Anjou
~1025 - 1066
Richard
D'
Avranches
41
41
~1043
Emma
De
Conteville
1380
Henry
Fowler
~1001
Harlevin
De
Conteville
~0969
Jean
De
Conteville
~0989
Toustien
Le
Goz
~0994
Judith
De
Montanolier
0963
Ansfred
Le
Goz
~0937
Ansfred
Rollosson
~0942
Helloe
Countess
of Beulac
~0885
Rollo
Thurston
Brico
~0913
Gerlotte
~1174 - 1264
Roger
De
Quincy
90
90
~1208 - 1245
Elena
De
Galloway
37
37
~1155 - 1219
Saher
De
Quincy
64
64
~1156 - 12 JAN 1235/36
Margaret
De
Harcourt
~1127 - 1197
Robert
De
Quincy
70
70
~1133 - 1181
Orabella
De
Leuchars
48
48
~1100 - 1158
Saher
De
Quincy
58
58
1096 - 1140
Maud
Saint
Liz
44
44
~1046 - 1111
Simon
De Saint
Liz
65
65
~1072 - 23 MAR 1130/31
Maud
Huntinton
~1186 - 1234
Alan
De
Galloway
48
48
1147 - ~1212
Helen
De
L'Isle
65
65
~1164 - 1200
Roland
De
Galloway
36
36
~1172 - 1217
Elena
De
Moreville
45
45
~1118 - 1174
Uchtred
Lord of
Galloway
56
56
~1134
Gunnild
of
Dunbar
~1090 - 1161
Fergus
Lord of
Galloway
71
71
1095
Elizabeth
Princess
of England
1062 - 1138
Waltheof
Earl of
Dunbar
76
76
1079 - 1118
Matilda "Atheling"
Princess of
Scotland
38
38
This marriage represented the union of the Norman and Saxon royal lines.
1068 - 1135
Henry I
"Beauclerc"
King of England
67
67
Henry I was the fourth and most capable son of William the Conqueror and Matilda, born 1068, and nicknamed "Beauclerc" (fine scholar) for his above average education. He married Eadgyth (who later took the name Matilda), daughter of Malcolm III of Scotland, who bore him two sons and a daughter. One son died very early, and the other, William, died in the wreck of the White Ship in November 1120, leaving the daughter, Matilda, as the sole heir. Eadgyth died in 1118, and Henry married Adelaide of Louvain, but the union produced no offspring. Henry also had two fairly significant illegitimate children - Robert de Mellent, Earl of Gloucester, and Sibylla, wife of the Scottish King Alexander I. Henry's was the longest reign of the Norman line, lasting thirty-five years. The first years of Henry's reign were concerned with subduing Normandy. His father divided his kingdoms between Henry's older brothers, leaving England to William and Normandy to Robert. Henry inherited no land, but received £5000 in silver. He played both sides in his brothers' quarrel, leading both to distrust Henry, and sign a mutual accession treaty barring their brother from the crown. Henry's hope arose when Robert went on the First Crusade; should William die, Henry would be the obvious choice. Henry was in the woods hunting on the morning of William's death, August 2, 1100. He moved quickly and was crowned king on August 5, his coronation charter denouncing William's oppressive policies and promising good government. Robert returned to Normandy a few weeks later, but escaped final defeat until 1106, at the Battle of Tinchebrai. Robert was captured and lived the remaining twenty-eight years of his life as Henry's prisoner. Henry was drawn into controversy with the Church over the lay investiture issue - the practice of selling clergy appoints by the king to gain revenue, heavily opposed by Gregorian reformers in the Church. He ignored the situation until he was threatened with excommunication by Pope Paschal II in 1105, reaching a compromise with the papacy: he would officially denounce lay investiture, but prelates were to continue to do homage for their fiefs. In practice, it changed little - the king still had the deciding voice in appointing ecclesiastical offices - but it a marked a point when kingship was viewed as purely secular, and subservient to the Church. A solution to the lay investiture controversy and conquest of Normandy were accomplished in 1106, allowing Henry to expand his power. Henry mixed generosity with violence in motivating allegiance to the crown, appointing loyal and gifted men to administrative positions. Roger of Salisbury, the most famous of Henry's servants, was instrumental in organizing a department for collection of royal revenues, the Exchequer. The Exchequer quickly gained notoriety for sending out court officials to judge local financial disputes, weakening the feudal courts controlled by local lords, and won the title "Lion of Justice". The final years of his reign were concentrated on war with France, and succession concerns upon the death of his son William in 1120. The marriage to Adelaide was fruitless, leaving Matilda his only surviving legitimate heir. She was recalled to Henry's court in 1125 after the death of her husband, Emperor Henry V of Germany; Henry forced the barons to swear they would accept Matilda as Queen upon Henry's death. She was then forced to marry the sixteen-year-old Geoffrey of Anjou (founder of the Plantagent dynasty) in 1128 to continue the Angevin alliance. The marriage was unpopular with the Norman barons, but Matilda and Geoffrey produced a male heir, prompting Henry to force another oath from the barons in support of Matilda. In summer 1135, Henry refused to give custody of certain key Norman castles to Geoffrey, as a show of good will, and the pair entered into war. Henry's life ended in this sorry state of affairs - war with his son-in-law - in December 1135. Source: www.britannia.com
~1075
Sigrid
~1336
Nicholas
Lovayne
~1340
Margaret
Saint
John
Elfrida
~0968 - 1016
Ethelred
II of
England
48
48
King of England, the son of Edgar, succeeded his brother, Edward the Martyr, in 979, and, for his want of vigour and capacity, was surnamed the Unready. He paid a tribute to the Danes, raised by a tax called Danegelt, levied on his subjects. To free himself from this oppression, he caused all the Danes in England to be treacherously massacred in one day (Nov.13, 1002). On this Sweyn, king of Denmark, invaded his kingdom and compelled him to fly to Normandy, but Sweyn dying soon after, Ethelred returned and resumed the government. He died in 1016, while Canute was preparing his great expedition. Burke says he died 1010. His tomb was lost when the old St Pauls was destroyed in the great fire of London.
~0975 - 1045
Crinan
The
Thane
70
70
0984
Bethoc
of
Scotland
1438 - 1496
Richard
Chamberlain
58
58
~1448 - 1525
Sibyl
Fowler
77
77
1392 - 1439
Richard
Chamberlain
47
47
1408 - 1458
Margaret
Knevett
50
50
~1356 - 1396
Richard
Chamberlain
40
40
~1366 - 1408
Margaret
Lovayne
42
42
1324 - 1391
Richard
Chamberlain
67
67
1329 - 1410
Jane
Reyns
81
81
1293
John
Chamberlain
~1303
Margaret
Jane
Morteyn
1260
Richard
Chamberlain
1268
Jane
Gatesden
~1230
John
Chamberlain
~1238
Margaret
~1238
John
De
Gatesden
~1236
Margaret
~1273
John
Morteyn
~1277
Joan
Eckney
~1265
Joan
Gobion
~1260 - 1296
John
Morteyn
36
36
~1235
Constance
Merston
~1230
John
Morteyn
~1235
Hugo
Gobion
~1240
Matilda
1200
Richard
Gobion
~1205
Agnes
Merlay
~1170
Richard
Gobion
~1175
Beatrice
Lucelles
~1175
Roger
Merlay
~1180
Alice
Stuteville
~1130 - 1160
Ralph
Merlay
30
30
~1135
Juliana
of
Dunbar
1062 - 1138
Gospatric
II of
Northumberland
76
76
~1105
Sybil
Morel
1040 - 1075
Gospatrick
35
35
1042
Athelreda
Princess
of England
~1378 - 1464
William
John
Knevett
86
86
D. >1484
Joan
Stafford
~1352
John
Knevett
~1356
Elizabeth
Clifton
~1402 - 1460
Humphrey
Stafford
58
58
~1114 - 1180
Anne
Neville
66
66
2 MAR 1377/78 - 1403
Edmund
Stafford
1383 - 1438
Anne
Plantagenet
55
55
1334 - 1386
Hugh
Stafford
52
52
~1334
Philippa
Beauchamp
1301 - 1372
Ralph
De
Stafford
70
70
~1312 - 1347
Margaret
De
Audley
35
35
1272 - 1308
Edmund
Stafford
36
36
~1280 - 17 MAR 1336/37
Margaret
Bassett
~1246
Nicholas
Stafford
~1250
Alionore
Clinton
~1220
Robert
De
Stafford
~1225
Alice
Corbett
~1194
Hervey
De
Stafford
~1198
Petronille
De
Ferrars
~1199
Thomas
Corbett
~1203
Isabell
Valletort
~1242 - 1299
Ralph
Bassett
57
57
~1239
Hawise
De
Grey
1215 - 1265
Ralph
Bassett
50
50
~1229 - 1293
Margaret
De
Somery
64
64
Alice
~1245
Thomas
De
Wolvey
~1151 - ~1211
John
De
Somery
60
60
1160
Margaret
Fitzgilbert
~1125 - ~1195
John
De
Somery
70
70
~1160
Hawise
Paynel
~1105 - 1165
John "The
Marshall"
Fitzgilbert
60
60
~1139
Sybil
De
Salisbury
~1075 - <1130
Gilbert "The
Marshall"
Fitzrobert
55
55
1105
Unknown
De
Venuz
1289 - 1337
Hugh
De
Audley
48
48
1292 - 1342
Margaret
De
Clare
50
50
1243 - 1295
Gilbert "The
Red Earl"
De Clare
52
52
1272 - 1307
Joan "of Acre"
Princess of
England
35
35
1239 - 1307
Edward I
"Longshanks"
King of England
68
68
Edward (èd´werd), kings of England. Edward I, 1239-1307 (r.1272-1307), was the son and successor of HENRY III. He gained new claims to France through his marriage (1254) to Eleanor of Castile and was responsible for his father's victory in the BARONS' WAR. As king, his conquest of Wales (1277-82) was followed by a long, futile campaign against Scotland (1290-1307). Edward's legal reforms, notably the statutes of WESTMINSTER, earned him the title "English Justinian." He restricted private and church courts and controlled land grants to the church. His Model Parliament (1295) marked greater participation by the barons, merchants, and clergy whose resistance to war taxation had forced him to confirm previous charters (e.g., MAGNA CARTA). His son, Edward II, 1284-1327 (r.1307-27), was a weak king, dissipated and self-indulgent. His reign was noted for internal dissension and the loss of Scotland. His insistence on having his favorite, Piers Gaveston, at court caused rebellion among the barons, who eventually had Gaveston killed. Edward's later favorites, Hugh le Despenser and his son, virtually ruled England (1322-26). They made a truce with ROBERT I and recognized him as king of Scotland. Edward's wife, Queen ISABELLA, refused to return from France while the Despensers ruled. She entered into an adulterous alliance with Roger de MORTIMER and invaded England. The Despensers were executed and Edward forced to abdicate. He was imprisoned and almost certainly murdered by henchmen of Isabella and Mortimer. His son, Edward III, 1312-77 (r.1327-77), was dominated by Isabella and Mortimer until he seized power in a coup in 1330, putting Mortimer to death and forcing his mother into retirement. He supported Edward de BALIOL against the young Scottish king DAVID II, but despite his victory at Halidon Hill in 1333, the Scottish question remained unsettled. In 1337 the HUNDRED YEARS WAR began; it would dominate Edward's reign. He and his son EDWARD THE BLACK PRINCE took an active part in the war, the first phase of which ended with the treaty of London in 1359. The war was renewed after various treaties and truces, but, like the Scottish wars, was inconclusive in Edward's reign. There were many constitutional developments in Edward's long reign. The most important of these was the emergence of Commons as a distinct and powerful group in PARLIAMENT. The king's constant need for money for his wars enabled Commons to assert its power to consent to all lay taxation. The Black Death (see PLAGUE) decimated the population, producing a labor shortage that enabled the lower classes to demand higher wages and social advancement. Edward quarreled with the church, and the resulting religious unrest found a spokesman in John WYCLIF. There was rivalry between a court party headed by Edward's son JOHN OF GAUNT and the parliamentary party, headed by the Black Prince. Edward was succeeded by RICHARD II. Source: The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia is licensed from Columbia University Press. Copyright © 1995 by Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
1244 - 1290
Leonore
Princess of
Castille and Leon
46
46
1207 - 1272
Henry III
King of
England
65
65
Henry III was the first son of John and Isabella of Angouleme, born in 1207. Age nine when he was crowned, Henry's early reign featured two regents: William the Marshall governed until his death in 1219, and Hugh de Burgh until Henry came to the throne in 1232. His education was provided by Peter des Roche, Bishop of Winchester. He married Eleanor of Provence in 1236, who bore him four sons and two daughters. Henry inherited a troubled kingdom: London and most of the southeast was in the hands of the French Dauphin Louis and the northern regions were under control of rebellious barons - only the midland and southwest were loyal to the boy king. The barons, however, soon sided with Henry (their quarrel was with his father, not him), and the old Marshall expelled the French Dauphin from English soil by 1217. Henry was a cultivated man, but a lousy politician. Frenchmen and Italians, who came at the behest of Eleanor, inundated his court, and whose relations were handed important church and state positions. His father and uncle left him an impoverished kingdom; Henry financed costly, fruitless wars with extortionate taxation. Inept diplomacy and failed war led Henry to sell his hereditary claims to all the Angevin possessions in France, save Gascony (which was held as a fief of the French crown) and Calais. Henry's failures incited hostilities among a group of barons led by his brother-in-law, Simon de Montfort. Henry was forced to agree to a wide-ranging plan of reforms, the Provisions of Oxford. His later papal absolution from adhering to the Provisions prompted a baronial revolt in 1263, and Henry was summoned to the first Parliament, a gathering of two knights from every shire and county and a forerunner to the modern House of Commons. Parliament insisted that a council be imposed on the king to advise on policy decisions. He was prone to the infamous Plantagenet temper, but could also be sensitive and quite pious - ecclesiastical architecture reached its apex in Henry's reign. The old king, after an extremely long reign of fifty-six years, died in 1272. He found no success in war, but opened up English culture to the cosmopolitanism of the continent. Although viewed as a failure as a politician, his reign defined the English monarchical position until the end of the fifteenth century: kingship limited by law - the repercussions of which influenced the English Civil War in the reign of Charles I, and extended into the nineteenth century queen-ship of Victoria. Source: www.britannia.com
~1217 - 1291
Eleanor of
Provence Berenger
Queen of England
74
74
1167 - 1216
John I
"Lackland" King
of England
48
48
John was born on Christmas Eve 1167, the youngest son of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitane. His parents drifted apart after his birth, and his youth was divided between his eldest brother's house where he learned the art of knighthood, and the house of his father's justiciar, Ranulf Glanvil, where he learned the business of government. As the fourth child, inherited lands were not available to him, giving rise to his nickname, Lackland. His first marriage, to Isabel of Gloucester, lasted but ten years and was fruitless; Isabella of Angouleme, his second wife, bore him two sons (Henry and Richard) and three daughters (Joan, Isabella, and Eleanor). He also had an illegitimate daughter, also named Joan, who married Llywelyn the Great, Ruler of All Wales, from which the Tudor line of monarchs was descended. The Angevin family feuds left quite a mark on John - he proved his betrayal to both his father and his brother Richard. He and Richard clashed in 1184 when the elder refused to turn Aquitane over to the younger brother, as dictated by Henry II. The following year Henry sent John to rule Ireland, but John alienated the native Irish and the transplanted Anglo-Normans who emigrated to carve out new lordships for themselves; the experiment was a total failure, and John returned home within six months. Richard, after acceding to the throne in 1189, gave John vast estates to appease his younger brother, but to no avail. He tried to overthrow Richard's administrators during the German captivity, but failed. He conspired with Philip II in another attempt, which again failed. Upon Richard's release in 1194, John was forced to sue for pardon, and spent the next five years in his brother's shadow, staying out of trouble long enough to be named heir to the crown. John's reign was full of trouble. A quarrel with the Church resulted in England being placed under an interdict in 1207, with John excommunicated two years later. The dispute, centered around John's refusal to install the papal candidate, Stephen Langdon, as Archbishop of Canterbury, and was not resolved until John surrendered to the wishes of Innocent III, one of the greatest medieval popes. A succession dispute with his nephew, Arthur of Brittany, ultimately resulted in the loss French territories, as the king's French vassals preferred Arthur. By spring 1205, John had crossed the Channel back into England as the last of his French possessions fell out of his hands. From 1206 to the end of his reign, John was preoccupied with regaining these territories, levying a number of new taxes upon the landed barons to pay for his campaigns. This would have been satisfactory had John been winning battles, but the French continually trounced him. The discontented rebel barons revolted, capturing London in May 1215. In June, at Runnymeade, John met with the barons and signed the Magna Carta, a feudal rights document stressing three points: 1) the Church was free to make its own appointments, 2) no more than the normal amounts of money could be collected to run the government, unless the king's feudal tenants gave their content, and 3) no freeman was to be punished except in concert with the common law. This document proved to be the forerunner of modern constitutions. John signed the document as a means of buying time, and failed to keep his word. The nobility called for French assistance, and John died in the midst of an invasion. John was remembered in elegant fashion by Sir Richard Baker in A Chronicle of the Kings of England: "...his works of piety were very many ... as far his actions, he neither came to the crown by justice, nor held it with any honour, nor left it peace." John's treacherous nature was the cause of the greatest loss of English continental territory until Hundred Years' War (1337-1453). Source: www.britannia.com Magna Carta Decreed by King John at Runnymede on 15 Jun 1215 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- JOHN, by the grace of God, King of England, lord of Ireland, Duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, and Count of Anjuo: To the archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, barons, justices, foresters, sheriffs, prevosts, serving men, and to all his bailiffs and faithful subjects, Greeting. Know that we, by the will of God and for the safety of our soul, and of the souls of all our predecessors and our heirs, to the honor of God and for the exaltation of the holy Church, and the bettering of our realm: by the counsel of our venerable fathers Stephen archbishop of Canterbury, primate of all England and cardinal of the holy Roman church; of Henry archbishop of Dublin; of the bishops William of London, Peter of Winchester, Jocelin of Bath and Glastonbury, Hugo of Lincoln, Walter of Worcester, William of Coventry and Benedict of Rochester; of master Pandulf, subdeacon and of the household of the lord pope; of brother Aymeric, master of the knights of the Temple in England; and of the nobel men, William Marshall earl of Pembroke, William earl of Salisbury, William earl of Warren, William earl of Arundel, Alan de Galway constable of Scotland, Warin son of Gerold, Peter son of Herbert, Hubert de Burgh seneschal of Poictiers, Hugo de Neville, Matthew son of Herbert, Thomas Basset, Alan Basset, Philip d'Aubigni, Robert de Roppelay, John Marshall, John son of Hugo, and others of our faithful subjects: 1. First of all have granted to God, and, for us and for our heirs forever, have confirmed, by this our present charter, that the English church shall be free and shall have its rights intact and its liberties uninfringed upon. And thus we will that it be observed. As is apparent from the fact that we, spontaneously and of our own free will, before discord broke out between ourselves and our barons, did grant and by our charter confirm--and did cause the lord pope Innocent III, to confirm-- freedom of elections, which is considered most important and most necessary to the church of England. Which charter both we ourselves shall observe, and we will that it be observed with good faith by our heirs forever. We have also granted to all free men of our realm, on the part of ourselves and our heirs forever, all the subjoined liberties, to have and to hold, to them and to their heirs, from us and from our heirs: 2. If any one of our earls or barons, or of others holding from us in chief through military service, shall die; and if, at the time of his death, his heir be of full age and owe a relief: he shall have his inheritance by paying the old relief;--the heir, namely, or the heirs of an earl, by paying one hundred pounds for the whole barony of an earl; the heir or heirs of a baron, by paying one hundred pounds for the whole barony; the heir or heirs of a knight, by paying one hundred shillings at most for a whole knight's fee; and he who shall owe less shall give less, according to the ancient custom of fees. 3. But if the heir of any of the above persons shall be under age and in wardship,--when he comes of age he shall have his inheritance without relief and without fine. 4. The administrator of the land of such heir who shall be under age shall take none but reasonable issues from the land of the heir, and reasonable customs and services; and this without destruction and waste of men or goods. And if we shall have committed the custody of any such land to the sheriff or to any other man who ought to be responsible to us for the issues of it, and he cause destruction or waste to what is in his charge: we will fine him, and the land shall be handed over to two lawful and discreet men of that fee who shall answer to us, or to him to whom we shall have referred them, regarding those issues. And if we shall have given or sold to any one the custody of any such land, and he shall have caused destruction or waste to it,--he shall lose that custody, and it shall be given to two lawful and discreet men of that fee, who likewise shall answer to us, as has been explained. 5. The administrator, moreover, so long as he may have the custody of the land, shall keep in order, from the issues of that land, the houses, parks, warrens, lakes, mills, and other things pertaining to it. And he shall restore to the heir when he comes to full age, his whole land stocked with ploughs and wainnages, according as the time of the wainnage requires and the issues of the land will reasonably permit. 6. Heirs may marry without disparagement; so, nevertheless, that, before the marriage is contracted, it shall be announced to the relations by blood of the heir himself. 7. A widow, after the death of her husband, shall straightway, and without difficulty, have her marriage portion and her inheritance, nor shall she give any thing in return for her dowry, her marriage portion, or the inheritance which belonged to her, and which she and her husband held on the day of the death of that husband. And she may remain in the house of her husband, after his death, for forty days; within which her
~1188 - 1246
Isabella of
Angouleme Taillefer
Queen of England
58
58
5 MAR 1132/33 - 1189
Henry II
"Curtmantle"
King of England
Henry II was born in 1133, the son of Geoffrey Plantagenet , Count of Anjou, and Matilda, daughter of Henry I . He grew up in Anjou, but visited England as early as 1142 to defend his mother's claim to the disputed throne of Stephen; educated by famous scholars, he had a true love of reading and intellectual discussion. Geoffrey of Anjou died in September 1151, leaving Normandy and Anjou to Henry. Henry more than doubled his continental possessions with his marriage to Eleanor of Aquitane, the ex-wife of King Louis VII of France. After a succession agreement between Stephen and Matilda in 1153, he was crowned Henry II in October 1154. Eleanor bore Henry five sons and three daughters between 1153 and 1167; the relationship between Henry, Eleanor, and their sons Henry, Richard, and John proved to be tumultuous and treacherous. The empire ruled by Henry and his sons was considerably larger than the lone English island - the French Angevin positions extended from Normandy southward to the Pyrenees, covering the counties of Brittany, Maine, Poitou, Touraine, and Gascony, as well as Anjou, Aquitane, and Normandy. Henry was extremely energetic and traveled quickly and extensively within the borders of his kingdom. Henry revitalized the English Exchequer, issuing receipts for tax payments and keeping written accounts on rolled parchment. He replaced incompetent sheriffs, expanding the authority of royal courts, which brought more funds into his coffers. A body of common law emerged to replace feudal and county courts, which varied from place to place. Jury trials were initiated to end the old Germanic customary trials by ordeal or battle. Henry's systematic approach to law provided a common basis for development of royal institutions throughout the entire realm. The process of strengthening the royal courts, however, yielded an unexpected controversy. Church courts, instituted by William the Conqueror, became a safe haven for criminals of varying degree and ability, for one in fifty of the English population qualified as clerics. Henry wished to transfer such cases to the royal courts, as the only punishment open to the Church courts was demotion of the cleric. Thomas Beckett, Henry's close friend and chancellor since 1155, was named Archbishop of Canterbury in June 1162. In an attempt to discredit claims that he was too closely tied to the king, he vehemently opposed the weakening of Church courts. Henry drove Beckett into exile from 1164-1170, when the Archbishop returned to England and greatly angered Henry over opposition to the coronation of Prince Henry. Exasperated, Henry publicly announced a half-hearted desire to be rid off Beckett - four ambitious knights took the king at his word and murdered Beckett in his own cathedral on December 29, 1170. Henry is perhaps best remembered for Beckett's murder, but, in fact, the realm was better off without the contentious Archbishop. Henry endured a rather limited storm of protest over the incident, but the real threat to his power came from within his own family. Henry's sons - Henry the Young King, Richard, Geoffrey, and John - were never satisfied with any of their father's plans for dividing his lands and titles upon his death. The sons, at the encouragement (and sometimes because of the treatment) of their mother, rebelled against the king several times. Prince Henry, the only man ever to be crowned while his father still lived, wanted more than a royal title. Thus from 1193 to the end of his reign henry was plagued by his rebellious sons, who always found a willing partner in Louis VII of France. The death of Henry the Young King in 1183, and that of Geoffrey in 1186, gave no respite from his children's rebellion - Richard, with the assistance of Louis VII, attacked and defeated Henry, forcing him to accept a humiliating peace on July 4, 1189. Henry II died two days later, on July 6, 1189. A few quotes from historic manuscripts shed a unique light on Henry, Eleanor, and their sons. From Sir Winston Churchill Kt, 1675: "Henry II Plantagenet, the very first of that name and race, and the very greatest King that England ever knew, but withal the most unfortunate ... his death being imputed to those only to whom himself had given life, his ungracious sons..." From Sir Richard Baker, A Chronicle of the Kings of England: Concerning endowments of mind, he was of a spirit in the highest degree generous ... His custom was to be always in action; for which cause, if he had no real wars, he would have feigned ... To his children he was both indulgent and hard; for out of indulgence he caused his son henry to be crowned King in his own time; and out of hardness he caused his younger sons to rebel against him ... He married Eleanor, daughter of William Duke of Guienne, late wife of Lewis the Seventh of France. Some say King Lewis carried her into the Holy Land, where she carried herself not very holily, but led a licentious life; and, which is the worst kind of licentiousness, in carnal familiarity with a Turk." Source: www.britannia.com
~1122 - 1204
Eleanor
Duchess of
Aquitane
82
82
Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122?-1204), queen consort of France (1137-52) and queen consort of England (1154-1204), born in France. She inherited the duchy of Aquitaine from her father in 1137, the same year in which she was married to Louis VII of France. She accompanied her husband on the Second Crusade to the Holy Land, where it was rumored that she committed adultery. The scandal, and the fact that she had not given the king a male heir, resulted in an annulment of their marriage in 1152 under the pretext of blood kinship between her and the king. Later that year, Eleanor married and gave her possessions to Henry Plantagenet, count of Anjou, who in 1154 became Henry II, king of England. In 1170, the queen induced her husband to invest their son Richard the Lion-Hearted with her personal dominions of Gascony, Aquitaine, and Poitou. When Richard and his brothers rebelled against their father in 1173, Eleanor, already alienated from the king because of his unfaithfulness, supported her sons. Consequently, she was placed in confinement until 1185. After her release, she secured the succession of her son Richard, who had become heir apparent at the death in 1183 of his eldest brother. From the death of King Henry II in 1189 until Richard's return from the Third Crusade in 1194, Eleanor ruled as regent. During this time, she foiled the attempt of her son John in 1193 to conspire with France against the new king. After the return of Richard, she arranged a reconciliation between the two brothers. Eleanor continued to be prominent in public affairs until she retired to the abbey in Fontevrault, France, where she died on April 1, 1204. Source: "Eleanor of Aquitaine," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997
1113 - 1151
Geoffrey V
"The Fair"
Plantagenet
37
37
Plantagenet, surname, originally nickname, of the English royal house of Anjou or the Angevin dynasty, founded by Geoffrey IV, count of Anjou (1113-51), husband of Matilda (1102-67), daughter of King Henry I of England. The name is derived from the Latin planta ("sprig") and genista ("broom plant"), in reference to the sprig that Geoffrey always wore in his cap. Reigning from 1154 to 1485, the Plantagenet kings, in the main line of descent, were Henry II, Richard I, John, Henry III, Edward I, Edward II, Edward III, and Richard II; through the house of Lancaster, Henry IV, Henry V, and Henry VI; and through the house of York, Edward IV, Edward V, and Richard III. Source: "Plantagenet," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
7 FEB 1101/02 - 1167
Matilda
(Maud) Queen
of England
1400 - 1452
William
Fowler
52
52
1403
Cecily
Englefield
~1350 - 1412
John
Fowler
62
62
~1352
Margaret
Loveday
~0924 - AFT. 6 AUG 966
Willa
of
Arles
~0810 - 0849
Osburh
Queen Of
Wessex
39
39
~0785
Oslac Chief
Butler Of
Wessex
~0784
Egbert III "The
Great" King
Of Wessex
When Ecgbert becomes King of Wessex in 802, Wessex begins to supplant Mercia as the dominate kingdom in England. In 825, this is completed as Ecgbert defeats Mercia at the Battle of Ellandun. By 827, Egbert has become, in essense, the king of all England. In 836, he defeats an invasion by the Danes at Hingston Down. -------- Known as the first King of All England, he was forced into a period of exile at the court of Charlemagne, by the powerful Offa, king of Mercia. Egbert returned to England in 802 and was recognized as king of Wessex. He defeated the rival Mercians at the battle of Ellendun in 825. In 829, the Northumbrians accepted his over-lordship and he was proclaimed "Bretwalda" or sole ruler of Britain. Source: www.britannia.com
~0788
Redburh
Queen Of
Wessex
~0758 - ~0786
Ealhmund
Under-King
Of Kent
28
28
[Neet3.FTW] Literature, 731 AD Nonfiction: Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum by English scholar Bede, 58, of the monastery at Jarrow, marks the beginning of English literature. Bede will be known as "the venerable Bede" beginning in the next century. Source: The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1994 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~0732
Eaba
of
Wessex
~0706
Eoppa
of
Wessex
~0680 - 0718
Ingild
Prince Of
Wessex
38
38
~0644
Cenred
Under-Ruler
of Somerset
~0820 - ~0866
Ranulf
(Rainulf) I Duke
of Aquitaine
46
46
Daughter
of Rodrick
II of Maine
D. 25 JUN 841
Gerhard
(Gerard) I Count
of Auvergne
~0547 - ~0591
Ceawlin
King Of
Wessex
44
44
~0525 - ~0581
Cynric
King Of
Wessex
56
56
~0493
Crioda
Prince Of
Wessex
~0467 - ~0534
Cerdic
King Of
Wessex
67
67
Notes: First King of the West Saxons. Crowned at Winchester 532. Some say he ascended in 519.
Antenor IV
King of the
West Franks
~0190
Frithuwald
(Bor)
~0194
Beltsa
of
Asgard
~0160
Frealaf
Geata
Taetwa
Beaw
Sceldwa
Heremod
Itermon
Hathra
Hwala
Bedwig
The Anglo Saxon Chronicles shows Bedwig as the grandson of Noah (of the Bible). The Prose Edda continues the lineage from Thor to Odin.
Danus I
(Odan)
Seskef
Magi
Moda
Vingener
Vingethor
Einridi
Loridi
D. >0789
Theoderata
<0770 - 12 JUL 807
Rutpert
II of
Wormgau
Troana
Queen
of Troy
Tithonis
King of
Ethiopia
Laomedon
King of
Troy
This lineage is from the Icelandic prose Edda.
Strymo
"Placia"
of Troy
Erichthonius
(Erictanus) King
of Dardania
Darda
(Dardanus) King
of Dardania
Zerah
Judah
Tamar
Jacob
(Isreal) King
of Goshen
Leah
Nebuchadnezzar
IV King of
Babylon
Isaac
[Neet3.FTW] Notes: Isaac (Hebrew, "laughter"), Old Testament patriarch, the son of Abraham, half brother of Ishmael, and father of Jacob and Esau. The birth of Isaac was promised (see Genesis 17:19, 21) to Abraham and his wife Sarah, after a long and childless marriage, as a sign that the blessings originally bestowed by God upon Abraham would be continued in Isaac, heir of the Covenant. The events of Isaac's life are recounted in Genesis 21-28. The dominant story in the narrative, and one of the most widely known stories in the Bible, is that of the projected sacrifice of Isaac (see Genesis 22). According to this account, God tested Abraham's faith by asking him to sacrifice his beloved son. At the last moment, after God was convinced of the perfect obedience of both father and son, he accepted a ram as a substitute for the youth. This story is thought to express the Hebrew rejection of human sacrifice, practiced by surrounding nations. The ram is recalled today in synagogue ritual at the solemn blowing of the shofar, or ram's horn, during the Jewish High Holy Days, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The New Testament alludes to Isaac as a precursor of Christ and of the church (see Galatians 3:16, 4:21-31), and the obedience to his father to the extent of self-sacrifice is associated with that of Christ (see Hebrews 11:17-19). These themes were developed by several of the patristic writers, and Isaac appears often in Christian art, particularly in association with the Eucharist. Archaeologists and biblical scholars have drawn parallels between the biblical narrative of Isaac and the history of the Semitic tribes. Abraham is thought to represent the nomadic stock out of which the Hebrew and Edomite tribes separated. Isaac is believed to represent the tribes that joined to form the Hebrew confederacy and to give allegiance to the God, Yahweh, or Jehovah, originally a tribal deity; and Ishmael is believed to represent the tribes of Edom. Isaac was a relatively minor figure compared to the other two great biblical patriarchs, Abraham, his father, and Jacob, his son; but a number of the details of the biblical account are believed by scholars to have major symbolic importance. The story of his birth is believed to be a deliberate attempt by early Hebrew writers to alter the traditions of the Semitic tribes in order to strengthen adherence to the Hebrew confederacy, a military and political alliance, by suggesting that it had divine inspiration. In making Isaac the legitimate son, and Ishmael the illegitimate son, of their common ancestor, the Hebrews claimed superiority over the independent Edomite tribes. Finally, the rivalry between Isaac's two sons is thought to reflect again the rivalry between Edom and the Hebrews. Source: "Isaac," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Rebekah
Sarah
(Sarai)
Nahor
King of Ur
& Agade
Serug
King of Ur
& Agade
Reu
King of
Lagash
Eber
(Heber) King
of Babylon
Shelah
(Salah) King
of Babylon
~0895 - 16 JUN 956
Hugh Capet I
'The Great'
Duke of France
~0922 - 10 MAR 964/65
Hedwig
of
Saxony
Clodius II
King of
the Franks
Marcomir
III King of
the Franks
Noah
Emzara
(Naamah)
Merodachus
King of
Sicambri
Betenos
(Ashmua)
Edna
BET. 917 - 920 - >0969
Adele
(Gerloc) of
Normandy
Edna
Clodomir
I King of
Sicambri
Bassanus
Magnus King
of Sicambri
Marcomir
II King of
Sicambri
Clodius
I King of
Sicambri
Shem
Sedeqetelebab
Daniel
Francus
King of the
West Franks
Japheth
Clodomir
II King of
Sicambri
Antenor
III King of
Sicambri
Ephar
(Atlas)
Melka
Muak
Azrail
Batea
of
Teucri
~0850 - ~0900
Hubert I Count
of Senlis &
Vermandois
50
50
0848 - 26 OCT 901
Alfred "The
Great" King
Of England
Alfred the Great is probably the most famous of all of the Anglo-Saxon kings. Much of his fame is based on legend, not historic fact. However, based solely on the facts known to us today, he still ranks as one of the most important early kings of the British Isle. He is the only English King to be known as 'The Great'. The Vikings, or Danes, had invaded England in 793. They controlled East Anglia, Northumbria and Mercia and they were moving to take control of Wessex. Alfred defeated the invading Danes at the battle of Edlington in 878; however, allowed the Danes to keep the territories they had previously won in Mercia and East Anglia provided that Guthrum, King of Denmark, converted to Christianity (Treaty of Wedmore). The dividing line between English and Danish territory was roughly a line running northwest from London to Chester; Alfred ruled south of this line and was recognized as overlord of the area to the north that became known as the Danelaw. King Alfred built a Navy to defend the coasts against further Danish invasions; he protected Wessex by building a chain of fortified towns called 'burghs'. These towns were located such that no one lived more than twenty miles from one of them (there were 30 of these burghs manned by about 900 military men for a total defensive army of 27,000). In 886 he took control of London thus gaining control of all of England except for that portion controlled by the Danes, yet was recognized as King of all England by both the Saxons and the Danes. Alfred reformed and codified Saxon law. Being well-educated himself, he promoted a revival in learning, and instigated the compilation of the famous ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE, a 1,200-year history of the people of England from before Julius Caesar's invasion of the British Isles in 55 BC. ----------- Youngest son of King Æthelwulf, Alfred became King of Wessex during a time of constant Viking attack. He was driven into hiding by a Viking raid into Wessex, led by the Dane, Guthorm, and took refuge in the Athelney marshes in Somerset. There, he recovered sufficient strength to be able to defeat the Danes decisively at the battle of Eddington. As a condition of the peace treaty which followed, Guthorm received Christian baptism and withdrew his forces from Wessex, with Alfred recognizing the Danish control over East Anglia and parts of Mercia. This partition of England, called the "Danelaw", was formalized by another treaty in 886. Alfred created a series of fortifications whose purpose was to surround his kingdom and provide needed security from invasion. The Anglo-Saxon word for these forts, "burhs", has come down to us in the common place-name suffix, "bury." He also constructed a fleet of ships to augment his other defenses, and in the doing became known as the "Father of the English Navy." The reign of Alfred was known for more than military success. He was a codifier of law, a promoter of education and a supporter of the arts. He, himself, was a scholar and translated Latin books into the Anglo-Saxon tongue. The definitive contemporary work on Alfred's life is an unfinished account in Latin by Asser, a Welshman, bishop of Sherbourne and Alfred's counselor. After his death, he was buried in his capital city of Winchester, and is the only English monarch in history to carry the title, "the Great." Source: www.britannia.com
~0852 - 5 DEC 905
Ealhswith
Queen Of
England
~0806 - 13 JAN 857/58
Aethelwulf
King Of
England
[Neet3.FTW] Æthelwulf (è´thelw¢lf, à-), d. 858, king of WESSEX (839-56), son of EGBERT and father of ÆTHELBERT and ALFRED. With his son Æthelbald, he won a notable victory over the Danes at Aclea (851). He married Judith of France in 856. A man of great piety, he learned while on a pilgrimage in Rome that Æthelbald would resist his return. He left his son as king in Wessex and ruled in Kent and its dependencies. Source: The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia is licensed from Columbia University Press. Copyright © 1995 by Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. Excerpt from the Anglo Saxon Chronicle: AD 855. In this year heathen men (the Vikings) first took up their quarters over the winter in Sheppey. And in the same year king Æthelwulf chartered the tenth part of his land over all his kingdom, for the glory of God and his own eternal salvation: and in the same year went to Rome with great pomp, and dwelt there twelve months, and then returned home; and Charles, kin of the Franks, then gave him his daughter for queen; and after that he came to his people, and they were rejoiced thereat; and two years after he came from France, he died, and his body lies at Winchester, and he reigned 18 years and a half. And Æthelwulf was son of Egbert, Egbert of Ealhmund, Ealhmund of Eafa, Eafa of Eoppa, Eoppa of Ingild; Ingild was the brother of Ine, king of the West Saxons, who held the kingdom thirty-seven winters, and afterwards went to St. Peter's , and there gave up his life. And they were the sons of Cenred, Cenred of Ceowald, Ceowald of Cutha, Cutha of Cuthwine, Cuthwine of Ceawlin, Ceawlin of Cynric, Cynric of Cerdic, Cerdic of Elesa, Elesa of Esla, Esla of Giwis, Giwis of Wig, Wig of Freawine, Freawine of Frithogar, Frithogar of Brond, Brond of Baldag, Baldag of Woden, Woden of Frithuwald, Frithuwald of Frealaf, Frealaf of Frithowulf, Frithowulf of Finn, Finn of Godwulf, Godwulf of Geat, Geat of Tatwa, Tatwa of Beaw, Beaw of Sceldwa, Sceldwa of Heremod, Heremod of Itermon, Itermon of Hathra, Hathra of Hwala, Hwala of Bedwig, Bedwig of Sceaf, that is son of Noah; he was born in Noah's ark; Lamech, Methuselah, Enoch, Jared, Mlahel, Cainan, Enos, Seth, Adam, the first man and our father, that is Christ, Amen. And then Æthelwulf's two sons succeeded to the kingdom, Æthelbald to the kingdom of the West Saxons, and Æthelberht to the kingdom of the Kentish people, and to the kingdom of the East Saxons, and to Surrey, and to the kingdom of the South Saxons. And then Æthelbald reigned five years. Alfred, his third son, he had sent to Rome; and when pope Leo heard say that [Æthelwulf] was dead, he blessed Alfred as king, and held him to the episcopal hands, as his father Æthelwulf, in sending him thither, had requested. Thus, according to the above, the ancestry of Woden was (linage based on Islandic prose Edda in parenthesis): Woden (Woden) Frithuwald (Frithuwald) Frealaf (Frealaf) Frithowulf (Frithuwulf) Finn (Finn) Godwulf (Godwulf) Geat (Geata) Tatwa (Taetwa) Beaw (Beaw) Sceldwa (Seeldwa or Skjold) Heremod (Heremod) Itermon (Itermon) Hathra (Hathra) Hwala (Hwala) Bedwig (Bedwig) Scaef (Seskef) Noah (Maji) Lamech (Moda) Methuselah (Vingener) Enoch (Vingethor) Jared (Einridi) Mlahel (Loridi) Cainan (Thor) Enos (Troan) Seth (Priam) Adam, the first man ---------- Æthelwulf was the son of Egbert and a sub-king of Kent. He assumed the throne of Wessex upon his father's death in 839. The usual Viking invasions and repulsions common to all English rulers of the time characterize his reign, but the making of war was not his chief claim to fame. Æthelwulf is remembered, however dimly, as a highly religious man who cared for the establishment and preservation of the church. He was also a wealthy man and controlled vast resources. Out of these resources, he gave generously, to Rome and to religious houses that were in need. He was an only child, himself, but had fathered five sons, by his first wife, Osburga. He recognized that there could be difficulties with contention over the succession. He devised a scheme which would guarantee (insofar as it was possible to do so) that each child would have his turn on the throne without having to worry about rival claims from his siblings. Æthelwulf provided that the oldest living child would succeed to the throne and would control all the resources of the crown, without having them divided among the others, so that he would have adequate resources to rule. That he was able to provide for the continuation of his dynasty is a matter of record, but he was not able to guarantee familial harmony with his plan. This is proved by what we know of the foul plotting of his son, Æthelbald, while Æthelwulf was on pilgrimage to Rome in 855. Æthelwulf was a wise and capable ruler, whose vision made possible the beneficial reign of his youngest son, Alfred the Great. Source: www.britannia.com
16 APR 778 - 20 JUN 840
Louis I 'The
Pious' King
of France
~0778 - 3 OCT 818
Ermengarde
(Irmengarde)
Princess Of Hesbaye
Geoffrey
Count of
Gatenois
~0757 - 30 APR 783
Hildegard Empress
Of The Holy
Roman Empire
0714 - 24 SEP 768
Pâepin "The
Short" King
Of France
[Neet3.FTW] Pepin the Short (circa 714-68), mayor of the palace of Austrasia and king of the Franks (751-68), the son of the Frankish ruler Charles Martel, and the grandson of Pepin of Herstal. He was mayor of the palace during the reign of Childeric III (reigned about 743-751), the last of the Merovingian dynasty. In 751, Pepin deposed Childeric and thus became the first king of the Carolingian dynasty. He was crowned by Pope Stephen II (III) in 754. When the pope was threatened by the Lombards of northern Italy, Pepin led an army that defeated them (754-55). He ceded to the pope territory that included Ravenna and other cities. This grant, called the Donation of Pepin, laid the foundation for the Papal States. Pepin enlarged his own kingdom by capturing Aquitaine, or Aquitania, in southwestern France. He was succeeded by his sons Carloman and Charlemagne as joint kings. Source: "Pepin the Short," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0720 - 12 JUL 783
Berthe
Countess
of Laon
0676 - 15 OCT 741
Charles "Martel"
Mayor Of The
Palace Of Austrasi
[Neet3.FTW] Political Events, 732 The Battle of Tours near Poitiers October 11 ends the menace of a 90,000-man Moorish army that has invaded southern France under the Yemenite Abd ar-Rahman, who has crossed the Pyrenees, captured and burned Bordeaux, defeated an army under Eudo, duke of Aquitaine, and destroyed the basilica of St. Hilary at Poitiers. The Moors march on Tours, attracted by the riches of its famous church of St. Martin, but they are routed in battle by the Frankish leader Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer), 44, whose men kill Abd ar-Rahman. The Moors retreat to the Pyrenees, and their advance into Europe is terminated, partly by their loss to Charles Martel and partly by a revolt of the Berbers in North Africa. Political Events, 735 Charles Martel, mayor of Austrasia and Neustria, conquers Burgundy. Political Events, 739 Pope Gregory III asks Charles Martel to help fight the Lombards, Greeks, and Arabs. Political Events, 741 Charles Martel dies October 22 at age 53 after dividing his realms between his elder son Carloman and younger son Pepin (or Pippin), although the country has had no true king since the death of Theodoric in 737. Lands to the east, including Austrasia, Alemannia, and Thuringia, have gone to Carloman along with suzerainty over Bavaria, while Pepin has received Neustria, Burgundy, and Provence. Source: The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1994 by James Trager. All rights reserved. ------------ Charles Martel (circa 688-741), Carolingian ruler of the Frankish kingdom of Austrasia (in present northeastern France and southwestern Germany). Charles, whose surname means "the hammer," was the son of Pepin of Herstal and the grandfather of Charlemagne. Pepin was mayor of the palace under the last kings of the Merovingian dynasty. When he died in 714, Charles, an illegitimate son, was imprisoned by his father's widow, but he escaped in 715 and was proclaimed mayor of the palace by the Austrasians. A war between Austrasia and the Frankish kingdom of Neustria (now part of France) followed, and at the end of it Charles became the undisputed ruler of all the Franks. Although he was engaged in wars against the Alamanni, Bavarians, and Saxons, his greatest achievements were against the Muslims from Spain, who invaded France in 732. Charles defeated them near Poitiers in a great battle in which the Muslim leader, Abd-ar-Rahman, the emir of Spain, was killed. The progress of Islam, which had filled all Christendom with alarm, was thus checked for a time. Charles drove the Muslims out of the Rhône valley in 739, when they had again advanced into France as far as Lyon, leaving them nothing of their possessions north of the Pyrenees beyond the Aude River. Charles died in Quierzy, on the Oise River, leaving the kingdom divided between his two sons, Carloman and Pepin the Short. Source: "Charles Martel," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0690 - ~0724
Rotrude (Chrotude)
Duchess Of
Austrasia
34
34
~0635 - 16 DEC 714
Pâepin Mayor
Of The Palace
Of Austrasia
[Neet3.FTW] Pepin of Herstal (635?-714), Carolingian mayor of the palace, who reunited the Frankish realms in the late Merovingian period. A grandson of Pepin the Elder, he succeeded to his position in the kingdom of Austrasia around 680. In 687 he extended Carolingian rule to the other Frankish kingdoms, Neustria and Bourgogne, but retained members of the Merovingian dynasty as figurehead monarchs in all three. Two years later he extended his control over the Frisians, a pagan people living on the North Sea coast. Pepin's death was followed by a civil war and the succession of his illegitimate son Charles Martel. Source: "Pepin of Herstal," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0654
Alpaide
Concubine
Of Austrasia
~0607 - 0685
Ansigisen Mayor
Of The Palace
Of Austrasia
78
78
0613 - 17 DEC 693
Beggue (St
Beggue)
Of Landen
13 AUG 582 - 16 AUG 640
Arnoul (St Arnoul)
"de Heristal"
Bishop Of Metz
~0586 - 0615
Oda
de
Savoy
29
29
0591 - 8 MAY 652
Itte
(Itta) Of
Landen
0556 - >0611
Dode
(Oda) Of
Heristal
55
55
~0536 - ~0570
Ausbert The
Senator Of
The Moselle
34
34
0541 - 0580
Berthe (
Blithildis)
Queen Of Kent
39
39
MAR 772/73 - 8 JUL 810
Pâepin
(Carloman)
King Of Italy
~0465
Ferreolus
Duke Of
Moselle
~0504
Outeria
Duchess
Of Moselle
~0419
Sigimâerus
I Bishop Of
Auvergne
~0429
?
Tonontius
~0395 - ~0447
Clodion "Le
Chevelu" King
Of France
52
52
0398
Basina
Princess Of
The Thuringians
~0370 - ~0427
Pharamond
King Of
France
57
57
0376
Argotta
Queen Of
Franks
~0347 - 0404
Marcomir
Duke Of The
East Franks
57
57
~0324 - 0389
Clodius
Duke Of The
East Franks
65
65
~0300 - 0379
Dagobert
Duke Of The
East Franks
79
79
~0262 - 0358
Genebald
Duke Of The
East Franks
96
96
~0230 - 0317
Dagobert
Duke Of The
East Franks
87
87
D. 0306
Walter
King Of
The Franks
<0264 - 0298
Clodius III
King Of
The Franks
34
34
~0238 - 0272
Bartherus
King Of
The Franks
34
34
<0212 - 0253
Hilderic
King Of
The Franks
41
41
0137 - 0213
Sunno
(Huano) King
Of The Franks
76
76
~0122 - 0186
Farabert
King Of
The Franks
64
64
~0129 - 0166
Clodomir IV
King Of
The Franks
37
37
~0106
Hafilda
Princess Of
The Rugji
<0128 - 0149
Marcomir
IV King Of
The Franks
21
21
<0125
Althildis
Princess Of
The Britains
0114 - 0128
Odomir
King Of
The Franks
14
14
D. 0114
Richemer
King Of
The Franks
Rathâerius
King Of
The Franks
~0690
Claribert I
(Heribert)
Count Of Laon
~0695
Bertrada
Countess
Of Laon
~0665
Leutwinus
Bishop Of
Treves
0564 - 0639
Pepin "The Old"
Mayor Of The
Palace Of Austrasia
75
75
0562 - 0601
Arnoldus Of
Saxony
Bishop of Metz
39
39
1024 - 1087
William I "The
Conqueror"
King of England
62
62
William I or William the Conqueror 1027?–1087, king of England (1066–87). Earnest and resourceful, William was not only one of the greatest of English monarchs but a pivotal figure in European history as well. Duke of Normandy The illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy, and Arletta, daughter of a tanner, he is sometimes called William the Bastard. He succeeded to the dukedom on his father's death in 1035. William and his guardians were hard pressed to keep down recurrent rebellions during his minority, and at least once the young duke barely escaped death. In 1047, with the aid of Henry I of France, he solidly established his power. William is said to have visited England in 1051 or 1052, when his cousin Edward the Confessor probably promised that William would succeed him as king of England. Despite a papal prohibition, William married Matilda, daughter of Baldwin, count of Flanders, in 1053. The union, which greatly increased the duke's prestige, did not receive papal dispensation until 1059. William's growing power brought him into conflict with King Henry of France, whose invading armies he defeated in 1054 and 1058. The accession (1060) of the child Philip I of France, whose guardian was William's father-in-law, improved his position, and in 1063 William conquered the county of Maine. Soon afterward Harold, then earl of Wessex, was shipwrecked on the French coast and was turned over to William, who apparently extracted Harold's oath to support the duke's interests in England. King of England The Norman Conquest Upon hearing that Harold had been crowned (1066) king of England, William secured the sanction of the pope, raised an army and transport fleet, sailed for England, and defeated and slew Harold at the battle of Hastings (1066). Overcoming what little resistance remained in SE England, he led his army to London, received the city's submission, and was crowned king on Christmas Day. Although William immediately began to build and garrison castles around the country, he apparently hoped to maintain continuity of rule; many of the English nobility had fallen at Hastings, but most of those who survived were permitted to keep their lands for the time being. The English, however, did not so readily accept him as their king. A series of rebellions broke out, and William suppressed them harshly, ravaging great sections of the country. Titles to the lands of the now decimated native nobility were called in and redistributed on a strictly feudal basis (see feudalism), to the king's Norman followers. By 1072 the adherents of Edgar Atheling and their Scottish and Danish allies had been defeated and the military part of the Norman Conquest virtually completed. In the only major rebellion that came thereafter (1075), the chief rebels were Normans. Later Reign William undertook church reform, appointed Lanfranc archbishop of Canterbury, substituted foreign prelates for many of the English bishops, took command over the administration of church affairs, and established (1076) separate ecclesiastical courts. In 1085–86 at his orders a survey of England was taken, the results of which were embodied in the Domesday Book. By the Oath of Salisbury in 1086, William established the important precedent that loyalty to the king is superior to loyalty to any subordinate feudal lord of the kingdom. William fought with his factious son Robert II, duke of Normandy, in 1079 and quarreled intermittently with France from 1080 until his death. He invaded the French Vexin in 1087, was fatally injured in a riding accident, and died at Rouen, directing that his son Robert should succeed him in Normandy and his son William (William II) in England. Bibliography See biographies by F. M. Stenton (1908, repr. 1967), D. C. Douglas (1964), and David Walker (1968); F. M. Maitland, Domesday Book and Beyond (1897, repr. 1966); Frank Barlow, William I and the Norman Conquest (1965); F. M. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England (3d ed. 1971); Robin May, William and Conquerer and the Normans (1985). William the Conqueror was the illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy, and Herleva, daughter of a wealthy Falasian; many contemporary writers referred to him as "William the Bastard". Robert died in 1035 while traveling through Asia Minor, and the young William was named Duke of Normandy. He married Mathilda, daughter of Count Baldwin of Flanders, who bore him at least nine children, four of which were boys. Edward the Confessor, in an effort to gain Norman support while fighting with his father-in-law, Earl Godwin, had promised the throne to William the Confessor in 1051. By 1066, however, Edward had reconciled with Godwin, and on his deathbed and named the Earl's son Harold as successor to the crown. William felt cheated and immediately prepared to invade, insisting that Harold had sworn allegiance to his accession in 1064. He was prepared for battle in August of 1066, but the winds were against him throughout August and most of September, prohibiting he and his troops from crossing the English Channel. This turned out to be an advantage, however, as Harold Hardrada, the King of Norway, invaded England and met Harold Godwinson's forces at Stamford Bridge on September 25, 1066. Godwinson emerged victorious, but two days after the battle, William was able to land unopposed at Pevensey and spent the next two weeks pillaging the area and strengthening his position on the beachhead. The victorious Harold, in an attempt to solidify his kingship, took the fight to William and the Normans on October 14, 1066 at Hastings. Harold and his brothers died fighting in the Hastings battle, removing any further organized resistance to the Normans. The earls and bishops of the Witan hesitated in supporting William, but soon submitted and crowned him William I on Christmas Day 1066. The kingdom was immediately besieged by minor uprisings, each one individually crushed by the Normans, until the whole of England was conquered and united in 1071. William punished rebels by confiscating their land and giving it to Normans. The Domesday Book was commissioned in 1085 as a survey of land ownership to assess property and establish a tax base; within the regions covered by the Domesday survey, only two native English landowners still held their land. All landowners were summoned to pay homage to William in 1086. William imported an Italian, Lanfranc, to take the position of Archbishop of Canterbury; Lanfranc reorganized the English Church, establishing separate Church courts to deal with infractions of Canon law. William was a feudal vassal of the king of France (a situation destined to cause great consternation between England and France), and constantly found himself at odds with King Philip. In a siege on the town of Mantes in 1087 he was injured, and he died from complications of the wound on September 9. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle gave a favorable review of William's twenty-one year reign, but added, "His anxiety for money is the only thing on which he can deservedly be blamed; ... he would say and do some things and indeed almost anything ... where the hope of money allured him." He was certainly cruel by modern standards, and exacted a high toll from his subjects, but he laid the foundation for the building of English history.
~0999 - 1035
Robert I "The
Magnificent" Duke
Of Normandy
36
36
(Robert the Magnificent), d. 1035, duke of Normandy (1027–35); father of William the Conqueror. He is often identified with the legendary Robert the Devil. He aided King Henry I of France against Henry's rebellious brother and mother, intervened in the affairs of Flanders, and supported Edward the Confessor, then in exile at Robert's court. He also sponsored monastic reform in Normandy. After making his illegitimate son William his heir, he made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and died at Nicaea, Turkey. Robert the Devil Hero of a medieval legend. He was sold to the devil by his mother before his birth but upon discovering the fact did penance and was able to purify himself of his many sins. The tale may have been derived from the life of Robert I, duke of Normandy. The story exists in several French and English versions and is the basis of Meyerbeer's opera Robert le Diable. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition Copyright ©1993, Columbia University Press.
~1003 - ~1050
Harlette
de
Falaise
47
47
0927 - 29 JUN 992
Conan I
Duke of
Bretagne
0952 - 27 JUN 992
Ermangarde D'
Anjou Duchess
of Bretagne
D. ~0984
Juhel Berenger
Count of
Rennes
Gerberge
D. 0840
Judicall
Count of
Rennes
D. 0877
Gurvand
Count of
Rennes
Erispoe
King of
Brittany
11 NOV 958 - 21 JUL 987
Geoffroy I
"Grisegonelle"
Count of Anjou
Adelaide
de
Vermandois
~0913 - ~0952
Gerberge du
Maine Countess
of Anjou
39
39
~0909 - 11 NOV 958
Foulques
II Le
Anjou
0888 - 0938
Foulques
I Le
Anjou
50
50
~0874
Roscille de
Loches Countess
of Anjou
0860 - 0888
Ingelger
28
28
~0844
Aelinde
(Rescinde)
de Gatenois
~0821
Tertulle
Count of
Anjou
~0825
Petronilla
D'
Auxerre
~0800
Torquat
(Tortulfe)
de Rennes
~0794 - 7 JUN 844
Hugo
"l'Abbe"
Bastard
2 APR 742 - 28 JAN 813/14
Charlemagne
Emperor Of The
Holy Roman Empire
[Neet3.FTW] The Historical Charlemagne (742?-813) "By the sword and the cross," Charlemagne (Charles the Great) became master of Western Europe. It was falling into decay when Charlemagne became joint king of the Franks in 768. Except in the monasteries, people had all but forgotten education and the arts. Boldly Charlemagne conquered barbarians and kings alike. By restoring the roots of learning and order, he preserved many political rights and revived culture. Charlemagne's grandfather was Charles Martel, the warrior who crushed the Saracen. Charlemagne was the elder son of Bertrade ("Bertha Greatfoot") and Pepin the Short, first "mayor of the palace" to become king of the Franks. Although schools had almost disappeared in the 8th century, historians believe that Bertrade gave young Charles some education and that he learned to read. His devotion to the church became the great driving force of his remarkable life. Charlemagne was tall, powerful, and tireless. His secretary, Eginhard, wrote that Charlemagne had fair hair and a "face laughing and merry . . . his appearance was always stately and dignified." He had a ready wit, but could be stern. His tastes were simple and moderate. He delighted in hunting, riding, and swimming. He wore the Frankish dress: linen shirt and breeches, a silk-fringed tunic, hose wrapped with bands, and, in winter, a tight coat of otter or marten skins. Over all these garments "he flung a blue cloak, and he always had a sword girt about him." Charlemagne's character was contradictory. In an age when the usual penalty for defeat was death, Charlemagne several times spared the lives of his defeated foes; yet in 782 at Verden, after a Saxon uprising, he ordered 4,500 Saxons beheaded. He compelled the clergy and nobles to reform, but he divorced two of his four wives without any cause. He forced kings and princes to kneel at his feet, yet his mother and his two favorite wives often overruled him in his own household. Charlemagne Begins His Reign In 768, when Charlemagne was 26, he and his brother Carloman inherited the kingdom of the Franks. In 771 Carloman died, and Charlemagne became sole ruler of the kingdom. At that time the northern half of Europe was still pagan and lawless. In the south, the Roman Catholic church was striving to assert its power against the Lombard kingdom in Italy. In Charlemagne's own realm, the Franks were falling back into barbarian ways, neglecting their education and religion. Charlemagne was determined to strengthen his realm and to bring order to Europe. In 772 he launched a 30-year campaign that conquered and Christianized the powerful pagan Saxons in the north. He subdued the Avars, a huge Tatar tribe on the Danube. He compelled the rebellious Bavarian dukes to submit to him. When possible he preferred to settle matters peacefully, however. For example, Charlemagne offered to pay the Lombard king Desiderius for return of lands to the pope, but, when Desiderius refused, Charlemagne seized his kingdom in 773 to 774 and restored the Papal States. The key to Charlemagne's amazing conquests was his ability to organize. During his reign he sent out more than 50 military expeditions. He rode as commander at the head of at least half of them. He moved his armies over wide reaches of country with unbelievable speed, but every move was planned in advance. Before a campaign he told the counts, princes, and bishops throughout his realm how many men they should bring, what arms they were to carry, and even what to load in the supply wagons. These feats of organization and the swift marches later led Napoleon to study his tactics. One of Charlemagne's minor campaigns has become the most famous. In 778 he led his army into Spain to battle the infidel Saracens. On its return, Basques ambushed the rear guard at Roncesvalles, in northern Spain, and killed "Count Roland." Roland became a great hero of medieval songs and romances. By 800 Charlemagne was the undisputed ruler of Western Europe. His vast realm covered what are now France, Switzerland, Belgium, and The Netherlands. It included half of present-day Italy and Germany, part of Austria, and the Spanish March ("border"). The broad March reached to the Ebro River. By thus establishing a central government over Western Europe, Charlemagne restored much of the unity of the old Roman Empire and paved the way for the development of modern Europe. Crowned Emperor On Christmas Day in 800, while Charlemagne knelt in prayer in Saint Peter's in Rome, Pope Leo III seized a golden crown from the altar and placed it on the bowed head of the king. The throng in the church shouted, "To Charles the August, crowned by God, great and pacific emperor, long life and victory!" Charlemagne is said to have been surprised by the coronation, declaring that he would not have come into the church had he known the pope's plan. However, some historians say the pope would not have dared to act without Charlemagne's knowledge. The coronation was the foundation of the Holy Roman Empire. Though Charlemagne did not use the title, he is considered the first Holy Roman emperor. Reform and Renaissance Charlemagne had deep sympathy for the peasants and believed that government should be for the benefit of the governed. When he came to the throne, various local governors, called "counts," had become lax and oppressive. To reform them, he expanded the work of investigators, called missi dominici. He prescribed their duties in documents called capitularies and sent them out in teams of twoÄÄa churchman and a noble. They rode to all parts of the realm, inspecting government, administering justice, and reawakening all citizens to their civil and religious duties. Twice a year Charlemagne summoned the chief men of the empire to discuss its affairs. In all problems he was the final arbiter, even in church issues, and he largely unified church and state. Charlemagne was a tireless reformer who tried to improve his people's lot in many ways. He set up money standards to encourage commerce, tried to build a Rhine-Danube canal, and urged better farming methods. He especially worked to spread education and Christianity in every class of people. He revived the Palace School at Aachen, his capital. He set up other schools, opening them to peasant boys as well as nobles. Charlemagne never stopped studying. He brought an English monk, Alcuin, and other scholars to his court. He learned to read Latin and some Greek but apparently did not master writing. At meals, instead of having jesters perform, he listened to men reading from learned works. To revive church music, Charlemagne had monks sent from Rome to train his Frankish singers. To restore some appreciation of art, he brought valuable pieces from Italy. An impressive monument to his religious devotion is the cathedral at Aachen, which he built and where he was buried. At Charlemagne's death in 814 only one of his three sons, Louis, was living. Louis's weak rule brought on the rise of civil wars and revolts. After his death his three quarreling sons split the empire between them by the Partition of Verdun in 843. Copyright 1991 Compton's Learning Company
~0770
Regina
~0844
Garnier
Seigneur
de Loches
Toscanda
28 AUG 933 - 20 NOV 966
Richard "Sans
Peur" Duke of
Normandy
D. ~0762
Aethelbert
II King
of Kent
~0882 - 17 DEC 943
William
(Longsword)
Longue-Espee
1382
Isabel
Barton
~0978
Fulbert "The
Tanner" de
Falaise
~0980
Doda
Duxia
~0911
Espriota
(Sprota)
Bretagne
~0880
Hubert
Count of
Senlis
~0856 - ~0927
Rolf
Rognvaldsson
Duke of Normandy
71
71
~0872
Poppa
Duchess of
Normandy
~0824 - 0890
Jarl Rognwald
I Eysteinsson
Earl of More
66
66
Hilder
(Ragnhild)
Countess More
~0810
Eystein
(Glumra)
Ivarsson
Aseda
Rognvaldsson
~0788
Ivar
Halfdansson
~0762 - 0800
Halfdan
II "Milldi"
Eysteinsson
38
38
Hlf
~0736
Eysteinn
~0736
Halfdan
Olafsson
~0709
Asa
Eysteinsson
~0683
Eystein
"Haardaade"
~0688
Solveig
Halfdansson
~0682
Olaf
Ingjaldsson
0684
Solveig
Halfdansson
~0660
Ingjald
Braut-
Onundsson
Gauthild
Algautsson
~0638
Braut-Onund
"Braut"
Ingvarsson
~0616
Ingvar "The Tall"
Eysteinsson
King of Sweden
~0594
Eystein
Adilsson King
of Sweden
~0572
Adils "Athils"
Ottarsson I King
of Sweden
Yrsa
Helgasdatter
~0551
Ottar "Vendilkraka"
Egilsson King of
Sweden
~0530
Egil Aunsson
King of
Sweden
~0509
Aun "The Aged"
Jorundsson
King of Sweden
~0487
Jorund
Yngvasson
King of Sweden
~0466
Yngvi
Alreksson I King
of Sweden
~0445
Alrek
Agnasson King
of Sweden
Dagreid
Dagsdotter
~0424
Agni
Dagsson King
of Sweden
~0428
Skjalf
Frostadotter
~0402
Frosti
King of
Finland
~0403
Dag
Dyggvasson
~0382
Dyggvi
Domarsson
King of Sweden
~0361
Domar
Domaldsson
Drott
Danpsdotter
~0340
Domaldi
Visbursson
~0319
Visbur
Vanlandasson
~0298
Vanladi
Svegdasson
Driva
Snaersdotter
~0277
Svegdi
Fjolnarsson
Vana
~0256
Fjolnir
Yngvi-
Freysson
~0235
Yngvi-Frey
King of
Swedes
~0239
Gerd
Gymersdotter
~0214
Njord
King of
Swedes
~0193
Yngvi
King of
Turkey
~0214
Gymer
0218
Orboda
~1013 - 1067
Baldwin V 'The
Pious' Count of
Flanders
54
54
[Neet3.FTW] In the 11th century, Flanders became a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire, as well as of the French crown. During the rule of Count Baldwin V, the territory between the Schelde (Escaut) and Dendre rivers and the margraviate of Antwerpen were added to Flanders. Source: "Flanders (historic region)," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
~1031 - 1083
Matilda (Maud) of
Flanders Queen
of England
52
52
~1003 - 8 JAN 1078/79
Adelaide (Adela
Alix) Princess
of France
~0980 - 1035
Baldwin IV 'Fair
Beard' Count of
Flanders
55
55
~0995 - 21 FEB 1029/30
Ogive
of
Luxemburg
0962 - 30 MAR 987
Arnold II (Arnolph)
'The Young' Count
of Flander
~0945 - <1003
Rosela (Susanna
Rozela) Princess
of Italy
58
58
~0933 - 1 JAN 961/62
Baldwin III Count
of Flanders and
Artoi
[Neet3.FTW] In the early part of the 10th century, Baldwin III laid the basis for the industrial and commercial greatness of the region by establishing the wool and silk industries at Ghent and instituting annual fairs at Brugge (Bruges), Ieper and other towns. Source: "Flanders (historic region)," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
~0946 - 1008
Matilda of
Saxony
Billung
62
62
~0890 - 27 MAR 964
Arnold (Arnolph) I
'The Great' Count
of Flanders
~0910 - ~0958
Alice (Adelaide
Adele) de
Vermandois
48
48
~0863 - 10 SEP 918
Baldwin II 'The
Bald' Count of
Flanders
D. 7 JUN 929
Aefthryth
(Elfrida) of
Wessex
~0863 - ~0879
Baldwin I 'Bras
der Fer' Count
of Flanders
16
16
[Neet3.FTW] Flanders was inhabited by Celts in the 1st century BC and conquered by Germanic tribes in the next several hundred years, finally becoming a part of the empire established by Charlemagne in the 9th century AD. About 862 Baldwin I, son-in-law of the Carolingian emperor Charles the Bald (later Charles II, Holy Roman emperor), was created the first count of Flanders. Under Baldwin I and Baldwin II, Flanders was made secure against the incursions of the Vikings. In the early part of the 10th century, Baldwin III laid the basis for the industrial and commercial greatness of the region by establishing the wool and silk industries at Ghent and instituting annual fairs at Brugge (Bruges), Ieper and other towns. Source: "Flanders (historic region)," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0844 - >0870
Judith
Princess
of France
26
26
~0810 - ~0864
Odacre
Count of
Flanders
54
54
~0780 - ~0851
Enguerrand
(Engleran) Count
of Flanders
71
71
~0750 - ~0792
Lideric
de
Flanders
42
42
D. ~0673
Egbert
I King
of Kent
D. ~0664
Eorcenbert
King of
Kent
Stephen
Paynter
Stephen
Wittlesbach
of Bavaria
BET. 950 - 955 - ~0994
William
I of
Arles
~0942 - ~1026
Adelaide
(Blanche)
of Anjou
84
84
D. BET. 961 - 965
Constance
of
Arles
~0920 - ~0965
Boso II
of
Provence
45
45
D. ~0949
Rotbald I
(Rotbaude)
d'Angelca
BET. 910 - 918
Daughter
of William
Le Pieux
D. 6 JUL 918
William
Le
Pieux
~0877 - AFT. JAN 916/17
Engleberge
of
Provence
Ermengarde
D. ~0886
Bernard
Plantevelue
D. ~0844
Bernard
of
Narbonne
Dhoude
Liegarde
D. ~0812
William
of
Toulouse
Guibour
of
Hornbach
<0724
Aude
~0755 - >0793
Makir
Theodoric
Aymeri
38
38
Havivai
(Habibai)
D. ~0739
Natronai
(Nafronai)
Hisdai
Izdundad
Mustanai
Yazdagird
Shahrihar
Khusraw
Sirin
Hormizd
Khusraw
Kavadh
Peroz
Dinak
Yazdagird
Varahan
Yazdagrid
Shapur
Hormizd
Nerseh
King of
Armenia
Gurzad
~0215 - ~0272
Shapur
I King of
Persia
57
57
D. ~0241
Ardashir
I King of
Persia
Daughter
of
Artabanos
D. ~0224
Artabanos
IV King
of Media
~0145 - ~0208
Volgaeses V
'The Great'
King of Parthia
63
63
~0155
Daughter of
Pharamenses III
Princess of Iberia
~0115 - ~0192
Volgaeses
IV King
of Parthia
77
77
D. ~0148
Volgaeses
III King of
Parthia
Volgaeses
II King of
Parthia
Volgaeses
I King of
Parthia
Vonones
II King of
Parthia
A
Greek
Concubine
Darius
Prince of
Atropatene
Artavasdes
King of
Atropatene
Dau. of Antiochus
I Princess of the
Commagene
Antiochus I
King of the
Commagene
Isias
Philostrogos
Mithridates I
Kallinikos King of
the Commagne
Laodike
Thea
Philadelphos
Antiochus VIII
Philmeter Grypos
King of Syria
Cleopatra
Tryphaena
Euergetes
II
Ptolemy
[Neet3.FTW] Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II (Physcon) was the eighth ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. He was the younger brother of Ptolemy VI Philometor and the uncle of Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator. He ruled Egypt when Philometor fled Alexandria for Rome. His rule proved to be intolerable and the Alexandrians were begging for Philometor to return. When he did, the two brothers split up rule; Physcon ruling the western province of Cyrenaica and Philometor ruled Egypt. Upon Philometor's death, his son, Philopator, took over the throne with his mother as co-regent. Physcon married Philopator's mother, Cleopatra II, and had Philopator killed at the wedding feast. He returned to Memphis as Pharaoh and expulsed many of the Alexandrians who had sided against him. He also married Cleopatra II's daughter, Cleopatra III. He died on June 26, 116 BC and left his power to Cleopatra III and whichever of her sons she might prefer. Source: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism
Cleopatra
III of
Egypt
Cleopatra II
Epiphanes
of Egypt
Philometer
Ptolemy
[Neet3.FTW] Ptolemy VI Philometor was the sixth ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. He was the son and successor of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, who died when Philometor was a very young boy. His mother died at approximately four years after Philometor took the throne and he was under the control of his guardians, Eulaeus and Lenaeus. His wife-sister was Cleopatra II and his younger brother was Ptolemy VII Euergetes II Physcon. In 164 BC, Philometor left Alexandria and went to Rome where he pretended to be working-class. He waited here until the authorities came to him. Physcon ruled in his absence and it was becoming intolerable. The Alexandrians soon were begging for Philometor to return to Alexandria. In May of 163, the two brothers agreed to split up the rule of Egypt. Physcon would rule the western province of Cyrenaica and Philometor was ruler of Egypt. This lasted until Philometor's death in 145 BC. Source: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism
Arsinoe
III of
Egypt
Berenike
II of
Cyrene
[Neet3.FTW] Berenike II was the wife of Ptolemy III Euergetes, and was the daughter of Ptolemy Magas, who was installed as governor of Cyrene. She was a benefactor of the temples throughout the land and increased more and more the honours of the gods, especially caring for Apis and Mnevis and the other sacred animals of the land at great expense. Source: www.touregypt.net
Laodike
Philadelphus
Ptolemy
[Neet3.FTW] Ptolemy II Philadelphus, which means 'Brother/Sister-loving', was the second ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. His construction efforts included that of building the canal that linked the Nile to the Gulf of Suez. He was married to his full sister Arsinoe II. He also began a tradition of a four-yearly celebration to honor his father. It was intended to have a status equal to the Olympic games. According to the "Letter of Aristeas", Ptolemy II requested 70 Jewish scholars come from Jerusalem to translate the Pentateuch into a Greek version to be placed into the Great Library collection. He died on January 29, 246 BC. Source: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism
Seleucus II
'Kallinikos'
King of Syria
Philopater
Ptolemy IV
King of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ptolemy IV Philopator was the fourth ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. Philopator means 'Father-loving'. He married his sister Arsinoe and the two received a cult as the Father-loving Gods (Theoi Philopatores). He died in the summer of 204. After his death, two of his most powerful ministers had his wife, Arsinoe III, killed. Source: www.touregypt.net
Euergetes
Ptolemy III
King of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ptolemy III Euergeter I was the third ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. He was the son of Ptolemy II Philadelphus and Arsinoe II and was married to Berenike, his sister. During the Third Syrian War of Ptolemy III, he discovered the main port in the Axumite kingdom, which was very important to the trade of ivory. He died in 222 BC. Source: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism
Antiochus I
'Soter' King
of Syria
Stratonice
Apama
Seleucus I
'Nictator'
King of Syria
Spitamana
Satrap of
Baktria
Artabazus
II Satrap
of Bithnyia
Pharnabaszus
Satrap of
Daskyleion
Apame of
Princess
of Persia
Artaxerxes
II King of
Persia
[Neet3.FTW] Artaxerxes II (reigned 404-358? BC) for aid to Sparta in its war against Athens. In return, Persia received Spartan recognition of Persian supremacy over the Greek cities in Asia Minor. He then commanded the Spartan fleet in battles near the Hellespont (modern Dardanelles) in which the Athenians were driven from the Aegean Sea, and in 386 BC he imposed a peace, known as the Peace of Antalcidas, upon Athens. Source: "Antalcidas," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
Parysatis
of
Persia
Darius
(Ochus) II
King of Persia
[Neet3.FTW] Darius II, original name Ochus (died 404 BC), king of Persia (423-404 BC). He was an illegitimate son of Artaxerxes I, hence his Greek name, Nothos, meaning "bastard." As Ochus, he was a satrap of the province of Hyrcania when his father died. Ochus's half brother, Xerxes II, was king for a few weeks; another half brother, Sogdianus, murdered Xerxes II and was king for a few months; then Ochus murdered Sogdianus and ascended the throne, assuming the name of Darius. In the early years of his reign the power of Athens prevented him from interfering in the affairs of Greece. But after Athens was defeated by Syracuse in 413 BC, Darius II intervened and supported Sparta for the remaining years of the Peloponnesian War. In 407 BC he sent his son Cyrus the Younger to command the combined Persian and Spartan forces in Asia Minor. Three years later he died. The 20 years of Darius's reign were notable primarily for ruthless suppression of a series of revolts within his empire. Source: "Darius II," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Darius II, as King of Egypt, is considered as the fifth king of the 27th Dynasty.
Andia
Artaxerxes
I King of
Persia
[Neet3.FTW] Artaxerxes I Died 424 B.C. King of Persia (465-425) who sanctioned the practice of Judaism in Jerusalem. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition copyright © 1992 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from InfoSoft International, Inc. All rights reserved.
Esther
[Neet3.FTW] Esther is the same as the Biblical Queen Esther.
Xerxes I 'The
Great' King
of Persia
[Neet3.FTW] Xerxes I (Persian Khshayarsha) (circa 519-465 BC), king of Persia (486-465 BC), the son of Darius I and Atossa (flourished 6th century BC), daughter of Cyrus the Great. Ascending the throne upon the death of his father, he subdued a rebellion in Egypt, and then spent three years preparing a great fleet and army to punish the Greeks for aiding the Ionian cities in 498 BC and for their victory over the Persians at Marathon in 490 BC. The Greek historian Herodotus gives as the combined strength of Xerxes' land and naval forces the incredible total of 2,641,610 warriors, but it was probably between 200,000 and 300,000. Xerxes is said to have crossed the Hellespont by a bridge of boats more than a kilometer in length and to have cut a canal through the isthmus of Mount Áthos. During the spring of 480 BC he marched with his forces through Thrace, Thessaly, and Locris. At Thermopylae 300 Spartans, under their king, Leonidas I, and 1100 other Greeks made a courageous but futile stand, delaying the Persians for ten days. Xerxes then advanced into Attica and burned Athens, which had been abandoned by the Greeks. At the Battle of Salamís later in 480 BC, however, his fleet was defeated by a contingent of Greek warships commanded by the Athenian Themistocles. Xerxes thereupon retired to Asia Minor, leaving his army in Greece under the command of his brother-in-law, Mardonius, who was slain at Plataea the following year. Xerxes was murdered at Persepolis by Artabanus, captain of the palace guard; he was succeeded by his son Artaxerxes I (reigned 465-425 BC). Xerxes is generally identified as the Ahasuerus of the Book of Esther. Source: "Xerxes I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. ---------- Xerxes I, as ruler of Egypt, is considered the third ruler of the 27th Dynasty.
Darius I 'The
Great' King
of Persia
[Neet3.FTW] Darius I, called The Great (558?-486 BC), king of Persia (521-486 BC), son of the Persian noble Hystaspes, and a member of a royal Persian family, the Achaemenids. In 522 BC, on the death of King Cambyses II, a group of Magian priests tried to give the throne to one of their number, the usurper Gaumata; he pretended to be Smerdis (died about 523 BC), the murdered brother of Cambyses II. In 521, Darius defeated Gaumata and was chosen king of Persia. The first two years of his reign were occupied with suppressing rebellions, the most important of which occurred in Babylonia. Thereafter he devoted himself to reforming the internal organization of Persia and making its outer borders secure. He reorganized the vast empire into 20 satrapies, built highways, organized a postal system, reformed the currency, encouraged commerce, and won the goodwill of large portions of the heterogeneous population. Because he respected their religions, he was honored by the Jews, whom he permitted to complete the rebuilding of the Temple at Jerusalem in 516; by the Egyptians, whose high priest he consulted; and by the Greeks of Asia Minor, whose oracles supported him during the revolt of the Greek cities. In protecting the borders of the empire, Darius conquered new territories along the Indus River in the east and in the Caucasus Mountains in the northeast, but his expedition in 516 against the tribes of the Danube River failed. In 499 a revolt broke out among the Ionian Greek cities of Asia Minor, partly encouraged by some of the Greek cities on the mainland. The revolt was suppressed by 493, and Darius prepared to punish the mainland Greeks for their intervention. In 492 an army under Mardonius, the son-in-law of Darius, crossed the Bosporus into Thrace but was unable to reach Greece because the supply ships were wrecked off Mount Áthos. Two years later, a strong Persian force under the joint command of Artaphernes (flourished 5th century BC), a nephew of Darius, and the Mede commander Datis (flourished 5th century BC) invaded Greece from the north but was defeated at Marathon. A third expedition was being prepared when Darius died. He left a detailed account of his reign, inscribed in three languages on a towering rock. This Behistun Inscription, the first English transcription of which was complete in 1849, confirms many details of the life of Darius. Source: "Darius I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Darius I, as ruler of Egypt, is considered the second ruler of the 27th Dynasty.
Atossa
of
Persia
Cyrus II 'The
Great' King
of Persia
Neithiyti
of
Egypt
Apries (Wahibre
Haaibre) of
Egypt
Psamtek II
(Neferibre)
King of Egypt
Takhuat
of
Athribis
Daughter
of
Akhenaton
Chedebnitjerbone
Necho II
(Wehemibre)
King of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Succeeded his father as ruler of Egypt. Reigned for a period of about fifteen years.
Mehetenweskhet
of
Heliopolis
Psamtek I
(Wahibre)
King of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Psamtik I, in Greek, Psammetichos, king of Egypt (reigned 664-610 BC), founder of the 26th or Saite dynasty. He ruled first as regent for the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal, who had subjugated Egypt about 670 BC. About 660 BC Psamtik renounced his allegiance to Assyria and unified Lower Egypt under his independent rule. He established his capital city of Sais, from which the name of the dynasty was taken. During his reign Egypt entered into friendly relations with Greece, and Greek merchants and soldiers were encouraged to settle in Egypt. Psamtik extended his rule by capturing the Egyptian city of Thebes from the Assyrians in 654 BC. He also protected the independence of Egypt by strengthening the frontiers and reforming his army. His reign was notable for a remarkable flourishing of commerce and the arts. Source: "Psamtik I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Istemabat
Necho I
(Memkheperre) of
Egypt King of Memphis
[Neet3.FTW] Necho I was the fourth ruler of the 26th Dynasty.
Nekauba Irib
Re' of Egypt
Prince of Sais
[Neet3.FTW] Nekauba was the third ruler of the 26th Dynasty, the beginning of the Late Period of ancient Egypt.
Bakenranef
Wah Ka Re'
King of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Bakenranef was the second king of the Twenty-fourth Dynasty. His name was found on a vase that was found in an Etruscan tomb at Tarquinia which is located 100 kilometers northwest of Rome. Papyrus plants on the vase suggest the area of the Delta. He is shown in the company of gods and goddesses, such as goddess Neith of Sais. Source: www.touregypt.net
Tefnakhte
Shepses
Re' of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Tefnakht was the first king of the Twenty-fourth Dynasty. In the Piankhy stela, he is called the "chief of the West," "chief of Me," and "chief of Sais." He also gives himself titles as prophets and royal titles. It is thought that his vigorous expansionist activity was the cause of an invasion from the south. Source: www.touregypt.net
Osorkon IV
Great Chief
of Ma
[Neet3.FTW] Osorkon IV was the tenth and final ruler of the Twenty-second Dynasty. During his reign, Hoshea, the king of Israel, sent messengers to Osorkon in Egypt. He was requesting help against Shalmaneser V. No help was sent. Samaria was captured and the Israelites were taken away to Assyria. There was also threats from Sargon II, who was the Assyrian king. To try to avoid an attack, Osorkon IV tried a rich gift and it apparently worked. The Assyrian king came no further. Source: www.touregypt.net
Pami (Pimay
Pemay) Great
Chief of Ma
[Neet3.FTW] Pami was the eighth king of the Twenty-second Dynasty. He reigned for approximately six years following the fifty-two year reign of Shoshenq III. Pemay is translated to "The Cat". Source: www.touregypt.net
Es ankh
Djed
Bast
Shoshenk
III Great
Chief of Ma
[Neet3.FTW] Shoshenq III was the seventh king of the Twenty-second Dynasty. He is thought to have ruled for fifty-two years. During the twenty-eighth year of his reign, an Apis bull was born. This is recorded on the Serapeum stela by a priest named Pediese. His tomb was found at Tanis and was similar in structure to those of Psusennes I and Osorkon II. Source: www.touregypt.net
Takelot "B"
of Egypt High
Priest of Ptah
Shoshenk "D"
of Egypt High
Priest of Ptah
Karomama
Osorkon
II Of
Egypt
Takelot
II of
Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Takelot II was the sixth king of the Twenty-second Dynasty. He was the father to the high priest of Amun, Osorkon. This Osorkon was responsible for the longest inscription on the Bubastite Gate. According to his inscription, during the fifteenth year of Takelot's reign, there was warfare in the North and South and a great convulsion broke out in the land. The remains of Takelot II were found in a usurped sarcophagus from the Middle Kingdom in Tanis. His Canopic jars and ushabti-figures were found with him as well. Source: www.touregypt.net
Karoma
Mertmout II
of Thebes
Harsiese
Pharaoh
of Egypt
Shoshenk II of
Egypt Great
priest of Amun
[Neet3.FTW] Shoshenq II is thought to have been the co-regent during the period between Osorkon I and Takelot I during the Twenty-second Dynasty. His mummy was found at Tanis in the tomb of Psusennes I. Source: www.touregypt.net
Nesitanebetashru
Osorkon
I Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Osorkon I is in the second king of the Twenty-second Dynasty. Between the reigns of Osorkon I and Takelot I, a Shoshenq II is often shown as a co-regent for a brief period of time. Source: www.touregypt.net
Maat
'Ka Re'
of Egypt
Psusennes II
of Thebes High
Priest of Amun
[Neet3.FTW] As High Priest of Amun, he is considered as the last ruler of the Theban 21st Dynasty. ------- Psusennes II was the seventh and final king of the Twenty-first Dynasty. He is believed to have ruled for 14 years. There are inscriptions on monuments which are the only information showing his reign. Source: www.touregypt.net
Neskhonsu
of
Thebes
Pinudjem II of
Thebes High
Priest of Amun
[Neet3.FTW] As High Priest of Amun, he is considered as the ninth ruler of the Theban 21st Dynasty.
Pinudjem
I of
Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Pinudjem was a High Priest who held the title 'Great Commander of the Army'. Alone among the contemporary High-priests of Amen Re, Pinudjem definitely asserted his right to be called the Pharaoh, taking a Prenomen, as well as a Nomen, but even with him, the records write it most frequently without a cartouche. Source: www.touregypt.net
Henttawy
of
Egypt
Tenamum
Ramses XI
Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ramesses XI was the tenth and the last king of the Twentieth Dynasty as well as the New Kingdom. The reign of this king was a period of turmoil. Ramesses was not a very energetic or vital ruler. The viceroy of Nubia, Panehsi, went from Elephantine to Thebes to try to stop the unrest that was arising from contention over the region that was between the high priest of Amon and others. At the same time there was a famine and was called the "Year of the Hyena." Hrihor was left in Thebes by Panehsi to control the affairs there. He soon assumed the role of the high priest of Amon and eventually became the vizier as well. This was the cause of the eventual downfall of Panehsi. Panehsi rebelled and stopped Egypt's domination in Nubia. Hrihor administered the affairs of Egypt while Ramesses XI remained in seclusion. Upon the death of Ramesses, Hrihor and Smendes divided Egypt between themselves. Ramesses was technically pharaoh until his death, but Hrihor was the ruler of Upper Egypt for all practical purposes. Ramesses' death marked the end of the Twentieth Dynasty and the New Kingdom. His tomb is located in the Valley of the Kings. Source: www.touregypt.net
Tiye
Ramses X
Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ramesses X was the ninth king of the Twentieth Dynasty. During his reign the workers went on strike for wages not paid. There are few monuments of Ramesses that have survived. He left a tomb in the Valley of the Kings. Source: www.touregypt.net
Baktwernel
Ramses IX
Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ramesses IX was the eighth king of the Twentieth Dynasty. He is thought to have reigned for about seventeen or more years. During his reign, there was a scandal in which the tombs in the Theban necropolis were being robbed. There were also campaigns by Libyan bandits. He had a son, Montuherkhopshef, who did not live to succeed Ramesses. His tomb was found in the Valley of the Kings. Source: www.touregypt.net
Ramses VI
Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ruled Egypt between 1143-1136 BC. -------- The fifth king of the 20th Dynasty usurped the throne from his nephew, Ramesses V. However, the son of Ramesses III allowed mortuary ceremonies to continue for Ramesses V, who was only on the throne for four years. He usurped cartouches of previous kings and left his name on inscriptions in the Sinai. His built statues in Bubastis, Coptos, Karnak and Nubia. After his tomb was vandalized, the priests had to pin the corpse on a board in order to provide the remains with a decent burial. Source: www.youregypt.net
Takhat
Ramses III
Pharaoh
of Egypt
Ramses III (reigned 1182-1151 BC), Egyptian king of the 20th Dynasty, a great military leader who repeatedly saved the country from invasion. In the fifth year of his reign, Ramses defeated an attack by the Libyans from the west, and two years later he routed invaders known as the Sea Peoples. In his 11th year he again repelled an attempted Libyan invasion. Ramses was also a builder of temples and palaces in the tradition of his 19th-Dynasty predecessor, Ramses II. His victories are depicted on the walls of his mortuary temple at Medinet Habu, near Luxor. Egyptian records tell of a strike by workers at Ramses's burial site and of a plot against the king near the end of his reign. Ramses III was the last of the great rulers of ancient Egypt; his death was followed by centuries of weakness and foreign domination. Source: "Ramses III," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. ----------- The second king of the 20th Dynasty was the son of Sethnakhte and was the last great king of the New Kingdom. Ramesses assumed the throne after his father’s short two year reign. Ramesses fought the Libyans twice during his reign. He compared himself to Mont, the god of war and was confident in his abilities. He overcame an attack by the Sea Peoples in his eighth year as pharaoh. After defeating the Sea People (of which he took many captives) he attacked the Palestinian tribes and was again victorious. Ramesses received tributes from all conquered peoples. Egypt, however, was experiencing financial problems. Workers were striking for pay and there was a general unrest of all social classes. Consequently, an unsuccessful harem revolt led to the deaths of many, including officials and women. During his thirty-one year reign, Ramesses built the vast mortuary complex at Medinet Habu, three shrines at Karnak that were dedicated to the gods Amon, Mut and Khons, and a palace at Leontopolis, just north of Cairo. Ramesses III's tomb is in the Valley of the Kings. His mummy was found in a cache at Deir el-Bahri and is now in the Cairo Museum. Ramesses III is thought to have been about sixty-five years of age at his death. Source: www.touregypt.net
Setakht
of
Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Ruled Egypt from 1186-1184 BC. First ruler of the 20th dynasty of the New Kingdom. --------- Refusing to acknowledge the previous two pharaohs, the first king of the 20th Dynasty dated the beginning of his reign to that of Seti II. He probably usurped the throne from Tworse, Seti II’s widow, and later queen-pharaoh. He was at an advanced age when he took the throne but managed to accomplish peace and order in a short period of time. His tomb was not completed when he died so he was placed in that Tworse’s. His coffin was found in Amenophis II's tomb but his mummy has not been found. Setakht was the father of Ramesses III and the husband of Ramesses' mother, Tiye-merenese. Source: www.touregypt.net
Tiye-
Mereniset
of Egypt
Ramses II
of Pharaoh
of Egypt
Ramses II (reigned 1279-1212 BC), ancient Egyptian king, third ruler of the 19th Dynasty, the son of Seti I. During the early part of his reign Ramses fought to regain the territory in Africa and western Asia that Egypt had held during the 16th and 15th centuries BC. His principal opponents were the Hittites, a powerful people of Asia Minor, against whom he waged a long war. The major battle of this war was fought in 1274 at Kadesh, in northern Syria, and was hailed by Ramses as a great triumph. Neither power achieved a conclusive victory, however, and in 1258 BC a treaty was signed whereby the contested lands were divided and Ramses agreed to marry the daughter of the Hittite king. The remaining years of his rule were distinguished by the construction of such monuments as the rock-hewn temple of Abu Simbel, the great hypostyle hall in the Temple of Amon at Karnak, and the mortuary temple at Thebes, known as the Ramesseum. Source: "Ramses II," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. --------- Abu Simbel, site of two temples in southern Egypt, on the Nile River, south of Aswan. The temples were carved into a sandstone cliff about 1250 BC during the reign of Ramses II. The interior of the larger temple is more than 55 m (about 180 ft) in depth and consists of a series of halls and chambers leading to a central sanctuary. This temple was dedicated by Ramses II to the chief gods of Heliopolis, Memphis, and Thebes. It is oriented so that the rays of the rising sun illuminate the statues of the three gods and of Ramses II in the innermost sanctuary. The smaller temple was dedicated by Ramses to his queen, Nefertari, and to the goddess Hathor. The facade of the larger temple has four sitting statues of Ramses II, each more than 20 m (about 65 ft) in height. Smaller statues of Ramses II, Nefertari, and their children adorn the facade of Nefertari's temple. The larger temple has numerous inscriptions and reliefs, some of them of unusual historical interest. A series of reliefs depicts the battle between the Egyptians and the Hittites at Kadesh. Two of the large sitting statues of Ramses have inscriptions in Greek dating from the 6th century BC. They were written by Greek mercenary soldiers and are among the earliest dated Greek inscriptions. The temples, the most important monuments of ancient Nubia, were unknown to the West until 1812, when they were discovered by the Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt. In 1964 an international project was begun to save the temples from inundation by Lake Nasser, the reservoir of the Aswan High Dam. In a remarkable engineering feat, the temples were cut apart and, in 1968, reassembled on a site 64 m (210 ft) above the river. Source: "Abu Simbel," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. --------- The son of Seti I and Queen Tuya was the third king of the 19th Dynasty. Called Ramesses the Great, he lived to be 96 years old, had 200 wives and concubines, 96 sons and 60 daughters. One son, Prince Kha-m-was, was a high priest of Ptah, governor of Memphis, and was in charge of the restoration of the Pyramid of Unas. This son was buried in The Serapeum. Ramesses II outlived the first thirteen of his heirs. Ramesses was named co-ruler with his father, Seti I, early in his life. He accompanied his father on numerous campaigns in Libya and Nubia. At the age of 22 Ramesses went on a campaign in Nubia with two of his own sons. Seti I and Ramesses built a palace in Avaris where Ramesses I had started a new capital. When Seti I died in 1290 B.C., Ramesses assumed the throne and began a series of wars against the Syrians. The famous Battle of Kadesh is inscribed on the walls of Ramesses temple. Ramesses' building accomplishments are two temples at Abu Simbel, the hypostyle hall at Karnak, a mortuary complex at Abydos, the Colossus of Ramesses at Memphis, a vast tomb at Thebes, additions at the Luxor Temple, and the famous Ramesseum. Among Ramesses' wives were Nefertari, Queen Istnofret, his two daughters, Binthanath and Merytamon, and the Hittite princess, Maathornefrure. Ramesses was originally buried in the Valley of the Kings. Because of the widespread looting of tombs during the 21st Dynasty the priests removed Ramesses body and took it to a holding area where the valuable materials such, as gold-leaf and semi-precious inlays, were removed. The body was then rewrapped and taken to the tomb of an 18th Dynasty queen, Inhapi. The bodies of Ramesses I and Seti I were done in like fashion and all ended up at the same place. Amenhotep I's body had been placed there as well at an earlier time. Seventy-two hours later, all of the bodies were again moved, this time to the Royal Cache that was inside the tomb of High Priest Pinudjem II. The priests documented all of this on the linen that covered the bodies. This “systematic” looting by the priests was done in the guise of protecting the bodies from the "common" thieves. Source: www.touregypt.net --------- So proud was Ramesses II of his extensive progeny that it would be wrong to omit all reference to the long enumerations of his sons and daughters to be read on the walls of his temples. At Wady es-Sebua in Lower Nubia over a hundred princes and princesses were named, but the many lacunae make it impossible to compute the exact figure. From several temples it is clear that the eldest son was Amenhiwenamef, but his mother is unknown and he evidently died early. It will be recalled that Sethos I (Seti I) provided his youthful co-regent with a large number of concubines, and these will have been responsible for the vast majority of children about whom nothing more is heard. The most highly honored were naturally those born to Ramesses II by his successive King's Great Wives. Queen Isinofre was the mother of four who were depicted together with her and her husband. Foremost among them is Ramesse, at a given moment the crown prince, but it was his younger brother Merenptah, the thirteenth in the Ramesseum list, who survived to succeed his father. Another son who perhaps never had pretensions to the throne was Kha'emwise, the high-priest (setem) of Ptah at Memphis. He gained great celebrity as a learned man and magician, and was remembered right down to Graeco-Roman times. It was doubtless in that capacity that he was charged with the organization of his father's earliest Sed-festivals from the first I year 30 down to the fifth in year 42. Ramesses II lived to celebrate twelve or even thirteen in all. A daughter of Isinofre, who bore the Syrian name of Bint-anat, is of interest for a special reason: she received the title King's Great Wife during her father's lifetime. We cannot overlook the likelihood that she served at least temporarily as his companion. Even more frequent are the references to Queen Nofretari-mery-en-Mut, the Naptera of an already mentioned Baghazkoy letter. She is familiar to Egyptologists as the owner of the magnificently painted tomb in the Valley of the Queens on the west of Thebes. This henceforth, the burial-place of many females of the Ramesside royal family. Ramesses II himself had a tomb at Biban el-Moluk no doubt once as large and fine as that of Sethos I, but now closed owing to its dangerous condition. The great king's mummy suffered a fate similar to that of so many of his predecessors, finally finding its way to the cache at Der el-Bahri. Until moved to the mausoleum at Cairo, his corpse could still be seen as that of a shrivelled-up old man with a long narrow face, massive jaw, and prominent nose, conspicuous also for his admirably well-preserved teeth. Source: www.touregypt.net
Maetnefrure
of Princess
of Khatti
Tuya
of
Egypt
Seti I
Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Seti I (reigned 1291-1279 BC), ancient Egyptian king, second ruler of the 19th Dynasty, the son and successor of King Ramses I (ruled 1293-1291 BC). From 1292 BC he ruled as coregent with his father for a short time. He tried to recover some Syrian possessions Egypt had lost during the internal dissensions at the close of the 18th Dynasty. Later in his reign, Seti conquered Palestine, defended his western frontier against the Libyans, and fought against the Hittites. Seti's magnificent tomb in the Valley of the Kings, near Thebes, and his temple at Abydos are impressive architectural monuments. His mummy was found in 1881 at Dayr al Bahrì. Source: "Seti I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. ---------- Valley of the Kings, burial site used by Egyptian rulers of the New Kingdom period (1570-1070 BC). It is located on the west bank of the Nile, opposite the modern town of Luxor. Although only a few kilometers west of the riverbank, the valley is concealed by high cliffs and a long, narrow, and winding entranceway. Before the New Kingdom period, the kings of Egypt had built mortuary complexes consisting of pyramid-tombs and accompanying temples. In the 18th Dynasty, King Amenhotep I (reigned 1551-1524 BC) departed from tradition, building his temple closer to the riverbank and concealing his tomb farther north and west, in the cliffs. His successors continued this practice of separation, but they located their tombs within the valley. In all likelihood this move was an attempt to circumvent robbing of the royal tombs. Although no longer marked by a pyramid constructed of millions of carved blocks, the tombs stand below a pyramidal mountain called today The Horn (Arabic Al Qurn). Thirty-four tombs have been discovered at this site, beginning with that of Seti I, which was found by the Italian explorer G. B. Belzoni in 1817. The actual body of Seti, along with 39 other royal mummies that had been moved from their original resting places, were discovered in one great burial chamber on the Nile side of the cliffs in 1881. Most of the tombs were carved deep into solid bedrock and contain a multitude of rooms with carved and painted hieroglyphic texts and magical and symbolic scenes. The last tomb discovered (1922), that of Tutankhamen of the 18th Dynasty, was the only one to survive wholesale looting in ancient times. Although robbed twice, the tomb still contained more than 5000 items buried with the young king. Except for the wife of Thutmose II, Hatshepsut, who was a ruler in her own right, royal wives were buried several kilometers south in the Valley of the Queens. Contributed By: David Peter Silverman Source: "Valley of the Kings," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. --------- The second king of the 19th Dynasty was the son of Ramesses I and Queen Sitre. Like his father before him, Seti was a good military leader. On a campaign in Asia, Seti took three divisions of 60,000 men each into battle. He reoccupied Egyptian posts and garrisoned cities in the Syrian territory. He plundered Palestine and brought Damascus back into Egyptian control. He reconciled with the Hittites who were becoming the most powerful state in the region. Seti I and his heir, Ramesses II campaigned against Kadesh. In Karnak he completed his father's plan by converting the court between the second and third pylons into a vast hypostyle hall. He built his vast mortuary complex at Abydos. In Thebes, he built his tomb, located in the Valley of the Kings. Cut 300 feet into the cliffs, it was the largest tomb in the area. Buried with him were over 700 Shabti. These were carved stone or wooden figures that were to accompany him to the afterlife to comply with the requests from the gods. His tomb in the Valley of the Kings was vandalized and his body was relocated to Deir el Bahri. Source: www.touregypt.net
Sitre
of
Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Sitre was a queen of the 19th Dynasty, the wife of Ramesses I (1307-1306 B.C.). She was the mother of Seti I. Sitre married Ramesses long before he was proclaimed heir by Horemhab. Source: www.touregypt.net --------- Whether Sitre was the granddaughter of Akhenaton and Nefertiti is subject to speculation. This connection back to the earlier kings of the 18th Dynasty may be wishful thinking on the part of genealogists
Ramses I
Pharaoh
of Egypt
Ruled Egypt 1295-1294 BC. First ruler of the 19th dynasty of the New Kingdom. -------- The first king of the 19th Dynasty was the son of a military commander named Seti. Ramesses entered the military service and worked his way up to commander of troops, superintendent of the cavalry and eventually general. A short time later he became vizier to King Horemheb. He was also Primate of Egypt, which was the high priest of Amon, and was in charge of all the temples in Egypt. Horemheb died with no heir so Ramesses assumed the throne. His queen, Sitre, was the mother of Seti I, who was already a veteran military commander. Ramesses was originally buried in the Valley of the Kings. His tomb was later vandalized so the priests removed the body to Deir el Bahri. Source: www.touregypt.net
Seti
Akhenaton
Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Born as Amenhotep IV, he changed his name within a few years of becoming Pharaoh. -------- Akhenaton or Ikhnaton, also called Amenhotep IV, pharaoh of Egypt from about 1350 to 1334 BC. Akhenaton was the son of Amenhotep III and Tiy, and husband of Nefertiti, whose beauty is now famed through celebrated portrait busts of the period. Akhenaton was the last important ruler of the 18th dynasty and notable as the first historical figure to establish a religion based on the concept of monotheism. He established the cult of Aton, or Aten, the sun god or solar disk, which he believed to be a universal, omnipresent spirit and the sole creator of the universe. Some scholars believe that the Hebrew prophets' concept of a universal God, preached seven or eight centuries later in a land that Akhenaton once ruled, was derived in part from his cult. After he established the new religion, sometimes referred to as solar monotheism, he changed his name from the royal designation Amenhotep IV to Akhenaton, meaning "Aton is satisfied." He moved his capital from Thebes to Akhetaton (now the site of Tall al 'Amarinah), a new city devoted to the celebration of Aton, and he ordered the obliteration of all traces of the polytheistic religion of his ancestors. He also fought bitterly against the powerful priests who attempted to maintain the worship of the state god Amon, or Amen. This religious revolution had a profound effect on Egyptian artists, who turned from the ritualistic forms to which they had been confined, to a much more realistic representation of nature as evidence of the all-embracing power of the sun, Aton (see Egyptian Art and Architecture). A new religious literature also arose. This blossoming of culture, however, did not continue after Akhenaton's death. His son-in-law, Tutankhamen, moved the capital back to Thebes, restored the old polytheistic religion, and Egyptian art once more became ritualized. Source: "Akhenaton," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. ----------- The tenth king of the 18th Dynasty was perhaps the most controversial because of his break with traditional religion. Some say that he was the most remarkable king to sit upon Egypt’s throne. Akhenaten was traditionally raised by his parents, Amenhotep III and Queen Tiy (1382-1344 B.C.) by worshipping Amen. Akhenaten, however, preferred Aten, the sun god that was worshipped in earlier times. Early in his reign he changed his name to Akhenaten, meaning “He Who is of Service to Aten” and renamed his queen to Nefer-Nefru-Aten, which is “Beautiful is the Beauty of Aten.” The king and his queen, leaving Thebes behind, built elaborate buildings at Akhenaten (Amarna) “The Horizon of Aten.” He then sent his officials around to destroy Amen’s statues and to desecrate the worship sites. These actions were so contrary to the traditional that opposition arose against him. The estates of the great temples of Thebes, Memphis and Heliopolis reverted to the throne. Corruption grew out of the mismanagement of such large levies. Akhenaten died in the 18th year of his reign. His successor, Horemhab, claimed his reign began from the date of Amenhotep III, thus wiping out the entire rule of Akhenaten. Source: www.touregypt.net
Nefertiti
Ruled Egypt as Queen Between 1341-1337 BC. Continued as the effective Queen until 1327 BC, when Tutankhamum died. ------- Nefertiti, ancient Egyptian queen who was the chief wife of Akhenaton, the pharaoh of Egypt, with whom she initiated many religious, artistic, and cultural changes. Nefertiti may have exercised the priestly office, a position normally reserved for kings. Akhenaton, who reigned from about 1350 to 1334 BC, was the first pharaoh to establish worship of one god. He directed exclusive worship of the sun god, Aton, of which Nefertiti was a devout follower. In honor of Aton, Akhenaton changed his name to mean "beneficial to Aton" (he was originally called Amenhotep IV) and established the capital Akhetaton (now the site of Tall al 'Amarinah). In the 12th year of Ahkenaton's reign, Nefertiti apparently fell from favor and was replaced by Meritaten, one of her six daughters. A painted limestone bust of Nefertiti is one of the great works of art surviving from ancient Egypt and is now in the Staatliche Museum in Berlin, Germany. The Amarna letters, which are inscribed cuneiform tablets from the period of Akhenaton's reign, along with other inscriptions and reliefs, also indicate Nefertiti's fame. Contributed By: Leonard H. Lesko Source: "Nefertiti," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. ---------- Nefertiti was the wife of Akhenaten. Nefertiti, which means "the beautiful woman has come" is one of the most famous and beloved of all ancient Egyptians. One of the best known Egyptian treasures is a bust of her that can be found in the Egyptian Museum in Berlin. Not much is known about where she came from or who she was, but there has been much speculation about this. She appeared with Akhenaten during his fourth year at el-'Amarna, which was Akhenaten's new city. The city was dedicated to the god Aten. In the sixth year of his reign, her name was changed to Nefernefruaten, which means "Beautiful in beauty is Aten". They lived in 'Amarna and held religious ceremonies celebrating Aten. They raised six daughters but no sons at 'Amarna. One of their daughters, Meket-Aten, died. Their mourning was shown on wall paintings. After the death of their daughter, Nefertiti disappeared from the court. Some evidence shows that she stayed in 'Amarna, but lived in a villa called Hataten. Her daughter took over her place as Akhenaten's Queen. Her body has never been found. Source: www.touregypt.net
Amenhotep
III Pharaoh
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Amenhotep III, king of Egypt (1386-1349 BC), of the 18th Dynasty, builder of extensive architectural works, including portions of the temple of Luxor and the so-called Colossi of Memnon. His reign was one of peace and prosperity, when Egyptian power was at its height. Amenhotep's diplomatic correspondence is preserved in the Amarna Letters, a collection of some 400 clay tablets found in Tall al 'Amarinah in 1887. Akhenaton, Egypt's great religious reformer, was his son. "Amenhotep III," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. ------- The ninth king of the 18th dynasty was the son of Thutmose IV and Queen Mutemwiya. He married Tiy, daughter of Yuya, who was a chancellor of the north and was a priest of Hermonthis and Amon. Egypt was enjoying a peaceful time during Amenhotep’s reign, thus allowing him to concentrate on more artistic renewals. He married daughters of foreign kings, including a Mitanni princess and one from Babylon. This solidified his international standings. During his reign he enlarged many temples. He built Malkata on the western shore of Thebes, south of Medinet Habu. This complex was a miniature city with offices, houses, chambers, chapels and apartments. Close to Malkata he built a lake for his queen. Next to the lake he built a palace for his harem and a palace for Queen Tiy. He built the famous Colossi of Memnon and is accredited with building the Temple of Luxor. Amenhotep spent years improving Karnak, by adding temples and a row of sphinxes that linked it to the temple of Amon at Luxor. Amenhotep died in his mid fifties. His heir was the infamous Akhenaten. Source: www.touregypt.com
Tiy of
Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Tiy was a queen of the 18th Dynasty, married to Amenhotep III (1391-1353 B.C.). The daughter of Yuia, a priest of Akhmin, and Tuia, a servant of the queen , Mutemwiya, Tiy likely married Amenhotep while he was a prince. She is believed to have been only 11 or 12 years old at the time of the marriage.. She was intelligent and diligent, the first queen of Egypt to have her name on official acts, including the announcement of the king's marriage to a foreign princess. After giving birth to Akhenaten and a number of royal daughters, Tiy urged her oldest daughter, Princess Sitamun, to marry the king. It is believed that she did this in order to ensure royal heirs to the throne Amenhotep III built a pleasure palace for Tiy and for the members of the royal family at Malkata, on the western shore of Thebes. He retired to his own palace with his women and allowed her to see to the affairs of state with counselors and officials. Tiy was mentioned by the kings of several other lands in their correspondence, having been made known to them in her official dealings. She was widowed at the age of 48. Akhenaten retired to 'Amarna, and for a time Tiy lived there. Depictions of her show a forceful woman with a sharp chin, deep-set eyes and a firm mouth. Source: www.touregypt.net
Antharius
King of
Sicambri
Ham
Daughter of
Aethelbert II
of Kent
Nebuchadnezzar
III Prince of
Babylon
Nebuchadnezzar
II King of
Babylon
Nebuchadnezzar II (reigned 605-562 BC), greatest king of the neo-Babylonian, or Chaldean, dynasty, who conquered much of southwestern Asia; known also for his extensive building in the major cities of Babylonia. The eldest son of Nabopolassar, Nebuchadnezzar commanded a Babylonian army late in his father's reign and in 605 BC triumphed over Egyptian forces at the decisive Battle of Carchemish in Syria, which made Babylonia the primary military power in the Middle East. After his father's death, Nebuchadnezzar returned to Babylon and ascended the throne on September 7, 605 BC. During the next eight years he campaigned extensively in the west against Syria, Palestine, and Egypt and against the Arabs. On March 16, 597 BC, he captured Jerusalem and took Jehoiakim, king of Judah, and many of his people captive to Babylonia. He was subsequently troubled by major revolts in Babylonia (594 BC) and in Judah (588-587 BC), which were vigorously punished; many more Jews were exiled to Babylonia. Nebuchadnezzar also conducted a 13-year siege of the Phoenician city of Tyre and launched an invasion of Egypt in 568 BC. During the latter part of his reign, as the empire of the Medes increased in power to the north and east, Nebuchadnezzar built a wall, known as the Median Wall, in northern Babylonia to keep out the potential invader. Nebuchadnezzar's conquests brought in much booty and tribute, creating an age of prosperity for Babylonia. He undertook an ambitious construction program, rebuilding the temples in the major cult cities and refurbishing his capital at Babylon with a splendid ziggurat (pyramid temple) as well as other shrines, palaces, fortification walls, and processional ways. Later legend credited him with building one of the Seven Wonders of the World, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, for his Median wife Amyitis. Nebuchadnezzar died in early October 562 BC and was succeeded by his son Amel-Marduk (the biblical Evil-Merodach). Source: "Nebuchadnezzar II," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. -------------- Babylonian Captivity or Babylonian Exile, term applied to the period between the deportation of the Jews from Palestine to Babylon by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II and their release in 538 BC by the Persian king Cyrus. Two main deportations are recorded: one in 597 BC, when Israelite nobles, warriors, and artisans were transported; and one in 586 BC when Nebuchadnezzar's army destroyed Jerusalem, and the major part of the remaining Israelite community was taken to Babylon. At the time of the second deportation an important group of Israelites fled to Egypt; thereafter, only the poorest peasants were allowed to remain in Palestine, and the political dissolution of independent Israel was an accomplished fact. The majority of the Jews living in Babylon did not return to Palestine at the end of the exile period, but became a part of the Diaspora, or body of Jews dispersed among nations outside Palestine. Source: "Babylonian Captivity," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Amyitis
Nabopolassar
King of
Babylon
Epiphanes
Ptolemy
[Neet3.FTW] Ptolemy V Epiphanes was the fifth ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. He was the son of Ptolemy IV Philopator and Arsinoe III. He became king after his father's death, when he was only five years old. After his father's death, his mother was eager to become the next regent. Ptolemy IV Philopator's two most powerful ministers, Sosibius and Agathocles had Arsinoe murdered. He was passed from the control of one adviser to another. The Rosetta Stone gives the trilingual inscription of the ceremonies attending the coronation of Ptolemy V Epiphanes. He was married to Cleopatra I. He died at the age of twenty-eight while putting down the last of the insurgents in the Delta. There were rumors that he had been poisoned. He left his wife, who was the daughter of Antiochus, as regent for their young son Ptolemy VI Philomentor. Source: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism
Antiochus III
'Megas' King
of Syria
Antiochus II
'Theos' King
of Syria
Arsinoe
I of
Greece
Cleopatra
I of
Syria
Soter 'Saviour'
Ptolemy I King
of Egypt
[Neet3.FTW] Upon the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, the throne of Egypt fell to Ptolemy I, the son of Lagus. He was a veteran soldier and trusted commander who had served Alexander. He started the Ptolemaic Dynasty, which lasted about 300 years. He ran Egypt like a business, strictly for profit. One of the few surviving works of Ptolemy I Soter is the temple of Kom Abu Billo, which was dedicated to Hathor "Mistress of Mefket". Source: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism
Berenike
I of
Macedonia
Lagus
'The
Rabbit'
Arsinoe
Olympias
Princess
of Epirus
Phillip II
King of
Macedonia
Philip II (of Macedonia) (382-336 BC), king of Macedonia (359-336 BC) and father of Alexander the Great, born in Pella. From 367 to 365, Philip was a hostage in Thebes, and during that period he observed the military techniques of Thebes, then the greatest power in Greece. In 364 he returned to Macedonia. In 359 he was made regent for his infant nephew Amyntas; later that year he seized the throne for himself. Faced by internal dissensions and attacked on all sides, Philip reorganized the Macedonian army on the model of the Theban phalanx. In less than two years he had secured the safety of his kingdom and firmly established himself on the throne. From then on his policy was aggressive. In 357 he conquered the Athenian colony of Amphipolis in Thrace, gaining possession of the gold mines of Mount Pangaeus, which financed his subsequent wars. In 356 he captured Potidaea in Chalcidice and Pydna on the Gulf of Thermaïkós. In 355 he captured the Thracian town of Crenides, which, under its new name, Philippi, soon acquired great wealth and fame. In 354 Philip conquered Methone and then advanced into Thessaly. By 352 he had reached the pass of Thermopylae, which he did not attempt to take, because it was strongly guarded by the Athenians. In 351 the great Athenian orator Demosthenes delivered the first of his Philippics, a series of speeches warning the Athenians about the Macedonian menace to Greek liberty. By 348 Philip had conquered Thrace and Chalcidice. Two years later he made peace with Athens, which had been at war with him in defense of its ally, the Chalcidian city Olynthus. Philip was next requested by the Thebans to interfere in the sacred war against Phocis. He marched into Phocis in 346 and destroyed its cities. Thereafter Macedonia replaced Phocis in the Amphictyonic League, giving Philip the right to participate in Greek political affairs; in 338 the council appointed Philip commander of the league forces. The Athenians, aroused by Demosthenes, united with the Thebans against Philip, but their combined army was utterly defeated in 338 at the Battle of Chaeronea. Philip's victory made him complete master of Greece. Two years later, while preparing to invade Persia, he was assassinated. His wife Olympia was accused, probably falsely, of his murder. Philip was the greatest statesman and general of his time. He laid the foundation of the Macedonian military power employed by his son, Alexander the Great, to conquer and Hellenize the Middle East. A treasure-filled royal tomb, believed to be Philip's, was excavated at Vergina, near Thessaloníka, Greece, in 1977. Source: "Philip II (of Macedonia)," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Amyntas
Eurydice
of
Troy
Frederick
Count of
Luxemburg
~0900 - 6 AUG 966
Berenger
(Berengarius)
II King of Italy
~0819 - ~0866
Adelaide
(Aenis)
of Tours
47
47
<0880 - ~0931
Beatrice
de
Vermandois
51
51
~0866 - 15 JUN 923
Robert I
King of
France
~0890 - BET. 932 - 934
Ebles
'Manzer' Duke
of Aquitaine
Emilienne
(Emliana)
BET. 848 - 855 - ABT. 5 AUG 890
Ranulf
(Rainulf) II King
of Aquitaine
D. ~0935
Irmgard
(Ermengarde)
~0622 - >0688
Ceolwald
Under-Ruler
Of Wessex
66
66
~0600
Cutha (Cuthwulf)
Prince Of
Wessex
~0564 - ~0584
Cuthwine
Under-Ruler
Of Wessex
20
20
BET. 800 - 802 - >0841
Rotrud (Matilda
Hildegard) of
Aquitaine
~0439
Elesa of
Ancient
Saxony
~0411
Esla of
Ancient
Saxony
~0383
Gewis of
Ancient
Saxony
~0355
Wig of
Ancient
Saxony
~0327
Freawine
of Ancient
Saxony
~0299
Frithogar
of Ancient
Saxony
~0271
Brand
of
Scandanavia
~0243
Beldeg
(Balder) of
Scandanavia
~0247
Nanna
Frithuwulf
~0130
Finn
Godwulf
Thor
King of
Thrace
Fostered in Thrace by a certain war-duke called Lóríkus. He was goodly to look at with hair faireer than gold. When he was 12 he was so strong he could lift 10 bear skins. He killed is foster father and mother (Lora) and took the kingdom of Thrace. He then travelled the earth, it is claimed, killing Giants Dragons and many beasts. He met his wife in the north, where she was a prophetess.
Sibil
Minion (Memnon)
of Troy King of
Ethiopia
Waldrada
(Wiltrud)
of Orleans
<0808 - >0834
Rutpert
III of
Wormgau
26
26
Tuya
Tros of
Acadia King
of Troy
Abraham
(Abram)
[Neet3.FTW] Notes: Departed Haran in abt 2031 [Gen 12:4] to go to the land of Canaan [Gen 12:5]. Abraham or Abram, biblical patriarch, according to the Book of Genesis (see 11:27-25:10), progenitor of the Hebrews, who probably lived in the period between 2000 and 1500 BC. Abraham is regarded by Muslims, who call him Ibrahim, as an ancestor of the Arabs through Ishmael. He was once considered a contemporary of Hammurabi, king of Babylonia. Because the biblical account of his life is based on traditions preserved by oral transmission rather than by historical records, no biography in the present sense can be written. Originally called Abram, Abraham was the son of Terah, a descendant of Shem, and was born in the city of Ur of the Chaldees, where he married his half sister Sarai, or Sarah. They left Ur with his nephew Lot and Lot's family under a divine inspiration and went to Haran. Receiving a promise that God would make him a "great nation," Abram moved on to Canaan, where he lived as a nomad. Famine led him to Egypt, but he was driven out for misrepresenting Sarai as his sister. Again in Canaan, after quarrels between Abram and Lot and their herdsmen, they separated, Lot remaining near Sodom and Abram continuing his nomadic life. He later rescued Lot from the captivity of King Chedorlaomer of Elam and was blessed by the priest Melchizedek, king of Salem. Then God promised Abram a son by his wife Sarai, repeated his earlier promises, and confirmed these by a covenant. When this covenant was later renewed, the rite of circumcision was established, Abram's name became Abraham, and Sarai's became Sarah. God subsequently repeated his promise of a son by Sarah by means of visiting angels. When God informed Abraham that he intended to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah because of the wickedness of their inhabitants, Abraham pleaded with him to spare the cities. Eventually it was agreed that God would spare the cities if he could find only ten righteous men. The ten men could not be found, and God destroyed both cities. Ishmael, first son of Abraham, whose mother was Hagar, an Egyptian slave, was born when Abraham was 86 years old. Isaac, born to Abraham by Sarah in his 100th year, was the first of his legitimate descendants. God demanded that Abraham sacrifice Isaac as a test of faith, but because of Abraham's unquestioning compliance, God permitted him to spare Isaac and rewarded Abraham with a formal renewal of his promise. After Sarah died, Abraham married Keturah and had six sons by her. He died at the biblical age of 175 and was buried beside Sarah in the Cave of Machpelah, in what is now Hebron, West Bank. Christians, Muslims, and Jews accept Abraham as an epitome of the man of unswerving faith, a view reflected in the New Testament. Source: "Abraham," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
Terah
King of
Agade
Pelag
King of
Babylon
Cassander
King of
Sicambri
Nicanor
I King of
Sicambri
Rasueja
~0950 - 1006
Adelaide
of
Poitou
56
56
~0941 - 24 AUG 996
Hugh
Capet King
of France
[Neet3.FTW] Hugh Capet dies at Paris October 14, 996 at age 58 and is succeeded by his son, 26, who will reign until 1031 as Robert II. [Note difference in reported death.] Source: The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1994 by James Trager. All rights reserved. Capet (kâ´pît, kàp´ît, kà-pâ´) A dynasty of French kings (987-1328), including Hugh Capet (940?-996), who was elected king in 987, thereby permanently removing the Carolingians from power, and ruled until his death. The expansion of territory and centralization of power under the Capets began the movement toward a unified France. Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition copyright © 1992 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from InfoSoft International, Inc. All rights reserved. The Early Capetians, 987 to 1180 When Louis V died, the magnates turned to Hugh Capet, duke of France and descendant of Robert the Bold and of Odo. Hugh was elected king not because he was strong but precisely because he would not be strong enough to control the other magnates; in fact, he secured election only by giving much of his land to the electors. The French nobles may have had no intention of installing the Capetians as a dynasty, but Hugh moved quickly to have his son Robert crowned. When Robert became king (as Robert II) in 996, he named his son Hugh as his successor, but due to Hugh's death, another son, Henry, became king in 1031. The Capetians eventually passed the crown through a direct male line for more than three centuries, from 987 through 1328. The earliest Capetians remained subservient to the feudal princes, but the rebuilding of a royal administration, indicated by a new importance of royal provosts, was evident by the 1040s. Nevertheless, in the late 11th century, William the Conqueror, duke of Normandy, and Hugh the Great, abbot of the monastery of Cluny, although nominally vassals of the king, were far more powerful than the Capetian king Philip I (reigned 1060-1108). Philip's successor, Louis VI (reigned 1108-1137), consolidated royal power once and for all in the Île-de-France, a region centering on Paris that covers about 160 km (about 100 mi) from north to south and 80 km (50 mi) from east to west. Here he systematically suppressed all feudal opposition to the royal government. He had his son, the future Louis VII, brought up at the abbey of Saint Denis, north of Paris, and in 1137 arranged for him to marry Eleanor, heiress to the duchy of Aquitaine. Eleanor's possessions were far larger than the Île-de-France, and by making her his wife, Louis VII won control of extensive territories between the Loire River and the Pyrenees. In 1147 Louis went on a Crusade to the Holy Land, taking Eleanor along with him. While they were in the East it was rumored that she had committed adultery. Since the marriage had never been agreeable to Eleanor, and had not produced a male heir, both spouses wanted the papal annulment of the marriage, granted in 1152. Two months later Eleanor married Henry, count of Anjou and duke of Normandy, who in 1154 became king of England as Henry II. Thus, Aquitaine passed from the French crown to the English crown, and the lands controlled by Henry in France (the Angevin Empire) vastly exceeded in size those of his feudal lord, Louis VII. Source: "France," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Methusala
Enoch
Cynegth
Maria
Arphaxad
(Arfakhshadh)
King of Arrapachtis
<0834 - 15 SEP 866
Rutpert IV 'The
Strong' Count
of Wormgau
D. >0770
Thuringbert
(Turinebertus)
of Wormgau
~0689 - <0764
Rutpert I
Count of
Wormgau
75
75
D. ~0764
Williswint
Heiress of
Wormsgau
<0678 - <0741
Lambert
(Lantbertus)
63
63
~0675
Chrotlind
~0654 - ~0691
Theuderic
III King of
the Franks
37
37
Chlotilde
~0634 - ~0657
Clovis II
(Chlodovech)
King of the Franks
23
23
Balthild
Nantilde
~0602 - 19 JAN 638/39
Dagobert
I King of
Austrasia
[Neet3.FTW] Claimed to be the 'greatest of all Merovingian kings'.
~0584 - ~0629
Clothaire
II King of
France
45
45
D. ~0604
Haldetrude
D. ~0584
Chilperic
I of
Soissons
~0543 - ~0597
Fredegunde
54
54
[Neet3.FTW] Fredegunde was the maid of the first wife of Chilperic, and said to be 'one of the most bloodthirsty women in history'.
~0497 - 23 NOV 561
Chlothar I
King of
the Franks
Rodegunda
Berthar
King of
Thuringia
~0466 - 27 NOV 511
Clovis I 'The
Great' King of
the Salic Franks
[Neet3.FTW] Clovis I, in German, Chlodwig (circa 466-511), king of the Franks (481-511) and first important ruler of the Merovingian dynasty. He succeeded his father, Childeric I, as king of the Salian Franks. His career focused largely on forging the Salian Franks on the northern Rhine River and the Ripuarian Franks on the lower Rhine into a single dominion. He began with a victory in 486 over Syagrius, the last Roman governor in northern Gaul. By 493, when he married the Bourguignon princess Clotilda (later canonized as St. Clotilda), Clovis had defeated many petty princes whose territories had surrounded his capital at Soissons. He next came into conflict in 496 with the confederation of Germanic tribes known as the Alamanni, who inhabited land east of his domains. According to legend, it was only by invoking the God of his Christian wife, Clotilda, that he defeated his enemy. Clotilda was almost certainly instrumental in Clovis's conversion to Christianity, and he was baptized in 496. He became the champion of orthodox Christians in every part of Gaul and was supported effectively by the church in all his campaigns. He continued to fight the Alamanni, who were completely conquered by 506; the next year the Visigoths were decisively defeated when their king, Alaric II, was killed by Clovis in a battle near Poitiers. Clovis made Paris the capital of the Frankish kingdom, which at that time included most of present-day France and southwestern Germany. According to Salian custom, he divided his kingdom among his four sons. Source: "Clovis I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
<0492 - 3 JUN 545
Chrotechilde
(Clotilda) of
Burgundy
BET. 436 - 437 - 26 NOV 481
Childeric I
King of
the Franks
[Neet3.FTW] Historical Figures Rulers of France: Kings, Queens, Presidents Caesar to Charlemagne Julius Caesar subdued the Gauls, native tribes of Gaul (France) 58 to 51 BC. The Romans ruled 500 years. The Franks, a Teutonic tribe, reached the Somme from the East ca. 250 AD. By the 5th century the Merovingian Franks ousted the Romans. In 451 AD, with the help of Visigoths, Burgundians and others, they defeated Attila and the Huns at Chalons-sur-Marne. Childeric I became leader of the Merovingians 458 AD. His son Clovis I (Chlodwig, Ludwig, Louis), crowned 481, founded the dynasty. After defeating the Alemanni (Germans) 496, he was baptized a Christian and made Paris his capital. His line ruled until Childeric III was deposed, 751. The West Merovingians were called Neustrians, the eastern Austrasians. Pepin of Herstal (687-714), major domus, or head of the palace, of Austrasia, took over Neustria as dux (leader) of the Franks. Pepin's son, Charles, called Martel (the Hammer), defeated the Saracens at Tours-Poitiers, 732; was succeeded by his son, Pepin the Short, 741, who deposed Childeric III and ruled as king until 768. His son, Charlemagne, or Charles the Great (742-814) became king of the Franks, 768, with his brother Carloman, who died 771. He ruled France, Germany, parts of Italy, Spain, Austria, and enforced Christianity. Crowned Emperor of the Romans by Pope Leo III in St. Peter's, Rome, Dec. 25, 800 AD. Succeeded by son, Louis I the Pious, 814. At death, 840, Louis left empire to sons, Lothair (Roman emperor); Pepin I (king of Aquitaine); Louis II (of Germany); Charles the Bald (France). They quarreled and by the peace of Verdun, 843, divided the empire. Source: The World Almanac® and Book of Facts 1995 is licensed from Funk & Wagnalls Corporation. Copyright © 1994 by Funk & Wagnalls Corporation. All rights reserved. The World Almanac and The World Almanac and Book of Facts are registered trademarks of Funk & Wagnalls Corporation. Political Events, 481 AD The king of the Salian Franks Childeric I dies at age 44 after a 24-year reign. He is succeeded by his son, 15, who will reign until 511 as Clovis I. Source: The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1994 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
BET. 438 - 440 - >0470
Basina
of
Thuringia
~0415 - ~0458
Merovech I 'The
Young' King of
the Salic Franks
43
43
[Neet3.FTW] Defeated Attila 'The Hun' in 451. --------- Merovingian, dynasty of kings that ruled the Franks, a Germanic tribe, from AD 481 to 751. The kings were descendants of the chief of the Salian Franks, Merovech or Merowig, who ruled from 448 to 458 and from whom the dynasty's name was derived. The first Merovingian ruler was Clovis I, grandson of Merovech. Clovis became king of both the Salian and Ripuarian Franks. In addition, through an aggressive policy of conquest supported by the church, Clovis enlarged his kingdom until it included most of present-day France and part of Germany. After his death in 511 the kingdom was divided among his four sons into Austrasia, Neustria, Bourgogne, and Aquitaine. The divisions were reunited by Clotaire I, divided after his death, and then reunited under Clotaire II. The last strong Merovingian monarch was the son of Clotaire II, Dagobert I, who ruled from 629 to 639. Under his numerous successors the Frankish kingdom became decentralized. Royal power gradually gave way to the noble families who exercised feudal control over most of the land. The most important of these families was the Carolingian. The Carolingians held the office of mayor of the palace and after 639 were kings in all but name. In 751 the Carolingian mayor of the palace deposed the reigning king, Childeric III (reigned about 743-751), and assumed royal power himself as Pepin the Short, putting an end to the Merovingian dynasty. Source: "Merovingian," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0419
Verica
Princess
of Sweden
~0473 - ~0493
Chilperic
II King of
Burgundy
20
20
Agrippine
<0436 - >0473
Gundioc
(Gunderic) King
of Burgundy
37
37
~0385 - ~0436
Gundicaire
(Gundicus) King
of Burgundy
51
51
Giolahaire
Godomar
Gibica
1855 - 1909
Mary
Elizabeth
Newton
54
54
0817 - >0840
Pepin II
Count of
Peronne
23
23
BET. 915 - 925 - 3 APR 963
William I (III)
'Towhead' Duke
of Aquitaine
Kunigunda
Cunegonde
~0797 - 17 AUG 818
Bernhard
King
of Italy
Bertha
of
Toulouse
~1320 - 1361
John
Fowler
41
41
1322
?
Hartley
1296
Isabell
Foxley
~1380 - ~1411
Joane
Rycote
31
31
~1378 - 1415
Nicholas
Englefield
37
37
~1348 - ~1380
Phillip
Englefield
32
32
~1352
Joan
~1292 - ~1362
Roger
Englefield
70
70
~1304
Joan
~1270 - >1306
William
Englefield
36
36
1250 - 1276
John
Englefield
26
26
1354
Nicholas
Rycote
1356
Katherine
1406 - 1450
Joanne
Bruley
44
44
~1390 - 1448
John
Danvers
58
58
~1330 - ~1409
Richard
Danvers
79
79
~1374 - >1395
Agnes
De
Brancestre
21
21
~1319
Isabel
De La
Lee
~1295
John
Danvers
1256 - 1331
Simon
Danvers
75
75
1420 - 1477
Richard
Fowler
57
57
~1422
Joan
Danvers
0949
Duncan
Lord of
Mormaer
0970 - 1034
Malcolm II (Melkolf)
Mac Kenneth King
of Scotlan
64
64
0932 - 0995
Kenneth
II KIng of
Scotland
63
63
[Neet3.FTW] Notes: Kenneth II (died 995), king of Scotland (971-95), the son of Malcolm I MacDonald. From the beginning of his reign, Kenneth waged war against the Saxons, particularly the earls of Northumbria, who occupied southern Scotland, and the Scandinavian Vikings, who controlled Scotland north of the Spey River. Although his wars were not successful, Kenneth consolidated central Scotland into a strong kingdom. Source: "Kenneth II," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0862 - 0900
Donald II
Dasachtach
King Of Scotland
38
38
0836 - 0877
Constantine
I King of
Scotland
41
41
0747 - 0819
Eochaid
IV King Of
Scotland
72
72
~0755
Fergusa
(Urgusia) Queen
Of Scotland
~0722 - ~0778
Aodh Hugh
Fionn King
Of Scotland
56
56
~0695 - 0721
Eochaid
III King Of
Scotland
26
26
0660 - ~0692
Findon (Eochaid
II) King Of
Scotland
32
32
0677
Spondana
~0709
Urgust
King Of
The Picts
0897 - 0954
Malcolm
I King of
Scotland
57
57
0810 - 6 FEB 858/59
Kenneth I
"Macalpin" King
Of Scotland
[Neet3.FTW] Notes: Kenneth I, called MacAlpin (flourished 832-60), traditionally, the founder and first king of Scotland. About 834 he succeeded his father, Alpin (reigned about 832-34), as king of the Gaelic Scots in Galloway. In a series of battles (841-46) he conquered the Pictish Kingdom and, uniting it with his own, called his expanded domains Scotland. The kingdom is sometimes called Scone, after Kenneth's capital. In later years, the king led six invasions of Lothian, southern Scotland, then part of Saxon Northumbria. Source: "Kenneth I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
0778 - 20 JUL 834
Alpin
King Of
Scotland
0735
Fergus
(Ungust) King
Of The Picts
~1262
Alice
~1323
William
De La
Lee
~1325
Isabel
~1360
Margaret
Mile
~1360
John
De
Brancestre
~1375
John
Bruley
~1378
Matilda
Quartermain
1350
William
De
Bruley
1360
Agnes
De
Bruley
~1305
John
De
Bruley
~1272
John
De
Bruley
~1338
Thomas
Quartermain
1247
Katherine
Foliot
1211
Richard
De
Bruley
1215
Millicent
~1185
Robert
De
Bruley
~1189
Joan
De
Kingwarton
~1163
Robert
De
Kingwarton
~1165
Joan
~1215
William
Foliot
~1298
Henry
De
Bruley
~1270
William
De
Bruley
1242
Henry
De
Bruley
~1354
Joan
Russell
~1313 - 1342
Thomas
Quartermain
29
29
~1317
Katherine
De
Bretton
~1282
William
Quartermain
~1286
Maude
~1250
William
Quartermain
~1250
Agnes
~1226
Herbert
Quartermain
~1194
Herbert
Quartermain
~1198
Lecia
Knevett
~1285
Guy
De
Bretton
~1289
Joan
De
Gray
~1253
William
De
Bretton
~1231
Avecia
Chetwode
~1253
Thomas
De
Gray
~1348
Anne
Planches
1340
John
Russell
Katherine
Vampage
~1314 - 1376
Robert
Russell
62
62
~1287 - 1338
Nicholas
Russell
51
51
1290
Agnes
Grindon
1258 - >1300
James
Russell
42
42
~1260
Jane
~1230
Robert
Russell
~1202
Thomas
Russell
~1180
Rose
Bardolf
1174 - 1224
John
Russell
50
50
~1160
Eudo
Russell
1125 - 1201
Robert
Russell
76
76
~1082
Robert
Russell
~1040
Hugh
Russell
1154
Thomas
Bardolf
~1156
Alice
De
Corbett
Seaxburh
of East
Anglia
Seawara
Anna King
of East
Anglia
Eni of
East
Anglia
D. ~0593
Tyttla King
of East
Anglia
D. ~0578
Wuffa King
of East
Anglia
Wehha
Wilhelm
Hryp
Hrothmund
Trygils
Tytmon
Casere
~0215
Odin (Woden\
Woutan) of
Asgard
Excerpt from the Anglo Saxon Chronicle: In the year that was past from the birth of Christ 494, then Cedric and Cynric his son landed at Cerdices ora from five ships. And Cerdic was the son of Elesa, Elesa of Esla, Esla of Giwis, Giwis of Wig, Wig of Freawine, Freawine of Frithugar, Frithugar of Brond, Brond of Beldeg, Beldeg of Woden. And 6 years after they landed they subdued the West Saxons' Kingdom; and they were the first kings who conquered the West Saxons' land from the Welsh; and he had the kingdom 16 years and when he died, then his son Cynric succeeded to the kingdom and held it 26 years. When he died, his son Ceawlin succeeded and held it 17 winters. When he died, then Ceol succeeded to the kingdom and held it 6 years. When he died, then Ceolwulf his brother succeeded, and he reigned 17 years and their kin goes back to Cerdic. Then Cynegils, Ceolwulf's brother's son, succeeded to the kingdom and reigned 31 winters; and he first received baptism of the West Saxons' kings; and then Cenwalh succeeded, and held it 30 winters; and Cenwalh was the son of Cynegils; and then Seaxburg his queen held the kingdom one year after him. Then Æscwine succeeded to the kingdom, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it 2 years. Then Centwine, the son of Cynegils, succeeded to the West Saxons' kingdom, and reigned 7 years. Then Caedwalla succeeded to the kingdom, whose kin goes back to Cerdic and held it 3 years. Then Ine succeeded the [West] Saxons' kingdom, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it 37 winters. Then &Æthelheard succeeded, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it 14 winters. Then Cuthred succeeded, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it 17 years. Then Sigeberht succeeded, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it 1 year. Then Cynewulf succeeded to the kingdom, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it 31 winters. Then Beorhtric succeeded to the kingdom, whose kin goes back to Cerdic, and held it for 16 years. Then Ecgberht succeeded to the kingdom and held it 37 winters and 7 months; and then Æthelwulf his son succeeded, and held it 18 years and a half. Æthelwulf was the son of Ecgberht, Ecgberht of Ealhmund, Ealhmund of Eafa, Eafa of Eoppa, Eoppa of Ingild, Ingild of Cenred; and Ine, Cuthburg (daughter) and Cwenburh were also children of Cenred. Cenred was the son of Ceolwald, Ceolwald of Cuthwulf, Cuthwulf of Cuthwine, Cuthwine of Celin (Ceawlin), Celin of Cynric, Cynric of Cerdic. And then Æthelbald his son succeeded to the kingdom and held it 5 years. Then Æthelberht his brother succeeded, and held it 5 years. Then Æthelred their brother succeeded to the kingdom and held it 5 years. Then Alfred their brother succeeded to the kingdom when he was 23 years old; and it was 396 winters since his kin first conquered the West Saxons' land from the Welsh. It is assumed that Alfred 'The Great' was instrumental in the writing of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle.
~0219
Frigida
(Frigg)
of Britain
Electra
Jared
Baraka
Mahalalel
Dinah
Kenan
(Cainan)
Mualeleth
Yaya
Alexander 'The
Great' King of
Macedonia
D. ~0725
Wihtred
King of
Kent
Callirhoe
Lamech
Assaracus
D. ~0181
Lucius
(Lleuver) Mawr
King of Britons
Baptised at Winchester by his father's first cousin, St. Timothy, according to legend. Lucius the Great founded the first church at Llandaff and established Christianity in place of Druidism. He is reputed to be the first Christian king in Britain.
Cadwalladr
of
Britain
Gladys
of
Siluria
[Neet3.FTW] Constantine 'The Great' descends from this family as follows: 1 King of Britons Lucius (Lleuver) Mawr of Britain - 181 .. +Gladys of Siluria Mother: Eurgen of Siluria 2 Gladys 'The Younger' of Britain ... +Prince of Combria Cadvan of Combria 3 Strada 'The Fair' of Combria .... +King of Colchester Coilus II (Coel Cole) of England 232 - 4 Saint Helena (of the Cross) 248 - 328 .... +Roman Emperor Flavius Valerius CONSTANTIUS 250 - 306 . 5 Emperor of Rome Constantine 'The Great' 287/88 - 337
D. >0120
Coel
King of
Britain
This is undoubetedly the same as Coel 'Old King' (Coilus), King of the Britons. Old King Coel was a merry old soul and a merry old soul was he...
D. ~0125
Marius Cyllin
of King of
Siluria
[Neet3.FTW] Legend states that Saint Cyllin assisted the Apostle Paul, together with his brother, Linus 'The Martyr', and his sister, Claudia, who had married Rufus Pudens, a half-brother of the Apostle.
Tiberius Claudius
Nero Germanicus
Emperor of Rom
[Neet3.FTW] Claudius I (10 BC-AD 54), Roman emperor (AD 41-54). Claudius was born TIBERIUS CLAUDIUS DRUSUS NERO GERMANICUS in Lugdunum (present-day Lyon, France). His father, Nero Claudius Drusus, was a younger brother of Tiberius Claudius Nero Caesar, later the Roman emperor Tiberius. Claudius held no important public office until the age of 47, when he became consul during the reign of his nephew, Emperor Caligula. When the latter was assassinated in AD 41, Claudius was proclaimed emperor by the Praetorian Guard, who found him hiding in the palace. The first acts of his reign gave promise of mild and just government; but in 42, when a conspiracy against his life was uncovered, he went into semiretirement. His wife Messalina became largely responsible for administering the government for a time. She practiced cruelties and extortions without restraint. Aside from the excesses perpetrated under the influence of Messalina, Claudius's reign was that of an able administrator, both in civil and military affairs. Mauretania (present-day northern Morocco and western Algeria) was made a Roman province; the conquest of Britain was begun; and the Roman armies fought successfully against the Germans. Judea and Thrace also became Roman provinces during his rule. Claudius expended enormous sums in building, especially in the construction of the famous Claudian Aqueduct. His administration was characterized by a decline in the power of the nobility and by the practice, later commonplace, of granting responsibility and wealth to the personal followers of the emperor, including former slaves. In 48 Claudius ordered the execution of Messalina, who had indicated her contempt for him by publicly staging a mock marriage with her lover. He then defied widespread disapproval by marrying his niece, Agrippina the Younger, under whose influence he deprived his son by Messalina, Britannicus, of his heritage, adopting instead Agrippina's son by a former marriage, Nero, later emperor of Rome. Shortly thereafter Claudius was poisoned, presumably by Agrippina. Claudius is depicted by ancient historians as being neglected, sickly, and ridiculed before coming to power; his character during his reign is described as ignorant and malicious. Modern scholars, however, tend to discount their testimony and estimate him as shrewd and able. Source: "Claudius I," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Aviragus of
the Britons
King of Siluria
Eleazar
Nero
Claudius
Drusus
[Neet3.FTW] Drusus Germanicus, Nero Claudius, called Drusus Senior (38 BC-AD 9), Roman general. He was the younger son of Livia Drusilla , wife of Emperor Augustus, by her first husband, Tiberius Claudius Nero. Drusus Senior was thus the brother of Emperor Tiberius and stepson of Emperor Augustus. He served as a general under Tiberius against the Rhaeti and Vindelici in 15, and from 13 until 10 he was governor of the three Gallic provinces. In 9 he held an army against the German peoples of the Elbe region, penetrating farther than previous Roman armies. Drusus Germanicus died after a fall from his horse. Germanicus Caesar and Emperor Claudius I were his sons. Source: "Drusus Germanicus, Nero Claudius," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Aemilia
Lepida
Manogan ap
Eneid King
of Britons
Joseph ben
Matthat of
Arimathaea
[Neet3.FTW] REF: "Britannia Internet Magazine": Joseph of Arimathea was a wealthy disciple of Jesus, who, according to the book of Matthew 27:57-60, asked Pontius Pilate for permission to take Jesus' dead body in order to prepare it for burial. He also provided the tomb where the crucified Lord was laid until his Resurrection. Joseph is mentioned in a few times in parallel passages in Mark, Luke and John, but nothing further is heard about his later activities. Legend, however, supplies us with the rest of his story by claiming that Joseph, accompanying the Apostle Philip on a preaching mission to Gaul, was sent to Britain for the purpose of converting the island to Christianity. The year 63 AD is commonly given for this "event", with 37 AD sometimes being put forth as an alternative. It was said that Joseph achieved his wealth in the metals trade, and in the course of conducting his business, he probably became acquainted with Britain, at least the southwestern parts of it. Cornwall was a chief mining district and well-known in the Roman empire for its tin and other metals. Some have even said that Joseph was the uncle of Jesus, and that he may have brought the young boy along on one of his business trips to the island. It was only natural, then, that Joseph should have been chosen for the first mission to Britain, and appropriate that he should come first to Glastonbury, that gravitational center for legendary activity in the West Country. Much more was added to Joseph's legend during the middle ages, and he was gradually inflated into a major saint and cult hero. For example, he is said to have brought with him either a cup, said to have been used at the Last Supper and also used to catch the blood dripping from Christ as he hung on the Cross. A variation of this story is that Joseph brought with him two cruets, one containing the blood and the other, the sweat of Christ. Either of these items are known as The Holy Grail, and were the object(s) of the quests of the Knights of King Arthur's Round Table. The legend goes on to suggest that Joseph hid the "Grail" in Chalice Well at Glastonbury for safe-keeping. There is a wide variance of scholarly opinion on this subject, however, and a good deal of doubt exists as to whether Joseph ever came to Britain at all, for any purpose.
Matthat
ben
Levi
Daughter
of
Eleazar
Levi
ben
Melchi
Melchi
ben
Jana
Jana
ben
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Mattathias
Mattathias
ben
Naum
Amos
ben
Naum
Naum
ben
Esli
Esli
ben
Nagge
Nagge
ben
Maath
Maath
Mattathias
ben
Semel
Semel
ben
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Judah
Judah
ben
Joanna
Joanna
ben
Resa
Resa
Salathial
Neri
Daughter
of
Jehoiachin
Melchi
Addi
ben
Cosam
Cosam
Elmadam
Er ben
Jesus
Jesus
ben
Eliazer
Eliazer
ben
Jorim
Jorim
Matthat
ben
Levi
Levi
ben
Simeon
Simeon
ben
Judah
Judah
ben
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Jonam
Jonam
Eliakim
Melea
Menna
Mattatha
Nathan
David King
of Judea
and Israel
[Neet3.FTW] David (king) (died 961 BC), king (1000-961 BC) of Judah and Israel, founder of the Judean dynasty. Several accounts of his accomplishments occur in the Old Testament, chiefly in the books of Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles. David was the youngest son of Jesse, a shepherd of Bethlehem, where he spent his youth tending his father's flocks. He became known for his musical skill and for his courage, exemplified by his victorious encounter with the Philistine giant Goliath. As his reputation grew, he was summoned to the royal court, where he received an appointment as armor-bearer to Saul, the first king of Israel. After achieving distinction in the wars against the Philistines, he married Michal, Saul's daughter, and won the friendship of Jonathan, Saul's son. As a result of his growing popularity, however, he incurred the jealousy of the king, who banished him from the court. David spent the next period of his life in exile, at the head of a band of warriors, levying tribute on the landowners of Judah. After a period in the town of Adullam, near Jerusalem, and in the deserts of Judea, he entered the service of Achish, king of the Philistine city of Gath. As a reward for his help to Achish, he was made ruler of the town of Ziklag. David returned to his native country after Saul, Jonathan, and two others of Saul's four sons died in battle with the Philistines. Becoming king of Judah at Hebron, he reigned for seven years, until about 993 BC, when he was anointed king of Israel. David subsequently defeated in rapid succession the Philistines, Moabites, Aramaeans, Edomites, and Ammonites, firmly establishing Israel as an independent national state and greatly extending its dominions. One of his principal conquests was that of the Jebusite stronghold of Zion, which he made the nucleus of his capital city, Jerusalem, often called the City of David. There he constructed his palace and installed, under a tabernacle, the Ark of the Covenant, making Jerusalem the religious and political center of the domains united in his person. During the siege of Rabbath (now Amman, Jordan), the Ammonite capital, David committed adultery with Bathsheba, wife of the soldier Uriah, for whose death he was indirectly responsible. This episode, generally considered the major sin of his life, was followed by recurring troubles with his children, one of whom, Absalom, was killed during a rebellion that he had organized against his father. The final years of David's reign were marked by additional family troubles, notably the dispute with his eldest surviving son, Adonijah, that developed after David had selected Solomon, his son by Bathsheba, as heir to the throne. David was a valiant warrior and an outstanding leader. He displayed unfailing religious devotion and epitomized the courage and aspirations of his people, the prophets of whom came inevitably to regard him as the type of the promised Messiah. In both the Old Testament and New Testament, the Messiah is referred to as the Son of David. In tradition, he is credited with writing 73 of the Psalms; most scholars, however, consider this claim questionable. Source: "David (king)," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Holy City of the Jews According to the Old Testament, David brought the sacred Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem from Qiryat Ye'crim (a holy place of the time, west of Jerusalem) and installed it in a new tabernacle, built a royal palace and other buildings, and strengthened the city's fortifications. Although David greatly expanded the Kingdom of Israel and made Jerusalem its capital, the city and the temple he built were quite modest. Solomon, his son and successor, improved the temple and enlarged the city. He built a city wall and many buildings on a scale of magnificence previously unknown in Israel. Solomon's Temple was destroyed and the Jews exiled by the Babylonians in the year 586 BC. In 539 BC, Babylonia was conquered by the Persians (see Persia), who allowed the Jews to return to Jerusalem the following year. The construction of a new temple, or Second Temple, was then undertaken on the ruins of the old. Jerusalem was captured by Alexander the Great in 333 BC, and after his death it came under the rule first of Egyptians and later of Syrians. The Syrian ruler Antiochus IV attempted to wipe out the Jewish religion by destroying a large part of Jerusalem in 168 BC. This caused a Jewish revolt under the leadership of Judas Maccabeus, a member of a priestly ruling family, the Hasmonaeans (see Maccabees). He liberated Jerusalem from the Syrians in 165 BC and later extended Hasmonaean rule over a large part of Judea. Jerusalem became the destination of annual Jewish pilgrimage from the outlying area, since certain religious obligations could only be fulfilled in the temple. All Jewish sacred and secular law and power came to be concentrated in the city. Source: "Jerusalem," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Bathsheba
Jesse
Maachah
Princess
of Geshur
Obed
Boaz
Ruth
of
Moab
Rahab
Salmon
(Salma)
Nahshon
Amminadab
Ram
Prince
of Israel
Hezron
Perez
Fetjuir
Genuissa
(Venessa)
Claudia of Rome
Jehoiachin
Julia
Princess of
the Icenians
Antonia 'The
Younger'
Augusta
Tiberius
Claudius
Nero
Livia
Drusilla
Appius
Claudius
Nero
Tiberius
Claudius
Nero
Marcus (Marc
Antony)
Antonius
[Neet3.FTW] Antony or Marc Antony, Lat. Marcus Antonius, c.83 B.C.-30 B.C., Roman politician and soldier. He was of a distinguished family related to Julius CAESAR, who made him a protégé. In 49 B.C. Antony became tribune. He and Quintus Cassius Longinus (see CASSIUS, family), another tribune, vetoed the bill to deprive Caesar of his army. Caesar then crossed the Rubicon, and the civil war began. After Caesar's assassination (44 B.C.), Antony, then consul, aroused the mob against the conspirators. Octavian (later AUGUSTUS) joined forces with him, but they soon fell out. However, Octavian arranged the Second Triumvirate with Antony and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (see LEPIDUS, family). At Philippi, in 42 B.C., Antony and Octavian crushed the republicans, and the triumvirate ruled the empire for five years. Antony met CLEOPATRA in 42 B.C., and their love affair began. When Antony's wife, Fulvia, died (40 B.C.), he married Octavian's sister, OCTAVIA. In 37 B.C., Antony settled in Alexandria as the acknowledged lover of Cleopatra. In 32 B.C. the senate deprived Antony of his powers, thus making civil war inevitable. In the following year Octavian's forces defeated Antony and Cleopatra in the naval battle at Actium, and Antony returned to Egypt. When Octavian came there (30 B.C.), Antony committed suicide, and Cleopatra killed herself soon afterward. Of the many dramas on the tragedy, the best known by far is SHAKESPEARE's Antony and Cleopatra. Source: The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia is licensed from Columbia University Press. Copyright © 1995 by Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
Octavia
'The
Younger'
[Neet3.FTW] Octavia (69?-11 BC), Roman matron, daughter of the Roman general Gaius Octavius, grandniece of Julius Caesar, and sister of Octavian, who became emperor as Augustus. Octavia was distinguished for her beauty and her virtue. In 40 BC on the death of her first husband, the consul Gaius Claudius Marcellus, she consented to marry Octavian's rival Mark Antony to make secure the reconciliation between him and her brother. When Antony deserted her for the Egyptian queen Cleopatra, Octavia remained loyal to her husband, even providing him with reinforcements on occasion. Octavian was indignant at the treatment she received and wished her to leave her husband's house. When war broke out between Octavian and Antony in 32 BC, Antony crowned his insults by sending Octavia a notice of divorce. When he died in Egypt after being defeated by Octavian in 30, Octavia brought up not only her own children but also Antony's children by his first wife, Fulvia), and by Cleopatra. Octavia herself had five children: two daughters by Antony, and a son and two daughters by her first husband. Her son, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, was adopted by Augustus and apparently intended to succeed the latter as emperor, but died at the age of 19. Among the descendants of two of Octavia's daughters, Antonia Major (flourished 1st century AD) and Antonia Minor, were three rulers of the Roman Empire: the emperors Claudius I, Nero, and Caligula. Source: "Octavia (69?-11 bc)," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Gaius
Octavius
Atia
Marcus
Atius
Balbus
[Neet3.FTW] The Balbus family originated in Africa and could boast of many ancestral busts of senators. His mother was also closely related to Pompey 'The Great'.
Julia
Gaius
Julius
Caesar
[Neet3.FTW] This Julius Caesar is not the one you think about when you think of the name Julius Caesar - the Emperor of Rome, conqueror of England, Gaul, and nearly all the rest of the known world, but the father Julius Caesar. This is the great grandfather of Octavian Caesar (later known as Augustus), who was adopted into the family of the famous Caesars (because his grandmother was a Caesar).
Marcia
Quintus
Marcius
Rex
Prasutagus
King of the
Icenians
Boadicca
(Boudicea) Queen
of the Icenians
Mandubratius
Lud King
of the
Britons
Beli 'The Great'
(Heli) King of
the Britons
Anna
"The
Prophetess"
Eneid ap
Cerwydr King
of Britons
Cerwyd
ap
Crydon
Dyfnarth
(Cynfarch) King
of Cornwall
Prydain
King of
Cornwall
Aedd
King of
Cornwall
Antonius
King of
Cornwall
Seisyll
(Serwyl)
King in Britain
Gwrwst
King in
Britain
Rhiwallon
King in
Britain
Cunedda
King in
Britain
Henwyn King
of Cambria &
Cornwall
Verch
(Lear)
Llyr
Bleiddud (Cyngen)
King of Cambria &
Cornwall
Asser King
of Cambria
& Cornwall
Dyfnwal Hen
King of Cambria
& Cornwall
Gorbonian King
of Cambria &
Cornwall
Camber (Cymryw)
King of Cambria &
Cornwall
Brutus
(Brwt) King
in Britain
Silvius
Iulus
Ascanius King
of Alba Longa
Creusa
of
Troy
Aeneas of
Latium King
of Latium
Living
Madding
Dymas
King of
Phrygia
Anchisa
Capys
Themiste
of
Troy
Ilus
King of
Troy
Astochye
of
Acadia
Lucia
Clodomir III
King of
The Franks
Enosh
(Enos)
Noam
Seth
Azura
Cain
Abel
Adam
Eve
Diocles
King of
Sicambri
Helenus
V King of
Sicambri
Priamus
King of
Sicambri
Antenor
II King of
Sicambri
Marcomir
I King of
Sicambri
Antenor I
King of the
Commerians
Helenus
Diluglio
Almadion
Getmalor
Priam
Alexandre
Basabelian
Plesron
Helenus
Priam
Atenor
Plaserius
Gaberiano
Eliacor
Plesron
Pleserio
Bosabiliano
Gelio
Esdron
Franco
of the
Scythians
Genger
of the
Scythians
Helenus of
Troy King of
the Scythians
Priam
High King
of Troy
Hecuba
of
Phrygia
1829 - 1862
William
H.
Newton
33
33
The KY Adjutant General's Report (US Vol. 1, 1866) confirms that William H. Newton served as a Pvt. in Co. G, 7th Ky. Inf. He enlisted 9/18/1861 at Camp Dick Robinson, and died 4/30/1862 at Camp Halleck, TN. In the summer of 1861, Union authorities empowered U. S. Navy Lieutenant William "Bull" Nelson to recruit loyal men for the United States Army inside Kentucky. On July 15, 1861, Nelson arrived in Lancaster in Garrard County. He selected several men to raise regiments, one of whom was Theophilus Toulmin Garrard, a state senator and Mexican War veteran. Garrard (pronounced gar'-rud, with a hard g) began recruiting for his Third Kentucky Volunteer Infantry Regiment. State authorities soon changed the designation to the Seventh Kentucky, but the men who made up the regiment resented the change and often used the earlier number well into 1863. Colonel Garrard collected his men at Camp Dick Robinson in Garrard County, rendezvous point for several regiments raised under Nelson. Here the men learned the rudiments of drill and suffered through shortages of food, uniforms, and other supplies. A measles epidemic added to their overall discomfort. On September 22, 1861, General George H. Thomas, later known as the Rock of Chickamauga, mustered the Seventh Kentucky into federal service. The 7th was the only three-year regiment from Kentucky to carry over 1,000 men on its roster. During late 1861 and early 1862, the 7th was shifted several times within the organizational charts of the forces in eastern Kentucky, then commanded by Major General Don Carlos Buell. By spring, the regiment was part of Carter's 24th Brigade of General G. W. Morgan's 7th Division of the Army of the Ohio. Morgan concentrated his force at Cumberland Ford in preparation for an advance on Cumberland Gap. He brought in fresh provisions, including the first fresh meat the men of the 7th had tasted in months. An initial reconnaissance to the Gap resulted only in a small skirmish. 7th Regiment Kentucky Infantry, USA "One of the first Recruited in the State. Old 3rd," Organized at Camp Dick Robinson, Ky., September 22, 1861. Attached to Thomas' Command, Army of the Ohio, to January, 1862. 12th Brigade, 1st Division, Army of the Ohio, to March, 1862. 24th Brigade, 7th Division, Army of the Ohio, to October, 1862. 3rd Brigade, District of West Virginia, Dept. of the Ohio, to November, 1862. 2nd Brigade, 9th Division, Right Wing 13th Army Corps (Old), Dept. of the Tennessee, to December, 1862. 2nd Brigade, 3rd Division, Sherman's Yazoo Expedition, to January, 1863. 2nd Brigade, 9th Division, 13th Army Corps, Army of the Tennessee, to February, 1863. 1st Brigade, 9th Division, 13th Army Corps, to July, 1863. 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, 13th Army Corps, Dept. of the Tennessee, to August, 1863; and Dept. of the Gulf to November, 1863. Plaquemine, District of Baton Rouge, La., Dept. of the Gulf, to March, 1864, 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, 13th Army Corps, to June, 1864. 1st Brigade, 3rd Division, 19th Army Corps, to December, 1864. District of Baton Rouge, La., to April, 1865. Provisional Brigade, District of Baton Rouge, Dept. of the Gulf, to March, 1866. SERVICE.--Moved to Mt. Vernon, Ky., October, 1861, and duty there until March, 1862. Action at Camp Wild Cat, or Rockcastle Hills, October 21, 1861. Reconnaissance toward Cumberland Gap and skirmishes March 21-23, 1862. Cumberland Gap Campaign March 28-June 18. Occupation of Cumberland Gap June 18 to September 16. Evacuation of Cumberland Gap and retreat to Greenupsburg, in the Ohio River, September 16-October 3. Expedition to Charleston, West Va., October 21-November 10. Ordered to Memphis, Tenn., November 10; duty there until December 20. Sherman's Yazoo Expedition December 20, 1862, to January 2, 1863. Chickasaw Bayou December 26-28. Chickasaw Bluff December 29. Expedition to Arkansas Post, Ark., January 3-10, 1863. Assault on and capture of Fort Hindman, Arkansas Post, January 10-11. Moved to Young's Point, La., January 15-23, and duty there until March. Moved to Milliken's Bend March 8. Operations from Milliken's Bend to New Carthage March 31-April 17. James Plantation, near New Carthage, April 6 and 8. Dunbar's Plantation, Bayou Vidal, April 15. Expedition from Perkins' Plantation to Hard Times Landing April 25-29, Phelps' and Clark's Bayous April 26. Choctaw Bayou and Lake Bruin April 28. Battle of Thompson's Hill, Port Gibson, May 1. Champion's Hill May 16. Big Black River Bridge May 17. Siege of Vicksburg May 18-July 4. Assaults on Vicksburg May 19 and 22, Advance on Jackson July 5-10. Near Clinton July 8. Near Jackson July 9. Siege of Jackson July 10-17. Ordered to New Orleans, La., August 13. Duty at Carrollton, Brashear City and Berwick until October. Western Louisiana Campaign October 3-November 20. Duty at Plaquemine until March, 1864. Moved to Baton Rouge, La., March 23, and duty there until October. At mouth of White River and Duvall's Bluff, Ark., October 6-November 10. At Baton Rouge until May 1, 1865; and at Clinton until March, 1866. Mustered out March 11, 1866. Regiment lost during service 3 Officers and 40 Enlisted men killed and mortally wounded and 2 Officers and 274 Enlisted men by disease. Total 319. Source - A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion by Frederick H. Dyer (Part 3)
1832 - 1910
Amanda
Todd
78
78
1863 - 1947
Nancy
Jane
Richardson
83
83
1801 - 1886
Joel Elias
"Uncle
Joel" Todd
85
85
Note: Joel Todd was a member and supporter of John G. Fee's "Free Church," Glade Church (American Missionary Association) He was a radical abolitionist and was in the group of exiles when they fled to Cincinnati, Ohio. Later he would sell land to freed african american slaves. Joel gave land for the founding of Berea College. From A Utopian Experiment in Kentucky, pg. 81: "One family of white Bereans sold hundreds o f acres to black settlers: Joel Todd, Sr., and his wife Nancy Mills, who had been exiled for their support of abolitionism in 1860, made land available to many black families. On February 17, 1868, Todd sold land on Bushy Fork to Anderson Crawford, Stephen Hagan, and Horace Yates. These settlers living neighbors to one another, constitutes the now nonexistent town of Canton, apparently their name for black settlers on Bushy Fork. Daniel Herron bought town lot no. 4 in Canton from Joel Todd, Sr., February 2, 1869. (Lest it appear that [Rev. John] Fee's policy of interspersion was spoiled by this black village, it should be pointed out that everyone in it owned land neighboring a white person's land on one boundary line at least.) In 1873, Joel Todd, Sr., sold another parcel of land on Bushy Fork to Henry Adams, who had purchased materials for building a house in 1866. Probably blacks were permitted to erect houses on land they planned to purchase sometime later; Adams is not the only instance of a black man in Berea building a house before he owned land to put it on. The five acres Stephen Hagan bought in 1868 included the house where he already lived. Joel Todd, Jr., a pre-Civil War student in the Berea school and owner of land near his father's, also sold to blacks, including Horace Yates (1874) and Gibson Gill(1878)."
1832
Francis
Ann
Newton
1794 - 1867
Samuel
Newton
73
73
~1803
Kitturah
Poates
Winny
1753 - 1819
Richard
Bland
Lee
66
66
Heirs also named in Madison County Deed Book R, Page 399, 15 Apr 1827. Richard was named in the will of his Uncle John, proved 27 Sep 1789, Orange County, VA
1856 - 1916
Joel
Glover
Newton
59
59
1800 - 1840
Nancy
Ruth
Lee
40
40
1764 - 1838
Elizabeth
H.
Scott
74
74
1709 - 1763
Hancock
Lee
54
54
1716 - 1766
Mary
Willis
50
50
1652 - 1709
Hancock
Lee
57
57
Hancock Lee b. 1653, Ditchley, Northumberland Co., VA, d. 25 May 1709, Hancock’s Neck, Northumberland Co., VA, m. (1) 1675, Northampton Co., VA, Mary Kendall b. Newport House, Northampton Co., VA, (daughter of William and Susannah (Baker) Kendall). M. (2) bef 1707, Sarah Allerton, b. 1656, "Narrow's Plantation", Westmoreland Co., VA, (daughter of Isaac Allerton, Col. and Elizabeth Willoughby) d. 17 May 1731, "Hancock's Neck", Northumberland Co., VA. Hancock was buried at Ditchley, where his tombstone is still seen. This burying ground was used by this branch of the family for several generations, probably until the estate was sold in 1789, to Col. James Ball, Jr., whose descendants own it today. The inscription reads as follows: “Here Lyeth the Body of Hancock Lee, Seventh son of the Honourable Richard Lee, Who departed this Life the 25th May, Anno Domo 1729, Aeta. 56 years. Also Mary his first Wife, only Daughter of William Kendall, Gent., Who departed this life the 24th December, Anno Domo 1694, Aeta. 33 years. And Sarah, his last Wife, Daughter of Isaac Allerton, Esq., Who departed this Life 17th May, Anno Domo, 1731, Aeta. 60 years.” Although this inscription states that he died in 1729, there can be no doubt that Hancock Lee died in 1709; for these reasons, : The certificate of probate of his will reads: “Die July 20: 1709. This will was proved in Northumberland County Court to be the last Will and Testament of Mr. Hancock Lee, dec’d by ye oaths of Thomas Knight and Mary Knight, two of ye witnesses thereto admitted to Record. (Signed) Tho: Hobson C. Cur. Northumberland. The Clerk’s office of Northumberland was burned the 25th of October 1710; later all the records that could be found were recorded a second time to replace those destroyed. So, on Hancock’s will there is this second note of record: “Die Martii 21, 1711, This Coppie of Mr. Hancock Lee’s Will and the Codicils thereto annexed were approved by ye Court and upon motion of Capt. John Howson were admitted to Record. (signed) Tho: Hobson C. Cur. Northumberland.” Again, an inventory of Hancock’s property was filed the 21st of Mar, 1710, and moreover in an application for a land patent, made the 6th of March, 1709-10, it was stated that the patent was for “Hancock Lee son of Hancock Lee dec’d.” These records clearly prove that Hancock was deceased in 1709. If the inscription on his tombstone were correct in that died in 1728, aged 56 years, then he would have been born in 1673, about nine years after the death of his father. Whilst, if the record of his first marriage, in 1675, be correct, then he married at the early age of two or three years! Hancock is supposed to have settled in Northampton at the time of his first marriage and to have returned to Northumberland about 1686. He was a Justice for Northampton County in 1677, and held similar positions in Northumberland in 1687, 1699; was also a Burgess from Northumberland in 1688. A list of civil officers, dated 3 Jun 1699, names him as the “Naval Officer and Collector of Virginia Dutys in Northumberland County;” another list of the date of 1702, mentions him as Justice, showing him to have been in commission at the time of his death. The Northern Neck land records show that Hancock patented land as follows: 1,100 acres in Richmond County, the 18th Apr 1704; 570 acres on both sides of Rappahannock Horsepen Run and adjoining his own land, 21st May 1705; 1,353 acres in Richmond County, 6th Jun 1704; 460 acres on north side of the Occoquan in Stafford County, 2nd Nov 1707; 1,750 acres at the heads of the branches of Chapowamsic in Stafford, adjoining the land of Capt. Thomas Harrison, 10th Feb 1707. Hancock Lee, son of Hancock dec’d, patented 1,025 acres on Wolf Run in Stafford, for which Hancock Lee the elder had obtained a warrant, 1708, and by codicil to his will, 21st Dec 1706, gave to his son the said Hancock, 6th Mar 1709-10. In 1678, Hancock Lee, gent., obtained a patent for 268 acres in Accomac County. The land formerly included in the Ditchley estate was patented the 21st May 1651. It has usually been stated that Hancock built Ditchley mansion about 1687, but there is no evidence to substantiate this tradition. The present house was built by Kendall Lee, grandson of Hancock, and was completed about 1765-70, as estimated by James Flexmer Ball. Hancock’s will was made 31st Dec 1706; one codicil was added 1st Jan 1706/07; a second the 18th May, and a third the 20th of May, 1709. It was probated at Northumberland County Courthouse the20th Jul 1709.
1656 - 1731
Sarah
Allerton
75
75
22 MAR 1617/18 - 1 MAR 1663/64
Colonel
Richard
Lee
Richard Lee, Col. b. 1617/18, Worcestershire, England, d. 1 Mar 1664, Dividing Creek, Northumberland Co., VA, m. Mar 1641, Jamestown, VA, Ann Constable b. 1621/22, England. An early account of Richard Lee is given in Lee of VA, p. 49, in a passage written by William Lee in 1771, is as follows: “Richard Lee, of a good family in Shropshire (and whose Picture I am told is now at Coton, near Bridgenorth, the seat of Launcelot Lee, Esq.), some time in the Reign of Charles the first, went over to the Colony of Virginia, as Secretary, and one of the King’s Privy Council….He was a man of good Stature, comely visage, and enterprising genius, a sound head, vigorous spirit and generous nature. When he got to Virginia, which was at that time not much cultivated, he was so pleased with the Country that he made large settlements there with the servants he had carried over; after some years, he returned to England, and gave away all the lands he had taken up, and settled at his own expense, to those servants he had fixed on them; some of whose descendants are now possessed of very considerable Estates in that Colony. After staying some Time in England, he returned again to Virginia, with a fresh band of Adventurers, all of whom he settled there.” In 1646, Richard Lee sat on the York bench as a magistrate, with a Dr. Henry Lee, who married Marah Adkins. Richard patented 1,250 acres in York Co., VA in 1648, and named, amongst his headrights, Henry, Matthew, and George Lee, who may have been his relatives. That Richard settled first in York Co., is proven by the grant of 1,000 acres, dated 10 Aug 1642; the patent states that his land was due “unto the said Richard Lee by and for his own personal Adventure, his wife Ann, and John Francis and by assignment from Mr. Thomas Hill, Florentine Paine and William Freeman of their right of land due for the transportation of Seaventeene p’sons.” This land was the plantation, Paradise in his will, and bequeathed to his second son, Richard. This name is frequently applied to subsequent records to this plantation; as on the 22nd of July, 1674, in a patent issued to “Major Richard Lee for 1,140 acres in Gloster, called Paradise, on a branch of Poropotank Creek; 1,000 thereof being due to said Richard Lee by two former patents, and the residence now found to be within the bounds.” Richard represented York County as Burgess in 1647, and in 1651 “Mr. Lee” was paid for services as Burgess of Northumberland County. “It seems possible that Richard Lee was engaged in commerce as well as agriculture, and that he had an interest in vessels trading between England and Virginia, as had many of the large planters. In his will, he bequeathed to his son, Francis, his interest in two ships, which was 1/8th part in each vessel. He appears to have made frequent voyages to and fro; being in England in 1654-55, again in 1659, and later in 1661 and in 1663.” Richard’s first home in Virginia was on the York River, near the head of Poropotank Creek, where he had a store or warehouse. His next home was located on the Dividing Creeks in Northumberland, which afforded a very safe harbor. The main creek is only a mile or two long; then it divides into branches, which makes several small peninsulas or “necks” as they were formerly called. On two of these necks Richard Lee located his two plantations, where we can find grants for 800 and 600 acres in 1651 and 1656 respectively. Richard was not only Burgess for several counties, but served in several capacities, having been Justice, member of the Council and Secretary of State. He also served on various commissions. [See Lee of VA, p.59]. While in England in 1663, his wife and children being there also, Richard made his will; the wording of this will indicates that he had given up his intention of settling permanently in England. For he ordered that his estate there should be sold, gave minute directions for the payment of his debts, and closing up of his interests in that country, and made arrangements for the settlement of his children in Virginia. The account of his property given in his will shows him to have been possessed of considerable wealth- for that day. If his tobacco crop was actually worth L2000 a year, as Gibbon estimated, and his estate at Stratford-Langton, L800 a year, as stated by William Lee, then Richard Lee must have enjoyed an income larger than most of the early planters. His will was executed in London 6 Feb 1663/64, prov. 10 Jan 1664/65, London, England.
~1621
Anne
Constable
Owen
~1588 - 23 FEB 1629/30
John
Lee or
Lyes
~1590 - 24 FEB 1637/38
Jane
Hancock
Will probated March 26, 1639, Worcester Consitory Court. No. 147, transcribed from the British film collection, Film 098. 058.
1564 - 1621
Richard
Lee
57
57
Elizabeth
Bendey
1528 - 1605
John
Lee
77
77
Joyce
Romney
~1506 - 12 MAR 1588/89
Humphrey
Lee
Katherine
Blount
~1465 - 16 MAR 1525/26
Thomas
De
Lee
Joanna
Morton
~1420 - 1478
John
De
Lee
58
58
Elizabeth
Corbin
John
De
Lee
Joyce
Packington
~1352 - ~1419
Roger
Lee
67
67
~1354 - 1423
Margaret
Astley
69
69
~1316
John
Lee
Matilda
1286 - 1320
John
De
Lee
34
34
1292
Matilda
De
Erdington
1257
Sir
Thomas
Lee
~1258
Petronella
De
Stanton
~1224 - ~1258
Thomas
De La
Lea
34
34
~1238 - 1313
Petronella
De
Stanton
75
75
1195
John
De La
Lea
1160
Reginaldus
Reynor
De La Lea
He was the first of record to use the coat of arms of the Shropshire Lee family.
~1140
Hugo
De
Lega
Rollo, Rou or Rolf was a Norse Chieftain of the Scandinavian Peninsula, from which the Vikings drove their boats over the rough North Sea. (Scandinavia is a name applied in a restricted sense to the Peninsulas of Norway and Sweden). In an historical sense, Scandinavia includes Denmark and Iceland and in a literary sense, besides these, the intellectual productions of the Swedish race in Finland). In 900,ONE THOUSAND AND FORTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, this Northman went into northern France along the English channel, and took the north-west section—extending from Belgium along the channel to Brittany, and including the Cherbourg Peninsula, extending inland about 100 miles. In 911 Rollo was granted by King Charles, the Simple, of France, the possession of Rouen, for his Capital, and the adjacent territory which Rollo had already seized. This is the Normandy of today—where our American boys landed on D-Day, June 6, 1944. From Rollo, baptized under the name of ROBERT and his wife, Grisela, the daughter of King Charles, the Simple—sprang the dukes of Normandy, of whom Richard the 1st, a grandson of Rollo vigorously maintained his authority against his Liege Lords, Louis IV and Lothaire. William, 2nd son of Robert 2nd le Diable, became Duke of Normandy in 1035 and in 1036 – 879 years ago – established a Norman Dynasty on the throne of England. For a time the English Channel looked as formidable to William of Normandy as it did to "Old Hitler" after the battle of Dunkirk. Finally, William attempted the crossing. For awhile it looked very unpropitious to his superstitious men, for as William landed, he fell. However the resourceful William grabbed his hands full of England’s soil and turning to his men cried in a loud voice: "Thus O England, do I take seizin’ of thee." William and his men of Normandy took England had held it as a fief of Normandy. He killed Harold the English King; introduced the French language into the court, gave the Englishmen’s land to the Norman men, and thus we get the story of "Robin Hood." With William, now called "the Conqueror," came one HUGH DE LEGA AND GILBERT DE VENABLES, relatives, who fought so valiantly with William that they each were given an estate in Essex (Eastern England). The LEE name was spelled Lee, Lea, Leigh, de Lega and de Lee. In 1183 , 762 years ago , LIONEL DE LEE went into Palestine with Richard the Lionhearted, king of England, with Louis XII, of France,and with Frederick Barbarossa I, of Germany, to take the tomb of Christ from Sladin, the Turk. (With Frederick Barbarossa there was a Heyl (Hoyle) from Wiesbaden—my father’s family) IN "LEES of Virginia" by Edmund J. Lee (1895) there is the following reference under Leigh of West Hall, of Cheshire, England: "This most ancient family of the name in England traces its pedigree through Hamon de Venables, son of Gilbert de Venables, grandson of Gilbert de Venables of Normandy, who accompanied the Conqueror to England, and was a younger brother of Thibault, Count of Blois, descended from Rollo, the first Duke of Normandy." LINEAGE OF THE LEE FAMILY (Copied from Burke) "The Lee Family of Stanton, Roden and afterwards of Langley and Coton Hall, Salop, IS stated in Burke’s Baronetcies to be ONE of the oldest in England. "Eyton treating of Reyner le la Le about 1195 gives also an unbroken descent thro’ the Stantons of Stanton Hineheath from 1086 to 1173-4. The pedigree of 1623 (when Sir Humphrey Lee’s charters were copied by Vincent) begins with HUGO DE LEGA, 1100, whose son, "Reginald de la Lee is identified with the above. He was Sheriff 1201 and one of the knights as REINER DE LEGA AT THE assizes Oct. 1203. He received a grant of land from William, son of William FitzAlan and according to the pedigree had a son; "Sir John de la Le, evidence produced by Eyton and Sir William Hardy, late Keeper of the Records in the Duchy of Lancaster, shows that Reyner’s son was really Sir Thomas de Lee, given as his grandson in the pedigree. He married Petronilla, daughter of Sir Thomas Corbet (Sheriff) in time of King Henry 3rd of England—king from 1266-1272. Sir Thomas de la Le had THREE sons: Sir John de la Lee mentioned above Reyner or Reginald de la Lee—to whom he gave the V. of Lee Pevenhull 7c,and Thomas de la Lee, this latter m. Petronilla de Stanton about 14(?) and had a SON: "Sir John de la Lee of Stanton, Roden and given as his nephew, SIR JOHN DE LA LEE married Matilda de Erdington and had (with a daughter, Matilda) two (2) sons: John de la Lee and Thomas de la Lee. "(These Lees were from Normandy, and this was the French manner of writing the name.)" "To THOMAS DE LA LEE he gave land called OKEHURST. (MORE OF THOMAS PRESENTLY). John de la Lee as succeeded by his oldest son, Sir John de Lee, who is shown by Eyton to have been succeeded by HIS son, Sir John de Lee, who was succeeded by HIS son, Sir Robert de Lee of Roden. He married Petronilla, a daughter of Roger Lee of Pimhill, by his wife, Joan, daughter of and heir of Edward Burnell of Aston Burnell, and Langley and was succeeded by HIS son: "Sir Ralph de Lee of Lee Hall, Langley Aston, Burnell, 1447. He married first Isabella, and second Isabella, a daughter of James Ridley, and died Dec. 14, 1479. Sir Ralph was succeeded by HIS son: "Sir Richard de Lee of Langley and married Margaret, daughter and heiress of Sir Fulke Sprenchose and had five sons and two daughters. He was succeeded by HIS son: "Sir Fulke Lee of Langley; married Alice, daughter of Sir Richard Cromwell, and secondly Elizabeth, daughter of John Leighton. He was succeeded by HIS son and heir: "Sir Thomas Lee of Langley and he married Jane, daughter of Sir Robert Morton and had five sons and seven daughters. He, Sir Richard Lee, died in 1591 and was succeeded by HIS oldest son: "Sir Richard Lee of Langley, who m. Eleanor, dau. Of Walter Wrottesley and had four sons and six daus. He, Sir Richard Lee, d. in 1591 and was s. by his oldest son: "Sir Humphrey Lee, J. J. of Langley and was created a Baronet by King James First of England, 1620. He married Margaret, daughter of Reginald Corbet and had one (1) son and four (4) daughters. He died in 1633 and was succeeded by His son: "Sir Richard Lee, Baronet of Langley, M. P. for Salop. He attended the King at Oxford and suffered much for the Royal Cause. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward Allen and died 1660 when the Baronetcy became extinct. (He had no son) and the Estates were divided between his TWO daughters—Rachel who married Ralph Clanton and Mary who married Edward Smythe, afterwards created a Baronet. "Return, please, to THOMAS DE LEE of Okehurst. Records of the second visitation make him the father of: "Roger Lee, who had a son; "Roger Lee who married Margaret, sister and heiress of Thomas Astley of Nordley, whose descent is given by Eyton from the time of King Henry First of England (b. 1068-1135) king from 1100-1135, the youngest and only "ENGLISH-BORN SON OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR—according to tradition, at Selby, Yorkshire. He warred with his brothers and for some time wandered as a landless man. Immediately after the death of his brother, William Rufus, with whom he had been hunting—he rode to Winchester, seized the Royal Treasure, and in the absence of his brother, Robert, then on his way home from Crusading in Palestine, was elected King by the Council, through the influence of the Earl of Warwick, and was crowned at Westminster. "The first visitation shows that Roger Lee, Margaret’s husband, was of the Second House, and it is probable that he was a son, and not a grandson, to THOMAS LEE OF OKEHURST, who died about 1419 and was succeeded by HIS son: "Sir John Lee who m. Jocosa (Joyce) Packingon and was s. by HIS son: "Sir John Lee of Nordley who married Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Thomas Corbine and was succeeded by his son: "Sir Thomas Lee of Nordley who m. Johanna, a dau. Of Robert Morton of Houghton and was s. by his son: "Sir Thomas Lee of COTTON HALL who married Katherine, daughter of John Blount of Eye and was succeeded by his son: "Sir John Lee of King’s Nordley who died 1605 married Jocosa (Joyce) a daughter of John Romney and had issue of EIGHT (8) sons. 1. Thomas Lee, the heir, died 1620 and HIS SON, Launcelot, succeeded him; 2. William Lee, born 1597, came to America, landing in theVa. Plantations in July 24, 1635, bought much land and died 1656, leaving everything to His oldest son by the same name. He came over in ship Assurance de Lo. See the ‘Original List of Emigrants From England to the Virginia Plantations’ from 1600-1700 by Hotton. Without this book I could not have made the link. William Lee, Gent, was granted 500 acres in Charles City County, on the south side of James River, Feb. 16, 1654. He had obtained much land before that, for he sold some land in 1636. Both he and Richard appear among those having headrights. William died 1656. No other grants were as large as these two. 3. Edward Lee, Clergyman 4. Gilbert Lee 5. Jasper Lee 6. Richard Lee. The genealogy of the family of Lee of Chester, Bucks and Oxon, showing the descent of Robert E. Lee from sir John Lee, knight. Burke says that there is no doubt that this Richard Lee, bearing the arms of this family, is the progenitor of the Robert Edward Lee line who figured in the Confederacy. Richard Lee, Gent, was granted 1,000 acres on the south side of Charles River, in York Co., Va. on August 10, 1642. Richard died in 1664. 7. Fernando Lee 8. Josias "The members of this Lee Family have served as High Sheriffs of Shropshire. Richard Lee had the arms of the Shropshire family. There is evidence at Queens College, Oxford, the Herald’s College, and in America. The descent of this Richard Lee II, Secretary of the State of Virginia 1659 was a son of Richard I, from the Shropshire Family, is attested by John Gibbon, Bluemantle, in 1682. "Our William Lee and his younger brother, Richard were examined by the minister of the Towne of Gravesend as to their conformity in Religion. He and Richard had both taken oaths of allegiance to the crown of England. "Sir John Lee died in 1605,leaving his beloved kinsman, Sir Humphrey Lee, overseer of his will. Sir John’soldest son, the heir, Thomas Lee of Coton, married Dorothy, daughter of Richard Oteley of Patchford, Shropshire. Issue was as follows: four sons and seven daughters Thomas Lee died 1620 and was succeeded by HIS oldest surviving son: "LAUNCELOT LEE of Coton Hall born 1594 and died 1667. Residence: Chantry, Frome, Somerset, England. The following members of this Family served as High Sheriffs of Shropshire. 1210 - Sir Reiner de Lee 1387 - Robert de Lee (Atty, in Blakeway’s list) 1395 - Sir Thomas Lee 1478 - Ralph Lee 1479 - Richard Lee 1639 - Richard Lee 1639 - Sir Richard Lee
~1212 - 1255
Richard
De
Corbett
43
43
1210 - ~1272
Lady
Petronella
De Booley
62
62
~1190 - ~1235
Richard
De
Corbett
45
45
~1192 - ~1239
Lady
Johanna De
Toret Morton
47
47
~1165 - ~1225
Lord
Richard
De Corbett
60
60
1142
Baron Thomas
"The Pilgrim"
De Corbett
~1116 - ~1165
Simon
De
Corbet
49
49
~1084 - ~1155
Baron
William De
Corbet
71
71
~1044 - 1134
Baron
Robert Fitz
Corbet
90
90
1020
Sir Hugo
De
Corbet
~1160
Batholomew
De
Toret
1230 - 1338
Stephen
De
Stanton
108
108
~1270
Joan
De
Wolvey
~1269 - 1294
Henry
De
Erdington
25
25
~1238
Maud
De
Somery
~1236 - 1282
Henry
De
Erdington
46
46
~1216 - 10 JAN 1268/69
Giles
De
Erdington
1190 - 20 MAR 1217/18
Thomas
De
Erdington
King John officially gave to Sir Thomas de Erdington on 3 Nov 1212 the manors of Wellington and Shawbury, and acknowledged the lansds which he had acquired at Montgomery, and the Manor of Badmondisfield Sufolk, acquired from Stephen de Stanton and his son Robert on 18 Jan 1214/15.
~1192 - ~1218
Rohese
De
Cocfelde
26
26
~1208 - 1273
Roger
De
Somery
65
65
~1210 - 1240
Nicole
D'Aubigny
30
30
~1332 - ~1372
Sir
Thomas
Astley
40
40
Elizabeth
De
Beauchamp
~1310 - 1366
Lord
Thomas
Astley
56
56
1773 - 1839
John
Todd
65
65
Father: John Todd b: ABT. 1773 Mother: Martha "Patsy" Collier Marriage 1 Nancy Ruth Lee Children Martha Ann Todd b: 16 FEB 1823 Elizabeth "Betty" Todd b: 1824 John Todd b: 1 JAN 1826 Marriage 2 Nancy Mills Children Joel Todd b: ABT. 1828 note jhll error by Nancy Ruth Lee. 1860 census show Joel Sr. with real estate value at 700 dollars and personal estate at $1300 . His age as 60, Nancy at 62 (this would be his second wife), Joel Jr. 21 personal estate at $85,. Also two females lived with them. Eliza Parker age 15 and Polly Foreman age 20 (perhaps the two black women that lived with them.) On the census the race is not marked. My uncle Lee told me that he remembers a black woman living with his grandfather Joel Jr., and that she reminded him of the lady on the Aunt Jemima syrup bottle. He also thought that she was a former slave that had belonged to the family and that when she was freed she stayed with the family. Joel was a member of John Gregg Fee's anti-slavery church. Cassius M Clay gave Fee a 10 acre homestead if he would take up residency and preach. He called this place Berea, after the town mentioned in Acts 17:10 where men were open minded and receptive to the gospel. This was the start of Berea College. In 1857-58 the mob spirit raged in Madison Co. Fee and others were threatened, but they conti nued to crusade for human rights. Hostility intensified by John Brown's raid at Harper's Ferry. Two days before Christmas, 62 armed men rode into J.R. Rodger's yard (he was another leader and preacher) and told them their group had 10 days to leave the state. When the Govenor refused their protection, their exodus began to Ohio on the 7th day. the group numbering 34 carried only their necessary posessions confident of their return. They returned in 6 months. Joel was one of the men who donated to Berea College. James Todd (Jim) has a copy of the marriage bond for Joel Todd and Nancy Lee dated March 29 , 1822 and signed by Joel Todd and Thomas Todd (from A Day of Small Things by Richard Sears - summarized by Thomas J. Todd) According to Richard D. Sears, historian and teacher at Berea College, Kentucky, Joel was a s upporter of the abolitionist "colony" near Berea under the leadership of John Gregg Fee. Fee was given a grant of land by Senator Marcius Cassius Clay to start just such an antislavery movement in Kentucky. Senator Clay felt that as long as Kentucky held slavery, its poor and middle class would be under employed. With all of the waterfalls, Clay felt the state had the same potential for industrial development as New England, but that "the stain of slavery" would keep capitol venture out. Fee made an impassioned speech against slavery at a Fourth of July celebration in Richmond in 1859. Most of the influential men in the crowd were slave holders. Fee, rising to the occasion, pro claimed that any government that allowed the ownership of human beings was a government unworthy of obedience. This was too strong for Senator Clay to stomach and he removed his protective support for Fee's group. Local slave holders were further incensed by Fee bringing "Yankee" school teachers from Ohi o into Madison Co. to teach children of all races. A committee of slave owners gave Fee and his followers ten days to leave Kentucky. the 1850 census for Madison Co. Dwelling 390, family 392 Joel Todd age 50 Farmer $1500 Real Estate born Madison Co. Nancy Todd age 53 born Madison Co. Irvin Todd age 22 born Madison Co. Newton Todd age 20 born Madison Co. Amanda Todd age 16, born Madison Co. Lucy Todd age 14 born Madison Co. Mary Todd age 13 born Madison Co. Joe Todd age 10, born Madison Co. Dwelling 391, family 393 John Todd age 25, Farmer $417 Real Estate born Madison Co. Martha Todd age 23, born Madison Co. Lucinda Todd 2, born Madison Co. There is also a Madison Todd on this same page Dwelling 348, Family 390 Madison age 42, Farmer $5970 Real Estate, born Madison Co. Sarah age 37 John M age 14 Mary E age 11 George age 9 James M age 7 Nancy age 5 Walter age 2 William age 1/12 James Fletcher age 24 Farmer all born in Madison Co. There was also a Baxter Todd on a previous page.
1782 - 1846
Martha
"Patsy"
Collier
64
64
~1708 - ~1795
Caleb
Todd
87
87
"Patented land in Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1742. Sold land to Lewis Enger in 1756 and Went to Rowan County, North Carolina. The name of his first wife is not known, but he is said to have married second Margaret Williams about 1766. They moved to Wilkes County, Georgia about the time Benjamin Todd, Sr. moved to Rowan County, North Carolina. By 1790 they had returned to Rowan County where on the census his household included besides himself two free males 16 and up, one free male under 16, and four free females. Apparently his household then included sons Joshua, Benjamin and John. His will dated 21 September 1794 (Book E, p. 30, Rowan County) was probated in 1796, with bequests to wife Margaret Todd and son Caleb Todd. Executors were sons Caleb Todd and Joshua Todd, witnesses Peter Todd and Thomas Todd." From Todd Roots in Madison County, Kentucky, p. 67.
1737
Margaret
Catherine
Williams
~1681 - 1721
Joshua
Todd
40
40
1645 - 1699
Joseph
Tudor
Todd
54
54
The "Todd Roots in Madison County, KY" book by Hubert W. & Geneva L. Cox has the following will which can be seen in Philadelphia, PA. There are three copies of this will and one is transcribed as follows by the Coxes: In the name of God, Amen. On the second day of March Anno Domis (1698). I, Joseph Todd of Eling, in the County of Southampton, being of sound memory, thanks be unto God for the same, and confessing the frailty and uncertainty of this life, do make this my Last Will Testament in manner and form following (that is to say), First of all, I resign my soul into the hands and protection of almighty God, my maker, and his forever, and my body I commit to the earth from whence it was made, and for my worldly goods, which God in mercy hath lent and bestowed upon me, I do give and bequeath unto my son, Joseph Todd, forty pounds of lawful money of England, the full value thereof to be paid in money or goods by my executor hereafter named as soon as he shall come to and attain the age of one and twenty years, and if it should happen that he should die before he shall attain unto the said age of one and twenty years, then his said portion of forty pounds be given and bequeathed to be and remain equally divided between and amongst those of my children then surviving as they shall attain the said age of one and twenty years due to be paid by my executor hereafter named. Item: I give and bequeath unto all children which now I have by my last wife, Joanne, twenty pounds apiece of lawful English money. That is to say, unto Joshua, twenty pounds, unto Caleb twenty pounds, unto Thomas twenty pounds, unto Elizabeth twenty pounds and unto Mary twenty pounds, and it is my will and meaning that Joanne, my said wife, whom I do make my executor of this my Last Will and Testament, should hand thereof of the said twenty pounds apiece last given and bequeath unto my said children, dividing (this line illegible) should marry another husband, that within one month after her marriage, the said portions of twenty pounds apiece last given and bequeathed unto my said children then to become due and then to be paid by my said executor without any further delay, and in case any one of my said children should die and leave this world before they receive the said portions, then my will and meaning is the said portion or portions of the deceased should be equally divided between the survivors of them and whereas by the said Joseph Todd, am engaged to pay unto Davy, the son of my brother, Daniel Todd, and unto James & Hester Bradshaw, the children of Elizabeth, my sister, when they should attain unto the age of one and twenty years, five pounds apiece when they should come of age to receive the same, and if either of my sister, Elizabeth's children, should die before they come to receive the said money, then his or her share due to dying to be paid unto the survivors of them. Lastly, all the residue of my money, goods, chattels and credits, I give unto my loving wife, Joane, whom I do make and appoint to be executor of this my Last Will and Testament, and also I do nominate, desire, and appoint John Swift, the older, John Swift, the younger, and Henry Abbot and Pete (Peter) Chamberlyne to be (assayers?) of my Last Will and Testament. In witness whereof I do unto set my hand and seal the day and year above written and sealed and delivered in the presence of John MacShane, Richard Chandler, Andrew Morgan. Joseph Todd /SS/ Signed, sealed and declared in the presence of John Worsham, Richard Chambers Andrew Worsom, witnesses. Probated 31st August 1700. Personally appeared before me, Patrick Robinson, Secretary of the Province of Penn, the will of Joseph Todd, deceased. The within named executor being and did execute unto the said office, the Last Will and Testament of the said declarer and did attest to being executor to pay the debts and legacies given and contained according to law. signed Patrick Robinson, Secretary. Will Book B of Will Books of Philadephia County 1699-1706. Daniel, Davy, and Elizabeth were still living in England when his will was probated in 1699. Per Charles CONNELLY: "Wills 1682-1726" p58 TODD, Joseph. Eling, Southamptonshire, England. March 2, 1698. August 31, 1700. B.63. Son by first wife Joseph. Children by second wife Joshua, Caleb, Thomas, Elizabeth, and Mary. Brother Daniel and son David. Sister Elizabeth Bradshaw and her children James and Hester. Friends John Swift Sr, John Swift Jr, Henry Abbott, and Peter Chamberlayne. Exec Wife Joane. Wit: John Worsham, Richard Chambers, Andrew Worsom. From: Rhian Watkins, Hampshire Record Office Subject: Eling Dear Mr Connelly, Thank you for your message. Kelly's Directory of 1939 states that, 'Eling is a parish and village near the head of Southampton Water, on the western side, one mile south from Totton, 5 west from Southampton, 6 south from Romsey and 86 from London, in the New Forest and Christchurch division of the county...... The old ecclesiasical parish of Eling was divided into six parishes, Eling, North Eling or Copythorne, Netley Marsh, Marchwood, Colbury and Testwood. Eling parish now only contains the village of Eling and the portion of Totton not contained in Testwood.......The parish registers date from 1538. ' You may also like to know that the County of Southampton was renamed Hampshire in the 1950s. I hope the above has been of some assistance. Yours sincerely, Miss R S Watkins (Archives Assistant
~1649 - 1700
Joanne
Bodycoat
Swift
51
51
John
Dodds
Nancy
Ann
Newton
1800
Elizabeth
Newton
1797 - <1874
Joseph
Newton
77
77
1805
Phineas
Newton
1883
Charles
Elmer
Newton
~1605 - 19 MAR 1677/78
John
Todd
Source: Blackman/Farmer Roots Bermuda 1677 Wills 1:250 Will made Mar 1 1677, proved Mar 26 1678 Joh Todd, of Southampton, widower children Mary, Amos Tudor, Henry, John Tudor, Joseph Tudor, Benjamin Tudor, Elizabeth (now Wethersby), Sarah (now Jackson). grandchildren of all but Mary and Henry. exec: Henry Durham, Thomas Richards wit: William Keele, Henry Onyon inventory included Note: pg 212 Mercer's "Bermuda Settlers of the 17th century" 1673, Book V(A) pg 468 Sep 1, 1673 I, Thomas Richards, being in England in 1651, discoursed with Joseph Todd, skinner, who lived in Walbrook and who told me that he had bought two shares land in Bermuda on which his brother John Todd should live and at his decease the same should go to his nephew, Joseph Todd, son of John Todd. Memorials of the Bermudas by Lefroy pg 401. John Todd held land in "Southampton Tribe, formerly part of ye twelve shares of Sr Nathaniell Rich. A tenement and two shares of land in his owne occupation Abutting at ye south end partly on ye south side sea and partly uppon a parcell of common land there. And at ye north end upon a bay called ____, Lying betweene ye lands last before entred of Capt Wm Sayle to ye eastwards and ye ffree-schoole land to ye westwards cont." Memorials of the Bermudas by Lefroy Volume II pg 7 Letter from the Committee in London to Captain Josias Forster London 1 Jan 1649/1650 "Wee have chosen & appoynted Mr John Todd to be marshall in the roome of Mr John Stowe and requier you and the Govrnor & Councell forthwith to see the s'd John Todd invested in the same wth all the emunityes belonging to the said place for wch wee have sent here with him a commission." ...signed by Nath Rich, Owen Rowe, Joseph Todd, John Oxenbridge, Leonard Ward, Isaak Rowe pg 41 Order of Council of State, 21 May 1653. Interegnum Entry Book, vol xcvii CP pg 402 " The petition of Leonard Ward and Joseph Todd on behalf of the well affected of the company of the Somers Islands is referred to the Committee for that business.". pg 42 Order of the Council of State, 25th June 1653. Domestic Entry Book. Interregnum No 97 pg 411 " That a comission be granted to Cornelius Holland Esqre, Colonell Owen Rowe, Sr Thomas Wroth, Francis Alleyn Esqre, Dr Aaron Gourdon, Maurice Thomson Esqre, Mr Wm Jessop, Mr John Oxenbridge, Mr Edward Pead, Mr Leonard Ward, Mr Joseph Tod, Mr George Turberville, Mr george Prynn, Mr Edward Carter, Mr Elias Roberts, Mr Mathew Batson, and Mr Nathaniel Hawes, or any of the three or more of them, whereof the Governor or Deputy to be one, To be a Company for the governing and carrying on the affairs of the Somer Islands als Bermudas, and to have the same powers and privileges as the former Company had."
~1620
Elizabeth
Paynter
~1570
William
Tod
Hampshire Record entries designated the "Tod" spelling, which probably means that this William's family possibly migrated from Scotland or Ireland to England. This was the only Tod/Todd family in the area of Eling in the 1600's. Name found on the baptismal record for Joseph and Benjamin Todd, per Ran Rader. Other sources list his name as John Todd (Darla McDonald). It should be noted that the name of William does not appear among known grandchildren (children of John), which was and still is quite common among the Todd family. This confusion may make it impossible to determine which Todd lines to go through from here. The Todd lines of Denton Parish, County Durham (William "Gulialmus" Todd) may be tied in here, or possibly the lines in Yorkshire (Reginal Todd). There is not enough data to go beyond this at this time. Sources for Todd family info: Rirsch, David. Todd Family of Eling, Southampshire, England, Philadephia and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and Rowan County, North Carolina, Madison County, Kentucky, Butler and Howard Counties, Missouri and Others. Privately Published. Original manuscript in the Mo Valley Room, Mid-continent Branch, Kansas City, Missouri Public Library. Donated by Betty I. Smith Silfies. Sears, Richard. A Utopian Experiment in Kentucky: Integration and Social Equality at Berea, 1866-1904. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1996. Todd Roots in Madison County, Kentucky.
~1575
Mary
Tudor
From notes of Claude C. Todd 1969, Springfield, Missouri-Joplin Public Library, Joplin, Missouri, she is noted as being descended from the House of Tudor. Following leads from this, I am led to Robert Tudor whom I am quite confident is the grandson of Jasper Tudor, but this confidence is muted in that I cannot find the names of Jaspers children to verify the data.
~1550
Owen
ap
Tudor
~1510
Tudor
ap
Robert
~1525
Jane
Vielville
~1486 - ~1525
Robert
Tudor
39
39
Maraded
ferch
Gruffydd
1431 - 1495
Jasper "of
Hatfield"
Tudor
64
64
~1445 - ~1525
Katherine
Wydeville
80
80
~1397 - 4 FEB 1460/61
Owen
Tudor
1401 - 3 JAN 1436/37
Catherine
De
Valois
Merredudd
ap
Tudor
Margaret
Fychan
D. 1367
Fychan
Tudor
Margaret
D. 1331
Goronwy
ap
Tudor
Captian of 20 Archers at Aquitaine.
Gwervyl
D. 1311
Tudor Hen
ap Grono of
Penmynedd
Built the priory of Bangor.
Angharad
Fychan
D. 1268
Goronwy
ap Ednyfed
Fychan
Morfydd
D. 1246
Ednyfed
Fychan ap
Kendrig
Gwenellian
Kendrig
ap
Iorwerth
Angahared
Iorwerth
ap
Gwgan
Gwenillian
Gwgan
ap
Idnerth
Edryd
ap
Nathen
Nathen
ap
Jafeth
Jafeth
ap
Karwedh
Karwedh
ap
Marchudd
Marchudd
ap
Cynan
Cynan
ap
Elevan
Elevan
ap
Mor
Mor
ap
Mynan
Mynan
ap
Yspwys
Yspwys
ap
Cadrod
Cadrod ap
Cynwyd
Calchfynydd
Cynwyd
ap
Cynfyln
Cynfyln
ap
Arthwys
Arthwys
ap
Mar
~0410
Mar
ap
Ceneu
~0335
Ceneu
ap
Coal
~0360
Coal
Hen
Tehvant
Urban
Ririd
ap
Pasgen
Pasgen
Hwfa
ap
Kendrig
Gwenillian
Ieven ap
Owain
Gwynedd
D. 1116
Owain
Gwynedd
ap Gruffydd
1368 - 1422
Charles VI "the
Beloved" de
Valois of France
53
53
~1371
Isabelle
Wittlesbach
of Bavaria
21 JAN 1336/37 - 1380
Charles V
"the Wise"
of France
Joan
De
Bourbon
1319 - 8 MAR 1363/64
John II de Valois
"the Good" of
France
Bonne
of
Luxemburg
1293 - 1350
Phillip VI
de Valois
of France
57
57
Joan
of
Burgandy
12 MAR 1169/70 - 1325
Charles III
de Valois
of France
Margaret
of
Anjou
1245 - 1285
Phillip III le Hardi
"the Bold" of
France
40
40
Isabelle
of
Aragon
Margaret
Berenger of
Provence
1214 - 1270
Louis IX (St.
Louis) Capet
of France
56
56
1187 - 1226
Louis VIII
"the Lion"
of France
39
39
Blanca
of
Castile
1165 - 1223
Phillipe II
"Augustus"
Capet of France
57
57
Isabelle
of
Hainault
1119 - 1180
Louis VII "the
Younger" Capet
of France
61
61
Alix of
Champaigne
1081 - 1137
Louis VI
"the Fat"
of France
56
56
Adelaide
of
Maurienne
1052 - 1108
Philip I the
Fair of
France
56
56
Bertha
of
Holland
1008 - 1060
Henry
I of
France
52
52
Anna Agressa
Yaroslavna of
Kiev
27 MAR 972 - 1031
Robert II Capet
"The Pious"
King of France
[Neet3.FTW] Believed to have married Bertha of Burgundy (962-1010), widow of Count Eudes I of Chartes. If so, be probably married her after 1003 and married Constance of Toulouse about 1010. In this case, the children of Robert II are not associated with the proper mother. More research is needed here.
~0973 - 1032
Constance
of Arles
Tolouse
59
59
Alice
Harrison
1826
Gilbert
Griswold
1817 - 1899
Lester
Griswold
82
82
1831 - 1928
Charles
Perry
Griswold
97
97
From: Compendium of History and Biography of Central and Northern Minnesota (Chicago, Geo. A. Ogle & Co., 1904), pages 636-39. Charles P. Griswold, a wealthy and influential farmer and land-owner of the township of Minnesota Falls, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota, has found a way to a large success, and his career shows what is repeated again and again in the lives of the settlers of the northwest that character and integrity, industry and thrift are indeed the dominant elements of every successful career. Mr. Griswold was born in Oswego County, New York, in 1831, and his father, Daniel, was a farmer and lumberman of old Yankee blood. His mother, Mary (Genet) Griswold, also came of good American stock. Charles P. Griswold was the youngest in a family of ten children. In 1832 the removal of his parents carried him to Pennsylvania, where he lived until he was thirty-one years old. There he married Jane Braughton, who came of Dutch descent on her mother's side, and was Yankee by her father's people. To this marriage were born ten children, eight of whom are now living: Bert; Jessie, a widow; Sadie, a widow; Pennie, married; Elmer, dead; Eland, Herbert; Mattie, who is a widow, and Estella, a widow. While in Pennsylvania Mr. Griswold was farming and lumbering, and when he came to Caadonia, in March, 1862, he followed farming. Late in 1865 he settled in Redwood Falls, and was one of the earliest pioneers of that city. In 1887 he came to Yellow Medicine County, making his home for three years at Minnesota Falls, where he owned a lumber yard. For a year and a half he owned and carried on a drug store in Granite Falls, having already owned a drug store in Minnesota Falls. About 1883 he settled on a farm in section 10, Minnesota Falls township, the land being entirely unimproved at that time. He put up a board shanty, and gradually improved year by year, until he now owns a magnificent estate of eight hundred acres. Here he devotes much attention to stock, having one hundred and seventy-five head on the place now. His buildings are banked on the banks of the Minnesota River, and the place is very sightly. Last year he sold about seventy-five dollars' worth of apples, and he has plums, strawberries, currents, etc., coming right along, and the place will soon be as noted for its fruit as it now is for its stock. Mr. Griswold is a Republican, has been assessor, and has also held various school offices, taking a leading part in local affairs, and it is worthy of note that he was assessor when Lyons, Lincoln, Lac-qui-parle, Redwood and Yellow Medicine counties, were all included in Redwood county. He was also sheriff of Redwood county before it was divided, also deputy sheriff one term. Portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Griswold will be found on another page of this volume.
1787 - 1863
Daniel
Griswold
76
76
Richard
Courtney
Daniel
Williams
1748 - 1821
Mildred
"Miley"
Vaughan
73
73
~1742 - 1821
John
Collier
79
79
1696 - 1747
Mildred
Washington
51
51
1690 - 1744
Colonel
Henry
Willis
54
54
1884 - 1959
George
Wiley
Newton
75
75
Ollie T.
Stockdale
1884 - 1884
Samuel
Glover
Newton
1885 - 1942
Charles
Isaac
Newton
57
57
1887 - 1888
Clarence
Erwin
Newton
1
1
1889 - 1927
Mary
Jane
Newton
38
38
1891 - 1968
Elisha
Hutison
Newton
77
77
Hazel
E.
Evans
1893 - 1918
Albert
Ethan
Newton
25
25
Buna
Elizabeth
Casey
1895 - 1962
Robert
Franklin
Newton
67
67
Rosa
Nelle
Lyon
1896 - 1896
Johnny
Monroe
Newton
1898 - 1981
Julia
Earnest
Newton
83
83
1900 - 1992
Lillie
Ann
Newton
92
92
James
Harvey
Maxwell
1903 - 1988
Edna
May
Newton
85
85
1867
Theodosia
Earnest
Richardson
John
Collins
Thomas
Purdom
Richardson
1827
John
Newton
1834
James
Newton
1838
David
Newton
1840
Sarah
Newton
~1740 - 1791
Captain
William
Scott
51
51
1659 - 1699
Lawrence
Washington
39
39
1670 - 1701
Mildred
Warner
31
31
1630 - 1677
John
Washington
47
47
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- JOHN WASHINGTON HISTORY, 1631 to 1677 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Born into comfort and wealth John Washington was born in 1631 - 2 most likely in the Parish Purleigh, in Northern England. His parents Lawrence and Amphillis Twigden enjoyed the comforts of life near the rural village of Sulgrave. His father Lawrence was both a scholar and a cleric. The Washington ancestral home of Sulgrave Manor, situated near Banbury and about 30 miles from both Stratford-upon-Avon and Oxford, was a palatial home. The family's comfortable life was established by John's grandfather Lawrence Washington in 1539 based on his wealth as a wool merchant and his position as Mayor of Northampton during the reign of King Henery VIII. The Washingtons were Royalists and property owners, which placed them in the upper classes of English society. At the age of 8 years in 1640, young John Washington was enrolled in a prestigious education program at Sutton's Hospital in London based on a nomination by King Charles I of England. His future looked very promising. English civil war and Washington family despair From 1642-48 a conflict between King Charles I of England and large body of his subjects known as parliamentarians led by the zealous Oliver Cromwell erupted. King Charles was overthrown and executed on the chopping block at the hands of an ax wielding and masked executioner. Oliver Cromwell set about to establish a republican Commonwealth or a legal rule by the masses. The parliamentary army turned on any English citizen allied with the King. Unfortunately this included the Washingtons. The countryside was turned upside down, property was seized, some churches and graves desecrated. The Washington home at Sulgrave was seized after 120 years of ownership. The Washingtons were forced out of their comfortable life style. Lawrence and Amphillis Twigden were forced to move from the Parish Purleigh to the lesser Parish of Littled Braxted, Essex. John's promising education and comfortable future abruptly ended. In 1655 as a young adult, John Washington had no other option, but to seek success and attempt to continue the Washington family level of wealth elsewhere. He departed England with his brother-in-law Edward Prescott by sail ship in route to the young colonies in the Americas. It is ironic that John's great-grandson George Washington would embrace the exact opposite of what forced John from Great Britain- popular rule versus a monarchy. Arriving in the Virginia Colony John Washington and Edward Prescott arrived in Virginia in 1655 and in the next year or so travel as merchants between England and the Virginia Colony. During one of the later voyages their ship was wrecked in a storm. With the life of a merchant loosing its appeal, John Washington abandoned his partnership and remained in the Virginia Colony. The two partners embarked on a period of conflict and accusations. Prescott sought legal remedy against John Washington for his abandonment of their partnership and the subsequent loss of capital. At one point John Washington, in a Maryland court, retaliated by accusing Prescott of a witch hanging aboard his ship. John's Fortunes turned for the better when he is befriended by Nathaniel Pope, a well seated land owner in Westmoreland County, Virginia. Pope financially bailed young Washington out of his debts, and assisted him in severing ties with Prescott. Pope grew very fond of John and eventually John married Nathaniel Pope's daughter Ann. For their wedding present Nathaniel gave his new son-in-law John Washington and his bride Ann Pope Washington 700 acres of land on Mattox Creek (approximately 5 miles from the present National Monument). John Washington becomes land rich in Virginia John Washington built a home on Mattox creek and began his new life with his lovely bride Ann. In 1659 and 1660 he purchased an additional 1,000 acres to his already luxurious 700 acres at Mattox Creek. John takes advantage of the "headright" system where by an English land owner in the Virginia colony would receive 50 acres for every indentured servant he agreed to receive in the colony. In 1664 John purchased acreage at Bridges Creek where he made his permanent home. His largest single purchase was in 1674 at Hunting Creek across the Potomac River from the "Piscataway Indian Towne" in Maryland. This land would obtain everlasting fame as the location for Mount Vernon. By 1668 and in a span of 10 years, John Washington by use of headright and shrewd investment had amassed his land holdings to 5,000 acres. For a man in late 30s, John had reclaimed the Washington position that was lost during the oppressive English Civil War. Yet, this new and resurrected Washington family legacy was now in a wide open, untamed, and largely unexplored America. Prominent citizen and family man John Washington dedicated himself to his new wife Ann Pope Washington. The two had 4 children. Lawrence their eldest son was born in 1659, with John II following in 1661, Ann in 1662, and a child unknown to historians (dying in childhood) most likely born in 1663. Soon thereafter, John Washington and family established a home a Bridges Creek. With John enjoying the comforts of family life, and the prosperity of farming and land ownership, he began to rise as a leader of Westmoreland County. He was elected as county judge and coroner. This post was offered only to the leading members of the community. Interestingly, other prominent members of the Westmoreland court (over a period of years) would include James Monroe's father and grand father, as well as Robert E. Lee's grand father, and uncles. Many Washington descendants would continue this family honor as well. As a dedicated member of the Church of England, John Washington also served as vestryman in the local Episcopal parish which would eventually be renamed in his honor - Washington Parish. John received a commission in the Virginia Militia and would rise to the rank of Colonel. All of this civic honor would culminate with John Washington's appointment to the Virginia House of Burgesses. His service in Jamestown would lead to a friendship with Virginia Governor Berkley. John Washington made his permanent home at Bridges Creek (located at George Washington Birthplace NM). Bacon's Rebellion and the seizure of John's home In 1675 raids by the Doeg (Dogue) Indians began to plague Virginia plantations, especially on the frontier of the colony. Compounding this problem was frustration by lower income planters towards trade with indians. Bacon's Rebellion occurred when this seizable group of Virginians attempted to seize or stop trade with Indians. Governor Berkley supported the trade with the Indians (some believe he privately profited from such trade). At the request of the Govenor, Colonel John Washington was called to arms to investigate indian raids on the Northern Potomac. Leading a unit of Virginia militia, Colonel John Washington met with Maryland militia members. The armed men were met by a couple of Dogue tribe members seeking to avoid bloodshed. The site of the encounter is believed to be modern day Washington D.C. Colonel Washington welcomed a peaceful solution, but before progress could be had, members of the Maryland Militia proceeded to execute the Indians. There is some evidence that the indian raids were carried out by members of the Seneca tribe who were willing to blame to the Dogues. With some justice given to the indians, the Marylanders were punished. While Colonel Washington was quelling Indian conflicts, his home a Bridge Creek was overtaken by Bacon supporters led by Daniel White who physically constrained servants from loading or selling any tobacco or other trade items. By 1676 Bacon's rebellion failed, and Daniel White was ousted by John Washington from Bridges Creek. White was handed over the courts for proper trial. There is some evidence that he was hanged for his misdeeds. End of an era for John and Ann John Washington left three children from his marriage to Anne Pope upon his death in 1677. Lawrence, the eldest, married Mildred and had three children, including the second son Augustine. This particular Washington produced eleven children by marriages to two wives. By his first marriage to Jane Butler, there were four children, including Lawrence the oldest surviving son. His second marriage was to Mary Ball, an orphan, who was raised by a family friend, George Eskeridge. This marriage produced seven children. The first born was George who was named for Mary Ball's guardian. Ann Pope died about the time of John's dispatch with the militia. Luckily the Washington children were in their teen years and were able to take care of themselves probably somewhere removed from Bridges Creek (perhaps in England). John remarried a second time to Ann Gerrad who soon thereafter died, and then John married a third time to Ann's sister Frances. Two years after Ann Pope's death, and perhaps only a year after the short marriage to Ann Gerrad and later Frances Gerrad, John Washington died at Bridges Creek in 1677 at the age of 46. Source: http://www.nps.gov/gewa/historypage.htm http://www.sar.org/sarmag/GW.html.
~1634 - 1667
Anne
Pope
33
33
1601 - JAN 1652/53
Lawrence
Washington
The fifth son of Lawrence and Margaret Butler Washington was the Reverend Lawrence born in 1602 at Sulgrave. His education was from Brasenose College, Oxford, obtaining B.A., M.A. and B.D. degrees while serving as proctor and lector. Following the granting of the B.D. degree in 1632, Lawrence became rector of Purleigh, Essex in 1633. This was a wealthy parish and allowed him to marry AmphIlys Twigden who was the heiress of John Twigden. She was living with her mother Anne and stepfather - a Mr. Roades - who subsequently died. Her mother then married Andrew Knolinge who became godfather to Amphyllis' second son, Lawrence. John was the first son with another son William and daughters Elizabeth, Mary and Martha. As a result of the royalist connections of the family, Reverend Lawrence was turned out of his Purleigh parish and sent to Little Braxter near Maldon, Essex which provided a poor living. The family became impoverished and Amphyllis and the children sought refuge with Andrew Knolinge while Lawrence was in disfavor. At the death of Knolinge, his estate was divided between His wife's children and grandchildren, with Lawrence, his godson, receiving the residue. However, Amphyllis subsequently died intestate. John, the eldest son, and Lawrence successfully sued in London to restore Andrew Knolinge's estate. These funds allowed the brothers to invest in trade with the colonies.
2 FEB 1601/02 - 19 JAN 1654/55
Amphyllis
Twigden
~1568 - 1616
Lawrence
Washington
48
48
The marriage of Lawrence in the late 1500s to Margaret Butler brought a connection to the Plantagenet line.
~1568 - ~1652
Margaret
Butler
84
84
~1544 - 10 MAR 1622/23
Robert
Washington
~1544 - ~1599
Elizabeth
Light
55
55
~1500 - 19 FEB 1583/84
Lawrence
Washington
~1520 - 1564
Amy
Pargiter
44
44
~1478 - ~1528
John
Washington
50
50
Built Sulgrave Manor, the ancestral home of George Washington, first President of the United States. Much of the prosperity of the early Washington's was through marriages in the male line to wealthy widows. These marriages brought increased landholdings and greater status. Through John Washington's marriage to Margaret Kytson was brought a connection to the Spencer line which produced the future Sir Winston Churchill.
1482
Margaret
Kytson
~1455 - 1528
Robert
II
Washington
73
73
Elizabeth
Westfield
1405 - 1483
Robert
Washington
78
78
Margaret
~1385 - ~1423
John
De
Washington
38
38
~1340 - 1408
John
De
Washington
68
68
~1350
Joan
De
Croft
~1300 - ~1347
Robert
De
Washington
47
47
~1300
Agnes
le
Gentyl
~1288 - 1324
Robert
De
Washington
36
36
~1280
Joan
De
Strickland
~1237 - ~1289
William
De
Washington
52
52
~1247
Margaret
De
Morville
~1212 - ~1266
Juliana
De
Witchester
54
54
~1212 - 1264
Walter
De
Washington
52
52
~1191 - ~1239
William
De
Washington
48
48
~1191 - ~1240
Alice
De
Lexington
49
49
~1150
William
De
Wessinton
Of manor of Washington near Sunderland, Durham, England --grant of this manor in exchange for Hartburn, Stockton from Hugh du Puiset, Bishop of Durham ca.1180 (Burke's Presidental families) Work suggests descended from Crinan, hereditary lay abbot of Dunkeld and wife Bethoe, daughter of MalcolmII, King of Scots, through Sir William de Hertburn (hartburn) alias de Wessington.
Margaret
of
Richmond
Henry
of
Northumberland
Robert
De
Morville
Ranulf
le
Gentyl
Robert
Kitson of
Warton
1490 - 31 JAN 1557/58
Robert
Pargiter
ANCESTORS OF ALDEN SMITH SWAN AND HIS WIFE MARY ALTHEA FARWELL, by Josephine C. Frost, The Hills Press, New York, MCMXXIII, page 247, 248. Robert Pargiter of Grytworth, County Northampton, made his will Feb 4, 1557, proved Jan. 31, 1558, wherein he requests bruial within the church of Grytworth, in St. Katherine's Isle. He made his son-in-law, Lawrence Washington, supervisor of his will. The Herald's Visitation of Northamptonshire in 1564 shows that Robert Pargiter was son of Richard and Anne (Coles) Pargiter, and that Anne Coles was the daughter of Richard Coles of Preston in the same county. Anne, the wife of Robert Pergiter, was daughter of John Knight of Carlton. NEW ENGLAND REGISTER, Vol. 43, page 398,420. Vol. 45, page 62. Vol. 47, page 267-271.
~1588
William
Butler
~1588
Margaret
Greeke
~1581 - ~1611
John
Twigden
30
30
~1582 - 1637
Anne
Dickens
55
55
~1561
Thomas
Twigden
~1553 - ~1582
William
Dickens
29
29
~1555 - 1614
Anne
Thornton
59
59
~1535
Henry
Thornton
~1537
Anne
Wilmer
~1614 - 1660
Nathaniel
Pope
46
46
1611 - 1660
Lucy
Fox
49
49
1642 - 1681
Augustine
II
Warner
38
38
1643 - 1686
Mildred
Reade
43
43
1611 - 1674
Augustine
Warner
63
63
1614 - 1662
Mary
Townley
48
48
Mary Townley (1614-1662), the sixth daughter of Laurence Townley of Stonehedge and Jennet Halstead is shown in the evidence of 1664 to have married Augustine Warner of Norwich, gent. Augustine Warner (1611-1674) emigrated to Virginia in 1628 and it seems that Mary Townley joined him in 1638. Her uncle Henry Townley (1571-1626) had an ecclesiastical position in Norfolk and a number of his relations settled in Norwich which may explain the link between the two families. There appears to have been a regular emigration of people from East Lancashire in the following years. It is important to realise that land was granted to those who could import others to Virginia in the 17th century and so they encouraged their friends and relations. Laurence Smith, born in Burnley in March 1629, who was a nephew of Mary Townley went to Virginia in 1652. In 1656 and 1657 he was granted land for bringing in others. Sometime before October 1672 the fourth Laurence Townley of Stone Edge went to Virginia to marry Sarah Warner, daughter of Augustine and Mary Warner. His brother John may have gone at the same time because he was granted land in Virginia in 1676. Many of the Towneleys of Virginia who are alive today are descended from this John Townley. Further information on the Townleys of Virginia can be found in two articles by Mary Burton Derrickson McCurdy in the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography Vol. 77 no. 4 for October 1969 ("A discovery concerning the Townley and Warner families of Virginia") and Vol. 81 no. 3 for July 1973 ("The Townleys and Warners of Virginia and their English connections"). The old home of the Warner family, Warner Hall with the Warner graveyard where Mary Towneley Warner is buried, is now owned by the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities. page 22 Tracing the Towneleys Version 3.1 www.burnley.gov.uk/towneley
~1570 - 12 FEB 1653/54
Laurence
III
Townley
1590 - 1623
Jennet
Halstead
33
33
1540 - 19 JAN 1597/98
Laurence
II
Towneley
~1547
Mary or
Margaret
Hartley
~1510 - 1566
Laurence
Towneley
56
56
~1511
Hellen
Hesketh
1458 - 1531
Henry
Towneley
73
73
~1426 - 1530
Laurence
Towneley
104
104
Joan
1415 - ~1473
John
De
Towneley
58
58
~1422 - ~1462
Isabella
Sherburne
40
40
~1387
Richard
De
Towneley
Alice
~1384
Richard
Sherburne
~1384
Matilda
Hamerton
~1489 - 1523
Thomas
Hesketh
34
34
~1490
Alice
Haward
~1554
John
Hartley
~1575 - 1635
John II
Halstead
60
60
~1573 - 1621
Mary
Greenwood
48
48
~1535 - 1632
John
Halstead
97
97
~1560 - 1636
Marry
Sellars
76
76
1509 - 1582
Oliver
Halstead
73
73
1530
Ann
Barcroft
1485 - ~1570
Lawrence
Halstead
85
85
Hester
1460
Oliver
Halstead
1435
William
Halstead
~1415
Robert
Halstead
~1385
John
Halstead
~1355
Eli De
Hallstedes
~1329
Roger
De
Hallstedes
~1272
William
De la
Hallstedes
~1218
Hallstedes
~1150
Ralph
Halstead
~1133 - ~1189
Richard
Halstead
56
56
~1100
Halsted
1608 - ~1674
George
Reade
66
66
George Reade came to America in 1637, staying at first with Governor Harvey at Jamestown. In 1640 he was Secretary to the Colony of Virginia. Later he became a Burgess and a Colonel of the Militia. His maternal grandmother is descended from various kings of England, Ireland, Scotland, and elswhere, supposedly tracing back to King David of Israel.
1625 - 1685
Elizabeth
Matiau
60
60
~1584 - ~1630
Mildred
Windebank
46
46
~1583 - ~1627
Robert
Reade
44
44
1565 - 1605
Alice
Cooke
40
40
1551 - 1623
Andrew
Reade
72
72
Andrew settled the manor of Linkenholt, Hants. In 1600, on his son, Robert. His will was made 16 Oct 1621, and it was probated 24 Oct 1623.
~1565 - 1607
Thomas
Windebank
42
42
Clerk of the Signet to Queen Elizabeth and James I for many years. Roberts will was dated December 10, 1626.
~1566
Frances
Dymoke
~1546 - 1666
Edward
Dymoke
120
120
Anne
Talbois
~1460 - 1544
Robert
Dymoke
84
84
~1470
Jane
Sparrow
1428 - 12 MAR 1469/70
Thomas
Dymoke
Margaret
De
Welles
1591 - 1657
Nicolas
Matiau
66
66
Jane
1694 - 1743
Augustine
Washington
49
49
1707 - 1789
Mary
Ball
82
82
22 FEB 1731/32 - 1799
General George
Eskridge
Washington
Height: 6’2” Ancestry: English Religion: Episcopalian Important dates in his life 1732 (Feb. 22) Born at Wakefield on Pope’s Creek Farm in Westmoreland County, Virginia. Was actually born on 2/11/1732, but when the American colonies switched from the Julian to the Gregorian calender, Washington's birthday was switched to February 22 (all dates were switched 11 days to make up for a failure to mesh with the calender and the actual rotation of the Earth around the sun). 1747 Became a surveyor after leaving school at fourteen or fifteen 1753 Took oath as major in Virginia militia 1753-54 Carried message to French in western Pennsylvania warning them to leave Ohio valley 1754 (July 4) Forced to surrender Fort Necessity to French forces 1754-58 Fought in French and Indian War, rising to rank of colonel in command of Virginia militia 1759 (January 6) Married Martha Dandridge Custis 1759-1774 Member of Virginia House of Burgesses 1770 Justice of the Peace of Fairfax County, Virginia 1774-75 Member of Virginia’s delegation to First and Second Continental Congresses 1775-83 Commander of Continental Army throughout Revolutionary War 1787 President of Constitutional Convention that drew up Constitution of the US 1789-97 First President of the United States of America 1798 (July 4) Commissioned lieutenant general and commander in chief of the US Army when war threatened France 1799 (December 14) Died at Mount Vernon, Virginia Important date of his administration 1789 -Congress created the Departments of State, Treasury, and War and created the offices of Attorney General and Postmaster General -(June 1) Signed the first act concerning the administration of oaths -(Sept. 24) the Judiciary Act was passed creating the Supreme Court, John Jay was appointed first Chief Justice -(Nov. 21) North Carolina became the 12th State admitted to the Union 1790 Feb. 1, the Supreme Court held its first session -(Mar 1) the first national census was conducted to determine taxation and congressional representation of the states -(May 29) Rhode Island becomes the 13th state admitted to the Union -A site along the Potomac River was approved by Congress as the permanent Capital, later named Washington, DC 1791 -The President’s cabinet held its first meeting -Alexander Hamilton, Sec. of the Treasury, proposed a nation economic plan which led to the creation of the first national bank to handle government finances -(Mar. 4) Vermont became the 14th state admitted to the Union -(Dec. 15) Congress passed the Bill of Rights 1792 -Political parties began to develop in the US-Federalists and Democratic-Republicans -Congress established a national mint -(Jun 1) Kentucky became the 15th state admitted to the Union -Elected to a second term 1793 -Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin -Begins second term -(Apr 22) issued the Proclamation of Neutrality, keeping the US out of the Nepolionic Wars -Edmont Genet, a French Minister, was relieved of his duty for violating the Proclamation of Neutrality -(Sept. 18) Washington laid the cornerstone of the US Capitol in Washington, DC 1794 -Major General Anthony Wayne defeated a band of 2,000 Indians at Fallen Timbers Indians then surrender Ohio Valley -Whiskey Rebellion, US troops show the strength of the Central Government -(Nov. 19) Jay’s Treaty signed -Congress authorized the formation of the US Navy 1795 -John Rutledge was appointed as the second Chief Justice of the Supreme Court -First stone road created -(Feb. 7) the 11th Amendment was ratified -(Oct. 27) Pinckney’s Treaty was signed, establishing commercial relations with Spain and fixed the southern boundary at the 31st parallel 1796 (Jun. 1) Tennessee became the 16th state admitted to the Union. George Washington was born Feb. 22(Feb. 11 by the Old Style Calendar) 1732. He was the eldest child and when he was two, his family moved from his birthplace, Wakefield on Pope’s Creek Farm in Westmoreland County, Virginia, to a new farm about fifty miles north along the Potomac River to a new plantation which later would become part of Mount Vernon. When he was six, his father, Augustine, decided to move again, to be nearer to the ironworks which he had a part interest. This time the move brought the family to the east bank of the Rappahannock River. This is the place where George grew up enjoying hunting, fishing, and horseback riding. Augustine died when George was 11, leaving an estate of around 10,000 acres and fifty slaves. Most of the inheritance went to George’s older half-brother Lawrence Washington. George would receive Ferry Farm as his share when he turned twenty-one. Mary Ball Washington, George’s mother, was left to raise George and his five younger siblings. It is not exactly known how much formal education George Washington had as a child. It is unsure as to whether he was tutored by an indentured servant or if he went to a school in Fredericksburg, across the Rappanhannock. Although he was never a scholar, George had respect for books, once saying, “I conceive a knowledge of books is the basis upon which other knowledge is to be built.” He did, however, write extensively in diaries and letters, which provided a great source of information about his life and beliefs. George worshipped his older brother Lawrence. He spent much of his time at Mount Vernon, which Lawrence had built and named for an Admiral he served under in a brief war with Spain in the 1740s. Lawrence wanted George to join the British navy, but Mary would not give her consent. At age fifteen, George saw a need for additional family income. Under the management of his mother, Ferry Farm was gaining more debt than income. As a result, George dusted off a set of surveyors tools his father had owned, and became an assistant surveyor. When he was 16 he helped survey the huge landholdings of Lord Fairfax, a relative of Lawrence’s wife, in the wilderness of Western Virginia. In 1749, he was appointed official surveyor of Culpeper County. With this new income, George started a practice he would continue throughout his life, the purchasing of land. Through this practice, George would become one of the largest landholders in the country. When George was nineteen, he accompanied Lawrence to Barbados, a trip which Lawrence took to help his health. While there, George was seriously attacked by smallpox. This would be the last time George would leave the shores of America. After returning from Barbados, George fell in love with a 16 year old named Betsy Fauntleroy. But to George’s dismay, she repeatedly rejected his proposals. An extremely sad day in George’s life came in 1752 when Lawrence Washington succumbed to the fatal effects of tuberculosis. Lawrence made clear in his will, that Mount Vernon should go to George if his only daughter, Sarah, was to die without any children--an event that occurred two years later. In an effort to emulate his beloved Lawrence, George applied to the governor of Virginia for an appointment as adjutant in the militia, a post which Lawrence had held. The governor appointed George as adjutant to the southern part of the colony. On Feb. 1, 1753, he was sworn in as a major in the Virginia militia, at 20 years old he had more ambition and less military knowledge than most of the men he was to command. That same fall George learned from a friend that Governor Robert Dinwiddle was planning to send a warning message to the French, who had invaded the Ohio River Valley. George realized this as a chance of a lifetime to see the Western Frontier and so he hurried to the capital to volunteer his services as messenger and was gladly accepted. He set out on Oct. 31, 1753, collecting supplies, horses, and a party of six frontiersmen along the way. He made the 1,000 mile round trip to the French Fort Le Boeuf on Lake Erie in the face of extreme cold, snow, and unfriendly Indians. Once he had to swim for his life in a flooded river among chunks of ice; he was shot at by an Indian; and he was forced to walk hundreds of miles when his horses became too tired. The message Washington returned with rejected the commands of the British, and the governor immediately began rounding up money and troops. Four months after returning from his journey, the twenty-two year old Washington commanded a British force in the first engagement of the French and Indian War. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel, and lead a small body of Virginia troops when he ran into a French scouting Party in southern Pennsylvania on May 27, 1754. He and his men captured 20 and killed 10 in the skirmish, losing only one man. The next month he was promoted to colonel in command of all Virginia troops in the field. He knew the French would attack in retaliation so he prepared for this by building Fort Necessity in Pennsylvania. He was correct about an attack when the French with several hundred Indians surrounded the Fort on July 4. He and his men were allowed to return to Virginia with arms and ammunition. Shortly after his return, the British government ordered all militia officers reduced in rank so that none would outrank captains commissioned by the British King. Washington resigned as colonel in October 1754 and returned to Mount Vernon. The following spring, he volunteered to serve as aide-de-camp to British Major General Edward Braddock, who was planning to attack the French at Fort Duqeusne. Although Washington warned Braddock of Indian ambush tactics in frontier fighting, the British Army marched toward the Fort as though on parade before the King. On July 9, 1755, the French and Indians fell on British troops with murderous war whoops, and the terrified redcoats broke and ran. Almost a thousand British soldiers were massacred and Braddock was fatally wounded. Washington had four bullet holes through his jacket and two horses shot out from under him but amazingly escaped injury-free. With the fear of a French attack on Virginia, Governor Dinwiddle appealed to Washington to resume command of the Virginia militia with the rank of colonel. At first Washington rejected the offer, but after persistent urging he agreed. His command continued till the end of the war. Meanwhile, George had proposed to and was accepted in marriage by Mrs. Martha Dandridge Custis. At the same time he was apparently involved with his neighbor’s wife, Mrs. Sally Fairfax. The authenticity of the affair remains a mystery but he married Martha Custis on January 6, 1759 and remained cordial with the Fairfax’s. Martha brought to the marriage a fortune in land and money as well as two children by her first marriage. They never had children of their own. Meantime, he had been elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses. After a short honeymoon, Martha and George went to Williamsburg for the session. He was regularly re-elected, gaining a fine schooling in representative government. During this time, Washington continued to acquire more land traveling deep into the Ohio Valley looking for more sites to purchase for future development. He rented thousands of acres to tenant farmers, but devoted most of his attention to Mount Vernon. He enjoyed experimenting in agriculture, trying new crops, and breeding better livestock, and took pleasure in the social life and recreation of the plantation-the dances, games, fox hunts, and sports. Because he was a military man, it was natural that he looked to force when the British government interfered with the rights of colonists. When the governor disbanded the House of Burgesses in 1769 because its members protested the British Stamp Act, Washington wrote to a friend, saying that America must keep its liberty, even if force was necessary. As a delegate to the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia in 1774, he impressed his colleagues from the other colonies with his assurance and wisdom. When questioned as to who the greatest member of the Congress was, Patrick Henry said “...if you speak of solid information and sound judgment, Colonel Washington is unquestionably the greatest man on that floor.” When the Second Continental Congress met in May 1775, Washington wore his colonel’s uniform to dramatize his belief that military force was necessary. On June 15, he was unanimously elected as commander in chief of the armed forces. He accepted, with modesty, but refused any payment, other than to repay personal expense. By July 2, he had taken command of the troops in Massachusetts. He organized the siege of British forces in Boston, despite a serious shortage of ammunition, and succeeded in forcing the British to sail away from Boston in March 1776, leaving the city in the hands of American forces. Washington guessed the British would attack New York City in order to drive wedge in between the northern and southern colonies. He was met by them, as expected, in July. Lack of supplies, undisciplined troops, and inexperienced officers brought defeat, forcing Washington to retreat into New Jersey by November. Desertions and the refusal of “sunshine patriots” to re-enlist, weakened Washington’s army to about 5,000 by December. Many feared the war was lost. Hope revived with Washington’s brilliant surprise attack on Hessian troops at Trenton the day after Christmas, 1776. He followed this victory with another at Princeton the first week of January 1777. He spent that summer waiting for a British land attack on Philadelphia, but the Brits used their naval power to bypass the American Army and land troops south of Philadelphia. Washington hurried south, but was defeated at Brandywine Creek in September, losing Philadelphia. The turning point of the war came when Horatio Gates captured British General John Burgoyne and 5,000 of his troops at Saratoga, New York. Washington spent the next winter at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania starving and freezing with his troops. He admired their patience and courage. In the spring of 1778 news came that the French had decided to form an open alliance with America. The British abandoned Philadelphia and headed for New York. Washington planned to attack from Monmouth on June 28, but the incompetency of his second in command, Major General Charles Lee, lost him his opportunity. Lee was found guilty of disobedience by a court-martial and was discharged from the army. From that summer to the summer of 1781, Washington kept the main part of the British army sealed in New York City. During this time Washington’s army was faced with constant desertions due to inactivity, while Congress had to be prodded to supply the needed money and supplies. His patience paid off when word was sent that the French were sending the main part of their fleet, thousands of troops, and a loan to the Americans. He then decided to take an offensive. Washington and French Commander Rochambeau led their armies to Virginia in an effort to cut off Lord Cornwallis’s army. They joined with the forces of the young Marquis de Lafayette and the French Fleet, which sealed off Chesapeake Bay. From the end of September to the middle of October, Washington continually laid siege on Cornwallis at Yorktown. Washington experienced his greatest joy in the military when Cornwallis surrendered his army of 7,000 men. This loss convinced the British that the war was not worth fighting anymore. The war was over. Washington happily resumed his life as a planter at the conclusion of the war, confidant his days of public service were through. He did, however, grow increasingly concerned with the problems of the US under the Articles of Confederation. News of Shays’ Rebellion in Massachusetts increased his fears that the independence he had struggled for might be destroyed unless the Government was strengthened. In 1787 the Constitutional Convention was held in Philadelphia. He reluctantly accepted election as a delegate from Virginia. On May 25, he was unanimously elected President of the Convention. He never expressed his own views from the chair; but his continued presence and privately stated determination that all obstacles must be overcome, became dominant factors in its success. On the final day of the Convention, September 17, 1787, Washington made his only request, that an amendment be written to provide broader representation in Congress. The amendment was quickly written and approved. Washington and most of the other delegates then signed the Constitution. In the following months Washington wait anxiously at Mount Vernon as states debated whether or not to ratify the Constitution. He did not enter public debate and issued no statements. Within nine months New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify the Constitution, putting the new government into operation. It was assumed throughout the land that Washington would be the first President of the United States of America. The people were sure he would not abuse the powers of office. When the electoral college met on February 4, 1789, Washington was unanimously elected President. He accepted with great reluctance. Washington began setting precedents and traditions from the day he took office, April 30, 1789. He took the oath from Robert Livingston on a balcony of Federal Hall in New York City, then the Capital. The first precedent set was the words “so help me god” added to the end of the Presidential oath. He then set a second, delivering a inaugural address. In his address he stated the need for a Bill of Rights and declared he would not accept payment beyond his own expenses. He faced four major problems upon entering office: 1. organizing the new government and making the many necessary appointments; 2. straightening out the tangled financial affairs of the nation; 3. obtaining better relations with Great Britain; and 4. negotiating treaties of friendship with the Indian tribes of the frontier. He succeeded at solving all of these during his administration. Congress took four months to pass the legislation necessary to create the main departments of the federal government. He placed great reliance in his department heads. Not until his second term were they know as the Cabinet. Alexander Hamilton was chosen as Treasury Secretary. He worked on a plan to take care of the debts the US obtained during the war. Hamilton, leader of the Federalists party, was the most liked by Washington. He treated Hamilton like the son he never had, this is way many historians classify Washington as a Federalist. Under leadership from Virginia Representative James Madison, Congress approved the Bill of Rights and North Carolina and Rhode Island then became the last of the thirteen colonies to ratify the constitution. Vermont in 1791, Kentucky in 1792, and Tennessee in 1796, were admitted to the Union during Washington’s administration. Washington established the Presidential veto when he turned down legislation passed by Congress. Congress failed to override the re-apportionment Bill and several months later, a fairer bill was passed and signed by Washington. He believed the President should be a strong leader, but that the government should be as separate as possible. He did not get personally involved with the legislation process, instead he left that to his department heads, mainly Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, and Hamilton. Because they each represented opposite parts of the country, Jefferson and Hamilton’s ideology were opposites. These two were also the heads of the two political parties. Thomas Jefferson told Washington, “North and South will hang together if they have you to hang on”, this was one of the many demands that kept Washington from retiring after his first term. Washington was again unanimously elected. His second term was not as smooth as the first. After Jefferson resigned in 1793 and Hamilton in 1795, Washington felt betrayed. He found the positions of those who retired hard to fill and was deeply wounded by the insults of Democratic-Republican newspapers. Washington had a difficult task in the area of Foreign affairs. With the general war in Europe Washington declared the US neutral. He was strictly criticized by the Democratic-Republicans, and this criticism reached a peak when Jay’s Treaty, a trade agreement that had been negotiated by Chief Justice John Jay, was signed by Washington. Secretary of State Edmund Randolph resigned after rumor that he was bribed by the French to speak against the Treaty. Washington had been wanting to show the might of the central government for some time. He finally got the opportunity when a rebellion over whiskey taxes broke out in western Pennsylvania. He sent 15,000 troops to put down the rebellion, which quickly disbanded. The final years of his administration were rather uneventful. The economy improved due to the trade stimulated by Jay’s Treaty and attacks by the Dem-Reps diminished. Talk of a third term were underway, but he refuted them when he published his Farewell Address on September 19, 1796 establishing the important two-term precendent. After handing over the Presidency to his Vice-president John Adams, Washington retired to Mount Vernon with Martha. His hope for a peaceful retirement was ruined when war threatened France in 1798. Adams asked Washington to accept a new commission as lieutenant general and take control of the new United States Army to be raised. After several months of choosing officers, the French crisis subsided and Washington returned to Mount Vernon. On the snowy morning of December 14, 1799 he awoke with a sore throat and could hardly speak. The soar was due to pneumonia, and when the doctors came, the applied the traditional remedy of bleeding. He continually grew weaker and at about 10pm the Father of the US was dead. He was buried at the family vault four days later. Memorials were held in many towns and cities throughout the country, the most elaborate in Philadelphia. Here “Light Horse Harry” Lee said of Washington, “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen, he was second to none....” In 1978, 178 years after his death, George Washington was promoted by the Army to General of the Armies of the United States so that he would be the senior general officer on army roll calls. This promotion put him above the previous two highest ranking officers, both presidents, Ulysses S. Grant and Dwight D. Eisenhower. http://www.geocities.com/arj_president/GEORGEWASHINGTON.htm
1731 - 1802
Martha
Dandridge
Custis
70
70
Martha Dandridge Washington (1731-1802) grew up on a large plantation in Virginia. She had no formal education, for girls in those days were rarely taught outside their own homes. Private tutors taught Martha reading and writing. She also had lessons in sewing, housekeeping, cooking, dancing, and music. At 17 she was one of the most popular young ladies in Williamsburg, and at 18 she married a prosperous planter named Daniel Parke Custis. Seven years after their marriage Custis died, leaving Martha a wealthy young widow with two small children. Martha Custis first met Colonel George Washington a year after her husband's death. They were married in 1759 and settled down at Mount Vernon, Washington's plantation. Their gracious, comfortable life was interrupted when Washington was called to head the Continental Army in the American Revolution. During the war years Lady Washington, as she was called, did not spare herself. She joined her husband at winter headquarters every year for eight winters. She did everything she could to encourage and help the tattered soldiers. As the wife of the first president, Mrs. Washington had no traditions to follow. With only her common sense and sound social training to guide her, she proved to be a fine model for the first ladies who followed her. With the President at her side, she greeted the guests who attended their weekly levees (receptions) with dignity and charm. Although she always remained cheerful and happy, Mrs. Washington felt she led an extremely dull life in New York City. She was more content when the capital moved to Philadelphia in 1790. They spent the balance of the President's first term and his second term in Philadelphia. There were no regrets, however, when they returned to their beloved Mount Vernon in 1797. This famous couple spent their final years happily surrounded by their grandchildren, friends, and visitors.
Daniel
Parke
Custis
Colonel
Francis
Willis
Colonel
Lewis
Willis
1731
Sarah
Anne
Willis
Thomas
Pope
Nathaniel
II Pope
"tried many of Abraham Lincoln's cases" according to [Thomas, Lincoln, p335].
~1474 - 1490
Robert
Hesketh
16
16
~1475
Alice
Booth
Robert
Hesketh
1406 - 1458
Thomas
Hesketh
52
52
[flcurry.FTW] Sir Robert Lawrence was guardian.
Margaret
Massey
1406 - 1458
Sir
Thomas
Hesketh
52
52
1427 - 1460
Sibyl
Lawrence
33
33
1377 - 1416
Nicholas
Hesketh
39
39
Minshull
1347
Thomas
Hesketh
Margaret
Bannester
Alice
Lawrence
D. 1360
John
Lawrence
John
Lawrence
John
Lawrence
D. 1252
James
Lawrence
Robert
de
Lancaster
~1168 - 1216
Robert
de
Lancaster
48
48
Robert
Booth
Elizabeth
Fleming
Robert
Hesketh
1399 - 1450
Robert
Lawrence
Jr.
51
51
[flcurry.FTW] Held the monor of Carnforth, half of the manors of Scotforth and Middleton and Carleton. Slain at Bosworth Field(?)
1371 - 1439
Robert
Lawrence
68
68
A considerable contingent from Lancaster accompanied Henry V in 1415 on a campaign that ended at Agincourt during the Hundred Years' War. John Lord Harcourt, bannert, took two knights, twenty-seven men-at-arms, and ninety archers; seven knights, James de Harrington, Richard de Kighley, Ralph de Stavely, Nicholas de Longford, William Botiller, John Southworth, and Richard de Radcliffe, and two esquires, John Stanley and Robert Laurence each served with fifty archers. In 1419 he was a commissioner to raise a loan for the King and in 1421 commissioner to bring 400 archers to France during the Hundred Years' War. He was knighted in 1417 or 1437 according to Schuyler Lawrence. Paul Lawrence believes it probably was 1417 as he is referred to as Sir Robert Lawrence in 1426.
Margaret
Holden
~1315 - 1381
Edmund
Lawrence
66
66
[flcurry.FTW] In 1338 he held, with his parents, the Stapleton part of the manor of Ashton for life. In 1345, he had been commissioner with his uncle William to investigate wastes in the manor of Wyresdale. In 1348, John Franceys dismised certain of this lands, etc., to Edmund for live at the rent of a rose for six years and then 100s. Agnes, the daughter of John Franceys married Lambert de Wyresdale and they quit-claimed to Edmund in 1366. In 1350 Edmund held burgages in Pennystreet, Lancaster. In 1357 he made a feoffment of lands in Lancaster, Skerton, Ellel, Ashton, and Preeshall. In 1358 he was pardoned, after paying 100 shillings, for acquiring a life interest in the Irish Manors of Baliogary, Lough and Casterling without license. Also in 1358 he held land in Preeshall. He was pardoned, for service in France, of taking 200 in silver from John Darcy's house. He was Knight of the Shire in 1362 when he and Matthew de Rixton being deputies of the sheriff, concealed the election writ and returned themselves as knights of the shire. This return was later quashed. In 1363 was receiver of Queen Philippa's monies in Ireland. In 1367 he was attorney in England for the Prior of St. Mary's, Lancaster. In 1368 he was commissioner of Array to choose 100 archers in Lancashire. In 1373 he held for life three plough-lands of Thomas de Stapleton by a rent of 20 marks. In 1375 he released his life interest in the Irish Manors and in that of Dunmow In 1376, he held for life fisheries and ridings in Ashton together with a fourth part of the manor, of the heirs of Thomas de Thweng, deceased, by rent of 13s. 4d. In 1378 he purchased all the rights of Thomas de Molyneux in the marriage of Richard, son of Sir William de Moylneux of Sefton. In 1381/2, evidently shortly before his death, John de Oxcliffe granted an estate in Overton to Edmund. John de Oxcliffe had held the estate as trustee, given him in 1374, from Adam, son of William de Lancaster, that William held in the right of his wife Blanche.
<1320 - <1354
Alice
de
Cuerdale
34
34
Agnes
de
Washington
Robert
de
Washington
~1280 - >1348
John
Lawrence
68
68
[flcurry.FTW] John was granted Ashton Hall for life in 1324. John Lawrence was the first Squire of Ashton and the first to use the surname Lawrence. John was a Member of Parliment in 1301 for Lancaster. Richard, son of William the Cook, gave lands to Thomas, son of Richard de Stainall in 1315-16. This same Richard also gave land to John Lawrence and his wife Elizabeth. In 1323 he held 30 acres in Skerton by a rent of 6s. 8d. In 1331 he made a complaint of trespass on his fishery at Ashton. At that time he also was holding lands in Lancaster and Lentworth from Robert de Holland. He obained land in Stodday on the Netherbaiske Brook in 1337. Between 1318 and 1325 he was a juror in at least eight inquests. In 1346 he was a partner in a farm belonging to the Cockersand Abbey Estate and at an inquest was holding additional lands in Lancaster from the Earl. In 1346 he was paying the Earl 10d. annually for the harrowing, reaping, etc., due from 32 acres in Skerton. Also in 1346, he held a half plough-land in Amounderness Hundred by the service of two crossbows. In 1347 John gave to John the Frereson and Joan his wife (who had sons John and Edmund) a burgage in St. Mary-gate upon Caldkeld Bank and was master of the manor of Ashton by a yearly fee of Ð22. In 1348 he was holding 5 acres in Skerton and Hackensall from the Duke and was a partner with his nephew, John Lawrence of Lancaster, in the milnfield in Lancaster. In 1348-50, William de Heaton made a claim for messuages, etc., in Lonsdale against Thomas son of Marmaduke de Thweng, John Lawrence of Ashton, William de Washington, and Robert de Haldleghes
~1282
Elizabeth
Holt
Holt of
Stabley
~1250 - >1317
Lawrence
de
Lancaster
67
67
[flcurry.FTW] In 1292, Lawrence de Lancaster claimed the tenement of 30 acres in Skerton as heir of his brother John. It had evidently been held in trustee by Nicholas Gentyl. In 1317 Lawrence son of Thomas de Lancaster granted lands in Skerton, Ashton, Brntbreck, Grisehead, etc. to his son John Lawrence and Elizabeth his wife. From this time on Lawrence was used as the family name. At various times in early records it was spelled Laurens, Laurenz or Laurence.
~1225 - ~1290
Thomas
(James?) de
Lancaster
65
65
~1191 - ~1265
Sir Robert
(Roger?) de
Lancaster
74
74
[flcurry.FTW] The Lawrences did not occupy Ashton Hall until about 1292 according to suit where Lawrence de Lancaster of Aston set forth his claim to 30 acres of land in Skerton. This suit mentions the first three generations of the fmaily beginning with Roger de Lancaster and it appears that they were of a family long settled in the nearby town of Lancaster.
1425
William
Lawrence
[flcurry.FTW] Fought under the Lancastrian banner at St. Alban's in 1455, and having fallen here, was buried in he Abbey
Edmund
Lawrence
Ann
Lawrence
D. <1292
John
de
Lancaster
<1290 - <1357
William
Lawrence
67
67
[flcurry.FTW] He founded a family line seated at Ribbleton and Ribbleton and Calughton.
<1290 - >1332
Alice
Lawrence
42
42
[flcurry.FTW] Lived at Ashton Hall. Had two acres of land in 1332 obtained from Robert de Holland.
~1300 - >1329
John
Lawrence
29
29
[flcurry.FTW] John and his wife, Emma, received lands in Lancaster in 1329.
James
Lawrence
>1353
William
Lawrence
D. >1423
John Lawrence
of Skerton and
Heysham
Thomas
Hesketh
Jr.
1193
Trafford
Matilda
de
Washington
John
de
Washington
>1410
Thomas
Lawrence
[flcurry.FTW] Paul Lawrence gives his parents as Robert Lawrence Jr. and Agnes Croft One source makes him son of Sir Robert Lawrence and Margaret Holden, but the dates don't work. knighted at the marriage of Prince Arthur in 1501
Holden
of
Lancashire
Margaret
Chesford
Walter
Chesford
John
Pope
1 The Approbation of My Own Conscience (excerpt) John Pope was born on March 16, 1822, in Louisville, Kentucky, and raised in Kaskaskia, Illinois, where he grew up privileged and well-placed socially, enjoying the finest a half-settled prairie had to offer. His mother, Lucretia Backus Pope, had a college education and came from a New England family with roots in America reaching back two hundred years: one ancestor, the Reverend William Hyde, was cofounder of Hartford, Connecticut; a second, John Haynes, governed the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1630s. John Pope's paternal lineage was equally distinguished. His uncle, John Pope, for whom he was named, was a United States senator from Kentucky. His grandfather, William Pope (the family seems to have eschewed middle names for their male offspring), served in the colonial army and married the aunt of Ninian Edwards, a future governor of Illinois. Young John's first ancestor in America, Nathaniel Pope the elder, owned the land on which Robert E. Lee was later born and had a daughter who married George Washington's great-grandfather. John's father, the younger Nathaniel Pope, was one of the most illustrious men in Illinois.1 Nathaniel Pope had come to Kaskaskia from Kentucky at the turn of the nineteenth century, having attended Transylvania University at Lexington for one year and read law in his brother John's office. Nathaniel moved easily in the pioneer community, and in 1809, when Congress authorized the organization of the Illinois Territory, he was appointed territorial secretary. That year also he married Lucretia Backus. Although Nathaniel owed his appointment to the influence of his brother John and of Henry Clay, he proved worthy of the job. When the new governor, his cousin Ninian Edwards, was detained several months in Kentucky, it fell to Pope to organize the territory. He drew county lines, settled boundary disputes, and appointed territorial officials. Six years later, under the authority of the legislature, he revised the Laws of the Territory of Illinois, a massive two-volume work that became known simply as Pope's Digest.2 Pope's popularity won him election as territorial delegate to Congress in the fall of 1816. In Washington, he became an aggressive champion of statehood for Illinois. When in 1818 the territory petitioned for admission to the Union, Pope was asked to draw up the necessary resolution. In doing so, he turned what might have been a prosaic parchment into a dynamic entreaty for Illinois's preeminence in the Northwest Territory. The fifth article of the Ordinance of 1787 had stipulated that there should be formed from the Northwest Territory no fewer than three nor more than five states, and the ordinance proceeded to define the boundaries of the future states of Illinois, Ohio, and Indiana. Troublesome to Pope was a proviso that permitted Congress to "form one or two states in that part of said territory which lies north of an east and west line drawn through the southerly bend of Lake Michigan." As Wisconsin had applied for statehood north of that line, Pope realized Illinois would be deprived of access to Lake Michigan; specifically, it would lose control of the tiny settlement of Chicago. Enlisting the help of his brother John and of Henry Clay, and displaying what the distinguished early Illinois lawyer Thomas Hoyne called "the forecast of a truly great statesman," Pope induced both houses of Congress to agree that the ordinance of admission he had drawn should supersede the provisions of the Ordinance of 1787. Pope's ordinance drew the northern boundary of Illinois at its present 42°70' latitude. To the chagrin of Wisconsin's less-enterprising delegates, Illinois was admitted to the Union with Chicago snugly inside its boundaries. Thomas Hoyne summarized the debt Illinois owed Pope when he observed, "No prescience could have supposed that in sixty years the part of Illinois included by that change of boundary, would have given her the fourth largest city of the Union, and that in the fifteen counties, organized out of the territory then taken from Wisconsin, there would be a majority of the population of this state, by the census of 1880, while three-fourths or four-fifths of all the wealth of the state would be found north of the southern bend of Lake Michigan."3 Impressive too were Pope's efforts on behalf of public education. Ordinarily, states carved from the Northwest Territory were granted 5 percent of the revenue from the sale of public lands to finance road building. But Pope won an exception. Certain that roads would be built with or without state aid, he convinced Congress to allow the state of Illinois to retain 3 percent of land-sale proceeds for the furtherance of learning. Pope also laid the foundation for an educational grant that gave the state government the thirty-sixth section of land in every township of Illinois, which might then be sold or rented for the benefit of a general school fund. For this too Thomas Hoyne paid tribute to Pope: "The organization and support of schools was with Judge Pope and the men of that day, one of the primal objects secured to the state, through their efforts, for posterity. The people of this generation owe them the acknowledgment of that service."4 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1Paul M. Angle, "Nathaniel Pope, 1784-1850, a Memoir," Illinois State Historical Society: Transactions for the Year 1936, Publication No. 43 (Springfield, 1936), 111-12: DAB, 15:77. 2DAB, 15:77-78; Merlin G. Cox, "John Pope, Fighting General from Illinois: (Ph.D. diss., University of Florida, 1956), 4-8; Angle, "Nathaniel Pope," 111-12. 3Thomas Hoyne, "The Lawyer as a Pioneer," in Chicago Bar Association Lectures, Part One, Fergus Historical Series No. 22 (Chicago, 1882), 72-73; Ninian W. Edwards, History of Illinois, from 1778 to 1833; and Life and Times of Ninian Edwards (Springfield, Ill., 1870), 254-55; John Moses, Illinois: Historical and Statistical, 2 vols. (Chicago, 1889), 1:237, 242, 276-82; DAB, 15:78. 4DAB, 15:78; Hoyne, "Lawyer as Pioneer,"73-74. General John Pope ·
Lucretia
Backus
William
Washington
Sir
Patric de
Offerton
Dolfin
fitz
Uchtred
Uchtred
fitz
Maldred
Maldred
~1015 - ~1045
Maldred
Earl of
Dunbar
30
30
Received Winlaton from Bishop of Durham, 1084.
~1020
Aglithia
Princess of
Northumberland
Elfrida
Elfgifu
of
England
0944 - 8 JUL 975
Edgar
the
Peaceful
Reigned 959-975. The first King of a united England. He allowed his Danish subjects to retain Danish laws. Edgar promoted a monastic revival and encouraged trade by reforming the currency. He improved defence by organising coastal naval patrols and a system for manning warships. Although he suceeded on 1st October 959, he was not crowned until 973 because St Dunstan, the Archbishop of Canterbury, disaproved of his way of life.
0921 - 26 MAY 946
Edmund
I the
Elder
Reigned 940-946 Murdered: An Outlaw, Leolf, stabbed him to death at a banquet to St.Augustine He expelled the Norse King Olaf from Northumbria in 944. He supported Dunstan in the reintroduction of the Monastic rule of St. Benedict.
Elfgifu
0869 - 17 JUL 925
Edward "The
Elder" King
Of England
Acceded to the throne upon the death of Alfred 'The Great' in 899. In 910, he defeated the Danes at the Battle of Tettenhall and advanced into portions of East Anglia, the Midlands, and Essex. Defeated the Danes in 918 where he took East Anglia; conquered Mercia in 918; acknowledged by the princes of West Wales as overlord in 919; and conquered portions of Northumbria in 920. His son, Athelstan, becomes King of all England upon his death in 925. ------------ Edward the Elder (died 924), king of Wessex (899-924), son of King Alfred. He succeeded as king of the Angles and Saxons in 899, despite a rebellion led by his cousin Ethelwald with the support of the Danes of Northumbria and East Anglia. After a protracted struggle he defeated the Danes, and in 912, on the death of his brother-in-law Ethelred, alderman of Mercia, he annexed the cities of London and Oxford and their environs. The Danes submitted formally in 918, and soon thereafter the sovereignty of Edward was acknowledged by the North Welsh, the Scots, the Northumbrians, and the Welsh of Strathclyde. Edward was succeeded by his son Athelstan. Source: "Edward the Elder," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
William
Franklin
Todd
1858 - ~1875
Richard
Henry
Newton
17
17
1859 - ~1937
Valentine
Hudson
Newton
78
78
Lindsay
A.
Jackson
Abraham
Gibbs
AnnaMaria
~1665
Peter
Gibb
~1665
Anna
Maria
Spiess
~1625
Herman
Gibb
Elisabetha
Ifflandt
1450 - >1510
Richard
Pargiter
60
60
1490
Ann
Knight
~1450 - 1528
Richard
Coles
78
78
He held lands in Preston Capes, Everdon, Litchborough, Maidford, Adston, Woodford, Church Brampton, and elsewhere.
~1450
John
Knight
~1450
Anne
Haly
D. >1474
William
Coles
Alice
D. >1474
Richard
Colles
Agnes
D. >1427
William
Colles
D. <1427
Richard
Collys
Adam
Knight
John
Knight
Alice
Forster
Thomas
Knight
~1798
Nancy
Todd
Daniel
Coy
1799
Aynip
Todd
1802 - 1802
William
Todd
1m
1m
1803 - 1834
Permilia
Todd
30
30
Thomas
Foley
Vivian
Foley
1805 - 1834
Jaila
Todd
29
29
Elijah
Hawkins
1807 - 1861
John
Todd
54
54
Nancy
Stephenson
1808
Lucy
Todd
1809 - 1834
Minerva
Todd
24
24
1811
Levi
Todd
Perry
Pickens
Permilia
Cox
Edward
Hawkins
1832 - 1850
Martha
Ann
Todd
18
18
1824 - 1890
Elizabeth
"Betty"
Todd
66
66
1826 - 1905
John
Todd
79
79
1827
Richard
Todd
1828
Irvine
Todd
1830
Newton
G.
Todd
1834 - 1885
Lucinda
Todd
50
50
1836 - 1908
Mary
Jane
Todd
72
72
1839 - 1910
Joel
Elias
Todd
71
71
D. ~1399
John
De
Towneley
D. 1397
Isabel
Rixton
D. 1379
Richard
d'la Leigh
Towneley
In 1195, Roger de Lacy, Constable of Chester, inherited the great estates of Clitheroe and Pontefract. Sometime before his death in 1211 he granted land "in Tunleia" that was part of the estate of Clitheroe to the husband of one of his daughters. In the 14th century the land passed by marriage to the de la Leigh family. When they came to live at Towneley they also assumed the name of the place and Towneleys of Towneley were to live there for a further 500 years. In 1664 at the herald's visitation to Lancashire, Sir William Dugdale received evidence from Richard Towneley for the Towneleys of Towneley. He also received evidence from a number of other members of the family representing various cadet lines, all descended from John Towneley and his wife Isabel Sherburne or possibly, in the case of the Townleys of Dutton, John's father Richard de Towneley. All of these other families were recorded as using the name Townley. The de la Leigh family first appeared locally around 1300. They owned land in Hapton before they acquired the Towneley estates. Today most of what is known about the earliest members of the family comes from legal papers and inquisitions post mortem. Many of the early papers are now in the Lancashire County Record Office at Preston, Lancashire County, England. The first of the de la Leighs to use the Towneley name was Richard who was Sheriff of the county of Lancaster when he died in 1379, but it was his son John de Towneley (1350-1399) who aquired all the old Towneley land and sealed the settlement of his estates with the arms of three mullets and a fesse.
Helen
John
d'la
Leigh
Gilbert
de la
Ley
1295- Grant of corrody to him and his son John by the Abbot of Whalley. 1302- Named as son of Michaell in a charter of Henry de Lacy. 1302- Grantee of Hapton by Thomas de Altaripa. 1304- Disseised by Henri de Laci, who granted Hapton to Edmund Talbot 1321- Settled Cliviger on his grandchildren. 1328- Grantee of Hapton fron John, son and heir of Edmund Talbot 1336- Settled Hapton on Gilbert, his grandson's first marriage.
Cecilia
Michaell
d' la
Leye
Alice
Cecilia
de
Thunlay
Richard
de
Towneley
D. ~1223
Geoffrey
Geoffrey
the
Elder
Dtr. of
Roger
de Lacy
D. 1211
Roger
de
Lacy
In 1195, Roger de Lacy, Constable of Chester, inherited the great estates of Clitheroe and Pontefract. Sometime before his death in 1211 he granted land "in Tunleia" that was part of the estate of Clitheroe to the husband of one of his daughters. In the 14th century the land passed by marriage to the de la Leigh family. When they came to live at Towneley they also assumed the name of the place and Towneleys of Towneley were to live there for a further 500 years.
Dean of
Whalley
Robert
Dean of
Whalley
Henry
Dean of
Whalley
Cudwlphus
Liwlphus
Cutwolphe
<0896
first Dean
of Whalley
Spartlingus
The TOWNELEY Genealogy Spartlingus first dean of Whalley was living in 896 and is the supposed founder of this family. The first so designated "Towneley" was Richard de Towneley circa 1200 His descendent Gilbert de la Legh was grandfather of Richard de Towneley. In Anglo-Saxon times the churches of the area were controlled by the Bishops of Lichfield (80 miles to the South) and the parish of Whalley was managed locally by a Dean answerable only to the Bishop. The Dean appears to have been part vicar, part local lord, allowed to marry and to pass on his authority to his heirs. This situation carried on after the Normans arrived and the office of Dean of Whalley was not abolished until the 13th century.
1640
Sarah
Warner
Lawrence
Townley
Alice
Townley
D. 1753
John
Grymes
Charles
Grymes
Frances
Jennings
Lucy
Grymes
1729 - 1787
Henry
Lee
58
58
1756 - 1818
Henry
II Lee
62
62
Ann
Hill
1807 - 1870
Robert
E. Lee
63
63
Civil War General. Robert E. Lee was known as an exemplary military commander when Abraham Lincoln asked him to command the Union army in 1861. Lee had graduated with distinction from West Point, served on Winfield Scott's staff during the Mexican American War, modernized the West Point curriculum in the early 1850s, and led the recapture of the Harpers Ferry arsenal from John Brown and his army in 1859. Though he opposed secession and favored an end to slavery, Lee declined Lincoln's appointment to head the Union army, instead supporting Virginia and the Confederacy. Under his leadership, Confederate forces scored important victories, despite the superior numbers and richer resources of the North. And even after Ulysses S. Grant began his final assault in 1864, Lee's troops held on for nearly ten months before the surrender at Appomattox in April 1865. Brady photographed Lee on the porch of his home in Richmond shortly after the surrender. As he recalled in 1891, "It was supposed that after his defeat it would be preposterous to ask him to sit, but I thought that to be the time for the historical picture. He allowed me to come to his house and photograph him on his back porch in several situations. Of course I had known him since the Mexican War when he was upon Gen. Scott's staff, and my request was not as from an intruder".
D. 1679
Mary
Warner
John
Smith
Mildred
Smith
1679 - 1758
Robert
Porteus
79
79
1705 - 1754
Robert
II
Porteus
49
49
1702 - 1789
Judith
Cockayne
87
87
1744
Mildred
Porteus
1740
Robert
Hodgson
Robert
II
Hodgson
Mary
Tucker
Henrietta
Mildred
Hodgson
1794 - 1863
Oswald
Smith
68
68
1832 - 1922
Frances
Dora
Smith
89
89
1824 - 1904
Claude
Lyon-
Bowes
79
79
1855 - 1944
Claude
George
Bowes-Lyon
89
89
14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne.
1862 - 1938
Nina Cecelia
Bentinck-
Cavendish
75
75
1900 - 2002
Elizabeth Angela
Marguerite
Bowes-Lyon
101
101
The Honorable Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon was born on August 4, 1900. Queen Victoria was still alive at the time, and the world was, of course, a very different place. Few people could have guessed that baby Elizabeth, a Scottish commoner, would one day become the matriarch of the British royal family. Elizabeth's exact birthplace is the subject of some dispute, but it is known that she was born in England and spent much of her childhood there. The ninth of 10 children, and the youngest daughter, she was nicknamed "Princess Elizabeth" by her affectionate family. The Bowes-Lyons were no strangers to royal circles (in fact, they were descended from King Robert the Bruce) and as a little girl Elizabeth played with the children of British king George V. Eventually Elizabeth's father became the 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, making "Princess" Elizabeth a real-life lady. The family seat, Glamis Castle -- the oldest inhabited castle in Scotland -- served as a military hospital during the First World War. Although Lady Elizabeth was too young to work as a nurse, she helped by running errands, writing letters, and playing cards with the patients. Four of her brothers fought in the war. One, Fergus, was killed in battle; another, Michael, was held prisoner for two years. The war ended in 1918, the year Elizabeth turned 18. She was lively and attractive, with great personal charm, which did not escape the notice of George V's second son, Prince Albert. On December 2, 1921 he asked her to marry him. He told his brother later, "Waiting for her answer was worse than [the battle of] Jutland, waiting for the German shells to arrive." Elizabeth gently turned him down. On December 26, the prince proposed again. Elizabeth laughed and said, "You spoil me. You must know I love proposals. But I'm afraid not, Bertie. It just wouldn't do." He proposed twice more in 1922 -- and twice more she refused. But the prince was in love and would not give up. On January 13, 1923 he proposed to Lady Elizabeth again. As always, she laughed, but this time her answer was different. "If you're going to keep this up forever, I might as well say 'yes' now. And so I do." The marriage took place in Westminister Abbey on April 23 of that year. Duchess of York Elizabeth was now the Duchess of York, but she didn't know that she would one day be England's queen. Her husband's older brother, Edward, was the heir to the throne. He was also a playboy with a penchant for married women, but it was expected that he would eventually settle down with a suitable bride and start a family. The Duke and Duchess of York started their own family in 1926, when their daughter Elizabeth was born. A second daughter, Margaret Rose, followed in 1930. (According to Kitty Kelly's book "The Royals," both girls were the product of artificial insemination, an uncommon procedure at the time.) Like their mother before them, the princesses grew up in a loving family atmosphere and were educated at home. George V died in January 1936 and his eldest son ascended the throne as Edward VIII. In December the king shocked the world by abdicating to be with the woman he loved, a married American named Wallis Simpson. Queen Elizabeth Suddenly Elizabeth's husband, a shy man who stammered when forced to speak in public, was thrust into the very public role of king. He accepted the crown, taking the reign name George VI, and worked hard to live up to his new responsibilities with Elizabeth's constant support, but it was never easy for him, and his wife never forgave Edward and Wallis for putting "the weight of the world on his shoulders." The king and queen earned the respect and love of their people in the dark days of the Second World War. Other European kings and queens were being forced to flee their homelands, but Queen Elizabeth declared, "I shall not go down like the others." She learned to fire a revolver so she could fight to the death if necessary. Despite the threat of a German invasion, the king and queen refused to send their daughters out of the country. "The princesses cannot go without me," Queen Elizabeth explained. "I cannot go without the king. The king will never go." The girls spent the war years at Windsor Castle, where they were relatively safe, while the king and queen stayed bravely on in London during the Blitzes. Their home, Buckingham Palace, was hit by bombs and rockets on nine occasions. "I'm glad we've been bombed," Queen Elizabeth said. "It makes me feel I can look the East End in the face." And look it in the face she did. She and the king visited bomb sites day after day, encouraging and comforting others with their presence. Determined to convey optimism, Elizabeth made a point of wearing pastel colors, never black. Her smiling warmth and charm, captured in newsreels, made her beloved around the world, and her radio speeches brought her message of courage and hope to the ears of people living under German occupation. She was such an inspiration to those who opposed the Nazis that Adolf Hitler called her the most dangerous woman in Europe. By the time the war ended, the queen's daughters were nearly grown up. Princess Elizabeth married Philip Mountbatten in 1947 and gave birth to the queen's first grandchild, Prince Charles, in 1948. The royal family also celebrated the king and queen's silver wedding anniversary in 1948. The Queen Mum Sadly, the king's health had begun to deteriorate. He died of lung cancer on February 6, 1952. His eldest daughter became Queen Elizabeth II, and his widow was now officially known as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. In the decades after her husband's death the "Queen Mum" remained one of most beloved members of the British royal family. Even after she turned 100 years old, she continued to make official appearances and served as patron or president of some 350 organizations. She was a living link to the past; a symbol of the history and majesty of the monarchy; and, quite simply, a remarkable woman. Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother died on March 30, 2002 at the age of 101. Her friend Lord St John of Fawsley said, "With the passing of the Queen Mother we have lost our most treasured national person. She was not merely an historical figure. She was history."
1926
Elizabeth
Alexandra
Mary Windsor
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth was born in London on April, 21 1926, first child of the Duke and Duchess of York, subsequently King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. Five weeks later she was christened in the chapel of Buckingham Palace and was given the names Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor. The Queen ascended the throne on February 6, 1952 upon the death of her father, King George VI. Her Coronation followed on June 2, 1953. Princess Elizabeth had her early education at home. After her father succeeded to the throne in 1936 and she became heiress presumptive, and her studies were extended to include lessons on constitutional history and law. After the Second World War Princess Elizabeth's public engagements grew in number and frequency. Her first official visit overseas took place in 1947, when she accompanied her parents and sister on a tour of South Africa. Princess Elizabeth married Philip Mountbatten (4th cousin) in Westminster Abbey on November 20, 1947. Prince Charles, now the Prince of Wales and heir apparent to the throne, was born in 1948, the Princess Anne, now the Princess Royal, was born in 1950, the Prince Andrew, now the Duke of York, was born in 1960, and the Prince Edward, in 1964. The Queen and the Duke celebrated their silver wedding anniversary in London in 1972. In 1977, the Queen's Silver Jubilee was celebrated in the United Kingdom and throughout the Commonwealth. Accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, the Queen travelled some 56,000 miles to share the anniversary with her people. 2002 marks the 50th anniversary of The Queen's Accession to the Throne.
1672 - 1720
Elizabeth
Warner
48
48
1669 - 1775
John
Lewis
106
106
1704
Robert
Lewis
Jane
Meriwether
1733 - 1781
William
Lewis
48
48
1751
Lucy
Meriwether
1774 - 1809
Meriwether
Lewis
35
35
(b. Aug. 18, 1774, near Charlottesville, Va.--d. Oct. 11, 1809, near Nashville, Tenn., U.S.), U.S. explorer who with William Clark led the first overland expedition to the Pacific Northwest (1804-06). As a boy, Lewis developed a love of the wilderness and became an expert hunter. After serving in the militia during the Whiskey Rebellion (1794) in western Pennsylvania, he transferred into the regular army. In 1801 Lewis became private secretary to Pres. Thomas Jefferson, who for the next two years unofficially prepared Lewis for leadership of a transcontinental exploring expedition. At Lewis' request, another Virginian, Lieut. William Clark, was appointed to share the command with him. Upon the U.S. purchase of the Louisiana Territory (1803), Congress appropriated $2500 for its exploration. To round out his background before leaving, Lewis went to Philadelphia to study botany, zoology, and celestial navigation. The three-year expedition, from St. Louis to the Pacific Ocean and back, succeeded not only because of the party's skills but also because its two leaders worked together in such close harmony. Following Jefferson's instructions, Lewis and his colleagues kept a detailed journal of the trip, thus contributing a priceless narrative of North American exploration. These diaries helped dispel ignorance about the region and did much to open the way for westward expansion. Along with Clark, Lewis received 1,600 acres of public land as a reward. On his resignation from the army, he was named governor of Louisiana Territory in 1808. He died under mysterious circumstances in an inn on the Natchez Trace while en route to Washington. Whether his death resulted from murder or suicide is still a subject of controversy. A reliable biography is Richard H. Dillon's Meriwether Lewis: A Biography (1965). Copyright © 1997 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All Rights Reserved
George VI
(Albert)
Windsor
Philip
Mountbatten
1914 - 1991
Wallace
E.
Newton
77
77
D. 1461
Lionel
Welles
Joan
Waterton
Eudo
Welles
Maude
de
Greystoke
D. >1421
John
Welles
~1364 - >1444
Eleanor
Mowbray
80
80
Hugo
Fitzwarin
Warin
The
Bold
1412 - 1469
Richard
II
Wydeville
57
57
~1415 - 1472
Jacquette
de
Luxembourg
57
57
~1380 - 1441
Richard
Wydeville
61
61
~1385 - ~1448
Joan
Bittlesgate
63
63
~1350 - ~1390
Thomas
Bittlesgate
40
40
~1355 - ~1385
Joan
Beauchamp
30
30
~1330 - ~1396
John
de
Beauchamp
66
66
~1335
Joan
de
Bridport
~1300
John
de
Bridport
~1310 - ~1337
Hugh
de
Beauchamp
27
27
Idonia
de
Insula
William
de
Insula
~1245 - ~1316
Humphrey
de
Beauchamp
71
71
Sybil
Oliver
1217 - 1264
Robert
III de
Beauchamp
47
47
1222 - ~1283
Alice
de
Bohun
61
61
1191 - ~1251
Robert
II de
Beauchamp
60
60
1195
Juliana
Brett
~1165 - 1228
Robert
I de
Beauchamp
63
63
Simon
Valletort de
Beauchamp
Isabella
1200
Reginald
II de
Bohun
1198
Hawise
de
Mandeville
~1180
Reginald
I de
Bohun
~1184
Alice
de
Briwere
1159 - 1193
William
de
Bohun
34
34
Lucy
William
de
Bohun
~1140
Godehold
de
Toeni
1104 - 1162
Roger
de
Toeni
58
58
1109
Ida of
Hainualt
1079 - 1126
Ralph
II de
Toeni
47
47
~1070
Judith
Alice of
Huntington
~1030 - 1076
Waltheof
of
Huntington
46
46
1054 - >1086
Judith
of
Normandy
32
32
1798 - 1880
James
Turpin
82
82
1802
Lydia
Back
Lionel
Lee
~1686
Caleb
Todd
~1690 - 1735
Thomas
Todd
45
45
~1690
Elizabeth
Todd
~1695
Mary
Martha
Todd
Daniel
Todd
Elizabeth
Bradshaw
Samuel
Todd
1634
Elizabeth
Todd
1636
Mary
Todd
1638
Amos
Tudor
Todd
~1640
Henry
Todd
1642
John
Tudor
Todd
1644
Benjamin
Todd
1646
Sarah
Todd
1649
David
Todd
Margaret
Sharp
Veronica
Sharp
Barbara
Sharp
Rebecca
Sharp
Isaac
Sharp
John
Sharp
1854 - 1929
John
W.
Richardson
75
75
1856 - 1931
Elisha
Richardson
74
74
1858 - 1946
George
Washinton
Richardson
87
87
1866 - 1866
Sarah
Elizabeth
Richardson
6m
6m
1867 - 1868
William
Henry
Richardson
11m
11m
1825
David
Gibbs
Richardson
1826
Nancy
A.
Richardson
1827
William
L.
Richardson
1828 - 1863
Isaac
Richardson
34
34
Sarah
E.
Smith
1830
Sara
Gibbs
Richardson
1834 - 1896
Caroline
Richardson
62
62
1836 - 1863
Robert
H.
Richardson
26
26
Rebecca
Davis
1837 - 1937
John
Merrit
Richardson
99
99
Mary
Jane
Sturman
1839
Rachel
Richardson
Sanford
M.
Webb
1843
Minerva
Richardson
John
Kirk
1845 - 1866
Alexander
Wiley
Richardson
21
21
1848 - 1921
Louisa
May
Richardson
73
73
Carl
Franklin
Wadsack
Ida
Edith
Litven
Elijah
Newton
Erasmus
Gill
Cassandra
Chunn
Lucinda
Alice
Dawes
Hugh
Turpin
1765
Henry
Sharp
1767
Conrad
Sharp
1774
Sarah
Sharp
1783
William
Sharp
Elizabeth
Sharp
Mary
Sharp
?
Rutherford
L.
Sinclair
Orville
Wright
Nash
John
Kirk
Nelson
Boatman
James
Marion
Elder
Martha
Ann
Elder
Margaret
G.
Simmons
Silas
Williams
James
M.
Elder
1842 - 1915
Seperta
Vermillion
73
73
Unknown
~1763 - <1838
Elizabeth
Todd
75
75
William
Todd
1764
Mary
Todd
D. 1826
Joshua
Todd
Elizabeth
Palmer
Caleb
Todd
Sarah
McClanahan
~1759
Benjamin
Todd
1762 - 1866
Mary
Jane
Russell
104
104
8 MAR 1745/46
Jacob
Graves
Jacob Graves was born 8 March 1746 in Greenwich Township, Berks Co., Pa. His name appears in the Dunkel Church birth and baptism records, Greenwich Twp., as John Jacob Graff. He married Turley Coble, daughter of Anthony Coble. He appears to have served for a time in the British Army during the Revolutionary War. This may be explained by the fact that the Royal Governor (Tryon) forced those whom he defeated at the battle of Alamance in 1771 to sign an oath of allegiance to the Crown, and, being a very religious people, they either evaded service in the Continental Army or fought for the King. Jacob's will is dated April 9, 1820. He died 10 April 1820, and was buried in the Stoner Cem., Alamance Co., N.C. He was a member of the Moravian (Reformed) Church. Roy Stockwell states that of the following eleven children, only John and Boston moved to Tennessee, and it may be assumed that the others remained in North Carolina.
1747
Boston
Graves
Boston Graves, sometimes known as Sebastian Graff, was born 1 Oct. 1747 in Berks Co., Pa., and died 1 April 1840 in Knox Co., Tenn. He married Sarah Efland (or Ephland or Ephlin), daughter of Peter Efland, in 1769 in Orange Co., N.C. She was born in 1751 and died 28 Dec. 1842. Boston was a blacksmith. During the Revolutionary War he served as a private in Capt. William Rogers' company of Col. William O'Neil's regiment of Orange Co., N.C. troops. It is believed that he moved to Montgomery Co., Va. soon after the end of the Rev. War. He moved to Knox Co., Tenn. before 1797, when he witnessed a deed.
Peter
Graves
Peter Graves was born in North Carolina, and died 13 Nov. 1794 at Sharps Chapel, Tenn. According to William H. Thomas (Roy Stockwell's book), "On Nov. 13, 1794, Indians killed and scalped Peter Graves near Sharp's Fort. In December following, the fort was again assaulted, but Boston Graves, Henry Sharp, Conrad Sharp and Levi Hinds defended and drove off the foe, the other men of the settlement being at that time at Great Saltpeter Cove making gun powder in anticipation of another raid. Peter Graves was the first man buried at Sharp's Fort." He was married in N.C., but the name of his wife is not known.
1850
Ann
C. Hall
John
Graves
John Graves moved to Indiana about 1820. He married and had six children.
William
Graves
1719 - 1793
Peter
Efland
74
74
Peter Efland's Will Names John Noe's wife, Catharena Efland Noe. NOTE: A John Elfand b 1762 d 1844 is buried in Stoner's Cemetery PETER EFLAND'S WILL 4 January 1793 In the name of God Amen I Peter EFLAND of the County of Orange in the Sate of North Carolina, being weak in body and under _____anding do make this my Last will and Testament First of all I recomend my Soal into the hands of Almighty God that gave it to me hopeing through the merits of my blessed Saviour Jesus Christ to receive Full pardon for all my sins, and as for my Body I Commit it to the Earth to be Decently buried at the descretion of my Executors herein after mentioned and as for what worly Goods it hath pleased God to bestow on me I give devise and dispose of in the following manner and form Item I give and bequeath to Catharena EFLAND my Dearly beloved Wife Twenty five pounds One Cove One bed bed stead and Furniture my Will and Desire is that it be the bed that we Lie on One Large skillet One Iron pot Rack allso What She pleases to Take out of Orchard and from the Cows and out of the garden, and further is is my Will and Desire that she shall have all that she Brought with her to me , and it is allso my Will and Desire that she keep all that I have given her Dureing her Natural Life and to Dispose of them at her Deceas as she thinks Proper, and Further my will and Desire is that What Ever is Laid in for our years provision and Cloathing be my Wifes and that None of it be Taken from her Item I give to my son David EFLAND Five Shillings Sterling it being all that Ever I intend he shall have of my Estate. Item I give and Beqieath to my Son John EFLAND Catharena NOE Mary GIBS Elezabeth HANIE Sarah GRAVES and Philis SHARP an Equal Shear Each of them of all that part of my Estate which is not allready given Item I do hereby Appoint my Friends John ALLBRIGHT and Obed GREEN my hole and _________ Executors of this my Last Will and Testament hereby Revoakeing all Other wills by me here to fore made and do acknowledge this and this Only to be my Last will and Testament in Witness Where of I have hereunto Set my hand and Seal the 4 Day of January 1793 Signed Sealed acknowledged and Pronounced by me to be his my Last will and Testament Peter x Efland Seal In the presence of mark John BULLOCK ______ James HOLMES
1789
Sophia
Griswold
Fear
Brewster
Edward
Hancock
Alice
Jefferys
1828 - 1872
Delanson
M.
Griswold
43
43
Obituary in Conneaut Reporter for May 23, 1872 says he was a Mason and that "He was an one of those quiet, unobtrusive men and was a favorite with all his acquaintances." He had been ill for about 10 days with typhoid fever.
1854
Harriet
O.
1707
Isaac
Lee
John
Lee
~1709
Elizabeth
Lee
Grandson is President Zachary Taylor.
Anne
Lee
John
Lee
Mary
Willis
Lee
Samuel
Lee
~1709
Zachary
Taylor
Richard
Taylor
Sarah
Dabney
Strother
1784 - 1850
Zachary
Taylor
65
65
Elected in 1848 over Lewis Cass by a popular vote of 1,360,967 to 1,222,342 and an electoral vote of 163 to 127. Chose Millard Fillmore as vice-presi Died in office, while Congress was in session. Was a second cousin of James Madison.
Margaret
Mackall
Smith
William
Brewster
William Brewster was the Reverend Elder of the Pilgrim's church at Plymouth, since their pastor John Robinson remained behind in Leyden, Holland with the majority of the congregation which planned to come to America at a later time. Brewster was a fugitive from the King of England, because he had published a number of religious pamphlets while in Leyden which were critical or opposed the tenets of the Church of England. He had been a member of the Separatist church movement from its very beginning, and was the oldest Mayflower passenger to have participated at the First Thanksgiving, in his early fifties. William Bradford wrote a lot about William Brewster in Of Plymouth Plantation, some of which follows: After he had attained some learning, viz. the knowledge of Latin tongue, and some insight in the Greek, and spent some small time at Cambridge, and then being first seasoned with the seeds of grace and virtue, he went to the court, and served that religious and godly gentleman, Mr. Davison, divers years, when he was Secretary of State; who found him so discreet and faithful as he trusted him above all other that were about him, and only employed him in all matters of greatest trust and secrecy . .. he attended his mr. when he was sent in ambassage by the Queen into the Low Countries . . . And, at his return, the States honored him with a gold chain, and his master committed it to him, and commanded him to wear it when they arrived in England, as they rid through the country, till they came to the court . . . Afterwards he went and lived in the country, in good esteem amongst his friends and the gentlemen of those parts, especially the Godly and religious. He did much good in the country where he lived, in promoting and furthering religion not only by his practise and example, and provocating and encouraging of others, but by procuring of good preachers to the places thereabouts, and drawing on of others to assist and help forward in such work; he himself most commonly deepest in the charge, and sometimes above his ability. . . . They ordinarily met at this house on the Lord's day, (which was a manor of the bishops) and with great love he entertained them when they came, making provision for them to his great charge. He was the chief of those that were taken at Boston, and suffered the greatest loss; and of the seven that were kept longest in prison, and after bound over . . . After he came into Holland he suffered much hardship, after he had spent the most of his means, having a great charge, and many children; and, in regard of his former breeding and course of life, not so fit for many employments as others were, especially as were toilsome and laborious. But yet he ever bore his condition with much cheerfulness and contention. Towards the later part of those 12 years spent in Holland, his outward condition was mended, and he lived well and plentifully; for he fell into a way to teach many students, who had a desire to learn the English tongue, to teach them English; . . . He also had means to set up printing, by the help of some friends . . . and by reason of many books which would not be allowed to be printed in England, they might have had more then they could do. . . . And besides that, he would labor with his hands in the fields as long as he was able; yet when the church had no other minister, he taught twice every Sabbath . . . For his personal abilities, he was qualified above many; he was wise and discreet and well spoken, having a grave and deliberate utterance, of a very cheerful spirit, very sociable and pleasant amongst his friends, of an humble and modest mind, of a peaceable disposition, undervaluing himself and his own abilities . . . inoffensive and innocent in his life and conversation . . . he was tender-hearted, and compassionate of such as were in misery, but especially of such as had been of good estate and rank, and were fallen into want and poverty, either for goodness and religions sake, or by the injury and oppression of others; . . . NOTE ON WILLIAM BREWSTER'S WIFE: The maiden name of William Brewster's wife has not been proven. The claim it was Mary Wentworth rests solely on the fact that Mary Wentworth happened to live somewhat close to William Brewster in Scrooby, Nottingham. That is very shaky evidence to say the least. Further, it has been proposed that William Brewster may have married Mary Wyrall, but the evidence is just as flimsy for that marriage. There are no fewer than seven marriages from 1590-1610 that have been located in parish registers showing a William Brewster marrying a Mary. All, however, have been satisfactorily eliminated as probable candidates for the William and Mary (Brewster) who came on the Mayflower. So at present, there is no evidence to document who William Brewster's wife Mary actually was.
Wrestling
Brewster
Love
Brewster
Mary
James
Newton
Nancy
Gill
?
Bailey
D. 1802
Ann
Mason
John
Swift
~1700 - 1771
Thomas
Collier
71
71
Thomas
Collier
1703
Elizabeth
Reeks
D. 1732
John
Collier
Grace
Lucas
1685 - 1730
Richard
Ricks
45
45
Faith
Flood
William
Vaughn
The Will Of William Vaughan: In the name of God Amen. I William Vaughan of the County of Northampton and State of North Carolina being sick and weak but in sound disposing mind and memory knowing that it is appointed for all men once(?) to die and the uncertainty of the time thereof do make and ordain this my Last Will and Testament in manner and form following - First I recomend my soul to Almighty God who gave it and my Body to the Earth to be Buried at the descreshion of my Exetors hereafter mentioned - and touching such Worldly Estate as where with it has pleased God to bless me with in this life - I give demise and dispose of the same in the manner and form following Vizt over and above what I have heretofore given and delivered into possession of my Eight children namely Mary Christenbery Elisebeth Ralls Thomas Vaughan Miley Collier William Vaughan Nancy Patience Cathern Raney James Vaughan Imprimis - My will and desire is that all my Just Debts be paid at the descreshions of my Executors hereafter mentioned -- I lend unto my Beloved Wife Sarah Vaughan all my Estate during her natural life if she continues my widow for the training? and Educating the Children that she has Born me and the Death or Marriage of my Beloved Wife Sarah Vaughan my Will and Desire is that all my said Estate be sold and the Money arrising form such sale to be equally devided amongst all my children Born by my Beloved Wife Sarah Vaughan and if any of my said children Born by my Beloved Wife Sarah Vaughan should Die before such division and leave Issue then and in that case my will and desire is that the Issue of such Decendent have one equal part with my surviving Children Born by my Beloved Wife Sarah Vaughan -- Item I hereby nominate and appoint my loving So Jeriamiah Vaughan and my Beloved Wife Sarah Vaughan to be whole and sole Executor & Executrix of this my last will and Testament In Witness whereof I have hereunto set my Hand and affixed my seal this fifteenth Day of October in the Year of our Lord one thousand and Seven Hundred and Ninty three -- Signed sealed and delivered in presence of us -- Peter Weaver Jun. his John Gary William WV Vaughan Henry Weaver Jun. Mark Probated Dec Court Northampton Co., NC 1794
Sarah
Anderson
F.
Elder
~1651 - ~1718
Thomas
Flood
67
67
~1653 - 19 MAR 1727/28
Ann
Rose
Harry
Flood
~1629 - <1670
Thomas
Flood
41
41
~1592 - 1610
Col.
John
Flood
18
18
Margaret
D. 5 MAR 1671/72
Faith
~1568
Nicholas
Fludd
~1545 - 1607
Thomas
Fludd
62
62
~1527 - 25 JAN 1590/91
Elizabeth
Andros
John
Fludd
Ann
Banno
Philip
Andros
1616 - BET. 1671 - 1672
William
Rose
William
Rose
Agnes
Chisolm
Anne
1638 - 1732
Isaac
Ricks
94
94
Kathern
1606
Rix
1608 - >1677
Rebecca
Page
68
68
1577 - 1617
Robert
Page
40
40
1570 - 1637
Margaret
Goodwin
66
66
1550 - 1587
Robert
Page
37
37
Martha
1532 - 16 JAN 1554/55
Henry
Page
1544 - 1602
Francis
Goodwin
58
58
1543 - 1611
Joan
Lysinge
68
68
1510 - JAN 1561/62
John "The
Elder"
Goodwin
Alice
~1480 - 1531
William
Goodwin
51
51
Margery
John "The
Younger"
Goodwin
William
Goodwin
Roger
Goodwin
D. 1716
John
Collier
Jane
Thomas
William
Thomas
Christian
~1791
Mary
Genet
1825
Adaline
1849
Margaret
Griswold
1755
Daniel
Griswold
Served in the Revolutionary War. Sargent's Mass. Regiment. He was detached for service with Knowlton's Rangers, was captured at Fort Washington, imprisoned for 2 years, and returned to New Hampshire.
1794 - 1850
Elind
Griswold
56
56
1858
Emma
Hall
1859
George
Hall
1860
May
Manda
Hall
1869
Rose
Hall
William
R. Hall
1851 - 1851
Middle name
might be Elind
instead of Alind?
Thomas Alind and Hezekiah Gibb Hall were twins. Thomas died shortly after birth.
1851 - 1853
Hezekiah
Gibb
Hall
2
2
Twin of Thomas Alind Griswold.
~1858
Daniel
Hall
1856 - 1859
Lydia
Samantha
Hall
3
3
~1760
Abigail
Graves
Allen
Griswold
Abigail
Griswold
Theron
G.
Brown
1820
Fannie
Gates
1835
Joseph
Ahart
Newton
Samuel
G.
Newton
From the Kentucky Explorer - - June, 2000 - -Pg. 75 Samuel Newton was in the Civil War and bekieved to be on the Confederate side. It was told that Samuel never returned, and that his brother Joseph, would go regularly to search for him, Joseph having the buttons cut off his coat and sewn back on when he returned. He never found him.
Kitturian
Poats
Nancy
Anne
Newton
Cassandra
Newton
1835 - 1915
Joseph
Harper
Newton
80
80
Mary
Jane
Burks
~1831
Elijah
Newton
Susan
Swope
1831 - 1917
Lovina
Boyce
86
86
Matilda
Robinson
Lucius
Griswold
Amanda
Griswold
William
Henry
Gammett
Laura
Bolster
Frances
D.
Griswold
1716 - 1791
Joseph
Griswold
74
74
1690 - 1771
Joseph
Griswold
80
80
Joseph and his brother Benjamin were twins.
~1650 - 1717
John
Griswold
67
67
1607 - 1691
Edward
Griswold
84
84
Arrived in New England in 1639 and settled in Windsor. Then in 1664 to Killingworth, CT, first called Kenilworth, and now named Clinton. First deligate to the General Court. Justice of the peace in Windsor. First Deacon of the church. "Mr. Edward Griswold came to America at the time of the second visit of Mr. George Fenwick, at which date, also, came a large number of new settlers to the Conn. settlement. It was at a time when many of the gentry of England and wealthy persons connected with the Warwick Patent were intending removal hither; but the breaking out of the Scotch Rebellion compelled King Charles to call a Parliament, and they stayed at home to carry on their struggle with the King and Archbishop Laud. Mr. Griswold undoubtedly came in the interest of some of these patentees. He was attorney for Mr. St. Nicholas of Warwickshire, who had a house built in Windsor, and also a tract of alnd 'impaled' (fenced), as had Sir Richard Saltonstall. The Rev. Ephraim Huit, who came also, in 1639, was from the same parish, as, also, the Wyllys family, who settled in Hartford."5
Ethel
Newton
1574
George
Greswold
Dousabel
Leigh
D. 7 FEB 1716/17
Deborah
Griswold
Honora
Pawley
Matthew
Griswold
Thomas
Griswold
1609 - 1670
Margaret
Hicks
61
61
1629 - 1671
Francis
Griswold
42
42
Francis was one of the orginal settlers at Norwich, New London Co., CT in 1653, where he held public offices and become a Lt. of the Train Band.
Sarah
Wiswall
~1632 - 1715
Sarah
Griswold
83
83
D. 1704
George
Griswold
On May 9, 1700, George testified that he was son of Edward GRISWOLD and nephew of Matthew and Thomas GRISWOLD. On Jan. 19, 1737/8, sons George and John testified that they were grandsons of Edward GRISWOLD, great grandsons of George GRISWOLD, grand nephews of Matthew and Thomas GRISWOLD, and nephews of Francis GRISWOLD.
Mary
Holcomb
D. 1642
John
Griswold
1637 - 1637
Lydia
Griswold
D. 1714
Anna
Griswold
D. 1690
Mary
Griswold
Timothy
Phelps
1641 - 1720
Samuel
Buell
78
78
12 MAR 1647/48 - 1716
Joseph
Griswold
Mary
Gaylord
D. 1672
Samuel
Griswold
1654 - 1763
Bathsheba
North
108
108
1681 - 3 MAR 1689/90
Dorothy
Griswold
"Died young".
1685 - 1736
Samuel
Griswold
51
51
D. 1735
Sarah
Wright
1682 - 1753
Bathsheba
Griswold
70
70
3 FEB 1682/83 - 1739
Daniel
Clark
John
Griswold
1686
Lucy
Griswold
Allen
Ball
1689 - 17 MAR 1689/90
Martha
Griswold
Died in infancy.
1691 - 1773
Temperance
Lay
82
82
1690
Benjamin
Griswold
1693
Abigail
Norton
1693 - 1775
Dorothy
Griswold
81
81
Janna
Hand
1694
Martha
Griswold
11 FEB 1682/83 - 1751
Samuel
Pratt
1696 - 1737
Daniel
Griswold
40
40
1704
Jerusha
Stevens
7 MAR 1699/00
Walter
Griswold
Sarah
Wright
~1540
Roger
Greswold
~1510 - 1583
John
Greswold
73
73
~1472 - 1515
John
Greswold
43
43
~1440 - 1481
John
Greswold
41
41
William
Greswold
Margerie
Greswold
Isabell
Greswold
Thomas
Greswold
Elizabeth
John
Greswold
Robert
Greswold
Ambrose
Greswold
Henry
Greswold
3
daughters
~1414 - ~1473
John
Greswold
59
59
Elizabeth
Beyham
Anne
Greswold
Robert
Greswold
~1390
John
Greswold
Margaret
Bromely
Richard
Greswold
Christian
Greswold
William vel
Thomas
Greswold
Isabell
Grange
Thomas
Grange
Thomas
Greswold
D. 1411
Richard
Greswold
Daughter
of William
Grome
William
Grome
~1279
Rodolpus
Ralph
Greswold
Margaret
Dudley
~1250
John
Greswold
The principal information source for the Griswold ancestry is The Greswolds Family: Twelve Generations in England, researched and editied by Robert L. & Esther G. French and compiled by Coralee Griswold (1999). Those interested in source citations, lineage analysis and further details are encouraged to supported further research by purchasing a copy of the booklet from the publisher, The Griswold Family Association. Refer also to the series of short articles in The American Genealogist (Vols. 39-41), by Kiepura, Jacobus, and Hunt, on the GRISWOLD ancestry. Each of these articles builds on and corrects the preceding, so they should be consulted as a unit.
Alice
Greswold
Daughter
of William
Huggeford
William
Huggeford
1835 - 1898
Adam
Simmons
Pierce
63
63
1871
Guy
Hall
Pierce
1872
Clarissa
Pierce
1877
Jennie
Pierce
1883
Fred
Clarke
Pierce
1885
Nathaniel
Pierce
1886
Hazel
Pierce
6 MAR 1653/54
Robert
Lay
Mary
Stanton
1725
Sarah
Hurd
1715
John
Griswold
1719 - 1791
Nathan
Griswold
72
72
Sarah
Hull
1723 - 1804
Giles
Griswold
81
81
Mary
Chatfield
6 MAR 1725/26 - 1776
John
Griswold
Mary
1728 - 1753
Daniel
Griswold
24
24
Lydia
Hull
1730 - 1808
Jedediah
Griswold
77
77
Thomas
North
Mary
Price
Elnathan
Hurd
Thankful
Nettleton
1850 - 1932
Mary
Eliza
Griswold
82
82
1862 - 1957
Herman
Sylvester
Griswold
95
95
Jane
Braughton
1830
Catherine
Boster
1817 - 1906
Thomas
Levi
Boster
89
89
Leanna
Dewitt
1836
Daniel
J.
Boster
1838
Mahala
Boster
~1796 - 1866
Daniel
Boster
70
70
1796 - <1866
Mary
Lake
70
70
1763 - 1835
Phillip
Boster
72
72
1765 - <1830
Elizabeth
Barbara
Hinterliter
65
65
John
McCain
1819
Jacob
Boster
1819
Sally
Boster
~1823
Mary
Elizabeth
"Polly" Boster
~1825
Alameda
Boster
~1829
Melinda
Boster
Daniel
Lake
1781 - 1862
Solomon
Boster
81
81
1785 - 1842
Sarah
Boster
57
57
1789
John
Boster
1791 - ~1859
Johnathan
Boster
68
68
Hand-written, faded, worn documents are so difficult to read that sometimes a bit of imagination is necessary to piece together the ''Family Tree''. The name has been found spelled Bosser, Bosesters, Bosters, Boyster and Boister. By using the same first names (Phillip, John, Jonathan, Daniel, Solomon) over and over also adds to the confusion'. Phillip Bosser came from Alsace, Germany, in 1740, arriving in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Records show a Phillip Boster born 175O-1760 in Montgomery County, Virginia, who was probably the son of the first Phillip. Also, Solomon Boster was born about 1781 in Virginia, as was John in 1789 and Jonathan on April 22,1791. We believe they were brothers, and may be sons of Phillip No. 2. Records show that Jonathan married Mollie Huffman between 1815-1820, as the 1820 census in Montgomery County, Virginia, reads of a Jonathan Bosters and wife, one son and two daughters. We feel this son's name was Jonathan L. even though his grave marker is engraved "Born July, 1830; died June 3, 1887" The 1830 census in Montgomery County, Virginia, reads ''Jonathan Boster, four sons and four daughters,'' the mother evidently having died. Jonathan probably went to visit some of his family in Ohio around this time, where he met Patience Martin and married her on February 12, 1830. He did not move his family to Ohio until 1832-1835. The 1840 censes in Gallia County, Qhio (Harrison Township) reads only Jonathan Boster so we wonder if he was widowed for the second time. Four sons, Jonathan, Wesley Madison, another Phillip and -------- , and two daughters are listed also. By 1850 young Jonathan L. had migrated and married in Iowa. Census records for that year in Wapello County, Iowa, (Cempetine Township) tells that Jonathan L. Boster was thirty-six years old and was born in Giles County, Virginia. His description was six feet tall, light complexion, and grey eyes. His wife, another Patience , was 29 and born in Ohio. Their children were: Charles Wesley, age 9: Stephen, age 7; Rhoda, age 5; Mary, age 5 and Phillip, age 2. Children born after this time were George, Rufus and Floyd. Then came the tragic Civil War. Jonathan L. answered the call by enlisting on April 11, 1862, and was discharged April 4,1864. He developed an eye disease contracted from being wounded by an exploding shell. He was pensioned at the rate of $12 a month beginning June 22,1883. They came to Kansas before 1875 , homesteading the farm in 28-11-2 . Jonathan L Boster is buried at Bennington. Beside his grave marker is an iron star engraved: ''G. A. R. 1861- 1865". A plan white small stone is there, also, engraved: "Co. H, 351 A. lnf." His son, Charles Wesley, (January 7,1852), married Clara Chapman (August 2,1860) in 1877. They lived on the southwest corner of the J. B. Browne '8O acres'', which is located one mile north, one mile east, and one-half mile north of Bennington and now owned by Ray Roster. Indians would ride up to the house, demanding food, and the mother would take the two babies upstairs to hide. If Charles Wesley was home he would give them corn, meat, bread, or whatever there was; if not, they would raid the kitchen and help themselves! We know they lived 4 and 1/2 miles north east around this time, because the mother would push the small children in a buggy to her parents, the Chapmans, where Jim Cherry's now live, and walk on to town after groceries. Supplies were brought from Abilene on the road that went through the southern edge of town along the creek where John Berkley lives, and on to Dodge City. In 1882, five years after they were married, he moved his family to Concordia where he carried on a large draying and transferring business. He was delivery agent for the Pacific Express Company and also delivered the mail to and from the post office. At the early age of 47 he suddenly died on April 8,1899. In three different obituaries are listed three birthplaces: Ottumwa, Burlington and Nevada, Iowa. He was buried in Concordia. To this union of Charles Wesley and Clara (Chapman) Boster were born eight children: Varney Raymond, Della Mildred, Frances Marie, Charles Lawrence (his twin sister, Florence, died in infancy), and Clarence Edward. Two other young children, Nellie and Jessie died of diphtheria. In 1902 the widow purchased the farm located one miles north, one and one-haIf miles east of Bennington, and moved there with the remaining five children. She passed away January 17, 1935. Clarence Edward (January 24,1887) married Ethel Anna Morse (October 2,1894) on December 30, 1914. Two sons were born: Raymond L. and Charles D. Source: taken from the 1966 Centenial Book published by the Bennington Business Assn.
1793
Moses
Boster
1794
Catherine
Boster
1801
Mary
"Polly"
Boster
1803
Rhoda
Boster
<1740
Phillip
Bosser
Mary
Mollie
Huffman
James
Bowen
Jacob
Slusser
Mary
Niebart
James
Smith
1854 - 1934
Ralph
King
Griswold
80
80
1851 - 1926
Lester
Griswold
75
75
1860 - 1879
Lynn
D.
Griswold
19
19
1819
Anson
C.
Seeley
Salina
~1845
Emily
Seeley
1791 - 1871
Lyman
Seeley
80
80
Gravestone at Westmoreland New Cemetary. Located by Daniel and Ruth Seelye Aug. 18, 1992: LYMON SEELYE Have picture. Same stone as Martha wife of LYMAN SEELYE The 1850 USA Census showed Lyman Seelye as a Farmer with a real a estate of $3500.00. OBITUARY- Seelye - in Westmoreland, Dec.. 8, 1871, Lyman Seelye aged 80 years and 6 months. Friends of the family are invited to attend the funeral Sunday fore-noon at 10:30 AM., from the Methodist church in Hampton. (Utica Daily Observer Dec. 9, 1871)
1798 - 1866
Martha
Ann
Griswold
68
68
1855 Census Westmoreland Oneida Co, NY Martha Seelye wife of Lyman Seelye age, 57 born in Montgomery Co, NY. Lived in Westmoreland 54 years. From Hewton, Dorothy Post. Seely and Post Families Vol. 2 Lyman Seelye married Martha (Egan) b Nov 1798 d Dec. 1866 68 yrs. 1 mo,18 days. Both bur. Westmoreland Cemetery lot. Children (given Surrogate's Ct. Oneida Co. 6 Apr.1871 List 12 children all born Westmoreland Karen Vogel, 1374 Anita Ave, Grosse Point, MI 48236 is also researching Martha Griswold. 3/18/1992 her data gives the middle name of ANN. Data from, Robert and Esther French Genealogist, The Griswold Family of America June 19,1992 Martha is a desc. of Edward Griswold of CT.
1763 - 1840
Daniel
Seelye
76
76
Annuals of Westmoreland, page 719, reg. Daniel: History of Westmoreland page 609. Will of Daniel Seeley will book #6, p265. Oneida Co, NY Surrogates Court. Census 1800,1810,1820, Westmoreland, Oneida Co. NY: 1830.1840 Lorain Co, OH. IGI, Humphrey Smith & Cordelia Loveland, Cornelius Seely & Rachel Smith and land record of Daniel & Betsey, Ambrose, Sarah. Lyman, Reuben, Elijah D, Oneida Co, NY Mrs. Robert T Barnes, 20 Loblolly Lane, Wayland, MA 01778 Daniel was the son of David Seely. Born July 1, 1763 at Deerpark Orange Co, NY. Died May 29, 1840 at Westmoreland Oneida Co, NY. Married Phoebe Fulkerson July 11, 1789. He latter married Betsey Doolittle. May of died at Vienna, NY Daniel was taken prisoner at the age of 14 by the British and taken to Canada 1777. He and his father were fishing with soldiers of the Continental Army and all were taken prisoners. They offered to let the father go if he would leave the son and swear allegiance to the King, which he refused to do. They were kept prisoners in Canada for two years but finally escaped. They suffered greatly from hunger and privation. Notes from SGS, Daniel of Oneida Co, NY removed to Avon, Loraine Co, OH. 1821 returned to Westmoreland Oneida Co, NY. This town is just east of Cleveland, OH. Will of Daniel Seely of Westmoreland, Oneida Co, NY, dated Mar, 30, 1840. probated July 20, 1840: Surrogate Court, Book 6 Page 265. No wife mentioned. Sons Lyman, son Dempster, daughter Sibble. Mentions division among other children but names not given. June 1840, names in division of property is widow Cynthia Seely. Children, Lyman, Phebe Stevens, Ambrose, Reuben, Betsey Sears, wife of Silas Sears of Camden, Sibbel, Lovinia Stevens wife of Isaac Stevens, Cornelius, Daniel of Avon, Ohio, Charles of Ohio and Dempster Seely, a minor. Maria Mozier and Bray and Ann Mozier, infant children of Hiram Mozier address unknown. Notes from Predmore Collections, Orange Co. Genealogical Society. From Gazetteer of N.Y. State by J H French Page, 262; Daniel Seeley (1789) was of Westmoreland, Oneida Co, New York.
1768 - 1803
Phoebe
Fulkerson
35
35
1789 - 1861
Lovinia
Seeley
71
71
Isaac
Bishop
Stevens
1796 - 1866
Cornelius
Seeley
69
69
Rachel
Smith
Mary
House
1798 - 1879
Daniel
J.
Seeley
80
80
Ann
1800 - 1822
Sally
Seeley
21
21
1802 - 1866
Phoebe
Seeley
63
63
Samuel
Parker
Stevens
~1744 - ~1840
David
Seely
96
96
1. Predmore collection, gives David Seely date of birth as 1747. Histroy of Orange Co, NY, by, Ruttenber and Clark 1683:1881 page 682 list a David Seely, as a family living in School district No. 4 city of Wawayanda, 1813. Page 440 on Assessment roll 1803 of Wallkill. 2. Family tradition says David Seely and son Daniel. a lad of 14 were fishing with some soldiers when taken prisoners in 1777, by the British. 30 May 2000 Dear Dan, Thanks for your letter. In his diary, Sylvanus tells of a trip back to Orange County, Jan 4, 1810, where he stayed with his cousin David and saw his uncle Charles in his 89th year and his wife in her 84th. He later goes on to visit Elijah, David's brother. On Jan 2, 1811, Charlotte Seaman visits and tells him that her old father and mother are dead. Unfortunately, the mother is never named. One of my goals is to create a genealogy of all of Samuel Seely's and Charlotte Popino's descendants for about 5 generations. So I'll keep looking! There are so many unknown people back in the 18th century. Another Seely, not in the 1-5 or 6th generation books is Anthony Seeley, listed in the French and Indian Wars Muster Rolls as a cordwainer, born in Orange County ca 1743. He would presumably be a grandson of Samuel Seely or his brothers Muster Rolls as a cordwainer, born in Orange County ca Warm regards, Ollie Oliver Popenoe 5 Kassel Court Mamaroneck, NY 10543 Phone: 914-381-3226 Fax: 914-381-0329 Email: oliver@@popenoe.com
1738 - ~1809
Cornelius
Fulkerson
71
71
1745
Frinche
Van
Dyke
After the marriage she joined Dutch Reformed Church, is mentioned New Jersey Colonial Documents, Marriage Licenses page 143 list the following Falkison, Cornelius, Somerset, and Frinche Van Dyke, Somerset, 1764 Dec 11
1697 - 1780
Volkert
Volkertzen
83
83
1698
Femmetjie
Buys
Femmetjie is Dutch for Pheobe.
1766
Jonas
Seelye
1769
David
Seelye
Reuben
Seelye
1765
Mary
Seelye
Shubel
Seelye
Dempster
Seeley
Sibble
Seeley
Ambrose
Seeley
Reuben
Seeley
Betsy
Seeley
Charles
Seeley
~1720 - 1810
Charles
Seely
90
90
Wallkill, First Congregation Church. The church was organized June 10, 1785. June 10, 1785 to June 19, 1797 Rev. Charles Seely, who came to this place from Newton, NJ.this later became the First Presbyterian Church of Middletown . Rev. Charles Seely, from the beginning . perhaps to 1796, who divided his Labors with the church at "Shawangunk" as records have it, afterwards know as the "Plains ", near Mount Hope.
1726 - 1810
Mary
Horton
84
84
1687 - ~1779
Samuel
Seely
92
92
Samuel was first of Stamford, CT. He was among the early settlers who came to Goshen, Orange Co., NY prior to 1721. It is thought that he was one of the party led by Christopher Dunn in 1712 who acquired the original tract in Orange Co, NY. It is known that at least the last 5 of his children were born in NY. His name appears on a deed in Stamford , 1724 and on deeds in Orange Co. NY. 1723-24, 1733. His name last appears on the 1755 tax list for Orange Co. In various documents, Samuel is stated to have been a cordwainer. Married May 13, 1709, Stamford, CT. Charlotte Bounos(or Buenos) Popino, widow of Jean Popino (or Papineau), a French Huguenot, by whom she had a son, Peter Popino (d 1755, Salem Co, NJ) whose will was witnessed by David Seeley in1752, Salem Co, NJ.
~1680
Charlotte
Bouniot
Popino
1652 - 1703
Jonas
Seely
50
50
Jonas was one of the original 22 proprietors of Bedford, NY. 1680/1, where he received a home lot. He sold his Bedford property between 1680-85 to Cornelius Seeley, Sr. and Jonathan Miller, and returned to Stamford, CT. Jonas will dated Mar.20,1702/3, was not allowed. Inventory of his estate was taken Mar. 5,1704/5; his widow Mary and 8 children were mentioned. Apr. 22, 1719, Jonathan Holmes of Horse Neck was appointed administrator Feb. 13,1721/2, it was represented that Jonas, Jr, Martha and Susanna had died after distribution was granted 1705; surviving children: Ebenezer, Nathaniel, Eliphalet, Samuel the eldest son, Sarah. Some records also give him a daughter. Elizabeth, supposed twin to Eliphalet. She m, Nathaniel Sanford in 1728. She is not mentioned in any documents concerning the children of Jonas. She was actually the daughter, of John (3) She is. (Taken from SGS files) VOL 1,page, 11 Data from, Roselyn Whitman who states that her data came from Barbara Seidl, descendant of Obadiah Seeley by Elizabeth White. Barbara White 4880 Newcastlle Way, Anchorage, AK 99508
D. ~1689
Mary
Slawson
D. 1657
Obadiah
Seely
Obadiah was an early resident of Stamford, CT, as several entries in the records show. On Feb. 20, 1648 it was recorded that John Holly had 9 acres of land in Rock Neck, Stamford, bounded by lands of Obadiah Seeley on the north. Obadiah and Mary were married in Stamford, CT. and their first child was born there 1648. In 1649, Obadiah was listed as a citizen of Stamford. In 1651, Obadiah acknowledged payment of a debt due him from John Lareson. Obadiah died intestate Aug. 25,1657. Inventory of his estate was dated Dec. 24 1665 and mentions his widow Mary and their sons Obadiah, Cornelius and Jonas. Distribution of estate was dated Sept. 3, 1666. Habakuk Seeley died at the age of 3 in Stamford June, 1658. SGS VOL 1 page, 6
~1616 - 1665
Mary
Angel
Miller
49
49
~1580
William
Seely
~1580
Alice
Bissell
~1560
William
Seely
~1560
Alice
Blockskiche
AKA Bloxsich. Father may of been William Bloxich who was buried on 3 Fe 1929. St Martin Transcript .
Sarah
Seely
Samuel
Seely
Mary
Seely
Twin of Elizabeth.
FEB 1615/16 - 24 FEB 1615/16
Alyce
Seely
Elizabeth
Seely
Twin of Mary. Died at birth.
James
Angel
Mary
Eliot
~1648 - 1679
Obadiah
Seely
31
31
Pierre
Bouniot
French Huguenot Immigrants.
~1655 - 1658
Habakuk
Seely
3
3
~1649 - ~1714
Cornelius
Seely
65
65
Betsy
Doolittle
Papers at Westmoreland Historical Society, Tree Talks. Vol. 7 # 3 Sept,1967 Death in " Rome Telegram" a weekly newspaper, pub. each Tue. Rome, NY. Seelye, Mrs. Betsey, wife of Rev. Daniel aged 60 years on the 2nd interned, in Westmoreland, Jul. 17, 1838 Record of birth Barbour Collection, Connecticut State Library, Hartford, CT Volume 2, page 261 of the Middletown vital records. History of Oneida County, NY 1977 page 216.
1818
Orrin
Seeley
1820
Ambrose
Griswold
Seeley
1822
William
Seeley
1824
James
Seeley
1825
Daniel
Seeley
1827
Phebe
Ann
Seeley
1828
Lyman
Seeley
1830
Caleb
Seeley
1833
Lafayette
Seeley
1836
Mary
Jane
Seeley
1837
Sarah
Lavina
Seeley
1839
David
Emery
Seeley
1840 - 1925
Charles
Wesley
Seeley
85
85
1841
Bejamin
Franklin
Seeley
1740
Charlotte
Seely
1743
Mary
(Polly)
Seely
1746
Lydia
Seely
1752
Charles
Seely
1754
Elijah
Seely
1710 - 1779
Samuel
Seely
69
69
23 MAR 1710/11
Susanna
Seely
1714
Sarah
Seely
1716
Christopher
Seely
1718
Jonas
Seely
1723
John
Seely
1724
Joseph
Seely
16 FEB 1683/84
Sarah
Seely
Mary
Wicks
Waterbury
1690
Martha
Seely
1692
Jonas
Seely
1694
Susanna
Seely
18 JAN 1695/96 - 1767
Ebenezer
Seely
1699
Nathaniel
Seely
1701
Eliphalet
Seely
Elizabeth
de
Faucquemberque
~1690 - >1782
Barnabas
Horton
92
92
~1690
Mary
Sweazy
HORTON GENEALOGY, page 139. Barnabas, son of Barnabus Horton and Sarah Hines, (H is crossed out and spelled WINES). born in Southhold , about 1690; married Mary Sweazy and moved to Goshen, Orange Co, N Y about 1732. Children, probably all born in Southhold; (1) Barnabas, born in 1722; married Abigail Parshall, (2) David, born 1724; married Mary Warner.(3) Matthias, born 1726 married (4) Elihu, born 1720; died young;.(5) Silas, born 1730; married Experience Vail (6) Mary, married Charles Seely.
Janetta
Seeley
~1840
Charles
Seeley
Mary
Alexander
Wiley
Alexander was baptisted as a Presbyterian on September 13, 1742 at the First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, PA. Alexander was a Lieutenant (not Captain) in the Revolutionary War...also served in Dunsmore's war against the Indians under the command of Captain John Floyd.
N.
Richardson
William
Richardson
1811
Isaac
Richardson
~1770 - >1840
Isaac
Richardson
70
70
1771 - <1840
Nancy
Wiley
69
69
1746 - <1809
Rebecca
Hays
63
63
~1748 - 1835
William
"Buckeye Billy"
Richardson
87
87
Nickname, "Buck-Eye-Billie", was given following his feat of clearing the large area of land he purchased filled with "buck-eye" trees.
Abel
Richardson
Robert
Buchanan
Richardson
John
Richardson
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