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1743
Thomas
Nixon
1746
John
Nixon
1749
Ann
Nixon
1755
Susannah
Nixon
1764
James
Nixon
1767
Ann
Nixon
1769
Ellen
Nixon
1775
Mary I
Nixon
1777
Mary II
Nixon
1796
James
Nixon
1900
Mary
Pauline
Gallagher
1788
Harriet
Nixon
1789
Jane
Nixon
1791
Mary
Nixon
1793
Henry
Nixon
1800
Thomas
Nixon
1798
William
Nixon
*John
Rowlege
1736 - 1814
*
Frances
Wright
78
78
~1770
Ruth
Rowlege
~1895 - 1926
Leonard
E
McKeough
31
31
1895
Harriett
L
Gallagher
* John
Riley
* Mary
Ann
1895
David
Christopher
Holland
1876 - 1893
Harriet
Louisa
McKeough
17
17
~1881
William
James
McKeough
~1883
Frances
M
McKeough
~1885
John
R
McKeough
~1878
Melvina
A
McKeough
~1879
Christina
Adeline
McKeough
~1889
Lydia
P
McKeough
1897
Alesiah
M
Gallagher
~1891
Harold
C
McKeough
~1893
Ileen B
McKeough
~1894
Lenanoah
J
McKeough
~1900
Doreen
E
McKeough
~1861
Alexander
Gallagher
* Hugh
Mooney
*
Margaret
1826 - 1897
* John
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
71
71
Arrived in Sydney 9 apr 1852 on 'David McIvor' with brother Lawrence. Farmer in Mallaroba NSW. Signed marriage certificate 1859 with his mark. Was a widower at time of marriage to Margaret Callaghan.
1841/1842
*
Margaret
Callaghan
Signed marriage certificate 1859 with her mark. Witnesses at marruage William Walsh & Margaret Bugden.
* Alured
Of
Cornwall
1918
Montague
Gallagher
Service record Name GALLAGHER, MONTAGUE WILLIAM Service Australian Army Service Number NX5002 Date of Birth 26 Nov 1918 Place of Birth CUNDLETOWN, NSW Date of Enlistment 21 Oct 1939 Locality on Enlistment ENMORE, NSW Place of Enlistment MARRICKVILLE, NSW Next of Kin GALLAGHER, JAMES Date of Discharge 8 Oct 1945 Rank Private Posting at Discharge 2/3 Australian Infantry Battalion WW2 Honours and Gallantry None
* Verpyn
Of
Cornwall
* Vortegyn
Of
Cornwall
*
Rolopedaph
Of Cornwall
* Alanor
Of
Cornwall
* Elnyd
Of
Cornwall
*
Fferferdyn
Of Cornwall
* Mordaff
Of
Cornwall
* Hopkin
Of
Cornwall
Living
Gallagher
Ida
1899
Peter
Gallagher
1923
John
Wilson
Whinnen
1926 - 1994
Robert
Wilson
Whinnen
68
68
James
Chapman
Margaret
Norman
Hannah
Needham
Sarah
Piper
1771 - 1842
Richard
Ridge
70
70
Maria
Carroll
0580
* Yazdagird
Son Of
Sharihar
Charles
Daley
1893
John
Stanley
Gallagher
Service record Name GALLAGHER, STANLEY JOHN Service Australian Army Service Number N448290 Date of Birth 23 Jun 1893 Place of Birth KRANBACH, NSW Date of Enlistment 22 Apr 1944 Locality on Enlistment PORT MACQUARIE, NSW Place of Enlistment PORT MACQUARIE, NSW Next of Kin GALLAGHER, IDA Date of Discharge 30 Sep 1945 Rank Lance Corporal Posting at Discharge 30 BATTALION VOLUNTEER DEFENCE CORPS PART TIME DUTY WW2 Honours and Gallantry None
Thomas
Lovell
1809 - 1886
James
Bligh
Ridge
77
77
1810
Thomas
Ridge
1813 - 1892
Richard
Charles
Ridge
79
79
Mary
Ann
Riley
1815 - 1867
John
Ridge
52
52
1821 - 1888
Isabella
Jane
Ridge
67
67
Enoch
Cobcroft
1819 - 1888
Robert
Ridge
69
69
Sarah
Johnston
Basil
Gallagher
Mary
Ann
Skuthorpe
1821 - 1866
Martha
Ridge
45
45
1824 - 1835
Elizabeth
Lucy
Ridge
11
11
1826 - 1851
William
Bligh
Ridge
25
25
1828 - 1906
Mary
Ann
Ridge
78
78
Abel
John
Cobcroft
1829 - 1906
Margaret
Ridge
77
77
William
Buttsworth
1831
Ann
Ridge
Thomas
Wall
1904
James
Mark
Gallagher
1832 - 1857
Lucinda
Ridge
25
25
~1803 - 1823
Lucy
Upton
20
20
1806 - 1873
Maria
Roberts
67
67
1819 - 1819
Robert
Forrester
8m
8m
1821 - 1879
George
Forrester
58
58
1823 - 1824
Henry
Forrester
9m
9m
James
McDade
Charles
Homer
Martin
Henry
Potts
1852 - 1858
Albert
Potts
6
6
1894 - 1894
Augustus
Leigh
Gallagher
1850
Emma
J Potts
1818 - 1866
Sophia
Huxley
48
48
BEF 1052/1053 - 1108
* Philip I
'The Fair'
Capet
At age twenty, Philippe I, King of France, married Bertha of Holland, the step-daughter of his first cousin. This marriage had been arranged to seal the reconciliation between the king and his first cousin, the Count of Flanders. However, it took Bertha about six years before she produced a daughter, Constance, which was not the hoped-for heir. Arnoul, a holy hermit of Saint-Medard in Soissons who was always consulted on family problems, prayed to heaven; however, it still took another three years before the heir, the future King Louis VI, was born. He was followed by three more sons. Twenty years after the marriage, Philippe imprisoned Bertha in comfort in the chateau at Montreuil-sur-Mer. He then wed the still-married Bertrade de Montfort l'Amauri, wife of the Count of Anjou, and they produced four children. It is lost in time whether she seduced him or he her, but most likely Philippe had an understanding with the Count of Anjou. In any case Betrade was more than willing as she did not want to be "sent away like a whore," as her husband had done to her predecessors. Philippe's remarriage caused a sensation but not disapproval. The only one who caused problems was Yves, bishop of Chartres, who had been appointed by Pope Urban II without consultations with Philippe and this had been resented by the latter. The king had invited all bishops to his second wedding but Yves declined, referring to Philippe as committing bigamy. Although Philippe had married with the blessing of the Archbishop of Reims as well as the Papal legate, Yves wrote to the Pope who then forbade the bishops to crown Bertrade and told Philippe to cease all relations with her or else be excommunicated. Next, Bertha, his first wife, died and Philippe gathered two archbishops and eight bishops in Reims who all confirmed the royal second marriage. The Pope also put pressure on the womanising Count of Anjou who then obediently complained about the king's committing adultery with his wife. In 1096 Philippe pretended to have broken with Bertrade and consequently the excommunication was lifted. However, when it became obvious in 1099 that Bertrade was still with him, the excommunication was renewed. It took until 1105 before peace was restored and from then on Philippe and Bertrade remained together till Philippe died in 1108. Source: Leo van de Pas
1008 - 1060
* Henri
I
Capet
52
52
0972 - 1031
* Robert II
'The Pious'
Capet
59
59
0939 - 0996
* Hugh
Capet
57
57
Hereditary Abbot of St Martin & St Denis.
D. 0956
* Hugh 'The
Great' l'Abbe
Of Franks
* Walter
de St
Martin
* Papie
Of
Normandy
0865
* Robert
'The Great'
Of France
1902 - 1902
Emily
Irene
Gallagher
>1809 - 1883
*
Alexander
C Stark
74
74
Sailed from Greenock Scotland on 'Lady Bute' which arrived in Port Adelaide on 18 Jun 1839. Was one of five gentlemen to be appointed to first District Council of Bremer in 1874 & their first chairman.
0880
* Beatrice
de
Vermandois
~0748 - 0788
* Ealmund
Of
Wessex
40
40
~0729
* Eafa
Of
Wessex
~0706
* Eoppa
Of
Wessex
~0680
* Ingild
Of
Wessex
~0644
* Kenred
(Ceonred)
Of Wessex
* Ceolwald
Of
Wessex
* Cutha
Of
Wessex
* Cuthwin
Of
Wessex
0548 - 0593
* Ceawlin
Of
Wessex
45
45
D. 1951
Kelvin
Gallagher
0528 - 0560
* Cynric
Of
Wessex
32
32
Margaret
Norman
1820
Charlotte
Cobcroft
0510 - 0559
* Creoda
Of
Wessex
49
49
1040 - 1110
* William
De
Tracy
70
70
1045
*
Rohesia
~1009 - <1068
* Turgis
De
Tracy
59
59
0492 - 0534
* Cerdic
Of
Wessex
42
42
0477 - 0499
* Elesa
Of
Wessex
22
22
0457 - 0479
* Elesa
Of
Wessex
22
22
1914
Arthur
Joseph
Forrester
0440 - 0475
* Gewis
Of
Wessex
35
35
0421 - 0458
* Uvigg
Of
Wessex
37
37
0404 - 0434
* Freawine
Of
Wessex
30
30
0387 - 0427
* Frithogar
Of
Wessex
40
40
0371 - 0397
* Brond
Of
Wessex
26
26
0355 - 0403
* Baeldaeg
Of
Wessex
48
48
1813 - 1889
James
Cox
Miller
76
76
0329 - 0388
* Overlord
Woden Of
Anglo-Saxons
59
59
0333 - 0392
* Frigida Of
Anglo-
Saxons
59
59
0301 - 0356
* Frithuwald
Of
Anglo-Saxons
55
55
1918 - 1984
Thomas
Victor (Dick)
Forrester
66
66
0277 - 0317
* Frealaf Of
Anglo-
Saxons
40
40
0250 - 0299
* Frithuwulf
Of
Anglo-Saxons
49
49
0228 - 0299
* Finn Of
Anglo-
Saxons
71
71
0199 - 0244
* Godwulf Of
Anglo-
Saxons
45
45
0176 - 0215
* Geata Of
Anglo-
Saxons
39
39
0149 - 0188
* Taetwa Of
Anglo-
Saxons
39
39
0127 - 0166
* Taetwa Of
Anglo-
Saxons
39
39
0100 - 0141
* Beaw Of
Anglo-
Saxons
41
41
1054 - 1093
Bertha
Van
Holland
39
39
~1062 - 1103
* Humbert II
'The Fat' de
Maurienne
41
41
1920 - 1984
Leonard
William
Forrester
64
64
Service record Name FORRESTER, LEONARD WILLIAM Service Australian Army Service Number QX7740 Date of Birth 24 Jan 1918 Place of Birth TAREE, NSW Date of Enlistment 8 Jun 1940 Locality on Enlistment CAIRNS, QLD Place of Enlistment CAIRNS, QLD Next of Kin FORRESTER, RUBY Date of Discharge 21 Oct 1944 Rank Private Posting at Discharge 2/12 Battalion WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
1036 - 1076/1089
* Anna
Agnesa
Yaroslavna
~1017 - 1061
* Floris
I Of
Holland
44
44
1820 - 1897
Louisa
Gough
77
77
~1028 - 1113
* Gertrud
Of
Saxony
85
85
~0980 - 1054
* Yaroslav
I 'The Wise'
Of Kiev
74
74
1950 - 1915
Robert
H
Forrester
34
34
1857 - 1861
George
H A
Forrester
4
4
1827 - 1895
George Holland
Humphries
Graham
68
68
1865 - 1949
Bertha
Amanda
Graham
84
84
Alexander
McPherson
1922 - 2001
Leslie
Edwin
Forrester
79
79
Name FORRESTER, EDWIN LESLIE Service Royal Australian Navy Service Number S/4060 Date of Birth 4 Feb 1922 Place of Birth TAREE, NSW Date of Enlistment 8 Apr 1940 Locality on Enlistment AUBURN Place of Enlistment SYDNEY, NSW Next of Kin STELLA Date of Discharge 5 Nov 1945 Rank ABLE SEA Posting at Discharge HMAS Rushcutter WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
1884
James
McPherson
1886
Alfred
E
McPherson
1887
George
A
McPherson
1888
Edith
M
McPherson
1889
Frederick
W
McPherson
1892
Charles
O
McPherson
1895
Claude
McPherson
1896
Frank
McPherson
1898
Lily M
McPherson
1901
Norman
C
McPherson
1924 - 2003
Mary
Forrester
79
79
~1001 - 1050
*
Ingrid
Olafsdotter
49
49
~1158
Unknown
De
Courtenay
Eustachia
De
Courtenay
Clementia
De
Courtenay
Robert
De
Courtenay
Constance
De
Courtenay
Guillaume
De
Courtenay
Isabelle
De
Courtenay
Phillipe
De
Courtenay
~1060 - 1133
* Gisela De
Bourgogne-
Ivrea
73
73
1926
Patricia
Mary
Forrester
~1032 - 1080
* Amadeo
II Of
Savoy
48
48
~1040
* Joan
De
Geneva
~1040 - 1087
* Guillaume
I De
Bourgogne
47
47
~1044 - >1092
* Stephanie
Of
Barcelona
48
48
~0986 - 1032
* Constance
de Toulouse
46
46
~0995 - 1059
* Bernard
II Of
Saxony
64
64
~1005 - 1059
* Eilike
von
Schweinfurt
54
54
~1002 - 19 Jan 1057/1060
*
Eudes
Savoy
1005 - 1091
*
Adelais
Suza
86
86
~1008
* Gerald
II De
Geneva
1928/1930 - 1942/1944
Francis
Hilton
Forrester
~1010
*
Gisela
~0986 - 1057
* Renaud
I Of
Burgandy
71
71
~1007
* Adelais
(Judith) De
Normandie
~1055 - 1082
* Raimund
II (III)
Berenger
27
27
1059 - 1083
* Mathilda
(Maud)
De Apulia
24
24
~0952 - 1004
*
Adbelahide
Of Aquitaine
52
52
* Guillaume
III de
Taillefer
* Arsinde
(Blanche)
de Anjou
Emma
De
Mortaigne
~1054
*Agnes
De
Mortaigne
D. 1928
Harold
G
Forrester
D. 0639
* Dagobert
I Of
Austrasia
* Vladimir
'The Great'
Of Kiev
*
Rogneda
Of Polotsk
* Olaf III
'Skotkonung'
Eriksson
* Astrid
Of
Obotrites
~0985 - 1039
* Dirk III Of
Holland &
West Friesland
54
54
Dirk III ruled 46 years. He appeared to have supported highwaymen who caused a lot of trouble not only for the farmers, forcing them to pay protection money, but also for merchants by creating a toll post on their way to England. These merchants complained to the Emperor who, in 1018, sent an army. However, this army was so ineffectual in the marshes of Holland, after being decimated and robbed, that its general, Duke Godfrey of Lorraine, was imprisoned and only released after he swore he would not return to avenge his defeat. These 'Friesians' didn't like their counts but outside interference was even more resented. Source: Leo van de Pas
~0985 - 1044
* Otelhild
Of
Saxony
59
59
* Otto
II Of
Germany
0960
* Arnulf Of
Holland &
West Friesland
His year of birth is unknown and it is not certain whether the place of his birth was Gent. He has been mentioned in records from 26 October 970 onwards. He extended his territories southwards but died in battle against the Friesians, 18 September 993. Source: Leo van de Pas
0960
* Luitgard
Of
Luxembourg
D. 1933
Charles
R
Forrester
1811 - 1867
*
Isabella
Brown
56
56
Arrived Port Adelaide 18 Jun 1839 on 'Lady Bute' having sailed from Greenock Scotland.
* Bernard
I Of
Saxony
*
Hildegarde
Of Stade
* Heinrich Of
The Nordgau &
Schweinfurth
*
Gerberga
Of Swabia
*
Richard
Inglett
*
Margaret
Ridsdale
~1590
* John
Westlake
1150 - 1220
Thomas
Basset
70
70
*
Humbert I
Of Savoy
1878
Frederick
C
Eather
1761
*
William
Nixon
1881
Bertram
Henry
Eather
1884
Leslie
Gordon
Eather
1888
Royston
C
Eather
* Ancelie
von
Lenzburg
D. 1035
*
Olderic
Suza
0980 - 1037
*
Bertha
Of Este
57
57
* Otto
Guillaume Of
Burgandy
*
Ermentrude
de Roucy
* Raimund
I (II)
Berenger
* Almodis
De la Haute
Marche
1762
* Mary
Rowlege
* Robert I
'Guiscard'
De Hauteville
*
Sigelgaita
Of Salerno
* Hedwige
Of
Saxony
* Roul
de
Crespy
*
Humphrey
de Viuelles
* Audrey
de la
Haie
1318
*
Ralph
Trenowith
~1320
*
Elizabeth
Bushell
~1324
*
Stephen
Treiago
~1330
* Alice
Cheynduit
1737
*
Samuel
Nixon
1294
* Michael
de
Trenouth
~1297
*
Margaret
Butler
~1294
*
Richard
Bushell
~1294
* John
Treiago
~1296
* Joan
Trewarthenek
~1302
*
William
Cheynduit
Nellie
Bushell
1269
* Stephen
de
Trenouth
1274
* Joan
de
Trenaco
1245
* John
de
Trenouth
1737
* Mary
Wood
1250
* Richard
de
Trenaco
~1270
*
Stephen
Trewarthenek
~1272
* Joan
Trevanion
~1244
*
Stephen
Trewarthenek
~1246
*
Melior
Soar
~1246
* John
Trevanion
* Joan
Beaupre
~1220
*
Osbert
Soar
*
Stephen
Beaupre
~1273
* John
Cheynduit
~1715
*
Samuel
Nixon
~1240
*
Ralph
Cheynduit
~1216
*
Ralph
Cheynduit
~1190
*
Ralph
Cheynduit
~1164
*
Ralph
Cheynduit
~1138
*
Simon
Cheynduit
*
Robert
de Buci
Eglina
de
Valletort
Hugh
de
Valletort
1863 - 1867
Talbot
G A
Forrester
4
4
1864
Isabella
J
Forrester
~1716
*
Sarah
Stevens
1865
Henry
W
Forrester
1867
Wentworth
J R
Forrester
1869 - 1869
Edith
M
Forrester
1863 - 1909
Thomas
Maisey
46
46
Gilbert
Basset
Gretta
J
Kellett
1908
Alexander
E
McPherson
1910
James
G
McPherson
~1245
* de
Columbers
Sigibert
III
~1756
* John
Dalton
1892
Millie
M F
Clarke
Richard
A
Munro
1895
Richard
J
Clarke
1898
John P
Clarke
1899
Cecil
Clarke
1902
Doris I
Clarke
1904
James
P
Clarke
1245
*
Adam
le Bret
Walter
J
Wilson
?
Walter
Curran
1759
*Anne
Wiggins
Pauline
E
Harford
Gladys
M
Basham
Living
Jones
~1266 - 1318
*
Henry
FitzAlan
52
52
~1270
*Rose
Bigbury
~1276 - 31 Jan 1350/1351
*
Richard
Lovel
~1285 - Feb 1317/1318
* Muriel
de
Soules
~1230 - 1295
* Alan
FitzRoland
65
65
~1235
* Matilda
de
Goldington
~1200 - 1252
* Peter
III de
Goldington
52
52
~1731
*
Edward
Dalton
~1210
* Joan
~1206
* Roland
de
Rohaut
~1170 - <1219
* Peter
II de
Goldington
49
49
~1175
* de la
Saucy
~1135 - <1198
* Peter
I de
Goldington
63
63
D. 0629
* Lothair
II Of
Neustria
~1130
* Eva
~1145
* Roger
de la
Saucy
Joan
de
Goldington
Charibert
II Of
Neustria
~1735
*Jane
Staples
1911 - 1987
*
Lawrence
Gallagher
76
76
D. 0584
* Chilperic
I Of
Soissons
0498 - 0561
* Lothair
of
Soissons
63
63
~1250 - <1291
* Hugh
Lovel
41
41
~1254 - >1300
*
Eleanor
46
46
~1250
* John
de
Soules
~1258
*
Hawise
Stewart
~1220 - 1281
*
Henry
Lovel
61
61
~1225
* Eve
~1240 - >1290
* Nicholas
II de
Soules
50
50
~1242
* Annora
de
Normanville
1805 - <1858
Susanna
Hammond
53
53
~1214 - 1283
*
Alexander
Stewart
69
69
1218 - 1250
Jean 'Heiress
Of Arran &
Bute' MacRory
32
32
~1205 - BEF Jan 1254/1255
*
Richard
Lovel
* Alice
~1195 - 1264
* Nicholas
I de
Soules
69
69
~1227
*
Ermengarde
Durward
~1217 - <1290
*
Alexander
Comyn
73
73
~1220 - 1282
*
Elizabeth
de Quincy
62
62
1173 - 1241
* Walter
FitzAlan
Stewart
68
68
~1184
* Beatrix
de
Angus
1832 - 1884
Ann
Forrester
51
51
* James
Macrory
Of Bute
~1190
* Ragnhild
Of The
Isles
John
Stewart
Alice
Stewart
Mary
Stewart
Elizabeth
Stewart
~1200 - 1275
* Alan
Durward
75
75
1906
Paul
Cocks
Mary
Fitzgibbon
Isabel
Basset
1837 - 1913
Isabella
Forrester
76
76
0535 - 0575
*Sigibert
I Of
Austrasia
40
40
~1213
* Marjorie
Of
Scotland
~1163 - 1233
*
William
Comyn
70
70
~1184
* Margaret
Colhan Of
Buchan
Charibert
I
Guntram
0465 - 0511
* Clovis
I Of
Franks
46
46
Theodoric
I
~1174 - 1264
* Roger
de
Quincy
90
90
1911
John
Ridge
Eather
1835
Lydia
Forrester
Marjorie Lidia
Bateman
Forrester
~0555
* Sharihar
Son Of
Khusraw
~0530
* Khusraw
Son Of
Harmizd
~1200 - >1245
* Helen Of
Galloway
MacDougal
45
45
~0505
* Harmizd
Son Of
Kushraw
Marjorie
Comyn
Chlodomer
Childebert
Sviatopolk
I
Mstislav
1858 - 1923
Robert
Samuel
Forrester
65
65
Boris
Gleb
D. 0972
*
Sviatoslav
I Of Kiev
Yaropolk
Oleg
D. 0945
* Igor
Of
Kiev
Elizabeth
Comyn
Elena
Comyn
John
Comyn
Alexander
Comyn
1862
Eliza
Matilda
Forrester
Egidia
Agnes
Comyn
~1126 - 1204
* Alan
FitzWalter
78
78
0534
* Sirin
~0480
* Khusraw
Son Of
Kavadh
~0455
* Kavadh
Son Of
Peroz
~1130
* Margaret
de
Galloway
1142 - 1207
*Gilchrist
de
Angus
65
65
~1160
*
Margary
Haroldsdottir
John
Stewart
Walter
Stewart
1864
John
Robert
Forrester
Euphemia
Stewart
William
Stewart
Elizabeth
Stewart
Christian
Stewart
Margaret
Stewart
Unknown
Stewart
~1145 - 1210
* Angus
Of The
Isles
65
65
* Arran
Of The
Isles
~1165 - ~1216
*
Henry
Lovel
51
51
1173 - ~1254
*
Christiana
81
81
1867
Kara
M
Forrester
Unknown
Lovel
* Alexander
II Of
Scotland
1115 - 1179
*
Richard
Comyn
64
64
1122
* Hextilda
Of Tynedale
FitzUchtred
D. <1199
* Fergus
Of
Buchan
Elizabeth
Comyn
Margaret
Comyn
William
Comyn
Fergus
Comyn
Idonea
Comyn
1865
Susannah
J
Forrester
Agnes
Comyn
D. 0969
* Olga
1904
Patience
Edwards
ABT 0186 BC - ABT 0145 BC
* Philometer
Ptolemy VI
Of Egypt
1907
Sylvia
Annie
Edwards
1908
James
Edwards
1915
Ellen
(Nell)
Edwards
1155 - 1219
* Saier
IV de
Quincy
64
64
Magna Charta Baron Page for Saire De Quincey Earl of Winchester A portion of the information concerning Surety Baron SAIRE de QUINCEY is as follows: SAIRE de QUINCEY, the Surety, born before 1154, was a Baron present at Lincoln when William the Lion of Scotland did homage to the English monarch in October 1200. He obtained large grants and immunities from King John and was created Earl of Winchester, 2 March 1207, having been governor in 1203 of the Castle of Ruil in Normandy. He is created with rewriting Magna Charta from the Charter of King Henry I and the Saxon Code. Because he had opposed the Kings concession to the Popes legate, he was bitterly hated by King John. One of the Barons to whom the City and Tower of London were resigned, Saire de Quincey was excommunicated with the other Barons the following year. He was sent, with Robert FitzWalter, the Surety, by the other Barons, to invite the Dauphin of France to assume the Crown of England and, even after the death of King John, he kept a strong garrison in Montsorell Castle in behalf of Prince Louis. When the Barons, being greatly outnumbered, were defeated by the troops of King Henry III, Saire de Quincey, with many others, was made prisoner and his estates forfeited. In the following October his immense estates were restored upon his submission. In 1218 the Earl of Winchester went with the Earls of Chester and Arundel to the Holy Land, assisted at the siege of Damietta in 1219, and died 3 November in the same year, on the way to Jerusalem. His wife was Margaret Beaumont, whom he married before 1173. At the beginning of Johns reign, Saire de Quincey was not a Baron, much less a great one. In the civil war the King had had the advantage over the rebels. Few of the Barons had had much actual military experience. The Barons contribution to the war was the scutage they paid, a war fund substituted for the contingent of knights owed to the Kings service. The money was collected from vassals, and mercenary knights were paid from it. Many of the mercenaries were regulars who served the same Baron from campaign to campaign, but those Barons who are known to have had extensive military experience were only Saire de Quincey, Robert FitzWalter, William de Mowbray, William dAlbini, Roger de Cressi and Robert de Roos. Saire de Quincey is associated with two stalwart Castles in the South of England: Colchester and Winchester, both with the Latin castrum root, signifying that they were once the site of Roman forts. Colchester Castle could not have been built before the early 12th Century, though Roman materials may have been re-used in its construction. The keep, the only portion now surviving, is in complete harmony with other Norman castles. Colchester must have been a formidable stronghold, and a challenge to Saire de Quincey. The King's men held the Castle against Quincey, the first Earl to attack Colchester. John had given the fortress into the charge of a Fleming whom he thought he could trust. But Quincey took the Castle, and later found holding it more difficult. The fighting was of such a nature that John himself came to Colchester to see just how stubborn Saire de Quincey was. The Earl held the Castle for two months, but lack of food forced him to give up and take flight to France. Colchester was the largest Norman keep in England. It measures one hundred fifty-two by one hundred seventeen feet, enclosing nearly twice the area of the Tower of London. Its walls vary between eleven and thirty feet in thickness. It was erected either by William the Conqueror or by William II. It is of the quadrangular variety, turreted at the corners. In it and elsewhere herringbone masonry has been noted. Winchester Castle was first erected by William the Conqueror. Later alterations and extra height were added by Henry III, about the year 1138. The great Hall has Purbeck columns of 13th Century architecture, supporting a restored roof and containing handsome windows of the same approximate period. Only the keep remains. "How commonplace this saying, 'Only the keep still stands,' . . . thanks to the old builders who made the keep strong and high to withstand time, and so difficult to tear down that it escaped the looters of the ages." Perhaps Murphy was thinking of Colchester or Winchester when he thus wrote, for this was the fate of the Quincey strongholds.
D. 0879
* Rurik
of
Kiev
1285 - 1356
Joan
de
Genevill
71
71
1871 - 1872
Mary
Ellen
Forrester
3m
3m
1916 - 1965
* Irene
Violet Mary
Forrester
49
49
1156 - 1236
* Margaret
de
Beaumont
80
80
~1186 - 1234
* Alan
MacDougal
Of Galloway
48
48
1195 - 1228
* Margaret
'The Scot' Of
Huntington
33
33
1218
Margaret
de
Quincy
1222
Elena
de
Quincy
~1106 - 1177
*
Walter
FitzAlan
71
71
~1110
*
Eschyne
de Molle
~1090 - 1166
* Fergus
Of
Galloway
76
76
~1095
*Elizabeth
Of
England
D. <1187
*Gilbert
Of
Angus
1864
Ernest
George
Forrester
* Harald
II
Maddadson
~1200 - 1256
* Raoul
de
Fougeres
56
56
1201 - 1221
* Alix
de
Thouars
20
20
* Robert
II de
Dreaux
*
Yolande
de Courci
~1157 - 1225
* Guy
de
Thouars
68
68
1166 - 1201
* Constance
de Bretagne
35
35
*
Gormflaeth
Maceth
~1127
* Guillaume
de
Thouars
~1128 - 1171
* Conan
'le Petit' de
Bretagne
43
43
James
McCann
1141
*
Margaret
Dunkeld
1110 - 1152
* Henry Of
Huntington
Stewart
42
42
* Somerled
Of The
Isles
1120 - 1178
* Ada
de
Warenne
58
58
*
Raginhild
Olafsdottir
Aufrica
Of
Galloway
~1095
* Alain
II de
Bretagne
Gilbert
Of
Galloway
Bethoc
MacFergus
1333 - 1389
Roger
Clifford
56
56
1806
George
Freeman
~1120 - <1167
*
Berthe
Bretagne
47
47
1060 - 1135
* Stephen
de
Bretagne
75
75
~1025
*
Gudrod
Haraldsson
~1046 - 1086
*
Marie
Haraldsdottir
40
40
*
Harald
Gudrodsson
~0950 - 0989
*
Godfred
Of Man
39
39
0955
*Unknown
Of
Islay
~0925
*
Harald
Sigrydsson
~0880 - 0927
*
Sigtrydd
Sigrydsson
47
47
~0896 - >0930
* Edith
Of
England
34
34
1794 - 1814
Elizabeth
Forrester
20
20
*
Sigtryd
Halfdansson
D. ~1135
*
Hawise
Bretagne
~0874
* Eggwyn
Of
England
0999 - 1079
*
Eudes
Penthievre
80
80
1024
* Agnes
de
Cornouaille
Edith
Aethelstan
~0762
*Unknown
Of
Kent
D. 0762
*
Aethelbert
II Of Kent
~0736
*
Unknown
Of Kent
1795 - 1873
Margaret
Forrester
78
78
D. 0725
*
Withred I
Of Kent
*
Cynegth
D. 0673
*
Egbert I
Of Kent
D. 0664
*
Earconbert
Of Kent
* Sexburga
Of East
Anglia
*
Eadbald
Of Kent
* Emma Of
Austrasia Daughter
of Theudebert
* Anna
Of East
Anglia
*
Saewara
~0730 - 0793
* Makir
Theudoric
Of Toulouse
63
63
1797 - 1875
John
Forrester
78
78
0738
* Auda
Aldane
Martel
0705
* Rolando
Of Toulouse
de Autun
~0710
*
Bernier
0689 - 0741
*
Charles
Martel
52
52
~0700
*
Swanhilde
Of Bavaria
0687
* Habaibai
Ben Nehemiah
David
0685
* Bertha
Of
Neustria
1080 - 1153
* David
I Of
Scotland
73
73
The youngest of the sons of Malcolm Canmore, he was sent in 1093 to England along with his sister Matilda (who in 1100 married Henry I of England) and remained for several years at the English court. In 1107, when his elder brother Alexander succeeded to the throne, David became Prince of Cumbria with a territory which, besides part of Cumberland, included all Southern Scotland except the Lothians. By his marriage in 1113 to Matilda, widow of the Norman Earl of Northampton and daughter of the Saxon Earl of Northumbria, he became Earl of Huntingdon. In 1124 he succeeded his brother on the Scottish throne; in 1127 he swore, with the other great barons of England, to maintain the right of his niece Matilda to the English crown. In 1135, he took up arms on her behalf when Stephen seized the throne and penetrated into England as far as Durham, where peace was purchased by the confirmation of the earldom of Huntingdon to his son Henry and the promise of that of Northumberland. In 1138 the war was renewed and David, deserted by Bruce and others of his Anglo-Norman vassals who owned large estates in England, was signally defeated at the "Battle of the Standards" near Northallerton. The next year a second peace was concluded when the promised earldom of Northumberland was bestowed on Prince Henry. The rest of David's reign---which marks the end of Celtic and the beginning of Feudal Scotland---was devoted to the welding of the different races of Scotland into one nation, the civilization of the people by the erection of burghs, the promotion of trade, manufacturing and commerce, and the founding or restoration of bishoprics and religious houses. According to Bellenden, "the crown was left indigent through ampliation of great rents to the church", a state of matters that led James I to remark, while standing by David's tomb at Dunfermline, that "he was ane sair sanct for the crown". He is often called St.David though he was never formally canonized but his name was inserted in the calendar prefixed to Laud's Prayer Book for Scotland (1637). He died at Carlisle and was succeeded by his grandson, Malcolm. Source: Leo van de Pas
0635 - 0714
* Pepin
II Of
Austrasia
79
79
0654 - >0689
* Alpaide
Of
Aupois
35
35
1799 - 1873
Henry
Forrester
74
74
1072 - 1130
* Matilda
(Maud) Of
Huntington
58
58
1046 - 1076
* Waltheof
Of
Northumberland
30
30
Executed on the orders of William I - beheaded.
1054
* Judith Of
Boulogne
Of Lens
Neice Of William I 'The Conquerer'.
1020 - 1054
* Lambert
Of
Boulogne
34
34
0650
* Grimaldo
II
Agilofinges
0670
*
Viletrude
0660 - 0739
* Natronai
(Nehemiah)
Of Hisdai
79
79
~0651 - 0691
* Thiedoric
III Of
Neustria
40
40
~0650 - 0692
* Clothilde
Of
Austrasia
42
42
0602 - 0685
*
Ansigisel
Of Metz
83
83
Henry
Forrester
0613 - 0693
* Doda
St
Beggue
80
80
~0602 - 0667
*
Theodon I
Agilofinges
65
65
0613
*
Regintrud
Meroving
~0630
*
Hisdai
Sharijhahr
0634 - 0657
* Clovis
II Of
Neustria
23
23
0635 - 30 Jan 0679/0680
* Bathildis
Of
Chelles
0582 - 0640
* Arnulf
Of
Austrasia
57
57
0683
* Dode
Clothilde
de Heristal
~0591 - 0639
* Pepin
I Of
Austrasia
48
48
0587 - 0652
* Itta
Of
Landen
65
65
1804 - 1888
Anne
Forrester
84
84
1030 - 1090
* Adelaide
Of
Normandy
60
60
D. 1049
*
Eustace
I
* Maud
Of
Louvain
D. 1015
* Lambert I
'The Bearded
Of Louvain
0975 - 1017
* Gerberga
Of
Lorraine
42
42
0953 - 0994
* Charles
Of
Lorraine
41
41
* Bonne
de
Ardennes
* Godfrey 'The Old
Count' Of Verdun
& Ardennes
0580 - 0625
* Garibald
II
Agilofinges
45
45
0920 - 0954
* Louis
IV Of
France
34
34
1805
Isabella
Jane
Forrester
1869 - 1952
* James
Peter
Gallagher
83
83
Samuel
Howard
Lothair
Of
France
Marie
* Matilda
Of
France
0580
* Geila
Of
Friuli
~0605
* Mustanai
Son of
Yazdagird
~0605
*
Izdundad
Clotaire
III Of
Neustria
Childeric
II Of
Neustria
Lothar
III Of
Neustria
D. 1801
Mary
Frost
* Bodegisel
II Of
Aquitaine
0879 - 0929
* Charles III
'The Simple'
Of France
50
50
* Oda
Of
Suevia
0540 - 0601
*
Arnoldus
Of Metz
61
61
0539 - 0610
*
Bertha
Of Kent
71
71
~0550 - 0645
* Carloman
Of
Austrasia
95
95
* Tassilon
I Of
Agilofinges
0552 - 0610
* Gisulf
Of
Friuli
58
58
0562
* Romilde
Of
Agilofinges
*
Charibert
I Of Paris
James
Manning
~0430
* Peroz
Son Of
Yazdagird
~0405
*
Yazdagird
Of Persia
~0409
*
Dinak
~0380
* Varahan
Son Of
Yazdagird
~0355
* Yazdagird
Son Of
Shapur
~0330
* Shapur
Son Of
Shapur
~0305
* Shapur
Son Of
Homizd
*
Ingoberge
Of Paris
D. 0951
*Eadgifu
(Egdina)
Of England
0844 - 0879
* Louis II 'The
Stammerer'
Of France
35
35
1878
Maude
Freeman
D. 0901
*
Adelaide
Of Paris
Maldred
Robert
de
Quincy
1178 - 1222/1223
Hawise
de
Quincy
Arabella
de
Quincy
0500
*
Ansbertus
Of Moselle
0513 - 0580
*
Blithilde
Of Gaul
67
67
1144 - 1219
* David
Of
Huntington
75
75
~0270
* Homizd
Son Of
Nerseh
0363 - ~0480
* Muredach
II Of
Scotland
117
117
1878
May
Freeman
~0240
* Nerseh
Of
Armenia
~0215 - ~0272
* Shapur
I Of
Persia
57
57
Living
Davis
Living
1171 - 1232
* Maud
Of
Chester
61
61
D. ~0425
* Erc
(Geodnaid)
Of Ireland
D. 0465
* Eochan Or Owen
Or Eugenius 'The
Lion' Of Ireland
Converted by St Patrick.
* Loarn Or
Eochaid Of
Scotland
* Niall 'Of The
Nine Hostages'
Noigallah
*
Roighnach
1880
Maisie
Freeman
* Angus
Of
Scotland
~0287 - ~0357
* Eochaidh
Muigh Meadhoin
Of Ireland
70
70
~0291
*
Cairrionn
Chasdubh
* Romaich
Of
Scotland
*
Fincormach
Of Scotland
~0280 - 0326
*
Murdeach
Tireach
46
46
~0290
*
Muireann
~0249 - ~0322
*
Fiacha
Srabhteine
73
73
~0240 - ~0322
*
Aoife
Gallgha
82
82
* Thrinklind
Of
Scotland
1882
Thomas
Freeman
~0200 - ~0284
*
Carbre
Lifeachain
84
84
~1085 - 1114
* Alan
FitzAlan
29
29
~1085
* Adeliza
de
Hesdin
1135 - 1190
*Robert
de
Beaumont
55
55
1130 - 1212
* Petronilla
de
Grandmesnil
82
82
1104 - 1168
*Robert
II de
Beaumont
64
64
1108 - 1168
* Amice
de
Montfort
60
60
Beatrice
Plantagenet
D. 1298
Eleanor
Of
England
* Hugh
De
Clermont
1884
Mary
Freeman
~1045 - ~1110
* Marguerite
de
Montdidier
65
65
~0906 - ~0984
*
Herbastus
De Crepon
78
78
* Hugh
I de
Meulan
* Alex
de
Vexin
~1014
* Agnes
Ermentrude
Fleitel
*
Walter
Gifford
~0974
* Aveline
de
Crepon
* John
Gifford
*
Sybel
1002
* Hildeburge
de
Beaumont
1882 - 1957
William
Charles
Bidner
74
74
1045
* Bertrade
de Monfort
d'Evreaux
Linda
Edwards
Kerry
Cavanagh
Michael
Edwards
1105
Sibilla
1033 - 1106
* Fulk IV
'The Rude'
Of Anjou
73
73
1164 - 1200
* Roland
Of
Galloway
36
36
Living
Edwards
Living
Findlay
Living
Findlay
1884 - 1887
Margaret
Jane
Bidner
2
2
~1172 - 1217
* Elena
de
Morville
45
45
~1143 - 1189
* Richard
de
Morville
46
46
1340
John
Dymock
Living
Gibson
~0220
* Para
Son Of
Keribir
~0180 - 0266
* Cormac Mac
Art Cormac
Uhlfhada
86
86
*
Eithene
Oilamdhda
~0188
* Keribir
Of
Britain
~0155 - ~0195
* Art
Eaufhear
Of Ireland
40
40
*
Eachtach
1886 - 1939
Joseph
Adam (Joe)
Bidner
53
53
1874 - 1963
* Mary
Ann
McKeough
88
88
~0140 - 0201
* Llewfer Maw
(Lucius) Of
Siluria & Britain
61
61
~0160
* Glwys
verch
Eurgen
0125 - 0170
* Coel 'Old
King Coel'
Of Britain
45
45
~0123
* Eurgan
ap
Marius
~0119 - ~0157
* Conn
Ceadcathach
38
38
~0125
*
Mendhbh
Lithdnearg
* Feidhlimdh
'The Lawgiver'
Rachtmhar
* Una
*
Gurdzad
~0197 - ~0241
*
Ardashir I
Of Persia
44
44
1890 - 1945
Josephine
Bidner
55
55
* Artabanus
Of Persia
Or Partha
* Vologases
IV Of Partha
*
Vologases
III Of Partha
*
Vologases
II Of Partha
*
Vologases
I Of Partha
* Vonones
II Of
Partha
* Darius
Of
Atropatene
~1100 - 1174
*Uchtred
Of
Galloway
74
74
* Artavasdes
Of
Atropatene
* Daughter Of
Antiochus I Of
The Commagene
1901 - 1974
Dorothy
Linda
Bidner
73
73
* Antiochus
I Of The
Commagene
Living
David
D. 1166
* Gunnild
Of
Dunbar
1147 - 1181
*Hugh
de
Kevelioc
34
34
1155 - 1227
* Bertrada
de
Montfort
72
72
* Marius
(Meric)
Of Britain
* Pernardim
Of
Boudicia
Agnes
Of
Chester
1100 - 1153
*Ranulf de
Gernon de
Meschines
53
53
Ranulph IV, Gernones, Earl of Chester, De Gernon/Gernones/German. born 1100 died 1163, married Maud. Their son was Hugh De Keveliock, 3rd Earl Chester. Ranulph was poisoned by William Peverel III, the grandson of Wiliam I's illegitimate son by the same name in 1153. The Peverel family had their seat at Peveril Castle, Castleton, Derbyshire. As a result of this attempted murder, the Peveril's lost their lands and were forced into exile on the continent. It is noteworthy that William Smith gives Ranulph the title of Count [Earl] of Huntington.
Roy
Clark
1896 - 1963
Elizabeth Eve
(Sr Mary
Aquin) Bidner
67
67
1926
Elizabeth II
Alexandra
Mary Windsor
D. 1291
Eleanor
Of
Provence
~1120 - 1189
* Matilda Of
Gloucester
FitzRobert de Caen
69
69
* Emma
Of
Normandy
1921
Philip
Mountbatten
D. 1290
Eleanor
Of
Castille
Margaret
Plantagenet
Adgina
Living
Edwards
Living
Edwards
1847
Henrietta
(Harriet)
Nixon
0968 - 1057
* Leofric
'The Great'
III Of Mercia
89
89
0980 - 1067
* Godiva
(Godifu)
Of Mercia
87
87
AKA 'Lady Godiva'
*
Leofwine
*
Alward
* Edulf
*
Elfwina
*
Ordgar
Hereward
1380
*James
Nanfan
1229
Roger
Floer
1839
James
Nixon
Patrick
Edwards
Phillip
Edwards
* Isias
Philostrogos
Anne
Carlion
Ann
Rosmergey
1231
William
Floer
Bartholomew
1846
Harriett
Whinnen
1840 - 1899
Mary
Whinnen
59
59
1836 - 1908
William
Barker
72
72
1843
Jane
Nixon
Ann
Blee
~1812 - 1896
Stephen
Blee
84
84
~1814
Ann
Blee
~1817
Peggy
Blee
Mary
Emily
~1824
George
Blee
Elizabeth
Williams
1850
Jane
Williams
Blee
1854
Mary
Eliza
Blee
1856 - 1934
Edward
Lindsay
Blee
77
77
1845
John
Henry
Nixon
Claude
Whitworth
Lindsay Blee
Elliott
Lindsay
Blee
~1786
Mary
Blee
~1788 - 1789
Edward
Blee
1
1
1790
George
Blee
~1794
Stephen
Blee
~1799
Margaret
Blee
Joan
Davey
~1784
Prudence
Thomas
~1803 - 1865
John
Blee
62
62
* Henry
Josua
Strassburg/er
Eliza
Blee
Stephen
Blee
1811
Charles
Blee
Thomas
Blee
Penelope
Blee
George
Blee
William
Blee
Sophia
Hughes
~1828
John
Blee
~1830
Sophia
Blee
*
Margaret
~1837 - 1888
Charles
Hughes
Blee
51
51
Jane
Blee
Stephen
Blee
John
Blee
Elizabeth
Pascoe
Stephen
John
Blee
James
Blee
Charles
H Blee
William
James
Blee
Bessie
Blee
1856
Edward
Gallagher
* John
McKeough
Elizabeth
Repper
James
Blee
John
Blee
Edward
Blee
Elizabeth
Blee
Mary
Thorn
~1836
Margaret
Blee
~1837 - 1888
Charles
Blee
51
51
Eliza
Blee
Jane
Bates
1857
Jane
Gallagher
1857 - 1928
Martha
Blee
71
71
1858
Mary
Blee
1861 - 1870
Jane
Blee
9
9
1863 - 1870
Charles
Blee
7
7
1864 - 1870
Emma
Blee
6
6
1866 - 1870
Alfred
Blee
4
4
1869 - 1870
William
Ernest
Blee
1
1
1871 - 1910
Alfred
Ernest
Blee
39
39
1873 - 1931
Charles
Henry
Blee
58
58
1875 - 1929
William
George
Blee
54
54
1883
William
H
Forrester
1880 - 1950
Walter
Robert
Blee
70
70
James
Armstrong
Scott
Mary
Calhoun
1893 - 1974
Alfred
Ernest
Blee
81
81
1896 - 1965
William
Blee
69
69
1901 - 1988
Dorothy
Jane
Blee
87
87
1907 - 1972
Rudolf
Blee
65
65
Mary
Ann
Daniels
Lucy
Moussell
1895 - 1946
Charles
Henry
Blee
51
51
1884
Ernest
G
Forrester
1897 - 1978
Walter
Stanley
Blee
81
81
1902 - 1902
Lucy
May
Blee
1902 - 1948
Vera
Gladys
Blee
46
46
1915 - 1973
John
Thomas
Blee
58
58
D. 1776
William
Blight
Jennifer
Blight
~1746
*
Richard
Williams
1748
*Mary
Thomas
*William
Buckfolde
Gent
~1772
Mary
Williams
1887
Florence
M
Forrester
~1775
Elizabeth
Williams
~1777
Honour
Williams
Eunice
Woodfall
Living
Blee
Living
Blee
Living
Blee
Living
Blee
Frances
Kealy
Amy
Edith
Lawry
Leslie
Blee
1891
Cecil
John
Forrester
Eileen
May
Duffy
Frank
Blee
Eileen
Blee
Walter
Blee
William
Chisholm
Mary
Chisholm
William
Chisholm
Janet
Chisholm
Thomas
Chisholm
John
Chisholm
Lillian
B
Forrester
Elsie
Chisholm
Isabel
Chisholm
James
Blee
Scott
William
Armstrong
Scott
Euphemia
Weir
Scott
Ethel
Jean
Scott
Mary
Huntly
Scott
Walter
Huntly
Scott
Nellie
Veir
Scott
May
Scott
Pearl
E
Forrester
Thomas
Armstrong
Scott
Evelyn
Gibson
Living
Blee
Living
Blee
Living
Blee
Richard
Alexander
Jackson
Living
Jackson
*
Thomas
Walters
* Ann
1868 - 1973
Ernst
Heinrich
Oppermann
105
105
~1798
Frances
Foley
1873 - 1956
Frederick
Oppermann
83
83
1870 - 1962
Emma
Louisa
Oppermann
91
91
~1810
* Ernst
Oppermann
Augusta
Prange
Hilda
May
Haines
1860 - 1917
Emanuel
Brooks
56
56
1875
Helene
Oppermann
~1871
James
Coulson
1897
Herbert
Willis
Holland
Myrtle
Beatrice
Ey
1824
Louisa
Nixon
Unknown
Holland
Unknown
Holland
Unknown
Holland
Unknown
Holland
Unknown
Holland
Living
Holland
Unknown
Brooks
1902 - 1982
Victor
Charles
Brooks
80
80
1900 - 1981
Ivy
Gesinea
Brooks
81
81
1902 - 1981
Elsie
Adeline
Brooks
79
79
1826
Samuel
George
Nixon
~1855 - 1933
* Emily
Jane
Riley
78
78
1892 - 1961
John
Emanuel
Brooks
69
69
1893 - 1956
Susan
Jane
Brooks
63
63
1891
Leslie
Stuart
Brooks
1898 - 1982
Anna Helena
Victoria
Brooks
84
84
1911 - 1912
Emma
Beatrice
May Brooks
7m
7m
1907 - 1985
Emanuel
Raymond
Brooks
77
77
1895 - 1983
Hilda
Daisy
Brooks
87
87
1904 - 1973
Francis
Wilfred
Brooks
69
69
1908 - 1980
Clement
Lloyd
Brooks
71
71
1896
Howard
Clare
Haines
1829
William
Nixon
~1899
David
John
Rivett
1897 - 1965
Daniel
Charles
Harrold
68
68
Julius
Samuel
Schulz
Unknown
Schulz
Unknown
Schulz
Unknown
Schulz
1931 - 1950
Ena
Ruth
Schulz
18
18
Unknown
Harrold
1919 - 1989
Douglas
Daniel
Harrold
70
70
Elizabeth
1832
Mary
Anne
Nixon
1734 - 1789
William
Longhurst
55
55
1731
Elizabeth
Longhurst
1739
Mary
Longhurst
~1700
Samuel
Sima
Sarah
Groves
~1494 - 1563
* John
Arscott
69
69
1503 - 1563
*
Phillipa
Battyn
60
60
1513 - 1580
Humphry
Arscott
67
67
~1531
Thomas
Arscott
1532
Joane
Arscott
1819
Eliza
James
~1534 - 1564
John
Arscott
30
30
~1538 - 1613
Thomas
Arscott
75
75
~1542
Edmund
Arscott
~1544
Margery
Arscott
~1548
George
Arscott
~1550 - 1619
Halnet
Arscott
69
69
~1552
William
Arscott
~1469 - 1541
* John
Arscott
72
72
~1472 - 1514
*
Margery
Floyer
42
42
~1496
Agnes
Arscott
Living
Wessling
~1498
Christian
Arscott
~1500
Thomas
Arscott
~1502
Richard
Arscott
~1504
John
Arscott
~1439 - 1493
* John
Arscott (or
Reynsham)
54
54
~1443
*
Joane
Cloford
~1471
Halnatha
Arscott
~1409
* John
Arscott
~1413
*
Elizabeth
Floyer
~1441
Richard
Arscott
Living
Wessling
~1443
Alnet
Arscott
~1445
John
Arscott
~1447
Margert
Arscott
~1379
* John
Arscott
~1383
* Joan
Tilley
~1360
*
Nicholas
Tilley
~1349
* John
Arscott
~1353
*
Unknown
Renson
1474 - 1522
*
Humphrey
Battyn
48
48
~1478
*
Katherine
Carmynowe
Living
Wessling
~1431 - 1514
* John
Carmynowe
83
83
~1446 - 1520
*
Phillipa
Trenowith
74
74
1400
*
Walter
Carminowe
1406
* Jane
Resprin
~1410 - 1497
*John
Trenowith Of
Fentongollan
87
87
1427
*
Honor
Tregarthen
1351 - 1407
*
William
Carminowe
56
56
1372 - 8 Feb 1406/1407
*
Margaret
Kelly
~1380
*
Richard
Resprin
1375
*John
Trenowith Of
Fentongollan
Douglas
McArthur
*Johanna
Nanfan
1400
*
William
Tregarthen
1322 - 1361
*
Walter
Carminowe
39
39
~1321 - >1356
* Alice
Tynten
35
35
~1346
* John
De
Kelly
~1348
*
Margaret
1350 - 1427
*
Ralph
Trenouth
77
77
~1378
* Jane
Basset
*
Mithridates
I Kallinikos
~1295 - 1341
* John
Carmynowe
46
46
1835
* Ernst
Oppermann
~1300 - 1349
*
Johanna
Glynn
49
49
<1303 - ~1321
*
Stephen
Tynten
18
18
<1303
*
Elizabeth
De Bloyou
~1265
* John
De
Kelly
1330
* John
Trenowith
1336
* Jane (Joan)
Treiago
(Trejago)
1337 - 1384
*
William
Basset
47
47
1360
*
Margaret
Fleming
*
Richard
Floyer
~1388 - >1428
* John
Floyer
40
40
1830
* Anna
Gesienne
Sophie Schafer
~1392 - >1433
* Alice
Basse
41
41
~1350
* John
Floyer
~1354
*
Margaret
Clive
<1329 - >1388
* John
Floyer
59
59
D. >1329
* Joan
~1270 - >1311
*
William
Floer
41
41
~1279
* Fina
Herewarde
~1227 - >1307
* John
Floyere
80
80
*
Unknown
Mariot
D. <1264
*
Floridus
Floer
~1798
* Johann
Christoph
Schafer
1893 - 1980
* Frederick
Arthur
Forrester
86
86
Service record Name FORRESTER, FREDERICK ARTHUR Service Australian Army Service Number N282499 Date of Birth 29 Apr 1893 Place of Birth PENRITH, NSW Date of Enlistment 13 Nov 1941 Locality on Enlistment AUBURN, NSW Place of Enlistment PADDINGTON, NSW Next of Kin FORRESTER, MATILDA Date of Discharge 4 Sep 1942 Rank Driver Posting at Discharge 106 R M T COY MARRICKVILLE WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
~1201 - >1264
* Sabina
De
Dunstanville
63
63
D. >1170
* Richard
Of Floyers
Hayes
D. AFT 1 Mar 1159/1160
*
Nicholas
D. >1131
*
Richard
<1066 - >1086
*
Floher
20
20
<1175
* Geoffrey
De
Dunstanville
* John
Hereward
* Sir
Thomas
Hereward
~1325
*
Richard
Clive
*
Thomas
Basse
~1800
* Anna Gesche
Sophia
Eisenhuth
*
Matilda
*
Thomas
Basse
*
Henry
Basse
1337 - 1370
*Simon
Fleming
33
33
1342
*
Cicely
Champernoun
~1314 - 1342
*Thomas
Champernoun
28
28
~1284 - 1316
*
Richard
Champernowne
32
32
1295
* Elizabeth
Joan de
Valletort
~1260 - 1283
*Richard
Chambernon
23
23
~1264
* Joan
Plantagenet
1705
* John
Longhurst
~1236
*
Richard
Chambernon
*John
de
Wotton
5 Jan 1208/1209 - 1272
*
Richard
Plantagenet
~1216
* Joan
De
Valletort
~1212 - >1284
*
Dionisia
English
72
72
~1207 - >1272
*Henry
De
Champernowne
65
65
Knight.
~1186
*Robert
English
~1195 - <1232
*Oliver
Champernowne
37
37
Knight.
~1175
* Eve
Of
Cardigan
1301 - 1351
*William
Basset
50
50
~1709
*
Sarah
Dickson
~1311
*
Johanna
Bottreaux
1270 - 1305
*
William
Basset
35
35
1275
* Alice
Wallis
1240
*Laurence
Basset
1245
*
Hawisia
Mallett
* Alan
Basset
1155 - 1233
* Alan
Basset
78
78
1159
* Aline
de
Gay
1099 - 1182
*
Thomas
Basset
83
83
1108 - >1207
* Alice
De
Dunstanville
99
99
~1675 - 1712
* Jervais
(Jarvis)
Longhurst
37
37
1270 - 1310
* Hugh
de
Valletort
40
40
~1275 - >1310
*
Lucia
le Bret
35
35
~1153
*
Isolda
Baronis
~1165 - ~1210
* Henry
De
Champernowne
45
45
1170 - 1237
* Rohais
de
Tracy
67
67
D. ~1203
* Henry
De
Champernowne
~1100 - >1170
* Mabel
Of
Gloucester
70
70
~1090 - 1147
*Robert
Of
Gloucester
57
57
Born an illegitimate son of King Henry I of England about 1090 in Caen, he was consequently known as Robert de Caen. He witnessed charters of the King from about April 1113 onwards and fought at the battle of Bremule, on 20 August 1119, where King Henry I defeated Louis VI, King of France. Between June and September 1122 he was created Earl of Gloucester. In 1123 he brought a force to assist in the capture of the castle of Brionne held by the rebellious Norman barons. In 1126 he had custody of his uncle, Duke Robert of Normandy, as a prisoner at Bristol and later at Cardiff. In 1127 he did homage to the Empress Matilda, recognising her as his father's successor in the kingdom. On this occasion he had a dispute with his cousin, Stephen de Blois, as to precedence which was decided against him. In 1130 he sanctioned the foundation of the Abbey of Neath. In 1131, at the Council of Northampton, he took precedence among the five Earls who attended. In 1133 he was sent by the King to Bayeux, after the death of Bishop Richard, to enquire as to the fees and services due to the see by its barons, knights and vavasours. He was present at the King's death in December 1135 and received 60,000 livres from him, apparently as executor. On Stephen's accession to the English Crown and his recognition as Duke by the Normans, Robert gave up Falaise to his agents but removed his father's treasure. In March 1136 he returned to England and, after Easter, did homage for his English lands and, when Stephen granted his Charter of Liberties, he was a witness. At about this time or in the following year he founded St.James's Priory at Bristol as a cell to Tewkesbury, giving to the Lady Chapel of the Priory every tenth stone while building the keep of Bristol Castle at the same time. In 1137 he accompanied Stephen to Normandy. However, they quarrelled and next year his English and Welsh estates were forfeited. Thereupon he prepared for war with Stephen and took up the cause of his half-sister Matilda in Normandy, obtaining the surrender of Caen and Bayeux to her husband. In September 1139 he landed in England with Matilda and, taking her to Arundel Castle, became her commander in the civil war that ensued. In 1140 he burnt Nottingham and, in February 1141, he and his son-in-law, Ranulph, Earl of Chester, relieved Lincoln and took Stephen prisoner, sending him to Bristol. He accompanied Matilda in her progress to Winchester and London and, when the citizens drove her out, fled with her to Oxford. Taking part in the fighting at Winchester, he helped Matilda to escape from the city but, on 14 September 1141, was captured at Stockbridge and taken prisoner to Rochester. Shortly afterwards he was exchanged, without concessions on either side, for King Stephen. Robert then joined Matilda at Bristol and with her proceeded to Oxford. In June 1142 Matilda sent him over to her husband, Geoffrey of Anjou, to urge him to invade England. Geoffrey declined to help until he had conquered Normandy, whereupon Robert joined him in his campaign. When they received the news that Matilda was besieged in Oxford, Robert hurried back to help her, taking with him her son, the future King Henry II. He captured Wareham and other places and, on Matilda's escape from Oxford, he and Henry met her at Wallingford. In 1143 Robert defeated Stephen at Wilton and in 1144, blockaded Malmesbury, Stephen refusing battle. Matilda's party was now so much reduced that Stephen was able to take Faringdon, which had been fortified by Robert. In the spring of 1147 Robert took Henry (II) back to Wareham and sent him over to Anjou; in the same year he founded Margam Abbey. However, on 31 October 1147 he died of a fever at Bristol and was buried there in the Priory of St.James. Source: Leo van de Pas
~1078
*
Unknown
1250
*John
Wallis
~1679 - 1706
*
Catherine
Williams
27
27
1176
*William
Mallett
Steward to King Henry II.
<1189 - >1207
* John
Basset
18
18
D. ~1130
* Alan
De
Dunstanville
Beatrice
De
Dunstanville
~0742 - 0814
* Charlemagne
'Charles The Great'
Of The Franks
71
71
Over 100 lines of descent from Charlemagne.
1100 - 1175
* Reginald
(Rainald)
FitzRoy
75
75
~1068 - 1135
*Henry
I Of
England
67
67
1027/1028 - 1087
* William
I Of
England
~1031 - 1083
* Matilda
Of
Flanders
52
52
She was of very small stature and very little is known about her early years. Being a descendant of the English King Alfred The Great was one reason why William, Duke of Normandy, sought her in marriage. Apparently she refused him as she did not want to be married to a bastard. Furious, William forced entry to her room and gave her a beating. However, this rather unconventional behaviour resulted in her changing her mind and they married in 1051, although they had to wait until 1059 before the papal dispensation arrived. William relied heavily on her and she acted as regent in Normandy whenever he was absent. After the conquest of England, she was crowned William The Conqueror's queen at Winchester. She went to the north of England with him and at Selby gave birth to the future King Henry I, probably their tenth or eleventh child. In the year 1069 she went back to the Duchy of Normandy where she remained in charge. When she became ill in 1083, William The Conqueror hurried over from England to be with her. However, she died on 2 November 1083 at Caen and was buried there. Source: Leo van de Pas
D. 1035
* Robert 'The
Magnificent'
Of Normandy
1871 - 1947
Alexander
Stark
75
75
~0940
* Rogerus
Magnus De
Montgomery
D. 1026
* Richard
II Of
Normandy
0982 - 1017
* Judith
De
Bretagne
35
35
~0933 - ~0996
* Richard II
'The Fearless'
Of Normandy
63
63
D. 1031
* Gunnor
Of
Crepon
D. 0942
* William
Longsword
Of Normandy
* Sprota
(Adela)
Of Senlis
0870 - 0932
* Robert 'Rollo
The Dane'
Ragnvaldsson
62
62
~0870
* Poppa
De
Valois
0846 - 0932
* Rolf 'The
Ganger'
Ragnvaldsson
86
86
William
Albert
Stark
~0857 - 0890
* Ragnvald I 'The
Wise' Of More
Eysteinsson
33
33
*
Eystein
Ivarsson
* Halfdan
Of
Normandy
* Sveide
Of
Normandy
* Berenger
Of Bayeaux
De Senlis
*
Ragnhild
Hrolfsdottir
~1012 - 1067
* Baldwin V
'The Pious'
Of Flanders
55
55
~1009 - 1079
* Adela
(Alix)
Capet
70
70
0972 - 1031
* Robert II
'The Pious' Of
France Capet
59
59
About 1018 the 'Manichaean' teachings appeared in Aquitaine; this sect not only rejected both baptism and the Cross but apparently observed strict asceticism. Ten years later, ten of the canons of the Church of the Holy Cross at Orleans were accused of being 'Manichaeans' and of worshipping the devil. These canons, which included the confessor of Queen Constance, rejected the sacraments of the Church and denied the human birth of Christ together with the reality of his Passion and Resurrection. Brought to trial before the King, Robert 'the Pious', and an assemblage of bishops, these heretics were consigned to the flames, yet not before Queen Constance struck out the eye of her former confessor. Source: Leo van de Pas
~0986 - 1032
* Constance
Of
Provence
46
46
Archibald
Edmund
Stark
~0938 - 0996
* Hugh
Capet
58
58
~1028 - 1080
* Herbert
V Of
Vermandois
52
52
~0895 - 0956
*Hugh 'The
Great' Of
Neustria Capet
61
61
0908 - 0937
* Edhilda
Of
England
29
29
0758 - 0783
*
Hildegarde
Of Swabia
25
25
~0777
* Bertha
Of
Toulouse
*
Childebrand
Roger
Carminowe
Thomas
Carminowe
Reginald
Carminowe
Caroline
Isabella
Stark
Margaret
Carminowe
<1250 - >1280
*
Jonathan
Glynn
30
30
<1198 - >1220
*
Paschasius
De Glin
22
22
<1168 - >1198
*
Richard
De Glin
30
30
~1150
*
Richard
De Glin
~1250 - ~1308
*
Roger
Carmynowe
58
58
1253 - ~1329
* Joanna
de
Dinham
76
76
1284
Oliver
Carmynow
~1230
*
Roger
Carmynowe
<1236 - >1302
* Sara
Hornacote
66
66
Arthur
Edward
Stark
1888 - 1950
* Matilda
May
Bidner
62
62
Living
Stark
~1195 - >1263
*
Robert
Carmynowe
68
68
<1173 - >1220
*
Roger
Carminow
47
47
<1152 - >1173
*
Roger
Carminow
21
21
<1216 - ~1302
* Gervais
De
Hornicote
86
86
1163 - 1224
* Robert De
Tintaioel De
Tintagel
61
61
<1160 - ~1208
* Gervais
De
Hornicote
48
48
>1287 - ~1322
* John
De
Tynten
35
35
~1280
*
Joane
Durant
<1267 - <1286
* Ralph
De
Tynten
19
19
~1250 - >1296
* Alice
Russell
46
46
John
Stark
<1255 - ~1285
*
Thomas
Durant
30
30
1002 - 1059
* Alfgar
III Of
Mercia
57
57
~1270 - 1305
* Alan
De
Bloyou
35
35
<1283 - ~1343
*Joanna
Nanscoyk
60
60
>1243
* Ralph
De
Bloyou
*
Elizabeth
>1217
* Alan
De
Bloyou
~1220
* Joan
De
Bodrugan
~1188 - <1240
* Ralph
De
Bloyou
52
52
<1165 - ~1204
* Alan
De
Bloyou
39
39
Robert
Longhurst
<1140
* William
De
Bloyou
~1200 - >1256
* Henry
II De
Bodrugan
56
56
*Juliana
de
Cardinham
Philip
De
Bodrugan
<1154
* Henry
De
Bodrugan
*
Isabella
<1220
*
Richard
De Kelly
<1200 - ~1252
* William
De Kelly
52
52
Thomas
Fleming
1312 - 1332
*Baldwin
le
Fleming
20
20
William
Longhurst
1318
* Matilda
de
Genevill
1285 - 1300
*Richard
le
Fleming
15
15
1285
*
Maria
Martyn
1321 - 1369
* Eleanor
De
Rohant
48
48
~1292 - ~1350
* Roger
de
Rohant
58
58
~1296
*
Eleanor
Lovel
1125 - 1192
* Robert
de
Quincy
67
67
1100 - 1162
*
Mabel
FitzRichard
62
62
1080 - 1140
* William de
Burgo De
Mortaigne
60
60
1080
* Isabel
FitzRichard
De Clare
John
Longhurst
~1082 - >1156
*
Sybilla
Corbet
74
74
~1037 - ~1091
* Robert
De
Mortaigne
54
54
(The ROBERT, COMTE DE MORTAIN AND EARL OF CORNWALL The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planch窠Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. Robert, Comte de Mortain and Earl of Cornwall, the exact date of whose birth is as much a question as that of Odo, who, if his age at the time of his death be correctly stated, must have been the elder of the two; but, whether or not, there was probably not more than a year or so's difference between them. Our first knowledge of him is obained from the fact of his being made Comte de Mortain in the Cotentin (not to be confounded with Mortagne in La Manche), by his uterine brother, Duke William, on the banishment of William the Warling, son of Malger, and grandson of Duke Richard the First, on suspicion of treason for it really amounted to nothing more the wily tyrant availing himself of an opportunity to advance, under a pretence of justice, another of his mother's family. This was just previous to Duke William's visit to England in 1051, and Robert, I conclude, might at that period have been nearly of full age, being born, as I take it, circa 1031. In 1054, on the invasion of Normandy by Henry, King of France, we find him joining the army of William, with his knights and retainers; but he was not in the battle of Mortemer, being in the Duke's division, and consequently had no opportunity of distinguishing himself. We next hear of him at the council called by William on receiving the tidings of Harold's assumption of the crown of England, and subsequently at the great meeting at Lillebonne, when he promised to contribute to the invading fleet no less than one hundred and twenty vessels, according to the curious Latin record published by Taylor; [A Roberto de Mortoleio, c. et xx.] an enormous number, but the size has to be taken into consideration, and the list may be held to include boats of every description. In the great battle of Senlac, Wace tells us he never went far from the Duke, and commanded the chivalry of the Cotentin, but he is not conspicuously delineated in that portion of the Bayeux Tapestry. His share of the spoil is said to have been the greatest. He was created Earl of Cornwall, in which county alone he possessed two hundred and forty-eight manors at the time of the compilation of Domesday; fifty-four in Sussex, besides the borough of Pevensey; seventy-five in Devonshire, forty-nine in Dorsetshire, twenty-nine in Buckinghamshire, thirteen in Hertfordshire, ten in Suffolk, ninety-nine in Northumberland, one hundred and ninety-six in Yorkshire, and twenty-four in other counties, amounting altogether to seven hundred and ninety-seven, with two castles in his county of Cornwall, one at Dunhever and the other af Tremeton. In 1069, the Earl of Cornwall and Robert Comte d'Eu were left by King William in Lindsey to watch the Danes who had landed at the mouth of the Humber and invested York, but alarmed at the approach of the Royal forces retreated to the opposite shore, and took shelter in the fens. Availing themselves of the opportunity afforded them by a festival at which the disaffected inhabitants liad invited the invaders to be present, the two Earls fell upon them unexpectedly, and pursued them with great slaughter to their very ships. We hear little of him from that period till we find him beside the death-bed of the elder William, supplicating for the pardon and release of his brother Odo, which the King, with great reluctance, at length conceded to the urgent and incessant entreaties of the Earl and his friends. "My brother Odo," said the dying monarch, " is a man not to be trustedambitious, given to fleshly desires, and of enormous cruelty. There is no doubt that if he is released he will disturb the whole country, and be the ruin of thousands." The petitioners pledging themselves for the Bishop's reformation, the King yielded from mere weariness, observing, " It is against my own judgment that I permit my brother to be liberated, for be assured that he will cause the death or the grievous injury of many persons." He was too true a prophet. His son Rufus had scarcely ascended the throne when the pestilent priest commenced, as we have seen, to sow dissensions amongst his subjects, and succeeded in involving the generous brother, to whom he was indebted for his freedom, in a conspiracy to depose the nephew who had restored him the possessions he had deservedly forfeited. Imposing on the duller nature, and working on the affection of Robert, he beguiled him into a rash attempt to hold his Castle of Pevensey against the King, which failing might have cost the Earl his life or liberty, and the confiscation of all his estates. The Red King, however, made a judicious distinction between his uncles, banishing for ever the arch-traitor Odo, and accepting the submission of Robert, allowed him to return to his allegiance. This event occurred in 1088, and after that time his name disappears from the pages of our historians. Brooke, in his Catalogue of Nobility, says, witliout citing any earlier writers, " This Robert was slain in Northumberland in the year 1087." Vincent, in his "Discoverie," points out the error of the date, but is silent respecting the account of the death, which he certainly would not have been if he could have contradicted it. Dugdale was equally ignorant on the subject. "When he departed this world, I do not find," he tell us; "but if he lived after King William Rufus so fatally lost his life by the glance of an arrow in New Forest from the bow of Walter Tyrrell, then was it," he continues, "unto him that this strange apparition happened, which I shall here speak of;" and then he relates the story told by Matthew Paris, how that, at the very hour the King was killed, the Earl of Cornwall, being hunting in a wood at some distance, and left alone by his attendants, was met by a huge black goat bearing Rufus all black and naked with a wound in his breast. The Earl adjured the goat by the Holy Trinity to tell him whom it was he carried, and was answered, "I am carrying your King to judgment. Yea, that tyrant William Rufus, for I am an evil spirit, and the revenger of his malice which he bore to the Church of God, and it was I that did cause his slaughter, the proto-martyr of England, St. Alban, commanding me so-to-do, who complained to God of him for his grievous oppressions in this Isle of Britain which he first hallowed all which the Earl related soon after to his followers." What a pity the goat did not reveal the name of the individual he had caused to do the slaughter! This absurd story, one of the many circulated at the time of the King's death, and tolerably well proving a guilty foreknowledge, is only quoted here as bearing on the question of the decease of Robert Earl of Cornwall, for the narrator does not distinguish the Earl by his baptismal name, and therefore leaves it uncertain whether he is alluding to Robert or to his son William, who had undoubtedly succeeded to the earldom of Mortain and Cornwall before 1103, as in that year he had left England for Normandy, and was in open rebellion against Henry I, whom he hated from childhood, and by whom he was consequently deprived of his titles and estates for treason. In the absence at present of any reliable information, I am inclined to believe that Robert's death preceded that of his brother Odo, as the monk of Malmesbury tells us that, "not content with the two earldoms of Mortain in Normandy and Cornwall in England, his son William demanded from King Henry the earldom of Kent which his uncle Odo had held, and petulantly declared that he would not put on his robe or mantle till the inheritance he derived from his uncle should be restored to him," a terrible threat, which must have alarmed the King amazingly. Without presuming to fix on an exact date, I consider then that Robert Earl of Cornwall died between the years 1089 and 1097; and if there be any foundation whatever for Brooke's statement, that he was slain in Northumberland, it is possible that he was there with his nephew King William on the occasion of Robert de Mowbray's rebellion in 1095. It is not the less remarkable, however, that the death of so important and wealthy a personage should have occurred without its being recorded by a single historian. Robert Earl of Cornwall had taken to wife previously to the Conquest, but at what period we are ignorant, Matilda, daughter of Roger de Montgomeri, Earl of Shrewsbury, and by her left one son, William, of whom I have just spoken, and three daughters Agnes, first offered in marriage to William de Grentmesnil, but afterwards the wife of Andr矤e Vitry, Denise, married in 1078 to Guy, 3rd Sire de La Val, of whom more hereafter; and Emma, wife of William Count of Toulouse. Of the three sons of Herleve, William, Odo, and Robert, the latter alone appears to have possessed some kindly feeling. He is described by William of Malmesbury as a man of a heavy, sluggish disposition, but no foul crimes are laid to his charge. He had evidently the courage of his race, and his conduct as a commander is unassociated with any act of cruelty. Scandal has not been busy with his name as a husband. No discords are known to have disturbed his domestic felicity. With the exception of the one occasion when ensnared by the artful representations of Odo, he had joined in the rebellion against Rufus, no trace is seen of his having been involved in any of the revolts and conspiracies which were continually convulsing both Normandy and England, and his fidelity to the elder William was never for an instant shaken. We have seen him beside the death-bed of that William, pleading urgently for the pardon of their worthless brother, and pledging himself generously but rashly to his reformation; and the distinction made by the second William between his two uncles upon their surrender at Pevensey, shows that he believed in the contrition of Robert, and thoroughly estimated the amount of dependence he could place upon the word or oath of the faithless, treacherous, turbulent Odo. He was a great benefactor to the Abbey of Grestain in Normandy, which had been founded by bis father, Herluin de Conteville, and his appropriation of the possessions which belonged to the Priory of St. Petroc at Bodmin, in Cornwall, founded by King Ethelstan, appears to be justified by the fact that they had been taken from the Priory, and were illegally enjoyed by canons secular. By a charter to the monks of St. Michael in Peril of the Sea, on the coast of Normandy, giving to them and their successors in pure alms for ever the monastery of St. Michael on the Mount in Cornwall, and which must have been executed before 1083, as the name of Queen Matilda occurs amongst the witnesses, we learn that the standard of that saint had been carried before him in battle, and may fairly conclude that it was in the decisive one at Senlac. This charter appears to have been subsequently confirmed by him in 1085 at Pevensey. [Mr. Freeman appears to have mistaken this date for the original one of the Charter, and consequently demurs to its authenticity; but it is clear from the names of the witnesses that it must have been executed in Normandy, and the note appended to it in the Monasticon refers merely to a confirmation some years afterwards, -- "Firmata atque roboratur est h塠carta anno millesimo octagesimo quinto apud Pevensel," in Robert's own castle.] Meagre as are the materials which we are enabled at present to scrape together for a memoir of Robert Earl of Cornwall, his character stands out in honorable distinction from those of his brothers, neither surrounded by the "guilty glory" of the King, nor blackened by the baseness of the Bishop. Photocopy of the text was provided this site by Fred L. Curry. Return to index of Wm's Companions Pat's Genealogy Index VISIT MY ONLINE BOOKSTORES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UPDATED 01/11/2003 10:45:03
~1039
* Matilda
(Maud) De
Montgomery
~1062 - 1107
*
Richard
De Clare
45
45
~1096 - >1135
* Adeliza
De
Meschines
39
39
~1001 - >1087
* Harlowen
De
Conteville
86
86
~1003 - ~1050
* Arlotte
De
Falaize
47
47
We hear nothing of Herleve after the birth of William until she appears as the lawful wife of a Norman knight named Herluin de Conteville, [P籥 Anselm, vol. ii, p. 470, has the following astounding marginal note: " D'autres le nomment Gilbert de Crepon"! There may be "more in this than meets the eye" at present.] of whom little is known beyond the fact that he was a widower, father of a son named Ralph, on whom William is said to have bestowed large domains, besides heaping honours and possessions on Herluin, both in Normandy and England, though no one knows what or where. He held the honour of Sainte Marie Eglise, a portion of the Comt矯f Mortain, but whether the gift of the Conqueror to him, or a family possession, does not appear. He had a castle there, and founded in its neighbourhood the Abbey of Grestain, in which he and his wife were buried. There is tolerably sufficient evidence that, as I have already stated, Herleve had by Duke Robert a daughter, named Adeliza, or Adelaide, of whom I shall have much to say anon; but the date of Herleve's marriage to Herluin is uncertain, William of Malmesbury stating it to have taken place before the death of Robert, while the monk of Jumi禥s, a contemporary, asserts the contrary. My own opinion is that the contemporary chronicler is in this instance wrong. He either knew nothing, or suppressed his knowledge of Robert's lawful marriage with Estrith, sister of Canute the Great, and widow of UIf, a distinguished Dane, who was murdered by order of his brother-in-law in 1025. Robert is said to have ill used and repudiated her, at what exact period is unknown; but he had no issue by her, which might possibly be one cause of his displeasure. It seems to me most probable that the marriage of Herleve and Herluin was consequent on that of Duke Robert with Estrith, and shortly after the birth of Adeliza her second child, who at the period of the pilgrimage could not have been more than six, William being only between seven and eight. At the time, therefore, of the Council of Fecamp Herleve would be with her husband, which may account for her not being mentioned by any historian in connection with that event, or associated in any way with the care or education of her son. Gilbert Comte d'Eu, was appointed his guardian, and Alain Count of Brittany, governor of Normandy during the Duke's absence; the latter act being a politic one, as Alain could not with honour harass a province committed to his charge.
~1005 - 1094
* Roger
De
Montgomery
89
89
ROGER DE MONGOMERI The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planch窠Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. "William sat on his war-horse and called out Rogier, whom they name De Montgomeri. ' I rely greatly on you. Lead your men thitherward and attack them from that side. William, the son of Osbern, the seneschal, a right good vassal, shall go with you and help in the attack, and you shall have the men of Boulogne and Poix and all my soldiers' " (i.e. paid troops -- mercenaries). Such are the words Wace puts in the mouth of the Conqueror. And yet, according to Orderic, Roger de Montgomeri was not present at Hastings, having been left by the Duke in Normandy, governor of the duchy. His statement is most explicit. King William, during his visit to his Norman dominions in 1067, was greatly disquieted by the reports from England of the disaffection of his new subjects, and the advantage taken of it by the Danes. "Leaving the government of Normandy," he proceeds, "to his Queen Matilda, and his young son Robert, with a council of religious priests and valiant nobles, to be guardians of the state, he rode, on the night of the 6th of December, to the mouth of the river Dieppe, below the town of Arques, and setting sail with a south wind in the first watch of the cold night, reached in the morning, after a most prosperous voyage, the harbour on the opposite coast called Winchester. . . . In his present voyage he was attended by Roger de Montgomeri, who at the time of his former expedition to invade England was left with his wife, governor of Normandy." Now when we remember that the father of Orderic was Odelirius of Orleans, one of the followers of this very Roger de Montgomeri when he came into England, and for his services received a grant of land lying on the banks of the river Meole at the east gate of Shrewsbury; that, with the help of his lord, he founded the monastery there of St. Peter and St. Paul, to which he retired in 1110, the Earl himself having died therein fourteen years previously; that Orderic, born in 1075, was at school at Shrewsbury until he was ten years of age, when he was sent to Normandy, became a monk in the Abbey of St. Evreux, of which Roger de Montgomeri was a patron and benefactor, revisited England in 1115, and was living, at the age of sixty-six, in 1141, -- it surely follows, that of all the companions of the Conqueror he had ever seen or heard of, Roger de Montgomeri, Earl of Shrewsbury, his father's lord and friend, was the one respecting whom he must have possessed the most accurate information. Is it likely, supposing Roger de Montgomeri had commanded a wing of the invading army, and performed feats of bravery at Senlac, that his servant and prot訩 who came over with him, and must in that case have been present at Hastings himself, would have been silent on the subject? Would not his deeds have been the theme of his whole household, and of the very school-fellows of the young Orderic? Was the Lord of Belesme amongst the noble personages who accompanied King William on his visit to Normandy in 1067? and if not, what was he doing in England during the disturbances in the King's absence? How was it that a man of his position and prowess was not associated with the other great warriors appointed to guard the realm and administer justice throughout it? His name never occurs even incidentally during that period. Against this, to me overwhelming evidence, we have to place the statement of William of Poitiers, who, without any allusion to Roger de Montgomeri, simply says that Roger de Beaumont was the person at the head of the council appointed by the Duke to assist Matilda in the government of Normandy, and that of Wace, who circumstantially describes the actions of Roger de Montgomeri in the great battle. As the latter authority distinctly contradicts William of Poitiers, by making "old Rogier de Belmont" present at Senlac, in lieu of remaining in Normandy to counsel Matilda, he is as likely to be wrong in one assertion as the other. William of Poitiers is more to be trusted, but he does not say that Roger de Montgomeri was in the battle; he makes no mention of him whatever, though he gives the names of a dozen of the principal personages present; nor does he prove that he was not amongst the noble and wise men selected by the Duke to compose that council, of which the writer states Roger de Beaumont was the president. Mr. Freeman, confiding in the archdeacon, sets down the assertion of Orderic as "a plain though very strange confusion between Roger of Montgomeri and Roger of Beaumont." I only suggest that the son of Odelirius is the least likely person to have made that confusion, and that we have no proof of Roger de Montgomeri's presence in England previous to 1068. The Lord of Belesme, however, is too remarkable a personage in the annals of those times to be omitted, on anything short of conclusive evidence, from an account of the companions of the Conqueror, and his family history is full of stirring and romantic incidents. Orderic has minutely chronicled his marriages, his children, his deeds of valour and piety, his death and burial, and yet such is the mist that hangs over the genealogical history of our ancient nobility, that the father of this great and powerful Earl has only been recently identified. Brooke, in his Catalogue, declared him to be the son of Hugh de Montgomeri and of Sibell, his wife, fifth daughter of Herfastus the Dane, brother of Gunnora, Duchess of Normandy. Vincent triumphantly quotes the monk of Jumi禥s in contradiction of this assertion, and insists that he was the son of Hugh de Montgomeri by Jocellina, his wife, daughter of Turolf de Pontaudemer, by Weeva, sister of the said Duchess Gunnora, and so he continued to be considered, notwithstanding that many passages in Orderic show this to be a mistake, until the French editors of that historian and the late Mr. Stapleton, in his illustration of the Norman Rolls of the Exchequer, clearly proved that the first Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury was not the son of a Hugh de Montgomeri by either lady, but of another Roger de Montgomeri, living in the time of Richard III and his brother Robert, Dukes of Normandy, and who in an early deed describes himself: "Ego Rogerius, quam dicunt Montgomeri." His son Roger, the subject of this memoir, in the act of foundation for the Abbey of Troarn in the Hiemois, acknowledging and distinguishing his father in the following words: "Ego Rogerius, ex Normannis, Normannus magni autem Rogerii filius." "The old chronicler, Robert du Mont, had heard," observes Mr. Stapleton, "of the reputed descent from a niece of the Duchess Gunnora, wife of Richard 1, Duke of Normandy, but the genealogy given is certainly erroneous in making her, as wife to Hugh de Montgomeri, the immediate progenitrix of Roger, the Viscount of the 0ximin or Hiemois." To any one unaccustomed to the examination of such subjects, it would appear strange that modern historians and genealogists could have overlooked the obvious inference to be drawn from the very circumstantial account given of the assassination of Osbern the seneschal by Guillaume de Jumi禥s himself, who, in the second chapter of his seventh book, informs us that Osbern, the son of Herfast, brother of the Duchess Gunnora, had his throat cut by William, son of Roger de Montgomeri, one night while sleeping in the Duke's chamber at Vaudreuil; that Roger, for his perfidy, was exiled to Paris; and that five of his sons, Hugh, Robert, Roger, William, and Gilbert, continued their wicked careers in Normandy. Surely no statement can be much clearer than this that there was a Roger de Montgomeri living during the minority of William II, Duke of Normandy, who had five sons, the third being named after him, and who, it is evident from subsequent passages in the same and other histories, was the Roger de Montgomeri who ultimately became Earl of Shrewsbury. Of these five sons we can trace the destinies. Hugh, Robert, and William were slain, -- the latter by Barno de Glotis, a servant of the Seneschal 0sbern in revenge for the murder of his master. Roger was Viscount of the Hiemois; and Gilbert, his youngest brother, was unintentionally poisoned by his sister-in-law, as I shall hereafter have occasion to mention. Of the five sons of the first Roger de Montgomeri, Hugh was apparently the eldest, as at the foot of one of his charters in the time of Duke Robert is "Signum Hugonis filii ejus," and it is therefore highly probable that the father of the first Roger might have been named Hugh, and was the husband of one of the nieces of Gunnora, and the confusion have arisen from that circumstance. The story told by the monk of Jumi禥s, though clear enough as regards the family of Montgomeri, is obscure in other respects. William de Montgomeri is named as the murderer of Osbern, who, if there be any truth in the statement of Brooke, must have been his near kinsman, and Roger, the father of the criminal, is banished, apparently for the crime; which would imply that he was " particeps criminis" -- the instigator or accomplice of his son. However this may be, it appears to have been the result of a personal quarrel, if not a family feud, for Orderic records that Osbern, the steward of Normandy, and William and Hugh, two sons of Roger de Montgomeri, and many other powerful knights, made war on each other in turn, causing great distress and confusion in the country, which was deprived at that time of its natural protectors, simply mentioning that Osbern was one of the many nobles who fell in those mutual quarrels. The genealogy of the Dukes of Normandy from Rollo is in all the collateral portions exceedingly confused, and the chronology of the duchy itself beset with difficulties. Next to Charlemagne, the Duchess Gonnor, or Gunnora, appears to have been the favourite starting-point for our Norman genealogists. If there is any insuperable obstacle in the way of hooking their line on to the Emperor of the West, they eagerly hitch it up, no matter how, to some loose end of the family of that fortunate fair one for whose romantic bistory we are indebted to the pages of Guillaume de Jumi禥s. As it is short as well as romantic, and so very old that it may be new to many of my readers, I will venture to tell it in the fewest words possible. One of the foresters of Richard 1, Duke of Normandy, was blest with a most beautiful wife, of Danish blood it would appear, named Sanfrie, the report of whose charms inspired the Duke with a vehement desire to ascertain the truth of it by personal observation. He therefore ordered a hunting party in the direction of the forester's dwelling, at which he stopped during the day, as a matter of course for rest and refreshment. The beautiful Sanfrie received her sovereign as was her duty, and the Duke was so captivated that he commanded her husband to resign her to him. As resistance could avail nothing, the woman, who had as much wit as beauty, contrived to substitute her sister for herself, and, the Duke, luckily for all parties, was not only well pleased with the exchange, but piously rejoiced that be had escaped a more flagrant breach of the decalogue. The fair substitute was named Gonnor or Gunnora, and on the death of Richard's first wife became Duchess of Normandy, and mother of Duke Richard I1, called after her Gonnorides. Such is the story, and at least there is no doubt about the marriage, which naturally led to the elevation of the other members of the Duchess's family. Besides Sanfrie (the wife of the forester), Gunnora had two sisters, the one named Eva or Weeva, and the other Avelina or Duvelima, and a brother named Herfast: and to one or other of these lucky Danes the majority of our Norman pedigrees are, as I have stated, hung on by hook or by crook. The date of the death of the elder Roger de Montgomeri is not yet known, but he was evidently dead in 1056, when Roger II invited Gislebert, Abbot of Chatillon, with his monks, to Froarn, and expelled thence the twelve canons who had been placed there by his father in 1022, and had abandoned themselves to gluttony, debauchery, carnal pleasures, and worldly occupations. We have already heard of William Talvas, the Lord of Belesme, who cursed the Conqueror in his cradle (vide p. 9, ante). Roger de Montgomeri married, in 1048, Mabel, the daughter of that William, and niece of Ivo de Belesme, Bishop of S褺 from 1035 to 1070. By this match he acquired a large portion of the domains of his father-in-law, and by the advice of Bishop lvo, his wife's uncle, transferred the Church of St. Martin of S褺 to Theodoric, Abbot of St. Evroult, and, in conjunction with his wife, earnestly entreated the Bishop to erect a monastery there, which it appears he did. Now this Mabel, the chronicler tells us, was both powerful and politic, shrewd and fluent, but extremely cruel. Still she had a high regard for the excellent Theodoric, and in some things submitted to his admonitions, although in general averse to religious men. "This lady," he subsequently tells us, "maliciously caused many troubles to the monks of St. Evroult, on account of the hatred she bore to the family of Giroie, founders of that abbey, but as her husband, Roger de Montgomeri, loved and honoured the monks, she did not venture to exhibit any open signs of her vindictive feeling. She therefore made the abbey her frequent resort, attended by numerous bands of armed retamers, under pretence of claiming the hospitality of the brotherhood, but to their great oppression, in consequence of their poverty through the barrenness of their land. At one time, when she had taken up her abode at the abbey with a hundred men-at-arms, and was remonstrated with by Abbot Theodoric on the sinful absurdity of coming with such a splendid retinue to the dwelling of poor anchorites, she exclaimed, in great wrath, 'When I come again my followers shall be still more numerous!' The abbot replied, 'Trust me, unless you repent of this iniquity, you will suffer what will be very painful to you.' And so it happened, for the very night following she was attacked by a disorder which caused her great suffering. Upon this she gave instant orders for being carried forth from the abbey, and flying in a state of alarm from the territory of St. Evroult, passed by the dwelling of a certain farmer named Roger Suissar, whose newly-born child she stopped for a few moments to suckle, with a hope of obtaining relief. It caused her severe pain at the time, but she reached home, we are told, completely restored to health, the unfortunate infant dying shortly afterwards." Of course the honest monk who believes "each strange tale devoutly true" has no suspicion that the abbot took care that his prophecy should be fulfilled, and gave the very inconvenient visitor a dose which would not kill her, but cure her of coming to the abbey. The death of the baby, if it did die, was a coincidence too tempting not to be made the most of. In 1063 Arnould d'Eschafour, son of William Giroie, the founder of the Abbey of St. Evroult, against whose family a deadly hatred had been continually cherished by that of Belesme, and who by the machinations of Mabel had been banished Normandy, presented himself at the Court of the Duke, and offering him a magnificent mantle, humbly entreated that his inheritance might he restored to him. The Duke, at that moment being in want of brave soldiers for his wars with the Manceaux and the Bretons, with his usual policy accepted the gift, and promised to restore him his estates (the greater proportion of which Mabel had contrived to obtain for her husband), giving him meanwhile free passage through his territories for a limited time. Returning from the Court in company with Gilbert de Montgomeri, brother of Roger, he stopped at his Castle of Eschafour, then in the possession of Roger and Mabel, whose attendants pressed him earnestly to partake of some refreshments their lady had ordered them to set before him. He had, however, received from a friend a hint of some treachery, and remembering the warning, steadily refused to touch either the meat or the wine. Gilbert, who had ridden there with him, quite unconscious of the foul design, took a cup without dismounting from his horse, and draining its poisoned contents, died three days afterwards at Remalord. Thus, observes Orderic, this perfidious woman, attempting to destroy her husband's rival, caused the death of his only surviving brother, who was in the flower of his youth, and much distinguished for his chivalrous gallantry. Foiled in this attempt, she shortly afterwards made another, as deadly and unfortunately more successful. By means of entreaties and promises she induced Roger Gulafre, the chamberlain of Arnould, to become the instrument of her murderous designs. Arnould being at Gourville, near Chᳲes, with his relatives, Giroie de Courville and William, surnamed Gouet de Montmirail, the traitor Gulafre took an opportunity of serving to his master and the other two nobles the poisoned beverage he had received from Mabel: Giroie and William de Montmirail survived the effects of the poison, but Arnould, after languishing for some days, expired on the 1st of January, 1064. After his decease the great family of Giroie gradually fell to decay, and for twenty-six years their lands remained in the possession of that of Montgomeri. A truly terrible fate, however, awaited this infamous woman, who, according to the chronicler, had caused many great lords to be disinherited and to beg their bread in foreign lands. Amongst her victims was Hugh de la Roche d'lg窠in the Canton de Belesme, from whom she had wrested his castle on the rock, and had deprived of the inheritance of the lands of his fathers. In the extremity of his distress he undertook a desperate enterprise. With the assistance of his three brothers, men of undaunted courage, he forced an entry by night into the chamber of the Countess (for such was her rank at that time) at a place called Bures, on the Dive, near Froarn, and severed her head from her body as she lay in bed after having taken a bath. Their vengeance satiated, they lost no time in making good their retreat. Hugh de Montgomeri, her second son, who was in the castle with sixteen men-at-arms, on hearing of his mother's murder, instantly took horse and pursued the assassins, but was unable to overtake them, as they had taken the precaution to break down behind them the bridges over the rivers, which, being flooded and the night dark, presented such obstacles in the way of the pursuers that the four brothers succeeded in crossing the frontiers of Normandy, and took unmolested the road to Apulia. Mabel was buried at Froarn on the 5th of December, 1082, Durandus being at that time the abbot who disgraced himself by causing a fulsome epitaph, preserved by Orderic, to be inscribed on the tomb of a detestable murderess. I have travelled a little out of the record, as the lawyers say, in order to complete the story of this special representative of the hereditary wickedness of the family of Belesme, and must now return to her husband, whom the chronicler appears to acquit of direct complicity in the darker deeds of his wife, and simply observes, that as long as Mabel lived he was, at her instigation, a very troublesome neighbour to the inmates of Ouche, she having been always opposed to the family of Giroie. In 1066 we find him at the Council of Lillebonne, and, according to Taylor's List, contributing a noble contingent to the fleet of his sovereign, "A Rogero de Mongomeri sexaginta naves," the furnishing of which by no means proves that he accompanied them to England. Wace is the only writer worth consideration who speaks of him as present in the great conflict, and selected by the Duke to command a wing of the invading army, while Dugdale, quoting the annals of St. Augustin at Canterbury, says he "led the middle part," which Wace as distinctly asserts was led by William himself, composed of all his principal nobles, his personal friends and kinsmen. Neither Robert du Mont, nor William of Jumi禥s, nor Benoit de St.-More, nor William of Poitiers, nor the author of Carmen de Bello make any mention of Roger de Montgomeri at that period, while Wace, not content with giving him the command of an important division, tells us of his single combat with a gigantic Englishman, captain of a hundred men, who, with his long Saxon axe, had hewed down horse and man till the Normans stood aghast at him. Roger de Montgomeri, riding at full speed with his lance couched, and shouting "strike, Frenchmen!" ("Ferrez, Franceiz") bore the giant to the earth, and revived the courage of his soldiers. Orderic, however, seems never to have heard of this brilliant exploit, nor anyone else that I am aware of. In 1068, however, he appears to have been in England, and two years afterwards received from the Conqueror the earldoms of Arundel and Shrewsbury, with the honour of Eye in Suffolk, and various estates in the counties of Cambridge, Warwick, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire, Staffordshire, Hertfordshire, Surrey, and Middlesex, amounting in all to one hundred and fifty-seven manors, besides the cities of Chichester and Shrewsbury, and the Castle of Arundel. At the same date (1070), by the death of lvo, Bishop of S褺, he became, in right of his wife Mabel, Seigneur of Belesme and Count of Alencon, which, added to his patrimonial lordship of Montgomeri, rendered him comparatively as powerful in Normandy as in England. In 1077, the Earl of Shrewsbury accompanied King William in his expedition to recover the province of Maine, which had revolted, and, after its submission, marched with a division of the army to the relief of the Castle of La Fl碨e, in which its lord, John de la Fl碨e was besieged by Fulk le Rechin, Count of Anjou. A battle being prevented by the interposition of some Cardinal not named, terms of peace were agreed upon, Roger Earl of Shrewsbury and William Count of Evreux taking a prominent part in the negotiations. This treaty is known as the Peace of Blanchelande or of Bruere, from the locality in which it was concluded. After the death of his wicked wife Mabel by the vengeful sword of Hugh de la Roche d'lg窠in December, 1082, Roger de Montgomeri married Adelaide, daughter of Everard de Puiset, an amiable and virtuous lady, who wrought by her advice and her example a great change for the better in his character, which, naturally good, had been warped by the arts and influence of his former Countess. His building of the church at Quatford, near Bridgenorth, in Shropshire, was due to one of tliose so-called " pious frauds," of which we read so many accounts in our mediaeval chronicles, and which in this instance was practised on the Countess Adelaide. On the first passage of this excellent lady from Normandy to England there arose so great a storm at sea, that nothing but shipwreck was expected by the mariners. The chaplain of the Countess, being much wearied with long watching, fell asleep, and saw in his dreams a comely matron, who said to him, "If your lady would be preserved from the danger of this dreadful tempest, let her vow to God that she will build a church to the honour of St. Mary Magdalen in the place where she shall first meet the Earl, her husband, in England" (he having preceded her thither some short time), "and specially where an hollow oak groweth near a hog-stye." All which, when the priest awoke, he related to the Countess, who forthwith made her vow accordingly, whereupon the tempest ceased, and she and her attendants landed safely in England. Journeying to rejoin her husband, she, after divers days, encountered him near Quatford, in a wood, hunting, at a certain spot where such an oak as "the comely matron" had described then grew -- and near a hog-stye, I presume, though it is not mentioned. She lost no time in informing her lord of the chaplain's vision and her consequent vow, and prayed him to fulfil it. The Earl, in gratitude for the preservation of his wife, readily assented. The church in honour of St. Mary Magdalen was built, endowed with ample possessions, and given to the Earl's collegiate chapel in the castle at Bridgenorth -- much to the advantage, no doubt, of the reverend chaplain, who may have been one of the clergymen, Godebald or Herbert, by whose counsels, Orderic tells us, in addition to those of Odelirius, the Earl was always prosperously guided. The Earl, in common with many of the Norman nobility, appears to have been much attached to Robert Court-heuse, who, with all his faults, was brave, generous, and kindly-hearted. Witness his conduct when besieging his brother Henry in Mont St. Michel, in 1091. The garrison, being in great distress from want of water, Robert forbade his soldiers to prevent detachments issuing from the place to draw water from the wells, and, on being blamed by William Rufus for his consideration, exclaimed, "What, shall we suffer our brother to perish of thirst? who can now give us another should we lose him?" Where shall we find such an incident recorded of the heartless tyrant, his father, who ridiculed and hated him? As early as 1081, we find the name of Roger, Earl of Shrewsbury, amongst those who zealously interceded with King William at Rouen in favour of Robert after the battle of Gerberoi, and, after long pleading, succeeded in effecting a reconciliation between them, which, reluctantly consented to by the former, was of very brief duration; and on the accession of William Rufus he proved still further his affection for Robert, and his opinion of the injustice with which he had been treated by the Conqueror, by joining with the Earls of Kent, Cornwall, and other powerful noblemen in the attempt to place Robert on the throne of England, as the eldest son and rightful heir to the crown; and though not openly taking up arms, secretly favouring the movement, his three eldest sons, Robert, Hugh, and Roger, being amongst the young nobility who held Odo's castle at Rochester against the King. The Earl of Shrewsbury is said to have been gained over by the artful promises of Rufus to submit his right to the crown to be decided by him and others whom the late King had assigned to be his curators; and after the reduction of Rochester, and the suppression of the rebellion, we find Earl Roger fortifying his Castles of Belesme and Alencon in the cause of the King, and his son Robert a prisoner of that very Duke of Normandy, to place whom on the throne they had so recently risked their lives and properties. The accounts of these tergiversations are so confused and discordant that, beyond main facts, it is dangerous to state anything, and as to the motives we are completely in the dark; but the days of Roger de Montgomeri were now briefly to be numbered. He returned to England in 1094, and having obtained from the Abbey of Cluni, of which he was a benefactor, the habit of its celebrated abbot, St. Hugh, assumed it, and was shorn a monk in the Abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul at Shrewsbury, with the consent, we are assured, of his wife, the Countess Adeliza, and for three days before his death wholly applied himself to divine conference and devout prayers with the rest of the community, expiring, in the odour of sanctity, 6th kalends of August, in the above year, leaving by his first wife, Mabel, five sons and four daughters: Robert, the eldest son, who succeeded to his mother's large estates in Normandy as Count of Alencon and Seigneur de Belesme; Hugh, who inherited his father's domains in England, with the earldoms of Arundel and Shrewsbury; Roger, surnamed of Poitou, in consequence of his marriage with Almodis Countess of March, who possessed great estates in that province, and also sometimes called Earl of Lancaster for a similar reason; Philip, who accompanied Duke Robert to the Crusades, and died at Antioch; and Arnoul, who married Lafracota, daughter of a king of Ireland, and by conquest obtained that part of South Wales now called Pembrokeshire, and, building a castle there, appears to have been sometime entitled Earl of Pembroke, as his brother was of Lancaster. The daughters by Mabel were Emma, Abbess of Almenache; Maud, wife of Robert, Count of Mortain and Earl of Cornwall; Mabel, wife of Hugh de Ch᳥au-neuf; and Sibil, who married Robert Fitz Hamon, Lord of Corboil, in Normandy. By his second wife he had only a son named Everard, who took holy orders, and was chaplain to King Henry 1. The Earls of Eglintoun are presumed to be descended from this family of Montgomeri, but no proof has ever been made, and though in 1696 there existed a Comte de Montgomeri in France, an Earl of Montgomery in England, a Montgomery Earl of Eglintoun in Scotland, and a Montgomery Earl of Mount Alexander in Ireland, the link has yet to be found which would legitimately connect these noble families with that of the great Earl of Shrewsbury, who has only transmitted his name to us in that county of North Wales which he won by the sword and called Montgomery. Added to this site through the courtesy of Fred L. Curry, who provided a photocopy of the section. Return to index of Wm's Companions Pat's Genealogy Index VISIT MY ONLINE BOOKSTORES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UPDATED 01/11/2003 10:58:12
1015 - 1082
* Mabel de
Alcenon-Belleme
De Talvas
67
67
1035 - 1090
* Richard
(FitzGilbert)
De Clare
55
55
Mary
Ann
Longhurst
~1034 - ~1117
*
Rohese
Giffard
83
83
~1070 - 1128
* Ranulph
De
Meschines
58
58
~1070 - 1136
*
Lucia
Taillebois
66
66
~0971
* Jean
De
Conteville
0970
* Fulbet 'The
Tanner' De
Falaize
~0980
*
Duxia
~1010 - <1056
* Hugh
De
Montgomery
46
46
~0975 - 1068
* Joscelina
De
Pontaudemer
93
93
0995 - 1048
* William
III De
Talvas
53
53
0995 - ~1067
* Hildeburge
De
Beaumont
72
72
1827
Henry
Longhurst
* Gilbert
'Crispin' Of
Brionne
*
Gunnora
D'Aunou
~1010 - 1085
*
Walter
Giffard
75
75
Present at Battle Of Hastings 1066.
* Ranulf
De
Meschin
*
Maud
D'Avranches
* Ives
Ivo De
Taillebois
1040
* Lucia
Of
Mercia
* Baldwin
II 'The
Bald'
*
Aefthryth
*
Torgil
Styrbjornsson
John
Dalton
*
Sigrid
~0985
* Roger
De
Montgomery
*
Josceline
* Touroude
De
Pontaudemer
0942
* Aveline
(Wevia)
De Crepon
1052 - ~1134
*
Robert
Corbet
82
82
~1094 - 1157
* Maud
(Sybil) Fitz
Hammon
63
63
~1050 - 1106
* Robert
Fitz
Hamon
56
56
~1020 - ~1066
* Hugh
le
Corbet
46
46
1100
*Alice
Corbet
Henry
Dalton
*
Moreton
Corbet
Roger
Corbet
Matilda
De
Dunstanville
* William
Seigneur
De Belleme
*
Matilda
Ganelon
* Arnoul
De
Beaumont
D. 1040
* Gilbert
'Crispin'
Crispin
* Godfrey
Of
Bronne
Roger
De
Clare
* Nigel
De St
Sauvuer
Jane
Dalton
~0951
* Sporta
Of
Normandy
* Richard
De St
Sauvuer
0933 - 0996
* Richard I
'The Fearless'
Of Normandy
63
63
0927 - 0992
* Conan I
'The Crooked'
Of Brittany
65
65
~0850 - 0900
* Hubert
I Of
Senlis
50
50
0817 - >0840
* Pepin
II Of
Peronne
23
23
~0797
*
Bernhard
Of Italy
~0797
*
Kunignda
Cunegonde
0773 - 0810
* Pepin
I Of
Italy
37
37
<1242 - >1260
* Baldwin
le
Fleming
18
18
Hannah
Dalton
1860 - 1944
* William
Henry
Forrester
84
84
<1185 - ~1212
* Stephen
Of
Flanders
27
27
<1165
*
Archembald
Of Flanders
<1139 - >1155
* Stephen
'Fitz-Archembald'
Of Flanders
16
16
<1066 - >1087
*
Archembald
Of Flanders
21
21
~1236
*
Nicholas
Martyn
1256 - 1292
* Piers
de
Genevill
36
36
~1262 - 1323
* Joan
De
Lusignan
61
61
~1226 - 1314
* Geoffrey
de
Geneville
88
88
~1232 - 1304
* Maude
de
Lacey
72
72
~1200
* Simon
de
Geneville
Anne
Dalton
~1205
* Beatrix
de
Burgandy
*Geoffrey
de
Chateaudun
~1206 - 1234
*Gilbert
De
Lacey
28
28
~1222 - 1239
*
Isobel
Bigod
17
17
Margery
De
Lacey
~1186 - 1224
* Hugh
Bigod
38
38
Magna Charta Baron Page for Hugh Bigod The Earl of Norfolk's Heir Return to Barons at Runnymede Page A portion of the information concerning Surety Baron HUGH BIGOD is as follows: HUGH BIGOD, son of Surety Roger Bigod and himself a Surety was third Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk, and heir to his father's estates and honors, to which he had succeeded in the 5th of King Henry III He died four years later, in February 1224/5, having married about 1212 Maud, a sister of the Surety William Marshall, and eldest daughter of William Marshall, the Protector. In her right Hugh acquired the Earldom of Pembroke, in which rank William Marshall bore the Royal Sceptre at the Coronation of King Richard I.
~1192 - 1248
* Maud (Matilda)
Marshall Of
Normandy
56
56
Ralph
Bigod
Roger
Bigod
John
Bigod
William
Dalton
Hugh
Bigod
William
Bigod
Simon
Bigod
~1150 - <1221
*Roger
Bigod
71
71
Magna Charta Baron Page for Roger Bigod Earl of Norfolk (and Suffolk) A portion of the information concerning Surety Baron ROGER BIGOD is as follows: Bigod is the name associated with Framlingham Castle in Suffolk. It is an imposing structure. The outer walls are forty-four feet high and eight feet thick. Thirteen towers fifty-eight feet in height remain, along with a gateway and some outworks. In early Roman times it was probably the site of the fortified earthwork that sheltered Saint Edmund when he fled from the Danes in 870, but we cannot be sure of the authenticity of this tradition. The Danes seized the fort, but they lost it in 921; it then remained a Crown possession, which passed into the hands of William the Conqueror when he became King. In 1100 Henry I granted the Castle to Roger Bigod, and possibly Roger was the one to erect the first masonry building. The ruins indicate a 12th Century dating, though material from an older building may very well have been used in the walls. Evidently the Castle was completely rebuilt in 1170. It remained in the Bigod family for some generations, then passed into the hands of the Mowbrays. ROGER BIGOD, the Surety, was born about 1150 and succeeded as second Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk. It is fitting that, after Richard's return to England after his captivity in Germany, Roger Bigod was chosen to be one of the four Earls who carried the silken canopy for the King, as Hugh Bigod had borne the Royal sceptre in the Royal procession. Roger Bigod was appointed in 1189 by King Richard one of the Ambassadors to King Philip of France, to obtain aid for the recovery of the Holy Land. In 1191 he was keeper of Hereford Castle. He was chief judge in the King's Court from 1195 to 1202. In 120() he was sent by King John as one of his messengers to summon William the Lion, King of Scotland, to do homage to him in the Parliament which was held at Lincoln, and subsequently attended King John into Poitou; but on his return he was won over to the opposition by the rebel Barons and became one of the strongest advocates of the Charter of Liberty, for which he was excommunicated by Pope Innocent III He died before August 1221, having married as his first wife, Isabella daughter of Hameline Plantagenet, who was descended from the Earls of Warren.
~1154
*
Isabel
Plantagent
Margaret
Bigod
William
Bigod
Thomas
Bigod
Alice
Bigod
Mary
Bigod
Elizabeth
Dalton
Roger
Bigod
Ralph
Bigod
~1095 - <1176
*Hugh
Bigod
81
81
~1116 - ~1199
*
Julianna
De Vere
83
83
Baldwin
Bigod
Hugh
Bigod
Simon
Bigod
Nicholas
Bigod
William
Bigod
Julia
Bigod
Jane
Dalton
~1060 - ~1107
*Roger
Bigod
47
47
1072
* Adeliza
de
Grentmaisnill
Gunnora
Bigod
~1035
* Robert
(Roger)
Bigod
William
Bigod
~1015 - 1071
*
Robert
Bigod
56
56
~0989
*
Toustien
le Goz
1017
Humphrey
le Goz
1025
*Richard
le Goz
0994
* Judith
De
Montandlier
Anne
Dalton
0963
*
Ansfred
II Goz
0937
* Ansfred I
(The Dane)
Rollosson
0909
* Rollo
Thurston Brico
Of Moere
<0891
*
Hrollager
Of Moere
*
Emina
~0857
* Hilda
Hrolfsdottir
~0823
* Hrolf
Rolla
Nefja
~0828
*
Unknown
~0812
*
Ascreda
Rognvaldsdottir
~0790
*
Rognvald
Olafsson
Sarah
Dalton
* Tora
Sigurdsdottir
~0770 - 0840
* Olaf
II
Gudrodsson
70
70
~0775
*
Unknown
~0738
*
Gudrod
Halfdansson
~0743
*
Unknown
~0704
*
Halfdan
Olafsson
* Asa
Eysteinsson
* Olaf
Ingjaldsson
~1019
*
Unknown
~1040
* de St
Saveur
Thomas
Dalton
~1016 - ~1066
* Neil
St
Saveur
50
50
NEEL DE SAINT-SAUVEUR The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planch窠Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. M. le Pr赯st, the French annotator of Wace, is disinclined to believe that Neel le Vicomte, whom we have seen in arms against Duke William at the battle of Val-es-Dunes (vol. i. p. 80), was fighting in his cause at Senlac; and Mr. Taylor, in his English version, does little more than cite le Pr赯st's opinion. The reasons of the latter are of no great weight: simply that the presence of Neel at Hastings is not vouched for by any contemporary authority, an objection that would equally apply to three-fourths of the persons who undoubtedly were there -- and that the name of "Sanzaver" in Brompton's List is not a corruption of Saint-Sauveur, but of Sanzavier (Sans-avoir), a family which established itself in England at the time of the Conquest, and of whom some charters are to be found in Dugdale's "Monasticon." Surely this is very illogical. Brompton's inclusion of the name of Sanzavier in his List, which is as little to be relied upon as any other, does not disprove the presence of Neel de Saint-Sauveur in the army of William, any more than the silence of Guillaume de Poitiers, or the other historians of the Conquest who merely mention a few of the principal leaders and contradict each other about them. That Wace is in error requires some much stronger argument, and I think I can show that probabilities are at least in his favour. He speaks of the Barons of the Cotentin, of which province Neel was the Viscount, that he was at the head of a company -- "Jost la cumpaigne Neel" (1. 13,626), and that he excited himself greatly to gain the love and favour of his feudal lord, vigorously assaulting the English, overthrowing many by the poitrail of his horse, and speeding, sword in hand, to the rescue of many barons (l. 13,489). It is quite clear that Wace knew well enough whom he was describing: and now let us see what evidence we can find to support him. It is well known that after the "Noble Chef de Faucon," as he was called, unwillingly retreated from Val-es-Dunes, he was banished by Duke William, and took refuge, in Brittany, that he was subsequently pardoned and restored to his estates, at what time is not exactly ascertained, but most likely at the moment the politic Duke felt the importance of such assistance as the valorous Viscount could afford him in his projected expedition; and, consequently, we find him at the head of a company, exerting himself to deserve the favour of the suzerain who had forgiven him his former rebellion. That he is not mentioned in "Domesday" is, as Mr. Taylor admits, to be accounted for by the supposition that he died previously to its compilation; and that supposition receives support from the fact that his son and successor, the last Neel de Saint-Sauveur, died in 1092, seven years afterwards, as is proved by the desire of his relative, Geoffrey, Bishop of Coutances, to attend his funeral ("Mem. Ant. Norman." i. 286, the bishop himself dying the following year. According to the Welsh Chronicles, as transmitted to us by Humphrey Lloyd and Dr. Powell, Neel the Viscount was one of the slain in the battle of Cardiff, A.D. 1094 (p. 116). Mons. de Gerville, following the French account, says 1074, but afterwards, as I have already mentioned, corrects as he imagines this date, substituting that of 1092; evidently confounding him with his son and successor above mentioned. The more critically the Welsh account of the battle of Cardiff is examined, the more does the general truth of the story appear, and if the last Neel the Viscount was killed in Wales in 1092, in company of Roger, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Arnold de Harcourt, there is every probability that his father was a companion of the Conqueror in 1060. But Wace names also a "Sire de Neahou" amongst the combatants at Senlac, and it is a question whether he is alluding to Neel de Saint-Sauveur by another title, or to some distinct individual. The fief of Nehou, in the arrondissement of Valognes, received its name from Neel, an ancestor of the Saint-Sauveur family, Nehou signifying Neel's Hou or Holm, i.e. Nigelli Humus. On the banishment of Neel the Viscount in 1047, Nehou is said to have been given by Duke William to Baldwin de Meules; but it could not have been at that period, as Baldwin and his brother Richard were then refugees in Flanders, and not received into the Duke's favour until 1053. Was Nehou excepted when WIlliam restored to Neel his estates previous to the Conquest, or did it pass to the Rivieres (De Redvers, Rivers) on the death of his son, the last of the family, in 1092? I shall return to this subject when noticing the Vernons (vide p. 205), who were Sires de Nehou from the end of the eleventh to the end of the thirteenth century. Added to this site through the courtesy of Fred L. Curry, who provided a photocopy of the section. Return to index of Wm's Companions Pat's Genealogy Index VISIT MY ONLINE BOOKSTORES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UPDATED 01/11/2003 11:05:46
~1021
*
Adela
d'Eu
~1032 - 22 Feb 1097/1098
* Hugh
de
Grentmaisnill
Present at Battle Of Hastings 1066.
~1062 - 1141
*Aubrey
De
Vere
79
79
~1080 - ~1163
* Adeliza
(Alice)
De Clare
83
83
~1031 - 1112
*
Alberic
De Vere
81
81
~1040
* Beatrix
de Gand
~1000
*
Alphonso
de Vere
1005
* Katherine
Of
Flanders
~1005
* Henry
de
Gand
Edward
Dalton
~1005
*
Sibilla
Manasses
~1065 - 1114/1117
* Gilbert
(FitzRichard)
De Clare
~1058 - >1113
* Adeliza
De
Clermont
55
55
~1030 - 1101
* Hugh
De
Clermont
71
71
~1035 - 1110
*
Margaret
De Roucy
75
75
~1000
* Renaud
De
Clermont
~1000
*
Unknown
~1010 - 1062
* Hildwin
De
Roucy
52
52
~1014 - 1062
* Alice Or
Adela De
Roucy
48
48
~0994 - 1033
* Ebles
I Of
Roucy
39
39
Thomas
II
Dalton
~0998
* Beatrix
Of
Hainault
~0956 - ~0985
* Gilbert
De
Roucy
29
29
~0961
*
Unknown
~0931 - 0973
* Renaud
De
Roucy
42
42
~0930 - 0973
* Alberade
De
Lorraine
43
43
~0890 - 0939
* Gilbert
Of
Lorraine
49
49
0913/0914 - 0984
*
Gerberge
Of France
0860 - 0916
* Ranier
I von
Hennegau
56
56
~0865
* Hersent
Of
Lorraine
~0830 - ~0892
* Gilbert
von
Maasgau
62
62
Thomas
Dalton
1862 - 1929
*
Agnes
Witcom
67
67
~0830
*
Ermengard
Of Moselle
~0795 - 0855
* Lothar I Of
The Holy
Roman Empire
60
60
~0800 - 0851
*
Ermengard
Of Tours
51
51
0778 - 0840
*Louis I 'The
Pious' Of
The Franks
61
61
~0778 - 0818
*
Ermengard
Of Hesbaye
40
40
~0753
* Ingeramne
Of
Hesbaye
~0758
*
Unknown
D. 0778
*
Gunderland
Of Hasbaye
* Landrade
Of
Hasbaye
*
Sigrimine
Robert
John
Dalton
0875
*Heinrich I
'The Fowler'
Of Germany
~0878 - 0968
* Matilda
Of
Ringleheim
90
90
~0851
* Otto I
Of
Saxony
~0856 - ~0903
* Hedwig
Of
Germany
47
47
* Arnuph
I Of
Germany
* Oda
Of
Bavaria
~0826 - 0866
* Ludolph
Of
Saxony
40
40
~0831
* Hedwige
Of
Saxony
~0800
*
Bruno
~0800 - 0863
*
Eberhard
di Friuli
63
63
Alfred
Dalton
D. 0811
*
Unruoch
di Friuli
~0853
* Theodoric
Of
Ringleheim
~0858
*
Ludmilla
Ragnhildis
~0820
*
Gottfried
~0820
*
Matilda
~0828
* Reginhart
Of
Ringleheim
~0833
*
Unknown
~0800
*
Wolpert
~0800
*
Alburgis
~0950 - 1013
* Ranier
IV Of
Hainault
63
63
Caroline
Dalton
~0972 - >1013
* Adwige
Of
France
41
41
1130 - 1202
*
Hamelin
Plantagent
72
72
~1137 - 1199
* Isabel
De
Warenne
62
62
1113 - 1151
*Geoffrey
V 'Le Bon'
Plantagent
38
38
Geoffrey's father, Fulk V, had married the daughter and heir of the Count of Maine and so the two counties were united. The year 1127 was an important year for the fourteen-year-old Geoffrey "the Fair" as he was married to the widowed Empress Matilda, heir to the King of England. In 1128 a deputation from the Holy Land came to Paris to ask King Louis VII for a nobleman to marry Melisende, daughter and heir of King Baldwin II. Fulk V, a widower, was chosen and left Anjou and Maine to Geoffrey while he married Melisende in 1129, then became King of Jerusalem in 1131. Although Geoffrey and the much older Matilda disliked each other, he nevertheless fathered three sons. He was confronted by unruly vassals which included his own younger brother Helie, who was eventually captured and imprisoned at Tours. When released, Helie died of a disease contracted in prison. In 1135 King Henry I of England died and his wife's cousin, Stephen de Blois, seized the crown. Geoffrey campaigned in Normandy on Matilda's behalf but even his fourth campaign in 1138 was no success. In 1139 Matilda invaded England and in 1141 imprisoned Stephen, after which many castles in Normandy surrendered to Geoffrey. In 1144, after the fall of Rouen, Geoffrey was invested as Duke of Normandy. From 1147 until 1149 he went on crusade with King Louis VII of France. In 1150 he passed the Duchy of Normandy to his eldest son, Henry. Geoffrey died on 7 September 1151 and was buried in the Cathedral of Le Mans. Source: Leo van de Pas
~1112 - >1129
* Adelaide
Of
Angers
17
17
1119 - 1148
* William
De
Warenne
29
29
~1110 - 1174
*
Adelia
Talvace
64
64
~1081 - 1138
* William
De
Warenne
57
57
~1081 - 1131
* Isabel Elizabeth
de Crepi (de
Vermandois)
50
50
~1055 - 1088
* William
De
Warenne
33
33
ROBERT, COMTE DE MORTAIN AND EARL OF CORNWALL The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planch窠Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. Robert, Comte de Mortain and Earl of Cornwall, the exact date of whose birth is as much a question as that of Odo, who, if his age at the time of his death be correctly stated, must have been the elder of the two; but, whether or not, there was probably not more than a year or so's difference between them. Our first knowledge of him is obained from the fact of his being made Comte de Mortain in the Cotentin (not to be confounded with Mortagne in La Manche), by his uterine brother, Duke William, on the banishment of William the Warling, son of Malger, and grandson of Duke Richard the First, on suspicion of treason for it really amounted to nothing more the wily tyrant availing himself of an opportunity to advance, under a pretence of justice, another of his mother's family. This was just previous to Duke William's visit to England in 1051, and Robert, I conclude, might at that period have been nearly of full age, being born, as I take it, circa 1031. In 1054, on the invasion of Normandy by Henry, King of France, we find him joining the army of William, with his knights and retainers; but he was not in the battle of Mortemer, being in the Duke's division, and consequently had no opportunity of distinguishing himself. We next hear of him at the council called by William on receiving the tidings of Harold's assumption of the crown of England, and subsequently at the great meeting at Lillebonne, when he promised to contribute to the invading fleet no less than one hundred and twenty vessels, according to the curious Latin record published by Taylor; [A Roberto de Mortoleio, c. et xx.] an enormous number, but the size has to be taken into consideration, and the list may be held to include boats of every description. In the great battle of Senlac, Wace tells us he never went far from the Duke, and commanded the chivalry of the Cotentin, but he is not conspicuously delineated in that portion of the Bayeux Tapestry. His share of the spoil is said to have been the greatest. He was created Earl of Cornwall, in which county alone he possessed two hundred and forty-eight manors at the time of the compilation of Domesday; fifty-four in Sussex, besides the borough of Pevensey; seventy-five in Devonshire, forty-nine in Dorsetshire, twenty-nine in Buckinghamshire, thirteen in Hertfordshire, ten in Suffolk, ninety-nine in Northumberland, one hundred and ninety-six in Yorkshire, and twenty-four in other counties, amounting altogether to seven hundred and ninety-seven, with two castles in his county of Cornwall, one at Dunhever and the other af Tremeton. In 1069, the Earl of Cornwall and Robert Comte d'Eu were left by King William in Lindsey to watch the Danes who had landed at the mouth of the Humber and invested York, but alarmed at the approach of the Royal forces retreated to the opposite shore, and took shelter in the fens. Availing themselves of the opportunity afforded them by a festival at which the disaffected inhabitants liad invited the invaders to be present, the two Earls fell upon them unexpectedly, and pursued them with great slaughter to their very ships. We hear little of him from that period till we find him beside the death-bed of the elder William, supplicating for the pardon and release of his brother Odo, which the King, with great reluctance, at length conceded to the urgent and incessant entreaties of the Earl and his friends. "My brother Odo," said the dying monarch, " is a man not to be trustedambitious, given to fleshly desires, and of enormous cruelty. There is no doubt that if he is released he will disturb the whole country, and be the ruin of thousands." The petitioners pledging themselves for the Bishop's reformation, the King yielded from mere weariness, observing, " It is against my own judgment that I permit my brother to be liberated, for be assured that he will cause the death or the grievous injury of many persons." He was too true a prophet. His son Rufus had scarcely ascended the throne when the pestilent priest commenced, as we have seen, to sow dissensions amongst his subjects, and succeeded in involving the generous brother, to whom he was indebted for his freedom, in a conspiracy to depose the nephew who had restored him the possessions he had deservedly forfeited. Imposing on the duller nature, and working on the affection of Robert, he beguiled him into a rash attempt to hold his Castle of Pevensey against the King, which failing might have cost the Earl his life or liberty, and the confiscation of all his estates. The Red King, however, made a judicious distinction between his uncles, banishing for ever the arch-traitor Odo, and accepting the submission of Robert, allowed him to return to his allegiance. This event occurred in 1088, and after that time his name disappears from the pages of our historians. Brooke, in his Catalogue of Nobility, says, witliout citing any earlier writers, " This Robert was slain in Northumberland in the year 1087." Vincent, in his "Discoverie," points out the error of the date, but is silent respecting the account of the death, which he certainly would not have been if he could have contradicted it. Dugdale was equally ignorant on the subject. "When he departed this world, I do not find," he tell us; "but if he lived after King William Rufus so fatally lost his life by the glance of an arrow in New Forest from the bow of Walter Tyrrell, then was it," he continues, "unto him that this strange apparition happened, which I shall here speak of;" and then he relates the story told by Matthew Paris, how that, at the very hour the King was killed, the Earl of Cornwall, being hunting in a wood at some distance, and left alone by his attendants, was met by a huge black goat bearing Rufus all black and naked with a wound in his breast. The Earl adjured the goat by the Holy Trinity to tell him whom it was he carried, and was answered, "I am carrying your King to judgment. Yea, that tyrant William Rufus, for I am an evil spirit, and the revenger of his malice which he bore to the Church of God, and it was I that did cause his slaughter, the proto-martyr of England, St. Alban, commanding me so-to-do, who complained to God of him for his grievous oppressions in this Isle of Britain which he first hallowed all which the Earl related soon after to his followers." What a pity the goat did not reveal the name of the individual he had caused to do the slaughter! This absurd story, one of the many circulated at the time of the King's death, and tolerably well proving a guilty foreknowledge, is only quoted here as bearing on the question of the decease of Robert Earl of Cornwall, for the narrator does not distinguish the Earl by his baptismal name, and therefore leaves it uncertain whether he is alluding to Robert or to his son William, who had undoubtedly succeeded to the earldom of Mortain and Cornwall before 1103, as in that year he had left England for Normandy, and was in open rebellion against Henry I, whom he hated from childhood, and by whom he was consequently deprived of his titles and estates for treason. In the absence at present of any reliable information, I am inclined to believe that Robert's death preceded that of his brother Odo, as the monk of Malmesbury tells us that, "not content with the two earldoms of Mortain in Normandy and Cornwall in England, his son William demanded from King Henry the earldom of Kent which his uncle Odo had held, and petulantly declared that he would not put on his robe or mantle till the inheritance he derived from his uncle should be restored to him," a terrible threat, which must have alarmed the King amazingly. Without presuming to fix on an exact date, I consider then that Robert Earl of Cornwall died between the years 1089 and 1097; and if there be any foundation whatever for Brooke's statement, that he was slain in Northumberland, it is possible that he was there with his nephew King William on the occasion of Robert de Mowbray's rebellion in 1095. It is not the less remarkable, however, that the death of so important and wealthy a personage should have occurred without its being recorded by a single historian. Robert Earl of Cornwall had taken to wife previously to the Conquest, but at what period we are ignorant, Matilda, daughter of Roger de Montgomeri, Earl of Shrewsbury, and by her left one son, William, of whom I have just spoken, and three daughters Agnes, first offered in marriage to William de Grentmesnil, but afterwards the wife of Andr矤e Vitry, Denise, married in 1078 to Guy, 3rd Sire de La Val, of whom more hereafter; and Emma, wife of William Count of Toulouse. Of the three sons of Herleve, William, Odo, and Robert, the latter alone appears to have possessed some kindly feeling. He is described by William of Malmesbury as a man of a heavy, sluggish disposition, but no foul crimes are laid to his charge. He had evidently the courage of his race, and his conduct as a commander is unassociated with any act of cruelty. Scandal has not been busy with his name as a husband. No discords are known to have disturbed his domestic felicity. With the exception of the one occasion when ensnared by the artful representations of Odo, he had joined in the rebellion against Rufus, no trace is seen of his having been involved in any of the revolts and conspiracies which were continually convulsing both Normandy and England, and his fidelity to the elder William was never for an instant shaken. We have seen him beside the death-bed of that William, pleading urgently for the pardon of their worthless brother, and pledging himself generously but rashly to his reformation; and the distinction made by the second William between his two uncles upon their surrender at Pevensey, shows that he believed in the contrition of Robert, and thoroughly estimated the amount of dependence he could place upon the word or oath of the faithless, treacherous, turbulent Odo. He was a great benefactor to the Abbey of Grestain in Normandy, which had been founded by bis father, Herluin de Conteville, and his appropriation of the possessions which belonged to the Priory of St. Petroc at Bodmin, in Cornwall, founded by King Ethelstan, appears to be justified by the fact that they had been taken from the Priory, and were illegally enjoyed by canons secular. By a charter to the monks of St. Michael in Peril of the Sea, on the coast of Normandy, giving to them and their successors in pure alms for ever the monastery of St. Michael on the Mount in Cornwall, and which must have been executed before 1083, as the name of Queen Matilda occurs amongst the witnesses, we learn that the standard of that saint had been carried before him in battle, and may fairly conclude that it was in the decisive one at Senlac. This charter appears to have been subsequently confirmed by him in 1085 at Pevensey. [Mr. Freeman appears to have mistaken this date for the original one of the Charter, and consequently demurs to its authenticity; but it is clear from the names of the witnesses that it must have been executed in Normandy, and the note appended to it in the Monasticon refers merely to a confirmation some years afterwards, -- "Firmata atque roboratur est h塠carta anno millesimo octagesimo quinto apud Pevensel," in Robert's own castle.] Meagre as are the materials which we are enabled at present to scrape together for a memoir of Robert Earl of Cornwall, his character stands out in honorable distinction from those of his brothers, neither surrounded by the "guilty glory" of the King, nor blackened by the baseness of the Bishop. Photocopy of the text was provided this site by Fred L. Curry. Return to index of Wm's Companions Pat's Genealogy Index VISIT MY ONLINE BOOKSTORES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UPDATED 01/11/2003 10:45:03
Unknown
ABT 1053/1063 - 1085
* Gundred
Of
Flanders
~0998
* Ralph
De
Warenne
~1020
* Emma
de St
Martin
~0950
* William
Of
Warren
~0960
* de
Torta
~0925
* Walter
de St
Martin
~0930
*
Unknown
~0935
* Ralph
de
Torta
~0940
*
Unknown
Reginald
De
Warenne
1867
Thomas
Dalton
~1050 - 1102
* Hugh 'The
Great' Of
Vermandois
52
52
~1065 - 1124
* Adelaide
Of
Vermandois
59
59
1008 - 1060
* Henri
I
Capet
52
52
* Matilda
Of
Germany
~1000
* Anne
de
Crespy
~0979 - 25 May 1043/1045
* Otho
Of
Vermandois
*
Ermengarde
~0942 - ~1015
* Herbert
III Of
Vermandois
73
73
~0946 - >1018
*
Ermengarde
Of Bar
72
72
~0917 - 0987
* Albert
I Of
Vermandois
70
70
~1838 - 1910
Joseph
Bridges
72
72
* Gerberge
Of
Lorraine
~0884 - 0943
* Herbert
II Of
Vermandois
59
59
~0895 - >0931
*
Hildebrante
Of France
36
36
~0848 - ~0900
* Herbert
I De
Senlis
52
52
~0862
* Berthe
De
Morvois
~0820
* Daughter
Of
Theodric
* Guerri
De
Morvois
* Eve
de
Roussilon
D. 0878/0879
* Girard
de
Roussilon
* Lisiard
Of Paris
D. 1902
Margaret
* Begue
Of
Paris
* Aupais
Of The
HRE
~0870 - 0923
* Robert
I Of
France
53
53
* Adele
Of
France
~0820 - 0866
* Robert
'Fortis'
De Blois
46
46
~0799
* Adelaide Of
The Holy
Roman Empire
~0820
*
Guillaume
Witithin
~0825
*
Geva
~0800
*
Gorm
~0945
*
Reinald
Of Bar
1834 - 1900
Jane
Stark
66
66
Will left 100 pound estate to son Alexander & daughter Isabella.
~0950
*
Unknown
~1084 - 1171
*
William
Talvace
87
87
* Helie
Ela
Borel
~1050 - >1135
*
Robert
Montgomery
85
85
* Agnes
De
Ponthieu
1022 - 1094
* Roger
De
Montgomery
72
72
1015 - 1079
* Mabel
de
Belleme
64
64
~0996
* Roger
De
Montgomery
<0994
* Josceline Du
Pont-
Audemer
<0994
* Hugh
Roger De
Montgomery
1835 - 1902
John
Stark
67
67
* Sybil
De
Crepon
* Roger
De
Montgomery
0963
* Herfast
De
Crepon
* Thorauld
Tourade De
Pontaudemer
*
Awelina
~0998 - 1048
* William II
Talvas de
Belleme
50
50
~1092 - 1143
* Fulk
V Of
Jerusalem
51
51
1094 - 1126
*
Ermengarde
de Maine
32
32
1144/1146 - 1219
* William 'The
Protector'
Marshall
1171 - 1220
* Isabel
FitzGilbert
De Clare
49
49
1837
Mary
Stark
1801 - 1870
*
Robert
Forrester
69
69
~1126 - 1164/1165
* John 'The
Marshal'
FitzGilbert
~1127 - >1146
* Sibilla
de
Salisbury
19
19
1075 - <1130
* Gilbert
FitzRobert
Marshall
55
55
1105
* de
Venuz
~1100 - 1147
* Walter
FitzEdward
D'Evereux
47
47
1112 - <1147
* Sybil
de
Chaworth
35
35
>1060 - 1130
*
Edward
D'Evereux
70
70
~1070
*
Maud
FitzHubert
~1033 - >1066
*
William
D'Evereux
33
33
Present at Battle Of Hastings 1066.
~1037
*
d'Ewrus
~1840 - 1875
Edward
Stirling
Stark
35
35
~1025
*
William
Devereux
~1030
*
Unknown
1052
* Patrick
De
Chaworth
1057
* Maud
Of
Hesdin
1104 - 1167
* Maud
Of
England
63
63
D. 1120
William
Athling
1134 - 1157
Geoffrey
VI Of Anjou
Plantagent
23
23
1136 - 1164
William
Plantagent
28
28
~1012 - 1067
* Baldwin V
'The Pious'
Of Flanders
55
55
1305
Robert
Clifford
~1851 - 1865
Isabella
Stark
14
14
ABT 0967/0968 - 30 May 1035/1039
* Baldwin IV
'Fair Beard'
Of Flanders
* Otgive
Of
Luxemburg
~0941 - 0987
* Arnulph
II Of
Flanders
46
46
*Rosele
Of
Italy
~0933 - 0962
* Baudoin
III Of
Flanders
29
29
* Mathilde
von Billung
Of Saxony
~0884 - 27 Mar 0964/0966
* Arnulph
I Of
Flanders
0910/0915 - 0960
* Adele
De
Vermandois
~0864 - 0918
* Baudoin II
'The Bald'
Of Flanders
54
54
* Elfrida Or
Alfthyth Of
England
~1853 - 1863
Mary
Cunningham
Stark
10
10
0837/0840 - 0877/0879
* Baudoin I
'Iron Arm'
Of Flanders
0772
Carl
Of
Franken
0823 - 0877
* Charles II
'The Bald'
Of The HRE
54
54
~0825 - 0869
*
Ermentrude
Of Orleans
44
44
~0800 - 0843
*Judith
Of
Bavaria
43
43
0777 - 0825
* Welf
I Of
Bavaria
48
48
0781 - 0846
* Hedwig
Or Edith
Of Saxony
65
65
* AEthelred
Mucel Of
The Gaini
1172 - 1240
* Walter
De
Lacey
68
68
~1177 - >1255
*Margaret
De
Braose
78
78
~1894 - 1972
Emily
Villiree
Whittaker
78
78
1115 - 1186
* Hugh
De
Lacey
71
71
1090 - 1149
*
Rohese
De Clare
59
59
1140/1150 - 1211
*William
III De
Braose
1155 - 1210
*Maud 'Matilda
Of Hay' de St
Valery
55
55
*
Ralph
Wallis
*
Robert
Battyn
* Joan
Waldron
*
Robert
Battyn
* John
Waldron
*
Johem
Battyn
1915
Edward
Ross
Stark
Name STARK, EDWARD ROSS Service Australian Army Service Number SX2790 Date of Birth 11 Dec 1915 Place of Birth MILLICENT, SA Date of Enlistment 14 May 1940 Locality on Enlistment MOUNT GAMBIER, SA Place of Enlistment WAYVILLE, SA Next of Kin STARK, VERA Date of Discharge 6 Nov 1945 Rank Corporal Posting at Discharge 9 DIVISION CAVALRY REGIMENT WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
*
Elizabeth
Dabernon
*
William
Battyn
* John
Dabernon
*
Isabella
Mules
* John
Dabernon
*
Thamsine
Cade
1386 - ~1442
* John
Mules
56
56
*
Robert
Cade
* Unknown
De
Donsland
1360
* John
Mules
1918
Donald
Alexander
Stark
1364
* Ann
Wotton
*
Elizabeth
* John
De
Donsland
1336
* John
Mules
1340
*
Unknown
Favel
~1314
*
Roger
Favel
1303 - 1339
* John
De
Mules
36
36
1282 - 1323
* Roger
De
Mules
41
41
1286
* Mariota
Le
Dennys
1260
* Robert
Le
Dennys
1920
Phyllis
Vida
Stark
1254
* Roger
De
Mules
1226
* John
De
Mules
~1200
* Robert
De
Molis
William
De
Mules
Maude
Trenouth
1458
Catherine
Trenouth
Margaret
Trenouth
1240 - >1295
* John
de
Valletort
55
55
1210 - 1259
* Philip
de
Valletort
49
49
* Joan
Of
Cornwall
1920 - 2001
David
Willis
Stark
80
80
Name STARK, DAVID WILLIS Service Australian Army Service Number SX7656 Date of Birth 1 Jul 1920 Place of Birth MILLICENT, SA Date of Enlistment 3 Jul 1940 Locality on Enlistment MOUNT GAMBIER, SA Place of Enlistment WAYVILLE, SA Next of Kin STARK, LAVINIA Date of Discharge 12 Feb 1944 Rank Trooper Posting at Discharge 9 DIV CAV REGT WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
1175
* Joel
de
Valletort
1180
* Emma
de
Botterell
<1120
*
Osmond
Basset
*
Basilia
Bray
<1076 - 1120
*
Ralph
Basset
44
44
~1073
* Alice
de
Buci
1050 - >1086
* Thurston
'The Norman'
Basset
36
36
* Irmgard
Of Anjou
Alice
Of
Normandy
Richard
Of
Normandy
1924 - 1985
Beryl
Doris
Stark
61
61
Name STARK, BERYL DORIS Service Royal Australian Air Force Service Number 114726 Date of Birth 6 Apr 1924 Place of Birth MILLICENT, SA Date of Enlistment 14 Feb 1945 Locality on Enlistment SEMAPHORE Place of Enlistment ADELAIDE Next of Kin STARK, DONALD Date of Discharge 12 Mar 1946 Rank Aircraftwoman Posting at Discharge Station HQ Pearce WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
Eleanor
Of
Normandy
Unknown
Of
Normandy
D. <1203
*
Orabilis
de Mar
William
Basset
Thurston
Basset
Nicholas
Basset
Gilbert
Basset
Richard
Basset
Thomas
Basset
~1060
*
Unknown
1926 - 1926
?
Stark
1841 - 1910
* Ellen
Nixon
69
69
~1005
* Fouque
De
Aulney
~0960
* Osmond
De
Centville
~0915
* Norman
Of
Basset
~0870
* Bathel Or
Basset Of
The Normans
Unknown
Osmund
Basset
1034
* Adelaide
De
Beaumont
0942
* Helloe
de
Beaulac
0921
* Godfrey
de
Beaulac
0913
*
Gerlotte
Of Blois
1927
Mervyn
Harry
Stark
Name STARK, MERVYN HARRY Service Royal Australian Navy Service Number 35146 Date of Birth 2 Mar 1927 Place of Birth MILLICENT, SA Date of Enlistment 17 Apr 1945 Locality on Enlistment Unknown Place of Enlistment PORT ADELAIDE Next of Kin STARK, LAVINIA Date of Discharge 5 Oct 1948 Rank ORDINARY SEAMAN Posting at Discharge HMAS Torrens WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
1000 - 1045
* Neil II
de St
Saveur
45
45
* Roger
de St
Saveur
* Neil I
de St
Saveur
* Richard
I de St
Saveur
0855 - 0912
* Malahule
(Hadrick)
Eysteinsson
57
57
0953 - 0996
*
Godfrey
d'Eu
43
43
~0956
* Heloise
De
Guines
0905 - 0965
* Sigfried
'le Danois'
Guines
60
60
0932
* Elstrude
van
Vlaanderen
0875 - 0924
* Edward
'The Elder'
Of England
49
49
1929
Margaret
Lavinia
Stark
0878 - 0919
* Alflaed
Of
Wiltshire
41
41
0848 - 0901
* Alfred
'The Great'
Of England
53
53
Born in 849 in the royal manor of Wantage in Berkshire. Apparently his mother encouraged their learning by showing Alfred and his brothers a beautifully illuminated book of poetry saying the one who could read it first could have it. Alfred, the youngest, was first. As a young man he was his brother King Ethelred's supporter in the struggle against the marauding Vikings. In 868 he married Ealhswith by whom he had a large family. When in 871 he succeeded his brother Ethelwulf as king, most of England was in Danish hands. Even though they won several small victories and, in 875, a seabattle, the Danes had the upper hand. Alfred had to take refuge in 877 and, during this period of not being seen, stories emerged of his being disguised as a wandering minstrel and strolling into Danish camps to gather information. There was also the story of his burning the cakes he had been asked to watch. In May 878, joined by English forces, he drove back the Danes to Chippenham. This was the turning point from which Alfred again emerged as King of England. Twice a year he called a great council which was the beginning of the English Parliament. Apparently Alfred suffered from a strange, regularly re-occurring illness as recorded by Asser, Bishop of Sherborne. According to Sir Iain Moncreiffe of That Ilk, it might have been porphyria. Alfred died 26 October 899 and was buried at Winchester. His wife survived till 5 December 902. Source: Leo van de Pas
0852 - 0905
* AEhlswith
Of the
Gainas
53
53
0859 - 0897
*
AEthelhelm
Of Wiltshire
38
38
*
Aethelglyth
Of Mercia
0806 - 0858
*
AEthelwulf
Of Wessex
52
52
0810 - ~0853
*
Osburgh
Of Wight
43
43
0775 - 0839
* Ecgbert
III Of
Wessex
64
64
0788 - 0840
* Redburga
de
Carolingians
52
52
0785
* Oslac
Of
Wight
1930 - 1993
Melville
John
Stark
62
62
0825 - 0871
*
AEthelred I
Of England
46
46
0827
*
Wulfthryth
1135 - >1170
* William
II De
Tracy
35
35
1137
*
Unknown
Pomeroy
~1097 - 1136
* William
De
Tracy
39
39
1110 - >1167
* Henry
Of Berry
Pomeroy
57
57
1120 - >1176
*
Rohese
Fitzherbert
56
56
* Joscelin
de la
Pomeroy
~1096 - <1190
* Jordan
De
Champernowne
94
94
1125 - 1176
* Richard
'Strongbow'
De Clare
51
51
1889
Edward
Blee
Whinnen
1145 - >1186
* Aoife (Eva)
MacDermot
MacMurrough
41
41
~1104 - >1172
* Isabelle
De
Beaumont
68
68
1100 - 1148
* Gilbert FitzGilbert
'Strongbow' De
Clare
48
48
~1065 - 1114
* Gilbert
FitzRichard
De Clare
49
49
~1058
* Adelaide
De
Clermont
1049 - 1118
* Robert
I De
Beaumont
69
69
Present at Battle Of Hastings 1066.
1022 - 1094
* Roger
De
Beaumont
72
72
1014 - 1081
* Adeline
de
Meulan
67
67
~0990 - 1096
*Waleran
III de
Meulan
106
106
~0994
* Ode
de
Conteville
1891 - 1950
George
Whinnen
59
59
~1060
*
Adelaide
de Lisle
~1044 - ~1080
*
Humphrey
de Lisle
36
36
1112 - 1192
* William
II De
Braose
80
80
1123
* Bertha
Of
Gloucester
~1125 - 1192
*Bernard
IV de St
Valery
67
67
~1125
*Alanora
St
John
1095 - 1166
* Renauld
II de St
Valery
71
71
~1065
* Bernard
III de St
Valery
~1035
* Gauthier
(Walter) de
St Valery
~1040
* Isabel
Elizabeth De
Monthlery
*
Reginald
Cock
* Bernard
II de St
Valery
0977
* Gilbert
de St
Valery
~0960
* Papia
De
Normandy
0947
* Bernard
I de St
Valery
0950
* Emma
de St
Valery
* Reginald
de St
Valery
1092 - 1143
* Miles
De
Pitres
51
51
1096 - >1143
* Sybil
De
Neufmarche
47
47
<1073 - 1134/1139
* Philip
De
Braose
~1084
* Aenor
De
Totnais
1849 - 1909
John Frederick
(Frederick)
Bidner
60
60
~1049 - 1093/1096
* William
I De
Braose
Came to England with William The Conquerer
* Eve
De
Boissey
~1049 - 1123/1130
* Judeal
Johel De
Totnais
~1054
*Unknown
de
Pecguigny
* Arnoul
de
Pecguigny
~1015
* Alured
De
Totnais
Philip
De
Braose
Basilia
De
Braose
D. <1129
* Walter
De
Pitres
1070
*
Berthe
1856 - 1914
Mary
Rose
58
58
1050 - 1093
* Bernard
De
Neufmarche
43
43
1079
* Nesta
verch
Osborn
1059
* Nesta
verch
Gruffud
1055 - 1080
*
Osbern
FitzRichard
25
25
* Geoffrey
De
Neufmarche
* Ada
de
Hugleville
* Thureyitel
De
Neufmarche
1030
*
Richard
FitzScrob
1011 - 1063
* Gruffyd
I ap
Llewelyn
52
52
1034 - 1086
*
AEldgyth
Of Mercia
52
52
1876 - 1941
Magdalene
Bidner
64
64
0997
*
AElfgifu
D. ~1063
* AElfgar
Of
Mercia
0980 - 1023
*
Llewelyn
ap Seisyll
43
43
0982
* Angaradh
verc
Maredudd
0938
* Seisyll
ap
Ednowain
* Prawst
verch
Elise
0938 - 0999
*
Maredudd
ap Owain
61
61
0913 - 0987
* Owain
ap Hywel
Dda
74
74
0918
* Angarad
verch
Llewelyn
William
Floyer
1880 - 1946
Harriet
Bidner
65
65
1757 - 1827
*
Robert
Forrester
70
70
ROBERT FORRESTER was born Abt. 1759 in MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, and died 14 January 1827 in WINDSOR NSW. He married (1) ISOBEL RAMSAY. She was born Abt. 1762. He met (2) JANE WILSON in PROBABLY NEVER. He met (3) MARY FROST Abt. 1793. Notes for ROBERT FORRESTER: Robert Forrester was tried at Justice Hall at the Old Bailey in London at the sessions which commenced on Wednesday 30 April 1783 before Mr. Justice Nares and the Second Middlesex Jury. Robert Forrester and Richard McDale were indicted for feloniously stealing on 29 April 1783, six pieces of gold coin of the realm called guineas to the value of Six Pounds and Six shillings English Currency being the property of Simon Hughes. The offence was alleged to have taken place at the dwelling house of Letitia Coleman a widow. Both Forrester and McDale were found guilty and senced to be hanged. ARRIVED IN AUSTRALIA AS A CONVICT ON 21/1/1788 ABOARD "SCARBOROUGH". SHIPPED OUT OF PORTSMOUTH. Robert Forrester arrived at Port Jackson in New South Wales, Australia on 26th January 1788 aboard "Scarborough" of the First Fleet. This account is a preliminary outline of the life and times of Robert Forrester. The information contained in it has been drawn from two sources. The first is the forty or fifty descendants of Robert Forrester who are themselves engaged in research into their First Fleet convicts genealogy and history. Many of them have been doing there own research in their own way for a longer period of time than the writer of this account. All have contributed in one way or another to this story and it is difficult to mention one of them and not others. However it ought to be noted that Mr Geoffery Steer (18 Gumblossom Drive, Westleigh, New South Wales, Australia, 2120. has set himself the task of tracing and recording the basic genealogical information (ie dates of births and/or baptisms marriages and deaths and/or burials) of every descendant of Robert Forrester. This is a great undertaking which will complement this outline or any other biography or history of Robert Forrester. All descendants of Robert Forrester are asked to contact Mr Steer and provide him with details of their families who have descended from Robert Forrester. The second source of information on Robert Forrester has been two professional record agents. Mr Michael Yelland (of Ancestry Research Associates, 9 Home Court, Maple Road, Surbiton, Surrey, KT6 4AZ England UK) was commissioned to search for information on Robert Forrester's birth, trial and goal movements in England and he reported on 28 June 1982 and 4 October 1982. Mrs Joanna Richards (3 Wellington Street, Woollahra, New South Wales, Australia, 2025) was commissioned to search for information on Robert Forrester generally in New South Wales and on Norfolk Island and to keep a watchong brief on information relating to Robert Forrester for the future. Mrs Richards reported on 1st June 1982, 20th August 1982, 1st September 1982, 4th September 1982 and 23rd October 1982. Mrs Richards has provided much information about Robert Forrester's early days at Port Jackson and on Norfolk Island. Mr Yelland's information and Mrs Richard's information has been incorporated into this account. Origins The date and place of Robert Forrester's birth is not yet known. At his trial in 1783 Robert Forrester in his defence stated that he was "a stranger in London". Mr Yelland is inclined to believe the statement because so many defendants gave the same defence. Robert Forrester's entry in the Old Bailey Sessions Roll at the Greater London Record Office staes that he was "late of the parish of St. Giles in the Fields in the County of Middlesex". However Mr Yelland suggests that addresses given in court proceedings generally were addresses or locations where the crime was committed. St Matthews Anglican Church Windsor Burial Register records Robert Forrester's age at time of death on 14th February 1827 as sixty nine years which indicates a date of birth of around about 1758. Mr Yelland searched the registers of St Giles in the Fields but did not find the baptism of a Robert Forrester there around about 1758. The closest is Robert Forrester son of Robert and Mary Forrest baptised on July 8, 1759. Mr Yelland believes that the big London parishes kept accurate records and that this is most certainly not a case of Forrest being wrongly used for Forrester. However if Robert Forrester was illiterate he might have made the mistake and as a youth (perhaps separated from his parents) he might have assumed that his surname was Forrester whereas it was really Forrest. The International Genealogical Index (IGI) records for London the baptism of Robert Forrester son of Robert Forrester in September 1757 at Founders Hall in London. Mr Yelland has advised that Founders Hall was the Scots Church at Lothbury in the City of London. It will be difficult to trace Robert Forresters origins further as in both England and New South Wales, Australia Forrester is often mixed with and used instead of Forester, Forster and Foster! Trial Robert Forrester was tried at Justice Hall at the Old Bailey in London at the Sessions which commenced Wednesday 30th April 1783 before Justice Nares and the Second Middlesex Jury. For a full account of the trial see the Old Bailey Sessions Papers 1782-1785 pp 485-487, 523 and 941 and the Old Bailey Sessions Roll April 1783. Robert Forrester and Richard McDale (sometimes McDeed or M'Deed) were indicted for feloniously stealing on 29th April 1783 six pieces of gold coin of the realm called guineas to the value of Six Pounds and Six Shillings English Currency being the property of Simon Hughes. The offence was alleged to have taken place at the dwelling house of Letitia Coleman a widow. Both Forrester and McDale were found guilty and sentenced to be hanged. The judgement was recorded at the end of the same Sessions. Both were pardoned at the end of the Sessions which commenced on 10th September 1783. The record reads that the "prisoners who had been capitally convicted at the former sessions were called to the bar and received his Majesty's gracious pardon on the annexed condition". The "annexed condition" in the case of Robert Forrester and Richard McDale was that of "transportation respites". However transportation to America was diminishing quite dramatically at about the same time because of the American independence movement and the war which accopanied it. Robert Forrester and Richard McDale were transported to New South Wales, Australia for reasons which are not readily apparent. Robert Forrester and Richard McDale were received at Newgate Prison (probably from the cells at the Old bailey) on 5th May 1783 as capital convicts. Mention is made in the Newgate Prison records of their pardon and transportation. On 4th October 1783 both were delivered "to Duncan Campbell Esq to be transported to Northern America". They must have gone to another prison or to one of the hulks but no record of this has emerged so far. Valerie Ross in her Matthew Everingham A First Fleeter and his Times (Sydney Library of Australian History 1980) states that Duncan Campbell was "a contractor who had previously been engaged in transportation to the American colonies, bought two vessels, the Justitia at two hundred and sixty tons and the Censor, an old frigate, from the Admiralty, dismantled them of rigging and moored them in the stream at the Thames between Gallions Reach and Barking Reach at Woolwich" p 20. Marriage in England Robert Forrester would have been about twenty five years of age in 1783 if St Matthew's Windsor Burial Register is correct about his age in 1827. He would have been of marriageble age prior to his incarceration. There is however no indication in either the English or Australian records that he married prior to his transportation to New South Wales, Australia. The IGI has an entry for the marriage of Robert Forrester to Mary Pratt on 22nd May 1780 at St Andrews Enfield but there will never be any way of determining that this marriage is the marriage of the Robert Forrseter who was transported to New South Wales, Australia. Voyage to New South Wales, Australia There are several short readable accounts of the voyage of the First Fleet to New South Wales. A Good one is Chapter 7 of Charles Bateson's The Convict Ships 1787-1868 (Sydney A H & A W Reed 1974) (pp 94-119). Another good one is Victor Crittendens The Voyage of the First Fleet (Canberra Mulini 1981). A recent good one is Jonathan King The First Fleet (Sydney Macmillian 1982). Valerie Ross has a good chapter in her Matthew Everingham A First Fleet and his Times (pp 23-34). There are several excellent journals and accounts of the voyage of the First Fleet by people who were part of it. One is The Journal of Philip Gidley King: Lieutenant, R.N. 1787-1790 (Sydney Australian Documents Library 1980). Residence in New South Wales Robert Forrester resided at Port Jackson until November 1791. During this time he had several shirmishes with the authorities. On 29th December 1790 or thereabouts he was a member of the watch and was sent to investigate a riotous party at the residence of William Whiting and to take him into custody. Instead he seems to have joined the party and got drunk himself. He and Whiting and two others appeared before Justices of the Peace (David Collins the Reverend Richard Johnson and Augustus Alt). Forrester was discharged from the watch into a work gang. The Register of Marriages of St Philip's Anglican Church Sydney records the marriage of Robert Forster and Mary Frost on 19th October 1791. The Reverend Richard Johnson Chaplain solemnised the matrimony. John Cobley in his Sydney Cove 1791-1792 identifies Robert Forster with Robert Forrester on the basis presumably that no convict named Robert Forster arrived Port Jackson prior to 19th October 1791. It is very likely of course that the variety of pronunciations of Forrester etc combined with limited abilities to spell and to write accounts for the various uses of Foster, Forster, Forester and Forrester. This marriage presents not only the problem of proper identification of Robert Forster but also the problem of where the marriage took place. Robert Forrester went to Norfolk Island in October 1791 (see Residence on Norflok Island). Mary Frost arrived Port Jackson on 28th June 1790 aboard "Neptune" of the second Fleet. She and many other female convicts were transferred aboard "Surprise" bound for Norfolk Island where she arrived on 7th August 1790. She was victualled on Norfolk Island throughout 1790 and 1791 and wholly ot partly through to 1793 maybe 1795. The Norfolk Island Victually Book from which this information comes also lists a second Mary Frost who was victualled through to March or April 1793 and she too arrived on Norfolk Island on 7th August 1790. The proper identification of Mary Frost is very complicated and cannot be made on present information nor can the proper identification of the Mary Frost who married Robert Forster on 19th Octoner 1791 nor can it be properly determine where that marriage took place. Free By Servitude Robert Forrester's crime took place in 1783 and he received a conditional pardon of his death sentence and a sentence of transportation for seven years. His sentence of transpotation would have expired around 1790 but his misdemeanours might have carried it on until late 1791. In any case Robert Forrester received settler status on Norflok Island. Receiving settler status was the way that a convict's sentence had expired at least on Norfolk Island. Residence on Norfolk Island Robert Forrester sailed for Norfolk Island on 26th Octoner 1791 aboard "Atlantis". In the Norfolk Island Victually Book 1792-6 in the Archives Office of New South Wales, Robert Forrester is stated to have arrived on Norfolk Island aboard "Atlantic" on 4th November 1791 and to have settled on Norfolk Island on 6th December 1791 and to have departed from Norfolk Island on 9th March 1793 aboard "Kitty". Robert Forrester is listed in Historical Records of Australia in a Return of Lands Granted in His Majesty's Territory of New South Wales and dated 5th November 1791. He is described in the return as a convict whose sentence had expired and he is said to have been married. His grant was of ten acres of land. "Atlantic" arrived Port Jackson on 20th August 1791. She was a 460 ton ship under the command of Archibald Armstrong with James Thomson a ships Surgeon. "Atlantic" sailed from Plymouth in company with "Salamander" and "William and Ann" on 27th March 1791 with Lieutenant Richard Bowen as naval agent in charge. "Atlantic" embarked 220 male convicts of whom 18 died on the voyage. She disembarked 220 male convicts at Port Jackson on 20th August 1791. "Atlantic" voyage is described together with other ships of the Third Fleet in Charles Bateson's The Convict Ships 1787-1868. There is an account of the arrival of "Atlantic" and "Queen" off Norfolk Island in November 1791 in The Journal and Letters of Lt. Ralph Clark 1787-1792. Clark states that "there is also 29 Discharged Marines come in this ship to Settle on this Island" (p121). Clark does not mention discharged convicts. It is likely that towards the end of 1791 there are some official recognition of the fact that Robert Forresters term of transportation would expire by the end of that year. Forrester might of course have been living with Mary Frost prior to their marriage (she had arrived on 28th June 1790 aboard "Neptune") and married her on 19th October 1791. They left Port Jackson on 26th October 1791 aboard "Atlantic" and arrived off Norfolk Island on 2nd November 1791. Forrester received his land grant on Norfolk Island on 5th November 1791 and became a settler there on 6th December 1791. Robert Forresters name appears in several documents held by the Archives Office of New South Wales. The most notable of these documents is the Norfolk Island Victualling Book 1792-6. Robert Forresters entry includes the following information. Category Settlers and Free People No 93 Date of Arrival 4th November 1791 "Atlantic" Qualities Nil Departed 9th March 1793 "Kitty" Port Jackson Victualled 1792 350 days All species 7 days Meat only 1793 Nil 7 days Meat only (no entries for 1794 and 1795) Time when Settled 6th December 1791 A list of persons settled on Norfolk Island but who had not received their land grants shows Robert Forrester as a convict settler who settled there on 6th December 1791 and who lived at Mount Pitt Path Queensboro' Town and had twelve acres of land. These are records of some small commercial transactions by Robert Forrester on Norfolk Island. he sold grain between 21st December 1792 and 30th January 1793 (eleven bushels of maize) and was paid in Spanish dollars (at the rate of 5/- Sterling for every Spanish Dollar). Between 27th December 1792 and 31st January 1793 he sold an additional 80 1/2 bushels for the same price. he signed two bills for this grain with his mark. Robert Forrester appears to have liked Norfolk Island not at all nor Mary his wife as it seems almost certain that he left them both on 9th March 1793 aboard "Kitty" and returned to Port Jackson where the next phase of his life in the antipodes began to unfold. Residence In New South Wales Robert Forrester received a grant of land on 3rd December 1794 at the Hawkesbury. It consisted of thirty acres with a river frontage. It was not the only grant Robert Forrester received. he was to receive an additional seventy acres on 16th July 1804 at Mulgrave Place from Governor Philip Gidley King. Robert Forrester commenced a de facto relationship with Isabella (or Bella) Ramsay soon after he arrived back at Port Jackson which was to last for more than a decade. There is abundant evidence that Robert Forrester and Isabella Ramsay lived together and had children. The Register of Baptisms of St John's Anglican Church at Parramatta conatins the following entries Isabella Ramsay appears in the 1806 Muster in New South Wales as "Housekeeper to R Forster". The concept of "housekeeper" in the early days of the Colony of New South Wales nearly always carried the connotation of a de facto relationship. More About ROBERT FORRESTER: Burial: 15 January 1827, ST matthews Windsor Cemetery NSW Australia Occupation: 1800, farmer Record Change: 14 November 1998 Residence: 1814, NSW MUSTER LIVING WITH ROBERT FORRESTER Notes for ISOBEL RAMSAY: Isabella Ramsay was convicted on 6th August 1790 in Carlisle in the County of Cumberland in England and was sentenced to seven years transportation to New South Wales. She arrived in Port Jackson on 9th July 1791 aboard "Mary Ann" of the Third Fleet. The Register of Marriages of St John's Anglican Church at Parramatta contains the record of the marriage of James Manning and Issabella (sic) Ramsey (sic) on 10th June 1792. The Reverend Richard Johnson solemnised the marriage and the entry is endorsed that he acted by "Special Permission". Jame Manning was a First Fleet marine who arrived in New South Wales which cannot properly be identified on present information. NB. Many thanks to Ros Taylor who provided me with the above information.
Mabel
Floyer
Thomas
Tregarthen
~1370
*
Edward
Tregarthen
~1340
*
Thomas
Tregarthen
~1310
*
William
Tregarthen
*
Margaret
Hellegan
* John
Tregarthen
*
Bedimus
Hellegan
~1327
* John
De
Tregarthen
* John
De
Tregarthen
1884 - 1944
William
Bidner
60
60
William
De
Champernowne
~1153
*Gilbert
Andea
Elizabeth
Champernowne
John
De
Champernowne
* Andrew
De
Cardigan
1166 - 1216
* John
Plantagenet
49
49
His mother was well over forty when John, his parent's youngest child, was born. He was not only his mother's favourite but he also inherited many of her characteristics. He grew up enjoying the good things of life: food, women and fashion. His parents indulged him but, when at 18 he was sent to Ireland to complete its conquest, he was recalled when he aggravated the situation by making fun of the beards and clothes of the Irish chieftains. His father denied him any lands and nicknamed him John Lackland; but when John's brother, Richard I, became king, he granted him the county of Mortain in Normandy. Richard I also found him a wife, Isabella of Gloucester. However, the Archbishop of Canterbury declared the marriage void as John and Isabella were second cousins. The Pope reversed this decision but that did not improve the marriage and they soon lived apart, the marriage to be annulled in 1200. When Richard I went on crusade, being aware of John's character, he appointed William de Longchamp as Regent. However, as soon as Richard was gone, John found support not only by the people of England but also by his illegitimate half-brother Geoffrey, Archbishop of York. Marching on London, he won the city by allowing the people to elect their mayor. Realizing he could not withstand his sovereign's brother, Longchamp fled disguised as a woman. He was ready to sail from Dover when an amorous sailor discovered who he was. Before Richard I died, he declared John to be his heir, by-passing Arthur of Brittany whose deceased father, Geoffrey, was John's elder brother. On 25 April 1199 he was invested as Duke of Normandy as well. In 1200 he divorced his unwanted wife as he had become enamoured of the 12-year-old Isabella of Angouleme. Her parents, keen to see their daughter become queen, assisted and they were married by the Archbishop of Bordeaux. As king he had a great concern and interest in the administration of his territories. Ralph of Coggeshall recorded that he ruled 'energetically enough'. He travelled widely in England, often dealing with mundane financial and legal matters. He was munificent and liberal to outsiders but a plunderer of his own people, trusting strangers rather than his subjects, wherefore he was eventually deserted by his own men and, in the end, little mourned. John produced some eight illegitimate children and, according to William of Newburgh, lusted after the wife of Eustace de Vesci, but who contrived to smuggle a prostitute into the king's bed in her place. Next day when John coarsely told him how good his wife had been in bed, de Vesci confessedÄÄÄthen fled. In 1203 John was responsible for the murder of his nephew and rival, Arthur. King Philippe of France, overlord for both Normandy and Brittany, was enraged by this action and, forfeiting Normandy, attacked and conquered Rouen. In 1205 John quarrelled with Pope Innocent III as he did not want to accept Stephen Langton as Archbishop of Canterbury. As a result John was excommunicated in 1208. This lasted until 1213 when he had to accept England as a fief from the pope. Campaigns in 1214 in France were disastrous. While he was in France his enemies in England joined forces under the banner of Stephen Langton, then forced John to accept the Magna Carta which was sealed by John on 15 June 1215 at Runnymnede near Windsor. Infuriated, John gained the support of the pope and gathered an army to fight his barons who were supported by the French king. Landing in England, King Louis marched on London. The Barons promised the crown to the French king and a civil war was begun. During John's travels through England, one of his baggage-trains was swept away while crossing a river and he lost all his valuables including his crown. This caused so great a depression that he fell seriously ill. His illness was aggravated by his gluttony and he was then taken by litter to Newark Castle where he died, aged nearly forty-nine, on 18 October 1216. Source: Leo van de Pas
ABT 1186/1188 - 1246
* Isabella
Of
Angouleme
1133 - 1189
* Henry
II
Plantagenet
56
56
1122 - 26 Jan 1201/1202
* Eleanor
Of
Aquitaine
The eldest daughter and heir of the Dukes of Aquitaine, she was born about 1122. She was brought up by her grandfather, the renowned troubadour Guillaume IX. In 1137 she inherited the Duchy of Aquitaine and married the French king, Louis VII. Two daughters were born from this marriage. Eleanor accompanied her husband on crusade and was rumoured to have had an affair with Saladin and others. On their return to France, Louis VII had their marriage annulled on 18 March 1152 on grounds of consanguinity. Eleanor, then about 30 years old, wasted no time in seducing the nineteen-year-old Henry, Duke of Normandy, marrying him on 18 May 1152 in Beaux. Over a period of fifteen years, five sons and three daughters were born. Eleanor and Henry then grew apart and, when their children had grown up, she supported first one son and then another against Henry. In 1189 Henry died and Eleanor lived long enough to outlive her son, Richard the Lionheart, and see her husbands favourite son, John, become king before she herself died in 1204 at about eighty-two years of age, to be buried at Fontevrault. Source: Leo van de Pas
1079 - 1118
* Matilda
(Maud) Of
Scotland
39
39
James
Bidner
~1031 - 1093
* Malcolm
III
Caenmor
62
62
Killed MacBeth 1057. He was a child when his father, King Duncan, was slain by Macbeth (1040). He spent his youth in Northumbria with his uncle, Earl Siward, who in 1054 established him in Cumbria and Lothian. In 1057, after Macbeth was slain, he became King of all Scotland. His first wife, Ingibiorg, widow of Thorfinn of Orkney, had died; and in 1069 Malcolm wedded Margaret, sister of Edgar the Aetheling, whose cause he made his own. Five times he harried Northumbria (1069, 1070, 1079, 1091, 1093) and there were counter-invasions by William the Conqueror and Prince Robert in 1072 and 1080. In 1092 William II Rufus wrested from Scotland all of Cumbria south of the Solway; and next year Malcolm marched into England but was entrapped and slain at Alnwick on 13 November 1093. He left five sons, of whom four succeeded him: Duncan, Edgar, Alexander and David. Source: Leo van de Pas
1045 - 1093
* Margaret
Of
Hungary
48
48
~1001 - 1040
*
Duncan I
MacCrinan
39
39
D. ~1040
* Sybil
Of
Northumberland
1016 - 1057
* Edward
'The Exile'
Of England
41
41
D. >1093
* Agatha
Of
Hungary
0978 - 1045
* Crinan
Of
Dunkeld
67
67
~0980
* Bethoc
(Beatrix)
MacMalcolm
1110
*Simon
Chenduit
*Robert
de
Trevors
Rosabella
Bidner
D. 1016
* Edmund II
'Ironside'
Of England
1018
* Algitha
Of
Germany
~1140
* Juhel
De
Molis
~1110
*
Nicholas
De Molis
~1080
* Roger
De
Molis
~1022
* Baldwin
de Briones
FitzGilbert
~1034
*
Emma
1153 - 1156
William
Plantagenet
3
3
1155 - 1183
Henry
Plantagenet
28
28
1156 - 1189
Matilda
(Maud)
Plantagenet
33
33
Samuel
Bidner
1157 - 1199
Richard
'Lionheart' I
Plantagenet
42
42
1158 - 1186
Geoffrey
Plantagenet
28
28
1161 - 1214
Eleanor
Plantagenet
53
53
1165 - 1199
Joan
Plantagenet
34
34
1086 - 1125
Henry
V
39
39
* Roger
De
Pitres
~1072
* Gieva
De
Tracy
Mistress of King Henry Ist.
~0945 - 1006
* Adela
Of
Poitou
61
61
0915 - 0963
* William
I Of
Poitou
48
48
1307 - 1362
Isabel
Berkeley
55
55
Deceased
Infant
Bidner
1102
Emma
De
Beaumont
1104 - 1166
Waleron
De
Beaumont
62
62
~1114 - 1191
* More
O'Toole
77
77
Hugh 'The
Poor' De
Beaumont
>1104
Adeline
De
Beaumont
>1104
Amicia
De
Beaumont
>1104
Albreda
De
Beaumont
William
Bigod
1110 - 1171
*
Dermot
MacMurchad
61
61
Richard
Bigod
1850 - 1928
Joseph
Bidner
77
77
Geoffrey
Bigod
John
Bigod
Maude
Bigod
*
Gunnor
Unknown
De
Braose
Maude
De
Braose
1150 - ~1227
Sibilla
De
Braose
77
77
Roger
De
Braose
1175 - 1210
*William
De
Braose
35
35
Maude
De
Braose
1851 - 1927
Eva
Korn
76
76
Giles
De
Braose
Roger
De
Braose
Philip
De
Braose
Bertha
De
Braose
Thomas
De
Braose
John
De
Braose
Henry
De
Braose
Annora
De
Braose
Loretta
De
Braose
1182 - 1227
*Reginald
De
Braose
45
45
Thomas
Bidner
Flandrina
De
Braose
Bernard
De
Braose
~1200
*Egidia
De
Lacey
Petronilla
De
Lacey
1396 - 1442
Thomas
Carminowe
46
46
~1205 - <1258
*
Geoffrey
de Dinham
53
53
*
Thomas
Durant
1179 - 1221
*
Oliver
Dinham
42
42
*
Warren
De Kelly
~1145 - ~1204
*
Geoffrey
Dinham
59
59
Charles
Bidner
~1121 - ~1183
*
Oliver
Dinham
62
62
* Lucy
D. 1202
* William
De Kelly
*
Roger
Carminow
1088 - 1156
*
Olivier
Dinham
68
68
1100 - ~1150
* Agnorie
De
Penthievre
50
50
* William
De
Bloyou
~1065 - ~1120
*
Geoffrey
Dinan
55
55
*
Radegonde
~1032
*
Oliver
Dinan
Edward
Bidner
~1762
*
Isabella
Ramsay
~1006
*
Geoffrey
Dinan
* Orio
Rohais
De
Clare
Unknown
De
Clare
0997
* Elgifu
Of
England
~1089
*
Murcetac
O'Toole
Edith
De
Warenne
Unknown
De
Warenne
1054 - 1075
Robert
III Of
Normandy
21
21
1055 - <1066
Adeliza
11
11
George
Bidner
1058 - 1127
Cecily
69
69
1057/1058
Richard
1061
Constance
1062 - 1137
Adela
Of
England
75
75
1064 - <1080
Agatha
16
16
Odo Earl
Of Kent De
Conteville
Half brother to William the Conquerer. Commisioned the Bayeaux Tapestry. Present at the Battle Of Hastings 1066.
*
Haccombe
*Andrew
Haccombe
D. >1086
* Ralph
de la
Pomeroy
>1109 - >1190
* Mabira
De
Caen
81
81
Frederick
Bidner
~1058 - 1107
* Sybil
De
Montgomery
49
49
* Emma
Of
Almannia
0711 - 0768
* Pepin
III Of
France
57
57
0714 - 0777
*
Bertrada
Of Laon
63
63
* William
Of
Toulouse
*
Gondres
*
Bernard
Louis
The
German
Giselle
Pippin
Alice
Bidner
Adelaide
~0968 - 1016
* AEthelred
'The Unready'
Of England
48
48
0944 - 0975
* Edgar 'The
Peaceable'
Of England
31
31
0921 - 0946
* Edmund
'Deed Doer'
Of England
25
25
D. 1034
* Malcolm
II Of
Scotland
D. 0995
* Kenneth
II Of
Scotland
D. 0954
*
Malcolm
I Of Alba
D. 0900
* Domnall
II Of Alba
D. 0877
* Constantine
I Of Picts &
Scots
Killed in battle fighting the Danes 877.
D. 0860
* Kenneth
mac Alpin
3 X Male Infants
Deceased
Bidner
D. 0780
* Eochaid 'The
Venomous' Of
Scots-Argyll
D. 0778
* Aedh 'The
White' Of
Scots-Argyll
D. 0733
* Eochaid III
Of
Scots-Argyll
D. 0697
* Eochaid
'Crook Nose' Of
Scots-Argyll
D. ~0673
* Domangart
II Of
Scots-Argyll
D. 0643
* Domanll Brecc
'The Speckled'
Of Scots-Argyll
D. ~0629
* Eochaid
Buidhe Of
Scots-Argyll
D. ~0608
* Aidan Of
Scots-
Argyll
D. ~0559
* Gabhran
Of
Scots-Argyll
D. ~0506
* Domangart I
Of
Scots-Dalriada
1 Female Infant
Deceased
Bidner
~0445 - 0501
* Fergus The
Great 'mac Erc'
Of Scots-Dalriada
56
56
1207 - 1272
Henry
III
Plantagenet
65
65
1210 - 1238
Joan
Plantagenet
28
28
1214 - 1241
Isabelle
Plantagenet
27
27
1215 - 1275
Eleanor
Plantagenet
60
60
1057 - 1100
William
II
43
43
D. 1107
Edgar
D. 1124
Alexander
I
* Hernam
Of
Cornwall
Emma Of
Anjou
Plantagent
1896 - 1978
Mary
Kathleen
McDonnell
82
82
~1240 - 1270
* Hugh
XII De
Lusignan
30
30
~1242 - 1274
* Jeanne
de
Fougeres
32
32
~1221 - 1250/1260
* Hugh
XI De
Lusignan
1212 - 1255
* Yolanda
de
Dreaux
43
43
Alice
De
Lusignan
1242 - >1266
Mary
De
Lusignan
24
24
~1183 - 1249
* Hugh
X De
Lusignan
66
66
D. 1241
Maud
De
Lusignan
~1124 - ~1254
Alice
le
Brun
130
130
1225 - ~1296
Guillaume
De
Lusignan
71
71
Mary
Phyllis
Bidner
1190 - 1250
* Pierre
de
Dreaux
60
60
1160 - 1218
* Aymer
Of
Angouleme
58
58
1160 - 1211
* Alice
De
Courtenay
51
51
~1134 - 1187
* William
IV
Taillefer
53
53
~1138
* Emma
de
Limoges
~1126 - 1183
* Peter
I De
Courtenay
57
57
1148 - 1205
* Isabel
Elizabeth De
Courtenay
57
57
1100 - 1161
* Reginald
De
Courtenay
61
61
1110 - >1158
* Hawise
(Hedwige)
de Donjon
48
48
D. 1218
Pierre
II De
Courtenay
1923 - 1989
Allan
Leonard
Bidner
66
66
1081 - 1137
* Louis VI
'Le Gros'
Capet
56
56
~1092 - 1154
* Adelaide
de
Maurienne
62
62
1119 - 1180
*Louis
VII
Capet
61
61
Constance
Capet
1083 - 1138
*
Frederick
de Donjon
55
55
Guy
de
Donjon
1075 - >1127
* Miles
(Milo) De
Courtenay
52
52
1078 - 1100
*
Ermengard
de Nevers
22
22
1047 - 1089
* Renault
de
Nevers
42
42
~0985 - 1034
* Athon
De
Courtenay
49
49
1925 - 1996
Joyce
Sylvester
Bidner
70
70
John
Carmynowe
~1034
* Josselin
De
Courtenay
~1040
* Elizabeth
(Isabel) de
Monthlery
1072
Josselin
De
Courtenay
1074
Geoffrey
De
Courtenay
~1040
* Elizabeth
de
Monthlery
John
Carminowe
Nicholas
Carminowe
John
De
Kelly
*
Nicholas
De Kelly
Veronica
Jean
Bidner
1797 - 1870
*
Samuel
Nixon
73
73
Notes for SAMUEL NIXON: Samuel's death was notified by his brother Thomas. Samuel is mentioned in the 1822 & 1824-5-6-NSW Musters, + 1828 Census, & in James McLelland's "History of NSW". A native of Rugby (Warwickshire) & a tailor by trade, Samuel took to "Highway Robbery," for which he was tried at Warwick Assizes & goaled for life on 28th Mar 1818. (The records give death as the sentence, but this was commonly communted to transportation for life) There was also a Thomas Nixon sentence to death for Larceny in a Dwelling Place, no doubt Samuel's brother, who was transported in 1819. Samuel sailed aboard the "Shipley" in 1818 leaving Woolwich for Sydney, arriving 18 Nov 1818. He was sent to work for William Cox at Windsor, it would seem that his sentence was shortened to 7 years as this is the time given at the 1822 muster, in 1825 he is still said to be serving life sentence & working as a laborer. He gained his ticket of leave, before 1828 census (#27/53) when he was living on 2 acres of cleared & cultivated land at Windsor, later gained a conditional pardon (#39/106) described as 5'9 1/2" tall, of pale complexion, brown hair & blue eyes. At his trail in 1818, his age was given as 20, in 1828 census as 28 yrs. Between 1824-1832 Samuel & Partner Frances E Foley had 4 children. They may have separated between 1832-34 as Samuel married Ellen Connor in 1834. On 15 May 1847 Samuel was up before the Police Court in Windsor, charged with stabbing his wife Ellen. Bailed to appear 1 June 1847 at Central Criminal Court Sydney, he was remanded in custody until 5 June 1847, & was sentenced to 6 months hard labour in Sydney Goal for malicious stabbing & assault.
1349
Ralph
Carminowe
Alicia
Mules
Joan
Dabernon
~1280
John
De
Mules
~1163 - 1219
* Hugh
IX De
Lusignan
56
56
~1158 - 1233/1239
*
Mathilde
Tailliefer
~1100
* Ademar
III de
Limoges
~1118
*
Graule
Taillefer
~1084 - 1118
*
Guillaume
III Taillefer
34
34
~1086
* Vitapoy
de
Benauges
1929
Kathleen
Monica
Bidner
Vulgrin
II
Taillefer
~1060
* Amanieu de &
Saint-Macaire
Benaug
1064
*
Unknown
~1015 - 1087
*
Foulques
Taillefer
72
72
~1062
*
Cundo
Vegena
~1038
*
Qunormau
Vegena
~1043
*
Unknown
~0998 - 1048
*
Geoffrey
Taillefer
50
50
~0994
* Petronille
de
Archaic
~0973
* Mainard
'Le Riche'
de Archaic
D. 1973
Mary
Irene
Pearl Wills
~0977
*
Hildegarde
~1017
Geoffrey
Taillefer
~1019
Arnold
Taillefer
~1021
Guillaume
Taillefer
~1023
Aymar
Taillefer
1025
Humberge
Taillefer
1062 - >1092
* Ida
de
Forez
30
30
1009 - 1095
* Guy
de
Monthlery
86
86
He was Lord of Monthlery and Chevreuse as well as of Chateaufort and Bray. He founded the Abbey of Longpont, where late in life he became a monk and died. Source: Leo van de Pas
1014
* Hodierne
de Gometz-le
Ferte
1050 - 1086
* Everard
de
Donjon
36
36
1917
Irene Sheila
(Sheila)
Bidner
1108 - 1140
*
Walgren
II Taillefer
32
32
1109
* Ponce
de
Lezigan
1065 - 1151
* Hugh
VII de
Lezigan
86
86
1067
* Sarazine
Of
Armenia
1039 - 1110
* Hugh
VI de
Lezigan
71
71
1041
*
Ildegard
Thouars
1015 - 1093
* Aumary
IV
Thouars
78
78
AIMERI DE THOUARS The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planch窠Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. We have already heard of "Le Visquens cil de Thouars" (Aimeri, Aumari, or Haimon, as he is indifferently called), in the first chapter of this volume, as the enthusiastic admirer of the martial appearance of the Conqueror previous to the battle. "Never have I seen a man so fairly armed nor one who rode so gallantly, or bore his arms, or became his hauberk so well; neither any one who carried his lance so gracefully, or sat his horse and manoeuvred him so nobly. There is no other such knight under Heaven! A fair Count he is, and a fair King he will be. Let him fight and be shall overcome; shame be to him who shall fail him!" And assuredly no shame could be cast on "li bon Visquenz de Toarz" on that occasion, who, appointed by William to lead with Alain of Brittany the left wing of the army, principally composed of Poitevins, Bretons, Manceaux, and of course his own following, which was a numerous one, proved himself "no coward that day." As neither Monsieur le Pr赯st nor Mr. Taylor have given us any information respecting the family of this undoubted companion of the Conqueror, I shall endeavour to supply the deficiency, more particularly as this is one of the Norman families in which a remarkable custom existed to the great confusion of the genealogists. Monsieur de Besly, in a letter to his brother antiquary, the learned Andr矤u Chesne, dated 23rd May, 1620, says: "Of all the great houses in this country, there are none in my opinion so difficult to give a clear account of as that of the Viscount of Thouars and of the other 'Gentilhommes' between the river S絲e, which flows to Mortagne, and the Dive, which passes to Moncontour, the more because in these parts they have retained an ancient mode of succession exceedingly singular, and of which an example could scarcely be found elsewhere in the kingdom; for the eldest son in the direct line, if he had male issue only, took all the fiefs and 'biens nobles,' with the obligation of providing for his younger brothers, which was done by dividing the usufruct of the whole estate into nine portions, two of which they afterwards divided equally amongst themselves. But if the eldest son died before his younger brothers, his children succeeded only to his personalities, and all his estates went to the next brother charged with the provision as before to any younger brothers and the children of the elder deceased, by subdivision of the two-ninths of the usufruct equally amongst themselves, as I have already stated. The lands thus passed from brother to brother, and after the decease of the youngest reverted entirely and absolutely to his nephews, the sons of the eldest brother, who became heirs of each other in the regular order of succession. This custom, which was termed 'Retour,' was abolished by the Three Estates of the kingdom in 1514, in consequence of its severity and the troubles and litigation it engendered. "Here, in fact, you have the true cause and origin of the deplorable confusion at present to be seen in the genealogies of our nobility in these quarters. For the fief passing from brother to brother, all the younger assumed the full title as though they were lords in actual possession of the territories, in lieu of simple annuitants. Sometimes also these uncles permitted their nephew, the eldest son of their eldest brother, to do homage for the lands and bear the title, saving the right as to the annuity, the reservation of which, nevertheless, was not thereafter expressed in their charters, so that frequently two Viscounts de Thouars are found named in and signing the same charter. Sometimes twelve viscounts are found succeeding each other in less than thirty years, arising from the circumstance that the elder of several brothers having lived to a very great age, the younger having all become old men, soon followed him to the grave, leaving us in these days uncertain and at a loss to guess which was the father, which the son, which the uncle, and which the nephew; so that the ordinary calculation could not be relied upon in such a case which allows ninety or a hundred years for three generations." Guided by this curious exposition of manners and customs, as interesting to the jurist as to the genealogist, I find that our Aimeri IV, Vicomte de Thouars, was the eldest son of Geoffrey II, Viscount de Thouars, by a lady named Ainor or Aldearde, but in consequence of the strange perplexing rules alluded to does not appear to have directly succeeded to him, though bearing in accordance with them the title of Viscount. He was present when Agnes, Duchess of Guyenne, gave the town of St. Angely to the abbey of that name in 1048. At the time of the invasion he was probably between twenty and thirty, and the husband of Aserengarde, sister of Raoul de Mauleon, living in 1069, by whom he had two sons, Herbert and Geoffrey, and a daughter, lldegarde, who became the wife of Hugues VI, Sire de Lezingen. Aimeri married, secondly, a lady named Ameline, for the health of whose soul, the souls of his father and mother, of his own soul, and those of his sons Herbert and Geoffrey, he gave, in December 1088, the Church of St. John the Evangelist, in the Castle of La Cheze, to the Abbey of St. Florent de Saumur. He also commenced the erection of another church in that castle, in honour of St. Nicholas, and confirmed to it all the gifts he had made to it, with the consent of his wife and children, Thursday, 15th of January, 1092. He died the following year, and was buried in his new Church of St. Nicholas de la Cheze, leaving by his second wife, according to P籥 Anselm, four sons, Savary, Raoul, Hugues, and another Geoffrey, whom he makes the successor to his grandfather Geoffrey; but as Savary and Raoul were both witnesses to charters in favour of St. Florent in 1054 and 1068, and as he makes Geoffrey out to be eighty years of ago in 1120, and consequently born in 1040, they could not be the sons of Ameline, married between 1069 and 1088. I can recommend the whole pedigree as a pleasing puzzle to all whom it may concern. I have extracted as much as concerns me on this occasion, which, little as it is, sheds some light on "li bon Visquenz de Toarz," who was "ne mauvais ne coarz, qui ert apel矅imeris," and who "mult recu le jor grand pris," and at the same time illustrates the singular custom recorded by Monsieur Besly. Added to this site through the courtesy of Fred L. Curry, who provided a photocopy of the section. Return to index of Wm's Companions Pat's Genealogy Index VISIT MY ONLINE BOOKSTORES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UPDATED 01/11/2003 11:08:39
1017
*
Auremarde
Moulcon
1013 - 1060
* Hugh
V Sire
47
47
1000 - 1060
* Almodis
de la
Marche
60
60
Mary
Veleta
Bidner
0974
* Bernard
I de la
Marche
0987
* Hugh
IV Sire
0989
*
Aldearde
Thours
0963
*
Raoul I
Thours
0961
* Hugh
III Sire
0935
* Hugh
II Sire
0922 - 0944
*Elgiva
22
22
1200 - 1240
Isabel
Marshall
40
40
1099 - 1137
* William
X Of
Aquitaine
38
38
1103 - 1130
* Eleanor
de
Chatellerault
27
27
1921 - 1923
Patrick
Bidner
2
2
1077
* Aumary
I de
Chatellerault
1071 - 1127
* William VIII
'The Troubador'
Of Aquitaine
56
56
1073 - 1117
* Phillipa
Of
Toulouse
44
44
1026 - 1086
* William VII
"Guido' Of
Aquitaine
60
60
1030 - 1104
*
Hildegarde
Of France
74
74
Agnes
Of
Poitou
0969 - 1030
* William V
'The Great'
Of Aquitaine
61
61
0995 - 1068
* Agnes
Of
Burgandy
73
73
1024 - 1077
Agnes
Of
Aquitaine
53
53
~1023
William VI
(Peter) Of
Aquitaine
1924
Eva
Thomasine
Bidner
~0949 - 0995
* William
IV Of
Aquitaine
46
46
~0954 - 1003
* Emma
Champagne
(De Blois)
49
49
0915 - 0963
* William
III Of
Aquitaine
48
48
0917 - >0962
* Adele
Of
Normandy
45
45
0889 - 0962
* Ebalus 'The
Bastard' 'Manzer'
Of Poitou
73
73
D. 0890
* Ramnulf
II Of
Poitou
*
Ramnulf I
Of Poitou
* Gerard
Of
Auvgern
~0802
* Hildegard
Of The
Franks
0958 - 1026
* Otto
William Of
Burgandy
68
68
1927 - 1995
Alban John
(Boydie)
Bidner
68
68
0952
*
Ermentrude
de Roucy
0922 - 0967
*
Ragenoldus
Of Roucy
45
45
0930 - 0973
* Alberade
Of
Hennegau
43
43
~1003 - 1039
* Robert
de
Grentmesnil
36
36
~1007
* Hawisa
de
Escalfoy
~1005 - ~1083
* Ivo
de
Beaumont
78
78
1008 - 1099
*Judith
Adelaide de
Gournay
91
91
1040
Beatrix
de
Beaumont
0977
* Gervase
de
Grentmesnil
0981
* Giroie
de
Escalfoy
Esther
Patricia
Styles
0983
* Gisele
de
Montfort
~1101
*
Unknown
* Laodike
Thea
Philadelphos
* Antiochus
VIII Philmeter
Grypos
* Cleopatra
Tryphaena
Of Egypt
Over 100 lines of descent from Cleopatra Tryphaena.
ABT 0184 BC - ABT 0117 BC
* Euergetes
II Ptolemy
VIII Of Egypt
*
Cleopatra
III Of Egypt
*
Epiphanes
Ptolemy
*
Cleopatra
Philopater
* Philpater
IV
Ptolemy
Living
Forrester
*
Arsinoe
*
Euergetes
III Ptolemy
*
Bernenice
Of Egypt
*
Phildelphus
Ptolemy
*
Arsinoe
*
Philadephus
Ptolemy
* Soter
'Saviour'
I Ptolemy
*
Arsinoe
~0915 - 0995
*
Theobald
I Of Blois
80
80
~0920 - 9 Feb 0978/0979
* Luitgarde
de
Vermandois
Living
Forrester
1812 - 1849
* Ellen
Connors
37
37
~1225
* John
Russell
1260 - 1290
* Alice
Bossell
30
30
1235
* John
Bossell
~1094
*
Inghin
O'Byrne
1055
*
Gillacomhall
O'Toole
1030
*
Doncuan
O'Toole
1005 - 1056
*
Gillacaemphin
O'Toole
51
51
0980 - 1041
*
Gillacomghall
O'Toole
61
61
0950 - 1018
* Doncuan
Of
Leinster
68
68
0920
* Dunlaing
Of
Leinster
Living
Forrester
0890
* Tuathal
Of
Leinster
0860
* Ugaire
Of
Leinster
0830
* Oilliol
Of
Leinster
0800
* Dunlaing
Of
Leinster
0770
*
Mureadac
Of Leinster
Unknown
0740
* Bran
Of
Ireland
0745
*
Eithne
0710
* Muredac
Of
Leinster
0640
* Bran
Muit Of
Leinster
Living
Forrester
0600
* Conal
Of
Leinster
0570
* Faolan
Of
Leinster
0530
* Colman
Of
Leinster
0500
* Cairbre
Of
Leinster
0460
* Cormac
Of
Leinster
0435
* Lillial
Of
Leinster
D. 1149
*
Loigsech
O'Morda
* Gormlaith
Ingen Finn
O'Caellaide
* Finn
O'Caellaide
D. 1097
*
Amargen
O'Morda
Ruby
Samuels
*
Gormflaith
O'Neill
D. 1069
*
Faelan
O'Morda
* Maelind
Ingen Meic
Dairgin
D. 1026
*
Amargen
O'Morda
* Mac
Dairgin
O'Thairmeascain
0818 - 0840
* Pepin
Of
Senlis
22
22
* Isabel
de
Craon
1198 - 1226
*
Amaury I
de Craon
28
28
D. 1237
* Jeanne
des
Roches
D. 1196
* Maurice
II de
Craon
Living
Forrester
D. 1220
* Isabel
de
Beaumont
* Hugues
de Craon
*
Marquise
de Vitre
D. 1181
* Agnes
de
Monfort
1100 - 1158
* Saher
de
Quincy
58
58
~1096 - 1140
* Maude Of
Northampton
Saint Liz
44
44
~1068 - 1111
* Simon I
de Saint
Liz
43
43
~1020 - 1055
*
Siward
Biornsson
35
35
1031
* Aelfled
Of
Bernecia
D. 1045/1049
* Bjorn
Ulfiusson
Living
Forrester
D. 0125
* Marius Or
Cyllin Or Meurig
Of Britain
~0060
* Julia Or Victoria
ferch Prasutagus
Of Icenea
D. 0074
* Arviragus
Gwenivyth
Of Britain
D. 0050
* Venissa
Or Genissa
Claudius
D. 0017
* Cymbeline
Or Cynfelyn
Of Britain
D. 0026 BC
*
Tenuatius
Of Britain
0010 BC - 0054
* Tiberius
Claudius
Germanicus Nero
0015 - 0059
* Julia
Agrippina
Minor
44
44
24 May 0015 BC - 0019
* Germanicus
Julius Caesar
0038 BC - 0009
* Nero Claudius
Drusus
Germanicus
Living
Forrester
0036 BC - 0038
* Antonia
Minor Of
Rome
0083 BC - 0030 BC
* Marcus
Antonius III (Mark
Antony) Of Rome
0064 BC - 0011 BC
*
Octavia
Minor
D. 0062
*
Boadicea
Of Icenea
*
Mandubratius
0080 BC - 0018
* Llud Llaw
Ereint ap
Heli
* Beli Mawr
Or Heli ap
Manogan
* Don Or
Anna ferch
Mathonwy
*
Manogan
ap Eneid
*
Eneid
Living
Forrester
0014 BC - 1933
* Vipsania
Julia Agrippina
Major
0038 BC
* Tiberius
Claudius
Nero
30 Jan 0058 BC - 0029
* Livia
Drusilla
D. 0071 BC
* Marcus
Antonius
Crecitus
* Julia
0143 BC - 0087 BC
* Marcus
'The Orator'
Antonius
D. 0086 BC
* Lucius
Julius
Caesar III
Lucius Julius Caesar III was Consul in 89 B.C., a Censor in 88 B.C. and the author of the Julian Law.
*
Cossutia
* Lucius
Caesar
II
~1073 - ~1114
*Nesta
verch
Rhys
41
41
Living
Forrester
~1035 - 1093
*Rhys
ap
Tewdwr
58
58
~1051
* Gwaladus
verch
Rhiwallon
* Tewdwr
Mawr 'The
Great' ap Cadell
1026 - 1069
*
Rhiwallon
ap Cynfyn
43
43
0982
* Cynfyn
ap
Gwerystan
0982
* Angharad
verch
Maredudd
0943
* Unknown
verch
Llandilo
* Cleopatra
II Epiphanes
Of Egypt
Over 100 lines of descent from Cleopatra II.
William
Floyer
<1414
William
Floyer
Living
Forrester
Ellen
(Elinor)
Floyere
<1284
John
Floyere
Hamelin
Hereward
*
William
Bottreaux
Hawise
de
Meschines
Mabel
de
Meschines
Amicia
de
Meschines
Beatrix
de
Meschines
Joanna
de
Meschines
~1117 - 13 Mar 1180/1181
* Simon
III de
Montfort
D. 1996
Stella
Margaret
Ross
* John
Connors
~1126
* Maud
De
Evereux
*Aumary
IV de
Montfort
* Agnes
de
Garlende
Guy
de
Montfort
Jane
Hill
1270
Joan
Carmynowe
1205 - <1262
* Philip
de
Columbers
57
57
~1226 - >1297
* Egeline
de
Courtenay
71
71
1180 - <1257
* Philip
de
Columbers
77
77
1183 - 1242
* Robert
de
Courtenay
59
59
Living
Forrester
1150 - 1194
* Reginald
de
Courtenay
44
44
1150 - 1219
* Hawise
de
Courcy
69
69
1183 - 1242
* Mary de
Reivers
de Vernon
59
59
1155 - 1217
* William
de
Vernon
62
62
1162 - >1204
* Mabel
de
Beaumont
42
42
1140
* Hugh
FitzRichard
de Valletort
Simon
de
Valletort
* Renaud
de
Courtenay
*
Hawise
Deincourt
* William
II de
Courcy
Living
Forrester
1115 - 1174
*
Maud
d'Avranches
59
59
1141 - 1207
* Robert
de
Beaumont
66
66
1140
* Maud Of
Cornwall
FitzRoy
Isabel
de
Beaumont
1092
Sybilla
FitzHenry
<1106 - <1155
*
Herbert
FitzHerbert
49
49
Nephew of King Stephen. Chamberlain & treasurer to King Henry I.
Herbert
FitzHerbert
1060 - <1130
* Herbert
Of
Winchester
70
70
1073
* Emma
Of
Blois
1045 - 1102
* Stephen III Of
Champagne &
Blois
57
57
Living
Forrester
*
Unknown
Mistress
1015 - 1089
*
Theobald
III Of Blois
74
74
1020
* Alix
de
Crepi
0990 - 1037
* Eudes II Of
Champagne
& Blois
47
47
0994 - 10 Mar 1039/1040
*
Ermengarde
de Auvergne
0985 - 1030
* Raoul
II de
Crepi
45
45
0992
* Adele
de
Breteuil
0950 - 12 Mar 0995/0996
* Eudes
I Of
Blois
0964 - >1010
*Bertha
Of
Arles
46
46
0970 - 1032
* Robert
I de
Auvergne
62
62
1922
Eric
Kenneth
Jones
~0980 - 0994
*
Ermengarde
Of Provence
14
14
Berthe Of
Champagne
& Blois
Stephen Of
Champagne
& Blois
0944 - 1017/1024
* Walter
'The White'
de Vexin
0954
* Adele
de
Senlis
0970
* Hildouin
de
Breteuil
0974
* Emmaline
de
Chartres
Raoul
de
Crepi
0925 - 0993
*Conrad 'The
Peaceful' Of
Burgandy
68
68
Gerberga
Of
Burgandy
Living
Jones
* William II
Of Arles &
Provence
*Adelaide
Blanche
Of Anjou
* Walter I Of
Valois &
Amiens & Vexi
* Adele
Of
Anjou
*
Bormard
de Senlis
Alix
de
Vexin
Drogo
de
Vexin
* Hildouin
de
Ponthieu
*
Hersende
0948
* Fouche
I Of
Chartres
Living
Jones
0890 - 0937
*Rudolf
II Of
Burgandy
47
47
0907 - 0967
* Bertha
Of
Swabia
60
60
Matilda
Of
Burgandy
0865 - 0911
* Rudolf
I Of
Burgandy
46
46
0870 - 0929
* Willa
Of
Vienne
59
59
* Berkhard
II Of
Swabia
* Regilinde
de
Nullenburg
Adelaide (St
Adelaide) Of
Burgandy
0845 - 0887
*Boso
II Of
Vienne
42
42
0852/0855 - 0896
*
Ermengarde
de Lorraine
1954 - 1997
Wendy
Jones
43
43
~0820 - 0864
*Budwine
Of
Metz
44
44
0825 - 0855
*
Richilde
Of Arles
30
30
0835 - 0900
*
Engelberga
65
65
*Boso III
Of East
Franks
Unknown
Of
Metz
Richaut
Of
Metz
D. 0928
* Gello
Of
Blois
Ellen
Hatch
Marie
Savorie
Mary
Fitz
1921 - 1998
Charles
Erasmus
Richards
77
77
Mary
Squire
Anthony
Leigh
Barbara
Arscott
Christopher
Harris
John
Kelloway
D. 1290
Devorguilla
MacDougal
Of Galloway
D. 1246
Christine
MacDougal
Of Galloway
Marjory
MacDougal
Of Galloway
Robert
Of
Huntington
Query AKA 'Robin Hood'?
Isabella
Of
Huntington
1947 - 1948
Coral
Teresa
Richards
1
1
John
Of
Huntington
Matilda
Of
Huntington
Ada
Of
Huntington
Henry
Of
Huntington
Henry Of
Stirling Of
Huntington
Henry Of
Brechin Of
Huntington
Ada II
Of
Huntington
David
Of
Huntington
1141
Malcolm
IV
Stewart
1143
William I
'The Lion'
Stewart
Living
Richards
* Ellen
Living
Stark
1146
Ada
Stewart
1195
* Reginald
De
Valletort
Caius
Julius
Caesar
Lucius
Julius
Caesar
* Sextus
Julius
Caesar
* Sextus
Julius
Caesar
Sextus Julius Caesar I was a military tribune under Lucius Aemilius Paulus. He was proconsul in Liguria. In his time, 200 B.C. books instead of being written on one long sheet of scroll and rolled, were of many leaves bound together.
Caius
Julius
Caesar
* Lucius
Julius
Caesar
* Numerius
Julius
Caesar
0995 - >1077
*
Godeheut
Borrell
82
82
1950 - 1988
Patricia
Anne
Richards
37
37
1052
William
FitzWilliam
1056
Roger
De
Breteuil
1058
Ralph
FitzWilliam
1060
John
FitzWilliam
1062
Richard
FitzWilliam
Adeliza
FitzOsbern
0955
* Ralph
de
Toeni
0990
* Adela
Estefania de
Barcelona
0992
Ralph
de
Toeni
1014
Robert
de
Toeni
Living
Richards
0972 - 1018
*Raymond
III
Borrell
46
46
0975
* Ermensinde
de
Carcassonne
0946 - 0992
*Borrell
II Of
Barcelona
46
46
0952
* Luitgarde
de
Toulouse
0932 - 1012
*Roger
I de
Carcassonne
80
80
0949
* Adelaide
Of
Melgueil
1005
Raimund
Berenger
Toda
Of
Barcelona
0890
* Hugh
de
Cavalcamp
0878 - 0948
*Sunyer
Of
Barcelona
70
70
Living
Richards
0911 - >0954
* Richilde
de
Rouergue
43
43
0921 - 0960
*Raymond
III de
Toulouse
39
39
0926
* Garsinde
Of
Toulouse
0975
Ermengard
I Of
Barcelona
0898
*Arnaud
I de
Carcassonne
* Eystein
'The Noisy'
Ivarson
0840 - 0897
*Guifre (Wilfred)
'The Hairy' Of
Barcelona
57
57
0855
* Gunhilda
Of
Flanders
*Armengol
Of
Toulouse
* Adelaide
Countess
of Toulouse
Living
Richards
*Raymond
II de
Toulouse
*
Guidenilde
* Oliba
II de
Carcassonne
*
Ascroda
Ragnvaldsdatter
*Sunifred
I Of
Urgel
*
Ermesinde
0835 - 0878
*Baldwin
I Of
Flanders
43
43
0843 - 0870
*Judith
Of The
HRE
27
27
Guidenhilde
Of
Barcelona
~1821 - 1898
Laurence
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
77
77
Living
Richards
1863 - 1936
Mary
Jane
Frost
73
73
1887
Elizabeth
Janet
Gallagher
1889 - 1952
Albert
Peter
Gallagher
62
62
1890 - 1890
Priscilla
Margaret
Gallagher
1891 - 1962
John
Arthur
Gallagher
70
70
1893
Mary
Florence
Gallagher
1895 - 1970
Joseph
Samuel
Gallagher
74
74
1897 - 1940
William
Kenneth
Gallagher
42
42
1899
Emily
Imelda
Gallagher
1902 - 1954
Bridget
Agnes
Gallagher
51
51
Living
Richards
1904 - 1989
Gertrude
Mary
Gallagher
84
84
1906 - 1958
Patrick
Cyril
Gallagher
52
52
1866 - 1930
Margaret
Halpin
64
64
1891 - 1966
Vincent
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
75
75
1892
Mary Maude
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
1894 - 1963
Augustine
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
69
69
1896
Laurence
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
1898 - 1917
John Percy
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
18
18
1899
Ellen
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
1901
David Herbert
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
Frederick
Gilligan
1903
Patrick Francis
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
1904
William
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
Ruby
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
Emily
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
1874 - 1942
Jane
Cusick
68
68
1894 - 1973
Stephen
Gallagher
79
79
1896 - 1896
Helen
Gallagher
1897 - 1969
James
Gallagher
72
72
1899 - 1968
Clarence
Gallagher
69
69
1901
Elizabeth
Veronica
Gallagher
1899 - 1968
Roy
Oswald
Keevers
68
68
1903
Loreto
'Laura'
Gallagher
1905
Agnes
Gallagher
Catherine
Gallagher
Daphne
Gallagher
John
Gallagher
1913
Eric
Gallagher
0774
Adelhaid Of
The Holy
Roman Empire
0775
Rotrud Of The
Holy Roman
Empire
0778
Lothar
Of
Franken
0779
Bertha Of The
Holy Roman
Empire
1928
Roylene
Dorothy
Keevers
0781
Gisela Of The
Holy Roman
Empire
0782
Hildegarde Of
The Holy
Roman Empire
0687 - 0737
*
Heribert
Of Laon
50
50
0696 - 0745
*
Bertdada
Of Laon
49
49
0688 - 0724
*
Rotrud
Of Trier
36
36
0708
Hildegarde
Of
France
0713 - 0762
Karlmann
Of
Austrien
49
49
0715
Grifo
Of
Trier
* Martin
II Of
Laon
* Bertha
Of
Merovingia
Living
Keevers
1833 - 1908
* Levi
Witcom
75
75
Member of the Cranbrook Primary School Committee 1883. Assisted immigrant via 'Herefordshire' in 1857 (aged 17 years).
* Richilda
Of
Bourges
1066
Agnes
de
Beaumont
0535
* Garibold
Of
Agilofinges
0540
* Waldrada
Of
Lombardy
0495
* Theodebert
Of
Agilofinges
0500 - 0540
* Waccon
Of
Lombardy
40
40
~0500
* Austricuse
Ostrogoth
Of Gepides
0480
* Elemundo
Of
Gepides
1890
Millie J
Forrester
1895
Robert
H
Forrester
1855 - 1933
Laura
Bidner
78
78
Hugh
Bulmer
D. 1993
Bessie
Patterson
Bulmer
Malcolm
Henricks
Living
Henricks
Living
Wilkie
Living
Henricks
Living
Henricks
Living
Henricks
Living
Henricks
Living
Keating
1852
David
Grice
Living
Stran
Living
Stran
?
Living
Lyssagor
Living
Gallagher
<0943 - 0959
Eadwig
Of
England
16
16
0884
Thyra
Danebod
Of Denmark
?
0870
* Thyra
Of
Jutland
0814 - 0850
* Horda
Knut
Sigurdsson
36
36
0782 - 0873
*
Sigurd
Ragnarson
91
91
0784
* Heluna
Of
England
David
A
Grice
0750 - 0845
*
Ragnar
Sigurdsson
95
95
*
Aslaug
Sigurdsdottir
0724 - 0812
*
Sigurd
Ranvardsson
88
88
0728 - 0810
*
Alfhild
Gandolfsdatter
82
82
0670 - ~0770
*
Randver
Radbardsson
100
100
0638 - 0700
* Radbard
Of Russia
62
62
0633
*
Auda
Ivarsdatter
0612 - 0647
* Ivar
Halfdansson
35
35
0618 - 0669
* Gauthilde
Gyrithe
Alfsdatter
51
51
D. 1115
*
Donnchad
MacMurchad
Richard
H
Grice
D. 0870
*
Murchad
Gilbert
Basset
Thomas
Basset
1110 - 1194
Aubrey
De
Vere
84
84
Geoffrey
De
Vere
Robert
De
Vere
William
De
Vere
Gilbert
De
Vere
Alice
De
Vere
Rohese
De
Vere
Margaret
A
Grice
0242 BC - 4 Jun 0187 BC
*
Antiochus
III Of Syria
0240 BC
*
Laodike
Of Syria
0265 BC
* Seleuchus
Kallinikos
Of Syria
1865
James
Witcom
1866
Maria
Witcom
1861
Ann
Witcom
Henry
Paskin
1888
Stella
Paskin
1889
Alice
Paskin
1891
Edith
Paskin
1857 - 1932
Catherine
Bidner
74
74
1892
Millie
Paskin
1895
Eva
Paskin
1896
Elsie
Paskin
1899
Ethel
Paskin
1900
George
Paskin
1902
Vera
Paskin
Richard
Arnold
1887
Richard
Arnold
1893
Lorrie
Arnold
?
1894
Alice
Arnold
D. 1929
John
Korn
1897
Cecil
Arnold
1903
Vera
Arnold
* Roger
Of
Buchan
* Ludolph
Of
Saxony
*
Gertrude
1812
*Robert
Crisp
Holland
*Mary
Ann
Phillippo
1900
Ernest
Edward
Holland
1902
Dora
Amelia
Holland
*Robert
Holland
John
Korn
*Mary
1841
Elizabeth
Eleanor
Holland
1842 - 1920
Robert
Josiah
Holland
77
77
1847
Henry
Holland
1849 - 1920
Martha
Amelia
Holland
71
71
1851
Mary Crisp
Emma Ann
Holland
1853
Rosa
Alberta
Holland
1854
Charlotte
Lavinia
Holland
1857
Henry Archibald
Ernest Edward
Holland
*James
Phillippo
Henry
Korn
*Elizabeth
1300
Matilda
Carmynowe
*Sarah
*Elizabeth
1125
Alan
Dinham
1136
Emma
Dinham
1172
Geoffrey
Dinham
~0107
Eurgan
Ap
Marius
0540 - 0614
*Brunhilda
Of The
Visigoths
74
74
*Chrunsine
Of
Burgandy
Margaret
Korn
~1833 - 1901
*
Kezia
Pope
68
68
Possibly assisted immigrant via 'Northern Light' 1858 (aged 24 years).
*Laodice
II Of
Syria
*Prasutagus
Of The
Icenea
1242 - 1279
*Maud
De
Brienne
36
36
1225 - 1307
*Guy
De
Brienne
82
82
1217 - <1274
*Eve
de
Tracy
57
57
~1210 - BEF 22 Mar 1281/1282
*Nicholas
Martin
1185 - BEF 15 Feb 1215/1216
*William
Martin
~1185 - >1246
*Avice
De
Toriton
61
61
~1202 - 1251
*Guy
IV De
Brienne
49
49
~1202
*Jane
de la
Pole
Annie
Korn
~1190 - 1274
*Henry
de
Tracy
84
84
1196
*Maude
de
Braose
1176 - 1213
*Maude
de
Clare
37
37
1197
John
De
Braose
1158 - <1217
*Richard
de
Clare
59
59
1160 - 1 Jan 1224/1225
*Amice
FitzRobert
1116 - 1173
*Roger
de
Clare
57
57
~1132 - 1193
*Maude
de St
Hilary
61
61
1116 - 1183
*William
FitzRobert
67
67
1129
*Hawise
de
Beaumont
Mary
A
Korn
1180
Joan
de
Clare
1180
Gilbert
de
Clare
*James
de St
Hilary
*Aveline
Unknown
1155
Elana
de
Clare
1168
Aveline
de
Clare
*Eve
de
Torrington
1152
*William de
Tracy de
Sudeley
*Harvise
de
Born
1108
*John
de
Sudeley
Kate
Korn
*Grade
de
Tracy
*Henry
de
Tracy
<1114
Ralph
de
Sudeley
1057 - >1115
*Harold
de
Sudeley
58
58
1068
*Maude
D'Avranches
1034
*Emma
de
Conteville
1026 - 1057
*Ralph 'The
Staller' De
Sudeley
31
31
1026
*Agatha
de
Gytha
*Osgood
Clapo de
Gytha
James
Blight
Elizabeth
Korn
1741
Elizabeth
Blight
Suzanna
Blight
John
Blight
Phillipa
Blight
D. 1760
*James
Blight
~1676 - 1744
*Gertrude
Blewett
68
68
D. 1681
*John
Blight
D. ~1725
*Phillipa
Margaret
Blight
Samuel
Blight
Emily
Korn
Phillis
Blight
John
Blight
Frances
Blight
Mary
Blight
*George
Blewett
~1681
*James
Rowe
Elizabeth
Rowe
*Elizabeth
Davyes
Jane
Rowe
~0960
*Thorold
Of
Lincoln
1859 - 1929
George
Bidner
70
70
1060
Alice
De
Vere
1064
Geoffrey
De
Vere
1066
Roger
De
Vere
1068
Robert
De
Vere
1072
William
De
Vere
*Boso
Of
Tuscany
*Willa
Of
Burgandy
*John
Bigbury
>1224
*Alphonse
De
Brienne
*Mary
de
Lusignan
1867 - 1936
Annie
Jupp
69
69
~1148 - 1237
*Jean
De
Brienne
89
89
Regent of Jerusalem 1212-1225. Emperor of Constantinople 1228-1237.
~1199
*Berenguela
Of Leon
& Castille
*Alfonzo
IX Of Leon
& Castille
*Berenguela
Of
Castile
1150
*Ralph
de
Lusignan
Anne
Stevens
1866 - 1926
Edward
Blee
Whinnen
60
60
~1340
*Englesia
Dymock
D. 1000
*Manfredo
I Of
Turino
*Prangarda
Di
Canossa
Maurice
Bidner
D. 0988
*Adalbert II
Of Modena
& Canossa
D. 1014/1021
*Humbert
I Of
Este
*Railinda
Of
Como
D. 0975
*Alberto
Azzo
*Guilla
Of
Spoleto
~0925 - 0999
*Wiprand
Of
Como
74
74
D. >0958
*Siefried
Langobarde
>0900 - ~0950
*Adelbert
III Of
Tuscany
50
50
D. 0928
*Bonifacio
I Of
Spoleto
*Olderado
Of
Como
Emily
Bidner
*Railinda
D. >0976
*Arduin
Of
Auriate
* De
Mosezzo
D. 0928/0929
*Gui
Of
Lucca
~0898 - 0986
*Marozia
88
88
Prisoner in Castel St Angelo for 54 years. Mistress of Pope Sergius III (904-911). Mother of Pope John XI (931-936). Grandmother of Pope John XII (955-964). Great Grandmother of Popes Benedict VIII (1012-1024) & John XIX (1024-1032), Great Great Grandmother of Pope Benedict IX (1032-1048).
*Roger
Of
Auriate
*Manfredo
De
Mosezzo
*Adelbert
II Of
Lucca
*Bertha
Of
Lorraine
*Theophylactus
Alice
Bidner
1882 - 1960
* Archibald
Charles
McArthur
78
78
D. ~0928
*Theodora
Mistress of Pope John X.
~1051 - 1138
*Stephen
De
Penthievre
87
87
*Hawise
de
Grungampe
<1140 - <1194
*Henry
Lovel
54
54
1252 - >1307
*Theobald
Butler
55
55
1283 - <1306
*Maude
de
Mortimer
23
23
1223 - 1285
*Theobald
de
Botiller
62
62
1230
*Margaret
de
Burgh
1200 - 1230
*Theobald
de
Botiller
30
30
1202 - <1225
*Joan
du
Marais
23
23
Joseph
Bidner
1188 - 1242
*Richard
de
Burgh
54
54
1170
*Geoffrey
du
Marais
1252 - 1304
*Edmund
de
Mortimer
52
52
~1259 - 1333
*Margaret
de
Fiennes
74
74
1231 - 1282
*Roger
de
Mortimer
51
51
1233 - <1301
*Maude
de
Braose
68
68
~1245 - 1302
*William
de
Fiennes
57
57
~1245 - 1302
*Blanche
de
Brienne
57
57
1274
Isolde
de
Mortimer
1287
Roger
de
Mortimer
Harriet
Bidner
1288
Hugh
de
Mortimer
1285
Matilda
de
Mortimer
1292
Joan
de
Mortimer
1294
Walter
de
Mortimer
1296
Margaret
de
Mortimer
1298
Edmund
de
Mortimer
1300
John
de
Mortimer
1302
Elizabeth
de
Mortimer
~1160
*Theobald
Walter
1187 - 1226
*Maude
le
Vavasoar
39
39
Thomas
Bidner
1158 - 1206
*William
de
Burgh
48
48
1162
*Mor
O'Brien
~1230
Walter
de
Burgh
1234
Alice
de
Burgh
1190 - 1246
*Ralph
de
Mortimer
56
56
He owned lands in the Counties of Gloucester, Southampton, Berkshire, Salop and Hereford. Of a martial disposition, he erected several strong castles by which he was able to extend his possessions against the Welsh. Realizing he could not cope with him, Prince Llewelyn gave him his daughter in marriage. Source: Leo van de Pas
~1205 - 1251
*Gwladys
verch
Llewellyn
46
46
1204 - >1243
*William
de
Braose
39
39
1204 - <1246
*Eve
Marshall
42
42
1246
Isobel
de
Mortimer
1248
Guillaume
de
Mortimer
1863 - 1912
Margaret
Elizabeth
Bidner
49
49
1250
Ralph
de
Mortimer
1256
Roger
de
Mortimer
1192 - 1267
*Enguerrand
de
Fiennes
75
75
1217 - 1267
*Isabeau
de
Conde
50
50
1225 - 1296
*Jean
de
Brienne
71
71
1232
*Jeanne
de
Chateaudun
1265
Robert
de
Fiennes
1276
Alice
de
Fiennes
1277
Jean
de
Fiennes
1130
*Hervey
Walter
D. 1992
Zeta
Mavis
Berrigan
1132
*Maugar
le
Vavasoar
1202
Maud
Walter
Fulk
Fitzwaren
1210
Fulk
Fitzwaren
1227
Eugenia
Fitzwaren
1200
John
du
Marais
1133
*Walter
de
Burgh
1137
*Alice
*Donnel
O'Brien
*Orlacan
Mac
Murrough
Living
Grobb
Katherine
De
Lacey
D. 1215
*Roger
de
Mortimer
Like his ancestors, he was constantly combatting the Welsh and at one time suffering a great defeat. However, in the end he was victorious and took twelve of their principal leaders in one battle. He then enlarged his territories considerably and also ejected thieves and robbers from those parts. Being at one time present at the solemn anniversary of his father, he confirmed all his grants to the canons of Wigmore. He then added his own gift of a spacious and fruitful pasture lying adjacent to the abbey and called the 'Treasure of Mortimer'. When his steward remonstrated with him for parting with so valuable a treasure, he replied, "I have laid up my treasure in that field, where thieves cannot steal or dig, or moth corrupt." By his first wife he had a son and two daughters. His second wife, Isabel de Ferrers, was the sister and heir of Hugh de Ferrers and brought him three sons as well as many properties. Source: Leo van de Pas
*Isabel
de
Ferrers
*Lleyellyn
ap
Iorwerth
*Tangwystl
verch
Llywarch
1233
Hugh
de
Mortimer
1235
John
de
Mortimer
1237
Peter
de
Mortimer
1186 - 1223
*Gracia
de
Brewer
37
37
*Guillaume
de
Fiennes
Living
Grobb
Agnes
de
Mello
*Nicholas
de
Conde
*Isabel
de
Moreaumes
1230
Reginald
de
Fiennes
1231
Maude
de
Fiennes
1233
Robert
de
Fiennes
1235
Enguarrand
de
Fiennes
1240
Giles
de
Fiennes
*Jean
de
Brienne
*Berengaria
Alfonsez
Living
Grobb
*Hervey
Walter
*Maugar
le
Vavasoar
1167
William
le
Vavasoar
1157 - 1198
*William
de Burgh
FitzAldhem
41
41
~1157
*Juliana
Daisnel
1150
Rowland
de
Burgh
1150
Thomas
de
Burgh
1145 - 1226
*William
de
Briwere
81
81
1149 - 1217
*Beatrice
de
Lavalle
68
68
1184
Isabel
de
Briwere
Living
Grobb
1197
Joan
de
Briwere
1173
Margaret
de
Briwere
~1110 - 1175
*Reginald
de
Dunstanville
65
65
1114 - 1162
*Beatrice
de
Mortain
48
48
1114
*Henry
de
Briwere
*William
de
Briwere
~1195
*Clemence
Des
Roches
*Guillaume
Des
Roches
~1345
*William
de
Wotton
~1345
*Gundred
Wyger
Living
Leach
1893 - 1978
* Julia
Mabel
Whinnen
84
84
~1320
*Walter
Dymock
*Cecily
1140
*Philip
de
Columbers
*Maude
de
Chandos
*Mary
Cunningham
*John
Stark
*Aldhem
De
Burgo
1138
*Agnes
Capet
~1122
*Robert
Daisnel
1340
Richard
Champernoun
Living
Forrester
~1150
*Gilbert
English
~1122 - 1167
*Philip
FitzRobert
de Gay
45
45
1135
*Alice
de
Berkeley
1100 - 1165
*Roger
III de
Berkeley
65
65
*Hawise
De
Paynel
*Roger
II de
Berkeley
1100 - ~1141
*Ralph
De
Paynel
41
41
D. 1139
*Hawise
de
Ferrers
Cecily
De
Paynel
D. 1139
*Robert
de
Ferrers
Living
Forrester
~1080
*Hawise
de
Vitre
*Henry
de
Ferrers
*Bertha
Roberts
*Andre
de
Vitre
*Alice
Picot
*Anabila
John
Carmynowe
Maude
Carmynowe
Gervais
Carmynowe
Maria
Battyn
Living
Forrester
Johanna
Battyn
John
Battyn
*Parvie
Of
Vermandois
D. 0886
*Manfredo
Of
Milan
*Ptolemy IV
Philpater
Of Egypt
*Arsinoe
III Of
Egypt
~1155 - 1191
*Avice
de
Lancaster
36
36
~1105 - 1262
*Hugh
de
Morville
157
157
In 1150 Hugh de Moreville founded Dryburgh Abbey, in Berwickshire, Scotland. One of his sons, also named Hugh, was one of four knights who, on 29 December 1170, was responsible for the murder of Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. In 1150 Hugh de Moreville founded Dryburgh Abbey, in Berwickshire, Scotland. One of his sons, also named Hugh, was one of four knights who, on 29 December 1170, was responsible for the murder of Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. Source: Leo van de Pas
~1107 - >1153
*Beatrice
de
Beauchamp
46
46
1079 - 1167
*Simon
de
Morville
88
88
Living
Martin
1081
*Ada
de
Engaine
1085 - >1111
*Robert
de
Beauchamp
26
26
*Rohesia
de
Vere
1100 - 1170
*William
de
Lancaster
70
70
1117 - 1166
*Gundred
de
Warrene
49
49
*Gilbert
de
Lancaster
*Godith
*Hugh
de
Morville
*Ralph
de
Engaine
*Ebria
Trivers
Living
Forrester
*Hugues
de
Beauchamp
*Adeliza
Matilda
Taillebois
*James
Callaghan
Occupation-Farmer in NSW. Possibly transported to New South Wales 1838.
*Elizabeth
Lynum
1845
John
Callaghan
1848
Michael
Callaghan
1848
William
Callaghan
1851
Elizabeth
Callaghan
1853
Catherine
Callaghan
D. <1502
Joane
Carminowe
Living
Forrester
1445 - 1470
Nicholas
Carew
25
25
1466 - 1513
Edmund
Carew
47
47
Catherine
Huddesfield
<1500
Catherine
Carew
Phillip
Champernowne
1519
Katherine
Champernowne
1521 - 1581
Walter
Rawleigh
60
60
Margaret
Raleigh
Carew
Raleigh
1552 - 1618
Walter
Raleigh
66
66
5th cousin 14 times removed.
Living
Forrester
Elizabeth
Throckmorton
Roger
de
Mortimer
D. >1345
Margaret
de
Mortimer
~1306
Edmund
de
Mortimer
~1309 - <1369
Catherine
de
Mortimer
60
60
~1314
Joan
de
Mortimer
~1313
Agnes
de
Mortimer
~1318
Beatrice
de
Mortimer
~1307
Maude
de
Mortimer
1314
Thomas
de
Beauchamp
Living
Forrester
1335
Maude
de
Beauchamp
1338
Thomas
de
Beauchamp
1334
Phillipe
de
Beauchamp
1358
William
de
Beauchamp
1372
Joan
FitzAlan
1396
Joan
de
Beauchamp
D. 1452
James
Butler
1426 - 1515
Thomas
Butler
89
89
1428
Anne
Hanchford
1465
Margaret
Butler
Living
Gallagher
William
Boleyn
1477
Thomas
Boleyn
1486
Elizabeth
Howard
1504
Mary
Boleyn
1501 - 1536
Anne
Boleyn
35
35
Second wife of King Henry VIII. 7th cousin 17 times removed.
George
Boleyn
1491 - 1547
Henry
VIII
Tudor
56
56
9th cousin 18 times removed.
1533
Elizabeth
Tudor
8th cousin 16 times removed.
1308
*William
Dymock
1311
*Elizabeth
Rous
Living
Gallagher
1866
* John
Whinnen
~1322
*Margaret
Tremenent
~1300
*Richard
Tremenent
~1280
*John
Tremenent
~1282
*Ralph
le
Rous
~1252
*Richard
Trement
~1222
*Richard
Trement
~1222
*Isabel
De
Clist
~1185
*William
De
Clist
~1150
*Gerard
De
Clist
~1155
*Beatrice
de
Hainoc
Living
McKenzie
~1125
*William
de
Hainoc
~1095
*Roger
de
Hainoc
~1312
*Thomas
Wyger
*Christian
~1315
*Richard
de
Wotton
~1320
*Julian
le
Prouz
~1295
*John
de
Wotton
~1306 - 1343
*Joan
de
Moels
37
37
~1285 - >1361
*William
le
Prouz
76
76
1168
*William
de la
Pole
Living
Potts
1130
*Nicholas
Pola
1105
*Nicholas
Pola
*William
de
Pola
1184
Hugh
de
Vere
1240
Robert
de
Vere
1224
Isabel
de
Vere
1220 - 1255
Eva
de
Braose
35
35
1250 - 1298
Milicent
de
Cauntelo
48
48
1282 - 1314
Eva la
Zouch
32
32
Maurice
Berkeley
Living
Forrester
1295 - 1361
Thomas
Berkeley
66
66
1352 - 1428
John
Berkeley
76
76
1400 - 1478
Elizabeth
Berkeley
78
78
1400
John
Sutton
1425/1427 - 1484
Edmund
Sutton
1430 - 1485
Joyce
Tiptoft
55
55
1461
John
Sutton
Margaret
Charroll
1497 - 1563
Margaret
Sutton
66
66
1483 - 1558
John
Butler
75
75
Living
Forrester
1540 - 1609
William
Butler
69
69
1544 - 1581
Margaret
Greeke
37
37
~1568 - 1650
Margaret
Butler
82
82
1560 - 1616
Lawrence
Washington
56
56
1600/1601 - 1652/1653
Lawrence
Washington
1632/1633 - 1677
John
Washington
Amphyllis
Twigden
Anne
Pope
1659 - 1697/1698
Lawrence
Washington
Mildred
Warner
Living
Forrester
1693 - 1743
Augustine
Washington
50
50
Mary
Ball
22 Feb 1731/1732 - 1799
George
Washington
First president of The United States Of America. 15th cousin 12 times removed.
1731 - 1802
Martha
Dandridge
71
71
~1370
John
Champernoun
Richard
Champernoun
Elizabeth
Champernoun
~1460
William
Fortescue
1485 - 1527
Jane
Fortescue
42
42
Unknown
Cobleigh
Living
Forrester
1502 - 1547
Margaret
Cobleigh
45
45
Unknown
Giffard
D. 1596
Jane
Giffard
1527 - 1577
Amyas
Chichester
50
50
1584
Frances
Chichester
Unknown
Wyatt
Margaret
Wyatt
Matthew
Allyn
>1626
Mary
Allyn
>1626
Thomas
Allyn
Living
Forrester
Abigail
Allyn
John
Williams
Elijah
Williams
Abigail
Williams
Thomas
Williams
Abigail
Williams
Unknown
Bliss
Margaret
Bliss
Unknown
Hoyt
Margaret
Jane
Hoyt
Living
Samuel
Edward
Axson
1860 - 1914
Ellen
Louise
Axson
54
54
16th cousin 7 times removed. Wife of President Woodrow Wilson.
1856 - 1924
Woodrow
Wilson
67
67
28th President of the USA.
Unknown
Newberry
~1656
Mary
Newberry
Unknown
Moseley
~1686
Joseph
Moseley
Mary
Moseley
1711
Abigail
Moseley
John
Lyman
Living
~1736
Mindwell
Lyman
Unknown
Pomeroy
1761
Eunice
Pomeroy
Unknown
Clarke
~1786
Jerusha
Clarke
Unknown
Gates
~1811
George
William
Gates
~1836
George
Porterfield
Gates
~1861
Margaret
Gates
Unknown
Wallace
Living
* Emily
McIntosh
1885 - 1982
Elizabeth
Virginia
Wallace
97
97
1884 - 1972
Harry
S
Truman
88
88
33rd President of the USA.
Unknown
Weller
~1711
Mary
Weller
Unknown
Sackett
~1736
Daniel
Sackett
~1770
Mehitable
Sackett
Unknown
Francis
~1800
Manning
Francis
~1833
Frederick
Augustus
Francis
Living
1863
Anne
Ayers
Francis
George
Robbins
1890
Kenneth
Seymour
Robbins
Edith
Luckett
1923
Anne
Francis
Robbins
19th cousin 4 times removed. Wife of Ronald Reagan.
1911
Ronald
Wilson
Reagan
40th President of the USA.
D. 1385
Katherine
Clivedon
~1353
Elizabeth
Betteshorne
John
de
Sutton
Constancia
Blount
Living
Crisp
John
De
Somery
Gunnor
D. 1211
Ralph
De
Somery
Margaret
Marshall
1208 - <1273
Roger
De
Somery
65
65
D. >1293
Margaret
De
Somery
1210 - 1240
Nichole
d'
Aubigny
30
30
Ralph
Basset
D. 1336
Margaret
Basset
1301 - 1372
Ralph
de
Stafford
70
70
Living
Crisp
Jane
de
Stafford
Nicholas
Beke
Elizabeth
Beke
D. ~1395
Robert
de
Swynnerton
~1370
Maude
de
Swynnerton
John
Savage
>1410
Margaret
Savage
1403 - 1445
John
Dutton
42
42
1421 - 1459
Thomas
Dutton
38
38
Anne
Tuchet
Living
Philp
Isabel
Dutton
Christopher
de
Southworth
1478 - 1518
John
de
Southworth
40
40
Helen
de
Langton
1497 - 1546
Thomas
de
Southworth
49
49
Margery
Boteler
1526 - 1595
John
de
Southworth
69
69
Mary
Ashton
1548 - 1616
Thomas
Southworth
68
68
Rosamund
Lister
Living
Philp
1590 - 1621
Edward
Southworth
31
31
Alice
Carpenter
1616 - 1669
Thomas
Southworth
53
53
Elizabeth
Reynor
1664 - 1717
Elizabeth
Southworth
53
53
Joseph
Howland
1671 - 1746
Nathaniel
Howland
75
75
Martha
Cole
Nathaniel
Howland
Abigail
Burt
Living
Crisp
1749 - 1836
Joseph
Howland
87
87
Lydia
Bill
1779 - 1852
Susan
Howland
73
73
John
Aspinwall
1809 - 1886
Mary
Rebecca
Aspinwall
77
77
Isaac
Roosevelt
1828 - 1900
James
Roosevelt
72
72
Sara
Delano
1882 - 1945
Franklin
Delano
Roosevelt
63
63
32nd President of the USA. 23rd cousin 5 times removed.
1884 - 1962
Eleanor
Roosevelt
78
78
24th cousin 7 times removed.
Living
Crisp
Maude
Dutton
D. 1456
William
Booth
George
Booth
Katherine
Montfort
1473 - 1519
William
Booth
46
46
Edward
Booth
William
Booth
Edward
Booth
1608 - 1687
Richard
Booth
79
79
Elizabeth
Booth
Living
Emms
John
Miner
1670 - 1753
Grace
Miner
83
83
Samuel
Grant
1692 - 1727
Noah
Grant
35
35
Martha
Huntington
1719 - 1756
Noah
Grant
37
37
Susanna
Delano
1748 - 1819
Noah
Grant
71
71
1794 - 1873
Jesse
Root
Grant
79
79
Hannah
Simpson
Living
Forrester
1822 - 1885
Ulysses
Simpson
Grant
63
63
18th President of the USA. 21st cousin 7 times removed. As a second-lieutenant he joined the army of occupation in Texas under General Zachary Taylor, was in the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, and was present at the capture of Monterey. Promoted captain in 1853, in 1854 he resigned his commission and settled on a farm near St. Louis, Missouri. In 1861, when the Civil War began, Grant was appointed colonel of the 21st Regiment of Illinois Infantry. In November, now brigadier- general, he fought the battle of Belmont. In February 1862 he captured Fort Henry, and soon after Fort Donelson. In April he fought a two days' battle at Shiloh. After various unsuccessful movements against Vicksburg, Grant crossed the Missisippi, April 1863, twice defeated the enemy, and drove them into Vicksburg, when he besieged. After many assaults the stronghold surrendered conditionally on July 4, 1863, with 31.600 prisoners. In October he fought at Chattanooga, and drove the enemy out of Tennessee. In March 1864 Grant, now a major-general in the regular army, was promoted lieutenant-general, and given the command of all the armies of the United States. His plan of campaign was to concentrate all the national forces into several distinct armies, which should operate simultaneously against the enemy. Sherman moving toward Atlanta, while Grant himself accompanied the army of the Potomac against Richmond. On May 4 he crossed the Rapidan, encountered General Robert E. Lee in the Wilderness, and fought a desperate three days' battle, and pursuing the offensive, he drove the enemy within the lines of Richmond. On March 29, 1865, began a week's hard fighting, after which Lee surrendered his entire army, April 9. The fall of Richmond substantially ended the war. In July 1866 Grant was appointed full general; in 1868 and 1872 he was elected president by the Republicans. Amont the events of his administration were the guaranteeing of the right of suffraqge without regard to race, colour or previous servitude, and the peaceful settlement of the 'Alabama Claims'. The proposal of a third term of presidency not having been approved, Grant became a sleeping partner in a bankinghouse. In May 1884 the house suspended, and it was discovered that two of the partners had robbed the general of all he possessed. In the hope of providing for his family, he begun his autobiography, when in 1884 a sore throat proved to be cancer at the root of the tongue. The sympathies of the nation were aroused, and in March 1885 congress restored him to his rank of general, which he had lost on accepting the presidency. He died at Mount McGregor near Saratoga, July 23. Source: Chambers's Biographical Dictionary.
Julia
Dent
D. 1041
*Tankred
De
Hauteville
*Fredesende
De
Normandie
Raimon
Berenger Of
Barcelona
Agnes
Of
Essex
>1164 - 1221
Robert
De
Vere
57
57
Isobel
de
Bolbec
1210
Hugh
De
Vere
1240
Robert
De
Vere
Living
Burns
1843 - 1921
* David
Crisp
Holland
77
77
Alice
de
Sandford
Joan
De
Vere
William
de
Warrenne
Alice
de
Warrenne
Edmund
FitzAlan
Richard
FitzAlan
Robert
Bruce
Robert
le
Bruce
Isabel
de
Clare
Robert
le
Bruce
Living
Forrester
Maude
Of
Carrick
D. 1329
Robert
I
Bruce
Robert the Bruce. 3rd cousin 28 times removed.
Isabel
Of
Mar
1297 - 1316
Marjorie
Bruce
19
19
Walter
Stuart
1316 - 1390
Robert
II
Stuart
74
74
5th cousin 26 times removed.
Elisabeth
Mure
1337 - 1406
Robert
III
Stuart
69
69
Annabella
Drummond
D. <1411
Elizabeth
Stuart
Living
Forrester
James
Douglas
D. 1457
James
Douglas
Elizabeth
Gifford
John
Douglas
David
Douglas
James
Douglas
Arthur
Douglas
John
Douglas
John
Douglas
James
Douglas
Living
Hillier
John
Douglas
Grizel
Forbes
D. 1749
John
Douglas
1710 - 1766
Euphemia
Douglas
56
56
Unknown
Irvine
1742 - 1808
John
Irvine
66
66
Anne
Elizabeth
Baillie
1770 - 1810
Anne
Irvine
40
40
Unknown
Bullock
1793 - 1849
James
Stephens
Bullock
56
56
Living
Mills
Martha
1834 - 1884
Martha
Bullock
49
49
1831 - 1878
Theodore
Roosevelt
46
46
Anna
Roosevelt
1858 - 1919
Theodore
Roosevelt
60
60
26th president of the USA. 23rd cousin 8 times removed.
1860 - 1894
Elliott
Roosevelt
34
34
Corinne
Roosevelt
Anna
Rebecca
Hall
1394 - 1437
James
I
Stuart
43
43
Jane
Beaufort
Living
Jones
1428 - 1486
Joan
Of
Scotland
58
58
James
Douglas
<1466 - 1513
John
Douglas
47
47
Elizabeth
Douglas
Robert
Keith
D. >1562
Elizabeth
Keith
George
Gordon
D. 1557
Elizabeth
Gordon
Unknown
Stewart
D. 1595
Elizabeth
Stewart
Living
Crane
Unknown
Fraser
Margaret
Fraser
Unknown
Cumming
Janet
Cumming
Unknown
Munro
Agnes
Munro
Unknown
Monroe
D. 1668
Andrew
Monroe
1666 - 1737
William
Monroe
71
71
D. 1735
Andrew
Monroe
Living
Crane
D. 1774
Spence
Monroe
Elizabeth
Jones
1758 - 1831
James
Monroe
73
73
5th President of the USA. 21st cousins 10 times removed.
Elizabeth
Monroe
Spence
Monroe
Andrew
Monroe
Joseph
Jones
Monroe
Elizabeth
Kortright
Richard
de
Clare
Maude
De
Lacy
Living
Jones
1243 - 1295
Gilbert
de
Clare
52
52
1272 - 1307
Joan
Of
Acre
35
35
1292 - 1337
Eleanor
de
Clare
45
45
1280 - 1326
Hugh
le
Despencer
46
46
D. 1342
Edward
le
Despencer
Anne
de
Ferrers
1335 - 1375
Edward
le
Despencer
40
40
Elizabeth
de
Berghersh
1373 - 1399
Thomas
le
Despencer
26
26
Constance
Of
York
Living
Jones
1400 - 1439
Isabel
le
Despencer
39
39
Richard
de
Beauchamp
1415 - 1447
Elizabeth
le
Despencer
32
32
Edward
De
Neville
Catherine
De
Neville
Robert
Tanfield
1489 - 1529
William
Tanfield
40
40
1508 - 1558
Francis
Tanfield
50
50
Anne
Tanfield
Unknown
Vincent
Living
Dillon
1865 - 1939
* Anna
Maria
Oppermann
73
73
Elizabeth
Vincent
Unknown
Lane
1589
Dorothy
Lane
William
Randolph
1621 - 1678
Richard
Randolph
57
57
1650 - 1711
William
Randolph
61
61
Mary
Isham
1685 - 1742
Isham
Randolph
57
57
1720 - 1776
Jane
Randolph
56
56
Peter
Jefferson
Living
Jones
1743 - 1826
Thomas
Jefferson
83
83
3rd President of the USA. 19th cousin 10 times removed. 1762: Graduated from College of William and Mary 1767: Began practicing law 1769-79: Served in Virginia legislature 1775:-76: Member of Virginia's delegation to Congress; wrote Declaration of Independence 1779-81 Governor of Virginia 1783-84: Member of Virginia's delegation to Congress 1784-85: Diplomatik commissioner of Congress in Europe 1785-89: U.S. diplomatic minister to France 1789-93: Secretary of State under George Washington 1797-1801: Vice President under John Adams Term: March 4, 1801-March 4, 1809 as 3rd President of the U.S. Vice Presidents: Aaron Burr; George Clinton 1816-25: Founder and first rector of the University of Virginia Buried: Charlottesville Thomas Jefferson was the eldest son and third of the ten children of Peter and Jane Jefferson. Peter Jefferson was a wealthy plantation owner, and Jane was a member of the prominent Randolph family, which was descended from British royalty. As a boy, Thomas received instruction in Latin, Greek, French, mathematics, and philosophy from local scholars. When Peter Jefferson died in 1757, Thomas inherited Shadwell, the thousand-acre Virginia estate on which he was born. In 1760, at the age of seventeen, Thomas entered the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. There he studied vigorously for two years under the tutelage of Dr. William Small, a professor of mathematics, history, and philosophy. He left the college in the spring of 1762, however, without taking a degree. Jefferson then studied law in Williamsburg for five years under the well-respected lawyer George Wythe. During Jefferson's stay in Williamsburg, Wythe and SmalI introduced him to many members of Virginia's government, including Francis Fauquier, the royal governor of the colony. In 1767 Jefferson was admitted to the Virginia bar and began a successful legal practice. Two years later he took a seat in Virginia's House of Burgesses. During his six years in that body, Jefferson distinguished himself as a powerful literary stylist. His colleagues often called upon him to draft proclamations and legislative documents. Jefferson brought his reputation as a gifted writer to the Continental Congress in 1775. The following year, at the age of thirty-three, he was appointed by Congress to the committee charged with writing the Declaration of Independence. His fellow committee members -John Adams, Benjannin Franklin, Robert Livingston, and Roger Sherman- chose him to draft the document. Although the committee made minor changes in Jefferson's original draft and the entire Congress asked that several passages be deleted or rnodified, the Declaration of Independence was largely Jefferson's work. Jefferson returned to Virginia in 1776 to a seat in the state legislature. In 1779 he became governor of his home state. His first experience as a chief executive was not impressive. In 1781 he was forced to abandon the Virginia capital of Richmond when British troops advanced upon the city. Some Virginians accused him of cowardice, but after a long debate the Virginia legislature passed a resolution stating that Jefferson's retreat was justified. He declined renomination for governor in 1781. Diplomat and Secretary of State In 1784 Congress sent Jefferson to Paris asits minister to France. During his five years at this post, Jefferson witnessed the many events of the French Revolution. He applauded the revolution's stated democratic goals and had many friends among its leaders. Jefferson, like John Adams, missed the drafting of the Constitution because of his diplomatic service in Europe. In 1789 Jefferson returned to the United States to become the country's first secretary of state. In this capacity Jefferson was more than just the nation's leading diplomat. Like the other members of George Washington's cabinet, Jefferson served as an adviser to Washington on matters outside the area of policy traditionally associated with his position. Washington often preferred to have his cabinet debate issues while he listened dispassionately to their reasoning. In these debates Jefferson was usually pitted against Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton. Hamilton, who was closer ideologically to Washington than Jefferson, was undoubtedly the most influential member of the cabinet. In July 1794 he announced that he would resign at the end of the year because of his disagreements with administration policies. In particular, Jefferson objected to Hamilton's creation of a national bank and Washington's strict neutrality between Britain and France despite the 1778 treaty of alliance with France, which Jefferson believed should have been honored. By 1798 the Democratic-Republican party, which opposed the Federalists, had begun to emerge with Jefferson as its leader. That year he lost the presidential election te John Adams by three electoral votes, and, according to the original election rules of the Constitution, his second-place finish earned him the vice presidency. In this office he actively opposed the policies of Adams and the Federalists. Presidency After the election of 1800 the Twelfth Amendmnent introduced new election rules, which called for the president and vice president to him as a team, thereby eliminating the possibility of a candidate intended for the vice presidency receiving more votes than the presidential candidate. In the 1800 election, however, Jefferson was paired on the Democratic-Republican ticket with Aaron Burr. When the ambitious Burr received as many electoral votes as Jefferson, he refused to concede to his running mate. The tie gave the House of Representatives, where the Federalists and Alexander Hamilton were still in the majority, the responsibility of electing the president. To Hamilton's credit, he worked for the election of Jefferson, his political archenemy, whom he thought less dangerous and more reasonable than Burr. The tie-breaking process took thirty six ballots, but Jefferson was elected eventually. Despite the acrimony between the Democratic-Republicans and the Federalists (outgoing president John Adams did not even attend Jefferson's inauguration), Jefferson entered office preaching reconciliation. He transformed the atmosphere surrounding the presidency from the stiff, regal style of Washington and Adams to his own democratic informality. Jefferson immediately freed all persons who had been jailed under the Alien and Sedition Acts enacted during the Adams administration. The Alien Act gave the president the authority to jail or deport aliens in peace time, and the Sedition Act gave federal authorities broad power to prosecute persons who criticized the govemment. He also worked with Congress, which had come under the control of his party after the 1800 election, to cut the govemment budget and federal taxes. In foreign policy Jefferson acted decisively to meet the threat to American shipping in the Mediterranean from pirates operating from the Barbary Coast of North Africa. American and European nations had been paying tribute to the governments of Morocco, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli to protect their ships from harassment. Jefferson, however, refused demands for increased tribute payments and sent a squadron of warships to the Mediterranean to protect U.S. shipping. After U.S. forces defeated Tripoli in a naval war, a treaty was concluded in 1805 that ended tribute payments to that state. The United States continued tribute payments to other North African states, however, until 1816. Jefferson's most important act during his first term as president was the Louisiana Purchase. In 1803 the French owned the port of New Orleans as well as a vast area that stretched from New Orleans to present-day Montana, known as the Louisiana Territory. Jefferson, fearing that the French could block U.S. navigation of the Mississippi and threaten American settlements in the West, sent ambassadors to France in the hope of purchasing the port of New Orleans. The French instead offered to sell the entire Louisiana Territory. The American representatives, James Monroe and Robert Livingston, saw the opportunity to create an American empire and improve the security of the western frontier. Thus, they struck a deal with French emperor Napoleon to buy all ot the Louisiana Territory for $15 million. Jefferson recognized that to support the agreement he would have to ignore his own principles of strict constructionism, since the Constitution did not specifically authorize the president to acquire territory and Congress had not appropriated money for the purchase. He believed that the purchase would greatly benefit the nation and that the offer from Napoleon might be withdrawn if he hesitated. Therefore, Jefferson approved the deal and urged Congress to ratify it and appropriate funds for the purchase. In the fall of 1803 Congress bowed to his wishes and appropriated the $15 million. With the addition of the 828,000 square miles of the Louisiana Territory, the area of the United States nearly doubled. In 1804, Jefferson, who was at the height ot his popularity, easily won reelection. He lost only two states and defeated Charles C. Pinckney in the electoral college by a vote of 162-14. Jefferson's second term was troubled by war between Britain and France. In 1806 both powers were blockading each other's ports and seizing American sailors and cargo. Jefferson was determined, however, to not become involved in the war. Thus, he persuaded Congress to pass the Embargo Act of 1807, which prohibited the shipping of U.S. products to other nations. Jefferson hoped that by cutting off all foreign trade he would prevent provocations on the seas that could lead to war. The Embargo Act was a total failure. lt severely hurt American businesses and farmers by denying them export markets. As the U.S. economy stagnated, Federalists and some Democratic-Republicans argued that the federal government's authority to regulate foreign commerce did not give it the power to stop ... commerce altogether. Many merchants defied the embargo, causing Jefferson to order harsh enforcement measures that led to abuses of civil rights. On March 1, 1809, three days before the end of his term, Jefferson signed the Non-Intercourse Act, which ended the embargo against nations other than Britain and France and made provisions to lift the embargo against those two nations if they stopped violating U.S. neutralty. Despite the unpopularity of the Embargo Act, Jefferson's chosen heir and secretary of state, James Madison, won the 1808 presidential election. Retirement When his second term expired, Jefferson retired to Monticello, his home outside of Charlottesville, Virginia, which he had designed himself. He devoted his time to managing his estate, entertaining visitors, corresponding with former colleagues, and revelling in his many intellectual pursuits. Jefferson, who suffered from financial troubles caused by bis generous entertaining and the defaults by several friends on loans he had cosigned, sold bis 6,500- volume library to Congress in 1815. Congress's original collection of books had been burned by the British during the War of 1812. Jefferson's books formed tbe nucleus of the collection that would become the modern Library of Congress. In 1819 the University ot Virginia was chartered under Jefferson's supervision. He planned the curriculum, chose the faculty, drew up the Plans for its buildings, and served as its rector until his death. Jefferson died at Monticello on July 4, 1826, the same day as John Adams and the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson is buried at Monticello beneath a gravestone that he willed should read: "Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, Author of the Declaration of American Independence, of the ... of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and the father of the University of Virginia". Jefferson married Martha Wayles Skelton, a wealthy twenty-three-year-old widow, on January 1, 1772. The couple had six children, but only two, Martha and Maria, reached maturity. Martha Jefferson's father, John Wayles, died in 1773, leaving a forty-thousand-acre estate to the Jeffersons that doubled their landholdings. Wayles was heavily in debt, however, and Jefferson struggled for many years to pay off the balance. On September 6, 1782, Martha Jefferson died at the age of thirty-three. Little is known about Martha, and there is no authentic portrait of her in existence. Jefferson never remarried.
Martha
Skelton
John
de
Warrenne
Maude
De
Braose
D. 1389
Elizabeth
le
Despencer
Maurice
de
Berkely
1352 - 1417
Thomas
de
Berkely
65
65
Margaret
de
Lisle
1386 - 1422
Elizabeth
de
Berkely
36
36
Richard
de
Beauchamp
Living
Mani
Elizabeth
de
Beauchamp
D. 1469
George
Neville
D. 1469
Henry
Neville
D. 1530
Richard
Neville
D. 1543
John
Neville
D. 1577
John
Neville
D. 1596
Catherine
Neville
D. 1585
Henry
Percy
D. 1632
Henry
Percy
D. 1650
Dorothy
Percy
Living
Trudgett
D. 1677
Robert
Sidney
D. 1684
Dorothy
Sidney
1621 - 1643
Henry
Spencer
22
22
D. 1702
Robert
Spencer
1674 - 1722
Charles
Spencer
48
48
1682 - 1716
Anne
Churchill
34
34
1708 - 1746
John
Spencer
38
38
D. 1783
John
Spencer
D. 1834
George
John
Spencer
Georgiana
Spencer
Living
Trudgett
D. 1857
Frederick
Spencer
D. 1922
Charles
Robert
Spencer
D. 1975
Albert
Edward
Spencer
1924
Edward
John
Spencer
1961 - 1997
Diana
Frances
Spencer
36
36
25th cousin 4 times removed.
Living
Windsor
Living
Windsor
Living
Windsor
Richard
Plantagenet
Richard
Plantagenet
Living
Garland
Joan
de
Cornwall
John
Howard
Robert
Howard
Margaret
de
Scales
John
Howard
Henry
Howard
Elizabeth
Howard
Margery
Wentworth
1483 - 1528
George
Waldgrave
45
45
Phyllis
Waldgrave
Living
Garland
Bridget
Higham
George
Burrough
Nathaniel
Burrough
George
Burrough
Hannah
Burrough
Thomas
Fox
Mercy
Fox
Fanny
Johnson
Eber
Call
Charles
Call
Living
Garland
Flora
Call
1901 - 1966
Walter
Elias
Disney
65
65
22nd cousin 5 times removed.
1294 - 1360
Elizabeth
de
Clare
66
66
1318 - 1363
Elizabeth
Damory
45
45
1349 - 1385
William
Bardolf
36
36
D. 1432
Cecily
Bardolf
1408 - 1466
Miles
Stapleton
58
58
1441 - 1505
Elizabeth
Stapleton
64
64
Anne
Calthorpe
D. 1572
Anne
Drury
Living
O'Connor
1859 - 1941
Elias
Disney
82
82
1832 - 1891
Kepple
Disney
59
59
Mary
Richardson
1801 - 1880
Arundel
Elias
Disney
79
79
Marie
Swan
1775 - 1857
Kepple
Disney
82
82
Frances
Best
1746 - 1808
Robert
Disney
62
62
Mary
Kepple
Isabel
le
Despencer
Living
Trudgett
Ankeret
Lestrange
Mary
Talbot
Thomas
Greene
Elizabeth
Greene
Edward
Raleigh
Edward
Raleigh
Bridget
Raleigh
Elizabeth
Cope
Bridget
Dryden
Anne
Marbury
Living
Smith
Living
Stark
Edward
Hutchinson
Elisha
Hutchinson
Hannah
Hutchinson
Hannah
Ruck
John
Lillie
Anna
Lillie
Harriet
Howard
Samuel
Prescott
Phillips Fay
Samuel
Howard
Fay
Susan
Shellman
Living
Smith
Harriet
Eleanor
Fay
Samuel
Prescott
Bush
Prescott
Sheldon
Bush
George
Bush
41st President of the USA. 26th cousin 3 times removed.
Living
Bush
Barbare
Pierce
Living
Welch
1165 - 1223
Phillipe
Capet
58
58
1187 - 1226
Louis
VIII
Capet
39
39
1214 - 1270
Louis
VIII
Capet
56
56
Living
Parsons
1245 - 1285
Phillip
III
Capet
40
40
1268 - 1314
Phillip
IV
Capet
46
46
1295 - 1355
Isabella
Of
France
60
60
1284 - 1327
Edward
II Of
England
43
43
D. 1307
Edward
I Of
England
1312 - 1377
Edward
III Of
England
65
65
1341 - 1402
Edmund
Of
York
61
61
1374 - 1416
Constance
Of
York
42
42
1405 - 1452
Eleanor
Holland
47
47
Constance
Tuchet
Living
Parsons
1450 - 1503
Jane
Whitney
53
53
1470
Elizabeth
Vaughan
1498 - 1577
Rowland
Morgan
79
79
1534 - 1603
Thomas
Morgan
69
69
1560 - 1653
William
Morgan
93
93
1583 - 1638
Elizabeth
Morgan
55
55
1607 - 1685
James
Morgan
78
78
1646 - 1704
Joseph
Morgan
58
58
1680 - 1754
Martha
Morgan
74
74
1709 - 1779
John
Perkins
70
70
Living
Parsons
1731 - 1798
John
Perkins
67
67
1753
Dyer
Perkins
1793 - 1859
Elizabeth
Rogers
Perkins
66
66
1838 - 1906
John
Perkins
Humphrey
68
68
1874 - 1914
Maud
Humphrey
40
40
1899 - 1957
Humphrey
DeForest
Bogart
57
57
Hollywood actor. 23rd Cousin 5 times removed.
Betty
Joan
Perske
1245 - 1296
Edmund
Plantagenet
51
51
1281 - 1345
Henry
Plantagenet
64
64
1318 - 1372
Eleanor
Of
Lancaster
54
54
Living
Hennessy-
Parsons
1339 - 1369
Henry
de
Beaumont
30
30
1360 - 1396
John
de
Beaumont
36
36
1379 - 1413
Henry
Beaumont
34
34
1411 - 1447
Henry
de
Beaumont
36
36
D. 1471
Henry
Beaumont
1467
Constance
Beaumont
1487
Joyce
Mitton
Edward
Mitton
Katherine
Mitton
D. 1640
Elizabeth
Marshall
Living
Hennesy
1626
Judith
Lewis
Hannah
Gibbins
Mary
Hibbert
1710 - 1762
Nathan
Jewett
52
52
1736 - 1780
David
Jewett
44
44
1771 - 1860
Elizabeth
Jewett
89
89
1795 - 1857
Elizabeth
Comstock
62
62
1820 - 1907
George
Seldon
Butler
87
87
1848 - 1916
Amy
Gridley
Butler
68
68
1867 - 1938
Adele
Augusta
Ayer
71
71
Living
McLouglin
1892 - 1967
Dorothy
Ayer
Gardner
75
75
1913
Gerald
Rudolph
Ford
38th President of the USA. 25th cousin 3 times removed.
1208 - 1246
Daffyd
Of
Gwynedd
38
38
Anne
ferch
Daffyd
Madog
ap
Elise
Efa
Ferch
Madog
Einion
ap
Gruffudd
Gruffudd
ap
Einion
Elissau
ap
Gruffudd
Dafydd
ap
Elissau
Living
Parsons
John
Wynn
D. 1626
David
Yale
D. 1617
Thomas
Yale
1616 - 1683
Thomas
Yale
67
67
1662 - 1744
Hannah
Yale
82
82
1684 - 1757
Sarah
Talmadge
73
73
1727 - 1796
Abraham
Hemingway
69
69
1764 - 1838
Jacob
Hemingway
74
74
1791 - 1863
Jacob
Street
Hemingway
72
72
1808 - 1886
Allen
Hemingway
78
78
Living
Parsons
1844 - 1926
Anson
Tyler
Hemingway
82
82
1871 - 1928
Clarence
Edmonds
Hemingway
57
57
1899 - 1961
Ernest
Miller
Hemingway
62
62
Author. 21st cousin 7 times removed.
D. <1190
William
de
Ferriers
He was one of the adherents of the younger Henry on his rebellion in April 1173, and sacked and burnt Nottingham in May or June 1174. He made his submission to the King at Northampton, 31 July 1174, surrendering his castles of Tutbury and Duffield. The King took him, with other prisoners, to France in August 1174, and imprisoned them at Caen. He went on Crusade and died, before 21 October 1190, at the siege of Acre, in Palestine. His wife survived him and was, perhaps, living at late as 1228. Source: Leo van de Pas
Edmund
de
Botiller
Joan
Fitzgerald
1305
James
de
Botiller
1305
Elinor
de
Bohun
1331
James
Butler
Anne
Darcy
Living
Johnson
Living
Stark
1943 - 2003
* Carole
Denise
Gallagher
60
60
1361
James
Butler
Anne
Welles
1392
James
Butler
1420
James
Butler
Eleanor
Beaufort
0975 - 1038
*Stephen
I Of
Hungary
63
63
Canonized 1083. 32nd 33rd & 34th G Grandfather. First King of Hungary. St. Stephen First King of Hungary, b. at Gran, 975; d. 15 August, 1038. He was a son of the Hungarian chief Géza and was baptized, together with his father, by Archbishop St. Adalbert of Prague in 985, on which occasion he changed his heathen name Vaik (Vojk) into Stephen. In 995 he married Gisela, a sister of Duke Henry of Bavaria, the future Emperor St. Henry II, and in 997 succeeded to the throne of Hungary. In order to make Hungary a Christian <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03712a.htm> nation and to establish himself more firmly as ruler, he sent Abbot Astricus to Rome to petition Pope Sylvester II for the royal dignity and the power to establish episcopal sees. The pope acceded to his wishes and, in addition, presented him with a royal crown with which he was crowned at Gran on 17 August, 1001 (see HUNGARY.--History). He founded a monastery in Jerusalem and hospices for pilgrims at Rome, Ravenna, and Constantinople. He was a personal friend of St. Bruno of Querfurt and corresponded with Abbot St. Odilo of Cluny. The last years of his life were embittered by sickness and family troubles. When on 2 September, 1031, his only son, St. Emeric, lost his life on a bear hunt, his cherished hope of transferring the reins of government into the hands of a pious Christian <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03712a.htm> prince were shattered. During his lifetime a quarrel arose among his various nephews concerning the right of succession, and some of them even took part in a conspiracy against his life. He was buried beside his son at Stuhlweissenburg, and both were canonized together in 1083. His feast is on 2 September, but in Hungary his chief festival is observed on 20 August, the day on which his relics <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12734a.htm> were transferred to Buda. His incorrupt right hand is treasured as the most sacred relic <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12734a.htm> in Hungary. Source: 'The Catholic Encyclopedia"
*Gisela
Of
Bavaria
0951 - 0995
*Henry
II Of
Bavaria
44
44
*Geza
Of
Hungary
*Gisela
Of
Burgandy
Living
Johnson
0918 - 0955
*Henry
I Of
Bavaria
37
37
*Judith
Of
Bavaria
John
FitzGeoffrey
~1240
Isabelle
FitzJohn
Isabel
Vipont
Roger
de
Clifford
Robert
de
Clifford
Maude
de
Clare
Robert
de
Clifford
Iodine
de
Clifford
Living
Johnson
Isabel
de
Berkely
~1677
George
Blewett
D. 1742
Samuel
Blight
Thomas
de
Clifford
Elizabeth
de
Ros
John
de
Clifford
Elizabeth
de
Percy
Thomas
Clifford
Joanna
Dacre
John
Clifford
Living
Parsons
Margaret
Bromflete
Henry
Clifford
Anne
St
John
Henry
Clifford
Margaret
Percy
Henry
Clifford
Eleanor
Brandon
Charles
Brandon
Mary
Tudor
Francis
Clifford
Living
Reid
Elizabeth
Clifford
Richard
Boyle
Charles
Boyle
Jane
Seymour
Charles
Boyle
Richard
Boyle
Charlotte
Elizabeth
Boyle
William
Cavendish
William
Cavendish
George
Augustus Henry
Cavendish
Living
Reid
Georgina
Spencer
Georgina
Dorothy
Cavendish
George
Howard
Blanche
Georgina
William
Cavendish
Edward
Cavendish
Emma
Elizabeth
Lascelles
Victor Christian
William
Cavendish
Evelyn
Emily Mary
FitzMaurice
Edward William
Spencer
Cavendish
Living
Walker
Mary Alice
Gascoyne-
Cecil
William John
Robert
Cavendish
1920 - 1948
Kathleen
Kennedy
28
28
Sister of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, President of USA.
1888 - 1969
Joseph
Patrick
Kennedy
81
81
1890 - 1995
Rose
Fitzgerald
105
105
Elizabeth
Comptom
William
Cavendish
Louisa
O'Callaghan-
Lismore
William
Cavendish
*Marguerite
De
Sable
Living
Andison
1250
*William
le
Rous
1285
*Joan
Godnesford
1250
*Robert
de
Godnesford
1255
*Joan
Speccot
~1250
*Peter
Nanscoyk
Henry
de
Lancaster
William
de
Lancaster
Alan
La
Zouch
1272 - 1324
*Roger
de
Moels
52
52
~1285 - <1335
*Alice
Prouz
50
50
Living
Andison
*Nicholas
de
Moels
*Hawise
de
Newmarch
~1245 - 1316
*William
Prouz
71
71
~1247 - >1318
*Alice
de
Regni
71
71
*James
de
Newmarch
D. 1270
*William
Prouz
*Alice
Widworthy
*William
Prouz
1230
*Alice
de
Ferrers
*William
Widworthy
Living
Andison
*John
de
Regni
Fergus
Of
Galloway
Lochlan
Of
Galloway
1335
Maude
de
Beauchamp
1369 - 1413
Catherine
Clifford
44
44
1353
Ralph
Greystoke
Maude
Greystoke
1389
John
Greystoke
Eudo
Dewelles
1406 - 1461
Lionel
Dewelles
55
55
Living
Andison
1971 - 2003
Antony
Adam
Troy Stark
32
32
Joane
Watertowne
1427
Margaret
Dewelles
1432
Thomas
Dymoke
D. 1463
Margaret
Dymoke
Thomas
FitzWilliam
Beatrix
FitzWilliam
Richard
Woodruffe
1466
Beatris
Woodruffe
1464
Thomas
Wentworth
1520
Thomas
Wentworth
Living
Gray
1532
Grace
Gascoigne
1569 - 1627
Mary
Wentworth
58
58
1560
William
Brewster
1584
Elizabeth
Brewster
1590 - 1634
Patience
Brewster
44
44
1606 - <1634
Fear
Brewster
28
28
1599
Thomas
Prence
1630
Mary
Prence
1651
John
Freeman
1687 - 1720
Mercy
Freeman
33
33
Living
Richards
1680
Chillingworth
Foster
Chillingworth
Foster
Mercy
Winslow
1737
Chillingworth
Foster
Sarah
Freeman
1783
Ruby
Foster
1782
Nathaniel
Crosby
1810
Nathaniel
Crosby
Mary
Lincoln
1835
Nathaniel
Crosby
1921
Jack
Edward
Brinkworth
1839
Cordelia
Smith
1870
Harry
Lowe
Crosby
Catherine
Harrigan
1903 - 1977
Harry
Lillis 'Bing'
Crosby
74
74
23rd cousin 4 times removed.
<1261
*Henry
Wyger
~1230 - 1277
*John
Wyger
47
47
~1235
*Gundreda
~1300
*Ellen
de
Ponte
1896
Everett
Crosby
1895
Laurence
Crosby
Living
Brinkworth
~1270
*Geoffrey
de
Ponte
1900
Edward
Crosby
1904
Catherine
Crosby
1906
Mary
Rose
Crosby
1913
George
Robert
Crosby
1911 - 1952
Wilma
Lee
41
41
1933 - 1995
Gary
Crosby
62
62
Living
Crosby
1934 - 1991
Dennis
Crosby
57
57
1938 - 1989
Lindsay
Crosby
51
51
Living
Nguyen
Living
Grant
Living
Crosby
Living
Crosby
Living
Crosby
William
de
Whalesburgh
1289 - 1355
John
de
Whalesburgh
66
66
Margaret
Of
England
1282 - 1316
Elizabeth
Of
England
34
34
D. 1317
Margaret
Of
France
1300 - 1338
Thomas
Of
Brotherton
38
38
Living
Nguyen
1307 - 1330
Edmund
Of
England
23
23
D. 1349
Margaret
Wake
1328 - 1385
Joan
Of
Kent
57
57
D. 1436
John
Of
Eltham
1318 - 1355
Eleanor
Of
England
37
37
1321 - 1362
Joan
Of
England
41
41
D. 1369
Phillipa
Of
Hainault
1330 - 1376
Edward
Of
England
46
46
Isabella
Of
England
D. 1348
Joan
Of
England
Living
Nguyen
1340 - 1399
John
Of
Gaunt
59
59
D. 1362
Mary
Of
England
D. 1361
Margaret
Of
England
D. 1359
Thomas
Of
Woodstock
1341 - 1369
Blanche
Of
Lancaster
28
28
1895 - 1952
George
VI
Windsor
57
57
1900 - 2002
Elizabeth
Bowes-
Lyon
102
102
Living
Mountbatten-
Windsor
Living
Mountbatten-
Windsor
Living
Mountbatten-
Windsor
Living
Gilbert
1930 - 2002
Margaret
Rose
Windsor
72
72
1865 - 1936
George
V
Windsor
71
71
1867 - 1953
Mary
Of
Teck
86
86
1894 - 1972
Edward
VIII
Windsor
78
78
1897 - 1965
Mary
Windsor
68
68
1900 - 1974
Henry
Windsor
74
74
1902 - 1942
George
Windsor
40
40
1905 - 1919
John
Windsor
14
14
1841 - 1910
Edward
VII Of
England
69
69
1844 - 1925
Alexandra
Of
Denmark
81
81
1035 - 1067
*
Adeliza
de Toeni
32
32
1864 - 1892
Albert
Victor Of
England
28
28
1867 - 1931
Louise
Of
England
64
64
1868 - 1935
Victoria
Of
England
67
67
1869 - 1938
Maud
Of
England
69
69
1819 - 1861
Albert Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
42
42
1819 - 1901
Victoria
Of
England
82
82
Victoria Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
1843 - 1878
Alice Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
35
35
1844 - 1900
Alfred Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
56
56
1848 - 1939
Louise Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
91
91
0990 - ABT 1038/0039
* Roger
de
Toeni
Living
Stark
1853 - 1884
Leopold Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
31
31
1858 - 1896
Beatrice Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
38
38
1850 - 1942
Arthur Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
92
92
1846 - 1923
Helena Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Gotha
77
77
1767 - 1820
Edward
Of
England
53
53
1786 - 1861
Victoria Of
Saxe-Coburg-
Saalfeld
75
75
1738 - 1820
George
III Of
England
82
82
D. 1818
Charlotte Of
Mecklenberg-
Strelitz
1762 - 1830
George
IV Of
England
68
68
1763 - 1827
Frederick
Of
England
64
64
1868 - 1926
John
Griffis
57
57
1765 - 1837
William
IV Of
England
72
72
1766 - 1828
Charlotte
Of
England
62
62
1768 - 1840
Augusta
Of
England
72
72
1770 - 1840
Elizabeth
Of
England
70
70
1771 - 1851
Ernest
Augustus
Of England
80
80
1773 - 1843
Augustus
Frederick
Of England
70
70
1774 - 1850
Adolphus
Frederick
Of England
76
76
1776 - 1857
Mary
Of
England
81
81
1777 - 1848
Sophia
Of
England
71
71
1779 - 1783
Octavius
Of
England
4
4
1878 - 1891
George
Bidner
12
12
1780 - 1782
Alfred
Of
England
2
2
1783 - 1810
Amelia
Of
England
27
27
D. 1751
Frederick
Lewes Of
Hanover
D. 1772
Augusta Of
Saxe-
Gotha
1683 - 1760
George
II Of
Hanover
77
77
D. 1737
Caroline
Of
Anspach
1660 - 1727
George
I Of
Hanover
67
67
1666 - 1726
Sophia
Dorothea
Of Celle
60
60
D. 1698
Ernest
Augustus
Of Hanover
1630 - 1714
Sophia
Of the
Rhine
84
84
1873 - 1967
Charles
Griffis
94
94
D. 1632
Frederick
V Of the
Rhine
1596 - 1662
Elizabeth
Stuart
66
66
1566 - 1625
James
I
Stuart
59
59
D. 1619
Anne
Of
Denmark
1594 - 1612
Henry
Frederick
Stuart
18
18
1600 - 1649
Charles
I
Stuart
49
49
1609 - 1669
Henrietta
Maria Of
France
60
60
1630 - 1685
Charles
II
Stuart
55
55
1633 - 1701
James
II
Stuart
68
68
1545 - 1567
Henry
Stuart
22
22
1900 - 1976
Alfred
Griffis
76
76
1542 - 1587
Mary
Of
Scotland
45
45
D. 1542
James
V Of
Scotland
1489 - 1541
Margaret
Of
England
52
52
1473 - 1513
James
IV Of
Scotland
40
40
D. 1503
Elizabeth
Of
York
1457 - 1509
Henry
VII
Tudor
52
52
D. 1483
Edward
IV Of
England
D. 1400
Richard
Of
England
Richard
III Of
England
D. 1411
Anne
Mortimer
1889 - 1976
Emily
Burrage
87
87
D. 1415
Richard
Of
Cambridge
D. 1398
Roger
Mortimer
D. 1378
Phillippe
Of
Ulster
D. 1381
Edmund
Mortimer
D. 1368
Lionel
Of
England
D. 1877
Adelaide
Horatia
Seymour
D. 1851
Horace
Beauchamp
Seymour
Hugh
Seymour
D. 1801
Anna
Horatia
Waldegrave
D. 1763
James
Waldegrave
Living
Griffis
D. 1741
James
Waldegrave
D. 1730
Henrietta
FitzJames
D. 1689
Henry
Waldegrave
D. 1714
Arabella
Churchill
D. 1972
Cynthia
Hamilton
D. 1958
Rosalind
Bingham
D. 1953
James
Hamilton
D. 1910
Cecilia
Lennox
D. 1914
George
Bingham
D. 1860
Charles
Lennox
Ronald
Kenneth
Harkness
D. 1819
Charles
Lennox
D. 1805
George
Henry
Lennox
D. 1750
Charles
Lennox
1672 - 1723
Charles
Lennox
51
51
D. 1734
Louise
de
Keroualle
D. 1718
Mary
Of
Modena
D. 1766
James
III
Stuart
D. 1788
Charles
Edward
Stuart
1837 - 1892
Louis
Of
Hesse
55
55
1863 - 1950
Victoria
Of
Hesse
87
87
Living
Harkness
1872 - 1918
Alex
Of
Hesse
46
46
1854 - 1921
Louis
Of
Battenburg
67
67
1892 - 1938
George
Of
Battenburg
46
46
1885 - 1967
Alice
Of
Battenburg
82
82
1882 - 1944
Andrew
Of
Greece
62
62
Living
Armstong-
Jones
Living
Armstong-
Jones
Living
Armstong-
Jones
D. 1456
Edmund
Tudor
Margaret
Beaufort
1924
Pendry Herbert
(Herbert)
Shadlow
1366 - 1413
Henry
IV Of
England
47
47
D. 1394
Mary
de
Bohun
1387 - 1422
Henry
V Of
England
35
35
D. 1421
Thomas
Of
England
D. 1435
John
Of
England
D. 1447
Humphrey
Of
England
D. 1437
Catherine
Of
France
1421 - 1471
Henry
VI Of
England
50
50
D. 1461
Owen
Tudor
D. 1496
Jasper
Tudor
Living
Shadlow
Living
Stark
1403 - 1444
John
Beaufort
41
41
Margaret
Beauchamp
1373 - 1410
John
Beaufort
37
37
Margaret
Holland
1401 - 1418
Henry
Beaufort
17
17
Catherine
Swynford
1375 - 1447
Henry
Beaufort
72
72
1377 - 1427
Thomas
Beaufort
50
50
D. 1455
Edmund
Beaufort
D. 1560
Marie Of
Lorraine-
Guise
Living
Darlington
D. 1551
Henry
Stuart
D. 1557
Archibald
Douglas
1515 - 1578
Margaret
Douglas
63
63
D. 1571
Matthew
Stuart
Charles
Stuart
D. 1492
Elizabeth
Woodville
1471 - 1483
Edward
V Of
England
12
12
D. 1483
Richard
Of
England
D. 1482
Mary
Of
England
D. 1507
Cecily
Of
England
Living
Darlington
D. 1511
Anne
Of
England
D. 1527
Katherine
Of
England
D. 1517
Bridget
Of
England
1452 - 1488
James
III Of
Scotland
36
36
D. 1486
Margaret
Of
Denmark
1431 - 1460
James
II Of
Scotland
29
29
D. 1463
Mary
Of
Guelders
1394 - 1437
James
I Of
Scotland
43
43
D. 1455
Joan
Beaufort
1340 - 1406
Robert
III Of
Scotland
66
66
Living
Darlington
D. 1401
Annabella
Drummond
Margaret
Of
Scotland
1316 - 1390
Robert
II Of
Scotland
74
74
D. 1355
Elizabeth
Mure
Francis
Seymour
Isabella
FitzRoy
Charles
FitzRoy
Henrietta
Somerset
1663
Henry
FitzRoy
Isabella
Bennett
Living
Grey
Barbara
Villiers
~1120
Galfridis
de
Crawford
D. 1202
John
de
Crawford
D. 1229
Reginald
de
Crawford
1165
Margaret
Of
Loudoun
D. 1255
Hugh
de
Crawford
1226 - >1297
Hugh
de
Crawford
71
71
~1230
Alicia
Of
Draffen
1251 - >1273
Margaret
de
Crawford
22
22
1245
Malcolm
Wallace
Living
Harkness
Jan 1271/1272 - 1305
William
Wallace
Scottish patriot. 6th cousin 25 times removed.
1646
Anne
Digby
1706 - 1758
Charles
Spencer
51
51
1701
Robert
Spencer
1715
Elizabeth
Trevor
1739 - 1817
George
Spencer
78
78
1743
Caroline
Russell
1766 - 1840
George
Spencer
Churchill
74
74
Susan
Stewart
1793 - 1857
George
Spencer
Churchill
63
63
Living
Harkness
Jane
Stewart
1822 - 1883
John Winston
Spencer
Churchill
61
61
Frances
Anne Emily
Vane
1849 - 1895
Randolph
Henry Spencer
Churchill
45
45
Jeanette
Jerome
1874 - 1965
Winston
Leonard
Churchill
90
90
24th cousin 5 times removed. British Prime Minister 1940-45, 1951-55.
1675 - 1759
Dorothy
Morgan
84
84
William
Witter
Mary
Witter
Erastus
Spaulding
1903 - 1969
Beatrice
Griffis
65
65
Martha
Ann
Spaulding
Caroline
Garlinghouse
Katherine
Martha
Houghton
1919 - 2003
Katherine
Houghton
Hepburn
84
84
23rd cousin 5 times removed.
D. 1286
William
de
Warrenne
1285 - 1338
Alice
de
Warrenne
53
53
D. 1385
Alaive
FitzAlan
D. 1398
Lucy
Le
Strange
Laura
FitzHugh
Joan
Constable
Eric M
Homer
1473
John
Mallory
William
Mallory
William
Mallory
1566 - 1644
Thomas
Mallory
78
78
Roger
Mallory
Jane
Mallory
1695 - 1751
Roger
Quarles
56
56
Dianna
Quarles
John
William
Thomson
Pike
Montgomery
Thomson
Rita
Homer
John
William
Thomson
Lillian
Thomson
Julia
Crawford
1930 - 1980
Steve
McQueen
50
50
Actor. 20th cousin 7 times removed.
William
d'
Aubigny
1119 - <1175
*William
de
Botterell
56
56
1096
*Nicholas
de
Botterell
*Unknown
Dunbar
*Dunfugan
Of
Angus
*Gospatrick
III
Dunbar
Ross
Homer
Living
Stark
*Diedre
~1092
*Colban
Of
Buchan
*Eva
Mormaer
Isaac
Allerton
~1627 - >1662
Isaac
Allerton
35
35
Elizabeth
Willoughby
~1671 - >1731
Sarah
Allerton
60
60
Hancock
Lee
Elizabeth
Lee
Zachary
Taylor
Unknown
Homer
1744 - 1829
Richard
Taylor
85
85
Sarah
Dabney
Strother
1784 - 1850
Zachary
Taylor
65
65
12th President of the USA. 19th cousin 8 times removed.
1884
Alice
Lee
Roosevelt
1861 - 1884
Alice
Hathaway
Lee
23
23
1861 - 1948
Edith
Kermit
Carow
87
87
Theodore
Roosevelt
Kermit
Roosevelt
Edith
Carow
Roosevelt
Archibald
Bulloch
Roosevelt
1907
Horace
Griffis
Quentin
Roosevelt
*Honor
Hendower
Alice
Prouz
*Richard
Speccot
~1695
*John
Dalton
~1695
*Anne
Rivers
~1710
*John
Staples
*Jane
Taylor
D. 1303
Joan
FitzJohn
D. 1321
Edmund
Butler
1911 - 1996
Gwen
Theresa Ethel
Hunt Bunyan
84
84
Joan
FitzGerald
*Unknown
Hendower
John
Blight
Jane
Blight
Alice
Blight
Honour
Blight
Mary
Blight
Thomas
Blight
Charles
Blight
~1639
*John
Rowe
Living
Griffis
*Jane
~1679
Benjamin
Rowe
~1671
William
Rowe
~1674
Alexander
Rowe
*Edward
Whinnen
*Margaret
*Francis
Mitchell
*Elizabeth
Priddis
*Thomas
Rivers
*Mary
1923
Merton Scott
(Scott)
Murray
*Robert
Burr
*Mary
Butler
<1691
*Grace
Carpenter
*John
Rosewarne
Margaret
Rosewarne
~1650
*John
Rosewarne
*Margaret
Warren
*Edward
Rosewarne
~1623
*Susanna
Eddy
1593 - 1641
*Phineas
Eddy
47
47
Occupation - tailor.
Living
Murray
~1595 - <1639
*Katherine
Courthopp
44
44
~1568 - 1616
*William
Eddy
48
48
Vicar of St Dunstan's Church, Cranbrook ENG. Rev. William Eddy was also known as Rev. William Eddye. He was born between 1558 and 1564 at Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.1 He graduated in 1583 from at Trinity Hall, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, receiving an AB. He was a sizar at Trinity Hall, which is a student who performs certain duties in partial payment for his education.1 He was a curate between 1583 and 1586 at Thurston, Suffolk, England.1 He was an assistant vicar to the Rev. Robert Roades. In 1586 at St. Dunstan's Church, Cranbrook, Kent, England.1 He graduated in 1586 from at Trinity College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, with a MA.1 On 20 November 1587 at St. Dunstan's Church, Cranbrook, Kent, England, William married Mary Fosten, daughter of John Fosten <p41.htm> and Ellen Munn <p110.htm>.1 Rev. William Eddy was the Vicar appointed by Archbishop Whitgift between 12 January 1591 and 1616 at St. Dunstan's Church, Cranbrook, Kent, England.1 On 22 February 1613/14 at St. Dunstan's Church, Cranbrook, Kent, England, William married Sarah Tayler <p110.htm>. Sarah was a widow with several children.1 Rev. William Eddy left a will on 20 August 1616 at Cranbrook, Kent, England.1 He died on Wednesday, 23 November 1616 at Cranbrook, Kent, England.1 His estate was probated on 4 December 1616 at Court of the Archdeacon of Canterbury, England.1 Source: www.theroyfamily.com
D. 1611
*Mary
Fosten
1542 - 1578
*Thomas
Eddy
36
36
~1568
*Peter
Courthopp
1571
*Anne
Sheaffe
~1537 - 1573
*John
Fosten
36
36
~1540 - 1611
*Ellen
Munn
71
71
~1511 - ~1591
*John
Fosten
80
80
~1514
*Stephen
Munn
Living
Salmon
~1516 - ~1591
*Bridget
Saxby
75
75
1599
Ellen
Eleanor
Eddy
Anne
Eddy
1589
Nathaniel
Eddy
1591
Mary
Eddy
1597 - 1684
John
Eddy
87
87
1601 - 1687
Abigail
Eddy
86
86
1603
Anna
Eddy
1606
Elizabeth
Eddy
1608 - 1682
Samuel
Eddy
74
74
Living
Murray
1610
Zacharias
Eddy
Margaret
Eddy
Abigail
Eddy
Peter
Eddy
~1532 - 1604
*Thomas
Sheaffe
72
72
1536 - 1609
*Mary
Harman
73
73
1505 - 1557
*Richard
Sheaffe
52
52
~1515 - 1564
*Elizabeth
Andrews
49
49
D. ~1548
*Thomas
Harman
Cloth merchant.
~1557
Unknown
Sheaffe
Living
Murray
1559
Richard
Sheaffe
1560
Edmund
Sheaffe
1561/1562
Thomas
Sheaffe
1562
Joan
Sheaffe
1566
Alexander
Sheaffe
1570
Harman
Sheaffe
1573
Samuel
Sheaffe
1575
William
Sheaffe
1577
Benjamin
Sheaffe
1579
Elizabeth
Sheaffe
Living
Murray
Living
Sullivan
~1532
Joan
Sheaffe
1534
Katherine
Sheaffe
1536
Margaret
Sheaffe
1538
Margery
Sheaffe
1541
Alice
Sheaffe
1542
William
Sheaffe
1545
Mary
Sheaffe
1546
Anne
Sheaffe
1470 - <1520
*Thomas
Sheaffe
50
50
~1474
*Alice
Hendley
Living
Chambers
1498
John
Sheaffe
1501
Gervase
Sheaffe
1503
Dorothy
Sheaffe
1507
Mary
Sheaffe
~1510
*John
Harman
John
Harman
1534
Richard
Harman
1540
Thomas
Harman
D. 1561
Stephen
Harman
Richard
Harman
Living
Chambers
Stephen
Harman
~1451
*Gervase
Hendley
1452
*Elizabeth
Roberts
~1438 - 1522
*Walter
Roberts
84
84
*Alice
Naylor
~1408
*John
Roberts
~1412
*Agnes
Buckfold
Gent
1436
*Richard
Naylor
1484 - 1526
*Giles
Andrews
42
42
~1490
*Agnes
Living
Chambers
*Robert
Andrewe
1467 - 1513
*Agnes
Millon
46
46
~1443 - ~1502
*Robert
Millon
59
59
*Joan
1508
*Elizabeth
Courthope
1474 - 1525
*Alexander
Courthope
51
51
Occupation - clothier.
1478
*Katherine
Foster
D. 1497
*Robert
Foster
*Peter
Courthope
1509
Agnes
Courthope
Living
Murray
1508
Katherine
Courthope
1512
Eleanor
Courthope
1510
Katherine
Courthope
1510
Richard
Courthope
1505
William
Courthope
John
Courthope
~1440
*Thomas
Sheaffe
John
Benjamin
1607 - 1689
Elizabeth
Savery
82
82
1637
John
Eddy
Living
Saunders
1639
Zachariah
Eddy
1645
Obadiah
Eddy
1639
Alice
Paddock
1680
Joshua
Eddy
1682
Hannah
Stevens
1709
Benjamin
Eddy
1715
Elizabeth
1745
Joseph
Eddy
1750
Phoebe
1774
George
Eddy
1883 - 1951
Sarah
Jane
Nixon
68
68
1770
Nancy
Ann
Salisbury
1813
Darius
Eddy
1820
Esther
Ann
Irons
1848
Isaac
Nelson
Eddy
1852
Martha
Percy
Gardiner
1875
William
Darius
Eddy
Isabel
Kendrick
1901 - 1967
Nelson
Eddy
65
65
Entertainer. 9th cousin 5 times removed.
Catherine
Rosewarne
1485
*John
Fosten
1919
John
William
Bidner
*John
Venecome
*Grace
Barnabas
Wines
1632
Hannah
Wines
1636 - 1671
Barnabas
Wines
35
35
Sarah
Wines
Mary
Sarah
Wines
1666 - 1696
Barnabas
Horton
30
30
1687 - 1772
Caleb
Horton
85
85
1909 - 1980
Kathleen
Kenney
71
71
Phebe
Terry
1722 - 1773
Phoebe
Horton
51
51
1715 - 1793
Henry
Tuthill
78
78
1741 - 1776
Anna
Tuthill
34
34
1742 - 1814
John
Cleves
Symmes
71
71
1775 - 1874
Ann
Tuthill
Symmes
98
98
Wife of President William henry Harrison, 9th President of the US. 6th cousin 8 times removed.
1773
William
Henry
Harrison
9th President of the United States.
1597
Amy
Doggett
1504
Peter
Courthope
Mary
Roberts
Living
Bidner
Joan
Roberts
John
Roberts
*Elizabeth
Thomasine
Naylor
Richard
Naylor
~1440
Anne
Roberts
*Richard
Saxbie
*Catherine
McIntosh
1804 - 1878
John
Scott
Harrison
74
74
1810 - 1850
Elizabeth
Ramsey
Irwin
40
40
Living
Powell
Living
Stark
1833 - 1901
Benjamin
Harrison
67
67
23rd President of the USA. 8th cousin 6 times removed.
1625
Mary
Eddy
Thomas
Horton
Mary
Horton
Job
Tyler
1642
Moses
Tyler
Prudence
Blake
1675
Job
Tyler
Margaret
Bradstreet
1710
Hannah
Tyler
Living
Bidner
John
Spofford
1733
Phebe
Spofford
John
Grout
1751
Phoebe
Grout
Jacob
Winn
1775
Endymia
Winn
Thomas
Sherwood
1794
Lucinda
Sherwood
John
Minthorn
1817
Theodore
Minthorn
Living
Bidner
Mary
Wasley
1848
Hulda
Randall
Minthorn
Jesse
Clark
Hoover
1874 - 1964
Herbert
Clark
Hoover
90
90
31st President of the USA. 12th cousin 2 times removed.
Lou
Henry
Deliverence
Owen
Patience
Eddy
Hannah
Eddy
Ebenezer
Eddy
1681 - 1739
Eleazer
Eddy
58
58
Living
Bidner
Elizabeth
Randall
John
Eddy
Eleazer
Eddy
Joshua
Eddy
Charity
Eddy
Elizabeth
Eddy
Caleb
Eddy
1704
Hannah
Eddy
Robert
Millard
1744
Abiathard
Millard
1920 - 1987
Laura
Marion
Bidner
67
67
Tabitha
Hopkins
1781 - 1831
Phoebe
Millard
49
49
Nathaniel
Fillmore
1800 - 1874
Millard
Fillmore
74
74
6th cousin 8 times removed. 13th President of the USA.
1620 - 1670
Sarah
Eddy
50
50
1643
Caleb
Eddy
1647
Hannah
Eddy
1350
*William
Tilley
*John
Wright
*Mary
1926
David
Bruce
Cowan
Ann
1143 - >1212
*Alice
De
Cary
69
69
~1100 - <1147
*Ralph
Lovel
47
47
1110
*Margaret
Of
Hawick
D. 1207/1208
Ralph
Lovel
Living
Cowan
Living
Nicholls
Living
Cowan
Living
O'Farrell
Living
O'Farrell
Living
Stark
1921 - 1977
Donald
Frederick
Bidner
55
55
1921
Joyce
Peacock
1949 - 1950
Robyn
Bidner
7m
7m
Living
Bidner
Living
Johns
Living
Bidner
Living
Bidner
Living
Bidner
Living
Bidner
Living
Taggert
1975 - 2001
Tracey
Anderson
25
25
Living
Taggert
Living
Bidner
Living
Kemp
Living
Kemp
Living
Kemp
John
Nixon
Margaret
Lee
1108
Amice
de
Gael
1000
* Robert
Osbern
de Crepon
*
Emma
Aldreda
Living
Stark
0884 - 0950
* Gorm 'The
Old' Of
Denmark
66
66
0846 - 0899
* Harald
Parcus Of
Denmark
53
53
0850
* Alfgifu
Of
England
0804 - 0875
* Frotho
VI Of
Sjaelland
71
71
* Unknown
Daughter Of
Harde Knud
* Wihtgar
Of The Isle
Of Wight
* William
de
Roches
~1707
* John
Rosewarne
~1709
*Grace
Venecome
1680
* John
Rosewarne
Living
Stark
1922 - 1992
* Derrick
Arthur
Stark
69
69
Service record Name STARK, DERRICK ARTHUR Service Australian Army Service Number SX15118 (S32472) Date of Birth 17 Sep 1921 Place of Birth MILLICENT, SA Date of Enlistment 8 Nov 1941 Locality on Enlistment SEMAPHORE, SA Place of Enlistment ADELAIDE, SA Next of Kin STARK, ENID Date of Discharge 17 Dec 1945 Rank Private Posting at Discharge 2/123 BRIGADE ORDNANCE FIELD PARK AAOC WW2 Honours and Gallantry None Prisoner of War No
1863 - 1943
John
Joseph
Gallagher
80
80
1860 - 1914
Patrick
Peter
Gallagher
53
53
1876 - ~1913
Elizabeth
'Agnes'
Gallagher
37
37
* John
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
Jessica
Margaret
Clough
1866
William
J
Gallagher
1892
William
Gallagher
1708
*
James
Blight
*Amy
Rowe
0936
*
Adalbert
Of Italy
Living
Stark
D. 0990
*
Gerberga
Of Chalon
0900 - 0966
*
Berengar
II Of Italy
66
66
D. 0966
* Willa
Of
Tuscany
D. 0971
* Letald
I Of
Macon
0894 - 0948
*
Ermengarde
Of Chalon
54
54
0866 - 0910
* Manase
Of
Chalon
44
44
0868 - 0945
* Alberic
I Of
Narbonne
77
77
0869 - 0925
*
Tolosana
Of Macon
56
56
0852 - 0920
* Raculf
Of
Macon
68
68
0833 - 0911
* Mayeul
Of
Narbonne
78
78
Living
Stark
0880 - 0939
* Giselbert
Of
Lothringen
59
59
0914 - 0984
* Gerberga
Of
Saschen
70
70
0876 - 0936
* Heinrich
I Of
Saschen
60
60
D. 0968
* Mathilde
Of
Hamalant
Arthur
Henry
Ray
0878 - 0916
* Dietrich
Of
Hamalant
38
38
0880 - 0937
*
Reginhilde
Of Klak
57
57
0865 - 0885
*
Gottfried
Of Klak
20
20
0864 - 0901
* Reginhilde
Of
Ostergau
37
37
0835 - 0891
* Friese
Of
Ostergau
56
56
Living
Colclough
0847 - 0882
*
Harald
Of Klak
35
35
0828 - 0860
* Halfdan
III Of
Vestfold
32
32
0830 - 0850
*
Helga
Frode
20
20
0803 - 0847
* Dag
Frode
44
44
0810 - 0856
* Gundrod
Of
Vestfold
46
46
0788 - 0831
* Halfdan
II Of
Vestfold
43
43
0766 - 0808
* Eyestein
I Of
Vestfold
42
42
0744 - 0779
* Halfdan
I Of
Vestfold
35
35
0748 - 0793
* Aasa Of
Heidmork
Throndheim
45
45
John
Hayward
Biden
Living
Colclough
0721
* Eyestein
Of Heidmork
Throndheim
0710 - 0768
* Olav
I Of
Vestfold
58
58
0689
* Ilradi
Of
Uppsala
0667 - 0718
* Braut
Of
Uppsala
51
51
Living
Lee
0645 - 0683
* Yngvarr
Of
Uppsala
38
38
0623 - 0671
* Eyestein
I Of
Uppsala
48
48
0600 - 0640
* Athils
Of
Uppsala
40
40
0577 - 0617
* Ottar
Of
Uppsala
40
40
0551 - 0592
* Egill
Of
Uppsala
41
41
Living
Jones
0532 - 0564
* Jorundr
Of
Uppsala
32
32
0505 - 0557
* Yngui
II Of
Uppsala
52
52
Living
Bidner
Living
Bidner
1928
James
Stanley
Everingham
Living
Everingham
Living
Thompson
Living
Thompson
Living
Thompson
Living
Thompson
Living
Jones
1440
Stephen
Roberts
1434
Sarae
Roberts
1390
*Stephen
Roberts
1380
*Johane
Tilley
1860
Kezia
Witcom
*
George
Pope
*
Anne
*
James
Witcomb
*
Harriett
Hooper
~1824 - 1894
John
McCallum
70
70
Living
Sharpe
1855 - 1923
Isabella
Brown
McCallum
67
67
1858 - 1881
Margaret
Jane
McCallum
22
22
~1856
Clunie
McMichael
1881 - 1881
Unknown
McMichael
4d
4d
1862 - 1867
Elizabeth
Mary
McCallum
4
4
1865 - 1941
Alexander
Cunningham
McCallum
76
76
1869 - 1907
William George
Sinclair
McCallum
37
37
Living
McLean
1869 - 1877
Jane
Stark
7
7
1872
Andrew
Edward
Stark
Living
Stark
1875
James
Angus
Stark
Susan
Longhurst
Mary
Longhurst
Thomas
Longhurst
Sarah
Longhurst
John
Longhurst
Margaret
Longhurst
Elizabeth
Longhurst
Susan
II
Longhurst
William
Longhurst
Living
Stark
Stephen
Longhurst
John
Longhurst
Stephen
Longhurst
William
Longhurst
Mary
Longhurst
Elizabeth
Longhurst
Elizabeth
Longhurst
Gervais
Longhurst
Catherine
Longhurst
Emily
Sunstrom
Living
Phillips
1923
* Enid
Betty
McArthur
Living
Williams
Living
Hopkins
Living
Stark
Living
Stark
Living
Williams
Living
Williams
ABT 1190/1191
William
Marshall
1967 - 1968
Sherryn
Lynette
Williams
6m
6m
1910
Leonard
John
Pennell
Living
Pennell
Living
Stark
Living
Pennell
Living
Pennell
* Mary
*
Dorothy
Francis
Westlake
Living
Pennell
Nicholas
Westlake
John
Westlake
1030 - 1100
* William
I de
Nevers
70
70
1917 - 1983
Doreen
Myrtle
McKinnon
65
65
Living
Phillips
Living
Stark
1030
*
Ermengarde
Of Tonnerre
0955
* Renaud
De
Courtenay
0975
*
Guillaume
de Gometz
0985 - 1040
* Renaud
I de
Nevers
55
55
0925 - 0996
*
Renaud
I
71
71
*
Fromond
I
1147
Amice
de
Beaumont
*Hugh
II de
Grandmesnil
* Alice
de
Beaumont
1945 - 1978
Peter
Robert
Stark
33
33
1078
*Ralph
de Gael
Montford
* Emma
Avice de
Vermandois
1121
Isabel
de
Beaumont
1125
Margaret
de
Beaumont
1173 - 1210
*Oliver
de
Tracy
37
37
*Ralph
de
Gael
~1056
*
Emma
FitzOsbern
1020/1030 - 1071
*William
FitzOsbern
WILLIAM FITZ OSBERN The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planch窠Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. Of the three great names at the head of this chapter [Wm F.O., Roger de Montgomeri, Robt de Beaumont], that of William Fitz Osbern claims precedence as the nearest personal friend of the Conqueror, and the chief officer of his household. Son of that Osbern the son of Herfast, otherwise Osbern de Cr误n, who was foully murdered in the bed-chamber of his young sovereign by William de Montgomeri, he succeeded him in his office of Dapifer and the favour of the Duke. No particular feat of arms is recorded of him, though he must have fought in some, if not all, of the battles in Normandy during the twenty years or more which immediately preceded the invasion of England, from that of Val-籭Dunes in 1047 to that of Varaville in 1060, and was probably with the Duke in his expeditions against Conan in Brittany and his invasion of Maine in 1063. We have proof at least of his presence at the siege of Domfront in 1054, when he was sent with Roger de Montgomeri to demand an explanation from Geoffrey Martel of his conduct in marching into Normandy and seizing Alen殮. It is not, however, till the memorable year 1066 that he becomes a prominent person in the history of Normandy and of England. He appears to have somewhat resembled his master in character, combining great valour with much readiness of wit and astuteness of policy. We have seen him entering the hall of the Palace at Rouen "humming a tune," and rousing the moody Duke from his silent and sullen consideration of the news from England by bidding him bestir himself and take vengeance on Harold, who had been so disloyal to him; to call together all that he could call, cross the sea, and wrest the crown from the perjured usurper. William followed his advice, as most people do when they have already determined on taking the course suggested, and "Osbern, of the bold heart," was very likely aware of that fact when he ventured to express his opinion. The call was made first of the Duke's relatives and most confidential friends, and then of the whole baronage of Normandy. It is at this last and large assembly at Lillebonne that the audacity and cunning of Fitz Osbern become strongly apparent. Considerable hesitation, and in some instances direct objection, being displayed to the adoption of the project, and the council breaking up into groups to discuss it, the wily Dapifer flitted about from one influential chief to the other, suggesting the danger of driving their feudal lord to extremities; that they should rather anticipate his wishes than suffer him to ask their aid in vain, and that it would be much worse for them eventually, should the Duke have to complain that his enterprise had failed in consequence of their defection. Puzzled and irresolute they at length requested him to speak to the Duke in the name of the whole body, and say not only that they feared the sea, but also that they were not bound to serve him beyond it. Having thus contrived to be elected their spokesman, he, with the greatest effrontery, assured the Duke that they were unanimous in their determination to support him. That to advance him they would go through fire and water. They would not only cross the sea, but double their service. He who should bring twenty knights would cheerfully bring forty; he who was bound to serve with thirty would come with sixty, and the barons who had to serve with one hundred men would join him with two hundred. As to himself, he promised to furnish sixty ships laden with fighting men. The barons were as indignant as astounded at this unwarrantable declaration. Many openly disavowed him; all was tumult and confusion. "No one could hear another speak; no one could either listen to reason or render it for himself" (Roman de Rou). The Duke then withdrawing to one side of the hall, sent for the barons one by one, and assuring them of his love and grace, pledged himself that if they would support him, as Fitz Osbern had stated, by doubling their service on this occasion, that they should not be called on in future for service beyond what was the custom of the land, and such as their ancestors had always rendered to their feudal lord. The Duke's eloquence was successful, and, as before stated (page 51), each baron's promise was recorded by scribes ready at hand as soon as it was made. In Taylor's List, the number of ships furnished by Fitz Osbern, whose name stands first upon it, agrees with that mentioned by Wace. "Habuit a Willielmo Dapifero, filio Osberni LX naves." No knights are mentioned. We next hear of him on English ground. While the Duke of Normandy was haranguing his forces on the morning of the battle, "William Fitz-Osber" rode up and interrupted him, saying, "Sire, we tarry here too long, let us all arm ourselves. Allons! Allons!" Wace, who recounts this incident, says, Fitz Osbern's horse was "all covered with iron." This is one of the instances in which he has been guilty of an anachronism, no such practice existing in the days of the Conqueror (vide the Bayeux Tapestry), but at the time that he composed the Roman de Rou, the fashion had been imported from the East by the Crusaders, and the horses were often coated with chain from the tail to the nostrils. In the disposition of the army, he was selected by the Duke to be a leader of the wing composed of the men of Boulogne and Poix, but we hear of no special incident connected with his name in the course of the battle. The reward of his great and long-continued service was promptly bestowed upon him. The earldom of Hereford and the lordship of the Isle of Wight being the principal honours; the manor of Hanley, in Worcestershire, and several in Gloucestershire and other counties, which, in consequence of his dying before the great survey, cannot now be identified. In addition to these substantial benefits, King William, on his return to Normandy in 1067, made him governor of his newly built Castle of Winchester: an office of great responsibility, as Winchester at that period was a city second only in importance to London. Its palace was the favourite residence of Edward the Confessor and the early Norman kings. It possessed a mint and a treasury, in which the riches and regalia of the sovereign were deposited, and was consequently to be most jealously guarded. The Conqueror also associated him with Bishop Odo, in the vicegerency (sic; viceregency) of the realm during his absence. Fitz Osbern having the chief administration of justice in the north, and Odo in the south of the kingdom. On the defeat of Edgar Athelin and his confederates at York by the Conqueror in 1068, William Fitz Osbern was appointed governor of that city, and in the following year was hastily summoned to relieve the cities of Shrewsbury and Exeter, simultaneously attacked by the Welsh and the disaffected men of Cheshire, Devonshire, and Cornwall. He was too late to save Shrewsbury, which the insurgents, under Edric the Wild, had burned and abandoned; but reaching Exeter at the moment when a sudden sally of the garrison had driven back the besiegers and thrown them into confusion, the Earl, in conjunction with Count Brian of Brittany, fell upon them and put them nearly all to the sword. In 1070, he was sent to Normandy by King William in order to assist Queen Matilda, the duchy being at that time in a very disturbed state. About the same period war broke out in Flanders between Richilde, widow of Count Baldwin VI -- called De Mons, and mother of his eldest son and heir, Ernulph -- and Robert, surnamed the Frison, who claimed the regency during the minority of Ernulph, in conformity with the will of his deceased brother. Matilda, taking the side of her sister-in-law, sent the Earl of Hereford with what forces she could spare to her aid. The Earl was then a widower, and either from love or ambition, became a suitor for the hand of the still fair Countess of Flanders. Richilde, either responding to his affection, or from a desire to attach the valiant Norman more thoroughly to her interest, married him, and made him titular Count of Flanders. He did not long, however, enjoy his dignity, for, on the 22nd of February, 1071, a sanguinary engagement took place at Ravenchoven, near Cassel, between the forces of Robert the Frison and those of the Countess Richilde and her ally, Philip I, King of France, in which both her son, young Count Ernulph, and her husband, the Earl of Hereford, who fought by his side, fell together. According to Meier, the death-blow of William Fitz Osbern was dealt by one of his own knights, named Gerbodon, who had previously unhorsed him, but we are left in doubt as to the motive of the felon. The Earl's body was carried by his men-at-arms to the Abbey of Cormeilles, in Normandy, of which he was the founder in 1060, and buried there "amid much sorrow." His first wife, Adelina or Adeliza, was the daughter of Roger de Toeni. The date of her death is uncertain, but it probably took place some few years before the Conquest. She was buried at the Abbey of Lire, on the river Risle, in Normandy, which was also founded by Fitz Osbern as early as 1046; perchance on the occasion of his marriage, as Cormeilles may have been on that of her death. The dates are at least suggestive. By Adelina de Toeni he had three sons and two daughters. The eldest son, William, succeeded him as Lord of Breteuil and Pacy, and in all his other possessions in Normandy. The second, Ralph, was shorn a monk, when young, in the Abbey of Cormeilles; and the third, Roger de Breteuil, had the earldom of Hereford and all the land his father held in England. The eldest daughter, Emma, married Ralph, Earl of Norfolk, of whom much hereafter. The name of the second and that of her husband are at present unknown, but she became the mother of Raynold de Cracci. (It is clear, therefore, that Dugdale and the other genealogists are in error, who give to Roger de Toeni for wife Alicia, a daughter of William Fitz Osbern, independently of the fact that in that case she would have been his own grand-daughter. Adela, by Pere Anselm called Helene, the widow of Roger de Toeni, and mother of Adeline or Alicia, wife of Will. Fitz Osbern, married secondly Richard Count of Evreux, vide chapter viii., p. 249.) A natural daughter of William de Breteuil, named Isabel, married Ascelin Goel, and was the direct ancestress of the Lovels of Tichmarsh. (Vide vol. ii, ch. vii) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Return to index of Wm's Companions Pat's Genealogy Index VISIT MY ONLINE BOOKSTORES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UPDATED 01/11/2003 10:37:58
0481 - 0537
* Alrekr
Of
Uppsala
56
56
0460 - 0513
* Agni
Of
Uppsala
53
53
Living
Stark
0836 - 0912
* Otto
Of
Saschen
76
76
0856 - 0906
* Hadwig
Of
Saschen
50
50
0834 - 0865
* Heinrich
Of
Friesland
31
31
0803 - 0846
* Poppo
I Of
Saalgau
43
43
Living
Stark
0779 - 0814
* Heinrich
Of
Saalgau
35
35
0806 - 0866
* Luidolf
Of
Saschen
60
60
0806 - 0869
* Oda
Of
Saschen
63
63
0788 - 0827
* Bruno
Of
Saschen
39
39
D. 0180 BC
*Ptolemy V
Ephinanes
Of Egypt
Living
Stark
0209 BC - 0172 BC
*
Cleopatra
I Of Syria
~1809 - 1840
Sarah
31
31
Living
Stark
Unknown
Of
Huntington
*Manassas
de
Vere
* Petronilla
Of Boleine
Living
Stark
* Of
Boleine
*Gallus
de
Vere
*
Gerbrudis
Living
Gallagher
*Unknown
Cleremont
*
Amelius
de Vere
*
Helena
*Unknown
Bloyes
Vera
Doreen
Carrison
Living
Stark
* Otbo
de
Vere
*
Constance
Aleeta
Joyce
Fensom
1943 - 1964
Raymond
Maurice
Stark
20
20
1939 - 1940
Gary
Lawrence
Gallagher
1
1
Living
Stark
*
Nicasius
de Vere
* Agatbe
Of
Champagne
* Unknown
Of
Champagne
* Milo
de
Vere
* Avelina
Of
Nauntes
Living
Stark
* Of
Nauntes
1911
Fred
Spencer
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Russell
~0750
* Milo
de
Vere
* Bertbelle
Of France
~0985
*
Gerald
Fleitel
1068 - 1110
* Elias
de
Maine
42
42
Living
Smith
1070 - 1099
* Matilde de
Chateau
Du Lorie
29
29
~1042
* John
de La
Fleche
~1044
*
Paula
1044
* Gervase de
Chateau-Du-
Lorie
Living
Smith
Living
Rollins
1010
* Robert de
Chateau-
Du-Lorie
1896
Horace
McIntosh
Whinnen
1900
Hector
McDonald
Whinnen
1902
Frederick
Nicholas
Whinnen
1904
Douglas
Tretheway
Whinnen
1888 - 1963
Robert
John
Whinnen
74
74
1842 - 1913
* John
Whinnen
71
71
1844
*
Elizabeth
Nicholas
~1817 - 1899
* John
Nicholas
82
82
1868
Mary
Whinnen
Living
Rollins
1890 - 1972
*
Donald
Stark
81
81
Died of pneumonia/cardiac failure.
1869
Margaret
Cock
Whinnen
1871
Samuel
Whinnen
May
Whittington
1873
Penninah
Whinnen
George
Bell
1875
Julia
Hannah
Whinnen
1877
Margaret
Whinnen
1879
Richard
James
Whinnen
1882
Elizabeth
Laura
Whinnen
1884
Frederick
Blee
Whinnen
1853 - 1923
* Philip
Charles
Bidner
69
69
1888
William
Francis
Whinnen
~1814
*
Richard
Whinnen
~1815
*
Peninah
Williams
1839
Richard
Whinnen
1845
Edward
Blee
Whinnen
1847
Samuel
Whinnen
1847 - 1925
Eliza
Rodda
78
78
1852 - 1856
Annie
Blee
Whinnen
3
3
1849
Joseph
Williams
Whinnen
1858
Elizabeth
Annie
Whinnen
1859 - 1952
* Eliza
Mary
Gallagher
92
92
~1859
Richard
Hampton
1862
Thomas
James
Whinnen
~1862
Mary
Tremain
~1778
* John
Whinnen
~1776
* Mary
Blight
~1742
*Edward
Whinnen
1745/1746
* Mary
Mitchell
~1799 - 1803
John
Whinnen
4
4
~1801
William
Whinnen
~1803
Jenefer
Blight
Whinnen
1822 - 1898
* Adam
Joseph
Bidner
76
76
~1805
John II
Whinnen
~1807
Mary
Whinnen
1809
Edward
Whinnen
~1812
Elizabeth
Whinnen
~1816 - 1877
James
Whinnen
61
61
~1821 - 1876
Elizabeth
Callaway
55
55
~1824
Samuel
Whinnen
~1771
Mary
Whinnen
~1773
Elizabeth
Whinnen
~1775 - 1803
Edward
Whinnen
28
28
1819 - 1890
* Margaretha
Elizabetha
Strassburg
71
71
~1780
Margaret
Whinnen
~1781
Francis
Whinnen
~1800
Elizabeth
II
Whinnen
~1802
Edward
II
Whinnen
1734 - ~1812
*
William
Blight
78
78
*
Jennifer
Cornish
~1816 - 1920
*
Margaret
Cock
104
104
~1838
John
Nicholas
~1840
Juliana
Nicholas
1842 - 1881
Richard
Cock
Nicholas
39
39
1830 - 1870
*
William
Gallagher
40
40
~1847
James
Nicholas
~1850
Mary
Nicholas
*
Richard
Cock
* Mary
~1806
Grace
Cock
1789
* John
Nicholas
1794 - 1861
*
Martha
Hodge
67
67
1815
John II
Nicholas
1819
William
Nicholas
1821
Elizabeth
Nicholas
1835 - 1864
*
Catherine
Mooney
29
29
1823
James
Nicholas
~1754 - 1823
*
William
Hodge
69
69
*
Margaret
Ford
~1724
*
Reuben
Hodge
*
Martha
Hitchens
Ann
Hodge
1791
Robert
Hodge
1793
John
Hodge
1801
James
Hodge
1743 - 1822
*
William
Nicholas
79
79
Will dated 18 April 1819
Margaret
Connors
1753 - 1847
*
Margaret
Bligh
94
94
1795
Richard
Nicholas
1786
William
Nicholas
1782
Francis
Nicholas
1704
*John
Nicholas
1703
*
Ursula
Badcock
1743
Margaret
II
Nicholas
1732
John
Nicholas
1732
Margaret
I
Nicholas
1735
Thomas
I
Nicholas
1912 - 1992
Annie
Rachel Maud
(Rae) Stark
80
80
1738
Thomas
II
Nicholas
1743
Elizabeth
I
Nicholas
1748
James
Nicholas
1745
Elizabeth
II
Nicholas
1682
* John
Nicholls
1682
* Blanche
(Blanch)
Carnow (Carno)
1677
*
Thomas
Badcock
1680
* Mary
Coskeys
1649
* John
Badkock
1653
*
Ursella
Barwaneth
1913 - 1997
Colin James
Allen (Jim)
Stark
84
84
1715
Henry
Nicholls
1715
Margaret
Nicholls
1649 - 1732
*
George
Nicholls
83
83
1649
*
Margery
Davy
1669
George
Nicholls
1680
Peter
Nicholls
1680
Jone
Nicholls
1685
Unknown
Nicholls
1691
Josea
Nicholls
1688
Manassas
Nicholls
1823 - 1899
*
James
Dalton
76
76
Arrived on 'Emily' at Port Adelaide 8 Aug 1849. Some sources suggest he was born in France. Died of Inflammation of the Lungs.
1893 - 1949
* Lavinia
May
Holland
55
55
1614
*
William
Badkock
~1620
*
Margaret
John
Badkock
1643
Jane
Badkock
1645
Henry
Badkock
1647
Thomas
Badkock
1651
Richard
Badkock
1668
Ann
Badkock
1662
Jone
Badkock
1662
Elizabeth
Badkock
1825 - 1901
* Jane
Longhurst
76
76
Came to Australia via 'Emily' 1849. Cause of death Senile Decay.
~1586
*
Henerie
Badkock
~1586
*
Elezabeth
Katerne
Badkock
Margaret
Badkock
Living
Anderson
* ?
John
Cornish
* ?
Mary
*
Johnson
* Ann
George
~1776
*
James
Williams
1848 - 1919
James
Victor
Dalton
71
71
0975
*
Aimon
Living
Smith
* Hildeburg
de
Belesme
1030
*
Erenburg
1045
*
Robert
1080
*
Geoffrey
de Venuz
~1920 - 1994
Lorna
May
Carrison
74
74
Living
Stark
1038
* Ernulf
Of
Hesdin
*
Emmalina
1849 - 1924
Emily
Wilson
Moar Dalton
74
74
1022
* Ilbert
Payn De
Chaworth
1926
Mervyn
Hartley
Clarke
Living
Clarke
0992 - ~1040
* Payn Of
Freteval De
Chaworth
48
48
* Adierne
Of
Montdoubleau
0962
*
Nivelon
I
0962
*
Ermentrude
0962 - 1057
* Odo
Of
Montdoubleau
95
95
Living
Clarke
0962 - 1062
* Placentia
Of
Montoire
100
100
1855
Mary
Anne
Dalton
* Hugh
Of
Montdoubleau
* Adela
Of
Belzai
0932 - 1030
* Nihard
Of
Montdoubleau
98
98
* Milo
De
Monthlery
* Hodierne de
Gometz-la-
Ferte
Living
Clarke
* William
de
Gamaches
* Alice
Of
Paris
0980
* Geoffrey
Of
Bretagne
Living
Clarke
1857
Ellen
Dalton
* Hawise
Of
Normandy
0063 BC - 0012 BC
* Marcus
Vipsanius
Agrippina
0039 BC - 0014 BC
* Julia
Agusta
* Appius
Claudius
Nero
0124 BC - 0091 BC
* Marcus
Livius
Drusus
Living
Clarke
D. 0020 BC
*
Caius
Octavius
D. 0043 BC
* Atia
*
Lucius
Vispanius
Living
Widdison
1859
Harriett
Jarret
Dalton
Living
Stark
23 Sep 0063 BC - 0014
*Augustus
Of
Rome
Ordered the census which took place at the time of the birth of Jesus Christ.
Living
Stark
Living
MacLennan
D. 0016
*
Scribonia
Of Rome
* Tiberius
Claudius
Nero
1953 - 1996
Ian
Bruce
Stark
43
43
Richard
Marshall
D. 0019 BC
* Marcus
Livius
Drusus
* Marcus
Atius
Balbus
1861
Matilda
Dalton
Living
Stark
0051 BC
* Julia
Minor
*
Caius
Octavius
*
Gaius
Antonius
Living
Stark
*
Caius
Octavius
0085 BC
* Caius
Julius
Caesar
Living
Stark
*
Marcia
Julius
Caesar
1864
Martha
Dalton
* Lucius
Scribonius
Libo Of Rome
Living
Stark
*
Johanna
Barratt
1861 - 1942
Laurence Patrick
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
81
81
1873
Johanna 'Annie'
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
1879
Mary Jane
Gallagher
(Gallohue)
Living
Stark
Living
Stark
1084
*
William
Comyn
1088
*
Maud
Basset
1865
Robert
Thomas
Dalton
1095
*
Uchtred
FitzWaldeve
1929
Herbert
Norman
Moulton
Living
Moulton
1066
*
Bethoc
Dunkeld
Living
Moulton
1926 - 1997
Valma
Dawn
Catlin
70
70
Living
Stark
1053
* John
Comyn
1057
*
Giffard
1022 - 28 Jan 1068/1069
*
Robert
Comyn
In 1068, completely ignoring the wishes of the people of that county, William the Conqueror created him Earl of Northumberland. The Northumbrians first decided to abandon their dwellings but, as they were prevented by the inclemency of the weather, decided to kill their new Earl. Egelvine, Bishop of Durham, warned Robert Comyn of their intentions but he ignored the warning and, using Durham as his base, with 700 soldiers commenced on a course of plunder and bloodshed. Incensed, the people of the neighbourhood assaulted Durham and the Earl and all his men were put to death. Source: Leo van de Pas
1868
Amy
Dalton
1844 - 1892
*
Alexander
Stark
48
48
Died of Influenza.
*
Osbert
Giffard
Living
Stark
1068
*
Waldeve
Tynedale
1033 - 1100
* Donald III
'The Fair'
Of Scotland
67
67
* John
Comyn
Raymond
Gallagher
Living
Stark
* Ranulph
'The Rich'
de Saint Liz
*
Ralph
de Mar
*
William
de Mar
1869
Arthur
Dalton
* Aldred
Of
Bernecia
Living
Stark
* Herbert
Of
Cornwall
1013
* Godwin
Of
Cornwall
~1853
Mary
Anne
Ferguson
1874
Alfred
Dalton
~1864 - 1908
Marianna
Meadows
44
44
1903
Vera
Mary
Dalton
1876
Ernest
Dalton
1878
Sarah
Dalton
1843 - 1906
Alfred
Dalton
63
63
1880
Marianne
Dalton
1786
*
Penina
Blee
~1754
*
Thomas
Blee
~1757
* Ann
Walters
~1729
*
Stephen
Blee
1731
*
Margery
Rosewarden
~1710 - 1756
*
Stephen
Blee
46
46
~1707
*
Margaret
1840 - 1919
Mary Ann
(Marian)
Clifford
79
79
1844
James
Boothey
1784
*
Robert
Longhurst
1882 - 1941
Ernest
Harold
Boothey
59
59
1876
Ada
Susannah
Bridgman
~1782
Thomas
Blee
~1784
Stephen
Blee
~1790
Edward
Blee
~1792
Ann
Blee
~1774
John
Blee
~1751
Rachel
Blee
~1756
Stephen
Blee
~1759
George
Blee
~1797
* Mary
Hodges
~1771
Margery
Blee
~1725 - <1730
Charles
Blee
5
5
~1732
Sabinah
Blee
~1734
Margaret
Blee
~1736
Elizabeth
Blee
~1738
Joan
Blee
~1740
John
Blee
Marie
Badkock
1791
James
Nicholas
1721 - 1780
*
Francis
Bligh
59
59
1786
*
Robert
Dalton
1702 - 1768
* Jane
Balsam
66
66
1754 - 1817
William
Bligh
63
63
Born at St. Tudy, near Plymouth, on 9 Sep 1754, he was the son of a customs officer. His mother died when William was 14, but it was very early when his parents had decided on as Naval career for their young son. He first appears on Naval roles at the age of 9, when, at the behest of Hon. Keith Stewart, said to have been a close relative of his mother, he was entered as a personal servant to an officer on a man-of-war. This was a common practice, even at that age, in order to give young boys who were destined for a Naval career the necessary 6 years qualification as early as possible. He was "paid off" on 21 Feb 1763. By the age of 15, he was not only well-versed in science and mathematics, but had developed fine talents as a writer and illustrator. He does not appear in the records again until 27 Jul 1770, when his name was entered on the paysheets of the H.M.S. Hunter, a small sloop mounting only 10 guns, rated as an AB and master's mate. This was soon after the death of his mother and the remarriage of his father, and these event may have had something to do with Bligh's re-entry into the Navy. It is believed that, in accord with normal custom, he was carried as an "additional midshipman", that is, a young man deserving of officer's training, but carried in addition to the two official midshipman's positions on a naval vessel. They were officially recognized as junior officers in training, both by respect of crew and duties assigned. They also became official midshipmen as soon as vacancies occurred. On 4 Feb 1771, he was discharged by order of Rear Admiral Sir Richard Spry, and re-entered the next day on the same ship as a midshipman. He remained on that ship until 22 Feb 1771, when he was reassigned to H.M.S. Crescent whereon he served until 23 Aug 1774. He then served on H.M.S. Ranger. It was on 20 Mar 1776 that he received what was to be his first opportunity to visit the South Seas, when he was appointed Master on board H.M.S. Resolution, commanded by Capt. James Cook, just prior to Cook's third voyage. At 22, to be appointed sailing master on a major research vessel was a great tribute to his skill and connections. There is evidence that he was in constant attendance on this ship, and in consultation with Cook and his officers constantly. On 1 May 1776, he passed his examination for Lieutenant. The voyage of the Resolution ended in late 1780, and Bligh took a 12-month leave from active duty, during which time he was married. Although little is known of his activities during this period, there is some indication that he may have spent time writing memoires of the famous voyage. His wife's relationship to Sir Duncan and Captain Sir John Campbell paved the way to additional career-enhancing appointments. After serving on a number of ships, in Jun 1783, he entered the service of Sir Duncan Campbell in the West Indian trade. The pay of a junior lieutenant often demanded occasional forays into higher-paying positions, and this appears to have been the case here. It was in the service of Campbell that Bligh commanded his first ship, the Lynx. He remained in the Jamaica trade for four years, his last assignment on board the Brittania, where he was to meet Fletcher Christian an others who were to sail with him on the Bounty. After the Bounty voyage, Bligh commanded a number of scientific voyages. Specialization in scientific projects paid off, and he became a Fellow of the Royal Society. Late in 1796, he was appointed commander of H.M.S. Director, a comparatively old ship, but a very important naval command. It was rated 4th class, mounted 64 guns, and carried 491 crewmen. This marked Bligh's promotion to senior command assigment. It is also interesting that in 1797, Bligh was involved in another serious mutiny, known as the Mutiny at the Nore. The crews of a number of naval vessels, including the Director, under the command of Vice-Admiral Buckner, mutinied together. It was a bloody and violent struggle. At its conclusion, Bligh stood strongly behind his ship's crew, and was commended by both seaman and officer alike for his handling of the affair. His naval career was distinguished. Brave in battle, he was line astern of Nelson at Copenhagen in 1801. The wartime period ended in 1802, and Bligh again commanded a scientific voyage, this time a hydrological expedition. In 1805, he was appointed Governor of New South Wales. His success in the realm of politics, unfortunately, did not match his prowess as a Naval commander. His appointment lasted until 1808 when the colonists "mutinied" and sent him back to England. He arrived there on 25 Oct 1810, and never received further appointment. His service record was as follows: * 01 Jul 1762 Captain's Servant: HMS Monmouth * 27 Jul 1770 AB: HMS Hunter * 05 Feb 1771 Midshipman: HMS Hunter * 22 Sep 1771 Midshipman: HMS Crescent * 02 Sep 1774 AB: HMS Ranger * 30 Sep 1775 Midshipman: HMS Ranger * 20 Mar 1776 Master: HMS Resolution * 14 Feb 1781 Master: HMS Belle Poule * 05 Oct 1781 Lieutenant: HMS Berwick * 01 Jan 1782 Lieutenant: HMS Princess Amelia * 20 Mar 1782 Lieutenant: HMS Cambridge * 14 Jan 1783 Half-Pay Lieutenant * 16 Aug 1787 Commanding Lieutenant: HMS Bounty * 14 Nov 1790 Captain: HMS Falcon (sloop) * 15 Dec 1790 Captain: HMS Medea * 08 Jan 1791 Half-Pay Captain * 16 Apr 1791 Captain: HMS Providence * 07 Sep 1793 Half-Pay Captain * 30 Apr 1795 Captain: HMS Calcutta * 07 Jan 1796 Captain: HMS Director * 03 Jul 1800 Half-Pay Captain * 13 Mar 1801 Captain: HMS Glatton * 12 Apr 1801 Captain: HMS Monarch * 08 May 1801 Captain: HMS Irresistible * 28 May 1802 Half-Pay Captain * 02 May 1804 Captain: HMS Warrior * 30 Apr 1805 Half-Pay Captain * 24 May 1805 Governor of New South Wales * 27 Sep 1805 Commander: HMS Porpoise * 14 Nov 1805 Captain: HMS Porpoise * 31 Jul 1808 Commodore: HMS Porpoise * 03 Apr 1810 Commodore: HMS Hindostan * 31 Jul 1810 Half-Pay Rear Admiral * 04 Jun 1814 Half-Pay Vice Admiral William Bligh does not deserve his popular reputation as a cruel villain. He could better be described as a "young turk ... a man moving in the fast lane". He evidenced early brilliance matched with the right connections. His perfectionism carried him far, but also led to most of his problems. He could not emotionally understand or deal well with persons who did not share his devotion to duty and detail. He was uncommonly concerned with the physical health of his men, and contrary to popular misconceptions, he was slow to impose corporal punishment. But he could, and did, impose fearful tongue- lashings, and his temper was legendary. These were not traits that would endear him to the violent, street-smart members of the lower classes who made up the bulk of the crews over which he served. Like many of today's corporate executives, he almost, but not quite, reached the pinnacle of his profession. He is a man deserving of admiration.
1828
Francis
Nicholas
1835
Martha
Nicholas
1789
William
Hodge
1854
William
Nicholas
~1687
*
Richard
Bligh
1688 - 1766
* Jane
Cocks
77
77
John
Bligh
Richard
Bligh
*
Anne
Reed
Reginald
Bligh
James
Bligh
William
I Bligh
William
II Bligh
Joseph
Bligh
Mary
Bligh
1646
* John
Bligh
* Mary
Watts
Temperance
Bligh
Mary
Bligh
1741 - 1804
*
Thomas
Longhurst
63
63
John
Bligh
Elizabeth
Bligh
Dorothy
Bligh
Patience
Bligh
James
Bligh
1697
Charles
Bligh
D. 1663
*
Richard
Bligh
* Mary
Westlake
Dorothy
Bligh
Elizabeth
Bligh
~1744
*
Margaret
Burr
Mary
Bligh
James
Bligh
Loveday
Bligh
Richard
Bligh
Charles
Bligh
~1592
*
James
Bligh
*
Loveday
Worthevale
Elizabeth
Bligh
John
Bligh
*
Richard
Bligh
* John
Brown
1565
*
Elizabeth
Inglett
Elizabeth
Bligh
~1542 - Feb 1597/1598
* John
Bligh
~1546
*
Agnes
Arscott
Thomas
Bligh
Margaret
Bligh
Thomazine
Bligh
Mary
Bligh
Johanna
Bligh
Robert
Bligh
*
Margaret
MacCaulay
1851 - 1909
* Anne Rachel
(Rachel)
Dalton
58
58
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