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Living
Neuman
1930 - 1999
Dorothy
Lorraine
Smith
68
68
RFN2
1925
Raymond
Fred
Neuman
RFN3
1921 - 2000
LaVerne
Edwin
Thompson
78
78
RFN5
1923 - 1988
Shirley
Kathleen
Lang
64
64
RFN6
Living
Thompson
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Anna
bint
Simon
Thor
George
Thompson
RFN12
1896 - 1964
Emma
Börreson
68
68
RFN13
1898 - 1986
Henry
Warren
Lang
88
88
RFN14
1898 - 1977
Theresa
May
Wade
78
78
RFN15
Living
Thompson
1897 - 1969
Geert
(George)
Jacob Smith
72
72
RFN17 BIOGRAPHY [UL:George and Eva Smith:UL][BO::BO] George Jacob Smith fi rst met Eva Mable Goodale when they were both students at Moorhead State Teach er's College. While going to school, Eva earned some of her spending money by babysitting for Harry Halvorson, who would become her second husband many yea rs after the death of George Smith. George and Eva were married on June 8, 19 23. After George received his teaching degree, they moved to Holt, Minnesota. Eva taught at that time with a two-year teaching certificate from Moorhead S tate College. One of their favorite pastimes in those early years was working difficult math problems together. In 1926 they moved to Birchdale, Minnesota with their infant daughter Virginia. Their house was a teacherage just acros s the schoolyard from where George was teaching. There were times when Ginny and Viv, as young girls, would sneak up to the school and peek in the windows where their Dad was teaching. At one time he got so upset with Eva for not w atching them more closely that he had them tied by long ropes to a tree near t he house. In 1930 they accepted teaching positions at a little two room schoo l in Mina, South Dakota, near the town of Aberdeen. Dorothy and the twins, D on and Donna were added to the family during that time. It was very dry durin g that time, with many dust storms and Eva often had to hang wet bath towels i n the windows to keep the dust out of the house. It was also a time when many bums traveled from door to door begging for food and bands of gypsies roamed the countryside. The gypsy women wore long skirts with many pockets and stole many items from local stores, hiding their stolen goods in the pockets. In 1 933 they returned to Birchdale, Minnesota to live in the same house they had left three years earlier. George taught at Indus High School, where he was Pr incipal, with four teachers under his supervision. The little house was actua lly built as a one bedroom home, but George was able to partition off part of the living room to make room for the five children. They used gas and kerosen e lanterns for lighting and had no running water. The well, with a hand pump, was two blocks away. In the winter they would often melt snow for doing dish es and washing clothes, but drinking water still needed to come from the well . Dorothy had a vivid memory of one very cold, subzero day when her older sis ters dared her to stick her tongue to the pump handle. It stuck firmly to the frozen metal and in a panic she pulled away, leaving the top surface of her to ngue painfully behind. The toilet was an outhouse in the back yard. The hous e was heated by wood, which was provided as part of George's salary. In 1941 they moved to Littlefork, Minnesota and lived in a house that had been the fi rst hospital there. This was the first time that they had a home with electri city. George was Superintendent of Schools and also taught some classes. Whe n he needed a teacher to fill a vacancy, Eva began teaching after 19 years of being a housewife and mother. In 1943 the family moved to 506 Stanton Ave. in Fergus Falls, Minnesota. This was a small home that George had inherited fro m his father, Jacob Smith. The house next door was owned by Jacob's brother, Jackson. George's mother, Tina Smith, lived upstairs with his uncle and aunt . At that time George accepted a job in Alaska, working with his younger brot her Jake as an electrician at the Air Base near Anchorage. He sent home check s of $700 - $800 which was big money in those last years of World War II. Wi th the money that Eva was able to set aside, Virginia attended college for two years at St. Cloud State College. While going to school, she worked at Montg omery Ward and the Atwood Book & Gift Shop. She then repaid the school loan an d the money was used to send Vivian to college for two years. At that time tu ition, room and board cost only $420 each quarte
1901 - 1981
Eva
Mable
Goodale
80
80
RFN18
Living
Neuman
Living
Armstrong
Living
Armstrong
Living
Armstrong
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Berndt
1886 - 1969
Paul
Fredrick
Neuman
82
82
RFN28
1888 - 1967
Alvina Katrina
Wilhemina
Freda Roth
79
79
RFN29
1866 - 1938
Jacob
George
Smith
71
71
RFN30
1877 - 1956
Trientja
(Tena)
Beving
78
78
RFN31
1926
Virginia
Mae
Smith
RFN32
1928
Vivian
Marie
Smith
RFN33
D. 1998
Gerald
Nordin
RFN35
Living
Nordin
D. 1999
Arthur
Ladwig
RFN36
1866 - 1943
Clark
Baker
Goodale
76
76
RFN37
1875 - 1966
Anna
Christine
Witty
90
90
RFN38
Harry
Halvorson
RFN39
1830 - 1903
George
Washington
Goodale
72
72
RFN40
1839 - 1923
Phoebe
Elvira
Nichols
84
84
RFN41
1789 - 1872
David
Goodale
82
82
RFN42
1788 - 1859
Elizabeth
Brackett
Welch
70
70
RFN43
1755 - 1842
Josiah
Goodale
86
86
RFN44
1757 - 1840
Persis
Babcock
83
83
RFN45
1808 - 1863
John
Nichols
55
55
RFN46
1809 - 1893
Mary
Chase
83
83
RFN47
Henry
Carver
RFN48
Myron
Brackett
RFN49
1844 - 1884
Henrich
(Henry)
Witty
40
40
RFN50 BIOGRAPHY INFORMATION SOURCES: Marriage Licenses, Civil War Records, Pension records, Personal records of Eva Smith Affidavit of original Family R ecord signed by a Notary PublicR
1846 - 1925
Maria
(Mary)
Hardt
79
79
RFN51
Fred
Hardt
RFN52
Amanda
or
Amelia
RFN53
Frederic
Witty
RFN54
1728
Jonathon
Goodale
RFN55
Mary
RFN56
~1737
Jason
Babcock
RFN57
~1742
Mary
Beeton
RFN58
~1762
John
Welch
RFN59
~1766
Hannah
Davis
RFN60
31 JAN 1700/01 - 1759
Jonathon
Goodale
RFN61 BIOGRAPHY Jonathon and Keturah Goodale were second cousins, being the great-grandchildren of Robert Goodell. It is interesting to note that two of their great-great grandchildren, George Washington Goodale and Phoebe Elvira N ichols were also married 131 years later. Jonathon Goodale, Sr. made his will in 1758, in which he says he is going into the Expedition Against Canada. He must have died soon after, for his will was proved in 1759. It mentions his sons, Jonathon and Joseph and wife Keturah, who in the same year is put by th e Selectmen, under the guardianship of one Josiah Wilkins, as a person non com pos.
1701
Keturah
Goodell
RFN62
1670 - 1739
Isaac
Goodell
69
69
Isaac (Jr.) Goodale5 was born March 29, 1670. He was a yeoman and a carpenter and he served in a military expedition against Canada in 1690. He married Mary Abbe on December 21, 1692. (Mary Abbe was the daughter of Samuel and Mary (Knowlton) Abbe, born 1674. Samuel (1648-1690) was the son of John and Mary Abbe. Mary Knowlton was the daughter of William and Ann Elizabeth Knowlton). Isaac (Jr.) and Mary Abbe Goodale had 11 children: 1. Isaac, married Deborah Hawkins, had 7 children 2. Jacob, his twin, died young 3. Samuel, married Anne Fowler, had 9 children 4. Hester, married first a Page, second, Elias Trask 5. Ezekiel, married Lydia Lee, no record of children 6. Jonathan, married Keturah Goodale, had 2 children 7. Sarah, married a McGraw of Marblehead, Mass. 8. Abigail, married Ebenezer Abbe 9. Enos, married Mary Angiers of Sudbury, Mass., had 8 children 10. Jacob, married Mehitable Browne, had 8 children 11. Mary, married John Oakes
1674
Mary
Abbe
RFN64
1672 - 1718
Joseph
Goodell
46
46
RFN65
1674 - >1711
Mary
Hutchinson
37
37
RFN66
1640 - 1715
Zachariah
Goodell
75
75
RFN67 BIOGRAPHY In 1665 his father conveyed to Zachariah a portion of his estate containing about one hundred acres lying northeast of the Goodell homeste ad, and beyond the farm which he conveyed three years later to his son, Isaac. Zechariah's final home, however, was the house built by John Walcott and in his possession as late as 1700. The farm on which it was built was a part of the original Goodell grant, and it may possibly have been only under lease to Walcott, as there are no deeds to show the facts of the tenure. The house, which has been the victim of "modernization" was still standing in 1926. The court records of 1672 tell the tragi-comic history of an incident in the life of Elizabeth Beauchamp Goodell. It appears that John Smith, husband of her sister-in-law (also named Elizabeth), had for years made somewhat crude and amorous advances toward her. In a too successful attempt to scandalize the gossips of the Village neighborhood, she told several women, who came purposefully to ferret out the details of the affair, a highly colored version of Smith's conduct. As a result she found herself the defendant in a suit for slander brought by Smith, and both of them were hailed before the magistrate for "uncivil carriage". Smith lost his suit and was sentenced to be whipped and to remain in goal until the sentence should be carried out or pay a fine of forty shillings. The whipping was remitted, however, and the incident closed with a confession by Elizabeth that she was "heartily sorry for her foolish words." Zachariah disposed of his property to his sons by a series of deeds between 1708 a nd 1715. In the latter year he conveyed his homestead to his son David in consideration of support and care of himself and his wife for the remainder of th eir lives. David died two years later and nothing more appears to show where his parents, then about seventy-five years of age, spent their last years.
1646 - 1696
Elizabeth
Beauchamp
50
50
RFN68 BIOGRAPHY The court records of 1672 tell the tragi-comic history of an incident in the life of Elizabeth Beauchamp Goodell. It appears that John S mith, husband of her sister-in-law (also named Elizabeth), had for years made somewhat crude and amorous advances toward her. In a too successful attempt t o scandalize the gossips of the Village neighborhood, she told several women, who came purposefully to ferret out the details of the affair, a highly colore d version of Smith's conduct. As a result she found herself the defendant in a suit for slander brought by Smith, and both of them were hailed before the magistrate for "uncivil carriage". Smith lost his suit and was sentenced to b e whipped and to remain in goal until the sentence should be carried out or pa y a fine of forty shillings. The whipping was remitted, however, and the inci dent closed with a confession by Elizabeth that she was "heartily sorry for he r foolish words."
1601 - 1683
Robert
Goodell
81
81
BIOGRAPHY William and Elizabeth Goodell, the grandparents of Robert were probably members of the Godelle or Goodelle family, French Huguenots who emigrated to London in the 1530's. Huguenots were Protestant followers of John Calvin during the 1500's and 1600's. It's members were persecuted in France and suffered greatly. In all, eight wars were fought between the Huguenots an d French Catholics between 1562 and 1598 in their struggle for survival. Although the protestants had the support of many French leaders and nobility, the queen mother, Catherine de Mâedicis made a compact with the Duke of Guise which resulted in the Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day on August 24, 1572, whe n thousands of Huguenots were slaughtered. During this period of per-secution more than two million of the Huguenots left France to seek a more friendly at mosphere. The Goodells were among that number who emigrated to England. The name appears as Goodell, Goodale, Goodall, or according to the late Rev. Isaac Goodell, as "some other of the 18 variations". We find the historian Bowen and other genealogists call him Goodell, while the historian Perly calls him Goodale. Although his birth year was given as 1604 in his oath of allegiance when sailing for America, one of Robert's descendants has verified the church baptisimal record as 1601. The "Elizabeth" left Ipswich, England on April 30, 1634 and landed at Boston in July. At that time, Robert Goodell was 30, his wife Katherine was 28, their daughter Mary 4 years old, their son Abraham was 2 and their baby, Isaac was 6 months old. The first record of the Goodells in America indicated that they settled just north of Salem at Great Cove in the North Fields. The Spring, so often mentioned in the early records, in what was later called Liberty Hill Park, was on Robert Goodell's farm and was known for the first half century of Salem's history as Goodell's Spring. It is not recorded how he acquired this first farm. However, in 1636 and in 1638 he received grants of twenty acres each in that portion of the town which became known as Salem Village, and he gradually acquired by purchase similar grants ma de to other early settlers, until by 1651, he was the owner of a tract of land at Bald Hill comprising four hundred and eighty acres, which was con-firmed to him by a town grant on November 7, 1651. He probably moved to this new property at about that time, and as opportunity offered, disposed of his Great Cove farm, deeding the house and a portion of the land to his son-in-law, John Smith in 1658. Another lot was conveyed to Nicholas Manning in 1667, and a third conveyance was probably made to John Orne, who owned a part of the property , hitherto unconveyed in 1684. Robert Goodell seems to have devoted his life to the developement of his large grant for the benefit of his sons and daughters. As they married, he gave them a generous acreage as a wedding gift, thus creating a family settlement about his own homestead. Although his clear fi rm handwriting would seem to indicate a good education, he took no part in loc al or broader governmental affairs and his name seldom appears in the records in any active capacity except as plaintiff or defendant in suits based on the ownership of his stock or land. His will reads as follows, "I, Robert Goodell being now aged & weake in body, as alsoe my wife and my daughter Elizabeth Bennett, hath taken care of me and therefore my will & desire is & I doe will & bequeath unto my daughter Elizabeth Bennett & my grand child, John Smith, m y house & the orchard & all the meadowes that I now possess with the pasture which is about eight acres of upland be it more or lesse, all which house, land & meadows my daughter Elizabeth Bennett, and my Grand child John Smith, shall enjoy after the lease, or terme, that it is now let for, is expired, they or either of them paying as much rent, yearly as the wife of the abovesaid Robert Goodell hath let it for which is to the value of twenty shillings in currant pay, dated the twelfth of October one thousand six hundred eighty two; & after my daughter Elizabeth's decease, the whole lands shall be my grand child's John Smith. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand & seal Francis Scerry Robert Goodell John. Massey his marke & seale The sd Francis Scerry & John Massey, whoe are entered as witnesses to the above written, made oath in court at Salem that in their presence the sd Robert did signe & seale to the above written as his act & deed & last will & testament: In Court at Salem; 27 June 1683 Attesr Hilliard Verne Cler. We whose names are under written being desired by the widdow Margaret Goodell, wife of the late deceased Robert Goodell, do appr'se the estate of the deceased Robert Goodell, aprizes as followeth, £ s d the house uplands orchard & meadow 71 00 00 2 cowes £ 5, wearing apparell bedding & other lumber £ 3 1s 08 16 00 -- -- -- 79 16 00 Salem the 10 day of March 1682/3 Nathaniel Putnam Job Swinerton Whether the house in question satisfied the "prenuptual" arrangement that Robert had with Margaret remains to be investigated. At the time of their marriage, he had agreed to "settle on her twelve acres of land, a new dwelling house which I doe intend, God welling, shortly to build and two cowes & a horse or mare fitt for her to ride on." This property was to have gone to Robert's son Jacob at the death of his step - mother, though Jacob died without issue prior to the date of the will. Sources: A Genealogy of the Descendants of Robert Goodale / Goodell of Salem Mass by Williams, Geo E. - 1984; Pioneers of Massachusetts by Pope, Charles Henry -1900; LDS Ancestral file (Goodale); History of Salem MA by Perly; Wason Research; Vital Records of Salem MA; Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy by Pierce, Frederick Clifton - 1898
1606 - 1645
Catherine
Kilham
39
39
RFN70
1616 - 1668
Edward
Beauchamp
52
52
RFN71 BIOGRAPHY BEAUCHAMP Thomas de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, b 1313, was a knight of the Garter. He was a descendant of the Sureties Roger and Hugh Bi god and Henry de Bohun. At the age of two years he succeeded his father as Ea rl of Warwick and later took an active part in the wars in Scotland and in Fra nce. One of the chief commanders of the battle of Crecy, he distinguished hims elf at Poitiers, and was constituted marshal of England. he and his wife Cathe rine Mortimer are both buried in a splendid tomb at Warwick, where thei r effigies may still be seen. They had 16 ch. Our decent is through Guy who m Philippa Ferrers. This is a Huguenot line. This is of course also a Magna Char ta line. Edward Beauchamp b ca 1620 in Eng. d ca 1682 in Salem, Mass. of Sale m and Lynn is said to have been a relative of Robert Beauchamp of Ipswich and a cousin of Sir Oliver Beauchamp, merchant adventurer. In 1639 he joined the c hurch and his 1st wife Mary joined the following year; freeman February 28, 16 43; proprietor at Lynn 1638; Clerk of Writs. Lived Salem 1645-1661; moved to Lynn. Married 1st 1640 Mary (???) who died 1668; 2nd November 8, 1670 Elizabet h Metcalf wid. b. ************************************************************ ********** **** Edward Beauchamp, a French Huguenot, was officially received as an inhabitant of Salem Villiage in 1636, and given four acres of land nea r the North Cove, immediately south and adjacent to the lands owned by Robert Goodell. In 1640 he was elected as Constable of Salem Village, an office of i mportance at that time. He later moved to Lynn, Massachusetts from 1645 to 16 61, and then returned to Salem. INDIVIDUAL_NOTE Variations of spelling the na me Beauchamp - Beachem or Burcham
~1623 - 16 JAN 1684/85
Mary
Metcalf
RFN72
1626 - 16 JAN 1685/86
Elizabeth
Metcalfe
RFN73
1633 - 1679
Isaac
Goodell
46
46
RFN74 BIOGRAPHY On February 10, 1667/8 Robert Goodell conveyed to his son, Isaac, a portion of his property at Bald Hill in Salem Village, containing one hundred acres, and he built a house thereon which was still standing in 1926, and which descended from father to son until the year 1915. He died intestate and his widow and his brother-in-law, John Pease, were appointed to administer his estate. The inventory was taken October 23, 1679 by Nathaniel Felton and Job Swinerton and showed property value at ¹ 192:7. The estate was not final ly settled until many years later in 1693 when the eldest son, Isaac became a dministrator, taking the place of Captain Pease who died at that time. Follow ing the death of Isaac, his widow married James Stimson of Reading sometime be fore 1684. Mr. Stimson died in 1691. Patience received one third of the Stim son estate when it was divided in 1708. She apparently left Reading in 1698/9 to live with her son, Isaac in Salem. *************************************** ******************************* ****** ISAAC2 GOODALE (Robert1) was born in 1634, and was six months old when the family sailed for America. He married Patience Cook 25: 11: 1668. Nothing is known of her parentage or early history and there is no evidence to connect her with the contemporary Cook family of Salem. On February 10, 1667/8, his father conveyed to him a portion of his property at Bald Hill in Salem Village, containing one hundred acres, and he uilt thereon a house which is still standing and which descended from father to son until the year 1915. Isaac Goodale died, intestate, in 1679, and his widow, Patience Goodale, and his brother-in-law, John Pease, were appointed to administer his estate.º The inventory was taken October 23' 1679, by Nathaniel Felt on and Job Swinerton, and showed property valued at 192: 7. The estate was no t finally settled until many years later, the eldest son, Isaac, taking the pl ace of Capt. Pease, who had died, as administrator in 1693. Patience Goodale , the widow, married James Stimson of Reading before 1684.** James Stimson died in 1691, and his widow received one-third of his estate when it was divided in 1708. She apparently left Reading to live with her son Isaac, as she was "of Salem" in 1698/9.(+)(+) (*) Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Es sex County IV: 142. (+) Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex Cou nty VI: 190. ?? Records and Files of the Quarterly Court of Essex County VII: 294. Essex County Deeds 4: 208. º Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County VII: 323. Essex County Probate 303: 183. ** Essex County D eeds 303: 183. (+)(+) Essex County Deeds 13: 64.
~1635
Patience
Cook
RFN75
James
Stimson
RFN76
1568 - 1642
Robert
Goodell
74
74
There are two theories as to the origination of the family name, GOODALE, GOODELL, GOODALL. One is reported by a research bureau in Washington, D.C. and supported by Dr. Robert L. Goodale of Ipswich, Mass.: The name is of Norse origin. There was a Goodel de Brixi who came from Normandy with Edward the Confessor before 1066. The Goodalls were a very early family in the British Isles, stemming from members living in Goldale, now Gowdall, a town in the parish of Snaith, Yorkshire. They were of the landed gentry and yeomanry. Among the earliest definite records are those of Villa de Goldale, Johannes or John Godhale, Recardus or Richard de Goldall, and Johannes or John Godhall of Yorkshire, in the year 1379. In the class of 1470 at Oxford was a Richard Goodale (recorded in the library of Merton College). Listed at the head of his class, the name was `Godyle.' It is true that in early times very little attention was given to the spelling of names, and during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, there was no fixed authority for the spelling of either `proper' names or surnames.1 The other theory is advanced by Professor Isaac Goodell of Ft. Worth, Texas, after much study: Robert Goodell is claimed to be of French Hugenot descent. `Goodelle' is the French origin of our family name and this spelling is yet found in Paris and a number of smaller towns in France. Later, one of our ancestors emigrated to Scotland, and about 1580, as tradition goes, a Goodelle family (Robert's grandfather) moved from Scotland to London. The name of Goodelle was Anglicized to Goodell, then Goodale and later Goodall in the coastal counties of Suffolk and Norfolk, England. Baptiste Goodell, supposed to be a son of that family and uncle to Robert, made his first appearance as an actor with William Shakespeare in Henry VI before Queen Elizabeth in 1589. The name is significant of family occupation as may be inferred from the coat-of-arms of the Scottish families, described as follows: `Arms: On 3 caps and in the middle fesse point as many ears of barley, two in saltire, and one in pale of the last. Crest: A silver cup PPR, motto Good God increase' 1 This was also true in early America. The record of Soldiers and Sailors in the Revolution gives no less than 16 different spellings of the name Goodale, many times with reference to the same man in the same document. At any rate, to be found recorded in the Parish Records of Dennington, Suffolk County, England, are the following: Marriages: 1590 12 June Robert Goodale and Joan Artys Baptisms: 1601 15 Aug. Robert, son of Robert and Joan Goodale Other children of this couple whose baptisms are recorded also are Mary, 1591; Margaret, 1593; William, 1596; Anne, 1599; Edward, 1603; Elizabeth, 1607; and Thomas, 1610. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------- The Goodale_Goodell_Goodall Family especially the Artemus Kimball Goodale Family Copyright 1999 Merriam Roebuck Wiggins. All Rights Reserved. King James had succeeded Queen Elizabeth in 1603, followed by King Charles in l625. One of the first acts of King Charles on his ascension to the throne, that caused a storm of indignation throughout the country was the imposition of a forced loan without the grant of Parliament. The imposition of ship money was the final measure that drove thousands to America. In the 9th year of the reign of King Charles, 1634, Robert Goodell3 and wife Katherine Kilham (daughter probably of Henry and Alice Goodale Kilham) sailed from the port of Ipswich, Suffolk County, England, on April 30 on the ship `Elizabeth,' Capt. William Andrews, Master. With them were daughter Mary, 4, and sons Abraham, 2, and Isaac `age one-half year.' The Goodall Crest They landed in Salem, Massachusetts, where Robert purchased 543 acres of land from the town of Salem and Danvers. That same year he received a grant of 40 acres from the town of Salem, between Ipswich River, Redding Road and the Newburyport turnpike. In 1652 the town laid out to him 504 acres. Children born in Salem to Robert and Katherine were Zachariah, 1638; Jacob, 1640; Hannah, 1642; and Sarah, 1645. In 1646 Katherine died and Robert married Margaret Larraby in 1647, by whom he had one daughter, Elizabeth. Robert seems to have devoted his life to the development of his large grant for the benefit of his sons and daughters to whom, as they married, he gave generous acreages as wedding gifts, thus creating a family settlement about his own homestead. His firm, clear handwriting would indicate a good education, but he took no part in governmental affairs and his name seldom appears in the records in any capacity except as plaintiff or defendant in suits based on the ownership of his land and stock. On August 30, 1669, he made a settlement on his second wife, Margaret: "12 acres of land, a new dwelling house, two cowes and a horse or mare fitt for her to ride on." He died and his will was proved June 27, 1683—he left his estate to his daughter Elizabeth and his grandson, John Smith. Wife Margaret was mentioned as having already been provided for, as were his other children.
~1570 - 1610
Joan
Artys
40
40
RFN78
Margaret
Lazenby
RFN79 BIOGRAPHY In the marriage agreement Robert Goodell promised to settle o n her twelve acres of land. "a new dwelling house which I doe intend, God welling, shortly to build and two cowes & one horse or mare fitt for her to ri de on." After her death this property was to go to his son Jacob.
~1540 - 1625
John
Goodell
85
85
RFN80
~1540 - 1601
Elizabeth
61
61
RFN81
1772 - 1830
Charles
Chase
58
58
RFN82RFN1294
1774 - 1857
Hannah
Stuart
82
82
RFN83
1743 - <1798
Jeremiah
Stuart
54
54
RFN84
~1740 - >1798
Hannah
Stuart
58
58
RFN85
1726 - 1791
Lt.
Francis
Chase
65
65
He was a Revolutionary War Soldier and faught at Burgoyne Invasion & Battle fo Bennington. Died of apoplexy at an inn on his way home from Boston MA. He was married to Mary Perkins on 12 Jun 1760.
20 MAR 1740/41 - 1819
Mary
Perkins
RFN87
1688 - 1764
Philip
Chase
75
75
RFN88 BIOGRAPHY PHILIP CHASE - Blacksmith and Innholder On 15 September 1 731, Philip Chase bought a farm in Sutton, Massachusetts from E. Johnson for t he sum of ¹1,100 current money. He probably settled in Sutton soon after, as records show that in February 1732 he received pay for work done on highways in 1731. On 25 January 1732 a town meeting was held at his home. A receipt dated Ipswich, 10 May 1738, signed by James McHard, for money received by the hand of Thomas Follansbee for Wm. Follansbee. A receipt was given, signed by Philip and Mary Chase, which is as follows: "Newbury, July 5, 1755. Then recei ved of William Follansbee two pounds, thirteen shillings and four pence lawful money, in full of a legise which was given to Mary Chase by her honored fathe r Thomas Follansbee, in his last will and testament. Received by us." Plank Tavern / The Old Sutton Tavern Notes from the History of Sutton, 1878 The building, one of the most ancient landmarks of Sutton, known in early times as the "Plank Tavern," and in later years as the old Sutton Tavern, was built about the year 1727 by Philip Chase. ... in 1724 he moved into Sutton. After his death his son Follansbee came into the possession of the tavern, paying the other heirs their portion. After the decease of Follansbee it came into possession of Thomas Follansbee Chase, who occupied it as a residence until the year 1800, when he removed to Paris, Maine. The tavern in its construction differed for the ordinary buildings of the period. As will be seen by the engraving that represents it as it originally appeared, the siding consists of thick oak planks nailed perpendicularly to the frame, and at each end of the upper corners the planking is placed diagonally, for the purpose of giving additional strength in bracing the buildilng. The clapboards were not added until a later period. They were cloven by hand and fastened by hand-made nails, cut nails being then unknown. The chimney was massive in size, and the fire-places throughout the building were of ample dimensions. The foundation of the chimney, laid with huge stones, occupied nearly one-third of the cellar. The interior was double-lathed and plastered, rendering it a remakrably warm house in coldest weather. The windows had glass 6x8 inches, and the sash were of unequal size, the upper ones contianing eight lights and the lower ones twelve. The building was owned by different members of the Chase family upward of three-quarters of a century. The portrait is from a silhouette likeness of Thomas Follansbee Chase, the last one of the family to whom it beloned. He sold it to Paul and Luther Whiting, from whom it passed into the possession of M. M. Hovey, and from him was purchased by the present owner, Mr. S.B. Holbrook, who was recently removed the building a short distance to the rear of its original location. Tradition tells us that the old tavern was a noted gathering place previous to and during the war for independence, but history supplies little information respecting the scenes and incidents that transpired there. <http://www.suttonmass.org/houses/planktavern.jpg>
1695 - 1786
Mary
Follansbee
91
91
RFN89
1710 - ~1740
William
Perkins
30
30
RFN90 BIOGRAPHY The Family of John Perkins Author: A. Perkins This book con tains the history and genealogy of the John Perkins family of Ipswich, Massach usetts. Bibliographic Information: Perkins, A. The Family of John Perkins. T he Salem Press Publishing and Printing Co. Massachusetts. 1889. 16 William (Za ccheus6, Thomas3, John1) was born in Topsfield, Mass., May 4, 1710. He married Elizabeth Nelson of Newbury, April 18, 1734. He died in Sutton, Mass., abt. 1 740. His widow married Cornelius Putnam, Nov. 12, 1741, who was a widower at t hat time, having a son, Cornelius Putnam, Jr. Page 14 William Perkins was a farmer in Topsfield, owning land there; he probably removed to Sutton in 1735 or 6. His father states in his will that "he had no trade." Children of Willi am and Elizabeth (Nelson) Perkins were: 62 Jacob, b. abt. Jan. 1735; m. Sarah- -? 63 Abigail, b. Oct. 14, 1736; m. Stephen Prince Sept. 16, 1756. 64 Martha , abt. 1738; m. Jonathan Wait Aug. 17, 1757. 65 Eunice, b. abt. 1739; m. Jonat han Sebley April 26, 1762. 66 Mary, b. March 20, 1741; m. Francis Chase June 12, 1760. Page 114
~1715
Elizabeth
Nelson
RFN91
Peter
Woodbury
RFN92
1655 - 26 FEB 1739/40
John
Chase
Served under Capt. John Turner in the Falls Fight, King Philip's War His house is the third east of Town House in West Newbury, near the Training Field. Was a cooper by trade. John was a soldier in King Philips War under Capt. William Turner and was in the "Falls Fight" at Turner Falls on 5/19/1676 and was one to help bury the brave Commander there as he himself certified. Notes for John CHASE (Cooper & King Philip) SOURCE: Cooper by trade. VITAL RECORDS: Newbury MA published:BIRTH: MARRIAGE: DEATH:561. PROBATE: Essex Co MA:5132: In the name of God Amen. The twenty second day of October One Thousand seven hundred & thirty and in ye fourth year of ye Reign of our sovereign Lord George ye second King of Great Britain &c I John Chase of Newbury In ye County of Essex and in ye Province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England Husbandman Being at this Time weak of Body and Calling to Mind my Mortality and knowing that It is appointed for man once to Die Do make, ordain & constitute this my Last will & testament whilst my understanding & memory is continued To me, as by Gods Goodness It is at this time (blessed be God for it) and First of all Recommend my soul Into ye hands of God That gave it and my body I Recommend to ye earth to be buried in Decent Christian Buryl at the Discretion of my executor and as Touching such worldly estate as it hath pleased God To bless me with in this Life, I do Demise & Dispose of in ye following order or Form. Imprimis I give and Demise unto Lydia my Dearly beloved wife the one third of all my Real Estate During her Natural Life and all my Movable Estate of what name or Nature soever to her and her Dispose forever. Item I give unto my son Philip Chase the sum of five shillings to be paid by my Exec' out of my estate after my Decease (the Reason why I give this my son no more Is because he hath Received His Portion already. Item I give unto my son Charles Chase five shillings to be paid to him by my executor out of my estate after my decease. The reason why I give this my son no more is because he hath received his portion already. Item I give to my son Jacob Chase ye sum of five shillings to be paid to him by my exec" out of my estate after my decease (the Reason why I give this my son no more is because he hath Received his Portion already. Item I give unto my son Abraham Chase five shillings to be Paid to him by my exec' after my Decease out of my estate The Reason why I give this my son no more is because He hath received his Portion Already. Item I give unto my Daughter Phebee Tucker ye sum of six pounds to be paid to her by my executor out of my estate after my decease (Besides what she hath already had. Item I give unto my Daughter Mary Safford ye sum of five Shillings to be paid to her by my exec' out of my estate after my Decease (the reason why I give her no more is because she hath had her Portion already. Item I give unto Daughter Lydia five shillings to be paid by my exec' after my Decease out of my estate (the Reason why I give her no more is because she hath had her Portion already. Item I give unto my grandson John Chase of Hampton the son of my son John Chase the sum of Twenty shillings, to be paid to him by my exec' out of my estate which Twenty shillings is all that I should have given to my said son had he been living. Item I give unto my Daughter Elizabeth the sum of Twenty shillings to be paid to her by my exec' out of my estate Provided she come to Newbury for it. Item I give and Bequeath unto my Grandson Jonathan Chase the son of my son Charles Chase the sum of Ten Pounds to be paid to him by my exec' out of my estate when he shall come to ye age of twenty & one years. Item I give and bequeath unto my son David Chase and to his Heirs & Assigns forever all my estate both Real & personal of what name or nature soever that is not otherwise Disposed of in this my Last will & Testament, especially my House & Barn with all my out housing where I no Dwell with my homestead living where I no Dwell Provided this my son execute this my last will & Testament & pay all my Just Debts & Legacies & funeral expenses; and I do Constitute & appoint my son David Chase to be my sole exec' of this my Last will & Testament and Do give this my son all ye Debts Due to me and I do hereby revoke & Disallow all other wills executors by me made; Ratifying & Confirming this and this only to be my last will & Testament. John Chase Signed sealed published pronounced & Declared to be ye last will & Testament of John Chase in presence of us witnesses ye Day & year before mentioned. Sam'l March Steph Bayley Joshua Bayley (Essex Probate 24:89, 185) Notes for Lydia CHALLIS (Homemaker) SOURCE: VITAL RECORDS: Salisbury Essex Co MA published: Birth:46.
1665 - >1736
Lydia
Challis
71
71
RFN94
1661 - 1755
Thomas
Follansbee
94
94
RFN95
1660 - 1734
Abigail
Bond
73
73
RFN96
Thomas
Follansbee
?
RFN97
1637 - 1726
Thomas
Follansbee
89
89
RFN98 BIOGRAPHY Thomas and Sarah Follansbee lived in Portsmouth, England from 1665 to 1671. At some time prior to 1677 they came to Newbury, Massachusetts with four of their children - Thomas, Francis, Hannah and Sarah. The two elder daughters must have come on another ship very shortly thereafter, for Rebecca married Thomas Chase in November of that year. Anne married Moses Chase, the youngest brother of Thomas, seven years later. [BO:[UL:The Follansbee Fami ly:UL]:BO] The first recorded mention of the name Follansbee was a knight by the name of Sir Follansbee who accompanied William the Conqueror from Normandy to England in 1066. The Follansbee coat of arms is a beehive and a swarm of bees. The name originated from Followingbees, Followbees, Follansbee. A grea t estate of 702 acres was given to him by Wm. the Conqueror in the county of Durham, where Follansbee Hall was later built and maintained by the heirs and d escendants. There is now a village by the name of Follansbee which became established on the estate grounds, located near the town of Durham. In the end, one of these descendants had a quarrel with his 3 or 4 sons who left home never to return. When the father died, no heir could be found so the government took it into their hands. In 1750 the land came into the possession of three men, recorded as Redhead, Esq., Mathew Russell, Esq. of Browspith Castle, and Thomas Wade, Esq. This transfer of entitlement has long been held in dispute by many descendants of the Follansbee clan in England and America, who learned of its passing out of the family several years after the fact. In the early 1850's and 1860's an earnest case was pursued by a consortium of Follansbee hei rs to reclaim the family estate, but to no avail. Several legal documents wer e revealed in the effort to obtain information about the above questioned estate. Among these was a will noted in London, England on 16 March 1619 from William Follansbee to his wife, Frances and his brother, Robert of all the goods, chattels, effects and credits of the said William Follansbee, and an inventory was annexed to the bond of administration. Also, a Thomas Follansbee, by his will dated at Rockwood Hill, in the Parish of Hasten, April 12th, 1630, beq ueathed several legacies to his children Robert, Henry, John, William, Grace, Alice, and William Hodgeson, and all other effects to his wife, Margaret, who he appointed sole executrix to this will. The will of Robert Follansbee, date d 12 April 1676 bequeathed legacies to his son George and his daughter Jane. George Follansbee also left a will dated 16 June 1690, bequeathing his honorable furniture , &c, and appointing Anna Wilkinson executrix. A certain Thomas and William Follansbee are said to have come to America from Derbyshire, Engla nd in 1642. William returned to England and became a stockholder in the East India Company, and went to India in the employ of the company, where he was very successful. His relation to the American branch of the Follansbee family is not clearly established. The first record of the Follansbee name in the American colonies was from "Thomas Follansbee, of Newbury, to one Stephen Greenle af, Feb. 16th, 1690, half of 5 acres, it being the rate lot." It seems that he had bought land, but his deed or deeds were not put upon record. The seco nd deed was to "Thomas Follansbee from Moses Chase, his brother-in-law, November 21st, 1698, in the tenth year of his majesty's reign." The third deed found was from "Thomas Huse, Thomas Bancroft, wives and others, to Thomas Follansbee, Dec. 14th, 1700; the rate lot, 11 acres; the year of the reign of King Wil liam, the Third." Thomas Follansbee is said to have lived at Portsmouth from 1665 to 1671, at which time he moved to Newbury, Massachusetts. There is record of a deed of Thomas Follansbee to his son-in-law, Thomas Chase in 1711. Thomas Follansbee's occupation was described in old records as a "joiner" or carpenter. He finished the Portsmouth church and schoolhouse, where he is first recorded as living in New England. In 1671 he moved from Great Island to Strawberry Bank where he rented a house from Abraham Corbett. The Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire describes his experience there as follows, "when Mr. Henry Dering, also removing to Strawberry Bank, hired the same house under a better title, whereupon the sheriffs turned Thomas Follansbee out without notice in the depth of winter with no habitation provided for his wife and many small children." He moved from Portsmouth to Newbury, MA about 1677.310 In 1711, Thomas Follansbee, "joiner" sold his homestead in Newbury to his son-in-law Thomas Chase, house carpenter. Chase in turn sold the same property to his son Aquila in 1713.
~1640 - 1683
Sarah
43
43
1624 - 1674
John
Bond
50
50
RFN100
1630
Hester
Blakely
RFN101
1597 - 1659
Thomas
Bond
62
62
OCCUPATION: A malster of Bury St. Edmunds, Soffolk, England. Will dated 5 Nov 1658--proved 10 Mar 1659 at Canterbury, London, England. Genealogical Personal Memoirs of Massachusetts, Fiche #6051241 #7. 3
~1602 - 1659
Elizabeth
Woods
57
57
RFN103
~1600
Joseph
Blakely
RFN104
~1600
Sarah
Williams
RFN105
1626 - 1670
Aquila
Chase
44
44
RFN106 BIOGRAPHY Seven Hundred Ancestors Author: Lewis Keeler Leaonard Call Number: CS71.L58 This book contains the history and genealogy of the Leonard family of Massachusetts. Bibliographic Information: Leonard, Lewis Keeler. Seven Hundred Ancestors. Privately Published. 1975. The Chase Family is said to be of Norman origin - the name being derived from the French word "chasseur" (to hunt). As early as 1326 families of Chase resided in Suffolk, England. The family which came to America was from Hundrich Parish of Chesham, Buckinghamshire, some thirty miles northwest from London. This is indicated in the records of the Herald's Visitation 1634, Buckinghamshire. It is thought that Thomas and Aquila Chase having a knowledge of navigation, were in the employ of their uncle, Thomas Chase, who was part owner of the "John and Francis"' which was named in a letter of Marque in 1626. The Chase name is so rare in England, it is assumed the flower of the family emigrated to America. They were by nature enterprising and high minded people. Released from the trammels of aristocracy and conservatism of the old country, on entering into the breath and freedom of new circumstances, they at once took the front rank in the new world. Chase arms: Gules four crosses, flory, two and two, on a canton azure with a lion passont of the second order. Crest: a demi-lion rampant holding the cross of the shield gules. Motto: Ne cede malis. Thomas Chase of Chesham, England was born about 1400 and was descended from an ancient family there. We have a record of one son. He was named John and he had a son Mathew born about 1486. He was also of Chesham. Source; New England Families, Vol. IV, Genealogies and Memorials, pages 1833 and 1834 Aquila, son of Aquila Chase and the American immigrant, was born in England in 1618. He was a mariner, probably emplyed by his uncle or brother, Thomas Chase, who was in 1626 part owner of the ship "John and Francis". He was of Hampton as early as 1640; removed to Newbury in 1646, when he had four acres granted for a house lot and six acres of marsh, on condition that he go to sea and to service in the town with a boat for four years. He was also a shipmaster. He and his wife and David Wheeler were fined "for gathering pease on the Sabbath," but were admonished and the fine remitted, September, 1646. He died December 27, 1670. His will was dated September 19, 1670. Aquila Chase married, about 1644, Anne Wheeler of Hampton, New Hampshire, daughter of John and Anne Wheeler, who came to Hampton from Salisbury, England with two children, David and Anne. John Wheeler died in 1670, and his wife died August 15, 1662. Mrs. Chase married (second) June 14, 1672, James Mussiloway. She died April 21, 1687. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Chase were: Sarah, born 1646, married May 15, 1666, Charles Annis, born in Ireland, 1649; Anna, born July 6, 1647, married April 27, 1671, Thomas Barber; Priscilla, born March 14, 1649, married February 10, 1671, Abel Merrill; Mary, born February 3, 1651, married March 9, 1670, John Stevens; Aquila, born September 26 or 27, 1652, married Esther Bond; Thomas, born July 25, 1654, married (first) November 22, 1677, Rebecca Follansbee, (second) August 2, 1713, Elizabeth Mowers; John, born November 2, 1655, married (first) May 23, 1677, Elizabeth Bengley, (second) Lydia ____; Elizabeth, born September 13, 1657, married June 27, 1678, Zachariah Ayer; Ruth, born March 18, 1660, died March 30, 1676; Daniel, born December 9, 1661, married May 25, 1683, Martha Kimball, born August 18, 1664, at Wenham, Massachusetts. Moses, born December 24, 1663, married (first) November 10, 1684, Ann Follansbee, (second) December 13, 1713, Sarah Jacobs;
1621 - 1687
Anne
Wheeler
66
66
RFN107
1580 - 1670
Aquila
Chase
90
90
Aquila, son of Richard and Joan Amie Bishop Chase, was baptized at Hundrich Parish, Chesham, England. On June 22 , 1606 he was married to Martha Sarah, daughter of John and Margerie Jelliman. She was born about 1582 at Hundrich, Chesham and was buried in St. Nicholas Cole Abby, Chesham on Aug.15, 1643. Aquila Chase was buried Feb.9, 1643. The c hildren of Aquila and Martha Sarah Jelliman Chase were: 1. William, b. about 1607; d. May 4, 1659, m. Mary Townley. 2. Anne, bapt.Feb.26, 1607 London; buri ed July 19, 1609. 3. Martha, b. about 1610 London; buried Mar.11, 1610/14. 4. Sara, b. Feb.9, 1611; d. May 2, 1624. 5. Thomas, b. 1615; d. 1652, m. 1642, E lizabeth Philbrick. 6. Elizabeth, bapt. May 14,
1588 - 1643
Martha
Sarah
Jelliman
54
54
RFN109
1591 - 1670
John
Wheeler
79
79
Emigrated on the "Mary and John" in 1634 to Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts * Will proved in Hampton court Oct 11, 1670 Wheeler family in America, American College of Genealogy, "Descendents of JOhioN WHEELER, of Newbury, Massachusetts." 5400. JOhioN WHEELER. He is said to have been born at Salisbury, Whiltshire, England, and to have sailed for America on March 24, 1633-34 in the ship "Mary and John", bringing with him, his wife Ann and six children and leaving four sons in England. He spent the first year of his residence at Aggawam (now Ipswich), Massachusetts. The following year he removed to the settlement on the north bank of the Merrimac River that was called Salisbury after 1640, and as one of its original proprietors, in 1641 he received land there which he still held and paid tax on as late as 1652, notwithstanding he had removed to Newbury, Massachusetts., before 1650. He died at Newbury, Aug. 29, 1670, aged 52, and his wife Ann died there Aug. 15, 1662. Will of John Wheeler Be it known unto all men by theise psents, th (at I) John Wheeler of new(berie) in the county of Essex in New england Massachusetts (Consider)ing my old age & (my owne) weakness; being of health of (body) and of pfect me(mory) through gods mercy (doe) hereby make my last will and testament, Comend (ing) my soule (in) to the hands of my blessed Redeemer Jesus Christe and my body to be buryed in the burying place of Newbury (when forver it shall please god to take me hence by death.) In hope of a blessed Resurrectio. And for my wordly goods I dispose as followeth first I give and bequeath unto my Son David Wheeler ten pounds of that debt which hee owes mee, 2dly I give to my Sonne Edward Wheeler of the Citty of alisbury in the Realme of England ten pounds of which he is to pay three pounds and ten shillings to the Chamber of the Citty aforesaid also I give & bequeath to my Son (Adam Wheeler of the said Citty) forty shillings Alabama (so I give) to my Son (Thomas Wheeler forty) shillings And also I give to my Son William forty shillings in case he shall come over into this country. Also I give to my Daughter Mercy forty shillings, And to my Daughter Elizabeth Button I give four pounds, Also I give to my Daughter Anne Chase four pounds. I give to my Daughter in Law Susanne Wheeler four pounds, twenty shillings apeice to all theise my children, of this estate was given them by their mother which is included in the severall Summs abou exprest. (Also I) give and bequeath to my Son George Chidren Ephraim Wheeler & (Small) Wheeler four pounds apeice that is eight-pounds between them (when0 they shalbe of the age of one and twenty to be paid by my Execut(or) I give to my Son Roger Wheelers daughte Mary Wheeler (three) pounds to be paid to her when she shall be of the age of (eighteen years) And to her Brother Joseph Wheeler I give forty shillings (when he shalbe) of the age of one & twenty years And to my Daughter El(izabeth children) forty shillings apeice: to Thomas forty shillings to be (payd to) him when he shalbe of age one & twenty & To Mary (forty Shill)ings & to Elizabeth forty shillings when they shalbe Eight(een years) of age. All theise Legacyes above mentioned which (is) in my children shalbe paid within one whole yeare after my decease but those of my Grandchildren to be to the use of my Executor until they shalbe of the ages above mentioned, Also I give the Land to my Daughter in Law Susanne My Son Georges wife which I gave to her husband which he built (upon) as it is inclosed; Also I appoint my Son Henry Wheeler to be sole Exceutor of this my Last Will & testament and to have all the rest of my goods & chattells undisposed of my debts & funerall being discharged. March 28, 1668 JOhioN WHEELER (seal) Witness Anthony Somerby Augustinn Stickney Jr Roger Woodman Beniamine Lowle jonathan Woodman Benj: Loel & Jon (athan) Woodman gave their oath before Court held at Hampton October ye: 11:1670 that this was the will & testament of John Wheeler, & (of when) he declared the same he was compos mentis; & that they know of no other will but this made by him & that he did signe & seale this writring as his last will. as attests, tho; Bradbury recd. See: Essex South District Registry of Deeds Norfolk Records Book 2 Part 2 folio 288 Essex ss. Probate Office July 23, 1913
~1592 - 1662
Ann
(Agnes)
Yeoman
70
70
RFN111
1564 - 12 JAN 1615/16
Dominick
Wheeler
RFN112
1569 - 1615
Mercy
Jellye
46
46
RFN113
1542 - 31 JAN 1610/11
Richard
Chase
Richard Chase of Chesham, born July 26, 1542, was married to Joan Amie Bishop April 16, 1564. She was born at Hundridge, Buckshire, England about 1543 and was buried May 4, 1597. He was buried January 31, 1611. Their children were: 1. Robert, bapt. Sept.2, 1565 Hundridge; m. Jean Tokefield, buried July 8, 1601. 2. Henry, bapt. August 10 , 1567. 3. Lydia, bapt. October 4, 1573. 4. Ezekiel, bapt. April 2, 1576. 5. Dorcas, bapt. March 2, 1578. 6. Aquila, bapt. August 14, 1580. 7. Jason, bap t. January 13, 1583. 8. Thomas, bapt. July 18, 1585. 9. Abigail, bapt. Januar y 12, 1588. 10.Mordecai, b. July 31, 1591.
1543 - 1597
Joan
Bishop
54
54
RFN115
1556 - 1620
John
Jelliman
64
64
RFN116
1558
Marjorie
RFN117
1520 - 1586
Thomas
Chase
66
66
Thomas Chase, b. April 22, 1520, married Elizabeth Bowchiew in 1539. She was born about 1518. They were both buried in Chesham, he on June 29, 1586 and she on Oct.2, 1569. Their children were: 1. John, bapt. Nov.30, 1540 at Hundr idge; burial Apr.22, 1599, m. Joan (???). 2. Richard, b. July 26, 1542 at Hundridge; burial Jan. 31, 1611, m. Joan Bishop, Apr.16, 1564. 3. Elizabeth, bap t. May 23, 1547/8 at Hundridge; burial June 25, 1579, m. Stephen Grover, Nov.1 2, 1571. 4. Agnes, bapt. Mar.9, 1551 at Hundridge; m. Thomas Welch, Nov.12, 1 571. 5. William, b. about 1553 at Hundridge; m. Isbell Sam Jan. 13, 1573. 6. Christian, b. about 1555 at Hundridge; m. Henry Atkins June 8, 1576. 7. Thomas, b. about 1545 at Chesham; buried Aug.3, 1569.
1617 - ~1681
Lt. Philip
Watson-
Challis
64
64
RFN119 BIOGRAPHY LIEUTENANT PHILIP CHALLIS Philip Watson-Challis was born a bout 1617, and in 1637 he received a house lot at Ipswich, in the Massachusett s Bay Colony, where records show that he was a "planter." The land comprised of three acres of planting ground at the Reedy Marsh on the South side of the Merrimack River. In 1640 he moved to Salisbury, where he was one of the "first settlers", being among those who had "lotts and proportions granted by the town of Colchester", now called Salibury, in the land division of 7 September 1639. His house lot was one acre of upland between the lots of Josiah Cobham and John Hodges, and his meadow lands fell between the lots of John Hodges and John Severance. The next year, John Severance was granted a parcel of salt marsh to make up for his meadow, which was allowed to Philip Challis. He was a member of the Salisbury Church in 1677, as was his widow as late as 1687. H is name is listed in most of the early Salisbury and Amesbury, Massachusetts records. When Nathaniel Ward was granted his farm of 600 acres near Pantucket , Philip Challis was one of three men chosen to lay the lot lines. On 25 Jan uary 1644, Philip Challis was ordered by the town to run his fence on the nort hwest side of his house lot. In an apparent disagreement over the placement o f the fence, on 21 Febrary 1646 the town ordered that the fence between Samuel Fellows and Philip Challis' house should be set up "in the same place where it was want to stand." Philip was a man of standing and education, and was one of the men named as freemen of Salisbury in November 1645. He held offices of trust in Salisbury, including service as one of the "prudential men," repeatedly from 1646 through 1680 and early became a lieutenant of the military company of Salisbury. He was on the committee to create the bounds between Salisbury and Hampton on 18 October 1648 and participated in the division of common lands in 1651. That year he was the only contra vote when the town decided to divide the Ox Common. He drew lots #13 in the Great Swamp, #7 on the River and on 2 March 1662/3 he recieved 40 acres, 50 acres and 200 acres in Salisbury. He received more land in 1654, 1658 and later, "children's land" for his son in 1659, and a "township" for one of his sons in 1660. It is said that P hilip Challis was a well-respected man with an eye for detail. He was chosen Lieutenant of the foot company of Salisbury in 1658, but refused the office be cause it was "not properly offered." In the same vein, on 16 May 1667, Challis refuse to sign the return of a committee appointed to run the bounds for Haverhill because he had not received his pay. Salisbury decided to set off a portion of its lands and created a "new towne" in 1665. Philip Challis was one of those who signed the articles of agreement separating the two towns. It was originally called "Salisbury Newtowne", but in 1668 it was named "Amesbury." In June, 1680, he was discharged from the "foot company" of Salisbury and appointed "Leftenant" to the military company of Amesbury. Although the circumstances of Philip Chalis' death are uncertain, he must have had a foreshadowing of his end, for on 10 March 1680, his was the first signature on a petition to the General Court regarding the replacement of a military officer for the town of Amesbury. In this way he passed the baton to his friend and long-time associate, Sgt. Samuel Foot, who was appointed lieutentant in Challis' place. LETTER OF PHILIP CHALLIS Lt. Philip Challis served in the foot company at S alisbury, MA during the Indian troubles. His observations of the enemy are preserved in the following letter: Amesbury: 9: 5mo: 1677 Sr: Be pleased wth these to understand yt yesterday being ye Sabbath. There was 5 Indians seen by Jno Hoyt junr follow one another in a strait file upon Thomas Hayne's hill & goe into ye bushes & a sixth to follow ye five:
1650 - 1701
Sarah
Sargent
50
50
1606 - ~1675
William
Sargent
69
69
RFN121 BIOGRAPHY Notes See "The Grantees & Settlement of Hampton, New Hampsh ire," complied by Victor Sanborn (first appearing in Essex Insititute Historical Collections in October, 1917) at p. 19 providing that: 13. WILLIAM SARGENT [William Sergant]. At Ipswich 1633, Newbury 1635, Salisbury 1639, Amesbury 16 55-75. He and Thomas Bradbury married sisters, daughters of John Perkins of Ipswich. Sargent's first wife, Elizabeth Perkins, is said to have been b orn in 1618. Concerning Sargent's own age there is some dispute. One account says he was born in 1598, and another says the year of his birth was 1 602. There seems no reliable testimony as to what part of England he came from , though the author of the Sargent Record (1899) believes he came from the Wes t of England.73 In his will, dated 14 March, 1671-2, and proved at Salem in 16 75, he calls himself a "seaman".74 The exact date of his death is not given on the town records, but he was living on 1 July, 1673,75 and dead before 14 Ap ril, 1675,76 when his will was proved. William Sargent never lived at Hampton, removing to Salisbury, and finally settling in that part which became Amesbur y. For his descendants, vide Hoyt's Salisbury and Amesbury Families, Vol. I, p p. 310-4; and Sargent Record (1899). Information obtained from Pedigree Charts compiled by Joanna Baxter Curtis and on file Yates Publishing, PO Box 67, Ste vensville, MT 59870. The following interesting bit of family history we take from an issue of the Salisbury (Massachusetts.) Villager (1876): "Wednesday night the Riverside Lodge of this village made public their installation of officers in Sargent Hall, after which friends and invited guests partook of a bountiful supper. The Sargents are a numerous family in this town, and are large owners of real and personal estate. William Sargent, one of twelve men who settled in Ipswich, in 1633, subsequently went to Newbury, and thence to Amesbury in 1643, where he died in about 1675, aged seventy-three. He was the founder of the family name in this town. Excerpt from "William Sargent and His Descendants in America" ...He came to America on the Ship Lion in 1633 with John Winthrop and his company of Puritans and landed at Massachusetts, possibly Charlestown. They began a common type of living, with all working together for a common purpose, but not to the point of common money affairs. t hey each worked at his original tade, that they had followed in England, and began to build a new life in America. William married after he reached America, and had many children, among which was Thomas and the line that we follow down to our Sargeant... Ms. Norma M. Hutson Anderson's GMB According to the "Sargent Record" by E. E. Sargent (1899), William died in Amesbury,Massachusetts. and is buried there at the "Ferry". Elizabeth arrived in America aboard the ship Lion in the spring of 1631. The writer states that william and Elizabeth were both in Agawam (Ipswich) prior to 1633 and that they probably married there in 1633. there is apparently no record of the marriage. The Sargent Record says william married Joanna Rowell Sept. 18, 1670. William Sargent found in: Passenger and Immigration Index, 1500s-1900s Place: Massachusetts Year: 1633 Primary immigrant: Sargent, William Permanent entry number: 7954269 Accession number: 994529 Source publication code: 1262 Source publication page number: 254 Source publication: COLKET, MAREDITH B., JR. Founders of Early American Families: Emigrants from Europe, 1607-1657. Cleveland: General Court of the Order of Founders and Patriots of America, 1975. 366p. Source annotation: Date and place of settlement or date and place of arrival. Names not restricted to the Order of Founders and Patriots of America. Source: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index William "Sargeant" sued Mr. William Hook of Salisbury for 56s. in corn 26 December 1643 The inventory of the estate of "Willi. Sargent, Senr.," taken 8 April 1675 by Thomas Sargent and John Weed, totalled £196, of which the real estate totalled £137 10s., including "housing & lands about the house & orchard on both sides [of] the country way," £85; "half the lot in the tide meadows, £16; "a Higledee Pigledee lot in the salt marsh" £25; "a lot lying in ... Lyons Mouth," £5 10s.; "a lot in the great swamp," £2; "a lot in ... Bugmore," £4 In his will, dated 24 March 1670/1 and proved 13 April 1675, "William Sargent of the town of Emsbery," seaman, "being in pritty good health of body..." bequeathed to "my grandchild William Challis" £5; to "my grandchildren: Elizabeth, Lidia, Mary and Phillip Watson Challis" each of them 20s.; to "my grandchildren Dorethie, & Elizabeth Colby" each 20s; to "my grandchild William Sargent" 30s.; to "my daughter Elizabeth the wife of Samuel Colby" £5; residue to "my daughter Sarah" and if she die without children, the housing and lands to be equally divided to "my four children hereafter named i.e.: my sons Thomas & William: & my daughters: Mary and Elizabeth"; "my son Thomas Sargent and my daughter Sarah Sargent" executors; loving "brother-in-law Mr. Tho: Bradbury" and esteemed friend Major Robert Pike, overseers William's burial place is located on Rocky Hill Road in Amesbury, Massachusetts at least I presume it's Amesbury - could be Merrimac though. Merrimac is the next town to the West of Amesbury. WILLIAM SARGENT ORIGIN: Unknown MIGRATION: 1632 FIRST RESIDENCE: Ipswich REMOVES: Newbury, Hampton, Salisbury, Amesbury OCCUPATION: Seaman. CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admission to a Massachusetts Bay church prior to 22 May 1639 implied by freemanship. FREEMAN: 22 May 1639 (as "Mr. Willi[am] Sergent") [MBCR 1:375]. EDUCATION: Signed his name to his will and to deeds. OFFICES: Essex grand jury, 13 April 1652 [EQC 1:251]. Petit jury, 8 April 1662, 24 June 1662, 13 April 1669, 12 April 1670 [EQC 1:377, 385, 4:128, 235]. [Some of this service may belong to William Sargent of Gloucester.] Sworn clerk of the train band of Salisbury on 8 April 1651 [EQC 1:223]. ESTATE: "It is ordered that no person whatsoever shall go to plant or inhabit at Aggawam, without leave from the court, except those that are already gone, viz. ... "Willm Srjeant" [MBCR 1:103]. In a grant at Ipswich in 1634, William Sargent received twelve acres of land [ITR]. "Willi[am] Sergant" was in the list of petitioners, mostly Newbury men, headed by STEPHEN BACHILER, who on 6 September 1638 were granted "liberty to begin a plantation at Winnacunnet [Hampton]" [MBCR 1:236]. "Will[iam] Sargent" was in the section of married men in the list of first comers to Hampton [GDMNH 55]. On 7 November 1644 John Severans of Salisbury, planter, sold to William Sargent of Salisbury, planter, twenty acres of upland in Salisbury on the west side of Powwos river [NLR 3:5]. On 25 March 1647 Anthony "Colebie" of Salisbury, planter, deeded to William Sargent of Salisbury, seaman, a dwelling house and house lot in Salisbury between Jarred Haddon and Henry Browne [NLR 1:19]. On 16 December 1652, William Sargent of Salisbury sold to John Browne of Hampton, the meadow and upland adjacent to Aquilla Chase and widow "Bristos" [NLR 1:21]. On 15 April 1659 William Sargent of Salisbury sold to John Woodin of Salisbury upland in Salisbury near the "Pawwaus River above the falls" [NLR 1:84]. On 1 November 1666, William Sargent of Salisbury, seaman, gave for "natural affection" to his son Thomas Sargent thirty acres of upland in Salisbury abutting the Merrimack River [NLR 2:157]. On 22 October 1669, William Sargent of Amesbury gave for "natural affection and other considerations" to his "beloved son Thomas Sargent" six acres of marsh granted to him by Salisbury, and a sweepage lot of salt marsh in Salisbury at a place called "ye beache" being lot number 8 containing three acres and four rods, being half the lot of marsh between two islands called "Barnss Iland" and "Ware Iland" [NLR 2:153]. On 9 October 1669 William Sargent of Amesbury, planter, gave for "natural affection and other considerations" to his "beloved son William Sargent" a great lot of upland containing two hundred acres in Amesbury, a lot of upland in ox common containing eight acres, a lot of upland west of the great pond containing forty acres, a lot of upland in "burchin meadow hill" containing forty-five acres "which I bought of Edward Goe"; the last division of three acres in the pond meadow (all the foregoing in Amesbury); and half his first division of the higledee pigledee lots of salt marsh in Salisbury [NLR 2:153]. On 4 March 1670/1 William Sargent of Amesbury, seaman, sold for £2 10s. to William Sargent Jr. of Amesbury, planter, two acres of upland at the Indian ground in Amesbury; wife Johana Sargent made her mark to this deed [NLR 2:201]. On 23 April 1672 William Sargent of Amesbury, yeoman, sold to Isaac Green of Hampton 2 acres of salt marsh called Hall's farm [NLR 3:25]. On 1 July 1673 William Sargent Sr. of Amesbury, with the consent of his wife, "Janna," sold to Thomas Wells of Amesbury ninety-five rods of land in Amesbury, part of his houselot [NLR 3:5]. On 1 October 1673 "William Sergent ... of Almsberry in Norfolke senior and mariner" mortgaged to Nathaniel Williams of Suffolk County eight acres of upland in Amesbury that Sergeant had by exchange with Richard Currier [ILR 3:284]. On 24 February 1673[/4] William Sargent Sr. of Amesbury, seaman, sold to Caleb Moody of Newbury, maltster, for £5 1s. "my second division higledee pigledee" lot of salt marsh containing three acres in Salisbury [NLR 2:312]. Among parcels sold by William Sargent Jr. on 18 October 1696 to Henry Deering, was a great lot of upland given by his grandfather [unnamed] to his father William Sergeant, "containing by estimation 200 acres in Amesbury amongst the great lots" [ELR 10:58]. In his will, dated 24 March 1670/1 and proved 13 April 1675, "William Sargent of the town of Emsbery," seaman, "being in pritty good health of body..." bequeathed to "my grandchild William Challis" £5; to "my grandchildren: Elizabeth, Lidia, Mary and Phillip Watson Challis" each of them 20s.; to "my grandchildren Dorethie, & Elizabeth Colby" each 20s; to "my grandchild William Sargent" 30s.; to "my daughter Elizabeth the wife of Samuel Colby" £5; residue to "my daughter Sarah" and if she die without children, the housing and lands to be equally divided to "my four children hereafter named i.e.: my sons Thomas & William: & my daughters: Mary and Elizabeth"; "my son Thomas Sargent and my daughter Sarah Sargent" executors; loving "brother-in-law Mr. Tho: Bradbury" and esteemed friend Major Robert Pike, overseers [EPR 2:438-39]. The inventory of the estate of "Willi. Sargent, Senr.," taken 8 April 1675 by Thomas Sergeant and John Weed, totalled £196, of which the real estate totalled £137 10s., including "housing & lands about the house & orchard on both sides [of] the country way," £85; "half the lot in the tide meadows, £16; "a Higledee Pigledee lot in the salt marsh" £25; "a lot lying in ... Lyons Mouth," £5 10s.; "a lot in the great swamp," £2; "a lot in ... Bugmore," £4 [EPR 2:440]. Unmarried daughter Sarah chose to have her "loving brother" Thomas act in her behalf as executor, 14 April 1675 [NLR 3:11]. Although William had married his last wife, Joanna, just a few months before he wrote his will, and she survived him, she was not mentioned, strongly implying that there was a pre-nuptial agreement (of which no record can now be found). BIRTH: By about 1611 based on estimated date of marriage. DEATH: Amesbury after 24 February 1673[/4] [NLR 2:312] and before 8 April 1675 (inventory). MARRIAGE: (1) By about 1636 Elizabeth Perkins, daughter of JOHN PERKINS. (2) Amesbury 18 September 1670 Joanna (Pinder) Rowell, born about 1621 (aged 14 in 1635 [Hotten 59]), daughter of Henry and Mary Pinder, widow of Valentine Rowell. She married (3) Amesbury 26 October 1676 Richard Currier and she died Amesbury October 1690 [Pillsbury Anc 119]. Excerpted Biography of William Sargent c. 1606 - 1675 William Sargent, described as an able seaman, was born 28 June 1606 in Bath, Somerset, England. He came to America on the Ship Lion in 1633 with John Winthrop, Governor of the new colony, and his company of Puritans. The flotilla was comprised of 4 ships with four hundred people who set out to the new continent on April 7, 1630. The immigrants were mostly Puritians and were carefully selected by Winthrop. He and his party arrived two months later in Salem, Massachusetts. The settlers could scarcely believe their eye's as the land was a total wilderness; except for a few huts and clearings made by previous settlers. The thought's of having to clear the land in order to raise crops and supply themselves in the coming winter was frightening. With food provisions running low, and many suffering from malnutrition, scores of the new settlers refused to get off the ships and decided to sail back to England immediately. Those who landed faced what seemed to be an insurmountable task. Through faith in God, perseverance, hard work, and the leadership of John Winthrop, William Sargent along with 800 of 1000 new settlers survived the first winter by carving caves in the hillsides and digging holes in the ground. When spring arrived another 200 would return to England. The colony was moved away from Salem, someplace where they would have room to build houses and raise crops. The colony settled largely in Charlestown, Cambridge, Boston, Watertown, Roxbury and Dorchester. William Sargent took his family north where they would settle in Ipswich, Salisbury and Amesbury, Massachusetts. Elizabeth, who would become the wife of William Sargent, arrived in America aboard the ship Lion in the spring of 1631. William and Elizabeth were both in Agawam (Ipswich) prior to 1633. William Sargent was one of the first to plant at Ipswich, Massachusetts. It is believed they married there in 1633. There is apparently no record of the marriage. In a grant at Ipswich in 1634, William Sargent received twelve acres of land [ITR]. "Willi[am] Sergant" was in the list of petitioners, mostly Newbury men, headed by STEPHEN BACHILER, who on 6 September 1638 were granted "liberty to begin a plantation at Winnacunnet [Hampton]" [MBCR 1:236]. "Will[iam] Sargent" was in the section of married men in the list of first comers to Hampton [GDMNH 55].William Sargent was admitted to the Massachusetts Bay Church before May 22, 1639. Also he is recognized as one of the founders of Amesbury, Essex County, Massachusetts. William "Sargeant" sued Mr. William Hook of Salisbury for 56s. in corn 26 December 1643 The inventory of the estate of "Willi. Sargent, Senr.," taken 8 April 1675 by Thomas Sargent and John Weed, totalled £196, of which the real estate totalled £137 10s., including "housing & lands about the house & orchard on both sides [of] the country way," £85; "half the lot in the tide meadows, £16; "a Higledee Pigledee lot in the salt marsh" £25; "a lot lying in ... Lyons Mouth," £5 10s.; "a lot in the great swamp," £2; "a lot in ... Bugmore," £4 On 7 November 1644 John Severans of Salisbury, planter, sold to William Sargent of Salisbury, planter, twenty acres of upland in Salisbury on the west side of Powwos river [NLR 3:5]. On 25 March 1647 Anthony "Colebie" of Salisbury, planter, deeded to William Sargent of Salisbury, seaman, a dwelling house and house lot in Salisbury between Jarred Haddon and Henry Browne [NLR 1:19] On 16 December 1652, William Sargent of Salisbury sold to John Browne of Hampton, the meadow and upland adjacent to Aquilla Chase and widow "Bristos" [NLR 1:21]. On 15 April 1659 he also sold to John Woodin of Salisbury upland in Salisbury near the "Pawwaus River above the falls" [NLR 1:84]. On 1 November 1666, William Sargent of Salisbury, seaman, gave for "natural affection" to his son Thomas Sargent thirty acres of upland in Salisbury abutting the Merrimack River [NLR 2:157]. In 1669, hard words were exchanged between the Sargent's and their near neighbors, the Martins. Either William Sr. or Jr. was sued for slander by George Martin, who claimed Sargent had called his wife a witch 13 April 1669 [EQC 4:129]. Martin sued Thomas Sargent for saying that his son George Martin was a bastard and that Richard Martin was Goodwife Martin's imp [EQC 4:129]. On 22 October 1669, William Sargent of Amesbury gave for "natural affection and other considerations" to his "beloved son Thomas Sargent: " Six acres of marsh granted to him by Salisbury, and a sweepage lot of salt marsh in Salisbury at a place called "ye beache" being lot number 8 containing three acres and four rods, being half the lot of marsh between two islands called "Barnss Iland" and "Ware Iland" [NLR 2:153]. On 9 October 1669 William Sargent of Amesbury, planter, gave for "natural affection and other considerations" to his "beloved son William Sargent": a great lot of upland containing two hundred acres in Amesbury, a lot of upland in ox common containing eight acres, a lot of upland west of the great pond containing forty acres, a lot of upland in "burchin meadow hill" containing forty-five acres "which I bought of Edward Goe"; the last division of three acres in the pond meadow (all the foregoing in Amesbury); and half his first division of the higledee pigledee lots of salt marsh in Salisbury [NLR 2:153]. In his will, dated 24 March 1670/1 and proved 13 April 1675, "William Sargent of the town of Emsbery," seaman, "being in pritty good health of body..." bequeathed to "my grandchild William Challis" £5; to "my grandchildren: Elizabeth, Lidia, Mary and Phillip Watson Challis" each of them 20s.; to "my grandchildren Dorethie, & Elizabeth Colby" each 20s; to "my grandchild William Sargent" 30s.; to "my daughter Elizabeth the wife of Samuel Colby" £5; residue to "my daughter Sarah" and if she die without children, the housing and lands to be equally divided to "my four children hereafter named i.e.: my sons Thomas & William: & my daughters: Mary and Elizabeth"; "my son Thomas Sargent and my daughter Sarah Sargent" executors; loving "brother-in-law Mr. Tho: Bradbury" and esteemed friend Major Robert Pike, overseers. [EPR 2:438-39]. On 4 March 1670/1 William Sargent of Amesbury, seaman, sold for £2 10s. to William Sargent Jr. of Amesbury, planter, two acres of upland at the Indian ground in Amesbury. The Sargent Record says Wlliam married Joanna Rowell Sept. 18, 1670. Her mark to this deed [NLR 2:201]. On 23 April 1672 William Sargent of Amesbury, yeoman, sold to Isaac Green of Hampton 2 acres of salt marsh called Hall's farm [NLR 3:25]. On 1 July 1673 William Sargent Sr. of Amesbury, with the consent of his wife, "Janna," sold to Thomas Wells of Amesbury ninety-five rods of land in Amesbury, part of his houselot [NLR 3:5]. On 1 October 1673 "William Sergent ... of Almsberry in Norfolke senior and mariner" mortgaged to Nathaniel Williams of Suffolk County eight acres of upland in Amesbury that Sergeant had by exchange with Richard Currier [ILR 3:284]. On 24 February 1673[/4] William Sargent Sr. of Amesbury, seaman, sold to Caleb Moody of Newbury, maltster, for £5 1s. "my second division higledee pigledee" lot of salt marsh containing three acres in Salisbury [NLR 2:312]. Among parcels sold by William Sargent Jr. on 18 October 1696 to Henry Deering, was a great lot of upland given by his grandfather [unnamed] to his father William Sergeant, "containing by estimation 200 In 1672 William Sargent and Joanna his wife sued Christopher Osgood for debt due part of the estate of Joanna's late husband, Valentine Rowell [EQC 5:20]. The inventory of the estate of "Willi. Sargent, Senr.," taken 8 April 1675 by Thomas Sergeant and John Weed, totalled £196, of which the real estate totalled £137 10s., including "housing & lands about the house & orchard on both sides [of] the country way," £85; "half the lot in the tide meadows, £16; "a Higledee Pigledee lot in the salt marsh" £25; "a lot lying in ... Lyons Mouth," £5 10s.; "a lot in the great swamp," £2; "a lot in ... Bugmore," £4 [EPR 2:440]. Unmarried daughter Sarah chose to have her "loving brother" Thomas act in her behalf as executor, 14 April 1675 [NLR 3:11]. Although William had married his last wife, Joanna, just a few months before he wrote his will, and she survived him, she was not mentioned, implying there was a pre-nuptial agreement (of which no record can now be found). The following was taken from an issue of the Salisbury (Massachusetts.) Villager (1876): "Wednesday night the Riverside Lodge of this village made public their installation of officers in Sargent Hall, after which friends and invited guests partook of a bountiful supper. The Sargents are a numerous family in this town, and are large owners of real and personal estate. William Sargent, one of twelve men who settled in Ipswich, in 1633, subsequently went to Newbury, and thence to Amesbury in 1643. William Sargent died in 1675 in Amesbury,Massachusetts. He is buried there at the "Ferry". William's burial place is located on Rocky Hill Road near Amesbury, Massachusetts. He was the founder of the family name in this town.
3 MAR 1609/10 - ~1669
Elizabeth
Perkins
RFN122
1575 - MAR 1673/74
Richard
Sargent
RFN123
1573 - 1609
Katherine
Stevens
35
35
RFN124
1583 - 1654
John
Perkins
70
70
John Perkins was born December 23, 1583 during the reign of Elizabeth I in Hilmorton County, Warwickshire, England and married Judith Gator ( born in 1588) on October 8, 1608.Record of John and Judith's marriage is on file at the Hillmorton Parish(still standing) in England. John Perkins and his wife, Judith Gator sailed on a ship named the Lyon from Bristol December 1, 1630. The ship landed in Boston February 5, 1631, Boston was only founded months earlier in 1630. Also on this ship was a man named Roger Williams who was later to found the colony of Rhode Island. Also with John were their six children: John, Elizabeth, Mary, Ann, Thomas and Jacob. Times were hard for the colonists who were already there, in ANNALS OF NEW ENGLAND, Volume 1, the following is related:" As the winter came on provisions in the Massachusetts Bay Colony were very scarce and the people fed on clams, mussels, ground nuts and acorns, they became very discouraged especially when they heard that Governor himself has the last batch of bread in the oven. A day of fasting and prayer was set for February 6, 1631. On February 5, the day before the appointed fast, in came the ship LYON, this was an occasion of joy as the ship contained provisions and the day for fast and prayer was changed to the 22d to be celebrated as a day of thanksgiving for the arrival of the LYON." This is one of the possible origins of Thanksgiving as the colonists would not have survived long except for the arrival of the provisions on the ship. The records of Hillmorton, Warwickshire contain the records of John Perkins baptism, marriage and the births of his six children in the Shire Hall in Warwick. This information is from PERKINS FAMILIES IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1790 by D.W. Perkins published in 1911. Many people especially Puritans, who supported Parliament against the King and were known as Roundheads because of their short haircuts, left England at this time, due to the tyranny of the king, Charles I. In 1628, he reluctantly agreed to the Petition of Right, which was a document that limited the power of the king. He had no intention of keeping the agreement and did not allow Parliament to meet from 1629 to 1640. Charles I was deposed by Oliver Cromwell, a leader in Parliament, and was beheaded in 1649. By the time of the rise of Cromwell, many Englishmen had already populated New England. Upon Charles I death, England became a republic, the Commonwealth of England and Parliament ruled the country. In 1629, John Winthrop, became governor of the Massachusetts Bay Company and in 1630 sailed to Salem. About a thousand settlers followed him to America. He and about 800 Puritans crossed the Charles River in 1630 and founded Boston on a peninsula that the Indians called Shawmut. He helped establish a Congregational church. The number of Englishmen departing for the colonies dwindled once England became a republic in 1649. For about two years after their arrival, the Perkins family remained in Boston, where their last child, Lydia was born, her baptism is recorded in the parish books of the First Church in Boston, June 3, 1632. On the 18th of May, 1631, John took the oath of freeman, admitting him to all the civil rights of the colony only enjoyed by freemen. He moved from Boston in 1633 to the colony at Ispwich, founded by John Winthrop, Jr. John Winthrop Jr. was a colonial governor of Connecticut. He came to America in 1631. In 1633, he founded the town of Ispwich, Mass. He returned to govern a new colony in Saybrook, Conn. By 1640, Massachusetts Bay Colony had 2,500 people. He founded New London in 1646 and later served as governor of Connecticut. John Perkins was largely engaged in agriculture, his house was near the river at the entrance to Jeffries Neck on what is now East Street. John Perkins besides holding town offices and occupying other positions of trust, appears to have been one of the leading men of Ipswich. He died in 1654, aged 64 years. His will is on file at the Probate office in Salem, Massachusetts.
19 MAR 1587/88 - 1654
Judith
Elizabeth
Gater
RFN126
~1550 - 1574
George
Stevens
24
24
RFN127
~1555
Amy
Clerke
RFN128
~1545 - 11 MAR 1607/08
Henry
Perkins
RFN129
~1541 - 1603
Elizabeth
Sawbridge
62
62
RFN130
~1550 - 1591
Michael
Gater
41
41
RFN131
~1550 - 1608
Elizabeth
Isabel
Bailey
58
58
RFN132
1530
William
Bailey
RFN133
~1525 - 23 MAR 1590/91
Thomas
Perkins
RFN134
~1527 - 1618
Alice
Kebble
91
91
RFN135
~1519 - 1590
William
Sawbridge
71
71
RFN136
~1127 - <1217
Josce
De
Flete
90
90
~1484 - 1546
Henry
Perkins
62
62
RFN138
Mary
RFN139
~1459 - 1528
Thomas
Perkins
69
69
Thomas Perkins married Alys and died April 21, 1528,. This was during the time of the reign of Henry VIII who ruled from 1509-1547.
~1461 - 1538
Alyse
De
Astley
77
77
RFN141
~1430 - ~1496
William
James
Perkins
66
66
RFN142
~1434
Joanna
Reade
RFN143
1419 - 1538
Sir
Thomas
De Astley
119
119
RFN144
1426 - 1545
Editha
Constable
119
119
RFN145
~1410 - ~1478
Thomas
Perkins
68
68
Thomas Perkins was an armor bearer for a knight during the War of the Roses which lasted from 1455-1485. He was from Mattisfield(Madresfield in Nottinghamshire) and owned Foxell Court in Sulhamstead Abbotts and died in 1478.
~1410
Ellen
Tompkins
RFN147
~1380 - ~1451
William
Perkins
71
71
RFN148
Margaret
Collee
RFN149
~1350 - >1399
John
Parkyns
49
49
John Perkins was steward for Earl of Gloucester and had 18 acres in Madresfield in Worcestshire.
Margaret
RFN151
~1329 - <1412
Henry
Pierrekin
83
83
RFN152
~1300 - >1381
Pierre
De
Morlaix
81
81
The Perkins family history starts with Peter Morley Perkins living in 1381 who was a Sargeant of Lord Hugh Despencer, he married Agnes Taylor, daughter of John Taylor of Shropshire. The family had a permanent feudal place with the Despencer. During this time Richard II was King, during his reign in 1381, a blacksmith named Wat Tyler led a peasants' revolt against forced labor and heavy taxation. Following the rebellion, Richard tried to rule without Parliament. The English people by this time had become used to certain rights contained in the Magna Carta signed in 1215 by King John. Richard II governed so badly that the country turned against him and he was forced to give up the throne. Parliament chose the Duke of Lancaster who ruled as Henry IV.
~1300 - <1388
Agnes
(Alice)
Taylor
88
88
RFN154
~1279
John
Taylor
RFN155
~1647 - 1732
Zaccheus
Perkins
85
85
RFN156 BIOGRAPHY The Family of John Perkins Author: A. Perkins This book co ntains the history and genealogy of the John Perkins family of Ipswich, Massac husetts. Bibliographic Information: Perkins, A. The Family of John Perkins. The Salem Press Publishing and Printing Co. Massachusetts. 1889. 14 Zaccheus ( Zaccheus6, Thomas3, John1,) was born in Topsfield, Mass., Sept. 19, 1705. He m arried Priscilla Jewett of Rowley, May 22, 1740. He died about Aug., 1742. He died intestate, and his widow, Priscilla, was appointed Administratrix of his estate. After his death, his widow married for a second husband, Humphrey Hobs on of Rowley, who was appointed in 1748 as guardian of his daughter, Priscilla Perkins, then under 14 years of age. He was a tailor by trade, and resided i n Rowley; his name often appears upon the records of Essex County deeds. The children of Zaccheus and Priscilla (Jewett) Perkins were: 47 William, b. Mar ch 14, 1741. 48 Priscilla, b. Dec. 7, 1742. Page 113
~1660 - 1747
Rebecca
87
87
RFN157
Cornelius
Putnam
RFN158
1622 - 1686
Thomas
Perkins
64
64
RFN159
~1620 - 1686
Phebe
Gould
66
66
RFN160
Judith
Elizabeth
Gater
RFN161
1839 - 1919
Geerd
(George)
Smidt
80
80
BIOGRAPHY GEERT SMIDT (GEORGE SMITH) NOTE: Geert Smidt came to Amer ica with his parents in the autumn of 1856 at the age of 17. They settled in Ogle County, Illinois near the town of Forreston. He then Americanized his na me to George Smith. We have no record of George's schooling. Although his fa ther continued to make and mend shoes, George learned how to dress and cut up beef very well. It was an ability he taught to his sons, as carried on by Jacob and Jackson. In early 1866, at the age of 27, George married Matilda Taalke Kruger of Forreston, a bride of 18 who had also been born in the same area of Germany as his family. There are still reunions of the Smith-Kruger families every summer near Sibley, Iowa. After a number of years, the George Smith family moved to the vicinity of Sheldon, Iowa, where they farmed for many years . He also did butchering of beef and pork as a side-line income. George was known as a meticulous farmer, with one of the finest looking farmsteads in the area. The lawn was beautifully kept, with lovely flowerbeds and a vine-cove red porch. A large strawberry bed was a particular attraction for relatives. He had a reputation for well-formed grain stacks. He measured distances care fully and his sons learned how to throw bundles so he could lay them with precision. When a stack was completed he had a large wooden-toothed rake with which he combed and combed them until every straw was in place. He retired in 1909 and lived in Sheldon for his last ten years. Jacob and Fannie spent most of their life on farms while George and Jackson farmed a few years each. Chris and Clara taught rural schools and later worked for many years in postal employ. Jackson was a livestock dealer, George a postal worker and Albert a cabinet maker. Charlotte was kicked in the abdomen by a horse when she was 15 and died as a result. Nancy married a carpenter contractor. Etta never married but made a loving home for her brothers when needed, also for Clara, and her mother when she became ill. George Smidt died at his home in Sheldon of the complications of old age after a lengthy illness. INFORMATION SOURCES - Family History of Rev. Jackson E. Smith and Matilda Hindt Onken
1847 - 1917
Taalke
Matilda (Tillie)
Kruger
69
69
1791 - 1881
Jakob Heijen
Gerdes
Smidt
90
90
BIOGRAPHY [BO:[UL:The Story of Jakob Smidt:UL]:BO] Jakob Smidt was bo rn at Rorichum, Ostfriesland, Germany, on the Ems River near the border of Holland. Rorichum is a very old town and was well known in the 15th Century, as well as nearby Oldersum, which was the larger trading center at that time. The Rorichum Church is one of the oldest in East Friesland, having been built in 1347. The church is a heavy walled "baked stone" rectangular structure, with a figure of a rooster on top of the mast, denoting the Calvinist faith. There is a separate high and very old bell tower and adjacent to them is the Freidhof (Kakehof) or cemetery. In 1812, Kreis Aurich, which included Rorichum, wa s annexed to the Kingdom of Prussia. The Ostfriesians didn't like the Prussians due to their military activities, so in 1815 Kreis Aurich reverted back to the Havover Province. Jakob Smidt was not from a wealthy family, his father being a shoemaker. As was customary, Jakob was conscripted into the Prussian army in 1812, at the age of 19. In 1815 he was with the Prussian Infantry in Belgium getting ready to invade France. Napoleon had escaped from exile, reactivated his army, and was determined to destroy the Allies on the Northwest be fore they could begin the invasion. The Prussians, in their dark gray uniforms and very high helmets, were deployed along the banks of the Sambre and Meuse Rivers with headquarters at Namur and Leige. They were led by the tough 72 year old General Marshal Gebbard von Blèucher who coordinated an attack from the east while Wellington's army prepared to advance from the north and west. On Thursday, June 15, Napoleon crossed the French border south of Charleroi w ith about half of his army of 126,000 veteran soldiers. Regiment after regimen t of light cavalry dashed into Belgium. Wellington was actually napping in Bru ssels when the French army engaged the Prussians further to the east. The Pru ssian outposts were soon swamped and by early afternoon the French had crossed the Sambre and headed for Ligny where the principal early Prussian engagement took place the afternoon of the next day. Jakob Smidt was with the troops that had arrived that afternoon evening, having been delayed by French troops u nder Marshal Grouchy. He was with the troops near Ligny that were overwhelmed by the French cavalry. During the course of the battle, Jakob received a bullet through his hat and several more through his clothing. His regiment was overwhelmed by the French infantry and the survivors were taken prisoner. Now started the long, difficult prisoner's march along the one hundred and sixty miles to Paris. The guards on horseback prodded the men along the sides of th e roads which were clogged by military gear being rushed in the opposite direc tion. With the rain and mud, and the strenuous events of the past two days of battle that had fatigued the already hungry prisoners, the journey became a virtual death march. The badly wounded and fatigued men that could not keep up with the march were put to the sword or bayonet, since powder was scarce and too valuable to waste. Finally, on the second day of the march, with Paris still a long way in the distance, Jakob was rapidly becoming exhausted and was slowly slipping back to the end of the line of prisoners. He knew that his end was probably very near. While passing through a small French village, he finally fell to his knees from sheer exhaustion. He was a very religious man, and knowing that this may be his final moments, he began to pray. A young French girl watching the line of prisoners through a window of her home, saw him praying and ran outside to hand him a glass of wine and two small biscuits. This kind offering gave him the strength and stimulation to keep up with the other prisioners for the remainder of the march. They finally reached the prison camp situated on the low hills at the northeast side of Paris. Because of his experiences and narrow escapes, Jakob Smidt had become known as "Little Iron Man" among his fellow prisoners. On Sunday, June 18, the day that Jakob and his fellow prisoners reached Paris, Napoleon engaged the British troops under the Duke of Wellington near the town of Walerloo, just south of Brussels in Belgium, hoping to defeat them before the remaining Prussians could arrive. But General Marshal Blücher and his troops joined in the final victory battle at Plancenoit with the LaBelle Alliance on Napoleon's right flank, thereby taking pressure off Wellington at Mount Saint Jean below Waterloo. The casualties on both sides were heavy, but the French were finally forced into a rout and the Allied armies joined in the pursuit of the broken and confused Imperial Guard. Napoleon to abdicate his throne and be deported to the island of St. Helena. On July 7, 1915, the allies marched into Paris and there was great rejoicing the next day as Jakob Smidt and his comrades were liberated from the prison camp. Jakob returned to his home in Rorichum and was given a hero's welcome for his part in helping to defeat the tyrant Napoleon. He soon married his childhood sweetheart, whose name is now unknown. She died shortly after the birth of a daughter, Heike. After several years the young widower married Frauke (Fanny) DeGrave, daughter of Tjark DeGrave, also of Rorichum. The people of this area spoke a dialect called "East Frisian Low German". West Friesland is just across the border in Holland. "Low German" means one of several different local dialects which have no written language. The classical written language taught in schools is called "High German". After the war Jakob Smidt followed the shoemaker trade. But the family was discouraged with conditions in their area and took an interest in the great opportunities that they had heard about in the German settlements of northern Illinois in America. The two oldest daughters of Jakob were sent to America to investigate and verify these opportunities. There was great anxiety when they didn't hear from them for several months, and the family feared that they may have perished. But the "Tourist Class" sailboat available in those days was very slow, and it was over six months before the family finally heard from the girls, who had made it to the Middle West. The rest of the family then emigrated to America and after three months on the ocean, they arrived in the autumn of 1856, settling in Lincoln Township, Ogle County, Illinois, near Haldane, a village southeast of Forreston. At that time George was 17 years of age and Clara was 14. With the help of other early pioneers Jakob built a two room log house. When some of their friends, the John DeVriese family of eight children from Simonswolde, about 10 miles northeast from Rorichum, came to this country they all moved in with the large Smidt family. All lived in this small two room house until the DeVrieses could build their own home. Jakob Smidt is buried next to his second wife, Frauke in the Haldane Cemetery. The name engraved on the tombstone is Schmit, which is pronounced the same, but is not the correct spelling of the name. INFORMATION SOURCES - Family History of Rev. Jackson E. Smith, Richard Smith, Matilda Hindt Onken, Al Buss and Kate Buss
1806 - 1874
Frauke
(Fanny)
DeGrave
68
68
RFN165
~1814 - 1857
Christian
(Chris) Eilers
Kruger
43
43
BIOGRAPHY CHRIS AND NONA KRUGER Christian Kruger and Nona Sarholt were born and raised in Ostfriesland, Germany, Hanover Province, where they were married. Chris was a sheepherder, and would whistle as he went down the street and all the goats and sheep would follow him as their owners turned them out. In the winter time he would cut peat from the peat bogs nearby for the fireplaces in the local homes. There was some money inherited from his father, a nd some land and other holdings had been inherited by his older brothers. Christian's aunt Lottie had held his share of the inheritance in trust until he was ready to emigrate to America in 1855. She then got all the money due him in currency so that he would not have to pay tax and duty on it. To keep officials from learning that she had this money, she sewed it into a beautiful bla ck, rustly taffeta petticoat. A real problem presented itself, though, when they wanted to bring a great deal of linens and woolen cloth to America. They had spent hours preparing wool for spinning and linen for cloth and thread. How would they ever be able to get through customs with so much more than they were allowed? Nona, the mother, proved herself to be a real smuggler, for what officer would ever think of going beneath a pile of dirty diapers. They would really close that pail in a big hurry! They left Germany in 1855 with the ir seven children, the youngest being only about 6 months old. The sailing ship on which they boarded for passage took three months to make the ocean voyage. The ship also had a store of peat in the hold to stoke a steam engine in case the weather became either too calm or stormy. When they reached America, they continued westward until they reached a German settlement at Freeport, Illinois. Their youngest child, Jessie, was born there in 1857. Her uncle John Sarholt, who came to America with them, called her his "Little American." Chris Kruger hired out to work for a Mr. Didden, who built a one-room house for them with a lean-to on the south side for extra clothes and cookware and on the west was another lean-to that housed a cow, pig and some chickens which he had given them. They also had the use of three acres of land for garden and feed for their livestock. He worked there for a year and a half, then passed away in 1857, and was buried in Freeport, Illinois. Nona Kruger then moved in to Freeport and in 1864 she married Henry Lindeman, a widower who had a married son named Folkert. He and his wife were very poor and lived over a creamery in Grundy Center. Henry Lindeman also hired out to work for Mr. Didden. Af ter a year and a half he, too, died in 1865. Nona died about one year later, in 1866 and was buried in Freeport. The family recalls that they lived 10 miles northwest of Freeport and Nona always had to walk to town for groceries unless she could get a ride with someone going past. Her very first ride to town was with Mr. Oko Tjaden who had one horse and one cow hitched to a wagon and was taking some wheat to get it ground. They also had to walk that distance to church every week. One Sunday, on their way home, a big rain storm came up . Being all prairie, there was no place to go for shelter. Jessie, her youngest was with Nona and when it started to rain so very hard, she put the child on the ground in front of her for protection and wrapped her long gathered skirt around her and they stood there until the rain was over. By the time they got home, their clothes were nearly dry.
1817 - 1866
Neone
Klaasson
Soorholz
49
49
RFN167
1849 - 1946
Dick
(Dirk)
Beving
97
97
RFN168 BIOGRAPHY Note: Dirk and Mareka Beving first made their home on a farm 2 1/2 miles east of Cleves, Iowa and later on farms at Matlock and Woden, Io wa. They finally moved to join their daughter Tena and her husband, Jacob Smi th at Doran, Minnesota. INFORMATION SOURCES: Beving Family Records and records of Rev. Jackson E. Smith
1854 - 1921
Mareka
Willemssen
66
66
RFN169
1814 - 1876
Dirk
(Ubbens)
Evers Beving
62
62
RFN170 BIOGRAPHY NOTE: Ubbe and Janna Beving came to America in 1864, spendi ng a few years near Freeport, Illinois and later moving to a farm near Cleves, Iowa. Jan and Gepke left Germany on 14 April 1866, spending six weeks on th e ocean, and making their home with Ubbe. Jan worked In Illinois for several years, later coming to Ackley, Iowa and settling on a place near Wellsburg. Dirk and Trientje Beving emigrated to America in the spring of 1867 with their three youngest children. In May of that year, they arrived at Forreston, Ill inois when Dirk was 18 years of age. This is also the same community that the Jakob Smidt family had come to in the autumn of 1856. The next spring, in 18 68, they moved to Iowa, as did the Smidt family not long after. There is no r ecord that the families actually knew each other then, but having come from th e same part of Germany, talking the same East Friesian dialect, and having arr ived in the same Illinois community, it is likely that they had become acquain ted. The Bevings bought a farm near Cleves, Iowa. INFORMATION SOURCE Bevi ng Family History of Rev. Jackson E. Smith
1817 - 1910
Trientje
"Tena" Jans
Freeksen
93
93
RFN171
1825 - 1877
Jan
Hindkerk
Willemssen
51
51
RFN172 BIOGRAPHY NOTE: According to census, land and courthouse records, Joh n C. Willemssen was also known as Jon C. Wilhelms. He had seven or eight bro thers and sisters. John emigrated to America as a single man in 1853 and sett led in Brookville Twp., Ogle Co., Illinois near Forreston, where he met Peterk e, which translated in American would be Pearl. Peterke Muntinga came to Amer ica in 1853 with her brother, William, and settled at Ogle Co., Illinois. She married John in 1853 and remained in Illinois until 1863 when they moved to I owa. They first settled in Etna Twp., Hardin Co. near Ackley, then moved to Shiloh Twp., Grundy Co., near Wellsburg. It is not known whether John and Pet erke were acquainted in Germany, but the towns of Oldersum and Rorichum are on ly a short distance apart on a map in the Ostfriesland area. John K. Brouwer (or Brower) was also born in East Friesland in 1824. He came to America in 18 63 with his wife and family. His wife, Brechje, died in Grundy County, Iowa. He and Peterke had two more sons who later lived in Campbell, Minnesota. IN FORMATION SOURCES - Beving Family Records and the Family History of Rev. Jack son E. Smith
1839 - 1921
Peterke
(Pearl)
Muntinga
81
81
RFN173
John
C.
Brouwer
RFN174
John
C.
Brouwer
RFN175
~1855
Fred
Neuman
RFN176
~1860
Lena
Pomeraing
RFN177
1858
Theodore
Roth
RFN178
John
Pomeraing
RFN180
Caroline
RFN181
1907 - 1907
Alice
Neuman
RFN182
1908 - 1908
Mable
Neuman
RFN183
1909
Eleanor
Ida (Norie)
Neuman
RFN184
Joseph
LeRoy
Beeler
RFN185
1912
Edna
Marie
Neuman
RFN186
1901 - 1992
Albert
C. "Rip"
Ludwig
91
91
RFN187
1914 - 1914
Esther
Neuman
RFN188
1916 - 1988
Edwin
Rhinehart
Neuman
71
71
RFN189
1921
Ruth
Johnson
RFN190
1918 - 1918
Lawrence
Neuman
6d
6d
RFN191
1923
Lorraine
Johanna
"Tootie" Neuman
RFN192
D. 2001
John
Hermann
RFN193
1921 - 1921
Gilbert
Neuman
RFN194
1921 - 1940
Norbert
Neuman
19
19
RFN195
1930 - 1930
Donald
Neuman
1d
1d
RFN196
Living
(Gilbertson)
Living
Neuman
Living
UNKNOWN
Living
Gilbertson
Living
Gilbertson
Living
Neuman
?
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Oliphant
Living
Pauly
Living
Pauly
Living
Pauley
Living
Pauley
Living
Pauley
Living
Pauley
Living
Liupakka
Living
O'Neill
Living
O'Neill
Living
Smith
Living
Walker
Living
Walker
Living
Walker
Living
Smith
1932 - 1968
Margaret
Johnson
35
35
RFN220
Living
Stonestreet
1926 - 1985
Edmund
A.
Hibbard
58
58
RFN222
1910 - 1997
Ronald
Cameron
DeGree
87
87
RFN223
1930 - 1979
David
Michael
Pomplin
49
49
RFN224
1898 - 1957
Dirk
(Richard)
C. Smith
58
58
RFN225
~1908
Ruby
Loomis
RFN226
1900 - 1995
Tjark
(Jackson)
Edwin Smith
95
95
RFN227
1907 - 1994
Myrtle
Ann
McKinley
87
87
RFN228
1902 - 1902
Marake
(Mary)
Smith
4m
4m
RFN229
1905 - 1994
Marake (Mae)
Charlotte
Smith
89
89
RFN230
1903 - 1945
Stanhope
Quentin
Salisbury
42
42
RFN231
Tarkel
Tweet
RFN232
1908 - 1993
Jacob
J.
Smith
84
84
JACOB J SMITH: Fact 1: Electrical Construction worker in Spain
~1920
Balbie
Manjon
RFN234
1910
Matilda
Viola
Smith
RFN235
Living
Austad
1912
Ethel
Pearl
Smith
RFN237
~1916
Robert
Soderholm
RFN238
1868
Noene
"Nancy"
Smith
RFN239
~1864
Harm
Bosma
RFN240
1870 - 1968
Frauke
"Fannie"
Smith
97
97
RFN241
~1867
Richard
F.
Hindt
RFN242
1873 - 1949
Etta
Smith
76
76
RFN243
1876 - 1970
Christian
J.
Smith
93
93
RFN244
~1896
Norma
Dot
Potter
RFN245
1878 - 1964
Klaaske
"Clara"
Smith
85
85
RFN246
1882 - 1897
Charlotte
Smith
15
15
Charlotte was kicked by a horse and died.
~1918
Vernon
Kern
1911 - 1939
George
Earl
Smith
27
27
George was a businessman at Hewitt, Minnesota.
1921
Evelyn
Emma
Smith
1913
Mary
Mathilda
Smith
1887 - 1970
George
G.
Smith
82
82
GEORGE G SMITH: Fact 1: Farmed then worked for the postal service
~1895
Martha
Pohlman
RFN253
1890 - 1969
Albert
Smith
79
79
RFN254
~1888
Henrietta
Myers
RFN255
~1776
Tjark Janssen
"Jackson"
DeGrave
RFN256
1830
Heike
Smidt
RFN257
~1833
Martin
Ulfers
RFN258
1835
Geertje
(Gertie)
Smidt
RFN259
~1831
John
Miller
RFN260
1836
Trientje
(Katherine)
Smidt
RFN261
~1831
W.C.
Kilker
RFN262
1833 - ~1869
Etta
(Ida)
Smidt
36
36
RFN263
~1829
Christof
Waegens
RFN264
1842 - 1910
Klaaske
(Clara)
Smidt
68
68
RFN265
1833 - 1908
Aalderk
Jochums
Eikamp
74
74
1. Farmer, constable, justice of the peace. 2. Sources for family: Family records of Aalderk Eikamp, birth record of Klaaska from baptism register of Ev. Reform Church in Rorichum, Death records of Aalderk and Klasska, Book from D.A.R. "Portrait and Biographical Album of Ogle County, Illinois", and info given from Aalderk while living.
1845
Henrietta
Smidt
RFN267
~1845
George
B.
Dannen
RFN268
1848 - 1918
Tjark
(Jackson)
Smidt
70
70
RFN269
~1882
Henry
Neuman
RFN270
Elsie
Reed
RFN271
~1884
Louis
Neuman
RFN272
1894 - 1965
Walter
Neuman
70
70
RFN273
Edith
Tulare
RFN274
1893 - 1905
Ubbe
Beving
11
11
RFN275
Christian
Kruger
RFN277
Matilda
Taalke
Kruger
RFN276
~1836
Ubbe
Beving
RFN278
Janna
Teyen
RFN279
~1838
Antje
(Anna)
Beving
RFN280
Dr.
Marcus
Relotius
RFN281
~1840
Jan
Beving
RFN282
Margaretha
Sents
RFN283
~1843
Gepke
Beving
RFN284
Jacob
Peters
RFN285
~1846
Amke
(Emma)
Beving
RFN286 BIOGRAPHY Johanns and Emma Riekena settled a farm west of Wellsbury, I owa until 1910 when it is mentioned that Emma moved to town.
Johannes
Riekena
RFN287
~1852
Trientje
(Tena)
Beving
RFN288
Casper
Jutting
RFN289
1878 - 1967
Peterka
(Patty)
Beving
89
89
RFN290
1870 - 1928
John
Lytle
58
58
RFN291
1873 - 1962
Frank
Wooley
89
89
RFN292
1880 - 1974
John
Willemssen
Beving
93
93
RFN293
1881 - 1968
Antje
(Anna)
Beving
87
87
RFN294
1882 - 1972
Gepka
(Abbie)
Beving
89
89
RFN295
1884 - 1968
Amke
(Emma)
Beving
84
84
RFN296
1884 - 1973
Tjark
"Jackson"
Smith
89
89
RFN297RFN248
1886 - 1959
Wopka
(Myrtle)
Beving
72
72
RFN298
1888 - 1962
Mareka
(Mary)
Beving
74
74
RFN299
1890 - 1916
Dirk
(Dick)
Beving
25
25
RFN300
1892 - 1894
Henrietta
Beving
2
2
RFN301
1896 - 1964
Henry
Beving
68
68
RFN302
1894 - 1894
Henry
Beving
6d
6d
RFN303
1898 - 1985
Etta
Beving
86
86
RFN304
1900 - 1928
Minnie
Beving
28
28
RFN305
1902 - 1979
Bertha
Beving
76
76
RFN306
~1857
Infant
Willemssen
?
RFN307RFN308
1859
Harm
Willemssen
RFN309
1861 - 1921
Wopke
Willemssen
60
60
RFN310
1864 - 1893
Henrietta
Willemssen
28
28
RFN311
1868 - 1952
Hindkerk
Willemssen
84
84
RFN312
~1870
Infant
Willemssen
?
RFN313RFN314
1872 - 1953
William
J.
Willemssen
81
81
RFN315
1874 - 1953
Sibo
Willemssen
79
79
RFN316
1876
Harminas
Willemssen
RFN317
~1880
John
Brouwer
?
RFN318
~1882
Bertus
Brouwer
RFN319
1850 - 1928
Frederika
(Rika) Johanna
Kruger
78
78
Notes for FREDERICA JOHANNA KRUGER: By Joise De Wall I never knew my grandfather very well, as he died a number of years before I was born. Frederika and Fred were married in Freeport, Illinois, but later moved to Forreston. My grandfather was a railroad man. As many men of his time, he did odd jobs on the side, such as butchering and barbering. I shall always remember my grandmother as a very kind, Christian lady. She was always ready and willing to help any one in need of her services. I'm sure all of her children and grandchildren loved her very much. Her life was not all a bed of roses though. She had a very meager education and was called upon to start working out at the age of 9 years. Her family was very poor. I can recall her telling us of her experience while working at one place. The man of the house told her to go to the pasture to get the cow to be milked. It was bitter cold weather with a lot of snow on the ground. Of course, with wooden shoes on, by the time she got back with the cow, her feet were frozen. The lady of the house didn't want Rika's mother to find out about this, so she said if she wouldn't tell her mother, she would buy her a new calico dress the next time she went to town. She had several tragedies happen during her life time. One was when her son, 12 years of age, who was taking lunch to his father at the railroad, was killed by a train. Another was when she lost her oldest daughter in a shooting accident. Her daughter was shot and killed instantly by a man who had a quarrel with her husband. He had warned her not to go to the window when they heard shooting in the street, but she had already started drawing the curtain aside and the shot came instantly. Her husband was only 35 and grandmother stayed with the family until the children were old enough to care for themselves. Her relatives remember her as a very witty person, good for laughs and playing jokes. What was a marvel was how she could be this way with all the tragedies in her life. She said, "We must live for today, for yesterday is gone." She lived a very useful life.
~1840
Hannes
Boelkes
RFN321
1844 - 1921
Noune
Lottie
Kruger
76
76
Notes for LOTTIE KRUGER: Story of Lottie Kruger Dilly and John Dilly Lottie was born to Christian and Noune Kruger in Ostfriesland, Germany. She came to America with her family in 1855 and settled near Freeport, Illinois. While living near Forreston, Illinois, Lottie met and married John Dilly. They farmed in Illinois for a time and then migrated to Iowa with several of the other Kruger families. One of their children remembers them crossing from Illinois to Iowa. Fred stood up and shouted "Good-bye Illinois" while Klaus cried. Lottie and her family first moved near Little Rock and then to the May City area. The following clipping from the Osceola Centennial paper tells of how Lottie and some of her children nearly drown in the Ocheydan River while making that move. The John Dilly family moved from near Hartley to a farm north of May City. The men had gone earlier with wagons and cattle. It was dark when Mrs. Dilly and five children riding in a spring wagon came to a place where they had to ford the Ocheydan River south of May City. They didn't cross the rive at the right place and they almost drowned. The oldest girl, 14 and a 5-year old boy floated out of the water; one horse was down but the girl got the tugs unhooked and got the horses across. Mrs. Dilly and the other three children floated down the river a ways in the spring wagon until it came to rest near the bank and they clung to it. They saw light about a half-mile away and Mrs. Dilly said, 'Lets all holler and the people, The Robinsons, heard them. Mr. Robinson and son Frank came to their rescue. Mrs. Dilly, holding the baby, had stood in the icy water so long that when she was going to hand the baby to the men she dropped him in the water. The boy grabbed him and although all were wet and cold, they suffered no ill effects: Didn't even catch a cold. The Robinsons were unhitching their horses after a trip to town and heard the calling. Interesting note: Young Frank later married daughter, Lottie Dilly. It was Hannah and her five year old brother who got out of the water while Lottie, with Emma on her lap, sat on the seat while Nona, Lottie and Henry were sitting on the robe behind the back seat as they floated down the swollen river. It was really answered prayer for such a rescue. In 1901, they moved to Reading, Minnesota, where they farmed until Henry got married. This was the last of his help, so John sold out to Henry and bought a little home in Worthington, Minnesota. John started doing carpenter work. They once visited their daughter, Lottie in the woods of Wisconsin and while John thought it was wonderful, Lottie thought her children were living out of the world, so they induced them to come to Worthington. Before the Robertsons could make that move, John died just one year before they were to have celebrated their golden wedding. Lottie, the daughter and her husband, decided, along with the brother, that Lottie, the mother, should not live alone, so she made her home with the Robertsons until she died. All the young people remember her for her quick wit, the many childhood stories, her peppy German songs and her marvelous disposition. She was always the source of many hours of entertainment to all. Children of LOTTIE KRUGER and JOHN DILLY are: 16. i. CHRIS3 DILLY, b. 1862. 17. ii. JOHNANNA DILLY, b. 1870, Freeport, IL. iii. LOUIS DILLY, b. 1873, Freeport, IL; d. Redfield, SD. 18. iv. FRED DILLY, b. March 02, 1875, Freeport, IL; d. August 22, 1925, Henning, MN. 19. v. CLAUS DILLY, b. 1877, Freeport, IL. 20. vi. WILLIAM DILLY, b. February 12, 1879, Freeport, IL; d. September 1969, Worthington, MN. 21. vii. NONA DILLY, b. 1880, Freeport, IL; d. May 22, 1962, Worthington, MN. 22. viii. LOTTIE DILLY, b. November 11, 1882; d. February 28, 1966. 23. ix. HENRY DILLY, b. November 08, 1884; d. April 1967. 24. x. EMMA DILLY, b. 1886; d. 1937, California. xi. JOHN DILLY, JR, b. July 11, 1907, Freeport, IL; d. May 29, 1942, Henning, MN. More About JOHN DILLY, JR: Fact 1: Mail carrier between May City and Ocheyedan
1841 - 1912
John
Dilly
71
71
RFN323
1842 - 1912
Klaas
C.
Kruger
70
70
Notes for KLAAS C KRUGER: K.C. Kruger, who successfully carries on farming on section 24, Colfax Township, is one of the worthy German citizens of Grundy County. He was born in Ostfriesland, Hanover, June 9, 1842, and is a son of Christian and Neone (Soorholz) Kruger. The father was a farmer by occupation. In 1854, accompanied by his family, he crossed the Atlantic to America, and took up his residence in Stephenson County, Illinois. But he was not long permitted to enjoy his new home, for his death occurred in 1856. His wife survived him only until 1861. Our subject was a youth of twelve years when he came to the New World. After his father's death he cared for his mother and her children. September 2, 1861, he manifested his loyalty to his adopted country by entering her service for three years as a member of the Forty-sixth Illinois Infantry. He served for three years and six months, being mustered out February 2,1864. In July of the same year he re-enlisted as a carpenter, and continued with the boys in blue until honorably discharged April 3, 1865. He participated in the battles of Ft. Henry, Ft. Donelson, Shiloh, Corinth and the siege of Vicksburg. From Vicksburg he was sent, as a guard of the rebel prisoners, to Cairo, Illinois, and subsequently went to Memphis, Tennessee, where he was discharged on account of physical disability arising from typhus fever contracted while at Shiloh. After the war Mr. Kruger resumed farming in Stephenson County, Illinois, where he continued his labors until 1870. He was married May 25, 1866, to Miss Berendina Gronhagen. Unto then have been nine children born, eight of who are yet living, namely: Rev Harm T., a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, in Butler County, Iowa; Christian, Henry, Nannie, Klass B., Gertie, Barney and Albert. The year 1870 witnessed the arrival of Mr. Kruger and his family in Grundy County, Iowa. They located upon a tract of wild prairie land, which he has since transformed into his present fine farm; in fact, he has made all of the improvements upon the place, and its buildings stand as monuments to his thrift and enterprise. The farm is two hundred and forty acres in extent, and the entire area is under a high state of cultivation. The home, a comfortable and commodious frame residence, was erected in 1878. In its rear there are food barns and outbuildings, and there in turn are surrounded by well tilled fields, In connection with the cultivation of his land Mr. Kruger carries on stock-raising, and for the pas twelve years has made a specialty of Chester-White hogs. Mr. Kruger has led a busy life, largely devoted to his business interests, yet he has found time to serve his fellow-townsmen in official positions. For seven years, he was Justice of the Peace, for four years was Township Clerk, six years served as Township Assessor, and for two years was Constable. He has several times been a delegate to the Democratic State Conventions, and has twice been a member of the County Democratic Central Committee. The prompt and able manner in which he discharges his public duties has won him the high commendation of all concerned. He and his family are all faithful members of the Presbyterian Church of Holland, and for twenty-two years he has been Clerk of the Board of Trustees. An honorable, upright life well entitles him to representation in the volume. Taken from Portraits and Biographical Records of Jasper, Marshall and Grundy Counties, Iowa, 1894.
1849 - 1930
Berenedena
Groenhagen
80
80
RFN325
1852 - 1929
Albert
Kruger
76
76
RFN326
1857 - 1916
Anna
Marie
Kortman
59
59
RFN327
1840
Christina
Charlotta
Kruger
RFN328
1854 - 1936
John
Kruger
81
81
RFN329
~1867
Anna
Sohl
RFN330
1857 - 1952
Jessie
Kruger
94
94
RFN331
~1850
Fred
Berends
RFN332
~1886
Mary
(Maria)
Roth
RFN333
~1880
Henry
Wilke
* Resided first near Barron, WI, then Nashua, MN. Shirley Baxton has wedding picture.
1892 - 1984
Mienna
"Minnie"
Roth
92
92
RFN335
Rhinehart
Kath
RFN336
1901 - 1971
Erna
Roth
69
69
RFN337
~1898
George
Edward
Rogge
RFN338
1898 - ~1990
Herman
Roth
92
92
RFN339
Marie
Ross
RFN340
1894 - 1965
Arthur
Lloyd
Goodale
71
71
RFN341
1893 - 1967
Mina
Otilia
Dakken
74
74
RFN342
1896 - 1979
Bessie
Elvira
Goodale
83
83
RFN343
1688
James
Stuart
1898 - 1944
Earl
Henry
Goodale
45
45
RFN345
1909 - 1989
Osa
Cleo
Sutton
80
80
RFN346
1901 - 1992
Lucy
Ermin
Goodale
91
91
RFN347
1902 - 1926
Carl
Walgren
23
23
RFN348
1891 - 1938
Henry
Marverud
46
46
RFN349
1892 - 1972
Leslie
Farrer
79
79
RFN350
1906
Ella
Pauline
Goodale
RFN351
D. 1947
Albin
Willard
Bartz
RFN352
Orval
Oscar
Cunningham
RFN353
1910 - 1985
Clarence
Marvin
Goodale
75
75
RFN354
1917
Hilda
Annie Elsie
Balzum
RFN355
1913
Mae
Edith
Goodale
RFN356
Clarence
M.
Bendor
Divorced: July 1934
Clarence
Perry
Woody
Divorced: 12 June 1941
1917
Truman
B.
Gibson
RFN359
1856 - 1931
Lucy
Ann
Goodale
74
74
RFN360
~1852
George
Sensor
RFN361
1858
Betsey
(Bessie)
Marie Goodale
RFN362
George
Martin
RFN363
1861 - 1868
Melvin
William
Goodale
7
7
RFN364
1862 - 1865
Charles
Elmer
Goodale
3
3
RFN365
1864 - 1875
George
Eddie
Goodale
10
10
RFN366
1869 - 1946
Sidney
Marcus
Goodale
77
77
RFN367
1869 - 1966
Mary
Johanna
Witty
96
96
RFN368RFN375
1879 - 1978
Ida
(Eda)
Witty
99
99
RFN369
1812
Frederick
Witty
RFN370
1828
Mary
RFN371
1872 - 1965
Emme
(Emma)
Witty
92
92
RFN372
Mr.
Hess
RFN373
Anton
Olson
RFN374
16 JAN 1689/90
Charles
Stuart
1875 - 1876
Alice
May
Goodale
9m
9m
RFN379
1878
Bert L.
Goodale
RFN380
Emme
(Emma)
Witty
RFN381
1882 - 1938
August
Witty
56
56
RFN383
Gudney
Johnson
RFN384
1884 - 1903
Frank
Witty
18
18
RFN385
1850
Harry
Witty
RFN386
1853
Samuel
Peter
Witty
RFN387
1858
Tip
Witty
RFN388
1860
Frank
Witty
RFN389
~1835
Fred
Hardt
RFN390
~1837
William
Hardt
RFN391
~1840
August
Hardt
RFN392
~1842
Anna
Hardt
RFN393
~1844
Frank
Hardt
RFN394
~1770
Solomon
Nichols
RFN395
1832 - 1899
Horace
Nichols
66
66
RFN397
Sarah
J.
Robinson
RFN398
1834 - 1837
Lucy
Ann
Nichols
2
2
RFN399
1836 - 1838
Harvy
Nichols
1
1
RFN400
1841 - 1878
Elmer
Nichols
37
37
RFN401
Elizabeth
Coffin
RFN402
1843 - 1843
Hannah
Jane
Nichols
3m
3m
RFN403
1844 - 1933
Melvin
Nichols
89
89
RFN404
Almeda
Cooper
RFN405
1847 - 1917
George
Nichols
70
70
RFN406
Mary
Rae
RFN407
Jane
Byers
RFN408
1849
Mary
Ann
Nichols
RFN409
George
Ellis
RFN410
George
Shoomaker
RFN411
1851 - 1938
John
Stuart
Nichols
86
86
RFN412
Julia
Fidelia
Miller
RFN413
1854 - 1941
Ellen
(Ella)
Nichols
87
87
RFN414
John
McComb
RFN415
Charles
York
RFN416
Herbert
Stone
RFN417
~1803
Matthew
Nichols
RFN418
~1804
Mark
Nichols
RFN419
1805 - 1880
Luke
Nichols
74
74
RFN420
1814 - 1880
Mariah
Ellen
Goodale
65
65
RFN421
Jonathon
Goodale
RFN423
1771
Ruth
Goodale
RFN424
John
Wells
Goodale
?
RFN425
John
Wells
Goodale
?
RFN426
1822 - 1905
John
Wells
Goodale
83
83
RFN427
Jonathon
Goodale
Sr.
RFN428
1817 - 1822
Isaac
Lockwood
Goodale
5
5
RFN432
1816 - 1850
Josiah
Goodale
33
33
RFN433
1824 - 1907
Lockwood
Welch
Goodale
82
82
RFN434
Catherine
Abigail
Miller
RFN435
1827 - 1856
Elizabeth
Mary
Goodale
29
29
RFN436
John
Leonard
RFN437
Mr.
Yeldhaven
RFN438
1779
Aaron
Goodale
RFN439
1781
Polly
Goodale
RFN440
1784
Joseph
Goodale
RFN441
Martha
Smith
RFN442
1786
Jonathon
Goodale
RFN443
1791 - 1811
Josiah
Goodale
20
20
RFN444
1793 - 1870
Persis
Goodale
77
77
RFN445
1795
Levi
Goodale
RFN446
1798
Fanny
Goodale
RFN447
1801 - 1886
Phebe
Goodale
84
84
RFN448
1752
Ebenezer
Goodale
RFN449
Anna
Newton
RFN450
~1748
Ithamar
Goodale
RFN451
~1750
Asa
Goodale
RFN452
~1770
Tammison
Faye
Bellows
RFN453
1763
Patience
Goodale
RFN454
Joseph
Jacob
Deland
RFN455
1767
Mary
Goodale
RFN456
~1726
Joseph
Goodell
RFN457
1695 - 1709
Edward
Goodell
14
14
RFN458
1696
Mary
Goodell
RFN459
John III
Wilkins
RFN460
11 FEB 1698/99
Ruth
Goodell
RFN461
Nathaniel
Esty
RFN462
1704 - 1789
Sarah
Goodell
85
85
RFN463
21 JAN 1701/02 - 1753
Ebenezer
Upton
RFN464
1706
Elizabeth
Goodell
RFN465
~1700 - 1761
Solomon
Richardson
61
61
RFN466
1711 - 1790
Joseph
Goodell
78
78
RFN467
4 FEB 1708/09 - FEB 1709/10
Joseph
Goodell
RFN468
9 FEB 1666/67 - 1727
Zachariah
Goodale
RFN469
Sarah
Whipple
RFN470
1669 - 1717
Samuel
Goodale
48
48
RFN471
Elizabeth
Buxton
RFN472
1674
Mary
Goodale
RFN473
John
Wilkins
RFN474
1676 - 1766
Thomas
Goodell
89
89
The big families and dwindling estates of Massachusetts' Goodales must have been having an impact as Thomas had left that Salem area and was "of Woodstock CT" at the time of his marriage to Sarah. He soon went on to Pomfret, purchasing land there from Deacon Chandler. He returned to Massachusetts to marry and he left her in the spring of 1698 to go to Pomfret and ready the homestead. This first Goodell home is believed to have stood near the summit of Easter Hill, in the Elliott section of Pomfret, so named from its last resident. Traces of the old cellar remain near a fine spring of water. In 1709 Thomas Goodell sold this first cabin and clearing with its young orchards to Ebenezer Truesdell, and built himself a large and substantial dwelling on the northern slope of the hill, about one-fourth of a mile south of the present Abington Church. He owned several hundred acres of land between Blackwell's Brook and Abington Brook. His land was crossed by the King's Highway up to 1870, when that section of this ancient road was closed by the laying of the N. Y. N. H. & H. R. R. Travel was diverted through Abington Common, now Route 97. The Goodells were of Huguenot origin. .All of their eleven children were born before 1721. The first child, Humphrey, born Oct. 30, 1699 was the first white child born in the limits of the Mashamoquet Purchase The Goodell family lived for many generations at their second home site. A marvelous growth of lilacs still thrive by the open gate. A crumbling chimney, broad door stones, and a near-by well are all that remain to mark this century old pioneer homestead. Captain Zachariah Goodell (French and Indian War) sold the land (for twenty pounds old tenor) for the site of the meeting-house in 1751." Sources: A Genealogy of the Descendants of Robert Goodale / Goodell of Salem Mass by Williams, Geo E. - 1984; Vital Records of Beverly MA; Vital Records of Pomfret CT; Folklore and Firesides in Pomfret, Hampton and Vicinity by Griggs, Susan J. - 1950
1684 - 1750
Sarah
Horrell
66
66
The following description from Folktales of Pomfret described for me what it must have been like as a colonial pioneer in the wilds of Connecticut and has helped to make Sarah Horrell Goodell one of my favorite ancestors: In the autumn of 1698, Sarah Horrel Goodell left the friendly village of Woodstock, following the Path alone, far out into the wilds of the Nipmuck wilderness, seeking the cabin that she had been told by friends her husband was making ready for her. He had left for the new country in the early spring. Receiving no tidings of him, she resolved to join him, so taking her spinning wheel, she traversed the lonely trail from Roxbury, Mass., depending upon chance "lifts" from fellow travelers along the way. She could not be prevailed upon to remain overnight at Woodstock but, spinning wheel in hand, she hurried on through the forest gloom. South of Woodstock lay the Mashamoquet in the Nipmuck Country, the future town of Pomfret. At this period the only settler in the Purchase was John Sabin, near the Woodstock line, the Bartholomew place. The path that Sarah Horrel Goodell trod that autumn night, two hundred and fifty years ago, led over Ragged Hill in the western section, miles from the Sabin home. She traveled the rocky trail, ragged and steep, down through the valleys, over the brooks and on for many a weary mile, until at last, as the last rays faded in the west, she came to the little clearing and there, by the side of the "way", she found her cabin home.
1678 - 1753
Abraham
Goodell
75
75
RFN477
Hanna
Rhodes
RFN478
Mary
Tarbell
RFN479
1681 - 1752
John
Goodale
70
70
RFN480
~1650 - 1697
Elizabeth
Witt
47
47
RFN481
Elizabeth
UNKNOWN
RFN482
23 MAR 1682/83 - 1752
Elizabeth
Goodale
RFN483
William
Fuller
RFN484
23 MAR 1684/85
Sarah
Goodale
RFN485
Samuel
Felton
RFN486
1687 - 1754
Benjamin
Goodale
67
67
RFN487
1689 - 1717
David
Goodale
28
28
RFN488
Abigail
Eliot
RFN489
1641 - 1661
Samuel
Beauchamp
20
20
RFN490
1643 - 1645
Mary
Beauchamp
2
2
RFN491
1647 - 1668
Mary
Beauchamp
20
20
RFN492
1630 - 1682
Mary
Goodell
52
52
RFN493
1630 - 1689
Capt.
John
Pease
59
59
RFN494 BIOGRAPHY : Captain John Pease was the son of Robert and Marie Pe ase and grandson of Margaret Pease, who made him her chief heir under the tru steeship of Thomas Watson, both the grandmother and father dying in 1644. Cap tain Pease remarried after Mary Goodell's death to Ann Cummings on 8 October 1 669. She died 29 June 1689. John obtained a grant of land at Enfield, Hampsh ire County, Massachusetts in 1681. The town of Enfield, Mass. was later given to Connecticut. Captain Pease was appointed by his brother-in-law, Isaac Good ale, to be the administrator of his estate following his death in 1679. He se rved in this capacity until his own death on 8 July 1689 at Enfield, Massachu setts.
Robert
Pease
RFN495
Marie
UNKNOWN
RFN496
Ann
Cummings
RFN497
1632 - 5 JAN 1668/69
Abraham
Goodell
RFN498
1636 - 1726
Nehemiah
Goodell
90
90
RFN499
1638 - 22 MAR 1729/30
Sarah
Goodell
RFN500 BIOGRAPHY : John Bechelder was the son of Joseph Bachelder and El izabeth Dickenson. He was one of the witchcraft jury in 1692. Her father, R obert Goodell, deeded forty acres of land to them September 20, 1666 as a wedd ing gift. They sold it the same year to their brother-in-law Lot Killam.
20 JAN 1637/38 - 1698
John
Batchelder
BIOGRAPHY John Bechelder was the son of Joseph Bachelder and Elizabeth Dickenson. He was one of the witchcraft jury in 1692. Her father, Robert G oodell, deeded forty acres of land to them September 20, 1666 as a wedding gif t. They sold it the same year to their brother-in-law Lot Killam John lived in Wenham MA and in all probablility, John served in the milita mustered on Dedham Plain, 10 Dec. 1675, to march against Narragansett Fort (King Phillip's War). I believe this to be true, as we know that John's brother Mark was killed in this battle and according to Tarbox, heirs of the militia that served in this battle were awarded land in 1728 by the General Court in what is now Amherst NH, where several of John's grandsons were a pioneer settlers. Pierce describes the prelude and the battle for Narragansett swamp like this: In 1675 King Philip's War broke out and continued for two years. It was the principal struggle made by the Indians for their homes and hunting grounds. They fought with the energy of despair, and inflicted many a severe loss upon the 'pale faced intruders.' About 600 of the whites were killed and many more severely wounded; 13 towns and 600 houses were destroyed; and the expenses of the war have been estimated at $500,000, an enormous sum for those days, considering the scarcity of money and the small number of those upon whom the loss fell. But heavy as were the losses of the feeble colonists, those of the enemy were still greater. They were routed from their old fastnesses and their power effectively broken. Their subsequent struggles were less for victory than revenge. No place was safe, and at no time were the colonists free from danger. The law of 1676 that each town should 'scout and war' and clear up the brush along the ways, 'to prevent the skulking of the enemy,' was rigourously obeyed. Farmers carried their arms and ammunition, as well as implements of husbandry to their fields and some worked while others were posted as sentinels about the clearing. Memebers of the church attended divine worship with their guns and sentinels paced their rounds about the little edifice while others were listening to the word. A fortification was raised in every town to provide against an attack, and often the whole population was massed in the stckade, while at other times neighbors were massed in the garrison houses. In the depth of winter a force of 550 men was collected in Massachusetts, and being joined by reinforcements from Plymouth and Connecticut colonies, they made a forced march through the snows and over the frozen ground till they reached, Dec. 19, 1675, a swamp in the country of the Narragansetts where the Indians had built a fort and gathered their bravest warriors. Notwithstanding tht they had camped out the previous night 'with no other covering than a cold and moist fleece of snow,' and had marched 19 miles that day, wading through the drifts, the troops rushed at once to the attack. The Indians retreated to the middle of the swamps, where they had fortified an island, covering five or six acres with palisades and a hedge nearly a rod thick. ' There were two entrances, one over a long tree upon a place of water, the other at a corner,' and commanded by a log house in front, and on the left by a 'flanker'. At this point an attack was made by the Massachusetts troops, led by Capt. Johnson, who unfortunately fell at the first fire, with Mark Batcheller. So many of the soldiers were killed or wounded that they were obliged to retreat. Again, however, they were rallied by their valiant leaders; again they rushed to the charge, carrying block house and flanker and fairly establishing themselves upon the island. The Indians then retreated to the middle of the fort, and the whole mass was quickly engaged in desperate and deadly struggle. The strife was long and bloody, for the savages outnumbered the whites more than three to one, but 'manifest destiny' was against them. They were routed, their wigwams burned and their corn and other stores destroyed by the flames. Three hundred warriors are said to have been slain, while as many more were taken prisoners. But this success was not purchased without severe loss to the Massachusetts troops, for more than 100 were killed or wounded .. (including) Capt. Joseph Gardiner." John served on the famous "Salem witch trial" jury in 1692 which resulted in the deaths of 23 men and women (19 by hanging, 1 pressed to death, 3 died in prison see Salem MA Witchcraft Hysteria for more information). That he came to regret the results of this civic duty is evidenced by the following "Declaration of Regret" which was signed inby John and the other members of the jury. "We whose names are underwritten, being in the year 1692 called to serve as jurors in court at Salem, on trial of many who were by some suspected guilty of doing acts of witchcraft upon the bodies of sundry persons, we confess that we ourselves were not capable to understand, nor able to withstand, the mysterious delusions of the powers of darkness and Prince of the air, but were, for want of knowledge in ourselves and better information from others, prevailed with to take with such evidence against the accused, as, on further consideration and better information, we justly fear was insufficient for the touching the lives of any (Deut. xvi 1) whereby we fear we have been instrumental, with others, though ignorantly and unwittingly, to bring upon ourselves and this people of the Lord the guilt of innocent blood; which sin the Lord saith in Scripture he would not pardon (2 Kings xxiv. 4) - that is, we suppose, in regard to his temporal judgments. We do therefore hereby signify to all in general, and to the surviving sufferers in special, our deep sense of, and sorrow for, our errors in acting on such evidence to the condemning of any person; and do hereby declare, that we justly fear that we were sadly deluded and mistaken - for which we are much disquieted and distresed in our minds, and do therefore humbly beg forgiveness, first of God, for Christ's sake, for this our error, and pray that God would impute the guilt of it to ourselves nor others, and we also pray that we may be considered candidly and aright by the living sufferers, as being then under a strong and general delusion, utterly unacquainted with, and not experienced in, matters of that nature. We do hereby ask forgiveness of you all, whom we have justly offended, and do declare, according to our present minds, we would none of us do such things again, on such grounds, for the whole world - praying you to accept of this in way of satisfaction for our offense, and that you would bless the inheritance of the Lord, that he may be entreated for the land. Thomas Fisk, Foreman Thomas Pearly, Sr. William Fisk John Peabody John Bacheler Thomas Perkins Thomas Fisk Samuel Sayer John Dane Andrew Eliot Joseph Evelith Henry Herrick, Sr." John's will was dated 16 Dec 1698 and probated 16 Jan 1698 and named Ebenzer as Executor. I was particularly interested in the degree of detail of how the widow Sarah was to be provided for; John specifies her entitlements down to the specific room in the house and the size of the pot she can use!: "In ye Name of God Amen I John Batchelder Senr. of Wenham in ye Co. of Essex in his Majestic Province of ye Massachusetts Bay in New England Yeoman, being Weake in body yett of perfect understanding and memory through ye Mercy and goodness of God and Nott knowing how short my time may be here in this world and being Willing to settle that little worldly Estate that God in his Goodness has been pleased to bestow upon me I doe make and ordain this to be my last will and testament in manner and Forme following: Imp. I committ my Soul into ye hands of Almighty God in and through ye merritts and mediation of ye Lord Jesus Christ my blessed Redeemer and Sanctifier in hope a blesed and glorious resurection and my body to ye earth to be decently buried in such decent manner as my Executer with ye advice of my overseers whom I shall Appoint shall see meet. And for that little Worldly Estate which God hath given me I dispose of it as followeth, my honest and just debts and funeral charges being Satisfied and Discharged in ye First place the Remainder I dispose of as is hereafter expressed. Item. My will is that Sarah my beloved wife shall be Taken Care of by my Exectr. And that she be Decently and honourably Kept and maintained by him out of my estate left in ye hands of my Exectr. So long as she lives and Remains my widow and also my Will that she my said wife shall have ye use of ye Little Room or Westwardly end of my now Dwelling house to live in if she shall see cause to accept of itt free to her self and that she have good bed and bed Clothes to itt with Curtains and Vallance to itt and a bedstead & an Iron Pott that will hold about two Gallons to be free to her to dispose of after her decease if she shall see meett. Item. My will is that Joseph Batchelder my Eldest son shall have and Enjoy to him and his heirs Exectr., Admin. And assigns forever all that land which he is now in possession of being about fifty five acres & on part of the land his dwelling house standeth in full of his Share or portion in my Estate and any right or interest that he might have to ye estate left by my brother Marke Batchelder Deed. Item. I give and bequeath to my Son John Batchelder and his heirs and Exec. And Assigns forever ye dwelling house in which he now liveth and all ye land both upland and meadow belonging to me which he is now in possession of, he paying out of ye same Ten pounds money to my Exectr. Within two years after my decease. Viz. Five pounds one year, & ye other five pounds ye next year following. Item. I give and bequeath to my daughter Elizabeth ye Wife of Thomas Millett Thirty Shillings money to be paid to her within twelve months after my decease by my Exectr. Which with what I have already bestowed upon her I do account it her Full Share or part of my Estate. Item. I give and bequeath to my three daughters, Hannah, Mary and Sarah to each of them Twenty Seven pounds apiece to be paid them in money or almony by my Exectr. Within five years after my decease Viz. To each of them in part of said sums Six pounds apiece within two years after my decease, and six pounds apiece more annually to each of them the two Next Years Following and Nine pounds apiece to Each of them ye next Year following being to Complete ye sd. Sum of Twenty Seven pound apiece to Each of them beside what I have already Given them which is a cow to Each of them I also now give to my daughter Hannah a yearling calf and a pair of Weaver's Looms all which legacies to bee free to their Disposal respectively. Item. I give and bequeath to my Son David Batchildor and his heirs, Exectrs., and Assigns forever when he shall Come to ye age of Twenty One Year Eighteen Acre of upland and Meadow ground to be laid out and Delivered to him and a legall Conveyance Given him by my Exectr. To be laid out of that parcell of land which my brother Mark Batchelder formerly lived on and dyed possessed of if there be Soe much remaining in Sd. Parcell of land & to leave and acre of land to ye dwelling house which my son Ebenezer hath built and Sett up on said land and also Sd. David and his heir and Assigns to have liberty of a convenient way to pass to and from Said land from time and at all times as occasion shall desire without lawful lett, hindrance or Interruption of my Exectr., his heirs or assigns. Item. I give and bequeath Unto my Son: Ebenezer Batchelder all ye reservation and Remainder of my estate Either in housing or land, goods or chattels whatsoever not before disposed of to be free to him, his heirs Exectrs., Adminrs., or Assigns forever and all Debt belonging unto me from any person or persons and I do hereby Nominate, ordain, Constitute and Appoint my Said Son Ebenezer to be Sole Executor of this my last will and testament and I desire my Loving Friend Ltt. William Fisk and Mr. John Newman to be overseers of this my last will and testament and in Witness whereof I shall hereunto Sett my hand and Seal this sixteenth day of Dec. Anno Dom. Sixteen hundred & Ninety Eight, 1698 Signed, Sealed, Published. John Batchelder & a Seal. Declared in ye presence of Wm. Fisk, John Newman and the mark of Bethia H. Herrick. Before ye Hon. Jonathan Corwin Esp. Judge of Probate of Wills etc. at Salem 16 Jan. 1698. Mr. Wm. Fisk, Mr. John Newman, and Bethia Herrick personally Appeared and made oath that they were present and Did See John Batchelder Decd. Sign, Seal, and heard him Declare, Publish and Declare ye above written Instrument to be his last will and Testament and that he was then of a disposing mind to their best judgement & that they then Sett to their names as Witnesses. Sworn Attest John Higginson, Regr. Upon which this will is declared Approved and allowed being presented by ye Executer. Attest John Higginson, Recr. Exam'd The inventory of John's estate was filed in March 1698/9 and amounted to almost £ 480: "An inventory of the Estate of John Batcheler Late of Wenham deed as it was apprised by us whose names are hereunto subjoined this 20 March 1698-9": Impe. The dwelling house & Barn and homestead being about 40 acres upland and meadow £ 180.00.00 A parcell of land wch Joseph Batcheler cont. About 55 acres of upland & meadow and Given him by his father's will 110.00.00 About 35 Acres of upland and meadow on which John Batcheler dwells 070.00.00 A parcell of land cont. About 9 acres with a small orchyard on it and being the land which was formerly Mark Batcheler's decd 040.00.00 6 acres ¼ of Salt marsh lying in Ipswich bought of Jacob Pirkins 31.05.00 4 young Cows 50prs. Sis a three year old steer 4 of 12.00.00 2 year old & att 30 ps. Js and two horse kynd one at 301 and the other at 241 5.14.00 14 sheep att 87 ps. P £ 5.12.0 his wearing apparel £ 4 and armes rcs. 10.12.00 bed bedding, Curtains & Vallances, Coverlids and sheets 8.00.00 Bedsted, & bed Covs. 1vs Val. A Cupbord, table chests boxes and chairs 44 2.16.00 Pewter, Brass, and Iron Ke. 14.0 & Sauce Spider at 10s pc. Beef and Pork 40 & 54 Bush. Barley, ?.2.0 9.4. Indien Corn & Meal £ 5 15.2 Oats 15s flax wool, yarn & wool meal sacks 45s a saddle and bridle 12s 3.12. 1 Cart, Sled, plow, plow-irons, axes, chains, and other utensils of husbandry £ 3 7s 3.53 In all sorts of wooden ware of Earthen war Tin & Glass bottles 5s 15. Syder mill and press £ 4, a grindstone Cl. Old bbl. And tubbs 5.10. ------ £ 507.15. We find in debts owning to the Estate Viz. From John Batchelerr Junr. £ 10 and other small debts from Several persons thirty shillings in all 11.10 Wee find in debts due from the estate to Several mercht. Docters, tradsemen etc.. £ 30 and the funeral charges £ 10, is 40.00. ------ Rests 479.05 Wm. Fisk John Newman Ebenezer presented the inventory to the Hon. Jon. Corwin Esp. Judge of Probate on 27 Mar 1699. Sources: History of the Town of Amherst NH - 1883; PAF for GOODALE; Tarbox, Blyney and Allied Families, compied by George E. Tarbox, Jr. Denver, Colorado 1965; Massachusetts Colonial Records; Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy by Pierce, Frederick Clifton - 1898; A Genealogy of the Descendants of Robert Goodale / Goodell of Salem Mass by Williams, Geo E. - 1984; Essex County Probate Records <http://members.aol.com/janau/navdiv.gif> .
Joseph
Batchelder
RFN502
Elizabeth
Dickenson
RFN503
~1626 - 1675
Jacob
Goodell
49
49
RFN505 BIOGRAPHY JACOB, bapt. Jan. 9, 1641/2. Some of the evidence given at t he time of his death in 1676 points to the conclusion that he was not of enti rely normal mentality. At the court session of April, 1669, Jacob Goodale was ordered to pay five shillings to the constable of Andover for bringing home hi s son.(*) There is no other evidence that he was married or that he had a son, and the name may possibly be a clerk's error for Robert Goodale, Jacob being the runaway. Jacob Goodale d. in 1676, after being severely beaten by Giles Co rey.(+) About the last part of November 1675, Mrs. Mary Corey testified that Elizabeth, wife of Zechariah Goodell, told her that the latter's brother, Jac ob, had been to Zachariah's house and got into the cellar, taking some apples. Zechariah was coming in at that moment with a log of wood. Laying it down, he took a stick and "pade him to som purpos." About ten days later, Giles Cor ey unreasonably beat Jacob with a stick about an inch in diameter, nearly an h undred blows in the presence of Elisha Kebee, who told Corey that he would kno ck him down if "he did not forbear." Corey then went to the house of Zecharia h Goodell and told him that his brother Jacob had had a fall. He was afraid that he had broken his arm, and desired him to take Jacob to Mrs. Mole's in th e town. Jacob was then about thirty-four years of age and had a reputation fo r being lustful. Now Jacob went "very Ravel" and stooping, and he was very pa le and his eyes were sunken. Thereupon Zechariah went to Corey's house and saw Jacob who was there. The roads were very slippery and Corey said that his hor se was not caulked, and so he could not go with him. Jacob went so badly, Ze chariah asked him if he had any other hurt than his arm, but he would not tell . Zechariah then requested that some one might go with them, for he would not go alone with him. Whereupon Goody Corey went with them. Jacob died a few d ays later and an inquest was held. The jury reported "We find several wrongs that he hath had on his body as upon his left arm and upon his right thigh a g reat bruise which was very much swold, and upon reins of his back in color dif fering from the other parts of his body we caused an incision to be made, much bruished and run with a jelly and the skin broke upon the outside of each bu ttock." For this offence Giles Corey was fined. In later years Giles was bru tally put to death during the witch hunts. The above episode was recorded in a poem by Longfellow.
~1645
Hannah
Goodell
RFN506 BIOGRAPHY Lot was the son of Austen Kilham, who emigrated to America i n 1637. He was the grandson of Henry and Alice (Goodell) Kilham of Dennington, England. Lot was a farmer who lived in Salem Village, having come there fro m Wenham, Massachusetts. Her father conveyed to Hannah thirty-five acres of h is farm. They settled on the westerly side of Goodell's Lane, near Lowell, in what is now Danvers. They were one of the first settler's of Enfield, where L ot died 26 October 1683.
1640 - 1683
Lot
Kilham
43
43
RFN507 BIOGRAPHY Lot was the son of Austen Kilham, who emigrated to America i n 1637. He was the grandson of Henry and Alice (Goodell) Kilham of Dennington, England. Lot was a farmer who lived in Salem Village, having come there fro m Wenham, Massachusetts. Her father conveyed to Hannah thirty-five acres of h is farm. They settled on the westerly side of Goodell's Lane, near Lowell, in what is now Danvers. They were one of the first settler's of Enfield, where L ot died 26 October 1683.
1587 - 1667
Austen
Kilham
80
80
RFN508
1558 - 1631
Henry
Kilham
72
72
RFN509
~1560 - 1639
Alice
Goodell
79
79
RFN510
1649
Elizabeth
Goodell
RFN511 BIOGRAPHY As stated in her father's will, he and her mother lived wit h Elizabeth until his death. She was a widow in 1692, living with her son Ab raham, who inherited the Goodell estate and left it to his son Nathan in 1740.
John
Smith
RFN512
Henry
Bennett
RFN513
1794 - 1876
Silas
Chase
81
81
RFN514
Nancy
Pratt
RFN515
1798 - 1862
Lucy
Chase
64
64
RFN516
1764
John
Brackett
1800 - 1876
Hannah
Chase
76
76
RFN518
Joseph
Blodgett
RFN519
1806 - 1871
Charles
C.
Chase
65
65
RFN520
Persis
Call
RFN521
1811
Phoebe
Chase
RFN522
Samuel
Pierce
RFN523
1814 - ~1891
Daniel
W.
Chase
77
77
RFN524 BIOGRAPHY Author: Darrell Stewart Contact: stewarts@@bmi.net
1816
Mary
Hale
RFN525
1762 - ~1829
Paul
Stuart
67
67
RFN526
1767
Jeremiah
Stuart
RFN527
1769 - 1841
Elizabeth
Stuart
71
71
RFN528
1778
John
Stuart
Source: Vital Records of Winchendon, Massachusetts, To the end of the year 1849. Winchendon Births to the Year 1850
1780 - 1860
Richard
Stuart
79
79
RFN530
1761 - 1816
David
Chase
55
55
RFN531
Sarah
Raymond
RFN532
1762 - 1837
Elizabeth
Chase
74
74
RFN533
Eliphlet
Richardson
RFN534
1764
Mary
Chase
RFN535
Caleb
Feich
RFN536
1765 - 1835
William
Chase
70
70
RFN537
Betsy
Work
RFN538
James
Work
RFN539
Martha
UNKNOWN
RFN540
1770
Archibald
Chase
RFN541
Susanna
Pierce
RFN542
Mrs.
Margaret
Nichols
RFN543
1774 - 1853
Rebecca
Chase
79
79
RFN544
Abill
Richardson
RFN545
1776
Hannah
Chase
RFN546
David
Brown
RFN547
1777 - 1840
Francis
Chase
62
62
RFN548
1783
Daniel
Chase
RFN549
1712
Mary
Chase
RFN550
Gideon
Post
RFN551
1714 - 1791
Abigail
Chase
76
76
RFN552
John
Gibbs
RFN553
1716
Miriam
Chase
RFN554
Daniel
Stockwell
RFN555
1719 - 1807
Anne
Chase
88
88
RFN556
5 FEB 1718/19 - 1741
Nathaniel
Stockwell
RFN557
Jonathon
Putnam
RFN558
1743
Johetha
Putnam
?
RFN559
1720 - 1802
Elizabeth
Chase
82
82
RFN560
James
Sibley
RFN561
1722
Lydia
Chase
RFN562
Elisha
Putnam
RFN563
John
Daniels
RFN564
1724 - 1799
Follansbee
Chase
74
74
RFN565
Hannah
Marsh
RFN566
1730 - 1773
Judith
Chase
43
43
RFN567
3 JAN 1731/32 - 1803
Joseph
Carriel
RFN568
1660 - 1685
Elizabeth
Bingley
25
25
RFN569
20 JAN 1678/79 - 1730
William
Chase
RFN570
1680
John
Chase
RFN571
12 JAN 1689/90 - 1775
Charles
Chase
RFN572
1692
Hepzebah
Carr
RFN573
~1694 - 1754
Jacob
Chase
60
60
RFN574
1697
Joanna
Davis
RFN575
1710 - 1801
David
Chase
91
91
RFN576
1711 - 1783
Sarah
Emery
71
71
RFN577
~1700
Phebe
Chase
RFN578
Nathaniel
Tucker
RFN579
~1705 - >1777
Mary
Chase
72
72
RFN580
12 MAR 1703/04 - ~1757
Joseph
Stafford
RFN581
~1698
Lydia
Chase
RFN582
William
Blay
RFN583
~1714
Elizabeth
Chase
RFN584
~1696
Abraham
Chase
RFN585
~1720
Ruth
Morse
RFN586
1647
Sarah
Chase
RFN587
1639
Curmac
"Charles"
Annis
RFN588
1647
Anne
Chase
RFN589
Thomas
Barber
RFN590
14 MAR 1647/48
Priscilla
Chase
RFN591
20 FEB 1643/44 - 1689
Abel
Merrill
RFN592
3 FEB 1649/50
Mary
Chase
RFN593
1650 - 1724
Jonathon
Stevens
74
74
RFN594
1652 - 1720
Aquila
Chase
67
67
RFN595
~1660 - 1711
Rebecca
Follansbee
51
51
RFN596
1655
Esther
Bond
RFN597
1654 - 25 FEB 1732/33
Thomas
Chase
RFN598
1674
Elizabeth
Mowers
Woodhead
RFN599
28 FEB 1689/90
Ruth
Chase
1657
Elizabeth
Chase
RFN602
Zachariah
Ayer
RFN603
Daniel
Favor
RFN604
1661 - 8 FEB 1708/09
Daniel
Chase
RFN605
1664
Martha
Kimball
RFN606
1663 - 1743
Moses
Chase
79
79
Moses, son of Aquila (2) Chase, was born December 24, 1663, died September 6, 1743. He settled in Sutton, New Hampshire, on the tract of land one hundred rods above Bridge street, on the north side of the main road, and this farm was at his death divided between his sons, Moses and Joseph. He married (first) November 10, 1684, Ann Follansbee, who died April 5, 1708, in childbed. and was buried at Newbury. He married (second) December 13, 1713, Sarah Jacobs, of Ipswich. Children: Moses, born September 20, 1685, died young; Daniel, twin of Moses; Moses, January 20, 1687-88; Samuel, May 13, 1690; Elizabeth, September 25, 1693; Stephen, August 29, 1697; Hannah, September 13, 1699; Joseph, September 9, 1703 or 1705; Benoni
1668 - 1708
Anne
Follansbee
40
40
RFN608RFN615
1674
Sarah
Jacobs
RFN609
Thomas
Follansbee
RFN610
Mary
UNKNOWN
RFN611
1667
Mary
Follansbee
RFN612
Robert
Pike
RFN613
William
Houke
RFN614
Mary
Bancroft
RFN618
~1665
William
Follansbee
RFN619
~1670
Abigail
Follansbee
RFN620
1697 - 1755
Thomas
Follansbee
58
58
RFN621
5 JAN 1714/15
Hannah
March
RFN622
1699 - 26 JAN 1746/47
Francis
Follansbee
RFN623
1699 - 12 JAN 1740/41
Judith
Moody
RFN624
14 MAR 1700/01
William
Follansbee
RFN625
Mary
Robinson
RFN626
Hannah
Simmons
RFN627
1676 - 1683
Sarah
Follansbee
7
7
RFN628
1677
Francis
Follansbee
RFN629
1680
Hannah
Follansbee
RFN630
~1670
Valentine
Rowell
RFN631
John
Kent
RFN632
~1611
Thomas
Follansbee
RFN633 BIOGRAPHY NOTE: The order of birth and other siblings are not known a t this point in time. Further research will hopefully extend the knowledge o f this family and their English roots in Derbyshire and Durham County. There is a record of two brothers, Thomas and William Follansbee who came to the Am erican colonies in 1642. It has yet to be shown if these are the same sibling s listed in this record. Anne Follansbee and her marriage to Moses Chase are listed in the family records of the Chase and Goodale families preserved and r ecorded by my grandmother, Eva Goodale Smith. Michael R. Neuman 6-2-93
~1610
Mary
RFN634
~1639
William
Follansbee
RFN635
1653 - <1655
John
Challis
1
1
RFN636
1655 - <1677
John
Challis
22
22
RFN637
1657 - 1658
William
Challis
1
1
RFN638
1657 - >1660
Phillip
Watson
Challis
3
3
RFN639
~1661 - >1744
Elizabeth
Challis
83
83
RFN640
8 JAN 1662/63 - 1691
John
Hoyt
RFN641
1668 - 1733
John
Blaisdell
65
65
RFN642
1663
William
Challis
RFN643
1673
Margaret
Elizabeth
Fowler
RFN644
1668 - 1697
Mary
Challis
28
28
RFN645
1663 - 6 FEB 1733/34
Joseph
Dow
RFN646
1670 - 1681
Phillip
Watson
Challis
11
11
RFN647
1673 - 1714
Thomas
Challis
41
41
RFN648
1647
Mary
Colby
RFN649
Sarah
Weed
RFN650
1675 - 5 MAR 1734/35
Hannah
Challis
RFN651
1677 - 23 MAR 1740/41
John
Challis
RFN652
1680 - >1751
Sarah
Frame
71
71
RFN653
1641 - 1641
Elizabeth
Sargent
2m
2m
RFN654
1643 - 27 FEB 1705/06
Lt.
Thomas
Sargent
Excerpt from "William Sargent and His Descendants in America" Thomas resided on "Bear Hill" and took the oath of Allegiance and Fidelity at Amesbury before Major Robert Pike on December 12, 1667. He held public office in Amesbury and was quite a prominent man. He was a Lieutenant in the Militia. Found not guilty of fathering Sarah Osgood's child, October 1668 Took oath of Allegiance & Fidelity before Major Robert Pike on 20 Dec 1677.[KenAndMary.ged] Excerpt from "William Sargent and His Descendants in America" Thomas resided on "Bear Hill" and took the oath of Allegiance and Fidelity at Amesbury before Major Robert Pike on December 12, 1667. He held public office in Amesbury and was quite a prominent man. He was a Lieutenant in the Militia. Osgood's child, October 1668 before Major Robert Pike on 20 Dec 1677.
1649
Rachel
Barnes
RFN656
1645 - 1712
William
Sargent
66
66
Notes for William Sargent: hat merchant (haberdasher), yeoman. Came to the American Colonies, and settled in what is now Malden (Everett) Massachusetts. It was then called Charlestown (Mystic Side) Massachusetts. Mystic Side meant the Mystic River. In 1656, he moved his family to Barnstable where he was a lay preacher for the church. His will and his inventory is on the internet at: http://www.my-ged.com/db/page/newberry/9926 Ordered to be whipped or pay a fine for fornication, 12 April 1670 William was a farmer and held public office: took oath of fidelity and allegiance December 20, 1677. He died in Amesbury, Essex County, Massachusetts and had 5 children with his wife Mary Colby.
1647 - 1661
Lydia
Sargent
14
14
RFN658
1648 - 5 FEB 1736/37
Elizabeth
Sargent
RFN659
~1485
Cameron
Of
Locheil
A brief History: The first chief of the Clan was Donald Dubh he married an heiress of the MacMartins of Letterfinlay and united the tribes that became Clan Cameron. He is believed to have been born around 1400 and he and his successors were known as captains of Clan Cameron. In the early 16th century Ewan Macallan united by charter the lands of Locheil into the Barony of Locheil. His father Alan Macdonald Dubh began a feud with the MacKintosh Clan that was to last for 300 years. Ewan was one of the great Cameron chiefs the death of his son Donald was a severe blow to him and he went on a pilgrimage to Rome. The pope ordered him to build 6 chapels for his sins. The next great chief was Sir Ewan (1629-1719) who was knighted in 1682 , he took part in the battle of Killiecrankie in 1689 in support of James VII. His grandson known as 'gentle lochiel' supported Bonnie Prince Charlie in the Forty Five he always felt guilty that he was won over by the Princes charm he died in France in 1748. After the disaster of Culloden the Cameron lands were forfeited. The Camerons are descended from the ancient Dalriadic kings of the West Coast. An old Irish manuscript lists their ancestry from Ferchar Fada of the tribe of Lorn, king of Dalraida in 697. The Gaelic name was Camshron. The name is from the Gaelic Cam-shorn, meaning hook nose. It is said that a hooked nose was a characteristic of the old Clan Cameron families. Their principal territory was Locheil and Northern Argyll. The Cameron chiefs were distinguished for their warlike tendencies.They were known as fierce fighters: “For centuries the Camerons held by the sword the lands that had once been Clan Chattan’s heritage in Lochaber. Their ferocious war cry was a promise to feed their enemies’ flesh to dogs: “Sons of the hounds come here and get flesh”. Their territory was bounded to the south by the MacLeans, to the west by the MacDonalds. Most of Cameron country is over one thousand feet in altitude. The highest mountain in Britain, Ben Nevis, is included in this area. The area contains eagles, wild cats, foxes, otters and red deer. The last wolf in Scotland is said to have been killed in 1680 by Ewan Cameron of Lochiel. The earliest historically recorded Cameron laird was Donald Dubh (or Black Donald) mentioned in the fifteenth century. He was a formidable Lochaber warrier, and is considered to be the eleventh chief of Clan Cameron. One of the best known Cameron chiefs was Sir EwenCameron, in the late 1600s. He was the last chief to hold out against Cromwell, and bit through a Cromwellian officer’s windpipe while locked in mortal combat near Inverlochy. Despite his ferocity, Ewan was said to be “the very model of a Highland gentleman of those times.” He trained his men to be tough and disciplined, and to say that a bed of snow was like a “thrice-driven bed of down”.He saw one of his nephews had rolled together a large snowball as a pillow for his head. Ewan kicked the heap from under his head, saying “What! Are you become a luxurious that you cannot sleep without a pillow?”
29 FEB 1651/52 - 1701
Sarah
Sargent
RFN661
18 FEB 1657/58
Orlando
Bagley
1603
Elizabeth
Sargent
RFN663
1609
Joanna
Sargent
RFN664
~1606
Jeremy
Walters
RFN665
1608 - 1633
Judith
Perkins
25
25
RFN666
1609 - 1686
John
Perkins
77
77
RFN667
Elizabeth
Eveleth
RFN668
1614
Absolom
Perkins
RFN669
1615 - 1700
Mary
Perkins
85
85
Mary married Thomas Bradbury and was convicted in 1692 as a witch along with a number of other people. She was living at the time in Salisbury, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Bradbury were prominent citizens in Salisbury. Despite vigorous objections and signatures of 117 of her friends and neighbors many of whom were influential citizens, she was still convicted of witchcraft, she was publicly whipped and imprisoned. She escaped from custody, perhaps with the help of some of her many friends. This information is from HISTORY OF WITCHCRAFT IN MASSACHUSETTS. In 1692, Sir William Phips became Massachusetts' first royal governor. One of his most important acts was to end the persecution of persons believed to be witches. In 1692, the Massachusetts colonists executed 20 persons as witches and imprisoned 150 others.
Thomas
Bradbury
1617
Ann
Perkins
RFN672
1624 - 27 JAN 1698/99
Jacob
Perkins
The earliest mention of Jacob in America was in his father's will in 1654. After the death of his father and mother, he came into possession of the homestead. This house was located in the extreme Eastern part of Ipswich, very near the riverside and also near to Manning and was occupied until August 7, 1668 when it was destroyed through carelessness of a servant girl. She was imprisoned for it. An account of the examination of her(Mehitable Brabrook) is recorded in FAMILY OF JOHN PERKINS BY George A. Perkins written in 1884. Jacob's new house was struck by lightning on a Sunday in 1671 while many people were gathered there to repeat the sermon. In 1647 or 1648, he married Elizabeth Lovell, their oldest child, Elizabeth was born April 1, 1649. Elizabeth Lovell died February 12, 1665. He then married Demnaris Robinson of Boston. He lived with her until his death, January 27, 1700. After his death, she returned to Boston and died in 1716. By her will, she left her property to her children by her first husband.
~1625 - 12 FEB 1664/65
Elizabeth
Lovell
RFN674
~1625 - 1716
Damaris
Robinson
91
91
RFN675
1632
Lydia
Perkins
RFN676
Henry
Bennet
RFN677
JAN 1575/76 - 23 MAR 1575/76
Alice
Gater
RFN678
1577 - 1578
Elizabeth
Gater
1
1
RFN679
1579
John
Gater
RFN680
Elinor
UNKNOWN
RFN681
1 JAN 1579/80
Agnes
Gater
RFN682
1583
Richard
Gater
RFN683
1583
Michael
Gater
RFN684
1585 - 1590
Francis
Gater
4
4
RFN685
11 MAR 1585/86 - 1606
Margaret
Gater
RFN686
1590
Mary
Gater
RFN687
1592 - 1592
Erasmis
Gater
16d
16d
RFN688RFN689
1593
William
Gater
RFN690
1567 - 21 FEB 1606/07
Elyne
Sawbridge
RFN691
Thomas
Twygger
RFN692
1570
Lettice
Sawbridge
RFN693
George
Kydener
RFN694
~1566
Margaret
Perkins
RFN695
23 JAN 1692/93
Jacob
Goodale
RFN696
23 JAN 1692/93
Isaac
Goodale
RFN697 BIOGRAPHY He received by the will of his father that property purchas ed from Benjamin Boyce.
Deborah
Hawkins
RFN698
1694
Samuel
Goodale
RFN699
Ann
Fowler
RFN700
1 FEB 1695/96
Hester
(Esther)
Goodale
RFN701
Samuel
Collins
RFN702
Elias
Trask
RFN703
1698 - <1739
Ezekiel
Goodale
41
41
RFN704
6 MAR 1702/03 - <1736
Mary
Goodale
RFN705
John
Oakes
RFN706
1706
Sarah
Goodale
RFN707
Mr. Le
Craw
RFN708
1708
Ebenezer
Goodale
RFN709
Abigail
Needham
RFN710
1718
Abigail
Goodale
RFN711
Jonathon
Wilkins
RFN712
1718
Enos
Goodale
RFN713
~1725
Mary
Angier
RFN714
1711 - 1768
Jacob
Goodale
57
57
RFN715
Mehitable
Browne
RFN716
17 MAR 1671/72
Hester
Goodell
RFN717
Zechariah
Goodell
RFN718
1675 - >1747
Zechariah
Goodell
72
72
RFN719 BIOGRAPHY Zechariah Goodell settled at Wells, Maine in 1699 where he w as a proprietor. Wells was a frontier post against French and Indian attack s. He purchased a lot on the main highway of Wells, near the Oquinquit River, with the highway to Berwick as the western boundary of his property. He also owned 100 acres west of the Oquinquit River.
~1679 - <1747
Elizabeth
Cousins
68
68
RFN720
Mrs.
Abigail
Tarrot
RFN721
James
Tarrot
RFN722
1677 - 1677
Abraham
Goodell
3d
3d
RFN723
1678
Abigail
Goodell
RFN724
1682 - 1759
John
Goodell
77
77
RFN725
Lydia
Titus
RFN726
Hannah
Colburn
RFN727
Anna
Colburn
RFN728
1679 - 1679
Infant
Goodell
4m
4m
RFN729
Johozadak
Ben
Seraiah
~1569 - <1590
Edward
Perkins
21
21
RFN731
~1567
Anne
Perkins
RFN732
~1571
Sarah
Perkins
RFN733
~1573 - 8 FEB 1595/96
Francis
Perkins
RFN734
Joiadah
Ben
Eliashib
~1577
Ivey
(Lucy)
Perkins
RFN736
17 MAR 1579/80 - <1608
Alice
Perkins
RFN737
~1581
James
Perkins
RFN738
1582 - 1658
Thomas
Perkins
76
76
RFN739
Jeshua
Ben
Jehozadak
Azariah
Ben
Hilkiah
1592
Agnes
(Anne)
Perkins
RFN742
Edmonde
Colliyson
RFN743
23 MAR 1592/93
Richard
Perkins
RFN744
Joiakim
Ben
Jeshua
Juddual
Ben
Johanan
Johanan
Ben
Joiadah
1598
Luke
Perkins
RFN748
Eliashib
Ben
Joiakim
1606 - 1670
Elizabeth
Perkins
64
64
RFN750
John
Springthorppe
RFN751
Thomas
Bolles
RFN752
Seraiah
Ben
Azariah
1590
Edward
Perkins
RFN754
Marjorie
Watkins
RFN755
Elizabeth
Butcher
RFN756
1848
Catherine
Witty
RFN757
1571 - 1629
Isaac
Perkins
57
57
RFN758
~1580 - 1639
Alice
59
59
RFN759
~1557 - 1602
John
Perkins
45
45
RFN760
Elizabeth
Shawe
RFN761
~1563 - 1619
Edward
Perkins
56
56
RFN762
Casia
Smith
RFN763
1568 - <1648
Luke
Perkins
79
79
RFN764
Margaret
Pur
RFN765
~1559 - <1590
William
Perkins
31
31
RFN766
20 JAN 1564/65 - <1649
Thomas
Perkins
RFN767
Mary
Bate
RFN768
1565 - ~1588
Francis
Perkins
23
23
RFN769
~1567 - <1659
Lewis
Perkins
?
92
92
RFN770
~1570 - <1662
Elizabeth
Perkins
92
92
RFN771
~1573 - <1659
Lysyl
Perkins
86
86
RFN772
~1576 - >1592
Mary
Perkins
16
16
RFN773
Edward
Shower
RFN774
1510 - 1592
Henry
Perkins
82
82
RFN775
1506 - 1578
Joan
Perkins
72
72
RFN776
1508 - ~1590
William
Perkins
82
82
RFN777
~1481
Joan
(Jane)
Perkins
RFN778
~1482
Juliana
Perkins
RFN779
Thomas
Compton
RFN780
~1486 - 1547
Thomas
Perkins
61
61
RFN781
Alice
RFN782
1456
John
Perkins
RFN783
~1460 - 1536
William
Perkins
76
76
RFN784
~1465
Agnes
RFN785
~1428
Thomas
Perkins
RFN786
~1429
Humphrey
Perkins
RFN787
1450 - 1519
John
Perkins
69
69
John Perkins born in 1450 and died in 1519. He inherited Hussies Manor in Padworth and West Court in Finchampstead and married Margaret Collee. Margaret and John's son, Thomas Perkins owned lands in feudal tenure in Beenham and Bradfield, Hussies Manor and married Dorothy More.
~1455
Margaret
Collee
RFN789
Living
Edlin
Living
Day
Living
Edlin
Living
Edlin
Living
Day
Living
Day
Living
Day
Living
Nordin
Living
Sikes
Living
Brown
Living
Brown
Living
Brown
Living
Nordin
Living
Wyld
Living
Pearson
Living
Nordin
Living
Nordin
Living
Hibbard
Living
Hibbard
Living
Hibbard
Living
Hibbard
Living
Hibbard
Living
Hibbard
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Cooke
Fonda
M.
Stonestreet
RFN817
Brian
David
Smith
?
RFN818
Living
Smith
1893 - 1978
George
Washington
Thompson
84
84
RFN820
~1638 - MAR 1697/98
Samuel
Abbe
RFN821 BIOGRAPHY Samuel Abbe, second son of John Abbe, husbandman, was made freeman October 3, 1680. He married Mary Knowlton, in Wenham, October 12, 167 2; and lived first in Wenham, removing to Salem Village, now Danvers, in 1682. He returned to Wenham in 1697, where he died in 1698. His wife, Mary, survive d him and married Abraham Mitchell. . SAMUEL2 ABBE, son of John1 Abbe, born pr obably at Wenham, Mass., about 1646, or soon after his father's settlement the re; died in Windham, Conn., March, 1697-8. His name first appears in the Wenha m records at the time of his marriage. "Samuel Abby and Mary Knowlton maryed the 12th October 1672." He received a grant of ten acres of land in Wenham, an d land to set his house upon, from his father, John Abbey, and wife, Mary, Apr il 3, 1675, his brethren to have the refusal of the place if he should sell ( Essex Deeds, 15:150). Samuel and his wife, Mary, were communicants of the chur ch in Wenham in 1674. He was a land surveyor in 1676 and appears upon the town records as a husbandman, made freeman, October 3, 1680 (Massachusetts Re cords, 5:540). He was named in his father's will, 1683. A map of Salem dwell ings in 1692, published in Volume I of Upham's Salem Witchcraft, shows the loc ation of Samuel Abbey's house, number 114 on a plot in the south-west part, ea st of Bald Hill, within the 500 acres laid out to Robert Goodell in 1652 and i ts subsequent additions. On November 1, 1682, Samuel Abbey bought of Lott Kil lam and wife, Hannah, of Salem, he being then of Wenham, 6 acres in Salem on Norrice's Brook (12:112), and also bought of James Stimpson and wife, Priscill a, who had been the widow of Isaac Goodell, at the same place, some land in 16 84 (12:113). On April 3, 1697, he and his wife, Mary, sold those lands describ ed as a dwelling house, two orchards, and seventeen acres in Salem, bounding A nthony Needham, John Walcott, Isaac Goodale, Samuel Goodale, Abraham Smith, Ab el Gardner, Joseph Flint, and also six acres on Norrice's Brook, and two acre s bought of James Stimpson, to Zachariah White of Lynn, all for 130 (12:147). The above James Stimpson was of Reading and had married the widow of the elde r Isaac Goodell. At the time of Goodell's death in 1680, the widow was adminis tratrix and Samuel Abbey was one of her sureties. He was then probably of Sale m or possibly Topsfield. He was admitted freeman of Salem Village, March 22, 1 689-90. He and his wife were dismissed from the Salem Church September 15, 168 9, to unite in forming one at Salem Village; the date of its formation being November 15, 1689. Salem Village is now Danvers. On July 1, 1690, he was taxed at Salem Village, and again, January 18, 1694-5, he and his son were taxed th ere. Samuel Abbey of Salem bought of Benjamin Howard of Windham, Conn., for 22. 10s. current money, half an allotment of land (500 acres), being number 2 at the Center, at or near the locality known later as Bricktop. He probably re moved to Windham about that time as he was admitted an inhabitant of that town December 21, 1697, and died there March of the following year. His estate wa s settled in 1699. The inventory, taken May 9, 1698, gives as legatees, the fo llowing: wife, Mary; daughter, Mary, aged 25; son, Samuel, aged 23; son, Thoma s, aged 20; Eleazer, aged 18 (the land records prove that this is a mistake fo r Elizabeth); Ebenezer, aged 16; Merey, aged 14; Sarah, aged 13; Hepsibah, age d 10; Abigail, aged 8; John, aged 7; Benjamin, aged 6; Jonathan, aged 2. One r ecord says he left a son, Eleazer, and a daughter, Abigail, each 8 years old a t his death. This is doubtless an attempt to rectify the error noted above. Samuel Abbe was living in Salem during the days of witchcraft and was one of t hose opposed to its fanaticisms. One Rebecca Nourse, on trial as a witch, prod uced a paper signed by several "respectable inhabitants" of Salem, among whom was Samuel Abbe. This document as to her good ch
6 MAR 1719/20 - <1738
Mary
Goodale
RFN822
25 FEB 1721/22 - <1730
Isaac
Goodale
RFN823
1724
Jonathon
Goodale
RFN824
1730
Isaac
Goodale
RFN825
1734
Ebenezer
Goodale
RFN826
1738
Mary
Goodale
RFN827
1649 - >1699
Mary
Knowlton
50
50
RFN828 BIOGRAPHY Ancestors of the Bingham Family Of Utah Page 114 KNOWLTON PEDIGREE RICHARD KNOWLTON md. ELIZABETH CANTIZE WILLIAM KNOWLTON, Sr . md. ANN ELIZABETH SMITH WILLIAM KNOWLTON md. ELIZABETH..... MARY KNOWLTON md. SAMUEL ABBE Page 114
1613 - 1689
John
Abbe
76
76
RFN829 BIOGRAPHY Moses Vail Genealogy Page 131 ABBEY LINE The ancestry of Stephen Abbey is this: John (I) Abbe; b. in England circ. 1613; m. 1st Mary(?? ?); m. 2d Mrs. Mary Goldsmith. Samuel (2) Abbe; b. circ 1646 at Wenham, Mass. ; m. Mary Knowlton. Jonathan (3) Abbe; b. Wenham, Mass. circ. 1697; m. 1st M ary Johnson; m. 2d Rebekah Wedge. Jonathan (4) Abbe, Jr., b. in Ashford or Wi llington, Conn. circ. 1725; m. 10 April 1752, Alice Johnson in Willington. Jo nathan (5) Abbey 3rd.; b. 26 Feb'y 1753 at Willington, Conn.; d. 5 Oct.1807 at Olive N. Y.; m. 1778 Mrs. Lucy (Knox) Robbins. She was connected with the fam ily of the celebrated John Knox & was widow of Samuel Robbins by whom she had a son Samuel. John (6) Abbey, b. 18 Nov. 1789 in Ashford, Conn.; d. 5 Oct. 1841 at the home of his son Stephen in Rondout, N. Y. He m. Catherine No rth (1789-1866). *********************************************************** *********** ******** Ancestors of the Bingham Family Of Utah Page 2 ABBE PE DIGREE JOHN ABBE md. MARY LORING SAMUEL ABBE md. MARY K NOWLTON EBENEZER ABBE md. MARY ALLEN MARY ABBE md. JONATHAN BINGHAM Page 2
~1675 - 15 MAR 1736/37
Samuel
Abbe
RFN831
1687 - 22 MAR 1747/48
Hannah
Silsby
RFN832 BIOGRAPHY Samuel3 Abbe married March 15, 1710, HANNAH SILSBY, born Oct ober 3, 1687; died March 22, 1748. She was the daughter of Jonathan and Bethi ah (Marsh) Silsby of Lynn, Mass. In her will, probated in Windham, December 14 , 1758, she left property to her Silsby relatives. (Windham Probate Records, V ol. 6, page 21.)
~1678 - 1700
Thomas
Abbe
22
22
RFN833
~1680
Elizabeth
Abbe
RFN834 BIOGRAPHY ELIZABETH3 ABBE, daughter of Samuel2 and Mary (Knowlton) Abb e, born in Wenham, Mass., probably about 1681, baptized there before 1682. Liv ed later in Windham, Conn. Married in Salem Village, Mass., September 23, 170 2, WILLIAM SLATE, born about 1675; removed to Windham. Children 1. William S late, jr., b. Dec. 7, 1703. l2. Elizabeth Slate, b. Aug. 29, 1705; m. in Mansf ield, Conn., Jan. 23, 1727, William Smith, "a transient person." 3. Daniel Sl ate, b. March 30, 1708. 4. Anne Slate, b. April 29, 1710; m. Joseph Whittemor e. 5. Samuel Slate, b. Nov. 8, 1711. 6. John Slate, b. June 7, 1715. 7. Ebenezer Slate, b. Jan. 19, 1717-8; m. Sarah Manley. 8. Ezekiel Slate, b. Dec . 26, 1719; m. Mchitabel Hall.
~1675
William
Slate
RFN835
1683 - 1758
Ebenezer
Abbe
75
75
RFN836 BIOGRAPHY Ebenezer. b. July 31, 1683, in Salem Village. m. Abigail, d aughter of Isaac Goodale, of Salem. He lived in Norwich in 1705. in Windham i n 1706, and in Mansfield Conn., in 1739. He had thirteen children. EBENEZER3 ABBE, son of Samuel2 and Mary (Knowlton) Abbe, born July 31, 1683, in Salem Vi llage, Mass., baptized in Wenham before 1685; died in Windham, Conn., December 5, 1758. He removed with his father to the locality known as "Bricktop" in 16 98; worked in Norwich for a time, about 1705; was at Windham in 1706 and later lived at North Windham and Mansfield. November, 1705, were recorded two deeds showing an exchange of property between Samuel Abbe and Ebenezer of Norwich, a lot upon Bushnell's Plain. He received a deed from Samuel, July 17, 1707, a nd sold land to Abraham Mitchell and William Slate in 1709 and 1711. October 2 9, 1713, John Abbe, "now resident at Hartford, in Hartford County," sold to hi s brother Ebenezer land he had received from his father, Samuel Abbe of Windham. In a deed of November 2, 1713, he alludes to his deceased father, Sam uel Abbe, January 11, 1714, land bought from his brother, Samuel Abbe, and cal ls Abraham Mitchell "father." He is found frequently in the records of Windha m down to late in life. September 8, 1742, he sold to his son, Samuel, land on the east side of Nauchaug River in Windham. In 1715, Ebenezer Abbe was one of the settlers who formed Canada Parish at Hampton Hill in the northeast part of Windham, and was one of those who on May 9, 1717, signed a petition to the General Assembly asking to be made a separate parish. In October of the same y ear another petition was sent to the Assembly, asking that the taxes on proper ty in this parish should be used for the establishing of their church. This pe tition was signed by "Ebenezer Abbe, for the rest," and William Durkee. His w ill, dated June 3, 1750, probated December 14, 1758, names these heirs: wife Mary; children Ebenezer, Joshua, Nathan, Gideon, Samuel, Elizabeth Cross, Zeru iah Marsh, Jerusha Wood, Abigail Cary, Miriam Cross; grandson Jonathan Bingham , only surviving son and heir of his daughter Mary, deceased. (Windham Probat e Records, Vol. 5, page 513.) Ebenezer Abbe married at Mansfield, October 28, 1707, MARY ALLEN, who died 1766, daughter of Joshua and Mary ( ) Allen, early settlers of Mansfield, who lived near what is now North Windham. Children, bi rths recorded in Windham Ebenezer Abbe, jr., b. July 27, 1708; m. Abigail Cary . Elizabeth Abbe, b. Sept. 11, 1709; m. Daniel Cross. Joshua Abbe, b. Jan. 20 , 1710-11; m. Mary Ripley. Mary Abbe, b. Sept. 21, 1712; m. Jonathan Bingham. Nathan Abbe, b. May 6, 1714. Resided in Mansfield, Conn. Married (1) in Mansf ield, Dec. 4, 1746, Silence Ames, daughter of William Ames of Mansfield. She d . Feb. 6, 1776. He m. (2) in Mansfield, Oct. 17, 1776, Lucy Hovey, daughter of Samuel Hovey of Windham. No children by either marriage are recorded. His wi ll, made Nov. 2, 1795, probated May 12, 1807, mentions his wife Lucy; brothers Joshua, Solomon and Samuel; Leonard Sessions; Anne, wife of Eleazer Cross; balance of estate to Jonathan Hovey "who dwells with me" (Windham Probate Rec ords, Volume 15, pages 298, 310). The 1800 Census records Nathan Abbe in Mansf ield with seven persons residing in the family. 48 Gideon Abbe, b. Feb. 13, 1715-6; m. (1) Mary Wood; (2) Keziah Walker; (3) Bathsheba Smith. Samuel (1) Abbe, b. Oct. 30, 1717; d. March 1, 1718. 49 Samuel (2) Abbe, b. April 24, 17 19; m. Temperance Lincoln. 50 Zerviah Abbe, b. March 17, 1720-1; m. Elihu Mar sh. 51 Jerusha Abbe, b. Oct. 22, 1722; m. Samuel Wood. 52 Abigail Abbe, b. Aug. 1, 1724; m. Benjamin Cary. 53 Miriam Abbe, b. Aug. 31, 1726; m. William Cross. 54 Solomon Abbe, b. May 29, 1730; m. (1) Sarah Knight; (2) Mrs. Eliza beth Burnham.
1 MAR 1684/85
Mercy
Abbe
RFN837
Jonathon
Ormsby
RFN838
1686 - 1774
Sarah
Abbe
87
87
RFN839
~1680
John
Fowler
RFN840
14 FEB 1688/89
Hepzibah
Abbe
RFN841 BIOGRAPHY HEPSIBAH3 ABBE, daughter of Samuel2 and Mary (Knowlton) Abbe , born in Salem Village (now Danvers), Mass., February 14, 1688-9; baptism recorded in Wenham. Married in Windham, Conn., April 8, 1707, SAMUEL PALMER, born January 4, 1683-4, in Rehoboth, Mass., son of Samuel and Elizabeth (Kin gsley) Palmer, and a grandson of Walter Palmer of Nottinghamshire, England, wh o died in Stonington, Conn., 1661. Children, births recorded in Windham Sarah Palmer, b. Feb. 2, 1707-8. Martha Palmer, b. April 25, 1710; d. April 26, 171 0. 55 Samuel Palmer, b. Sept. 18, 1711; m. (1) Lydia Silsby; (2) Tabitha (?? ?). Ebenezer Palmer, b. Jan. 25, 1714. Bought land in Kent, 1754. An Ebenezer Palmer was witness to will of Hannah (Silsbee) Abbe and was at Litchfield, De c. 5, 1758. Married in Windham, March 11, 1741, Mary Webb. Children, births re corded in Windham: i. Lucy, b. April 24, 1742; ii. Mary, b. and d. June 20, 17 43; iii. Mary, b. June 11, 1744; iv. Sibel, b. Jan. 1, 1746-7; v. Sarah, b. Ju ly 24, 1749. Ichabod Palmer, b. April 17, 1716. Resided in Kent 1754. Married in Windham, Nov. 22, 1738, Phebe Broughton. Children, births recorded in Wind ham: i. Eunice, b. Aug. 19, 1740; ii. Amos, b. Sept. 30, 1742; iii. Jeremiah, b. July 19, 1744; iv. Elizabeth, b. June 4, 1747; v. Phebe, b. May 23, 1749. Zebulon Palmer, b. May 19, 1718; m. in Windham, April 25, 1746, Lois Carpenter . Children, recorded in Windham: i. Edna, b. April 19, 1747; ii. William, b. Sept. 14, 1749. 56 John Palmer, b. March 6, 1720-1; m. (1) Esther Cleveland; (2) Lydia Eames. Aaron Palmer, b. March 12, 1722-3. Moses Palmer, b. Aug. 24 , 1726. Elizabeth Palmer. Ann Palmer, b. July 19, 1730; m. Sept. 26, 1751, Jo seph Wood of Mansfield.
4 JAN 1682/83 - 1778
Samuel
Palmer
RFN842
1690
Abilgail
Abbe
RFN843
1615 - 1672
Mary
Loring
57
57
RFN844
Mrs.
Mary
Goldsmith
RFN845
Richard
Goldsmith
RFN846
1637 - 1728
John
Abbe
91
91
RFN847 BIOGRAPHY . JOHN2 ABBE, son of John1 and Mary ( ) Abbe, born in 1636 o r 1637, probably in Salem, Mass., died suddenly, December 11, 1700, in Windha m, Conn. As early as 1663, he was one of three to oversee the Town's Common an d to resist encroachments on the timber. He may be the John Abbe who was const able in 1669. He is first described as a yeoman of Wenham, and was admitted to freedom by the court at Boston, May 11, 1670. In a document of 1683, his fath er designated him as the heir to his estate in Wenham upon the condition of hi s caring for his father and mother in their old age. He apparently resided upo n this estate until about 1696. The following items from the inventory of Rob ert Macklaflin of Wenham, September 19, 1690, doubtless refer to this John Ab be: To Jno. Abbe for nursing-- 1 To Jno. Abbe more for tending the swine for fatting--s16-d3 To John Abbe due for worke to save the corne & thresh the ry & killing the swine & carrying them to Salem & about fencing, 1-s18-d6. M arch 9, 1694-5, he sold to Francis Wainwright a house and lands in Wenham, 50 acres in all; and in the following year, February 21, he had a deed of the sam e property back from Wainwright. In 1696 he disposed of his property in Wenham and purchased of Lieutenant Exercise Conant, July 13, 1696, for 70, silver m oney, home lot number 7, at Windham Centre, with the 1000-acre right belongin g, dwelling house, etc. May 23, 1695, Jo. Abbey was a witness to a deed of Exe rcise and Sarah Conant of Beverly (Essex Deeds, Volume 2, page 101). He sold h is farm in Wenham, 30 acres with buildings, to Nathaniel Wainwright, October 1 9, 1696, for 130. He probably soon after removed to Windham, Conn., for on De cember 9, 1696, he was admitted a freeman of that town as John Abbe, Senr, of Windham. He and his wife, Hannah, were dismissed from the Wenham Church to tha t of Windham by a letter of October 28, 1700, and were both original members of the first church in Windham at its organization, December 10, 1700.
1647 - 1704
Rebecca
Abbe
57
57
RFN848
Richard
Kimball
RFN849
1652 - 1732
Obadiah
Abbe
80
80
RFN850
Sarah
Tibbals
RFN851
1650 - 1728
Thomas
Abbe
78
78
RFN852
Sarah
Fairfield
RFN853
Hannah
RFN854
1684
Joseph
Ormsby
RFN855
1704
Ichabod
Ormsby
RFN856
1692 - 1790
John
Abbe
98
98
RFN857 BIOGRAPHY JOHN3 ABBE, son of Samuel2 and Mary (Knowlton) Abbe, born in Salem Village, Mass., June 4, 1692; died in East Hartford, Conn., October 30 , 1790. He was a resident of Hartford as early as 1710 or 1713. John Abbe, res ident at Hartford, sold to his brother Ebenezer, land formerly belonging to th eir father, Samuel Abbe, of Windham, October 29, 1713. (Windham Deeds, Liber D , page 328.) March 12, 1718, he purchased from Benjamin Hills of Hartford, 8 a cres on the "east side of the Great River." There were several John Abbes liv ing at this period so that it is sometimes hard to tell which one is meant, bu t the following records seem to pertain to this one. March 3, 1731, he joined with several others in giving a deed to the Town of Hartford for a highway wh ich was later known as Silver Lane and on which his house stood. (Hartford De eds, Vols. 5, page 307, and 3, page 164.) John Abbe of East Hartford was one o f the inhabitants of that town to protest against a tax in 1769; signed a pape r with others regarding their desire to settle in what was known as "Western t own" in 1733; was a proprietor in the Western land and signed a Tolland petiti on. (Connecticut State Archives, State Library, Towns and Lands, IX, 278b, wi th his autograph, V, 238e, V, 23b, and VII, 13.) Deeds made by him were record ed in Hartford, 1736, 1738, 1748, 1754, 1759, 1765, and 1770. The most importa nt of these is that of January 15, 1759 (Hartford Deeds, 13, page 37), by whic h he conveys land to his son Nehemiah Abbe of Hartford. The name is spelled in various ways on the early records, Abbe, Abby and Abbey, but the latter seems to have been in most frequent use among the later descendants of his fa mily. Married HANNAH (???), Children 57 John Abbe, jr., m. Ruth Goodwin. 5 8 Stephen Abbey, b. about 1727; m. Mary (or Marah) (???). 59 Eleazer Abbey, m. Mary (???). 60 Nehemiah Abbey, m. Mabel Warren. Naomi Abbey. Sarah Abbey . These last two names are included in this list of children for the followin g reason. In a deed recorded in Hartford, Oct. 26, 1759 (Volume 9, page 559), John Abbe, junr., Solomon Hills and Sarah, his wife, and Naomi Abbe convey lan d in Hartford to George and John Buck of Wethersfield.
Hannah
RFN858
1694 - 1765
Benjamin
Abbe
71
71
RFN859 BIOGRAPHY . BENJAMIN3 ABBE, son of Samuel2 and Mary (Knowlton) Abbe, b orn in Salem Village, Mass., June 4, 1694; died about 1765. He probably remov ed with his family to Windham, Conn., and from there to Glastonbury, where his name appears on lists of freemen, 1718-35. He filled the offices of hayward, grand juryman, collector of rates, fence-viewer and tything man. In 1737 he wa s admitted to the First Ecclesiastical Society of Chatham or East Middletown, and his wife Mary, in 1741. He was appointed guardian of Daniel Andruss of Mi ddletown, 1748. April 24, 1749, he deeded land "on the east side of the Great River" to his son Samuel. His will, filed in Middletown, was made December 4, 1754; probated October 15, 1765. Inventory was recorded November 20, 1765. His will names his wife Mary; son Samuel; daughters Agnes Bidwell and Lydia Abbe y; grandchildren John, Ebenezer, Agnes and Lucy Miller; grandchildren Moses, S amuel, John and William Cornwell. Married at Glastonbury, January 24, 1716, MA RY TRYON, born October 5, 1695, daughter of Dr. Joseph and Lydia ( ) Tryon. C hildren 61 Samuel Abbe, b. 1726; m. (1) Rachel Masson; (2) Mrs. Sarah Leland . 62 Agnes Abbe, m. Daniel Bidwell. Lydia Abbe. Hannah Abbe. Mary Abbe.
1695
Mary
Tryon
RFN860
~1696 - 1757
Jonathon
Abbe
61
61
RFN861 BIOGRAPHY JONATHAN3 ABBE, son of Samuel2 and Mary (Knowlton) Abbe, bor n in Wenham, Mass., about 1697; settled in Willington, Conn., where he died M ay 3, 1757. The following records from the Ashford land books probably refer t o this Jonathan Abbe: 1719, 100 acres of land from John Follett; 1721, 10 acre s from Joseph Orcutt, adjacent to land of previous deed; 1761 and 1764, refere nces to holdings of land; 1764, land from Azariah Sanger, Elizabeth Sanger and Joseph Abbe. (Ashford Deeds, B, 133; E, 119; K, 272, 433.) The inventory of his estate was entered in Hartford, June 2, 1757, by William Arent, James Comi ns, and Abner Barker, appraisers. (Hartford Probate Records, 17; 32, 18; 86.) The estate consisted of 106 acres of land, with utensils and household goods to the amount of 381-5-4. The Court granted administration upon the estate to Jonathan Abbe of Willington, who was also appointed guardian for Mary, aged a bout 11 years, and Rebekah, aged about 3 years, minor children of said Jonatha n Abbe. The estate was ordered to be distributed March 4, 1760, the widow havi ng quitted her right to any of the estate. "To Jonathan Abbe eldest son a Doub le Shair of sd Estate and to Samuel, Anna, Mary and Rebekah Abbe an equall si ngle Shair." Married (1) MARY JOHNSON, probably daughter of Caleb Johnson of Willington. She died in Willington, January 19, 1742-3. Married (2) in Brookly n, Conn., September 19, 1745, REBEKAH WEDGE. The date of this marriage is reco rded in Willington as September 19, 1747. Children by first wife 63 Jonatha n Abbe, jr., b. about 1725; m. Allice Johnson. 64 Samuel Abbe, b. March 21, 1 727-8; recorded in Ashford; m. Lucie Persons. Isaac Abbe, b. July 2, 1730; d. Sept. 18, 1753, recorded in Willington. Thomas Abbe, b. Feb. 17, 1733; d. Ap ril 13, 1733, recorded in Willington. Mary (1) Abbe, b. April 11, 1734; d. No v. 7, 1740, recorded in Willington. 65 Anne Abbe, b. July 25, 1737; recorded in Willington; m. James Weston. Jeduthan Abbe, d. in Willington, Sept. 12, 1 743. Children by second wife, recorded in Willington Mary (2) Abbe, b. Sept. 1, 1746. John Abbe, b. Oct. 16, 1750; d. July 10, 1753. Rebekah Abbe, b. abou t 1754. Jonathan Abbe was appointed her guardian in 1757.
D. 19 JAN 1742/43
Mary
Johnson
RFN862
1615 - 1655
William
Knowlton
40
40
RFN863 BIOGRAPHY William Knowlton, son of Captain William Knowlton (I), was born in Kent, England, 1615. He settled at Ipswich and was a brick mason by tr ade. He was a member of the First Church of Christ Congregational). He was admitted a freeman in 1641-42. He was given commonage with pasturage for one cow and a share in Plum Island. He sold to Edward Bragg, of Ipswich, December 12, 1643, a house and lot he had bought of John Andrews. He died in 1655. The account of the estate was presented in the Essex court by his brother, Thomas Knowlton, in 1678. Thomas stated that he had kept two boys from the age of five to eight and a girl from one year old till she married. Children of Will iam and Elizabeth Knowlton were: Thomas, born 1640, married Hannah Green, Nove mber 24, 1668; Nathaniel, born 1641, married Deborah Grant, May 3,1662; Willia m, born 1642, married Susannah (???); John, born 1644, married Bethia Carter; Benjamin, born 1646, married Hannah Mirick, November 30,1676; Samuel, born 164 7, married Elizabeth Witt, 1669; Mary, born 1649, married Samuel Abbe, October 12, 1672, had a son Jonathan, resided at Wenham.
1626 - >1688
Elizabeth
Balch
62
62
RFN864
1584 - 1639
Capt.
William
Knowlton
55
55
RFN865 BIOGRAPHY Richard Knowlton, born 1553, married Elizabeth Cantize, July 17, 1577. Their children were: George, born May 6, 1578, resided in Chiswick; Stephen, born May 1, 1580, died young; Thomas, born 1582; William, born 1584 , married Ann Elizabeth Smith. The first two children were born in the parish of Canterbury in Kent. The great cathedral is but six miles from Knowlton Mano r and the parish boundaries at that time included the latter, but the manor is now in the parochial boundaries of the neighboring parish of Sandwich . Thomas Knowlton, son of Richard Knowlton, was born in Kent, 1582. His child ren were: John, born 1620, married Dorothy (???), 1643; Robert, born 1622, mar ried Susan (???); married (second) Sarah (???); Mary, born 1628, married John Wilson, April 26, 1651; Sarah, born 1630, married Augustine Ellis, February 23 , 1656. William Knowlton, son of Richard Knowlton, emigrated to America, as s tated above. His wife was Elizabeth. Their children were: John, born 1610; Sam uel, born 1611; Robert, born 1613, remained in England, said to have died youn g; William, born 1615; Mary, born 1617, died young; Thomas, born 1620-22. The manor hall in Kent is a beautiful structure with a history running back to th e days of William, the Conqueror. William Knowlton owned the ship in which he started for America and was known as Captain Knowlton. Of his children, John, William, Deacon Thomas and probably Samuel accompanied him, for a Samuel was found in Hingham soon after the others appeared at Ipswich, Massachusetts, and he died in 1655, leaving a will, proved September, 1655, in which his brother John is named as executor. As John, son of Captain William, was the only one answering the description, Samuel must have also been son of Captain Wil liam. John went to Ipswich in 1639, and William and Thomas followed in 1642. I t is believed that Captain William was buried in Nova Scotia, whither he was bound and near the coast of which he died. (Source: The Knowlton's of New Engl and, page 21 (BlCH) Knowlton Genealogy. He and 3 brothers came from Kent Co. Eng. in 1632. Settled in Ipswich, Mass. Freeman in 1641). ******************* *************************************************** ****** Ancestors of the B ingham Family Of Utah Page 116 William Knowlton, Sr. and Ann Elizabeth Smith WILLIAM KNOWLTON, Sr. (son of RICHARD KNOWLTON and ELIZABETH CANTIZE), born ..... 1584 at ..... died ..... 1632 at sea enroute to America; buried at sea; married ANN ELIZABETH SMITH (daughter of ..... and .....) born ..... at ... ..; chr. 9 June 1668 at Hingham, Plymouth, Mass.; died ..... at .....; buried ..... at ...... Children i. JOHN b. ..... 1610 at Canterbury, Kent, Eng . d. ..... Oct. 1654/5; will 29 Nov.1653 md. ..... MARJERY WILSON ii. SAMUEL b. ..... 1611 at Canterbury, Kent, Eng. d. ..... 1655 md. iii. ROBERT b . ..... 1613 at Canterbury, Kent, Eng. d. md. Page 116
Jonathon
Silsby
RFN866
Bethiah
Marsh
RFN867
1712 - 14 MAR 1713/14
Samuel
Abbe
RFN868
1659 - 1743
Samuel
Palmer
83
83
RFN869
29 JAN 1661/62 - 1717
Elizabeth
Kingsley
RFN870
Walter
Palmer
RFN871
Dr.
Joseph
Tryon
RFN872
Lydia
UNKNOWN
RFN873
Rebekah
Wedge
RFN874
Caleb
Johnson
RFN875
1553 - ~1633
Richard
Knowlton
80
80
RFN876
1550 - 1632
Elizabeth
Cantize
82
82
RFN877
1586 - 1675
Ann
Elizabeth
Smith
89
89
From Joan S. Guilford, "The Ancestry of Dr. J. P. Guilford, Vol. 1," (1990), p. 322-323: "Supporting the notion that the [Guilford] family came from Kent, England, is the marriage of John1 Guilford to Susanna Knowlton, daughter of William1 Knowlton, since the latter is known to be from Kent and since he was a seafarer and owned his own ship. It is believed that these families traveled together and it is assumed that after Mary (----) Guilford and her son John1 died, Ann (Smith) Knowlton took in the children of John1 and raised them. There has been a great deal of dispute as to whether Susanna was a Knowlton or a Norton, there also being a William Norton in Hingham at the time, but this writer believes the evidence in favor of Knowlton is overwhelming. For a discussion of this controversy, see the Knowlton family [in the same book, pp. 516-21]."
1642 - 16 MAR 1717/18
William
Knowlton
RFN879 BIOGRAPHY ) William Knowlton, son of William Knowlton (2), was born in Ipswich (probably), in 1642. He was a tailor by trade. He was fined for havi ng a pack of cards in his house. He was admitted a freeman in 1669. It is prob able that he removed to New York in 1678, and settled in Norwich in 1682, in c ompany with Thomas Clark. Children of William and Susannah Knowlton were: Tho mas, born 1667; Sarah, born December 1, 1671; Joseph, born 1677, married Lucy Whipple
~1651 - 3 MAR 1694/95
Susannah
Whitridge
RFN880
1640 - 1711
Thomas
Knowlton
71
71
RFN881 BIOGRAPHY Genealogical and Personal Memoirs of Worchester County vol2 Page 17 Thomas Knowlton, son of William Knowlton (3), was born in Ipswich, 1 667. He married Margery Goodhue, December 9, 1692, and second), 1702, Margery Carter. His first wife died August 23, 1698-99. Margery Goodhue was a granddau ghter of Deacon William Goodhue, a prominent citizen of Ipswich and one of the earliest settlers. He was deputy to the general court in 1666-67-73-76-80-81- 83. For resisting illegal taxation he was imprisoned by Governor Andros. Marg ery Goodhue's father was Joseph, who married Sarah Whipple, daughter of Elder John Whipple, who died in Ipswich, 1683, leaving an estate of three thousand p ounds. Margery's grandfather was a soldier in the colonial wars and a descenda nt, William Whipple, was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and a bri gadier-general at the capture of General Burgoyne. Children of Thomas and Mar gery (Goodhue) Knowlton were: Robert, born September 7, 1693, married Hannah R obinson, November 21, 1717; Marjery, born August 27, 1694,
1674 - 1706
Margery
Goodhue
32
32
RFN882 BIOGRAPHY Margery Goodhue was a granddaughter of Deacon William Goodhu e, a prominent citizen of Ipswich and one of the earliest settlers. He was de puty to the general court in 1666-67-73-76-80-81-83. For resisting illegal tax ation he was imprisoned by Governor Andros. Margery Goodhue's father was Josep h, who married Sarah Whipple, daughter of Elder John Whipple, who died in Ipsw ich, 1683, leaving an estate of three thousand pounds. Margery's grandfather w as a soldier in the colonial wars and a descendant, William Whipple, was a si gner of the Declaration of Independence and a brigadier-general at the capture of General Burgoyne. Children of Thomas and Margery (Goodhue) Knowlton were: Robert, born September 7, 1693, married Hannah Robinson, November 21, 1717; Marjery, born August 27, 1694,
Joseph
Goodhue
RFN883
Sarah
Whipple
RFN884
Elder
John
Whipple
RFN885
Deacon
William
Goodhue
RFN886
7 FEB 1645/46 - 1708
Hannah
Green
RFN887
Henry
Kilham
RFN889
~1562
Margaret
Goodell
RFN890
William
Downing
RFN891
~1564
George
Goodell
RFN892
~1566 - 1625
John
Goodell
59
59
RFN893
~1570 - 1612
William
Goodell
42
42
RFN894
~1572 - 1639
Thomas
Goodell
67
67
On March 1, 1612, arms were granted to Thomas Goodall of Earle-Stoneham, as follows: `Arms: Gules, an eagle displayed Argent, beaked and membered Or, on a canton of the last a Chaplet Gramine Vert. Crest: On a wreath an eagle displayed Argent beaked and membered Or and gorged with a chaplet Gramine Vert.' The Boston Transcript No. 9830 states that Robert brought to America the arms granted Thomas Goodall of Earle-Stoneham.
Martha
RFN896
~1510
Thomas
Goodell
The Goodale_Goodell_Goodall Family especially the Artemus Kimball Goodale Family There are two theories as to the origination of the family name, GOODALE, GOODELL, GOODALL. One is reported by a research bureau in Washington, D.C. and supported by Dr. Robert L. Goodale of Ipswich, Mass.: The name is of Norse origin. There was a Goodel de Brixi who came from Normandy with Edward the Confessor before 1066. The Goodalls were a very early family in the British Isles, stemming from members living in Goldale, now Gowdall, a town in the parish of Snaith, Yorkshire. They were of the landed gentry and yeomanry. Among the earliest definite records are those of Villa de Goldale, Johannes or John Godhale, Recardus or Richard de Goldall, and Johannes or John Godhall of Yorkshire, in the year 1379. In the class of 1470 at Oxford was a Richard Goodale (recorded in the library of Merton College). Listed at the head of his class, the name was `Godyle.' It is true that in early times very little attention was given to the spelling of names, and during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, there was no fixed authority for the spelling of either `proper' names or surnames.1 The other theory is advanced by Professor Isaac Goodell of Ft. Worth, Texas, after much study: Robert Goodell is claimed to be of French Hugenot descent. `Goodelle' is the French origin of our family name and this spelling is yet found in Paris and a number of smaller towns in France. Later, one of our ancestors emigrated to Scotland, and about 1580, as tradition goes, a Goodelle family (Robert's grandfather) moved from Scotland to London. The name of Goodelle was Anglicized to Goodell, then Goodale and later Goodall in the coastal counties of Suffolk and Norfolk, England. Baptiste Goodell, supposed to be a son of that family and uncle to Robert, made his first appearance as an actor with William Shakespeare in Henry VI before Queen Elizabeth in 1589. The name is significant of family occupation as may be inferred from the coat-of-arms of the Scottish families, described as follows: `Arms: On 3 caps and in the middle fesse point as many ears of barley, two in saltire, and one in pale of the last. Crest: A silver cup PPR, motto Good God increase' http://www.wiggo.com/Personal/Genealogy/Goodale_Book/goodale_book.htm
~1520 - 1586
William
Kilham
66
66
RFN898
1598 - 1667
Alice
Gorbal
69
69
RFN899RFN1234
1583
Mary
Kilham
RFN900
~1585
Alice
Kilham
RFN901
~1589
Robert
Kilham
RFN902
~1599
Henry
Kilham
RFN903
14 MAR 1591/92 - 1650
Mary
Goodell
RFN904
~1580 - 1633
Richard
Masterson
53
53
RFN906
Ralph
Smith
RFN907
1596 - ~1686
William
Goodell
90
90
RFN908
1599 - 9 MAR 1681/82
Ann
Goodell
RFN909
1612 - 1674
Edward
French
62
62
RFN910
1607 - <1701
Elizabeth
Goodell
94
94
RFN911
1603
Edward
Goodell
RFN912
14 MAR 1591/92
Margaret
Goodell
RFN913
1610
Thomas
Goodell
RFN914
Theophilus
Wilson
1610 - 1654
John
Knowlton
44
44
John2 KNOWLTON, b. ca. 1610; d. 8 October 1654, acc. to the geneal. Tingley, (1935, p. 190) says March 1654, both prob. wrong since acc. to Jacobus (1945, p. 267), his wf. made a will dated 20 Feb. 1653/4, he been alive., m. bef. 1633 at Ipswich, Marjory (-----) who has been called a Wilson, but Jacobus thinks she may have been a Kenning and it is known that she was sis. to the wf. of Theophilus Wilson and to Jane Kenning, poss. a dau. of John Kenning, a relationship that has led to her erroneously being given the surname Wilson (TAG, 35: 17f.). He was a shoemaker and citizen at Ipswich in 1639, made freeman there 9 June 1641, a subscriber to Maj. Denison in 1648. He accumulated considerable property. Ch.: John; Abraham (d. unm.); Elizabeth. Occupation: Shoemaker
~1615 - 1654
Margery
Kenning
39
39
RFN917
1613 - <1703
Robert
Knowlton
90
90
RFN918
1579 - 1648
John
Balch
69
69
WFT CD9, Tree #3807: (Source: Old Planters of Beverley in Massachusetts and the Thousand Acre Grant): There were five Old Planters: Roger Conant, John Woodberry, William Trask, John Balch and Peter Palfrey. John Balch left England and was originally associated with Thomas Weston in the colony at Wessagusset. The probability is that he arrived at Cape Ann, MA, with Phinneas Pratt, aboard the ship "Anne" in September 1623. After the Wessagusset settlement failed he associated himself with Roger Conant and the others in a Fishery located on Cape Anne. That operated for four or five years, but also farming. Unknown to them, Governor Endicott had obtained patents to Salem and when he arrived negotiated with the original planters to grant them 1000 acres across the Bass River on land that ultimately became Beverly. John Balch built the first wooden 2 story house in 1638 on Bass River in Beverly at the corner of Balch and Cabot Streets. In 1930, the house was still standing although greatly increased in size from the original three or four room, thatched cottage of John Balch's day. The grant of land was dated November 11, 1635. The house is now a museum, and it may be the oldest wooden building in the US. Source: Michael Edward Dobson (dobfam4@@juno.com): "John Balch landed at Wesseguset, Sep 1623. He came to New England in the company of Capt. Robert Georges, son of Sir Fernandes Georges of Somersetshire, who with others had obtained a generous grant covering a large part of the New England coast. Capt. Robert Georges was a gentleman adventurer, (a man of the court) of the Church of England and a soldier, not an earnest Puritan seeking religious freedom in the new world. He hoped to establish a little aristocratic England with English customs and form on the rough coast of the New World. The colonists who were farmers, mechanics and traders as well as "gentlemen" and "divines" arrived in Wessegusset (now Weymouth) in late Sept. But the following spring, Georges, with some of his followers, returned to England, "having found the state of things here," wrote Gov Bradford of Plymouth, "not to answer his qualities & conditions, having scarcely saluted the countrie in his Governmente." Perhaps John Balch returned with him as there is an entry in the register at Cuthbert-at-Welles that he returned for a wife in 1625. (He evidently returned to ENG 12 Sep 1625 to marry Margaret Lovell.) He and his wife Margery Lovell made their way to the settlement on Cape Ann near the site of Gloucester. Joined there by Roger Conant, a disaffected member of the Plymouth colony of Independents, after his enterprise at Cape Ann also went to pieces, four men were left to carry on: Balch, Conant, Peter Palfrey, and John Woodbury. Led by Conant they went S & W to a place called "Naumkeg" by the Indians (where his son Benjamin was born). Here they cleared the woods to plant an agricultural settlement and so became the founders of Salem, MA. These "old planters" as they were called, showed a religious tolerance unusual for the time. No one of these was said to take part in persecution of Baptists, Quakers and Witches. Balch and his wife, encouraged by White (the first minister at Dorchester), helped Conant found the first Salem church in 1629. He took the oath of freeman in 1631 (only church members were freemen, which meant the church practically governed the town). His third son was born at that time and named Freeborn. He held various offices, juryman, arbitrate, etc. When the MA colonists felt threatened by Thomas Morton & his crew at Merry Mount, he attended in 1628, a meeting of heads of various Plantations to consult for the common safety. Conant, Palfrey, Balch, Woodbury and Wm. Trank (Wm. Trask?) were given a tract of 1000 acres on the Bass River,, now part of the town of Beverly. In 1636-8, John Balch built his house there, said to be now the oldest frame house in MA with a written record. For many years it was maintained by an association of descendents. It is now owned and maintained by the Beverly Historical Association and open to visitors." Source: "Dodge Genealogy", found online in Genealogy Library.com: Balch, John, Salem,MA, came 1623 to Cape Ann and then to Salem.
1613 - 1655
Samuel
Knowlton
42
42
Samuel2 KNOWLTON, b. ca. 1611 (Tingley says 1626); d. 1655, unm. He was a mariner and although presumed to be in England, was certainly at Hingham prior to 22 Sept. 1655 when inv. of his estate was taken by his nephew John.
1617 - 1660
Mary
Knowlton
43
43
RFN921
~1625
John
Guilford
RFN922
1620 - 1692
Thomas
Knowlton
72
72
Thomas2 KNOWLTON, b. ca. 1622; d. 3 or 12 April 1692 at Ipswich, MA, ae. 70; m. Susanna (-----); m. 2nd, 17 May 1682 at Ipswich, Mary Kimball, dau. of Richard and Mary (Scott) Kimball (but Tingley says dau of John and Mary [Bradstreet] Kimball). He had a share in Plum Island. He was a cordwainer and shoemaker, a deac. of the old First Chh. Since he had no ch., he sent his bro. William 2's boys to school and cared for a dau. until she m. as well as taking in Nathaniel, his nephew, to live with him. His will of 5 Dec. 1688 settles the matter of his childlessness since all legatees are stated to be ch. of his bro.
Susannah
RFN924
1625 - 1686
Mary
Kimball
61
61
RFN925
1515
Valentin
Cantize
RFN926
1578 - <1668
George
Knowlton
90
90
RFN927
1580 - 1585
Stephen
Knowlton
5
5
RFN928
1582 - <1672
Thomas
Knowlton
90
90
RFN929
~1614 - 1645
John
Cook
31
31
lineage posted on: http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=montereng1&id=I24138 Raymond L Montgomery <montereng1@@hotmail.com>
~1620 - 1646
Mary
Roote
26
26
Arrived on 'The Abigail' at age 15 with her father, sailing on 30 June 1635. Arrived in Boston, Massachusetts in mid-July.
~1638 - <1735
Sarah
Abbe
97
97
RFN933
1645
Abraham
Mitchell
RFN934
1641
Nathaniel
Knowlton
RFN935
Deborah
Grant
RFN936
1664
Lydia
Griffin
RFN937
1644 - 1728
John
Knowlton
84
84
RFN938
1646 - >1707
Bethia
Edwards
61
61
RFN939
~1650
Suzanna
Hutton
RFN940
Bertha
Carter
RFN941
1646 - 1690
Benjamin
Knowlton
44
44
RFN942
10 FEB 1648/49
Hannah
Merrick
RFN943
1647 - 15 JAN 1695/96
Samuel
Knowlton
RFN944
1651 - >1683
Joseph
Knowlton
32
32
RFN945
1655
Mary
Wilson
RFN946
~1685
Mary
Allen
RFN947
Sarah
Fairfield
RFN948
~1681
Eleazar
Abbe
RFN949
1 MAR 1683/84
Nancy
Abbe
RFN950
1565 - 1601
Robert
Chase
35
35
RFN951
Jean
(Joan)
Tokefield
RFN952
1567 - 1618
Henry
Chase
51
51
RFN953
Alice
Bachilor
RFN954
Margaret
Giveas
RFN955
1573
Lydia
Chase
RFN956
1576 - <1663
Ezekiel
Chase
87
87
RFN957
~1580
Mary
Roberts
RFN958
2 MAR 1577/78
Dorcas
Chase
RFN959
13 JAN 1582/83 - 1606
Jason
Chase
RFN960
1585 - 1652
Thomas
Chase
67
67
RFN961
1621 - 11 FEB 1676/77
Elizabeth
Philbrick
RFN962
12 JAN 1587/88
Abigail
Chase
RFN963
Eliphalet
Chapman
RFN964
1591
Mordecai
Chase
RFN965
1518 - 1569
Elizabeth
Bowchiew
51
51
RFN966
1540 - 1599
John
Chase
58
58
RFN967
~1540
Joan
RFN968
~1540 - ~1632
Alice
(Alia)
Harding
92
92
RFN969
1545 - 1569
Thomas
Chase
24
24
RFN970
1547 - 1579
Elizabeth
Chase
32
32
RFN971
Stephen
Grover
RFN972
9 JAN 1550/51
Agnes
Chase
RFN973
Thomas
Welch
RFN974
1553 - 1599
William
Chase
46
46
RFN975
Isabell
Samuel
RFN976
1555 - >1599
Christian
Chase
44
44
RFN977
Henry
Atkins
RFN978
1486 - 1538
Matthew
Chase
52
52
Mathew married Elizabeth Bould, daughter of Richard Bould of Chesham. She was born about 1488. The children of Mathew and Elizabeth Bould Chase, all born in Chesham, wer e: 1. Richard, b. about 1512; m. Mary Roberts. 2. Francis, b. about 1514. 3. John, b. about 1516. 4. Mathew, b. about 1518. 5. Thomas, b. April 22, 1520. 6. Ralph, b. about 1522. 7. William, b. about 1524. 8. Bridget, b. about 15 26.
1488 - 1570
Elizabeth
Bould
82
82
RFN980
1520 - 1586
Richard
Chase
66
66
RFN981
~1525
Mary
Roberts
RFN982
1522
Francis
Chase
RFN983
1524
John
Chase
RFN984
1526
Matthew
Chase
RFN985
1530
Ralph
Chase
RFN986
1532
William
Chase
RFN987
1534
Bridget
Chase
RFN988
~1455 - 1490
Sir
John
Chase
35
35
Apothecary to Queen Anne
1462 - 1490
Alice
Harding
28
28
RFN990
1462
Sir
Richard
Bould
RFN991
1515 - 1562
Simon
Byshoppe
47
47
RFN992
Joan
RFN993
>1536
Agnes
Byshoppe
RFN994
~1546 - 1552
Rychard
Byshoppe
6
6
RFN995RFN999
~1540 - 10 MAR 1570/71
Cicely
Byshoppe
RFN996
Rychard
Johnson
RFN997
~1547
Elyzabeth
Byshoppe
RFN998
~1587
John
Challis
RFN1000 QUAY0parish record - LDS film #0413719NEUTRAL
~1592
Elizabeth
Watson
RFN1001
1832 - 1912
Elizabeth
Brackett
79
79
RFN1002
Phineas
Parks
RFN1003
Mrs.
Hannah
Robbins
RFN1004
~1780
Joanna
Kendal
RFN1005
Ruth
Bixby
RFN1006
~1655
Ezra
Rolfe
RFN1007
1680
Ezra
Rolfe
RFN1008
Sarah
Jackson
RFN1009
1706
Abigail
Rolfe
RFN1010
John
Annis
RFN1011
1625 - 1691
Capt.
William
Bond
65
65
RFN1012
Nathaniel
Biscoe
RFN1014
Elizabeth
Honor
RFN1015
D. 15 FEB 1692/93
Sarah
Biscoe
RFN1013
1654 - 1704
Thomas
Bond
49
49
RFN1016
2 JAN 1660/61
Sarah
Woolson
RFN1017
Thomas
Woolson
RFN1018
Sarah
Hyde
RFN1019
1650 - 1724
Deacon
William
Bond
74
74
RFN1020
Hepzibah
Hastings
RFN1021
1652
John
Bond
RFN1022
Hannah
Coolidge
RFN1023
1656 - 1729
Elizabeth
Bond
73
73
RFN1024
Nathaniel
Barsham
RFN1025
19 JAN 1658/59 - 1659
Nathaniel
Bond
RFN1026
9 JAN 1659/60
Nathaniel
Bond
RFN1027
Berthia
Fuller
RFN1028
1661
Sarah
Bond
RFN1029
Palgrave
Wellington
RFN1030
1664 - 1727
Jonas
Bond
62
62
RFN1031
~1666 - 1699
Mary
Bond
33
33
RFN1032
Richard
Coolidge
RFN1033
Elizabeth
UNKNOWN
RFN1034
1568 - 1601
Jonas
Bond
33
33
RFN1035
1562 - 1601
Rose
Woode
38
38
RFN1036
~1639 - 1674
Mary
35
35
RFN1037RFN99RFN601
Jane
Mossman
RFN1038
1708 - 1748
Judith
Poore
39
39
RFN1039
1704 - 1777
Richard
Stuart
73
73
RFN1040 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. 3. RICHA RD, born Oct. 15, 1704, is described in deeds as a husbandman and cordwainer. He married Judith, the daughter of Joseph Poor, previous to 1729. In 1737 an d In 1744 he bought land of his brother John, and in 1746 he bought his sister Ann's share of their late father's estate.--By the Rowley records Richard had :--Ebenezer, Jan. 3, 1729; Joseph, Aug. 5, 1731. Mr. Haskins found a deed by R ichard Stewart, of Leominster, in 1775, conveying to Richard Foster, of Boxfor d, land in Boxford coming to said Richard's wife, Mary, from the estate of her father, Samuel Flak, of Boxford. An Ebenezer Stewart witnessed the deed. Mr. Haskins thought this was Ebenezer's Richard, and that he was twice married, b ut there seems to be no such marriage record in either Boxford or Rowley, nor any death record of his first wife. I think the Richard, of Leominster may hav e been his son, born later than Joseph. (See Appendix C, page 117.)
1653 - 1732
Joseph
Poore
79
79
RFN1041
1663 - >1708
Mary
Wallingford
45
45
RFN1042
~1615 - 1684
John
Poore
69
69
RFN1043
Sarah
RFN1044
1642 - 15 FEB 1700/01
John
Poore
RFN1045
1645 - <1649
Hannah
Poore
4
4
RFN1046
1647
Elizabeth
Poore
RFN1047
1649 - >1697
Hannah
Poore
48
48
RFN1048
Elisha
Ilsley
RFN1049
1650 - >1697
Henry
Poore
47
47
RFN1050
1653 - >1697
Mary
Poore
44
44
RFN1051
1655
Sarah
Poore
RFN1052
John
Sawyer
RFN1053
1656 - >1697
Lydia
Poore
41
41
RFN1054
Penuell
Titcomb
RFN1055
1658
Edward
Poore
RFN1056
1660 - 1660
Abigail
Poore
1m
1m
RFN1057
1661
Abigail
Poore
RFN1058
William
Ilsley
RFN1059
1619 - 1682
Nicholas
Wallingford
63
63
Sources: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~teschek/wallingford/i0000001.htm http://thebecketts.com/genealogy/wallingford/wallingford.html NICHOLAS WALLINGTON/WALLINGFORD NICHOLAS WALLINGFORD I was born in or near WALLINGFORD, ENGLAND in the year 1619. He migrated from the parish of NETHER WALLOP, HAMPSHIRE, ENGLAND and came to America in the ship "CONFIDENCE OF LONDON" in 1638. (Waters and Emmerton Genealogical Gleanings in England published in 1885) On this voyage the "CONFIDENCE OF LONDON, JOHN JOBSON, Master" sailed from SOUTH HAMPTON on April 24, 1638 and landed at BOSTON. The log of the ship names NICHOLAS WALLINGTON, poor boy: (ie) WALLINGFORD aged 19 as one of the passengers. Sometime after his landing at BOSTON, NICHOLAS WALLINGFORD joined the colonists at NEWBURY, MASSACHUSETTS. He became Master Mariner and for many years followed the shipping trade. He was taken captive at sea and never returned. Presumably, NICHOLAS WALLINGFORD was either held captive until his death or was murdered by pirates. He was last at home in 1681 and his estate was settled in 1684. 1. Nicholas1 Wallingford, son of Unknown Wallingford and Unknown Gore, was born possibly in Nether Wallop, Southampton, England probably between 1620 and 1635.(1) Nicholas died in captivity overseas, before 22 September 1681, in "Argone". Certification of his death by Mr. Thomas Kellon, a merchant, was made to the court at Ipswich, Mass. on 27 September 1681, and an inventory of his estate had been made on the 22d.(2) Nicholas had been captured at sea while on a voyage to England and died in captivity, so likely died long before the news reached home. Evidence for this fact is contained in his probate files in a 1683 petition from his wife where she states that he "being going for England was taken Captive and there ended his Days". Some secondary sources state that he was captured by Barbary pirates, but this is likely only supposition, although perfectly plausible. The inventory of his estate begins "An Inventory of ye Estate of Nicholaus Wallingford who Deceased in Argone."(3) This would seem to indicate that the name of the place where he died is called "Argone". Three possible locations for this would be "Aragon", a part of Spain, "Argonne", a part of France, and "Arguin", a fortified trading station dominating a section of the West African coast, now in Mauritania. Arguin was under contention between the Dutch and the French about that time and was also being visited by some adventurous English traders. He married Sarah Travers, 30 August 1654, in Newbury, Essex County, Massachusetts.(4) Sarah was born about 1636, in Newbury, Essex County, Massachusetts.(5) Sarah was the daughter of Henry Travers and Bridget Fitts?. Sarah died by 22 August 1709. Administration of her estate was granted to her son John on that date, when she was referred to as "Sarah Wallingford alias Mash", of Bradford, "Relict of Nicholas Wallingford of Bradford."(6) THE TRAVERS Nicholas' last name was usually spelled Wallington in the early records, but by the second generation most of the family was using the spelling 'Wallingford'. It was spelled Wallingford in his uncle William Gore's will. This will, dated 22 January 1655/6 and proved 29 March 1656 has a clause giving "To Nicholas & Margaret, son and daughter of my late sister Wallingford, twenty pounds apiece in one year after my decease." William Gore was from the town of Nether Wallop in Southampton, England, and was probably the son of William and Joane Gore/Goore, also of Nether Wallop. The actual will hasn't been checked yet, just Waters' abstract of it. At the end of this abstract it ads that "If my cousin Nicholas Wallingford shall have issue of his body or Margaret Wallingford have issue of her body then, &c."(17) Apparently this clause, which isn't fully spelled out by Waters, intends to give an inheritance to any children that Nicholas or Margaret may have. This evidently came to pass as we have from the N.H. Probate records the following: "Know all men by these pnts that whereas wee John Wallingford, James Wallingford and Joseph Poore in right of Mary my wife Children of Nicholas Wallingford late of Newbury decd have sold unto William Longfellow of the same Newbury the Sume of Forty pounds a peice given unto either of us a legacy from our late great Uncle William Goore of Hampshire in and by his last will and Testamt bearing date 22nd January 1655 and have by our letter of Attourny of even date with these pnts Impoured the said William Longffellow in our name to demand require and receive the same; which is to be to his own proper use: And wee do hereby each of us respectively for our Selves promise and engage, that if the said letter of Attourny should miscarry, or be found in any respect too short for the obteining and recovery of the sd Legacies, wee will at any time or times hereafter upon demand and at the cost & charges in the law of the sd William Longfellow or his heirs give unto him or them under oE hands and Seales (and the hand and Seale also of Mary Poore if thought needfull) such further and other letter or letters of Attourny containing all power strength and Authority that wee can be capable of giveing unto him or them in the law for recovery of the [promises?]. Witness our hands hereunto Set this Sixteenth day of November, Anno Dom 1686. Signed John Wallingford, James Wallingford, Joseph Poore. Signed and Delivd in the presence of us.-- Joseph Ba[ily?], Isa Addington. [Joseph Bailey and Isaac Addington acc. to NH State Papers abstract] Nicholas Wallingford came from England in the ship Confidence from London in 1638, landing in Boston. Customs House records published in the NEHGR are prefaced with the following note: "The List of the Names of the Passengrs Intended for New England in the good shipp the Confidence of London of CC [200] tonnes, John Jobson, M[aste]r And thus by vertue of the Lord Treasrs warr[an]t of the xjth [11th] of Aprill, 1638. Southampton, 24 Aprill, 1638". Among the passengers were Stephen and Margery Kent, husband and wife aged 17 and 16 respectively, whose origins in England were not stated on the passenger list as were most of the other passengers. [One source states the Stephen was from Salisbury, England and his wife Margery (Norris) was from Wallopp, co. South.(18) ] With them were four young people aged 9 through 20 described as servants, as well as "Nicholas Wallington, a poore boy", whose age was not given.(19) The fact that he was listed among the servants yet not described as one probably means that he was not a servant. In any case from this we can guess that he was probably aged in the range of 5 to 15 years old at the time, give or take. A manuscript Wallingford genealogy by Charles Wallingford(20) states that the ship's log gives his age as 19, and one by Samuel Shackford(21) gives his age as 9, but no age appears in the published records in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register so this is suspect. Pope's "Pioneers of Massachusetts" also gives him a fictitious age of 9. If he was 19 at the time he would have been born about 1619, married at age 35 to a woman about 18 years his junior, had his last child at age 61, and disappeared at sea aged in his early 60s. It seems more likely that he was about nine years old and born closer to 1630 than to 1620. Nicholas Wallington witnessed the will of John Cutting of Newbury 22 October 1659(22) . On 18 June 1662 he owned land in the town of Rowley, as shown by a lease of that date in which Phillip Nelson of Rowley let to Robert Savery and William Bolton of Newbury a farm in Rowley of 300 acres, bounded on the east by the Newbury town line, on the west by land of "Nicolas Walington", on the north by the Merrimack River, and on the south by Crane Meadow.(23) Nicholas Wallington served as surveyor of Highways, fences and chimneys in Bradford in 1667 with John Hardy.(24) In a Court held at Salem, Mass., 25 June 1667: "Copy of deed, dated Oct. 16, 1661, John (his mark) Willcot of Newbury and Mary, his wife, to Nicolas Wallington of Newbury, the half farm he purchased of Philip Nellson of Rowley, etc. Wit: Joseph Muzzey, Trustram Coffin, Robert Lange, John Pike, and Hugh Marsh. Acknowledged Mar. 25 1662, by John Wolcott. Copy made, June 24, 1667, by Robert Lord"(25) . At a later Court held in Ipswich on 24 September 1667, Nicholas sued John Wolcott for not making good on this parcel of land. The verdict was for the defendant.(26) In February 1670 Nicholas "Wallinghton" was mentioned in court records as someone who "frequently communed with" members of Mr. Edward Woodman's church despite not being a member(27). He was a freeman in Newbury 11 October 1670.(28) In November 1672 he owed 3 pounds to the estate of Abraham Toppan of Newbury.(29) On 24 February 1672 town orders regarding fences, swine, cattle, and horses were signed by five people, including Nicolas Wallingford.(30) No town was stated in this record, but since Bradford came into existence in 1675 it was most likely Newbury. "Nicolas Walington" was a member of a grand jury in Ipswich, 25 September 1677.(31) By a deed acknowledged on 29 January 1677[/8?] he gave one acre of meadow in the Crane Meadow, bounded on Crane Brook, "to have an able & faithful ministry settle amongst the inhabitants of the s[ai]d Towne of Bradford" (Essex Deeds, 4 Ips.: 130)(32) He settled in Newbury, Mass. and, judging by the birth records of his children, was apparently living in Bradford by 1672, which is when that town was first named. He may have lived a short time in Rowley, Mass., about 1662-3, as evidenced by the fact that he owned land there in 1662 and one of his childen's birth's was recorded in the Rowley town records (although also in the Newbury town records at the same time). Of course, Bradford was originally part of Rowley, known as "Merrimack" or "The Merrimac Lands"(33) , so these lands may have been in what later became Bradford. At a court held in Ipswich on 27 September 1681, administration of the estate of Nicholas Wallingford was granted to Sarah Wallingford, relict of said Nicholas, and Caleb Hopkinson, and they were ordered to bring in an inventory to the next March court. This action was performed "upon a certificate received from Mr. Tho. Kellon, merchant, on the death of Nicholas Walingford".(34) -------------------------------------------------- -------------- Nicholas' probate file(35) includes a number of papers, some of which are extracted or abstracted below: An inventory that was taken on 22 September 1681 by Ezekiel Northen, [Shu?] Walker, and John Palmer was presented to the court on 28 March 1682: "An Inventory of ye Estate of Nicholaus Wallingford who Deceased in Argone. in apparill --------------------------------------------- 05-05-0 to books --------------------------------------------- 01-10-0 to Amunition --------------------------------------------- 03-00-0 to beding -------------------------------------------- 14-00-0 to [Sak--?] ------------------------------------------- 01-01-0 to Lumber and fla[x?] ------------------------------- 04-10-0 to Linin ----------------------------------------- 01-00-0 to pewtter brass and Iron in ye house ----- 03-00-0 to stock in cattel horses and swine ------------ [55?]--17-0 to utencils for husbandry ----------------------- 04-06-0 to one hundred four----? and two acres of Land and Meadow with housing ------ 300-00-0 This Inventory taken ye 22: September 1681 by Ezek Northe and [Shu?] Walker and John Palmer Debts Due from ye Estate John Wattson --------------------------------- 0-12-0 John Griffing ---------------------------------- 0-10-0 Anthony Somersby: Newbury: ----------- 1-12-9 Ensigne Greinleafe: Newbury: --------- 0-15-7 John Wicom: Rowley: --------------------- 3-10-0 Mr. H----? Wainwright ---------------------- 14-10-0 Mr. Jon Wainwright ------------ 1-01-0 Tristram Coffin: Newbury: --------------- 8-8-0 George Kilborne: Rowley ---------------- 0-8-0 Caleb Boynton ------------------------------- 0-4-9 Mistis Wi[ston?]: Bradford: ------------- 0-18-0 Rich Bartlet[?]: Newbury: --------------- 0-06-0 John [F---?]: Rowley ------------------------- 0-05-0 Mr Looke --------------------------------------- 2-0-0 David Merrill Newbury --------------------- 0-4-0 Abraham Merrill: Newbury ---------------- 0-5-0 Mr. {illeg.] and Mr. ----eth? in silver ---- 12-0-0 Caleb Hopkinson ----------------------------- 9-0-0 more to John Atkinson 10[s?] ------------------------ 56-10-1 Debts due to ye estate Abraham Be[lnapper?] --------------------- 2-0-6 Rich Hall -------------------------------------- 0-4-0 Will Hardy -------------------------------------- 0-7-0 Joseph [C?]onnor --------------------------- 2-0-0 Mathew Petingell ---------------------------- 2-0-0 [Ni?]cho Wallingford ------------------------ 0-[17?]-0 David [Bevison?] ---------------------------- 0-09-0 7-19-6 This inventory of the estate of Nicholas Wallingford the Administrators upon oath delivered to be a true Inventory to the best of their knowledge & if more appears [illeg.] ye court [illeg.] at Ipswich the 28 of March 1682. Attest Robert Ford clerk for ordering of the estate the court orders the estate to be left in the widdows hand for the bringing up the young child and the lame child but the land to be responsable to be ordered by the court." -------------------------------------------------- -------------- His widow petitioned the court: "To the Honored Generall Court sitting at Boston the 16th of May 1683. The Humble petition of Sarah Wallingford to this Honored Court is as followeth. Whereas by Gods Providence my Late Deare husband being going for England was taken Captive and there ended his Days, hath left your poore handmaid with her children sivirall of whom Small & not Capable to doe anything towards a livily hood; the Court at Ipswich having Granted Administration to myself of the estate which is most of it is wilderness land; not above two acres of said land in Improvement. I [cannot tell?] which was to make any releise of it for our subsistance; the rest of the moveable estate being so little not sufficient to pay Debts which can be spared; and for our support I am still [illeg.] running into Debt: The Humble request of your petitioner is, that this Court would Impower your petitioner or some other [meet?] person to make sale of some part of the Land for releife of the family and to pay what Debts are yet unpaid; for it is [conceived?] that it will be more advantageous [yet land it?] sold to pay Debts than to have it taken away by the Creditors and that [land?] it be disposed of for releife then to be under-- [illeg.] all want the estate is vallued at a very high rate and some think it will not be valued at about half so much [as?] it is [appraised?] at, if it be taken by Execution; If some speedy Course be not taken, I know not which way to subsist, but must fall into the hands of others for releife, therefore in trust that God may [illeg.] to that wch may be best for our pro-- [illeg.] & future benefitt for which yor humble Petitioner shall pray. Sarah Wallingford There [or then?] was my son in law named put into the letter of Administration but he will not undertake nor be engatged unless there be [illeg.] given, to sell some land to pay Debts & relieve us." The court granted Caleb Hopkinson & Sarah Wallingford administrators "liberty to make sale of part of the Land belonging to sd estate to the valew of forty pounds according to Inventory already Given in." On 28 March 1682 the probate court ordered that Nicholas' personal estate be left in the widow Sarah's hands "for the bringing up of the young child and the lame child". The young child is likely Abigail, who would have been less than two years old at the time. But the "lame" child is unidentified. If one assumes that a "lame" or handicapped child would not have married (perhaps a false assumption) that leaves either William or Joseph, who died unmarried, or Hannah, about whom it is not known whether or not she ever married.
~1636 - ~1703
Sarah
Travers
67
67
RFN1061
1655 - 1655
John
Wallingford
RFN1062
2 JAN 1656/57 - <1703
Nicholas
Wallingford
RFN1063
1659 - <1703
John
Wallingford
44
44
RFN1064
1661 - 9 FEB 1682/83
Sarah
Wallingford
RFN1065
Caleb
Hopkinson
RFN1066
1665 - >1703
James
Wallingford
38
38
RFN1067
1667
Hannah
Wallingford
RFN1068
27 FEB 1669/70 - 5 MAR 1684/85
William
Wallingford
RFN1069
1672 - >1703
Joseph
Wallingford
31
31
RFN1070
1674
Elizabeth
Wallingford
RFN1071
Jonathan
Look
RFN1072
1676
Esther
Wallingford
RFN1073
1678
Benjamin
Wallingford
RFN1074
1680
Abigail
Wallingford
RFN1075
~1600
Henry
Travers
Sarah's father, whose name is sometimes spelled Travis, came from London, England in the "Mary and John" early in 1634. Some secondary sources have said he was of Irish ancestry, but there is no evidence for this. The passengers of the "Mary and John" went first to Agawam, now Ipswich, Mass., and in 1635 many of them, Henry Travers included, moved to Newbury. He was granted six acres of salt marsh in the Great Marsh, and a house lot of half an acre near the First Landing Place. Also four acres in another part of Newbury.(7) He was on a list of 91 freeholders of Newbury on 7 December 1642.(8) His wife Bridget may have been a sister of Richard Fitts of Ipswich and Newbury, Mass., as in the latter's will dated 2 December 1672 he mentions his sister "Travisse's" daughter. As the term 'sister' could also refer to a sister-in-law, it is also possible that Richard Fitts was a brother-in-law, or even a step-relation of some sort. The widow Bridget married, 30 March 1659, Richard Window of Gloucester, Mass. She may have been married to a Goodwin before marrying Henry Travers.(9) It is also possible that Henry had a wife before Bridget in England before he came to America, although that may never be known. In a Court held at Ipswich, Mass. on 29 September 1646, "John Emery, for his miscarriage with the wife of Henry Traverse, fined 3 li. [pounds] or to be whipped, and pay witness fee to Christopher Bartlet. Bound to good behavior and not to frequent the company of the wife of Henry Traverse. Brigett Traverse fined 10s. for her misdemeanors."(10) Henry Travers was a seaman. In 1648 he went to London and never returned, leaving behind his wife Bridget, daughter Sarah and a son James. Before he left he wrote a will that began "This 26th day of July, 1648, I Henrie Travers of Newbury, having occasion to go to Sea and know not whether I shall live to Com againe, I do by this present declare my last Will and Testament, as followeth..." To his daughter Sara he left a cow and a 3-year old heifer, as well as two brass pots, a little kettel, a frying pan, and a table board.(11) In 1655 the widow Bridget petitioned the court regarding the estate, and said, in part, "That whereas Henry Travers, my husband, went away to England from mee seaven years agone, and left mee two children; my Daughter was of the age of ten years, and my son not full three years of age. He then made his will and gave my daughter a Cow and a Heifer, to be paid to her at twelve years old... ...my daughter being now marryed I have payed to her two heifers." At one point in this petition she states "And since he [her husband] went [to England] I have not heard of him but once, which is five years since(12) ." Since Henry left seven years earlier it appears that two years later she somehow got word of him, or heard from him. It sounds like the man decided to stay in England and abandon his family back in America. What became of him after this point is unknown, although on 15 July 1659 an inventory of his estate was made, and he was called "late of Newbury, deceased".(13) At a Court held in Ipswich, Mass. 27 September 1659, the will of Henry Travers was presented, but not proved. "Administration was granted to his widow, Bridgett, now wife of Richard Window. Nicolas Walington, who married his daughter, Sarah Traverse, had already received three pounds, and the court ordered the administratrix to pay them twelve pounds more, and to the son, James Traverse, thirty pounds when he comes of age, and the rest of the estate, which amounted to 92 li. [pounds], to the widow, the land to stand bound for the children's portions."(14) After Bridget Travers married Richard Window in 1659 they moved to Gloucester. Richard's will dated 2 May 1665 and proved 27 June 1665 mentions the Travers children with this section: "And Conserning James travis: thirty pounds which the Honored Court was pleased to aloue him out of his fathers inheritanc which lis in Neckeles waringtans hands which is his portion."(15) Bridget, widowed once more, was deceased by 9 November 1673 when her estate was in probate. Administration was granted to Nicholas Wallingford and James Travis. An inventory was done on 9 October 1673 that came to 11 pounds, 12 shillings, and 3 pence. Mrs. Samuel Worcester and Elizabeth, his wife, testified that "within two or three dayes before the death of the Widdow Window, wee heard her declare that her will, as to her disposall of w[ha]t estate she had, was that her son in Law Nicolas Wallington, who ought her forty shillings, giveing to his son John Wallington an Ewe lamb out of it should have the rest of the said forty shillings; and that her Grandchild Sarah Wallington should have her best coat; and that her son James Traves should have her bed; and that the rest of her estate should be equally divided between her son Nicolas Wallington & James Traves". Sworn November 25, 1673.(16) Elizabeth Worcester comes into the picture again after her husband Samuel died because she became the second wife of Onesiphorus Marsh, whose third wife was Sarah Travers.
~1610
Bridget
Fitts
RFN1077
1645
James
Travers
RFN1078
1683 - 1683
Infant
Poore
?
RFN1079
1685 - 1708
Joseph
Poore
23
23
RFN1080
1687
Benjamin
Poore
RFN1081
1690
Sarah
Poore
RFN1082
1692 - >1730
Mary
Poore
38
38
RFN1083
Jonathan
Moores
RFN1084
1695 - 1749
Abilgail
Poore
54
54
RFN1085
Ephraim
Foster
RFN1086
1698 - 1737
Hannah
Poore
39
39
RFN1087
Thomas
Lull
RFN1088
1701
John
Poore
RFN1089
14 MAR 1703/04 - >1739
Lydia
Poore
RFN1090
~1700
Samuel
Wallingford
RFN1091
3 JAN 1728/29 - 1749
Ebenezer
Stuart
RFN1092
1731 - 1760
Joseph
Stuart
29
29
RFN1093
Mary
Snow
RFN1094
1734 - 1817
Elizabeth
Stuart
83
83
RFN1095
1736 - 1754
Judith
Stuart
18
18
RFN1096
1739
Benjamin
Stuart
RFN1097
1741 - 1832
Richard
Stuart
91
91
RFN1098
~1742
Eunice
Stuart
RFN1099RFN1116
~1745
Mary
Stuart
RFN1100
1676 - 1749
Ebenezer
Stuart
73
73
RFN1101 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894 I get no birth record of Samuel or Ebenezer; (specs they growed, like Topsy,) nor can I find any data of Samuel, but from records of deeds at Salem (See Appendix C) I learned that Ebenezer accumulated property at Rowley, these deeds placing hi m as an Innholder at Rowley Byfield, in the corner of Rowley south of Newbury Byfield, and owning land near his inn, one purchase extending to the Bradford line. In the deed of 1718 the daughters' names are missing, but among my note s is a marriage of Silvanas Wentworth and Elizabeth Stewart, of Rowley, Nov. 3 , 1685, when Duncan's Elizabeth would be 23 years old. This, with our story of the daughters that were Carters, previously mentioned, and that there was a N ancy Carter in the household of Captain Robert Stuart during the Revolution, s upposed to have been a descendant of one of these sisters, is all I learn of them. Ebenezer married Elizabeth Johnson May 23, 1698, and from a deed by one of his children I learn that he died before Feb. 23, 1746, making him seventy or more years old at ?? death. His estate was not settled till 1749, (See App end?? C, bottom of page 146.) Below is as full a tabular record as I can obtai n of the births, marriages and deaths of the CHILDREN OF EDENEZER AND ELIZABE TH JOHNSON STUART. NAME ??ORN MARRIED TO OF DIED AO? ? 1. SAEAM May1??,1699 (???)Wob??ter Kingston 2.ROB??T Nov.20,1701 Dec.11,1727 Anno Adams Newbury 1782 80 3. ??ARD Oct. 15,1704 Jud ith Poor Boxford 4. JOHN Oct. 20, 1707 Nov. --,1732 Hannah ??ley Rowley 5. ELIZABETH " " " Feb. 17,1726 Benj. Wchster Kingston bef 1746 6. AN N Mar. 27,1712 No record Samuel Lowell Rowley 7. MERCY No reco rd Dec. 26,1734 Ezra Clough Kingston 8. MA?? Oct. 26,1715 Ma r. 8,1737 Nathl Boynton Rowley 9. CHARLES May ??1,1718 No record Sar ah Fisk Boxford 10. JA??E Aug. 17,1720 Dec. 24,1751 William Dav is Newtown . APPENDIX C. D??RDS TO EBENEZER STUART, AND ABSTRACT OF HIS WILL. In the Essex Registry of Deeds at Salem I found these records:--B. 26, p. 176, Jonathan Pritchard sold land to Ebenezer Stuart; b. 33, p. 58, Samuel Dic kinson sold to Ebenezer Stuart land bounded on the southeast side by land of s aid Stuart, southwest by Woodman's land; b. 44, p. 148, Dec. 9, 1724, Samuel Platto to Ebenezer Stuart, Innholder, of Rowley, in the part called Byfield, an d upon the plain called Rye Plain, 11 acres--3 acres as part of lot laid out as right of Richard Thurlow, and 3 acres as part of lot laid out as right of F rancis Parrott--the three acres bounded on westerly end by so called Ox Pastu re Land; b. 45, p. 58, July 1, 1725, John Bennett to Ebenezer Stuart, for 7 1 0s., one lot, which is the last draft of freehold right in the middle commons- -witnesses, Joseph Jewett and John Hobson; b. 48, p. 279, Sept. 30, 1726, Dav id Wood to Ebenezer Stuart, for 30, one commonage or freehold in Middle Commo nage; b. 49, p. 169, July 12, 1727, Mehitable Woodman, single, of Newbury, dau ghter of Joshua Woodman, to Ebenezer Stuart, lunholder, of Rowley, for 185, e ight acres, bounded Ed by the great swamp, Nd by land in possession of John Lu ll, Innholder, N. W. and S. W. by land of Dea. Maximillian Jewett,--with 1-2 d welling house, 1-2 of barn and orchard.--Also another tract of 30 acres , bounded Ed by Maximillian Jewett's land, N. W. by Town of Rowley's land?? W. by the highway in Bradford, and S. E. by said Stuart's land. In all these de eds Ebenezer's name was spelt with "u" as ??ere printed. The following, sent me by Mr. Preston, are spelt by him with "ew," and I am inclined to think the name in the deeds was thus spelt as I had taken notes of only those in the index spelt Stuart, thinking at the time no others
1677 - 1749
Elizabeth
Johnson
72
72
RFN1102
1699 - >1719
Sarah
Stuart
20
20
RFN1103 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical H istory of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894.
1701 - 1781
Robert
Stuart
80
80
RFN1104 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. ROBERT S TUART, our immediate ancestor, second child and eldest son of EBENEZER, of DUN CAN STUART; was born at Rowley, Nov. 26, 1701. In his youth he was in the pers onal service of Gov. William Dummer, at Newbury, Mass. On Dec. 11, 1727, he ma rried Anne Adams, a relative and co-descendant with the Governor from John Dum mer, of Bishopstoke, Eng., he being of the 4th and she of the 6th generation f rom John through the two brothers Richard and Stephen that came to Newbury in 1638. (See Ancestral Chart, page 108, and Appendix D for Dummer, Sewall, Long fellow and Adams records.) Anne Adams was born April 29, 1705, and was of the 4th generation from Robert Adams, who came to Ipswich in 1635. Robert Stuart took his bride upon the pillion behind him to spend their winter's hone ymoon in a leg cabin on his land in the Kingston Woods. From deeds on record I find that he owned land in Rowley in 1723, he selling land then; and in 1729 he sold land with buildings in Rowley. (See Appendix E.) Not being fully sati sfied with his location in Kingston Robert Stuart removed to the Newtown Woods between the years 1741, he then being "of Kingston," and 1745, when he is on record in a deed as of Amesbury. (See Appendix E.) He probably desired to get back into Massachusetts, the King having decreed in 1740 that Kingston should be a part of New Hampshire. If that was his object his effort was futile, for the State line was at length established a few rods south of his house. (See Appendix F.) Our family traditions say that Anne's two brothers, Joseph and S amuel used to visit her frequently, but her father, who was greatly opposed to her going into the wilderness, came but once, when, finding the cabin uncomfo rtably cool he set to work stopping the chinks between the logs. They were in the habit of salting down a beef and a hog each fall for poorer neighbors. A r elative not naturally so generous as themselves reported to him seeing his wif e give a whole strip of pork away, and got for answer that it was put into the barrel for his wife to give to whoever needed it and that he had nothing far ther to do with it. He was an early riser, and while making ??call upon a neig hbor one evening, being told that his turn would come next, as a certain wild cat that had been ravaging the roosts of the vicinity had eaten the last of hi s (Heath's) hens, he answered that if they got up as early as he did they woul dn't have lost many hens.--On going out at earliest dawn to feed his stock the next day he saw the wildcat jump and seize a hen, and located the cat by the squawking of the hen in an unoccupied cattle manger. By grasping the stanchion beam overhead with his hands he succeeded in bringing his whole weight of ove r two hundred pounds upon the wildcat at once; but not till the creature had been able to turn and claw his buskins off and bite and scratch his legs badly did he succeed in stamping the life out of it. Carrying the carcass to the ho use he threw it upon the kitchen hearth, telling his wife to get up and do up his wounds. He was unable to go out of the house again that winter,--but no mo re hens were lost. Like his fathers,--and I might add his descendants,--he was always a little in advance of those about him in religion as well as in polt ics and became a Baptist, or what was then called a "Schemer," In New Hampshir e As It Is I find that the first Baptist Church in New Hampshire was organized in 1755 at Newtown. Our great-grandfather Robert Stuart built the first log church, hired and paid Elder Walter Powers, and with Deacon Francis Chase invi ted all to come and hear THE TRUTH FREE OF EXPENSE. This was called "Stuart's Church," and claiming to have thus already paid for support of the Gospel he refused to pay his "minister's tax." While he wa
1706
Elizabeth
Stuart
RFN1105 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. The birt h of Ebenezer's ELIZABETH is not recorded in the Institute Collections, althou gh her marriage with Benjamin Webster is. In some of my notes I had her as a t win with John, both born Oct. 20, 1707. She may have been born in 1707 and Joh n in 1709, and both being recorded at one time, one date may have been acciden tally omitted. She married Benjamin Webster, of Kingston, Feb.17, 1726, and di ed before her father. From one of the sisters came Esq. Isaac Webster, of Deep Brook, and from the other came "Wildeat" Isaac Webster, the latter of whom had two sons and four or five daughters, but I fail to learn from which sister they respectively came.
1709 - 1792
John
Stuart
83
83
RFN1106 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 4. JOHN, was b orn with ELIZABETH, October 20, 1707 according to my notes, but by the Essex I nstitute Historical Collections he was born in 1709, withno record of Elizabet h until her marriage. The marriage intentions of John Stewart and Hannah Baile y were published Nov. 10, 1732. She was born June 30, 1709, the daughter of Ca pt. Jonathan. Bailey and his second wife, Sarah (Jewett.) On Feb. 16, 1735 Jo hn boys land in Rowley of his father, Ebenezer Stuart. In 1737 he makes a deed to his brother Richard, in which both their names are spelt with u, he styling himself John Stuart, Jr. He is then of Rowley and mentions his father , Ebenezer. In a deed in 1744 he is a husbandman, of Newbury, selling land in Rowley to his brother Richard, again mentioning his father Ebenezer. A death record in Rowley of "the wife of John Stewart, 16 Oct., 1752," is very likely of his wife, as in Newbury is a marriage record of "John Steward and Mary Some rby, of Rowley, Dec. 12, 1753." John would then be 44 or 46 years old. I get n o record of his death. In the Newbury marriages after his removal to that plac e are these, that may or may not be of his children:--Richard Stewart and Mary Stickney, July 14, 1748, that are probably the parties making the deed in 17 53, supposed by Mr. Haskins to be Ebenezer's Richard and Mary Fisk; Moses Lull and Judith Steward, of Newbury, April 11, 1754; Samuel Burrell and Sarah Stew ard, Dec. 23, 1754; James Smith and Elizabeth Stewart, Dec. 15, 1757.
1709 - 1793
Hannah
Bailey
84
84
RFN1107
1712 - >1737
Ann
Stuart
25
25
RFN1108 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical H istory of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894.
1715 - >1734
Mary
Stuart
19
19
RFN1109 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. 8. MARY, of the Rowley birth record, was born Oct. 26, 1715. The Institute Collections have the same record, with a marriage of Nathaniel Boynton and Mary Stewart, both of Rowley, March 8, 1737, taken from Rowley's first book of marriages. Sh e must have died without any heirs before her father, as her name is not menti oned in his will.
1718 - 1750
Charles
Stuart
32
32
RFN1110 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. 9. CHARL ES, born May 31, 1718, was of Rowley in 1749, and according to Mr. Haskins "ha d married Sarah, daughter of Samuel Fisk, of Boxford, previous to 1742." By th e Boxford Town Clerk's letter "Sarah, daughter of Samuel and Judith (Noyes) Fi sk, was born Dec. 13, 1738." A discrepancy somewhere, as this gives her a husb and twenty-four years old when she was but four. There may have been an earli er Samuel Fisk with a daughter Sarah. Mr. Parkhurst found no record of any Cha rles or Richard Stuart or Stewart in Boxford.
1720
Jane
Stuart
RFN1111 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. 10. JANE , born Aug. 27, 1720, by my notes, or August 7th by the Institute Collections, married William Davis, of Kingston, Dec. 24, 1751, and settled at Newtown. On e of her sons was Capt. Ebenezer Davis, of Portland, Me., a Continental Veter an. A granddaughter of his married the father of David G. Haskins, jr. Esq., a lawyer, of Boston, who has freely given me much valuable information. I think that Gilbert and Alfred Davis, the latter still a resident ?? Brother and ni ?? of Stuart's wife?? says Mr. ?? Shown by deed o?? Sept. 1??, 1742. ?? Stuar t and wife ?? ?? of Sam?? ?? of ??ford, de??sed, to Sam'l ?? of ??ford, son o f Samuel, dee ?? deed witnessed by Ebenezer and Jane Stuart. ?? of Newton as before stated, with a daughter married near him, and the family of the former now residents of Merrimac, formerly a part of Amesbury, are descendants of Jan e.
~1733
Johnson
Stuart
RFN1112
~1735
Enoch
Stuart
RFN1113
~1736
Sarah
Stuart
RFN1114
~1738
Elizabeth
Stuart
?
RFN1115
1747
John
Stuart
RFN1117
6 FEB 1749/50 - >1775
Jane
Stuart
RFN1118
1623 - 1717
Duncan
Stuart
94
94
Early New England Settlers, 1600's - 1800's Ancestral Heads of New England Families, Surnames. by Frank R. Holmes, pg. 228 Duncan Stuart (Stewart), shipwright, brother of Alexander, Newbury, Mass., 1659, removed Rowley, Mass., 1669 The First Settlers of New England, pg. 274 STEWART, DUNCAN, one of the early settlers of Newbury, d. in Rowley, in 1717 a. 100 years Captured in battle while in the Scottish Royalist Army by English Parliamentary Army during Civil War and transported to Massachussetts. Servant to George Hadley, Ipswich, Essex, MA Deposed in 1698 that he was about 75 yrs old. BIOGRAPHY Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America Author: Joseph A Stuart Caxton Press. 1894. This book contains the history and genealogy of the Duncan Stuart family of New Hampshire OUR BRANCH AND ITS CONNECTIONS. When commencing investigations in the winter of 1891 for tracing our family lineage back to the first settlers in this country the earliest information we had as from the tales of our grandmother, that they came in "the troublous times of King Charles." or about 1650 to 1660. Our Aunt, Ruth Hobson used to think they came earlier, and that they settled Stuartstown, in the extreme northern part of New Hampshire, the original immigrant, named Charles, fleeing from Scotland with a hundred followers. I find, however, that the grant of Stuartstown, N. H. was given to Sir George Cockburn, Sir George Coleman, John Stuart and John Nelson; and as the location must have been a very unsafe one previous to the conquest of Canada in 1760, and the settlement was so weak as to be abandoned after the Revolution broke out, this John could not be the immigrant from whom we descend. Her version of the traditions, however, lead s me to conclude that our ancestor was in one of the defeated Scotch armies led into England by Charles Stuart, father or son, and fled here for safety. Both promised immunity from religious persecution to the Covenanters, and they flocked to the aid of each in turn. My aunt and sister say our ancestor was a Covenanter, "coming here to escape persecution;" but as the religious persecution of Covenanters did not begin till 1662, any evidence of presence here befor e that time is evidence that our ancestor was a military refugee for acts in favor of Charles I, in 1646, or Charles II, in 1651. Our traditions have "There was a Henry about that time, who went up country and was never heard from after;" also a Charles, "who went up north with a large party;" and of a Samuel, "who left for parts unknown." The attention of members of our family has been directed to advertisements in New York papers recurring at intervals of twenty years, for the heirs of Archibald Stuart, as being entitled to property left by Charles and Henry Stuart. Our oldest sister, Sarah W., wrote to other relatives in 1873 that her attention had been directed to a similar one some forty years previously, and that she remembered talking with Aunt Hobson about it at the time, not then knowing the date of this Archibald's immigration. A letter from a claim agent, named Spear, to our brother Robert about the year 1855 set that at rest by giving the date of Archibald's emigration as 1797, and that the Charles and Henry were Surgeons in the British Army during our Revolution, nearly a century after our earliest record. This earliest record of our grandmother's time was seen in grandmother's desk at Newtown by my sister Ruth as late as 1830. It was a fragment of a deed, dated 1700, giving "to my beloved son, Eben-" (the rest of that name and the name of the donor eaten by mice .) As a family possession, dated the year before the birth, of our great-grand father Robert, this was presumptive evidence that "Eben-" was his father. Of Robert we knew that in youth he was in the personal service of Gov. Dummer, of Massachusetts, then residing at Newbury, near to Rowley, the birth-place of Robert, and a relative of whom this Robert married. Of Robert's brothers our traditions say little, while of his sisters we knew that two married Websters; o ne married Ezra Clough; and another William Davis, they all settling about him upon parts of his land in Kingston and Newtown. "Squire" Isaac Webster, of Deep Brook came from one of the sisters and "Wildeat" Isaac Webster from the other; but I fail to learn to which each of these is to be credited. I think from the one marrying a Davis came Gilbert and Alfred Davis, the last still a resident of Newtown in 1892, when I visited my birthplace. Sources: 1. Title: "Early Settlers of Rowley, Massachusetts" - Jewett & Blodgett 2. Title: "Ancestors and Descendents of Deacon Thomas Stewart" - Arthur W Stewart
1642 - 1729
Ann
Winchester
86
86
RFN1120
1654 - >1682
Jane
Stuart
28
28
RFN1121
1658 - <1750
Katherine
Stuart
92
92
RFN1122
~1652 - 1750
Paul J.
Wentworth
98
98
RFN1123
1659
Martha
Stuart
RFN1124
1661 - 1689
Charles
Stuart
27
27
RFN1125
1662
Elizabeth
Stuart
RFN1126 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. In the d eed of 1718 the daughters' names are missing, but among my notes is a marriage of Silvanas Wentworth and Elizabeth Stewart, of Rowley, Nov. 3, 1685, when Du ncan's Elizabeth would be 23 years old. This, with our story of the daughters that were Carters, previously mentioned, and that there was a Nancy Carter in the household of Captain Robert Stuart during the Revolution, supposed to have been a descendant of one of these sisters, is all I learn of them.
~1656
Sylvanus
Wentworth
RFN1127
1664 - 1750
James
Stuart
85
85
RFN1128 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the DuncanStuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894 James Stua rt, son of Duncan, as he styles himself in the deed of 1718, was born in Newbu ry Oct. 8, 1664, and with his wife Elizabeth had James, July 19, 1688; Charles , Jan. 16, 1690; then moved to Rowley and had Edward, Sept. 20, 1693; Abigail, Nov. 26, 1695; Solomon, July 24, 1698; Benjamin, Mar. 3, 1700-buried Mar. 20, 1702; David, Jan. 9, 1702-choked to death by a copper coin, Jan. 10, 1706; an d at Boxford, Moses, July 9, 1712. In the deed of 1718 he is recorded a s of Boxford, and in one of Mar. 17, 1724, as of Bradford, buying back land i n Rowley. His wife probably died 29th Dec., 1747, as in the book of deaths in Rowley there is the record of "the wife of James Stewart" dying then. James is recorded, "died, James Stewart in his 86th year, 17th Sept.,1750." Presumabl y of his son James I find a marriage record of "James Stewart and Sarah Prime. both of Rowley, 23 June, 1733." Also the marriage record of "James Stewart an d Mary Boynton, both of Rowley, 11th Jan. or June, 1742." She was a daughter of Jonathan Boynton and born 21st of Aug., 1720; the marriage dates are from d ifferent volumes, vols. VI and X'X, of Essex Institute Historical Collections, as given to me. This marriage could hardly refer to James, son of Duncan or to his son, on account of disparity in age, but rather to a great-grandson of Duncan. Mary's mother married David Gage, of Bradford,May 12, of the same yea r. A marriage is recorded of James Stewart and Sarah Prime, both of Rowley, 25 June, 1733, probably James' son, then 45 years old. James daughter Abigail se ems to have married John Yell, of Ipswich, 29 Nov., 1736, she then being 42 ye ars old. His son Solomon, born 1698, and wife Martha have a record of Benjamin , Jan. 26, 1729; Solomon, Jan. 14, 1730; Phineas, Mar. 27, 1732. A Daniel, so n of Solomon, was baptised at Salem, middle precinct, now South Danvers, Nov. 24, 1734; also William, in March, 1737.--A Solomon kept a store in Boxford abo ut 1730, where he sold stationery, and later a William was a stationer there. In Boxford is the record of "William Stuart married Abigaell Standly, M ar. 3, 1736; also "George and Sarah Stuart had:--Sarah, July 4, 1745; William, March 24, 1746; George, Dec. 16,1748." Whether these belong to James' record I could not decide.
1666 - 1756
John
Stuart
90
90
RFN1129 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894 The first name mentioned in that deed after James is John Stuart, of Rowley. I find he was born in Newbury in February or March, 1666, three years before Henry. His first wife was named Elizabeth, and died Dec. 20, 1689, nine days after their daughter Elizabeth was born. Both he and James appear at Rowley soon after, an d in the first tax list extant in Rowley (1691) John is taxed 1 9s.4d. In 16 95 John is deeded land by Duncan, his father. He appears to have had an Elizab eth for a second wife, as there is record of the birth in Rowley of "Mary Stew art, daughter of John and Elizabeth, 3 Oct., 1699.--[Essex Inst. Hist. Colls. vols. IV and V, where it seems the name is spelt with ew always, though if unw illing to concede the privilege of changing the spelling of a family name they should have retained the final d, as found in Duncan's first deeds. This Mary may have been the Mary of Rowley, that married Jeremiah Hunt, of Billerica, 12 Aug., 1731, she being then 32 years old. A second daughter by this Elizabet h was Sarah, born 25 Apr., 1712. Sarah seems to have married Ephraim Boynton. also of Rowley, 2 May, 1732. Ephraim was a son of Deacon Joseph and Bridget (H arris) Boyaton, born 16 July, 1707. He was dismissed from Rowley Church to Sec ond Church in Lancaster, 19 Feb., 1761. John's oldest daughter, Elizabeth pro bably married Ebenezer Gove, 28 March, 1728.--John's second wife appears to ha ve died without record in Rowley; but I find a death record of "Mary, wife of John Stewart, died 29 Sept., 1726," that probably was a third wife of this Joh n, as his nephew, Ebenezer's John was but 17 at that time. He appears to have married on 8 March, 1727, Sarah (Clark, of Ipswich) Bailey, the widow of Nathaniel Bailey, who had diedin 1722. By the spelling of one report, John Stewart was a blacksmith in Boxford about 1730, while the Town Clerk says "Sar ah, daughter of John Stuart, baptised April, 1729." He probably returned to Ro wley before 1736, as his nephew in a deed of that year is styled John Stuart, Jr., son of Ebenezer. In Rowley is the death record of "the wife of John Stew art, 7 Feb., 1749," and of the marriage of "Mr. John Stewart and widow Margare t Gage, 5 Sept. 1749," that may refer to him, as from his age and probable ret irement from active life he may have been given the title, as also to distingu ish him from his nephew of the same name, who would for the same reason be sty led John Jr. The widow Gage would have been his fourth wife. Another theory o f the marriage of the widow Gage to some person of this name with a prefix of "Mr." is given on page 144, but this would seem the more plausible. John died on the 23rd of Decemder, 1756, aged 90 yrs, and 8 or 9 mos.
~1668 - >1704
Anna
Stuart
36
36
RFN1130
1669
Henry
Stuart
RFN1131 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894 I find no record of Henry, so accept our family tradition. He was either known to be de ad, or given up as dead by the "surviving brothers of Charles" in their deed o f 1718.
~1671 - 1690
Solomon
Stuart
19
19
RFN1132
~1673 - BEF 11 MAR 1751/52
Samuel
Stuart
RFN1133
~1714
Mercy
Stuart
RFN1134 BIOGRAPHY Bibliographic Information: Stuart, Joseph A. Genealogical History of the Duncan Stuart Family in America. Caxton Press. 1894. 7. MERCY . This name does not appear in the record of births at Rowley, or in the Insti tute Collections, but it does appear in the latter as married to Ezra Clough, of Kingston, Dec. 24, 1734, and in Ebenezer's will as "Mercy Stewart, alias Cl ough." They settled on part of her brother Robert's land in Kingston or Newtow n. I think my sisters know of descendants to the present day. d
Ezra
Clough
RFN1135
Samuel
Chase
RFN1136
Samuel
Chase
RFN1137
Samuel
Stuart
Chase
RFN1138
Thomas
Baston
RFN1140
Hannah
UNKNOWN
RFN1141
~1674
Dorcas
Baston
RFN1139
1704
Samuel
Stuart
RFN1142
James
Allen
RFN1144
Dorothy
Barsham
RFN1145
Dorothy
Allen
RFN1143
Elizabeth
Littlefield
RFN1146
1706
Joseph
Stuart
RFN1147
1709
John
Stuart
RFN1148
1713
Zebulon
Stuart
RFN1149
1716
Jeremiah
Stuart
RFN1150
1718
Dorcas
Stuart
RFN1151
~1720
Amos
Stuart
RFN1152
~1630
Esther
Blakely
RFN1153
1650 - 1661
John
Bond
11
11
RFN1154
1653
Joseph
Bond
RFN1155
1657
Mary
Bond
RFN1156
1652 - 1652
Thomas
Bond
1m
1m
RFN1157
1616 - 1652
Thomas
Chase
36
36
THOMAS CHASE AND HIS DESCENDANTS Thomas Chase, a brother of Aquila, first appears in New England, at Hampton, N. H., among the second group of settlers there having a grant of land in June 1640. (History of Hampton, 1;18) He married about 1642, elizabeth Philbrick (Philbrook), daughter of Thomas and elizabeth Philbrick who settled in Watertown as early as 1636 and removed to Hampton in 1645. Her father made his will, 12 Mar. 1663/4, being "very aged" which was probated, 8 Oct. 1667. One clause of the will reads as follows: "and thatt att the Deseace of my Daughter Elizabeth Garland, her son James Chase shall have one Com in lew of the Cow which I have Given my daughter Elizabeth." (Probate Records of the Province of New Hampshire, 1635-1717, p72) Thomas Chase died in Hampton shortly before 5 Oct. 1652, upon which day his widow elizabeth Chase was granted administration upon his estate. She married (2) 26 Oct. 1654, John Garland, first of the name in Hampton. He died there, 4 Jan. 1672, aged 50 years and she married (3) in Hampton, 19 Jan. 1673/4, Henry Robie [Roby] of Hampton, and died there, 11 Feb. 1677. Children, born in Hampton: 2. Thomas, b. 1643. 3. Joseph, b. 1645 4. James, b. 1649. 5 Isaac, b. 1 Apr. 1650. 6. Abraham, b. 6 Aug. 1652. The last two were recorded as born in Hampton and their births are to be found in the Old Norfolk Co. Returns from Hampton. DEED FROM THOMAS CHASE TO JOHN PHILBRICK 1649 "Know all men by thes presenes that I Thomas Cheas of Ham(p)ton in the county of norfolk seeman for and in consederation of foure pound allrede in hand resevid in full satisfaction of John Fellbrik of Hampton in the county aforesaid planter have granted bargened sould and confermed and by thes presenes clearly grant bargin and conferme into the aforesaid John Fellbrik foure aceres of upland medow and swampe as it is layd out more or les belonging unto me within the boundes of Hamton butting southeast and northwest aioyning to the said John Fellbrikes six acer lott to have and to hould to the said John Fellbrik to him and his ayres for ever in witnis hereof I have here unto sett my hand the ninth of the ninth month one thousand six hundred forty nine* Thomase Chase (autograph) Signed and delevered in the presenes of us Thomas Philbrick (autograph) James Philbrick (autograph) *(This date is by the old style,by the present style, it would be Nov. 9, 1649). Lonnie Chase chase1858@@bwn.net
1674 - ~1751
Esther
Chase
77
77
RFN1159
1650
Sarah
Morrill
~1676
Hannah
Chase
RFN1161
Joseph
Hoyt
RFN1162
1682
Priscilla
Chase
RFN1163
Joseph
Hill
RFN1164
1681
Anne
Chase
RFN1165
Abraham
Foulsham
RFN1166
1677
Joseph
Chase
RFN1167
Abigail
Thurston
RFN1168
~1684
Rebecca
Chase
RFN1169
~1680
Jonathan
Moulton
RFN1170
~1686
Jemima
Chase
RFN1171
~1680
Peter
Ordway
RFN1172
~1688
Abigail
Chase
RFN1173
Joseph
Robinson
RFN1174
~1690
Benjamin
Chase
RFN1175
Sarah
Bailey
RFN1176
~1672
Jonathon
Chase
RFN1177
~1422 - ~1512
Thomas
Chase
90
90
RFN1178 BIOGRAPHY The Chase Family is said to be of Norman origin - the name being derived from the French word "chasseur" (to hunt). As early as 1326 fam ilies of Chase resided in Suffolk, England. The family which came to America was from Hundrich Parish of Chesham, Buckinghamshire, some thirty miles northwest from London. A rapidly running river, The Chess, runs through this area, giving its name to the place. This is indicated in the records of the Herald's Visitation 1634, Buckinghamshire. The Chase arms: Gules four crosses patonce argent (two and two) on a canton azure a lion passant. It is thought that Thomas and Aquila Chase having a knowledge of navigation, were in the employ of their uncle, Thomas Chase, who was part owner of the "John and Francis"' which was named in a letter of Marque i n 1626. The Chase name is so rare in England, it is assumed the flower of the family emigrated to America. They were by nature enterprising and high minded people. Released from the trammels of aristocracy and conservatism of the old country, on entering into the breath and freedom of new circumstances, they at once took the front rank in the new world. Thomas Chase of Chesham, England was born about 1400 and was descended from an ancient family there. We have a record of one son. He was named John and he had a son Mathew born about 1486. He was also of Chesham.
~1588
Elizabeth
Wheeler
RFN1179
King Of
Judah
Amon
1592
Jane
Wheeler
RFN1181
~1593
Robert
Wheeler
RFN1182
1613
John
Wheeler
RFN1183
1615 - ~1687
George
Wheeler
72
72
RFN1184
Susanna
Stowers
RFN1185
1617
William
Wheeler
RFN1186
1624
Mercy
Wheeler
RFN1187
1625 - ~1669
David
Wheeler
44
44
RFN1188
1675
James
Philbrick
1625
Thomas
Wheeler
RFN1190
10 JAN 1617/18 - 1690
Elizabeth
Wheeler
RFN1191
Matthias
Button
RFN1192
~1606
Thomas
Dustin
RFN1193
1629
Adam
Wheeler
RFN1194
1630 - 1661
Roger
Wheeler
31
31
RFN1195
Mary
Wilson
RFN1196
Mary
Stone
RFN1197
1632
Edward
Wheeler
RFN1198
1635 - 1696
Henry
Wheeler
61
61
RFN1199
Abigail
Allen
RFN1200
1636
Joseph
Wheeler
RFN1201
4 JAN 1605/06 - 1659
William
Chase
RFN1202 BIOGRAPHY The record of Rev. John Eliot, the Indian Apostle, of "such as adjoyned themselves to this church," the First Church of Roxbury, has thi s entry: "William Chase, he came with the first company, bringing with him hi s wife Mary and his son William." The maiden name of his wife is not known. Th e son William was about seven years old at the time of migration. The father a pplied for admission as a freeman, October 19, 1630. He was a town officer at Roxbury. He served against the Narragansetts in 1645. He removed to Yarmouth, Massachusetts, in 1638, and died there. His will, dated May 4, 1659, states th at he was aged. It was proved May 13, 1659, hence his death occurred in May of that year. He bequeathed to his wife Mary and two sons, Benjamin and William (see N. E. Hist. Reg. V. 388). His daughter Mary was buried at Barnstable, Ma ssachusetts, October 28, 1652. The early records of the town of Yarmouth were destroyed by fire, so that it is impossible to give the dates of birth and dea th of all the children. Page 1 SOME OF THE DESCENDANTS OF WILLIAM CHASE OF R OXBURY AND YARMOUTH, MASS. Compiled by George Walter Chamberlain for John C arroll Chase Hazen P. Chase Holyoke, Mass. 1983 Page 42 AN INTRODUCTION I publish this book on William Chase, the first Chase in America, in the hope t hat we his descendants may have a more perfect understanding from whence we ca me and thus a better idea of where we go. In this day when young people are st ruggling for identity, what better way to find it than to find where they have been. In 1928 John Carroll Chase and George Walter Chamberlain published The Descendants of Aquila and Thomas Chase. Five years later, Mr. Chamberlain com piled for Mr. Chase a like genealogy of William Chase. This record was then pu blished in the New England Historical and Genealogical Registers for the years 1933 and 1934. It is now published with the New England Historic Genealogical Society's permission in book form as it was printed fifty years ago. I hope you can find your ancestor where the compiler left off and that you will conti nue your record on the pages left blank for that purpose. Holyoke, Massachuse tts HAZEN P. CHASE 1 March 1983 "A precious gift, these links that bind The lives before with lives behind" - Mrs. Ira A. East man Page 44 SOME OF THE DESCENDANTS OF WILLIAM CHASE OF ROXBURY AND YARMOUTH , MASS. Contributed by JOHN CARROLL CHASE of Derry, N. H., as compiled for hi m by GEORGE WALTER CHAMBERLAIN, M.S., of Malden, Mass. 1. WILLIAM1 CHASE, of Roxbury and Yarmouth,(*) carpenter, the first of the Chase name to settle in N ew England, came with his family to Roxbury in 1630. As he married in England , before 1627, MARY (???), and had a son born there as early as 1627, he proba bly was born about 1600. He died at Yarmouth between 4 May 1659, the date of h is will, and 13 May 1659, when his will was proved. His widow, Mary, died ther e on or before 6 Oct. 1659. William Chase and his family lived at Roxbury fro m 1630 to 1638; and the following information about them has been copied from the records of the church at Roxbury kept by Rev. John Eliot: "William Chase, he came with the first company, 1630; he brought one child his son willia. a child of ill qualitys, & a sore affliction to his parents: he was much afflict ed by the long & tedious affliction of his wife; after his wives recovery she bare him a daughter, wch they named mary borne aboute the midle of the 3d mon th [May], 1637. he did after yt remove (intending) to Situate, but after went with a company who maide a new plantation at yarmouth." (Roxbury Church Recor ds, pp. 73-74.)
5 MAR 1602/03 - 1659
Mary
Townley
RFN1203
26 FEB 1606/07 - 1609
Anne
Chase
RFN1204
1618 - 1624
Elizabeth
Chase
6
6
RFN1205
1623
Joane
Chase
RFN1206
9 FEB 1610/11 - 1624
Sara
Chase
RFN1207
11 MAR 1609/10 - 11 MAR 1609/10
Martha
Chase
RFN1208
1862 - 1903
Dorothea
Helena Augusta
Johanna Becker
41
41
Called Lena/ also 4th name,Johanna/Bap. Moisall Parish/Aunt Minnie said Roths lived South of Silver Creek Ceme bef Steins-d. bef Grandma Pichelmann-remembers casket was dropped in grave half full of water.Res. near Clayton,WI. Note posted by Mark Stiles (Stilesmp@@aol.com)
1794 - 1850
Hinrich Hindkerk
Willems
Willemssen
56
56
RFN1210
1798 - 1889
Mareka
Antoni
Hassebroek
91
91
RFN1211
Antoni
David
Hassebroek
RFN1212
Etje
Janssen
RFN1213
~1765
Willem
Janssen
Willemssen
RFN1214
1764
Frauoke
Janssen
Bruns
RFN1215
1828
Ulfert
Hinrich
Willemssen
RFN1216
1833
Etje
Willemssen
RFN1217
1834 - 1834
Frauoke
Willemssen
RFN1218
1836
Nicholaus
Willems
Willemssen
RFN1219
1838
Harm
Hinrich
Willemssen
RFN1220
1841
Hinderk
Wilhelm
Willemssen
RFN1221
1799
Wopke
Willemssen
RFN1222
1801
Grietje
Willemssen
RFN1223
1803
Ulfert
Willemssen
RFN1224
Grietje
Antoni
Hassebroek
RFN1225
~1735 - <1787
Willem
Janssen
52
52
RFN1226
~1740
Trintje
Hinders
RFN1227
~1540 - 1633
Francys
Wheeler
93
93
RFN1228
~1544 - 12 JAN 1614/15
Margerye
Owens
RFN1229
Elmer
Walker
RFN1230
Ethel
Walters
RFN1231
Jess
Hibbard
RFN1232
~1644
Edward
Hutchinson
In the attack of 14 August near Brookfield, Edward Jr. was wounded as well as his father. If not for his actions helping his father to remount a riderless horse, his father would have been killed instantly. As it was Edward Sr. died five days later. Flames over New England. Hall-Quest, Olga. 1967 p. 84-95
~0275
Mauric
(Meurig)
Hannah
Kilham
?
RFN1235
16 MAR 1666/67
Hannah
Kilham
RFN1236
1677 - 1761
James
Kilham
83
83
RFN1237
15 JAN 1674/75
Ruth
Kilham
RFN1238
1620 - 21 MAR 1698/99
Daniel
Kilham
RFN1239
~1625
Mary
Safford
RFN1240
1664 - 1710
Hannah
Kilham
46
46
RFN1241
1663 - 4 JAN 1716/17
John
Lovering
John Lovering, Jr. was the son of John Lovering, Sr. & Esther _____ of Dover (Quamphegan), New Hampshire. He was born 16 May 1663 in Dover. Two days later, his father purchased 50 acres of land with a sawmill, at the foot of Quamphegan Falls from Andrew Wiggin. John, Sr. died 27 Jul 1668. Capt John Wincoll & Ezekiel Knight were appointed his guardians. Ezekiel Knight married Esther Lovering. On 4 Apr 1672, John, Jr., his mother Esther & his stepfather Ezekiel signed an indenture for twelve years. Under the terms of the indenture, John, Jr. would be apprenticed to Abraham Tillton & accompany him to Ipswich, Mass. He would be taught the skills of a carpenter & millwright. The indenture was to start on 16 May 1672, John's ninth birthday & terminate on 16 May 1684, when he reached the age of majority. He signed it John Loverell, NOT Lovewell. John, Jr. married Hannah Kilham, the daughter of Daniel Kilham & Mary Safford. He MAY have married Love Parsons on 19 Mar 1701/2. While the date of Hannah's death is unknown, she did sign the deed for the land transfer of John Lovering, Sr.'s property, which John, Jr. sold to Thomas Abbot on 21 Jun 1700. John, Jr. had twelve children: John, Samuel, Joseph, Ebenezer, Mary, Esther (d.y.), Hannah (d.y.),Daniel, Esther, Benjamin, Hannah & William. John, Jr. died 4 Jan 1717/8.
??
Clemens?
RFN1243
~1560
Robert
Kilham
RFN1244
~1562
Elizabeth
Kilham
RFN1245
Robert
Loveland
RFN1246
Patience
Collins
RFN1247
William
Thomson
RFN1248
1622 - >1667
Elizabeth
Kilham
45
45
RFN1249
1624
Mary
Kilham
RFN1250
1627
John
Kilham
RFN1251
>1632
Ruth
Kilham
RFN1252
24 JAN 1641/42 - 26 JAN 1736/37
Sarah
Kilham
RFN1253
John
Gilbert
RFN1254
~1620
Richard
Hutton
RFN1255
1599 - 1661
Thomas
Loring
62
62
RFN1256
1603 - 1672
Jane
Newton
69
69
RFN1257
~1578
Thomas
Loring
RFN1258
~1575
John
Newton
RFN1259
Alice
UNKNOWN
RFN1260
~1641
Mercy
Abbe
RFN1261
5 MAR 1624/25 - 25 FEB 1678/79
Thomas
Loring
RFN1262 BIOGRAPHY 320. Thomas Loring. Born ca 1625 in Axminster, Devon, Eng. Thomas was baptized in Axminster, Eng. on 5 Mar 1625/6.26 Thomas died in 1678/ 9 in Home in Hull, MA.31 Thomas came to New England with his parents when he as about eight years old. He was selectman of the town of Hull in 1671, 1674, and 1675, and Freeman 1673. He toolk the freeman's oath in 1673. 10 31 3 26 On 16 Dec 1657 Thomas married Hannah Jacob (284) , daughter of Nicholas Jacob (132) (ca 1604-5 Jun 1657) & Mary Gilman (117) (ca 1605-15 Jun 1681), in Hingh am, MA.25 Born ca 1637 in Hingham, MA. Hannah was baptized in Hingham, MA on 2 3 Feb 1639/40.25 Hannah died on 8 Oct 1720 in Plympton, MA.65 "Mrs Hanah frenc h widdow and Relect of Cap^t Stephen french Late of weymouth deceased at Plimp ton octo^r y^e 8^th: 1720 (in the 84^th year of her age. She was the Mother o f Caleb Loring Esq^r. by her first husband, and she is buried about 10 feet s outherly of her son's monument.)".
1637 - 1720
Hannah
Jacob
83
83
RFN1263
~1598 - 1679
Wealthian
Loring
81
81
RFN1264
D. 1651
Thomas
Richards
RFN1265
1630 - 1714
John
Loring
83
83
RFN1266
1639 - 1679
Mary
Baker
39
39
RFN1267
1643 - 1713
Rachel
Wheatly
70
70
RFN1268
Nicholas
Jacob
RFN1269
Mary
Gilman
RFN1270
JAN 1734/35
Jacob
Perkins
RFN1271
D. <1778
Sarah
RFN1272
1736
Abigail
Perkins
RFN1273
Stephen
Prince
RFN1274
~1738
Martha
Perkins
RFN1275
Jonathan
Wait
RFN1276
~1739
Eunice
Perkins
RFN1277
Jonathan
Sebley
RFN1278
1712
Priscilla
Perkins
RFN1279
1834 - 1914
Delia
Marie
Nichols
80
80
RFN1280
1835 - 1913
Solomon
Simmons
77
77
RFN1281
Charles
Simmons
RFN1282
Jannette
Winton
RFN1283
1855 - 1932
Luke
Nichols
Simmons
76
76
RFN1284
Caroline
Marie
Reine
RFN1285
1858 - 1930
Ethzelda
Janette
Simmons
71
71
RFN1286
Michael
Clarence
Wheeler
RFN1287
1860
Frank
L.
Simmons
RFN1288
1865 - 1931
William
Henry
Simmons
66
66
RFN1289
1851 - 1914
Ellen
Phylria
Nichols
63
63
RFN1290
1851 - 1926
Andrew
J.
Chase
75
75
RFN1291
1816 - ~1891
Martha
Hale
75
75
RFN1293
Jacob
Hale
RFN1295
Betsey
Brown
Were
RFN1296
1838
Mary
Amanda
Chase
RFN1297
Samuel
Francis
Bowker
RFN1298
1840 - 1853
Laura
A
Chase
13
13
RFN1299
1843
Daniel
W
Chase
RFN1300
Amanda
M.
Derby
RFN1301
1845
Harriet
E
Chase
RFN1302
Josia
Jerome
Harby
RFN1303
1845 - 1847
William
Wallace
Chase
2
2
RFN1304
1853 - 1872
Flora
A
Chase
18
18
RFN1305
1856 - 1856
William
F
Chase
RFN1306
1857
Marrill
D
Chase
RFN1307
1859
Emma
A
Chase
RFN1308
1863 - 1864
Warren
E
Chase
7m
7m
RFN1309
Anna
Harden
RFN1310
1875 - 1932
Lawson
N
Chase
56
56
RFN1311
Laura
Elishaba
RFN1312
1877 - 1941
Harriet
Amelia
Chase
63
63
RFN1313
Luther
Beaumont
RFN1314
1880 - 1883
George
E
Chase
3
3
RFN1315
1882 - 1955
Charles
Elmore
Chase
73
73
RFN1316
Laurel
Gaines
RFN1317
1885 - 1894
Louie
J
Chase
8
8
RFN1318
1887 - 1966
Flora
A
Chase
78
78
RFN1319
Roy
Willard
RFN1320
1890 - 1969
Ethel
May
Chase
78
78
RFN1321
Arie
Isaac
Etherington
RFN1322
1895 - 1962
Bertha
Vera
Chase
67
67
RFN1323
Karl
Linscott
RFN1324
~1467
Margaret
Boteler
(Butler)
~1444 - 1496
Henry
Bould
52
52
Some family information obtained from this website: http://www.users.bigpond.com/boldg/William%20Bold%20(1129).htm
~1448
Dulcia
Savage
1403 - 1463
Sir
John III
Savage
60
60
~1406
Eleanor
Brereton
1423 - 1486
Richard
De
Bold
63
63
~1426
Katherine
~1401 - <1479
Henry
de
Bold
78
78
~1405
Gracia
~1380 - <1438
Sir
Richard
de Bold
58
58
~1384
Elena
Halshall
~1360
John
de
Bold
JOHN BOLD, of Bold, who had a grant from HENRY IV. of free warren, in Prescot, under the forest of Symondswood
~1345
Emma
Ireland
~1325 - 1407
David
Ireland
82
82
~1325 - 1426
Margaret
Stanley
101
101
~1342 - 1390
Sir
Richard
de Bold
48
48
Lived in the time of Richard II
~1329
Ellen
Molyneux
~1285 - 1363
Richard
Molyneux
78
78
~1287 - <1361
Agatha
Kyerton
74
74
<1261
Sir
Roger
Kyerton
~1270
Alice
Lucia de
Thwenge
~1263 - ~1335
Sir
William de
Molyneux
72
72
Was made Knight Banneret in Gascony (Gascoigne) in 1286 by Edmund Couchback, Earl of Lancaster and 2nd son of Henry III.
~1267
Isabell
Scarsbrick
~1232 - ~1320
Richard
de
Molyneux
88
88
~1232 - >1336
Emma
Donne
104
104
~1210 - ~1289
Sir
William de
Molyneux
79
79
William held by knight's service 15 libratas terrae, equivilant to about 3600 acres. He received knighthood at the hands of Philip de Ulceby, Sheriff of Lancashire, in 1256. He was succeeded by his son Richard. 1349 Most noble Order of the Garter
~1212
Margaret
de
Thornton
~1186
Allan
de
Thornton
~1190
Alicia
Bickerstaff
~1185 - ~1247
Sir
Adam de
Molyneux
62
62
1225 Knighted Adam had a Forestship in Co. Lancaster in 1228. He also was in commission for the perambulation of Forest.
~1189
Letitia
de
Brinley
~1159 - >1211
Richard
de
Molyneux
52
52
~1163
Edith
le
Botiller
~1133
William
le
Botiller
~1135
Robert
de
Molyneux
Robert succeeded his father, Adam. This baronial family of De Molins, who bacame resident under Edward III are stated to derive their surname from the town so called in Bourbonnais, but there may have been an earlier settlement from one of the numerous places in Normandy called Moulines or Moulins, from Molendina or water wells there existing. In Gisbourn M's account, no mention is made of the 3rd and 4th sons.
~1138
Beatrice
de
Villiers
~1108
Robert
de
Villiers
~1107
Adam
de
Molyneux
Lord of Sefton and Speke, Adam is recorded as having given a grant of land in Mulling to the church of the Virgin Mary of Corksands, sealed with his seal of the Cross Molins and bearing the Legend "S. Adam's de Molineux".
~1111
Annora
le
Garnett
~1081
Benedict
le
Garnett
~1081
Vivian
de
Molyneux
Vivian and his brother, Captain William Molyneux (some records make Captain William the father of Vivian), were in the 1st expedition of the Army sent by William the Conqueror under the conduct of Roger de Poytiers (Poictou), Earl of Lancaster, in 1066. de Poytiers was then possessed of all the tracts of land in Lancaster between the river Robbie and Mersy by gift of the crown, and gave half of land as services of Knights fee as well as the manors of Septon, Thorndon, Kerdon in Co. Lancaster to Captain William Molyneux who made Septon his chief seat. Vivian succeeded Captain William Molyneux to these holdings (whether as brother or as son). Vivian, after the succession, was placed in de Poytiers castle at Liverpool to act as governor and Castellanus, in the utmost limits of the earldom. He was succeeded by his son Adam.
~1085
Sywarde
~1055
William
de
Molyneux
~1027
Robert
de
Moulin
WHERE IT ALL BEGAN: Robert was the son of a Spanish Priest of noble family and a French Nun, who left the Cloister, going to Moulin, where Robert was born, his mother giving him the name Robert de Moulin, after the place where he was born. She is spoken of by many as Heloise, and the priest was Peter Abelard. With much scandal in the church Peter and Heloise were privately married after Robert's birth. The union did not appease the wrath of the canon, however, and Abelard was expelled from the priesthood and became one of the founders of the Oblates, a society still existing in the Caucasian Mountains. Tradition also tells us that from this order often comes the call to the House of Molyneux, and when this call comes, the one called leaves all to obey. Robert was known as "The Comte de Meulin." He eventually married but no record has been found of her.
~1306 - 1388
Sir
William
de Bold
82
82
~1308 - 1388
Sibyl
de
Hoghton
80
80
~1260 - ~1341
Sir
Richard
Houghton
81
81
General Statement of Hoghton family pedigree: The de Hoghtons are of ancient lineage, descended from Harvey de Walter, one of the companions of William the Conqueror, and through the female line from the Lady Godiva of Coventry, wife of Leofric III the Great, Earl of Mercia. After the third generation from the Norman Conquest, Richard and William de Hoghton first assumed the family name around 1150. The great-grandson, Sir Adam de Hoghton, was knighted and died in 1290. Sir Richard de Hoghton 1316-1345, Knight of the Shire in the Parliaments of 1322-27-37. Married Sybilla de Lea, direct descendant of the Lady Godiva, whose lands in Lea still form part of the Hoghton Estates. Warden of the Ports, knighted by Edward III in 1336 and given permission to empark in 1327. It was from Lea Hall (his private residence), that Thomas Hoghton went into exile in 1569, having re-built Hoghton Tower 1560-1565. Note: There is a Master Richard de Hoghton 1290-1316, Sheriff of Lancaster 1282, 1291 & 1301 mentioned in the brochure as a predecessor of this Richard. May have been an uncle.
~1273 - ~1330
Sibyll
de
Lea
57
57
~1247
William
de
Lea
1247 - 1298
Clemence
de
Banastre
51
51
~1221 - 1288
Henry
de
Lea
67
67
~1225
Adam
Hoghton
~1233
Aurelia
Howick
~1278
Richard
de
Bold
~1282
Margery
Mobberley
~1250
Peter
de
Bold
~1220
Robert
de
Bold
~1224
Agnes
~1190
Matthew
de
Bold
The BOLDS were seated, it is affirmed, before the Conquest, at Bold, in the county of Lancaster; and in the reign of HENRY III. we find in Testa de Nevil that MATTHEW DE BOLDE, the grandson of WILLIAM DE BOLDE, of BOLDE, was employed on an inquisition to make a return of the "Nomina villarum, serjeantes and knights fees," in the hundred of West Derby. They have ever since maintained the highest place among the great landed proprietors of the north of England, have constantly received the honour of knighthood, have represented their native shire in parliament, and have allied with its most distinguished families.
~1160
Robert
de
Bold
1256 - 1323
Marmaduke
de
Thwenge
67
67
~1256 - 1309
Isabel
de
Ros
53
53
1225 - 1279
Marmaduke
de
Thwenge
54
54
1238
Lucia
De
Bruce
~1190 - 1241
Peter II
De
Bruce
51
51
1017
Felicia
De
Normandie
1070 - 1127
Etienne
D'Aumale
57
57
~1085
Hawise
De
Mortimer
~1152 - 12 FEB 1221/22
Peter
de
Bruce
~1158
Joan
De
Grammaire
1197 - 1247
Sir Robert
De
Thwenge
50
50
~1205 - 1279
Matilda
De
Kilton
74
74
~1176 - ~1255
Roger
De
Kilton
79
79
1164 - 1234
Marmaduke
De
Thwenge
70
70
~1055 - 1100
Ralph
De
Mortimer
45
45
* commander at the battle of Hastings * Note: RALPH DE MORTIMER accompanied the Duke of Normandy to England and was a commander at the battle of Hastings; was sent to Wales to encounter Edric, Earl of Shrewsbury, whom, after a long siege in his castle of Wigmore, Mortimer subdued and delivered into the King's hands, for which he obtained a grant of all Edric's estates and seated himself at Wigmore; captured Curthose and brought him to King Henry I; married Millicent and had as eldest son and heir HUGH DE MORTIMER
~0920
Lord
of Ham
Fouchard
1108 - 1185
Hugh
De
Mortimer
77
77
HUGH DE MORTIMER who possessed the castle of Cleobury, Wigmore and Brugges (commonly called Bridgeworth); was often engaged against the Welsh; finished the foundation of the Abbey of Wigmore; died 1188; married Maud, daughter of William de Longespee, Duke of Normandy
~1020 - >1078
Roger
De
Mortimer
58
58
~1035
Hawise
De
Valois
~1010 - 1074
Raoul
III 'the
Great'
64
64
~1012 - 1043
Adele
Bar Sur
Aube
31
31
<1043
Adela
De
Valois
~0990
I
Nocher
Adelaide
Soissons
Giselbert
Soissons
~0995
II
Raoul
~0995
Adelaide
De
Breteuil
~1096 - ~1147
Elizabeth
(Isabel) de
Beaumont
51
51
~1099
Aubreye
de
Beaumont
1046 - 1118
Robert
de
Beaumont
72
72
~0990
Adele
De
Bretuil
~1022 - ~1094
Roger
de
Beaumont
72
72
~0919
Bormard
de
Senlis
~0925 - 0998
I
Gautier
73
73
~0914
Adela
D'Anjou
0870 - 0941
Foulques
I 'The
Great'
71
71
~0874
Roscille
De
Loches
~0858
Forconda
~0904
Roscille
D'Anjou
~0898
Ingelger
D'Anjou
~0902
Guy
D'Anjou
~0844
Garnier
De
Loches
~0845 - ~0893
I
Ingelger
48
48
~0844
Adelaide
Rescinse
De Gatinais
~0828
Seneschall
d'Anjou
Tertullus
~0825
Petronilla
~0930 - ~0955
Ermenberge
de
Brioquibec
25
25
~0799
Bava
~0765 - 0836
Hugh 'Le
Mefiant'
De Bourge
71
71
~0830
Torquat
de
Rennes
~0833
Adelaide
of
Alsace
~0769 - 0837
Ava
D'Alsace
68
68
~0790
Bertha
of
Tours
~0778 - 20 MAR 850/51
Ermengarde
of
Tours
0824 - ~0866
Adelaide
of
Tours
42
42
~0840 - 0897
Ermengard
of
Francia
57
57
~0740 - 0780
II
Luitfrid
40
40
~0735
Hiltrude
~0815
Stephen
De
Bourges
~0705
I
Luitfrid
~0719
Edith
~0742
Theitbaldus
of
Alsace
~0675 - 5 DEC 741
Duke of
Alsace
Adalbert
~0679
Gerlinde
Von
Austrasia
~0697
Eberhard
of
Alsace
~0699
Eugenia
D'Alsace
~0701
Attala
D'Alsace
~0703
Gundlindis
D'Alsace
0705
Maso
D'Alsace
0646 - 0735
Eudes
Odo
89
89
~0650
Adela
Von
Austrasia
~0600
Dagobert
King of Austrasia 623-632 King of the Franks 629-639 In 623, Dagobert's father, Chlotar II, King of the Franks, made him kingof Austrasia to please the leading Austrasian nobles: Mayor of the PalacePepin I and Saint Arnulf, Bishop of Metz. When Chlotar died in 629, Dagobert became sole King of the Franks, and hemoved his capital from Austrasia to Paris. Later, Dagobert left thecouncil of Pepin for a more flexible Neustrian Mayor of the Palace. In 632, he was forced to put his three-year old son Sigebert on the throneof Austrasia as the nobles were in revolt, however Pepin was not made hisMayor of the Palace. The Neustrian nobles then wished to unite with Burgundy, and so theyurged Dagobert to put his son Clovis II as king of both those kingdoms,although he was only 5 years old and could be easily manipulated by thenobles. When Dagobert died in 639, the nobles of the kingdoms controlledboth his sons, now puppet kings.
0585
Ragnetrude
De
Bourgogne
~0585 - 0641
Fara
of
Bavaria
56
56
0584 - 0628
Clothaire
II
Meroving
44
44
King of Soissons 584-613 King of the Franks 613-629 When his father, King Chilperic I of Soissons died in 584, Chlotar wasnot yet even born. Until 597, his kingdom was administered by his mother,Queen Fredegund, but when she died that year he bagan to rule for himself, now 13 years old. In 613, the Austrasian and Burgundian kings,Theudebert II and Theuderic II respectively, had died, and Queen Brunhild had placed the young Sigebert II on the throne of those two kingdoms.That year, the 29 year old Chlotar had Sigebert and Brunhild killed, and became the first king of all the Franks since his grandfather Chlotar Idied in 561. In 615, Chlotar passed the Edict of Paris, a sort of French Magna Carta that greatly pleased the nobles across the kingdom. In 623, he gave the kingdom of Austrasia to his young son Dagobert I, which was a political move giving Pepin I, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, and Bishop Arnulfof Metz, the two leading Austrasian nobles, semi-autonomy for their loyalty to Chlotar. In 629, Chlotar died and Dagobert became sole king, moving his capital from Austrasia to Paris.
0586 - 0618
Haldetrude
Bertrude De
Burgundy
32
32
0608 - 0631
Charibert
23
23
0603
Emma
De
Neustrie
0595
Brynhild
~0648
Valtrude
De
Verdun
~0538 - >0605
Duke of
Franconia
Richemeres
67
67
0540
Garritrude
De
Hamage
D. 0570
Duke on the
Mossele
Ansbertus
~0570
Ragnetrude
De
Burgundy
~0525
Theodebald
De
Baviere
~0525
Count De
Orleans
Betton
Duke of Franconia & Burgundy
~0530
Austregilde
Aiga
~0500
De
Pastor
~0505
Ragnoara
Cambrai
~0465
Ragnomer
Cambrai
~0500
Parovius
De
Reims
~0475
Pretextat
De
Reims
~0523 - 0584
Chilperic
61
61
When Chlotar, King of the Franks, died in 561 he divided the kingdomamong his four sons: Chilperic received Soissons. Right away, in 562,Chilperic invaded the lands of his brother King Sigebert I of Metz, thusstarting the civil wars. Sigebert advanced all the way to the city ofSoissons, exiled Chilperic's son Theudebert, and forced a peace treatyout of Chilperic. In 567, their brother King Charibert I of Paris died,the kingdom was partitioned among the two and their other brother KingGuntram of Burgundy, and Chilperic immediately invaded Sigebert's legalshare, but was defeated. Chilperic next allied with Guntram against Sigebert (who was in the midstof a war with Guntram). As hostilities mounted, Guntram swiched hisalliance to Sigebert and Chilperic surrendered. The same exact thinghappened the next year, 575, when Guntram again allied with Chilperic.That year, Sigebert died and left his kingdom to his son Childebert II.Chilperic banished Sigebert's wife Brunhild, took her money, andimprisoner her daughters. Chilperic then renewed hostilities withGuntram. In that year, Guntram's general Mummolus defeated DukeDesidarius, Chilperic's senior general. In 577, Guntram and Childebert made an alliance, demanding all of the lands Chilperic took from them.When the dysentery epidemic swept through Gaul in 580, Chilperic not onlylost two sons but became ill himself. However, by the next year he wasdoing better and was able to make peace with Childebert. That year, asChilperic had no sons of his own, he named his nephew, King Childebert IIof Austrasia, his successor. A war with Guntram began and ended this yearin which Duke Desidarius took many cities from the kingdom of Burgundy.In 582, Chilperic and Fredegund had another son, Theuderic, who died twoyears later. In 584, Chilperic was assassinated. He died at peace with his brother Guntram andat war with his nephew and alleged successor Childebert, but left a sonborn that very year: Chlotar. King of Soissons 561-584
0545
Fredegonde
De
Franks
Fredegund was the main wife and Queen of King Chilperic I of Soissons.She was an evil women, but strong, and so when Chilperic died in 584 leaving a newborn son Chlotar II, Queen Fredegund ruled the kingdom effectively until he came of age. Her view of politics included assassinations, and so attempts were made at the lives of King Childebert II of Austrasia (585), King Guntram of Burgundy (587), Queen Brunhild(584), and many others. When she died in 597, her son Chlotar II was 13,old enough to rule on his own
0517
Brunulphe
Earlin
~0500
Crotechilde
De
Ostrogoths
~0455 - 30 AUG 526
King of
Ostrogoths
Theodoric
~0455 - 30 APR 535
Andelfieda
Audeflede
Meroving
0467
Amalasuntha
De
Ostrogoths
~0470
Avevagni
De
Ostrogoths
~0390
Vern
of the
Franks
~0473
II
Theodoric
0436 - 26 NOV 481
Childeric
~0439
Basina
De
Thuringia
0466 - 27 NOV 511
Clovis
I 'The
Great'
Clovis I (466?-511), king of the Franks (481-511) and first important ruler of the Merovingian dynasty. He united the dominions of the Salian Franks on the northern Rhine River and the Ripuarian Franks on the lower Rhine. Clovis began with a victory in 486 over the last Roman governor in northern Gaul. By 493 he had absorbed many territories that surrounded his capital at Soissons. Clovis converted to Christianity in 496. He had completely defeated the confederation of Germanic tribes known as the Alamanni by 506; the next year the Visigoths were decisively defeated. Clovis made Paris the capital of the Frankish kingdom, which at that time included most of present-day France and southwestern Germany. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. King of the Salian Franks 481-486 King of the Franks 486-511 CLOVIS (466?-511). The founder and king of the Frankish kingdom that dominated Western Europe in the early Middle Ages was Clovis. He supposedly became a great warrior after his conversion to Christianity when he was about 30 years old. During a battle with a neighboring tribe of Teutons in 496, Clovis'warriors were being driven from the field. Their gods Odin and Thor seemed to have failed them. Then Clovis remembered that his wife,Clotilda, had urged him to become a Christian. He cried out, "Oh, Christ Jesus, I beseech thee for aid! If thou wilt grant me victory over mine enemies, I will believe in thee and be baptized in thy name!" Clovis rallied his men and gained a victory, and within a few years, he and some of his warriors were baptized. But at heart Clovis remained the same rough warrior he had been before. When the monks told him the story of Christ's crucifixion, he clutched his battle-ax and cried: "If I had been there with my Franks, I would have revenged his wrongs!" When Clovis at the age of 16 became king of one tribe of the Franks,these ancestors of the modern French nation were a scattered people with a number of kings. When he died, 30 years later, he had united all theFranks into a single powerful nation under his own rule. He overthrew the Roman power in Gaul in a battle near Soissons in 486, and before his death in Paris he had won for his people a kingdom that reached from the Rhine on the north and east almost to the Pyrenees on the south. So complete was the conquest by the Franks that this land ever since has been called France, from their name. On Clovis' death in 511, the kingdom was split between Chlodomer (Orleans), Childebert (Paris), Chlotar (Soissons), and Theuderic (Metz).
~0467
Alboflede
Blanchefleur
De France
~0468
Lantraldis
Lanthilde
De France
~0415 - 0458
King of
the Franks
Maerovaee
43
43
~0419
Vaerica
~0395 - 0447
Clodion
Crinitis 'Long
Haired'
52
52
* * Note: Clodio Crinitus, who compelled his subjects to wear long hair and beards in token of liberty from the Romans, died 445 or 447
0398
Basina
of the
Thuringians
~0417
Albaeric
(Albero)
~0419
Sigimaerus
~0370 - 0427
King of
France
Pharamond
57
57
~0376
Argotta
of the
Franks
1087
Alan
La
Zouche
~0390 - 0419
Duke of the
West Franks
Genebald
29
29
~0347 - 0404
Duke of the
East Franks
Marcomir
57
57
0324 - 0389
Duke of the
East Franks
Clodius
65
65
~0372
Marcomir
~0300 - 0389
Dagobert
89
89
0262 - 0358
Duke of the
East Franks
Genebald
96
96
~0230 - 0317
King of
the Franks
Dagobert
87
87
0320 - 0375
Theodosius
55
55
~0255
Clodius
~0220 - 0306
King of
the Franks
Walter
86
86
~0200 - 0298
Clodius
98
98
~0180 - 0272
King of
the Franks
Bartherus
92
92
~0160 - 0253
King of
the Franks
Hilderic
93
93
~0140 - 0213
Sunno
(Huano)
73
73
~0122 - 0186
King of
the Franks
Farabert
64
64
0109 - 0166
Clodomir
57
57
0106
Hasilda
of the
Ruij
King
of the
Rugij
D. 0149
Marcomir
Princess of
the Britons
Athildis
D. 0170
Cole
(Coelus)
Old King Coel
Eurgen
of the
Britons
~0482
Anna
Mawgawse
Verch Uther
Aiofe
of the
Britons
D. 0125
Marius
(Meric)
Julia
Victoria of
the Iceni
King of
Iceni
Prasutagus
Queen
of Iceni
Boadicea
Boudicca Boudicca (b¡-dîk´e) also Boadicea (bo´àd-î-sê´e) First century A.D. Queen of ancient Britain who led a temporarily successful revolt against the Roman army that had claimed her deceased husband's kingdom. She was captured and brought to Rome, where she was executed at the Colliseum. Excerpted from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition © 1996 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from INSO Corporation; further reproduction and distribution in accordance with the Copyright Law of the United States. All rights reserved.
Mandubratius
Llud
Llaw
Eiri
Julius Caesar invaded Britain during the reign of King Llud.
Theomantius
Tenantius King
of Britons
~0364
Edern
(Æternus)
Ap Padarn
Beli Mawr
"The
Great"
Born about 110 b.c. died 62 b.c. Called Belenos by the Romans, was the Celtic God of the Sun, representing the curative powers of the Sun's heat. His festival of Beltane, when bonfires were lit to welcome in the Summer and encourage the Sun's warmth, was held on May 1st, and is remembered in today's May Day festivities. His symbols were the horse (as shown, for example, by the clay horse figurine offerings at Beli's Sainte-Sabine shrine in Burgundy), and also the Wheel (as illustrated on the famous Gundestrup Cauldron). Perhaps, like Apollo, whom he became identified with, Beli was thought to ride the Sun across the sky in a horse-drawn chariot. Indeed, a Celtic model horse and wagon, carrying a gilded sun-disc, has been found at Trundholm in Denmark. Sometimes he is illustrated riding a single horse, throwing thunder-bolts (hence an occasional idenification with Jupiter) and using his symbolic radiating wheel as a sheild, as he tramples the chthonic forces of a snake-limbed giant. This personification is similar to the classic depiction of the Archangel St. Michael defeating the Devil. Sacred pagan hills associated with Beli, are thought to have had their dedications transferred to this saint (or sometimes St. George) by the early Christians. Well known examples include St. Michael's Mount (Cornwall) and the churches of St.Michael on Brent Tor (Devon), and Burrow Mump and Glastonbury Tor (Somerset): All on a supposed ley line that faces the Rising Sun a tBeltane. He may also have been worshipped on Dragon Hill below the great Uffington White Horse in Berkshire. Beli Mawr is claimed as the founder of the Deisi, later rulers of the kingdom of Dyfed. His eldest son, Aballac, is claimed as the ancestor of Coel Hen, of Ebruac. His second child, daughter Lweriadd, marries Llyr Lleddiarth, who is claimed as the founder of Gwent.
Don
verch
Mathonwy
Caswallon
ap Beli
Penarddun
ap Beli
Marius
Lweriadd
verch
Beli
Mil
Espane
Manogan
ap
Eneid
Eneid
ap
Cerwyd
Cerwyd
ap
Crydon
Dyfnarth
Cynfarch
Dux
Cornwall
Prydain
Aedd
Mawr
Dux
Cornwall
Antonius
Seisyll
Serwyl
King in
Britain
Gwrwst
King of
Britain
Rhiwallon
King of
Britain
Cunedda
Dux Cambria
& Cornwall
Henwyn
Rhagaw
Regan
verch Llyr
Llyr
(Lear)
King Lear, whose story was told by William Shakespeare
King in
Britain
Bleiddud
Rhun
Baladr
Bras
Lleon
Lliwelydd
Brutus
Darianlas
Efrog
Gadarn
King in
Britain
Mymbyr
King in
Britain
Madog
King in
Britain
Locrinus
Brutus
Brwt "The
Dardanian"
Silivius
Selys
Hen
Iulus
Ascanius
"The Trojan"
Aeneas
Aeneas, in Roman mythology, son of Venus, the goddess of love, and Anchises, a Trojan prince. After the Greeks captured Troy at the end of the Trojan War, Aeneas escaped with the help of his mother. His subsequent voyage is described in the epic the Aeneid, by Roman writer Virgil. When Aeneas reached Italy, he met Latinus, king of Latium, and became engaged to Lavinia, Latinus's daughter. The goddess Juno, however, who hated Aeneas, caused Turnus, king of the Rutuli, to make war against Aeneas and Latinus. Aeneas killed Turnus and married Lavinia, accomplishing the union that would eventually produce the Roman people. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Creusa
Cassandra
of Troy
High King
of Troy
Priam
* Last king of Troy * Note: Priam was the king of Troy during its famous destruction. Priam was a direct descendant of Dardanus, son of Zeus, and became the king of Troy through natural succession. He married Hecabe and they started a family of their own.(1) Priam and his many children played crucial roles in the Trojan War. One of his sons in particular, Paris, was considered by many to be responsible for beginning the war. He was called upon to judge between the beauty of three goddesses - Athena, Aphrodite and Hera. (2) (3) Athena wins by promising Paris the love of the most beautiful woman in the world, Helen, who at the time was married to the Greek king Menelaus. Athena causes them to fall madly in love (4) and together they leave Sparta. (5) (6) Menelaus, the husband that Helen left behind, gathered together Greek troops and pursued the couple across the Aegean Sea to the city of Troy in order to reclaim his wife. (7) So began the Trojan War. http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/classics/Course_Materials/rop/priam.html Genealogical data compiled by Eugene W. Stark. All rights reserved. Copyright © 1995-1997Priam, in Greek mythology, king of Troy, father of Trojan warrior Hector. Too old to fight in the Trojan War, Priam anxiously watched from the walls of Troy. After his son Hector was slain by Greek hero Achilles, Priam went to the Greek camp to beg for his body. Achilles gave him Hector's body for burial, but during the sack of Troy, Priam was killed. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Hecuba
of
Phrygia
Troan
(Troilos)
Paris
Hector
Polyxena
~0310 - 0360
King of
the Franks
Theodomir
50
50
Cassandra
King of
Phrygia
Dymas
King of
Troy
Laomedon
Strymo
King of
Troy
Ilus
King of
Troy
Tros
King of
Acadia
Erichthonius
Dardaxor
Dardanus
Tarah
Zeus, in Greek mythology, the god of the sky and ruler of the Olympian gods, corresponding to the Roman god Jupiter. Zeus presided over the gods on Mount Olympus in Thessaly. He wore the aegis and wielded a terrible thunder bolt. His bird was the eagle and his tree the oak. His principal shrines were at Dodona and at Olympia, where the Olympian Games were celebrated in his honor every fourth year. Zeus was the youngest son of the Titans Cronus and Rhea. When Zeus grew to maturity he dethroned Cronus. Zeus henceforth ruled the sky, and his brothers Poseidon and Hades were given power over the sea and the underworld, respectively. Zeus was the god of justice and mercy, the protector of the weak, and the punisher of the wicked. As husband to his sister Hera, he was the father of Ares, the god of war; Hebe, the goddess of youth; Hephaestus, the god of fire; and Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth. Zeus was a lecherous god. Many of his children were born to goddesses or mortal women after love affairs. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Electra
Hera
Ares
Hebe
Hephaestus
Eileithyia
Ephraim
Rhea
Jacob
(Israel)
Ibn Isaac
Zelekha
Joseph
'The
Vizier'
Fetjuir
Anchisa
Capys
Themiste
Eurydice
of
Troy
Joseph ben
Matthat of
Arimathea
Joseph of Arimathea was not only a disciple of Jesus, he was also his great-uncle, the uncle of his mother, Mary. He was a wealthy merchant with many trading ships. It is said that after the Resurrection, Joseph brought Mary Magdalene to Gaul in one of his ships, and continued on to Britain. There he settled at Glastonbury, and is said to have owned land on one of the islands off the coast of Britain. Joseph of Arimathaea, according to all four Gospels of the New Testament, a rich Jew of Arimathaea, probably a member of the Sanhedrin, the ancient Jewish court in Jerusalem, who after the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, requested the body from the Roman procurator Pontius Pilate and placed it in his own tomb. According to some ancient writers he was later the founder of Christianity in Britain and of a monastery at Glastonbury; scholars, however, reject these claims. In the Arthurian cycle of romances and in late medieval legend he brings the Holy Grail into Britain. There is no known Biblical connection to show his genealogical connection to this family as of this date. ---------------------------------------- REF: "Britannia Internet Magazine": Joseph of Arimathea was a wealthy disciple of Jesus, who, according to the book of Matthew 27:57-60, asked Pontius Pilate for permission to take Jesus' dead body in order to prepare it for burial. He also provided the tomb where the crucified Lord was laid until his Resurrection. Joseph is mentioned in a few times in parallel passages in Mark, Luke and John, but nothing further is heard about his later activities. Legend, however, supplies us with the rest of his story by claiming that Joseph, accompanying the Apostle Philip on a preaching mission to Gaul, was sent to Britain for the purpose of converting the island to Christianity. The year 63 AD is commonly given for this "event", with 37 AD sometimes being put forth as an alternative. It was said that Joseph achieved his wealth in the metals trade, and in the course of conducting his business, he probably became acquainted with Britain, at least the southwestern parts of it. Cornwall was a chief mining district and well-known in the Roman empire for its tin and other metals. Some have even said that Joseph was the uncle of Jesus, and that he may have brought the young boy along on one of his business trips to the island. It was only natural, then, that Joseph should have been chosen for the first mission to Britain, and appropriate that he should come first to Glastonbury, that gravitational center for legendary activity in the West Country. Much more was added to Joseph's legend during the middle ages, and he was gradually inflated into a major saint and cult hero. For example, he is said to have brought with him either a cup, said to have been used at the Last Supper and also used to catch the blood dripping from Christ as he hung on the Cross. A variation of this story is that Joseph brought with him two cruets, one containing the blood and the other, the sweat of Christ. Either of these items are known as The Holy Grail, and were the object(s) of the quests of the Knights of King Arthur's Round Table. The legend goes on to suggest that Joseph hid the "Grail" in Chalice Well at Glastonbury for safe-keeping. There is a wide variance of scholarly opinion on this subject, however, and a good deal of doubt exists as to whether Joseph ever came to Britain at all, for any purpose. ....................................................................... Joseph of Arimathea was a wealthy disciple of Jesus, who, according to the book of Matthew 27:57-60, asked Pontius Pilate for permission to take Jesus' dead body in order to prepare it for burial. He also provided the tomb where the crucified Lord was laid until his Resurrection. Joseph is mentioned in a few times in parallel passages in Mark, Luke and John, but nothing further is heard about his later activities. Apocryphal legend, however, supplies us with the rest of his story by claiming that Joseph accompanied the Apostle Philip, Lazarus, Mary Magdalene & others on a preaching mission to Gaul. Lazarus & Mary stayed in Marseilles, while the others travelled north. At the English Channel, St. Philip sent Joseph, with twelve disciples, to establish Christianity in the most far-flung corner of the Roman Empire: the Island of Britain. The year AD 63 is commonly given for this "event", with AD 37 sometimes being put forth as an alternative. It was said that Joseph achieved his wealth in the metals trade, and in the course of conducting his business, he probably became acquainted with Britain, at least the south-western parts of it. Cornwall was a chief mining district and well-known in the Roman empire for its tin. Somerset was reknowned for its high quality lead. Some have even said that Joseph was the uncle of the Virgin Mary and therefore of Jesus, and that he may have brought the young boy along on one of his business trips to the island. Hence the words of Blake's famous hymn, Jerusalem: And did those feet, in ancient time, Walk upon England's mountains green? It was only natural, then, that Joseph should have been chosen for the first mission to Britain, and appropriate that he should come first to Glastonbury, that gravitational center for legendary activity in the West Country. Local legend has it that Joseph sailed around Land's End and headed for his old lead mining haunts. Here his boat ran ashore in the Glastonbury Marshes and, together with his followers, he climbed a nearby hill to survey the surrounding land. Having brought with him a staff grown from Christ's Holy Crown of Thorns, he thrust it into the ground and announced that he and his twelve companions were "Weary All". The thorn staff immediately took miraculous root, and it can be seen there still on Wearyall Hill. Joseph met with the local ruler, Arviragus, and soon secured himself twelve hides of land at Glastonbury on which to build the first monastery in Britain. From here he became the country's evangelist. Much more was added to Joseph's legend during the Middle Ages. He was gradually inflated into a major saint and cult hero, as well as the supposed ancestor of many British monarchs. He is said to have brought with him to Britain a cup, said to have been used at the Last Supper and also used to catch the blood dripping from Christ as he hung on the Cross. A variation of this story is that Joseph brought with him two cruets, one containing the blood and the other, the sweat of Christ. Either of these items are known as The Holy Grail, and were the object(s) of the quests of the Knights of King Arthur's Round Table. One legend goes on to suggest that Joseph hid the "Grail" in Chalice Well at Glastonbury for safe-keeping (Photo) There is a wide variance of scholarly opinion on this subject, however, and a good deal of doubt exists as to whether Joseph ever came to Britain at all, for any purpose. ----------------------------- Joseph of Arimathea All that is known for certain concerning him is derived from the canonical Gospels. He was born at Arimathea -- hence his surname -- "a city of Judea" (Luke, xxiii, 51), which is very likely identical with Ramatha, the birthplace of the Prophet Samuel, although several scholars prefer to identify it with the town of Ramleh. He was a wealthy Israelite (Matt., xxvii, 57), "a good and a just man" (Luke, xxiii, 50), "who was also himself looking for the kingdom of God" (Mark, xv, 43). He is also called by St. Mark and by St. Luke a bouleutes, literally, "a senator", whereby is meant a member of the Sanhedrin or supreme council of the Jews. He was a disciple of Jesus, probably ever since Christ's first preaching in Judea (John, ii, 23), but he did not declare himself as such "for fear of the Jews" (John, xix, 38). On account of this secret allegiance to Jesus, he did not consent to His condemnation by the Sanhedrin (Luke, xxiii, 51), and was most likely absent from the meeting which sentenced Jesus to death (cf. Mark, xiv, 64). The Crucifixion of the Master quickened Joseph's faith and love, and suggested to him that he should provide for Christ's burial before the Sabbath began. Unmindful therefore of all personal danger, a danger which was indeed considerable under the circumstances, he boldly requested from Pilate the Body of Jesus, and was successful in his request (Mark, xv, 43-45). Once in possession of this sacred treasure, he -- together with Nicodemus, whom his courage had likewise emboldened, and who brought abundant spices -- wrapped up Christ's Body in fine linen and grave bands, laid it in his own tomb, new and yet unused, and hewn out of a rock in a neighbouring garden, and withdrew after rolling a great stone to the opening of the sepulchre (Matt., xxvii, 59, 60; Mark, xv, 46; Luke, xxiii, 53; John, xix, 38-42). Thus was fulfilled Isaiah's prediction that the grave of the Messias would be with a rich man (Is., liii, 9). The Greek Church celebrates the feast of Joseph of Arimathea on 31 July, and the Roman Church on 17 March. The additional details which are found concerning him in the apocryphal "Acta Pilati", are unworthy of credence. Likewise fabulous is the legend which tells of his coming to Gaul A.D. 63, and thence to Great Britain, where he is supposed to have founded the earliest Christian oratory at Glastonbury. Finally, the story of the translation of the body of Joseph of Arimathea from Jerusalem to Moyenmonstre (Diocese of Toul) originated late and is unreliable. FRANCIS E. GIGOT Transcribed by Mike McLeod The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company Online Edition Copyright © 2003 by Kevin Knight Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08520a.htm
Callirhoe
Astyoche
of
Acadia
Simios
Daughter
of
Teucri
Teucer
Ilium
Teucri
"Xanthus"
River
Scamander
Nymph
Idaea
Priest
of On
Potipherah
Rachel
bint
Laban
Benjamin
of
Goshen
Bethuel
Ibn
Nahor
~0100
Eurgen
ap Meric
(Marius)
Reuben
Ibn
Jacob
Simeon
Ibn
Jacob
Levi
ben
Jacob
Issachar
Ibn
Jacob
Zebulon
Ben
Jacob
Dinah
Bint
Jacob
handmaid
of Rachel
Bilah
Dan
Naphtali
handmaid
of Leah
Zilpah
Gad
Asher
Laban
Ibn
Bethuel
Leah
Bint
Laban
Rebekah
Bint
Bethuel
Rebekah
Bint
Behuel
Esau
Ibn
Isaac
Abraham
Ibrahim
Departed Haran in abt 2031 [Gen 12:4] to go to the land of Canaan [Gen12:5]. Abraham or Abram, biblical patriarch, according to the Book of Genesis(see 11:27-25:10), progenitor of the Hebrews, who probably lived in theperiod between 2000 and 1500 BC. Abraham is regarded by Muslims, who callhim Ibrahim, as an ancestor of the Arabs through Ishmael. He was onceconsidered a contemporary of Hammurabi, king of Babylonia. Because thebiblical account of his life is based on traditions preserved by oraltransmission rather than by historical records, no biography in thepresent sense can be written. Originally called Abram, Abraham was the son of Terah, a descendant ofShem, and was born in the city of Ur of the Chaldees, where he marriedhis half sister Sarai, or Sarah. They left Ur with his nephew Lot andLot's family under a divine inspiration and went to Haran. Receiving apromise that God would make him a "great nation," Abram moved on toCanaan, where he lived as a nomad. Famine led him to Egypt, but he wasdriven out for misrepresenting Sarai as his sister. Again in Canaan,after quarrels between Abram and Lot and their herdsmen, they separated,Lot remaining near Sodom and Abram continuing his nomadic life. He laterrescued Lot from the captivity of King Chedorlaomer of Elam and wasblessed by the priest Melchizedek, king of Salem. Then God promised Abrama son by his wife Sarai, repeated his earlier promises, and confirmedthese by a covenant. When this covenant was later renewed, the rite of circumcision wasestablished, Abram's name became Abraham, and Sarai's became Sarah. Godsubsequently repeated his promise of a son by Sarah by means of visitingangels. When God informed Abraham that he intended to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah because of the wickedness of their inhabitants, Abraham pleaded with himto spare the cities. Eventually it was agreed that God would spare thecities if he could find only ten righteous men. The ten men could not befound, and God destroyed both cities. Ishmael, first son of Abraham, whose mother was Hagar, an Egyptian slave,was born when Abraham was 86 years old. Isaac, born to Abraham by Sarahin his 100th year, was the first of his legitimate descendants. Goddemanded that Abraham sacrifice Isaac as a test of faith, but because ofAbraham's unquestioning compliance, God permitted him to spare Isaac andrewarded Abraham with a formal renewal of his promise. After Sarah died,Abraham married Keturah and had six sons by her. He died at the biblicalage of 175 and was buried beside Sarah in the Cave of Machpelah, in whatis now Hebron, West Bank. Christians, Muslims, and Jews accept Abraham as an epitome of the man of unswerving faith, a view reflected in the New Testament. Source: "Abraham," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Departed Haran in abt 2031 [Gen 12:4] to go to the land of Canaan [Gen12:5]. Abraham or Abram, biblical patriarch, according to the Book of Genesis(see 11:27-25:10), progenitor of the Hebrews, who probably lived in the period between 2000 and 1500 BC. Abraham is regarded by Muslims, who call him Ibrahim, as an ancestor of the Arabs through Ishmael. He was once considered a contemporary of Hammurabi, king of Babylonia. Because the biblical account of his life is based on traditions preserved by oral transmission rather than by historical records, no biography in the present sense can be written. Originally called Abram, Abraham was the son of Terah, a descendant of Shem, and was born in the city of Ur of the Chaldees, where he married his half sister Sarai, or Sarah. They left Ur with his nephew Lot and Lot's family under a divine inspiration and went to Haran. Receiving a promise that God would make him a "great nation," Abram moved on to Canaan, where he lived as a nomad. Famine led him to Egypt, but he was driven out for misrepresenting Sarai as his sister. Again in Canaan, after quarrels between Abram and Lot and their herdsmen, they separated, Lot remaining near Sodom and Abram continuing his nomadic life. He later rescued Lot from the captivity of King Chedorlaomer of Elam and was blessed by the priest Melchizedek, king of Salem. Then God promised Abrama son by his wife Sarai, repeated his earlier promises, and confirmed these by a covenant. When this covenant was later renewed, the rite of circumcision was established, Abram's name became Abraham, and Sarai's became Sarah. God subsequently repeated his promise of a son by Sarah by means of visiting angels. When God informed Abraham that he intended to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah because of the wickedness of their inhabitants, Abraham pleaded with him to spare the cities. Eventually it was agreed that God would spare the cities if he could find only ten righteous men. The ten men could not be found, and God destroyed both cities. Ishmael, first son of Abraham, whose mother was Hagar, an Egyptian slave,was born when Abraham was 86 years old. Isaac, born to Abraham by Sarahin his 100th year, was the first of his legitimate descendants. God demanded that Abraham sacrifice Isaac as a test of faith, but because of Abraham's unquestioning compliance, God permitted him to spare Isaac and rewarded Abraham with a formal renewal of his promise. After Sarah died, Abraham married Keturah and had six sons by her. He died at the biblical age of 175 and was buried beside Sarah in the Cave of Machpelah, in whatis now Hebron, West Bank. Christians, Muslims, and Jews accept Abraham as an epitome of the man of unswerving faith, a view reflected in the New Testament. Source: "Abraham," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved
Sarai
Sarah bint
Haran
Nahor
Terah
\ Terih
handmaid
of Sarah
Hagar
Ishmael
Ibn
Abraham
Amtheta
Aminadab
Ben
Aram
Nahor
\
Nahur
Serug
\
Saragh
Melka
Kabor
Eber
Ibn
Salah
Salah
Assaracus
Arphaxad
Shem
(Sceaf
Sedeqetelebab
Bedwig
Eliakim
Methuselah
Edna
Lamech
Barakil
Elishaa
Arzrail
Enoch
Reu
Ra'u
Edna
Daniel
Mahalel
Mahalaleel
Dinah
Rashuja
Barakiel
Adam
Noam
Mualaleth
Jared
Seth
Azura
Enosh
\ Enos
Eve
Cain
Abel
Kenan
\
Cainan
Noah \
Nuh
Before the Great Flood the Bible tells us that mankind's behavior degenerated to where people's minds were thinking about "only evil continually" and "the earth was filled with violence." Our righteous God became sorrowful for having created people who became so wicked. So, God decided to destroy all people, all land animals, and all birds. (Gen.6:5-7, 11). Noah was trying to live righteously in this wicked world, so God was merciful to him and his family. (Gen. 6:8-9; 7:1). Noah was given instructions about how he was to build a big boat--450 feet long, 75 feet wide, and 45 feet high. (Gen. 6:14-16). I am told that its dimensions were similar to today's oil tankers, making it practically impossible to overturn even in the worst storm at sea. God told Noah, "Everything that is on the earth shall die" by a flood. (Gen. 6:17; 7:4). Noah was also told that the Ark would save his family (four married couples) and a male and female pair of every kind of"unclean" animal and 7 each (or 7 pairs) of every "clean" animal. (Gen.6:18-19). Noah was also instructed to store food in the Ark for hisfamily and for all the animals. (Gen. 6:21). Noah did "all that God commanded him." (Gen. 6:22; 7:5). Seven days before the rain started, God ordered Noah, who was 600 yearsold, to come into the Ark with his family and all the animals. (Gen.7:1-4, 6). God sealed them in the Ark. (Gen. 7:16). God caused water toboth rise up from below the earth and to fall from the sky for 40 days, until the water was 22 feet deep over the highest mountain. (Gen.7:11-12, 19-20). Everyone and everything that had lived on dry ground was drowned. Only those in the Ark survived. (Gen. 7:21-23). After 150 days the water began to subside. The Ark came to rest on a high mountain of Ararat. Three months later the tops of the mountains could be seen. (Gen. 8:3-5). When the surface of the ground was dry enough, the Bible says that God told Noah to go out of the Ark, 365 days after he entered it. (Gen. 8:16). Later, God made a promise that "never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth." The rainbow is the sign of His covenant. (Gen.9:8-17).
Baraka
Emzara
Naamah
Ham
Japheth
Rake'el
Betenos
Ashmua
Pelag
Falikh
Matthat
ben
Levi
Mary
bint
Matthat
Levi
ben
Melchi
Melchi
ben
Jana
Jana
ben
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Mattathias
Mattathias
ben
Amos
Amos
ben
Naum
Naum
ben
Esli
Esli
ben
Nagge
Nagge
ben
Maath
Maath
ben
Mattathias
Mattathias
ben
Semel
Semel
ben
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Judah
Judah
ben
Joanna
Joanna
ben
Resa
Resa
ben
Salathial
Salathial
ben
Neri
Neri
ben
Melchi
Daughter
of
Jehoiachin
Jehoiachin
Melchi
ben
Addi
Addi
ben
Cosam
Cosam
ben
Elmadam
Elmadam
ben Er
Er ben
Jesus
Jesus
ben
Eliazer
Eliazer
Ben
Jorim
Jorim
ben
Matthat
Matthat
ben
Levi
Levi
ben
Simeon
Simeon
ben
Judah
Judah
ben
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Jonam
Jonam
ben
Eliakim
Eliakim
ben
Melia
Melea
ben
Menna
Menna
ben
Mattatha
Mattatha
ben
Nathan
Nathan
ben
David
David
ben
Jesse
David (king) (died 961 BC), king (1000-961 BC) of Judah and Israel,founder of the Judean dynasty. Several accounts of his accomplishmentsoccur in the Old Testament, chiefly in the books of Samuel, Kings, andChronicles. David was the youngest son of Jesse, a shepherd of Bethlehem, where hespent his youth tending his father's flocks. He became known for hismusical skill and for his courage, exemplified by his victoriousencounter with the Philistine giant Goliath. As his reputation grew, hewas summoned to the royal court, where he received an appointment asarmor-bearer to Saul, the first king of Israel. After achievingdistinction in the wars against the Philistines, he married Michal,Saul's daughter, and won the friendship of Jonathan, Saul's son. As aresult of his growing popularity, however, he incurred the jealousy ofthe king, who banished him from the court. David spent the next period ofhis life in exile, at the head of a band of warriors, levying tribute onthe landowners of Judah. After a period in the town of Adullam, nearJerusalem, and in the deserts of Judea, he entered the service of Achish,king of the Philistine city of Gath. As a reward for his help to Achish,he was made ruler of the town of Ziklag. David returned to his native country after Saul, Jonathan, and two othersof Saul's four sons died in battle with the Philistines. Becoming king ofJudah at Hebron, he reigned for seven years, until about 993 BC, when hewas anointed king of Israel. David subsequently defeated in rapidsuccession the Philistines, Moabites, Aramaeans, Edomites, and Ammonites,firmly establishing Israel as an independent national state and greatlyextending its dominions. One of his principal conquests was that of theJebusite stronghold of Zion, which he made the nucleus of his capitalcity, Jerusalem, often called the City of David. There he constructed hispalace and installed, under a tabernacle, the Ark of the Covenant, makingJerusalem the religious and political center of the domains united in hisperson. During the siege of Rabbath (now Amman, Jordan), the Ammonite capital,David committed adultery with Bathsheba, wife of the soldier Uriah, forwhose death he was indirectly responsible. This episode, generallyconsidered the major sin of his life, was followed by recurring troubleswith his children, one of whom, Absalom, was killed during a rebellionthat he had organized against his father. The final years of David'sreign were marked by additional family troubles, notably the dispute withhis eldest surviving son, Adonijah, that developed after David hadselected Solomon, his son by Bathsheba, as heir to the throne. David was a valiant warrior and an outstanding leader. He displayedunfailing religious devotion and epitomized the courage and aspirationsof his people, the prophets of whom came inevitably to regard him as thetype of the promised Messiah. In both the Old Testament and NewTestament, the Messiah is referred to as the Son of David. In tradition,he is credited with writing 73 of the Psalms; most scholars, however,consider this claim questionable. Holy City of the Jews According to the Old Testament, David brought the sacred Ark of theCovenant to Jerusalem from Qiryat Ye'crim (a holy place of the time, westof Jerusalem) and installed it in a new tabernacle, built a royal palaceand other buildings, and strengthened the city's fortifications. AlthoughDavid greatly expanded the Kingdom of Israel and made Jerusalem itscapital, the city and the temple he built were quite modest. Solomon, hisson and successor, improved the temple and enlarged the city. He built acity wall and many buildings on a scale of magnificence previouslyunknown in Israel. Solomon's Temple was destroyed and the Jews exiled by the Babylonians inthe year 586 BC. In 539 BC, Babylonia was conquered by the Persians (seePersia), who allowed the Jews to return to Jerusalem the following year.The construction of a new temple, or Second Temple, was then undertakenon the ruins of the old. Jerusalem was captured by Alexander the Great in333 BC, and after his death it came under the rule first of Egyptians andlater of Syrians. The Syrian ruler Antiochus IV attempted to wipe out theJewish religion by destroying a large part of Jerusalem in 168 BC. Thiscaused a Jewish revolt under the leadership of Judas Maccabeus, a memberof a priestly ruling family, the Hasmonaeans (see Maccabees). Heliberated Jerusalem from the Syrians in 165 BC and later extendedHasmonaean rule over a large part of Judea. Jerusalem became thedestination of annual Jewish pilgrimage from the outlying area, sincecertain religious obligations could only be fulfilled in the temple. AllJewish sacred and secular law and power came to be concentrated in thecity.
Solomon
ben
David
Shammua
Ben
David
Shobab
Ben
David
Ibhar
Ben
David
Elishua
Ben
David
Elpalet
Ben
David
Nogah
Bint
David
Nepheg
Bint
David
Japhia
Bint
David
Elishama
Bint
David
Beeliada
Bint
David
Eliphalet
Bint
David
Jesse
ben
Obed
Princess
of Geshur
Maachah
King of
Geshur
Talmai
Obed
ben
Boaz
Boaz
Ruth
Salmon
Naashon
Ben
Aminadab
Thehara
Tara
Amenhotep
IV
Akhenaten
1685 - ~1686
Moses
Chase
1
1
Judah
Ibn
Jacob
Tamar
of
Kadesh
Gweirydd
Arviragus
Venissa
Claudia
Julia
Cunobelin
(Cymbeline)
King of the Trinovantes. Acknowledged by Rome.
Tiberius
Claudius
Caesar
Claudius I (klô´dê-es) In full Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus. 10 B.C.-A.D. 54 Emperor of Rome (A.D. 41-54) who became ruler after Caligula was murdered. He was poisoned by his wife, Agrippina, after her son Nero was named as heir. Excerpted from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition © 1996 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from INSO Corporation; further reproduction and distribution in accordance with the Copyright Law of the United States. All rights reserved.
Aemilia
Lepida
Tiberius
Claudius Caesar
Brittanicus
Octavia
Valeria
Messalina
of Rome
Lucius
A.
Paullus
Vipsania
Julia
Agrippina
Marcus
Vipsanius
Agrippa
Julia
Augusta
Lucius
Vipsanius
Caesar
Augustus
Augustus (63 BC-AD 14), first emperor of Rome (27 BC-AD 14), who restored unity and orderly government to the realm after nearly a century of civil wars. He presided over an era of peace, prosperity, and cultural achievement known as the Augustan Age. Originally named Gaius Octavius (and known as Octavian), Augustus was born in Rome; he was the grandnephew and adoptive heir of Julius Caesar. Caesar's assassination in 44 BC plunged Rome into turmoil. Octavian vied with Mark Antony, Caesar's ambitious colleague, for power and honor. In 43 BC Octavian, Antony, and Roman general Marcus Aemilius Lepidus formed the Second Triumvirate to rule the Roman domains. After defeating the armies of Caesar's assassins, the three divided the Roman world among them. Octavian gave Antony his sister, Octavia, in marriage. The triumvirate did not hold together for long. Octavian forced Lepidus from power while Antony was in the east fighting the Parthians. Having sent Octavia back to Rome, Antony married Cleopatra, queen of Egypt. Octavian defeated the combined naval forces of Antony and Cleopatra in the Battle of Actium in 31 BC; Antony and Cleopatra committed suicide the following year. In 29 BC Octavian returned to Rome in triumph, at age 34 the sole master of the Roman world. In 27 BC the Roman Senate gave Octavian the title Augustus and bestowed on him many other titles and powers that had been held by different officials in the Republic. The Senate vested him with paramount authority throughout the empire. Despite all this, Augustus carefully avoided the appearance of monarchy, claiming that he had restored the Roman Republic. Augustus was succeeded by his stepson and son-in-law, Tiberius. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Scribonia
Gaius
Julius
Caesar
Julius Caesar was a Roman general, politician, statesman, and writer, andemperor of the Roman empire from 49-44 B.C.E. He was born and educated inRome. He already had a reputation as a fine soldier when his politicalcareer began in 68 B.C.E. Julius showed a human spiritual greatness inhis generosity to defeated opponents. When he defeated his enemies andcrossed the Rubican to Italy in 49, he became the most powerful man inRome. He described these victories in three books called De Bello Civili(The Civil Wars). Julius was declared emperor for life and was verypopular with the Roman people. However, a group of senators, led by asenator named Brutus, believed that he was too powerful, and theyassassinated him on the Ides (15th) of March 44. Julius Caesar played a major role in Roman history, but he is neverdirectly mentioned in Christian scripture. His death was approximately 17to 20 years before the birth of Jesus. Julius Caesar was a Roman general, politician, statesman, and writer, andemperor of the Roman empire from 49-44 B.C.E. He was born and educated inRome. He already had a reputation as a fine soldier when his politicalcareer began in 68 B.C.E. Julius showed a human spiritual greatness inhis generosity to defeated opponents. When he defeated his enemies andcrossed the Rubican to Italy in 49, he became the most powerful man inRome. He described these victories in three books called De Bello Civili(The Civil Wars). Julius was declared emperor for life and was verypopular with the Roman people. However, a group of senators, led by asenator named Brutus, believed that he was too powerful, and theyassassinated him on the Ides (15th) of March 44. Julius Caesar played a major role in Roman history, but he is neverdirectly mentioned in Christian scripture. His death was approximately 17to 20 years before the birth of Jesus. Caesar, Gaius Julius (100-44 BC), Roman general and statesman, who laid the foundations of the Roman Empire. Early Life Born in Rome in 100 BC, Caesar belonged to the prestigious Julian clan; yet his uncle by marriage was Gaius Marius, leader of the popular party. This party was opposed by a reactionary senatorial faction. When Lucius Cornelius Sulla, leader of that faction, was made dictator in 82 BC, Caesar left Rome until Sulla resigned in 78 BC. Triumvirate Between 74 BC and 65 BC, Caesar held a series of public offices and formed alliances with powerful friends. Returning to Rome in 60 BC after a year as governor of Spain, he joined forces with Roman general Pompey the Great and the rich patrician Marcus Licinius Crassus in a three-way alliance known as the First Triumvirate. The triumvirate controlled the government in Rome. Gallic Wars Celtic Gaul was still independent in 58 BC. When Roman allies there appealed to Caesar for help against rivals, Caesar marched north into Gaul with six legions of soldiers. By 57 BC Rome controlled most of northern Gaul. While Caesar remained in Gaul, his agents attempted to dominate politics in Rome. After Crassus died in 53 BC while waging war against Parthia, tension increased between Caesar and Pompey. Civil Wars In 52 BC Pompey assumed full power in Rome. The Roman Senate called upon Caesar to resign his command and disband his army. Instead, early in 49 BC, Caesar marched his army into northern Italy and moved swiftly southward. Pompey fled to Greece. In three months Caesar was master of all Italy. His forces then took Spain and the key port of Massalía (now Marseille, France). In 48 BC Caesar landed in Greece and smashed Pompey's forces at Pharsalus. Pompey escaped to Egypt, but there he was assassinated. By the following year all forces opposing Caesar had been defeated. Dictatorship and Assassination The basic prop for Caesar's continuation in power was the dictatorship. According to the traditional constitution, this office was only to be held for six months during a dire emergency. That rule, however, had been broken before. Caesar now followed suit. In addition, he was made consul for ten years in 45 BC. Above all, he was in total command of the armies, and this remained the backbone of his power. A number of senatorial families felt that Caesar threatened their position and feared for the future of the Roman republic. In 44 BC, an assassination plot was hatched by a group of senators, including Gaius Cassius and Marcus Junius Brutus. On March 15 of that year, when Caesar entered the Senate, the group killed him. Since Caesar had no male heirs, in his will he named his grandnephew, Octavius, as successor. It was Octavius who became Rome's first emperor under the name of Augustus. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Cornelia
VII
Cleopatra
Cleopatra (69?-30 BC), queen of Egypt (51-30 BC), celebrated for her love affairs with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. In 51 BC, on the death of her father, King Ptolemy XII Auletes, Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIII succeeded jointly to the throne. In the third year of their reign Ptolemy drove Cleopatra into exile. Roman general Julius Caesar arrived in Alexandria, became Cleopatra's lover, and returned her to the throne, after which Cleopatra lived in Rome as Caesar's mistress. After Caesar's assassination in 44 BC, Cleopatra returned to Egypt. Roman general Mark Antony then fell in love with Cleopatra and moved to Egypt. Later Antony returned to Rome, where he married Octavia, a sister of Caesar's heir, Octavian, later Emperor Augustus. When Antony went to the East as commander of an expedition against the Parthians in 36 BC, he and Cleopatra reunited. Following Antony's victory over the Parthians, Antony and Cleopatra lived in Egypt until 32 BC, when Octavian declared war against them. Following the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, Cleopatra and Antony fled to Alexandria, where they both committed suicide. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Marcella
Minor
Gaius
Julius
Caesar
Aurelia
of
Rome
Julia
Major
Marcus
Atius
Balbus
Lucias
Aurelius
Cotta
Rutilia
Lucias
Aurelius
Cotta
Sextus
Julius
Caesar
Proconsul, A.U.C. 573
Marcia
of
Rome
Sextus
Julius
Caesar
Julia
Quinitus
Marcias
Rex
Lucius
Julius II
Caesar
Sextus
Julius II
Caesar
Consul A.U.C. 597
Nero Claudius
Druscus
Germanicus
Drusus (dr¡´ses), Nero Claudius Known as "Drusus Senior." 38-9 B.C. Governor of Gaul Roman general who sought to impose Roman rule on the Germanic tribes. Excerpted from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition © 1996 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from INSO Corporation; further reproduction and distribution in accordance with the Copyright Law of the United States. All rights reserved.
Antonia "the
Younger"
Augusta
Marcus
Antonius
Antony, Mark (83?-30 BC), Roman statesman and general, who defeated the assassins of Julius Caesar and helped form the Second Triumvirate, which ended the Roman Republic. Antony was born in Rome and served as a cavalry leader in Palestine, Egypt, and Gaul. At the outbreak of the civil war between Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great, Antony served as Caesar's commander in chief in Italy. After the assassination of Caesar in 44 BC, Antony, Gaius Octavius (later the Roman emperor Augustus), and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, formed the Second Triumvirate and divided the Roman Empire among themselves. Although Antony married Octavius's sister Octavia, he continued to carry on a love affair with Cleopatra, queen of Egypt. Octavius used this to excite indignation in Rome against Antony. When the Parthians defeated a military expedition led by Antony in 36 BC, civil war broke out. In 31 BC the naval forces of Octavius defeated the combined forces of Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium. The following year, besieged by the troops of Octavius in Alexandria, Antony and Cleopatra committed suicide. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Octavia
Major
Antonia
Major
Gaius
Octavian
Senator of Rome
Atia
Major of
Rome
Claudia
Marcella
Minor
Octavian
Caesar
Augustus
Marcus
Atius
Balbus
Julia
Minor
Atia
Minor of
Rome
Pompeia
Ancharia
of
Rome
Marcus
Antonius
Crecitus
Julia
of
Rome
Lucius
Crecitus
Gaius
Crecitus
Lucius
Julius IV
Caesar
Cossutia
Lucius
Julius III
Caesar
Consul A.U.C. 664, author of the Julian Law.
Fulvia
of
Rome
Popillia
of
Rome
Lucius
Julius
Caesar
Gaius
Julius I
Caesar
Numerius
Julius
Caesar
First of the Caesars
Lucius
Julus
Libo
Consul A.U.C. 487
Lucius
Julus
Libo
Lucius
Julus
Lucius
Julus
Lucius
Julus
Lucius
Julius
Julus
Military Tribune A.U.C. 368
Lucius
Julius
Julus
Military Tribune A.U.C. 351
Caius
Julius
Julus
Caius
Julius
Julus
Caius
Julius
Julus
Consul A.U.C. 272
Caius
Julius
Julus
Consul A.U.C. 265
Lucius
Julius
Julus
Numerius
Julius
Julus
Asserted his descent from Ascanius.
Silvias
Aeneus
Posthumus
descendants unknown for ca 560 years.
Zeus
Dino
the
Graeae
Janus
of the
Romans
Canens
Marcus
"the Orator"
Antonius
Lavinia
of
Latium
the
Dardanian
Silvias
King of
Latium
Latinus
II
Faunus
Picus
II "The
Cronid"
Cerulus
of
Latium
Anchises
Venus
Gaius
Antonius
Lucius
Antonius
Gaius
Antonius
Tiberius
Claudius
Nero
Livia
Drusilla Julia
Augusta
Marcus
Livius Drusus
Claudianus
Alfidia
of
Rome
Marcus
Livius
Drusus
Servilia
Quintus
Servilius
Caepio
Metella
Quintus
Servilius
Caepio
Marcus
Livius
Drusus
Cornelia
of
Rome
Lucius
Livius
Drusus
Livia
of
Rome
Gaius
Livius
Drusus
Marcus
Livius
Drusus
Marcus
of
Rome
Calavia
of
Rome
Appius
Claudius
Nero
Tiberius
Claudius
Nero
D. 0114
King Of
The Franks
Odomir
D. 0114
King Of
The Franks
Richemer
King Of
The Franks
Rathberius
Antenor
Clodemir
Marcomir
Clodius
II
(Clodie)
Fancus
Franks
Antharius
Caseander
Merodochus
Clodmis
Antinor
Clorius
Mercimir
Nicanor
Cloromir
Bassanus
Magnus
Docles
Helenis
Dilugilis
Almandio
Geulmalor
Priam
Alexandre
Basebeliano
Galio
Edron
Franco
Genger
Helenus
~0348
Julian
~0280 - 0350
Richimir
70
70
~0253 - 0337
Clodomir
84
84
0370 - 0410
I
Alaric
40
40
http://www.newgenevacenter.org/biography/alaric2.htm#overview Alaric was a Visigothic chieftain principally interested in becoming recognized within the Roman Empire as a military "protector" over the imperial household. He was rebuffed in his effort to do this through a normal rise up the ranks of the military--and thus Alaric took to conquering. Recognition, not plunder, seemed consistently to remain his aim in life. His main political adersary was Stillicho--who however sometimes worked in league with Alaric when it seemed profitable to do so. The dramatic highpoint in Alaric's maneuverings was his entry at the head of his Visigothic army into Rome itself in 410. Though his army was quite restrained in its treatment of Rome, this was a major humiliation for this grand city. In the end all of Alaric's maneuverings merely pointed out the glaring weaknesses of the Roman Empire, especially in the West. This set up conditions for the final collapse of the Western Imperium. Birth Alaric was born around 370 to a noble Gothic (Western Gothic or Visigothic) family, who had just fled south to the mouth of the Danube River at the Black Sea to escape the invasion of Eastern Europe by the Asian Huns. Early Military Service As a young man Alaric served in the army of the Gothic foederati (tribesmen with recognized territorial rights and responsibilities in the Roman Empire)--becoming a general in 394 and serving under the Emperor Theodosius. At this point he began to take note of the weakness of the Roman hold over northeastern Italy. Proclaimed a Gothic King When he was later bypassed by Theodosius's sons in their distribution of imperial offices, he made the decision to act on his own political behalf. Gathering disgruntled foederati (for whom tribute payments from Rome had been slacking off) he had himself proclaimed Gothic king. His March on Constantinople, Greece and Illyricum (395-396) He moved his troops on Constantinople itself. But unable to take this well defended city, he turned his troops towards Greece proper. For almost two years (395-396) he plundered Greece--though he spared Athens. Then he found himself trapped in Greece by the general Stilicho--but managed to escape to the north along the eastern Adriatic Sea (Illyricum), where he was welcomed as a liberator, king of the lands that reach even up to the middle Danube River. From there he conducted a devious diplomacy with the Eastern and Western branches of the Roman Empire--swearing fealty to one or another as he felt it opportune to do so. In the meantime he began to equip his troops with the finest of Imperial weapons. His First Invasion of Italy (401-403) In 401 Alaric broke his treaty with Rome and invaded Italy. He spread terror through northern Italy--until he was again met and defeated by Stilicho at Pollentia in 402. Then after another defeat from the hands of the Romans in 403, he abandoned Italy. He Returns to Greece Furthermore, though defeated, Alaric was not considered out of the political picture. Indeed, in the mounting tensions between the Eastern and Western Imperial governments, he was called in for support by even Stilicho. When however the Roman problem defused itself by the death of one of the imperial claimants, Alaric, who had moved his armies into Greece, demanded a huge tribute payment in compensation for his efforts. Stilicho and the Senate had agreed to the payment. But then he and some of the Senators were assassinated by their political enemies in the Senate. In the ensuing political chaos, some of the foederati of Italy were killed. This in turn set off a massive flight of foederati refugees to Alaric's camp. His Second Invasion of Italy This prompted Alaric to mobilize his troops. They invaded Italy again--and rolled right up to the walls of Rome. Rather than attack, he settled in for a siege of starvation against the surrounded Romans. Finally he was bought off by a huge ransom payment. Political Wheeling and Dealing But Alaric still pressed for Roman recognition of some kind of official position within the Empire: rule over the lands between the Northern Adriatic and the Middle Danube and the command of the Imperial army. Failing satisfaction in this, he besieged Rome a second time (409)--and gained the position as unofficial overlord of a new Western Emperor, Attalus. But Attalus proved to be an uncompliant vassal--and also brought Rome to defeat in Northern Africa where Rome depended heavily for its grain imports. The Romans began to complain bitterly about this new regime of Alaric and Attalus. The Eastern Emperor Honorius, once an ally of Alaric, now stepped into the situation. Alaric dumped Attalus and negotiated with Honorius--but was out-trumped diplomatically with the intervention of a Gothic rival, Sarus. Entry into Rome (410) Thus in 410 Alaric resorted to his old trick of besieging Rome again. This time Alaric and his Visigoths broke through the Roman defenses. But they proved themselves to be sparing in their plunder of the ancient capital. Catastrophe and Death in an Effort to Invade Africa (410) From there Alaric moved his troops to the south, with the intention of taking by force the grain lands of North Africa--thus bringing some contentment to his Roman subjects. But storms destroyed his navy--and Alaric himself was struck by fever and died in the effort, bringing to an end the life of this amazing self-defined adventurer. Despite his ultimate failure at establishing some kind of Gothic regime of his own, Alaric left an huge mark on his age. Principally, he had exhausted the Roman resistance in the West, and opened the way for the German Vandals and Suebi to invade Gaul and Spain. It was his marauding of Rome that also caused the withdrawal of the Roman legions from Britain--leaving that land vulnerable to the invading Picts to the North and the Saxons to the East.
~0497 - 23 NOV 561
Clotaire
I "the
Old"
Son of Clovis I, King of the Franks, he inherited Soissons on his deathin 511. He, with his four brothers, attacked and defeated Burgundy underthe kings Sigisbert and Godomar early in his reign. With his oldestbrother Theuderic I, King of Metz, he attacked the Thuringian Franksunder King Hermanfrid, took the kingdom, and took his daughter Radegund.Next, with his brother Childebert I, King of Paris, Chlotar murdered hisnephews who were under the care of Queen Clotilda his mother. WhenTheuderic died, the kingdom was up for grabs. Chlotar and Childebert eachreceived only a small part, the most of it going to Theudebert, his son.In 555, Theudebald, who had succeeded his father Theudebert in Austrasia,died, and Austrasia passed to Chlotar. When Childebert died in 558, Parisfell to Chlotar as well, thus making him sole ruler of the Franks. WhenChlotar died in 561, the kingdom was divided among his 4 living sons:Charibert (Paris), Guntram (Burgundy), Chilperic (Soissons), and Sigebert(Metz).
Aregund
King of
Burgundy
Guntram
Ingund
~0520
Charibert
~0490
Ansbertus
Ferreolus
Gallo-Roman Senator
~0538 - 0618
Brunchildis
of
Spain
80
80
~0475 - 3 JUN 548
St.
Clothilde de
Burgundy
~0336
Galla
Justina
Valentinia
Theodoric
King of
Orleans
Chlodomer
King of
Paris
Childebert
~0445 - 0491
King of
Burgundy
Chilperic
46
46
D. 0473
Gunderic
Caratone
D. 0436
Gundicus
Gislahaire
Godomar
~0330
King East
of Rhine
Gibica
~0410
King of the
Thuringians
Weldelphus
Gisela
Duke of
Gascony
Amaud
~0560
Nantechild
0689 - 22 OCT 741
Charles
Martel
Charles Martel, King of the Franks 690-741, married Lady Bothrude; he won the battle of Tours defeating the Saracens in 732 Political Events, 741 Charles Martel dies October 22 at age 53 after dividing his realms between his elder son Carloman and younger son Pepin (or Pippin), although the country has had no true king since the death of Theodoric in 737. Lands to the east, including Austrasia, Alemannia, and Thuringia, have gone to Carloman along with suzerainty over Bavaria, while Pepin has received Neustria, Burgundy, and Provence. Political Events, 747 Pepin's brother Carloman unexpectedly abdicates, becomes a monk, retires to a monastery near Rome, and leaves Pepin as sole master of the Frankish realm. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
0631 - 0656
Sisibert
25
25
0626 - 0688
Duke of
Aquitaine
Boggis
62
62
~0619
St. Oda
Ou
Aude
~0666
Duke of
Gascony
Hatton
~0887 - 0930
II Dato
43
43
~0645 - 20 FEB 719/20
Eticho
~0650
Berswinde
of
Autun
~0650 - 0678
II
Dagobert
28
28
~0677
Patron Saint
of Alsace
Saint Odile
~0668 - 0723
Eticho
55
55
~0679
Roswinda
of
Alsace
~0781
Hugo
of
Alsace
~0620 - 0680
Lendifius
Leutharius
60
60
~0835 - 0875
I
Ranulph
40
40
~0590 - 0661
Erchembaldus
Erchinoald
71
71
~0594
Leudefindis
~0560 - 0646
Major-
Domo
Ega
86
86
~0564
Gerberga
of
Franconia
Estrid
of the
Obotrites
~0540 - 0655
Gertudis
115
115
~0949 - 0999
Prince of the
Obotrites
Mieceslas
50
50
~0949
Sophia
~0919 - 0934
II
Mistui
15
15
~0895 - 0934
I
Mieceslas
39
39
Princess
of
Puffow
Prince of
Puffow
Eric
~0855
I Mistui
~0835
Rodigastus
of
Obotrites
~0795
Mieceslas
of
Obotrites
~0795
Antonia
~0775 - 0798
Billung
II of
Obotrites
23
23
~0775
Jutta
~0755
Billung
I of
Obotrites
~0755
Hildegarde
~0725
Anbert
I of
Obotrites
~0725
Mandana
~0695
I
Vislas
~0695
Petrussa
of the
Lombards
~0675
Aripert
~0660
Duke of
Turin
Reginpert
~0640 - 0662
Godepert
22
22
~0620 - 0661
I
Aripert
41
41
~0595 - 0612
Duke
of Asti
Gundwald
17
17
~0575 - 0640
I
Garibaldi
65
65
~0565
Walderade
of the
Lombards
~0525
Wacho
~0525
Ostrogotha
of the
Gepidea
~0495
King of the
Gepidae
Elemund
~0495
Zucchilo
~0465 - 0490
King of
Lombards
Claffo
25
25
~0435
Gudeoc
~0555 - 0609
I
Theodebert
54
54
~0525 - 0567
III
Theodon
42
42
~0545
II
Theodon
~0525
Theudelinde
of lower
Bavaria
~0465 - 0500
I
Theodon
35
35
D. 0528
Duke on the
Mossele
Wambertus
~0405 - 0491
Duke of
Moselle
Adelbertus
86
86
~0794 - 7 JUN 844
Abbot of
Saint Quentin
Hugues
2 APR 742 - 28 JAN 813/14
Holy Roman
Emperor
Charlemagne
Charlemagne (742-814), king of the Franks (768-814) and emperor of the Romans (800-814), who led his Frankish armies to victory over numerous other peoples and established his rule in most of western and central Europe. He was the best-known and most influential king in Europe in the Middle Ages. Charlemagne was probably born in Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle). He was the son of Frankish king Pepin the Short and the grandson of Charles Martel. When Pepin died in 768, the rule of his realms was to be shared between his two sons, Charlemagne and Carloman, who died in 771. Charlemagne then consolidated and expanded his power over the next 30 years, invading Italy, Saxony, Spain, Bavaria, and the empire of the Avars (corresponding roughly to modern Hungary and Austria). Having established Frankish rule over so many other peoples, Charlemagne had built an empire and become an emperor. On Christmas Day in 800, Charlemagne knelt to pray in Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome. Pope Leo III then placed a crown upon his head, and the people assembled in the church acclaimed him emperor of the Romans. Charlemagne established a more permanent royal capital than had any of his predecessors. His favorite residence from 794 on was at Aix-la-Chapelle. At his court he gathered scholars from all over Europe, the most famous being English cleric Alcuin of York. Administration of the empire was entrusted to approximately 250 royal administrators called counts. The empire did not expand after 800; in fact, by the 790s the seacoasts and river valleys experienced the first invasions of the Vikings. Charlemagne died before their full destructive force was unleashed on the empire. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. CHARLEMAGNE, King of the Franks and Roman Emperor 742-814, created Emperor in 800 by Pope Leo III, had three sons, Pepin, Charles, and Louis I. Charlemagne converted nations to Christianity and encouraged the spread of education. A contemporary, Eginhard, described him as a tall man with a soft voice, a long nose, bright eyes and white hair, wearing a silver - bordered tunic, gartered hose, and a blue cloak, always girt with his sword, the hilt and belt being of gold and silver. He was an active, self-confident man, exercising a great deal to keep fit, fond of pomp and religious ceremonies. He is considered the greatest figure of the Middle Ages and his court at Aachen was a center of learning. CHARLEMAGNE LINES TO THE GREAT EMPEROR CHARLEMAGNE--SEE CHART--VOL. I--PAGE 80 Contributed by Edyth Shipley Britton The lineage of Charlemagne, b--2 April, 742, can be traced to Marc Anthony, and from Heli, King of the Britons, 48 B. C. Some of our Md. lines trace back to Charlemagne. The grandfather of Charlemagne was Charles Martel, King of the Franks, b--690, who m--Lady Bothrude. In 732 he gained a great victory over the Saracens at the Battle of Tours, and for this victory he won the sur-name of "Martel" (the Hammer). He d--741, and his son, Pepin le Bref, b--714, succeeded him. He m--Lady Bertha, and he was the first King to establish Parliaments in France--18 Jan., 757. His second son was Charlemagne, King of the Franks, and Roman Emperor, b--2 April, 742. After his father's death in 768, he jointly reigned over the Franks with his brother, Carlomen, until the latter's death in 772. From that time until his death, he was sole ruler and carried on incessant wars, extending his domains and spreading Christianity, until he had a vast domain, over which he was crowned Roman Emperor in 800 by Pope Leo III, with the Iron Crown of the Western Empire. He m--Princess Hildegarde of Savoy, by whom he had three sons, Pepin, Charles and Louis, and I descend from Pepin and Louis. There are four lines of descent from him that are best known; the descent of the British people; Through Isabel de Vermandois, from her father, Hugh the Great, son of Henry I, King of France. Through Isabel, from her mother, Adelheid de Vermandois. Through Lady Alice de Courteney, wife of Aymer de Taillefer (dau--of Pierre de Courteney, son of Louis VI, called "le Gros" a descendant of Charlemagne) Aymer de Taillefer and Alice de Courteney, being parents of Isabel de Taillefer, wife of King John of England. Through the Plantagenets and other descendants of Matilda of Flanders, wife of William the Conqueror; she was a descendant of both Alfred the Great and also Charlemagne.
~0780
Regina
Reginopycrha
0792
Bishop
of Metz
Drogo
~0796
Adbelinda
a
concubine
Himiltrude
~0708 - >0775
Count
of Paris
Girard
67
67
~0766
Pepin
"The
Hunchback"
~0761
Rothais
Rothaid
mistress
~0800 - 0844
Dhoude
Liegarde
44
44
~0766
Maldegrade
Hathelgard
~0788
Abbesse of
Farmoutier
Rotrude
0766
concubine
Gerswiin
~0790
Adeltrude
~0776
concubine
~0800
Gertrude
~0785
Adbelahide
Adelinde ,
concubine
~0810
the
Monk
Thierry
~0755
Desiderata
0772
Duke of
Ingelheim
Charles
0758 - 30 APR 782
Hildegard
of
Vinzgau
0778 - 20 JUN 840
Louis I
'Pious'
Louis I (Holy Roman Empire), called The Pious (778-840), Holy Roman emperor (814-840), king of France (814-840), king of Germany (814-840), and king of Aquitaine (781-840). He was the son and sole successor of Charlemagne. In 817 Louis made plans for an orderly succession among his sons: Lothair I, Louis II (Louis the German), and Pepin of Aquitaine. Later he wanted to include in the succession Charles II (Charles the Bald), his son by a second marriage. Dissatisfied, his older sons rebelled (830, 833) against him and fought among themselves for supremacy as well. Pepin died in 838, and in 843 the empire was divided among the three surviving brothers (Verdun, Treaty of). Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0773 - 8 JUL 810
Pepin
~0766 - 14 JAN 822/23
Bertha
Carolingian
~0725
Abbess
of Chelles
Gisela
0773
Adelaide
0775
Rotrude
0778
Lothaire
0781
Gisela
0782
Hildegarde
0763
Fastrade
~0784
Theodrade
~0786
Hiltrude
~0774
Luttgarde
0714 - 24 SEP 768
Pepin
III 'the
Short'
Carolingian, dynasty of Frankish kings who ruled in Western Europe from the 7th to the 10th centuries. Pepin the Elder, the ancestor of the Carolingian kings, served the earlier dynasty of Merovingian kings in the position of mayor of the palace at Austrasia in the late 500s and early 600s. His descendants acquired increasing power, eventually ruling the Frankish kingdom in all but name. Pepin the Short became the first Carolingian king in 751. He was succeeded by his two sons, Carloman and Charlemagne. After 771 Charlemagne was sole ruler and increased the kingdom to include what is now France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Low Countries, and northern Italy. On December 25, 800, Charlemagne was crowned the first emperor of the revived Western Roman Empire. His son Louis I inherited the kingdom, but it was divided after his death among his three surviving sons, who fought each other for the title of emperor. Thereafter the dynasty declined. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Political Events, 768 Pepin the Short dies September 24 at age 54 and is succeeded as Frankish king by his son Charles, 26, who will be called Charles the Great, or Charlemagne, in a reign that will continue until 814. Pepin's son Carloman becomes king of Austrasia. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved. · Note: Pepin III, son of Charles Martel, was crowned at Saint-Denis (France) byPope Stephen II, and the new Frankish dynasty was then proclaimed holyand its title indisputable. 754. Pepin III, called le bref or the Short, succeeded his father, CharlesMartel, as ruler of the Merovengian Kingdom, which later became ImperialGermany, in 741. Pepin III ruled until 751 as Mayor of the Palace, thenas King of Carolingia from 751 to 768. He was succeeded Charles, whobecame known as Charlemagne. Pepin, son of Charles Martel, had himself crowned at Soisson in 751, bythe archbishop of Mainz Wynfrith Boniface, and became Pepin III in a newceremony for the Franks, one which gives much prestige to the newsovereign. Pepin le Brief (the short) in 751 had asked the PopeZacharias whether it would be wiser for the family who had all the power(after the end of the Meerwing Kings with King Childeric III) and thePope agreed. Saint Boniface, the English missonary, annointed Pepin atSoissons in 752. Charles Martel's legacy of the House of the Carlings was carried intopower by his son Pepin II who became the founder of the House ofCarolingia in 751, becoming King of all the Franks, and ruled the kingdomof Carolingia until 768. Succeeded by Charlemagne. Pepin II the Short, along with his brother, Carloman, received the officeof Mayor of the Palace from his father Charles Martel in 741. Pepin IIserved the Meerwing King Childeric III until Childeric was put in amonastary. Pepin then became King of the Franks in 751. The Frankish King Pepin III had taken lands that legally belonged to theByzatine/Eastern Roman Empire. Pepin II forced King Astolfo of theLombards to give up part of his lands. Pepin gave the lands to PopeStephen II, tacitly recognizing the claims of popes as heirs to theempire of Italy. Thus established the papal states which began temporalpower of the papacy. Pepin III aka Pepin the Short died at age 54. He was succeeded asFrankish King by his son, Carl or Charles, 26 years old, who becameknown as Charles the Great (Charlemagne) King of the Franks and theCarlings. Title: Trager's The People's Chronology. A Year by Year Record of HumanEvents from Prehistory to Present. Author: James Trager, Editor Publication: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. New York. 1979.
~0720 - 12 JUL 783
Lady
Bertha
Broadfoot
~0767 - 0839
Lady
Redburga
72
72
King of
Austrasia
Carloman
~0750
Bertha
of The
Franks
Abbess
of Chelles
Gisela
~0690 - ~0747
Heribert
Caribert
57
57
Caribert was nephew of Pepin II, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, and was himself Count of the city of Laon after his father, Martin. Hisdaughter, Bertrada, became the Queen of King Pepin III, and mother ofCharlemagne.
~0690
Bertrada
~0660 - >0710
Martin
of
Laon
50
50
~0660
Bertha
Merovingian
~0710
Rolande
De
Laon
~0620 - 0691
Theuderic
71
71
· Note: King of Neustria 673-675 King of the Franks 675-691 In 673, the young child Theuderic III became puppet king of Neustria, andwhen his brother Childeric II died in 675, king of all the Franks. In687, he and the Austrasian Mayor of the Palace were defeated by Pepin II,grandson of Pepin I. He died at a young age in 691, and was succeeded byhis son Clovis III.
~0625 - 3 JUN 692
Regent
Clotilde
~0620
St.
Amalberga
~0650
Chrotlind
Clovis
Childebert
0602 - 0685
Mayor of
Austrasia
Ansegisal
83
83
Ansegisel was the son of the powerful Austrasian nobleman, Bishop Arnulfof Metz, and was married to Saint Begga, daughter of the more powerful Austrasian nobleman Mayor Pepin I.
~0613 - 0694
Saint
Begue of
Brabant
81
81
~0635 - 16 DEC 714
Pepin
Political Events, 687 Pepin the Younger gains a victory at Testry and unites the Frankish kingdom. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~0585 - 0639
I Pepin
54
54
Pepin the Elder, aka Pippin von Landen or Pepin of Landen. Began theCarolingian Dynasty of rulers of the Kingdom of France. Pepin von Landen became Mayor of the Palace in the Merovingian / Frankishkingdom of Austrasia for King Dagobert in 628 until 639. Acted as one ofhis chief counselors, along with Arnoldus/Arnulf Bishop of Metz, for thekingdom of Austrasia. Pepin ruled when Clovis II was on the throne, andwas succeeded in 639 by Grimoald.
0592 - 0652
St. Itta
Iduberga
60
60
Mayor of
Austrasia
Grimoal
~0553 - 0601
Bishop
of Metz
Arnoaldus
48
48
* Margrave of the Schelde
~0556 - 0640
Oda
of
Savoy
84
84
* * Note: Descendant of the Sueves who invaded Gaul (south France-north Spain) in the 5th Century
13 AUG 582 - 16 AUG 640
Bishop of
Metz St.
Arnulph
Patriarch of the Carolingian and Capetian kings · Event: Counselor BET. 628 - 639 Metz 1 · Note: Bishop of Metz ?-641 Arnulf was a powerful Austrasian noble during the time of Mayor Pepin I,and their two children Ansegisel and Begga were married. According toFrankish myth, Arnulf was the son of Bodigisel, a supposed son of SaintGendolphus, Bishop of Tongress, and Oda de Savoy. This bishop was an actual historical figure, the son of Arthemia andMunderic of Vitry. According again to the myths, Munderic was the son ofCloderic the Paricide, son of the historic Sigisbert the Lame. ThisSigisbert was the son of King Childebert of Cologne, another historicalfigure that died sometime shortly after 450. He was the suposed son ofone Clovis the Riparian who died after 420. THE CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA St. Arnulf of Metz Statesman, bishop under the Merovingians, born c. 580; died c. 640. His parents belonged to a distinguished Frankish family, and lived in Austrasia, the eastern section of the kingdom founded by Clovis. In the school in which he was placed during his boyhood he excelled through his talent and his good behaviour. According to the custom of the age, he was sent in due time to the court of Theodebert II, King of Austrasia (595-612), to be initiated in the various branches of the government. Under the guidance of Gundulf, the Mayor of the Palace, he soon became so proficient that he was placed on the regular list of royal officers, and among the first of the kings ministers. He distinguished himself both as a military commander and in the civil administration; at one time he had under his care six distinct provinces. In due course Arnulf was married to a Frankish woman of noble lineage, by whom he had two sons, Anseghisel and Clodulf. While Arnulf was enjoying worldly emoluments and honours he did not forget higher and spiritual things. His thoughts dwelled often on monasteries, and with his friend Romaricus, likewise an officer of the court, he planned to make a pilgrimage to the Abbey of Lérins, evidently for the purpose of devoting his life to God. But in the meantime the Episcopal See of Metz became vacant. Arnulf was universally designated as a worthy candidate for the office, and he was consecrated bishop of that see about 611. In his new position he set the example of a virtuous life to his subjects, and attended to matters of ecclesiastical government. In 625 he took part in a council held by the Frankish bishops at Reims. With all this Arnulf retained his station at the court of the king, and took a prominent part in the national life of his people. In 613, after the death of Theodebert, he, with Pepin of Landen and other nobles, called to Austrasia Clothaire II, King of Neustria. When, in 625, the realm of Austrasia was entrusted to the kings son Dagobert, Arnulf became not only the tutor, but also the chief minister, of the young king. At the time of the estrangement between the two kings, and 625, Arnulf with other bishops and nobles tried to effect a reconciliation. But Arnulf dreaded the responsibilities of the episcopal office and grew weary of court life. About the year 626 he obtained the appointment of a successor to the Episcopal See of Metz; he himself and his friend Romaricus withdrew to a solitary place in the mountains of the Vosges. There he lived in communion with God until his death. His remains, interred by Romaricus, were transferred about a year afterwards, by Bishop Goeric, to the basilica of the Holy Apostles in Metz. Of the two sons of Arnulf, Clodulf became his third successor in the See of Metz. Anseghisel remained in the service of the State; from his union with Begga, a daughter of Pepin of Landen, was born Pepin of Heristal, the founder of the Carlovingian dynasty. In this manner Arnulf was the ancestor of the mighty rulers of that house. The life or Arnulf exhibits to a certain extent the episcopal office and career in the Merovingian State. The bishops were much considered at court; their advice was listened to; they took part in the dispensation of justice by the courts; they had a voice in the appointment of royal officers; they were often used as the king's ambassadors, and held high administrative positions. For the people under their care, they were the protectors of their rights, their spokesmen before the king and the link uniting royalty with its subjects. The opportunities for good were thus unlimited; and Arnulf used them to good advantage. FRANCIS J. SCHAEFER Transcribed by Patrick Tobin The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
~0586 - >0612
Clothilde
Dode
26
26
~0600
Count of
Verdon
Walchigise
~0600
Bodilon
~0551
II
Bodegisel
~0523 - 0570
Roman Senator
of the Mosalli
Ansbertus
47
47
~0523
Princess
of Franks
Blithilde
~0540
Erchenaud
~0450 - >0511
Praeorian
Prefect of
Gaul Tonantius
61
61
Praeorian Perfect of Gaul, 451, at Rome 469, 475; friend and relative of Sidonius Apollinaris.
~0420 - >0485
Tonantius
Ferreolus
65
65
The Greeks first tried to settle in Celtic Gaul and managed to establisha small colony in Marseille in 600 BC. Then it was the turn of theRomans, lead by Julius Caesar, who entirely invaded Gaul during theGallic Wars (58-51 BC). The Romans brought unity and peace for twocenturies of Pax Romana during which agriculture, cattle-breeding andurban development were greatly improved. During the 2nd century AC, Romans brought Christianity into Gaul and bythe third century, the power of the Roman Empire had begun its decline.The 4th century started with Barbarian invaders from the East such as theFranks, the Vandals and the Visigoths. Clovis, King of the Franks,converted to christianity and his power brought unity to Gaul, startingthe Merovingian dynasty
~0463
Papinilla
Roman
Emperor of the
West Avitus
~0390
Ferreolus
~0390
Deuteria
~0330 - ~0385
Afranius
Syagrius
55
55
D.
Avitas
Avitas
~0553 - 0615
Mayor of the
Palace of Austrasia
Carloman
62
62
~0620 - 0657
Chlodovech
Clovis
37
37
Note: King of Neustria 639-657 King of Burgundy 639-657 Before King Dagobert I of the Franks died, his Neustrian and Burgundian nobles urged a union of those two kingdoms, and do when he died in 639,Clovis II became king of Neustria and Burgundy. In 656, both Grimoald,Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, and his son Childebert who he had placed on the Austrasian throne, were executed. The next year, Clovis II died, leaving the kingdom to his infant son Chlotar III, really just a puppet of the powerful Neustrian and Burgundian nobles.
~0590
Balthild
: Balthild was an Anglo-Saxon slave girl, married to Clovis II out of love.When Clovis died in 657, Balthild became a nun. She later founded the monastery of Chelles.
Lothair
King of
all Franks
Childeric
Chlotar
~0690 - 0724
Lady Bothrude
(Rotrude) of
Alemania
34
34
~0716
Mayor of
Austrasia
Carloman
~0722 - 0804
Aude
of
Francia
82
82
~0820 - 26 JUL 866
Robert
'the
Strong'
~0680
Suanhilde
~0698 - 0754
Mayor of
the Palace
Carloman
56
56
~0687
Landrade
~0710
daughter
of Charles
Martel
~0660 - 0713
Bishop of
Treves
St. Lievin
53
53
~0660
daughter
of Robert
Rodobertus
0709 - >0722
Count
Gui
13
13
~0620 - >0678
Robert
II
Chrodobertus
58
58
~0620 - 0678
Doda
58
58
~0940 - 1019
I
Geoffroy
79
79
~0590 - >0650
Lambert
I
Lantbertus
60
60
0570
Chrodobertus
Robert
0555
Charibert
~0630
Count
Warin
~0630
Kunza
Gunxa
~0657
Lambert
of
Hesbaye
0596 - 0690
Bishop of
Metz St.
Clodoul
94
94
~0600
Siagree
Bishop
of Autun
St. Leger
~0570
Ansoud
~0580
daughter
of
Leutharius
~0560
Leutharius
~0560
Gerberge
of
Burgundy
~0510
Duke of
Burgundian
House Ricomir
~0654
Chalpaida
Alpaida
Plectrudis
Mayor of
Neustria
Grimold
Vareton
~0680
Duke in
Austrasia
Fulcoald
~0920
Engeltrude
~0930 - 0962
Bishop of
Coustance
Hugh
32
32
~0934
Drogon
Puy
~1589 - 1670
Zaccheus
Gould
81
81
* Mass G 5 d vol 1, 2, 3 "Ancestry of Zaccheus Gould of Topsfield" byB.A. Gound (18720, P. 8: Zaccheus Gould lived in Hemel Hempsted andGreat Missedned, Herts, Eng. and came to N.E. about 1638. "Founders ofEarly American Families" by Meredoth Colket, p. 125: Zaccheus Gouldof Weymouth, MA in 1639; Lynn in 1640; Ipswich in 1644; Topsfield in1662 and died there in 1668. Brother of Jereay. Farmer. "Pioneers ofMA" by Pope, p. 195: Zaccheus Gould, husbandman of Lynn headed apetition that husbandmen be excused from training in seedtime andharvest, dated 7 (8) 1640. He removed to Ipswich. Sold land inWeymouth which belonged to Jersey Gould, 26 (9) 1644. Removed toTopsfield. He deposed in 1661 about 72 years. His wife Phebe died 20(9) 1663. "Savage 11:287" Zaccheus Gould in Ipswich in 1644 in thatpart which was incorporated as Topsfield.. Came from Hants Green, nearPotter's Row in Bucks, 33 miles from London near Great Missenden.Lists children. "Sweet-Allen and Allied Families" by Rebecca AllenSweet, p. 140. Zaccheus Gould first settled in Lynn and later inTopsfield, MA where he acquired a large estate. His wife was PhebeDeacon, a daughter of Thomas and Martha Deacon of Corner Hall,Bovington, Hert., Eng. and a near relative to Lt. Col. Thomas Deaconthe parliamentarian soldier. A sister of Phebe Deacon married JohnPutnam of Danvers.
~1595 - 1663
Phebe
Deacon
68
68
1560
Thomas
Deacon
FEB 1577/78
Martha
Fielde
~1553 - 1597
Richard
Gould
44
44
Mary
1621
Mary
Gould
1623 - 1699
Martha
Gould
76
76
1625 - 1663
Priscilla
Gould
38
38
1635 - 26 JAN 1709/10
John
Gould
1639
Frances
Gould
1535 - 1615
John
Fielde
80
80
1555 - 1612
Grace
Turner
57
57
1521 - 1582
Thomas
Deacon
61
61
1525
Joan
Allen
~1552
Awdrie
Deacon
~1554
Margaret
Deacon
~1556
Marie
Deacon
~1560
Roger
Deacon
~1502 - >1542
Thomas
Deacon
40
40
~1500 - 1542
Elizabeth
42
42
John
Deacon
~1478
Thomas
Deacon
~1486
Alice
Spencer
~1530 - 1558
Richard
Gould
28
28
1538 - 22 MAR 1558/59
Jane
Weeden
1500 - 1547
Thomas
Gould
47
47
THOMAS GOULD, of Bovingdon, son of Richard and Joan, was born in or before the year 1500. His will is dated in 1546 and was proved in 1547. By his wife, Alice, he had seven children living in the year 1537, and eight at the time of his own death; only two of them being at that time under eighteen years of age. The first four of these children were sons
1499 - 1546
Alice
Axtel
Hallworth
47
47
1479 - 1531
Richard
Gould
52
52
RICHARD GOULD, of Bovingdon, was the second son of Thomas, above named, and his wife was likewise named Joan. He was born, apparently, not later than 1478, and died in 1531; his will being dated August 25th and proved October 11th of that year. His widow died in 1537.
~1478 - 12 JAN 1534/35
Joan
~1578
Richard
Gould
~1583
Sara
Gould
~1585
Priscilla
Gould
~1581
Jeremy
Gould
Jeremy, who married Priscilla Grover, came to Rhode Island, and after his wife's death returned to England, leaving behind him three sons, the eldest of whom, Daniel, married in 1651 Wait Coggeshall, and became the ancestor of the large and highly respectable family of Goulds of Rhode Island.
~1587
John
Gould
John, of the "Corner Hall," in Hemel Hempsted, and of King's Langley,--possibly also himself a colonist of New England. His youngest son, Zaccheus, died in New England unmarried, and letters of administration on his estate were granted to his elder sister, Elizabeth, in England. Other children of John also came over.
1557
Jane
Gould
1555
Henry
Gould
1556
Alice
Gould
1521
Thomas
Gould
1523
John
Gould
1532
Agnes
Gould
1534
Elizabeth
Gould
1536
Bridget
Gould
1538
John
Gould
1504
John
Gould
~1455 - 1520
Thomas
Gould
65
65
THOMAS GOULD, of Bovingdon, in the parish of Hemel Hempsted, and county of Hertford, seems to have been born as early as the year 1455. His last will and testament is dated 1520, August 29, and was admitted to probate Sept. 28, thirty days later. In this will he bequeaths property to his wife Joan, and to seven children, five of whom had not attained the age of legal majority. The eldest two children were sons.
~1453
Joan
Bullock
Curtis
1477
Thomas
Gould
~1432
Thomas
Gould
Eleanor
~1404
Robert
Gould
~1409
Idonea
Mycheldever
~1373
John
Gould
~1331
Robert
Gould
Elizabeth
~1300 - 6 MAR 1339/40
John
Gould
Isabell
~1274
John
Gould
~1244
Elias
Gould
1600
Anne
Deacon
1602
Thomas
Deacon
1603
Elisha
Deacon
1604
Sarah
Deacon
1609
Thomas
Deacon
1613
Martha
Deacon
1480
John
Gould
1484
William
Gould
1486
Henry
Gould
1502
Alice
Gould
1508
Joan
Gould
1577
Abiah
Fielde
1581
Jacob
Fielde
1581
Benjamin
Fielde
1582
Rebecca
Fielde
22 MAR 1583/84
Hannah
Fielde
1586
Seth
Fielde
D. <1575
Margerie
Gladman
~1511
John
Deacon
1460 - 1521
Robert
Spencer
61
61
~1464 - ~1500
Anna
Peake
36
36
~1477 - 1558
John
Spencer
81
81
~1496
Joan
Spencer
~1434 - >1475
John
Spencer
41
41
~1462
John
Spencer
~1406 - ~1477
Robert
Spencer
71
71
~1410
Lady
Smythe
~1435 - >1502
Sir
Robert
Spencer
67
67
~1436
Henry
Spencer
~1438
Thomas
Spencer
~1387 - >1433
Thomas
F.
Spencer
46
46
~1404
John
Spencer
~1408
Thomas
Spencer
~1365 - ~1476
Henry
Spencer
111
111
~1357
Isabella
Lincoln
~1395
Sir
John
Spencer
~1399
William
Spencer
~1401
Nicholas
Spencer
~1337
Henry
Lincoln
~1335 - >1435
Thomas
Despencer
100
100
~1305
Nicholas
Spencer
~1310
Joan
Polard
~1368
William
Spencer
~1280
Richard
Polard
~1275 - >1386
John
Despencer
111
111
Esquire to Body of Henry V of England and Keeper of his Wardrobe.
<1280
Alice
Deverell
~1260
Giles
Deverell
~1255 - ~1328
Sir
William
Despencer
73
73
1235 - 1274
Sir
John Le
Despencer
39
39
~1235 - <1266
Joan
Le
Lou
31
31
~1185 - 1242
Galfridus
Geoffrey Le
Despencer
57
57
~1206 - >1265
Emma
de
Harcourt
59
59
~1256
Adam
Spencer
Anne
~1208
Robert
Le
Lou
~1200
John De
Saint
John
~1131 - ~1206
Thomas
Noel
75
75
~1184 - 1218
Thomas
le
Despencer
34
34
~1195
Thomas
Le
Despencer
~1196
Hugh
Le
Despencer
~1200 - <1241
Rohese
le
Despencer
41
41
~1144 - 1209
Thurstan
le
Despencer
65
65
Steward to Henry I of England
~1148
Walter
Le
Despencer
~1150 - >1189
Almaric
Le
Despencer
39
39
~1152
Hugh
Le
Despencer
~1155
Galfridus
Geoffrey Le
Despencer
~1075 - 1171
Guillaume III 'Talovas'
Montgomery
Despencer
96
96
Steward to Henry I of England Duke of Alencon, Count of Ponthieu and Alencon WILLIAM III, called Talvas, Count of Ponthieu, in right of his mother; acted as the head of the house during the imprisonment of his father; was restored to the County of Alen‡on; died June 29, 1171; founded in 1130 the abbey of Saint Andrew in Goufern, of the diocese of Seez, in 1138 that of Valoire in the diocese of Amiens, in 1145 that of Perseigne in Sonnois and in 1159 that of Saint Josse-aux-Bois; married Helen, or Alix (Ala), called also Elute, daughter of Eudes Borel, Duke of Burgundy (ped. 62), and widow of Bertrand, Count de Tripoli; she died Feb. 28. 1191.
~1000
Sancha
Sanchez of
Gascony
~1120
Richard
Le
Despencer
1092 - 1131
Robert II
L'Arbetot
Despencer
39
39
* Chamberlain to William the Conqueror * Event: Name Change Took the name Despencer He succeeded his mother in the Seigneuries of Bellˆme and Alen‡on in 1082 ROBERT DE MONTGOMERY, surnamed Belesme, succeeded in 1082 to the Earldoms of Belesme and Alen‡on, Arundel and Shrewsbury; sided with Robert Courte-Heuse; in 1102 forfeited his English earldoms; imprisoned at Wareham, Dorsetshire, by Henry I in 1113; married Agnes, daughter and heiress of Guy, Count de Ponthieu (ped. 61) (*)Bank's Extinct Peerage, Vol. 1, p. 5; House of Arundel, by Yeatman, p. 8; L'Art, Vol. XIII, p. 147.
~1050 - ~1141
Hugh
(Hugue) De
Beauchamp
91
91
Hugh de Beauchamp came into England with the Conqueror, by whom he had gift of 43 lordships, the greatest part of which were in Bedfordshire. He also appears at the General Survey to be possessed of large estates in Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, as well as Bedford. These estates are documented in the Domesday book of abt. 1090. He was the founder of this illustrious house in England. He had issue: Simon, who died sine prole; Payne, ancestor of the Beauchamps of Bedford; Walter, of whom further; Milo of Eaton, and Adeline, who married Walter Le Espes of York. The name Beauchamp originated from the castle of Beauchamp in the Contentin part of the Barony of St. Denis le Geste, Normandy. The family was a branch of the Barons of St. Denis.
Robert
Le
Despencer
~1022 - 1094
Roger
II de
Montgomery
72
72
ROGER DE MONTGOMERY who succeeded in 1070 to the Seigneuries of Belesme and Alen‡on in right of his first wife MABEL, daughter and heiress of William II, surnamed Talvas, Count of Belesme, Alen‡on, etc. (ped. 152); accompanied William the Conqueror to England and led the centre of the army at the battle of Hastings; created Earl of Shrewsbury in 1070, where he had built an abbey; built Montgomery Castle; created Earl of Chichester, of Arundel, and of Montgomery in Wales; died July 27, 1094, and was buried in the Monastery of Shrewsbury which he founded. He married, second, ADELAIDE, daughter of Hugh de Puiset. He built also, during his wife Mabel's life, a fortress called Roche-Mabile in le Passais 150L'Art, XIII, 24. On the death of William in 1087, and the accession of William Rufus to the throne of England, Roger de Montgomerie and his sons were for a short time enlisted in Bishop Odo's conspiracy to place Robert, the eldest son of William, on the throne. The following is the account given by Hume of this attempt.6 "Odo, Bishop of Baieux, and Robert, Earl of Moreton, maternal brothers of the conqueror, envying the great credit of Lanfrane, which was increased by his late services, enforced all these motives with their partisans, and engaged them in a formal conspiracy to dethrone the king. They communicated their design to Eustace, Count of Boulogne, Roger, Earl of Shrewsbury and Arundel, Robert de Belˆsme his eldest son, William, Bishop of Durham, Robert de Mowbray, Roger Bigod, Hugh de Grentmesnil; and they easily procured the assent of these potent noblemen. The conspirators, retiring to their castles, hastened to put themselves in a military posture; and expecting to be soon supported by a powerful army from Normandy, they had already begun hostilities in many places." The king by "engaging the affections of the native English," and with the aid of some of his own countrymen, gained the advantage over his opponents. "This success gave authority to his negotiations with Roger, Earl of Shrewsbury, whom he detached from the confederates." In a subsequent attempt, after Roger's death, of his sons in favor of Robert, we shall see how unsuccessful they were, and how by the unfortunate result, the family entirely lost all the possessions in England and Wales he had acquired and which he had left intact to his descendants. Thus seemed to end Roger's connection with public affairs. He turned his attention to religious matters; and when well advanced in years, entered into holy orders, and was shorn a monk of the Abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul, his own foundation, where he spent the few remaining years of his life, and died on July 27, 1094, and was there buried. It is said that among his gifts to the Abbey, he enriched it with the coat of St. Hugh, of the monastery of Cluni, "which precious relick the Earl himself sometimes wore."1 At the Herald's Visitation to the Abbey in 1622, before referred to, the monument, a figure in mail, which was supposed to represent the Earl of Shrewsbury, was dug out of the ruins and erected at the east end of the south aisle, with the following inscription over it: "The figure underneath, which was at first placed within the Monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul, and was afterwards found in the ruins, was removed hither by directions of His Majesty's Heralds at Arms, in their visitation of this county, 1622, to remain (as it was originally intended) in perpetual memory of Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, who was kinsman to the Conqueror, and one of his chief commanders in the victorious battle of Hastings. He erected many useful buildings here, both publick and private; and not only fortified this town with walls, but built the Castle on the Isthmus. As also the castles of Ludlow and Bridgenorth, with the monastery of Wenlock. He founded and endowed in an ample manner this large Benedictine Abbey; and when advanced in years, by the consent of his Countess Adelaisa, he entered into holy orders, and was shorn a monk of this his own foundation, where he lies interred. He died July 27, 1094."2 There is a handsome illumination of Roger de Montgomerie's arms given in an Amsterdam edition of Camden's Brittania, "which was a Lion rampant or, on a field azure, within a border or."1 His descendants in Scotland did not bear these arms, but carried the three fleurs-delis or, on a field azure; the same now carried by his descendants, but around which have since clustered, the arms of Eglinton, Lyle, and Marr.
~1122
Lucia
Margaret
Smith
~0985
Hildeburge
~1438
Ann
Empson
~1402
Robert
Spencer
1434 - 1464
John
Peake
30
30
~1436
Margaret
Watkins
~1464
Jane
Spencer
Jane
Graunt
~1400
Peter
Empson
~1400
Elizabeth
Joseph
~1410
William
Spencer
~1404
Edward
Spencer
~1337
Dorothy
~1266
Alice
1195
Ida De
Hastings
~1134 - 1200
Alberic
II de
Dammartin
66
66
~1117 - 1174
Adela De
Talvas Le
Despencer
57
57
~1126
John
Le
Despencer
1058 - 23 MAR 1101/02
Eudes I
"the Red"
Borel
1065 - ~1103
Sybille
Matilda De
Bourgogne
38
38
~1083
Florine
De
Bourgogne
Sancho
Abraca II
Garces
~1088
Henry
De
Bourgogne
~1030 - 1087
Guillaume
I "The
Grand"
57
57
~1030 - >1088
Etiennette
Stephanie
De Longwy
58
58
~1066
Eudes
De
Bourgogne
1051 - 1087
Countess of
Maurienne
Bertha
36
36
~1062 - 1108
Raimund
De
Bourgogne
46
46
~1063
Etiennette
De
Bourgogne
1098 - JAN 1144/45
Matilde
D'Albon
~1065
Guillaume
II De
Bourgogne
Archbishop
of Besancon
Hughes
Clemence
De
Bourgogne
~1071 - 1107
Zaida
Elizabeth
36
36
"It is important to realize that much of what we now think of as Spain and Portugal had been under the rule of Arabs for centuries. They ruled over all but the northernmost quarter of the Iberian peninsula in the eleventh century. By the time of Alfonso, central power had been broken, and there were a number of petty Arab kingdoms that had been set up. The Abbadids of Seville became the most successful of these kingdoms, absorbing much of the others. But they summoned the Almoravids (Berbers) from Africa to help in the struggle with Alfonso VI, defeating him at Zallaka/Zalaca in 1086. These Berber mercenaries soon became a threat to the rulers of Seville. . Also remember that Alfonso VI was a king without a male heir. Even though he had the mistress Ximena/Jimena Munoz, she had only born him only daughters, Elvirs and Teresa. He also had a legitimate daughter, Urraca. So it was partly because of the very real threat of invasion by Arab Spain that Alfonso accepted Zaida as a mistress in 1092. She was the widow of Fath al-Mamun of Cordoba (who died in March of the previous year), daughter-in-law of al-Mutamid of Sevilla. . Importantly, Zaida became the mother of Alfonso's only son, Sancho, who would eventually be named his heir, in spite of his being illegitimate. Bishop Pelayo's chronicle (already quoted in the last post), states that she was baptized and given the Christian name Elizabeth (which was then equivalent to Isabel). . Zaida's monumental inscription states that she died on 13 [or 12, depending on the source] September in childbirth, but the year of her death does not survive. Thus the controversy. Levi-Provencal had concluded that she died during the birth of her son Sancho, on 12 September 1093. . But if you equate Zaida with Queen Elizabeth, who did not die until 1107, you arrive at a death date of 12/13 September 1107 (hence the varying dating given by different authorities). It is known that Queen Elizabeth was the mother of two daughters, and that Zaida was mother of Alfonso's only son. So if you equate the two women, it means she was mother of three children. But as she may not have died in 1093, the birth date of Zaida's son Sancho is problematic too. . There isn't enough surviving evidence to resolve these disputes. Different scholars interpret the evidence in different ways. BUT there is NO dispute that Teresa was Ximena's daughter, not a daughter of Zaida or Elizabeth. . By taking Zaida into his court, Alfonso VI could claim to be a protector of Spanish Islam against the incursions of the African Murabits/ Almoravids, giving him an excuse for further conquest of Arab lands in Spain. . . . Also, as the kingdom of al-Mutamid fell with his capital in September 1091, it would place the political act of sending Zaida to Alfonso's court between the death of her husband 26 March 1091 and September of the same year. It would seem almost unthinkable that the emir would give his own daughter to a Christian king, but a daughter-in-law, ..., hmmmm, she might be expendable, yet still important enough to be a valid symbol. And if Zaida then bore the king a male heir in 1092 or 1093.... . Alfonso VI did not have a legitimate grandson until the birth of Alfonso Raimundez, son of the Infanta Urraca and Count Raymond. This would mean legitimate contention for the succession to his throne. Alfonso was then a fairly old man (for those times) of about sixty-eight. He therefore (within a year of his grandson's birth) took action to proclaim his illegitimate son Sancho his heir. . A document dated 27 March 1106 reads in part "regnante rege illdefonso in legione eiusdem helisabet regina sub maritali copula legaliter aderente" [Reilly, pp. 338-9]. This is evidence that Alfonso married Sancho's mother. Reilly interprets this to explain a proper marriage for a formal mistress, and we know from Bishop Pelayo that Zaida had been baptized with the name Elizabeth. Alfonso's queen in named as Elizabeth in at least seventeen documents between 1102 and 1106. . . . There is a funerary inscription to Queen Elizabeth in the royal pantheon of San Isidoro of Leon which states that she was daughter of Louis VI of France [Hic requiescit Helisabeth Regina filia Lodovici Regis Franciae] and that she died in 1107, but this alleged French origin is not mentioned by the chroniclers Bishop Pelayo and the anonymous author of Sahagun, both fairly contemporary. And there is no evidence that Louis the Fat had a daughter named Elizabeth [Louis was born in 1081]. As Elizabeth is known to have born Alfonso two daughters before her death, this seems to preclude this allegation. . Alfonso had definitely married Elizabeth by 14 May 1100, when a charter stated, in part, "una cum voluntate et assensu conjugis meae Elisabeth iperatricis..." [Reilly, p. 298]. Queen Elizabeth, Count Raymond and the Infanta Urraca, and County Henry and the Infanta Teresa were present at a charter dated 25 January 1103 [Reilly, pp. 313-14]. Sancho Alfonsez also confirmed the document as "Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo." . The first documentary evidence of Queen Elizabeth's two daughters, the infantas Sancha and Elvira, was a royal charter granted to the Bishop of Oviedo on 16 March 1104. Alfonso's son Sancho, Counts Raymond [of Burgundy (RIN 2391)] and Henry [of Portugal (RIN 2400)], and the infantas Urraca and Teresa also confirmed the document [Reilly, p. 318]. Elizabeth confirmed a charter dated 19 March 1106, with Sancho and all of Alfonso's other children and sons-in-law (Count Raymond and Count Henry spent a great deal of time at the Spanish court) [Reilly, p. 339]. Queen Elizabeth and Sancho confirmed another charter dated 8 May 1107, and in a charter dated eight days later, Sancho was called "regnum electus patri factum" [Reilly, p. 340]. Elizabeth [Zaida] died 12/13 September 1107. It was on that same date that we know Count Raymond was sick with what would prove a mortal illness (he died on 20 September 1107) [Reilly, p. 341]. . . . Levi-Provencal assumed Zaida died in childbirth on 1093, but there is no true factual basis for this conclusion. We know that Zaida was named Elizabeth when she was baptized as a Christian. Alfonso's third wife, Bertha, did not die until 19 May 1097/8. So Alfonso would not have been free to marry Zaida/Elizabeth until after that date. We know a woman named Elizabeth was his consort and Queen by 14 May 1100. And we know that this Queen Elizabeth was mother of two daughters, Sancha and Elvira. Combined evidence suggests that Queen Elizabeth died 12 or 13 September 1107. The very old Alfonso VI married his last wife, Beatrice, by 28 May 1108. . It is logical to conclude that Alfonso, after having decided that he wanted his ONLY son Sancho to succeed him--instead of the legitimate son of his legitimate daughter the Infanta Urraca--would do everything to try and legitimize him. Marrying his mother, Zaida/Elizabeth, would be a logical step. . So it seems logical to me to conclude that Zaida was Queen Elizabeth, but this is still in dispute, and barring the discovery of some ancient document, it is likely to remain in dispute for the reasons spelled out in the above discussion. David Kelley stated that Szabolcs de Vajay assured him that "the concubine Zaida followed a not uncommon pattern in moving from a secondary status to a primary status, i. e., she became the queen" [TAG 69:113]." reedpcgen@@aol.com (Reedpcgen) posted to GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@@rootsweb.com on 15 Dec 1998 Subject: Re: Descent of Spanish Kings from Zaida: . "Christian Settipani was kind enough to bring to my attention a recent article by Jaime de Salazar y Acha, "Contribucion al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su politica matrimonal," Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heraldica y Genealogia, 2 (1992/3), pp. 299-343, sp. p. 323-8. . Though I have not seen this article, it is a long one, and if I understand correctly, he carefully examined all arguments for the different positions, both pro and con, and concludes without any hesitation that Zaida is Queen Isabel."
~1055 - 2 JAN 1104/05
Ermentrude
De
Bourgogne
Pope
Calistus
Guy
0990 - 1057
I
Renaud
67
67
~1002
Alice
(Adelaide)
of Normandy
~1029 - 27 JAN 1064/65
Henri I
Capet
~1035 - 1074
Sibylle
of
Barcelona
39
39
1011 - 21 MAR 1075/76
Robert
III
Capet
1016 - 1055
Helie
Ermengarde
De Semur
39
39
1033 - >1104
Hildegarde
Capet
71
71
~1034
Hughes
Capet
~1040
Robert
Capet
~1044
Simon
Capet
1046 - 1093
Constance
Capet
47
47
~0983 - 1055
I
Dalmace
72
72
0980
Aremburge
De
Vergy
~0954
Sire De
Vergy
Gerard
~0958
Elizabeth
De
Chalons
~0960 - 1019
II
Geoffroy
59
59
~0965
Maud
Mathilda
D'Autun
0988
Thibault
De
Semur
~0987
Geoffrey
III De
Semur
~0914 - 19 AUG 967
Adelais
Wera de
Chalons
~0945 - 12 MAR 984/85
Adelaide
Aelis de
Vermandois
0900 - 6 AUG 966
Berenger
II of
Ivrea
Duke in Spoleto, Margrave in Ivrea
11 NOV 938 - 21 JUL 987
Geoffrey
I
Grisegonelle
* Seneschal of France * Note: Geoffrey, surnamed Grisegonelle, Count of Anjou, received in requital of gallant services against the Emperor Otho, a grant from King Robert, of the dignified office of Seneschal of France. He inaugurated a policy of expansion, aiming at the extension of the boundaries of the ancient Countship, and the reconquest of those parts of it which had been annexed by the neighboring states. He married Adelais, of Vermandois, daughter of Robert, Count of Troyes (pronounced Troy, from which family the troy weight was named), and dying July 21, 987
21 JUN 967 - 1040
Fulk III
'the
Black'
~0960 - 0992
Ermengarde
of
Anjou
32
32
~0959
Gerberge
D'Anjou
~0962
Gersende
D'Anjou
~0964
Adelaide
D'Anjou
~0880 - 23 FEB 942/43
Herbert
~0897 - AFT MAR 930/31
Liegarde
Hildebranda
0915 - 10 OCT 960
Alisa
Adaele of
Vermandois
0918 - 29 AUG 968
Count of
Troyes
Robert
~0921 - 9 FEB 977/78
Luitgarde
de
Vermandois
~0915 - 9 SEP 978
Albert
I "The
Pious"
~0916
Count of
Viennois
Eudes
0920
Archbishop
of Reims
Hughes
0866 - 15 JUN 923
Robert
0881
Beatrice
de
Vermandois
~0895 - 16 JUN 956
Hugh
Magnus
~0898
Emma
of
France
~0900 - >0952
Amaury
52
52
~0850
Adelaide
of
Alsace
Hildebrand
Liegarde
0840 - 0902
Herbert
62
62
~0850
Beatrice
de
Morvois
0882 - <0950
Sprota
'Adela'
of Senlis
68
68
~0885 - 12 DEC 949
Cunigunde
de
Vermandois
~0820
Count of
Morvois
Guerri
~0820
Eve of
Roussillon
~0790
Count of
Paris and
Metz Gerard
~0760
Count of
Frezensac
Lisiard
~0738
Count
of Paris
Begue
~0768
Aupais
Alpais
~0762
Engeltron
de
Paris
~0718
Rotru
Rotrude
~0695
daughter
of
Alard
~0665
Alard
of
Spoleto
Margrave
of
Spoleto
Margrave
of Spoleto
Garnier
0817 - 0845
Pbepin
Quentin
28
28
~0838
Pbepin
II de
Senlis
0845
Count
Bernard
0797 - 17 APR 818
Bernhard
de
Austrasia
~0797
Kunigunda
Cunegonde
Count
of Selis
Pepin
~0773
Gondres
De
Therres
~0799
Adaele
(Atala)
~0801
Gundrade
(Gundrada)
~0803
Bertraide
(Berthais)
~0805
Princess
of Italy
Thbeodrate(Tetrada)
Bertha
of
Toulouse
~0743
Duke of
Gascony
Bernard
~0830 - ~0888
Countess
of Agenois
Rosalinde
58
58
~0865
King of
France
Eudes
0800 - 16 FEB 862/63
Conrad
0825 - 0881
II
Conrad
56
56
~0834
Welf
~0836
Hughes
L'Albe
~0789 - ~0834
Rutpert
45
45
~0800
Waldrada
of
Wormgau
~0815
Guntram
of
Wormsgau
~0818
Oda
of
Wormsgau
~0769 - 15 FEB 823/24
Lord of
Wormgau
Hadrian
~0774
Waldrat
of
Hornbach
~0739 - >0783
Count of
Hornbach
Lambert
44
44
~0875 - 0928
I
Rotbold
53
53
~0770
Guibour
of
Hornbach
~0727 - ~0779
Gerold
Childebrand
52
52
~0736 - 0798
Emma
von
Alamans
62
62
~0827 - 8 AUG 869
Lothaire
~0779 - >0808
I Ulrich
29
29
~0765
Erlafred
~0697 - >0736
Duke of
Alamannia
Nebi
39
39
~0667
Duke of
Alemania
Houching
~0667
Hersuinda
~0637
Duke of
Alamannia
Godefroy
~0661
Duke of
Alemania
Lentfroy
~0663
Duke of
Alemania
Thibaud
~0665
Count of
Thurgau
Oatillo
~0615 - 0716
Theodo
101
101
~0615
Regintrude
Von
Austrasia
~0555 - 0624
Chrodoald
69
69
~0525 - 0616
a
Lombard
Agilolf
91
91
~0697
Bishop of
Mayenne
Gerold
~0740 - 12 JUL 807
Rutpert
~0740 - 0789
Theoderta
49
49
Isingard
~0710 - 1 JUN 770
Turingbert
Turincbertus
~0696 - 0757
Rutpert
61
61
~0680 - >0768
Williswint
of the
Wormgau
88
88
~0921 - 15 JAN 979/80
Margrave of
the Nordgau
Berthold
~0650
Count
Adelheim
~0650 - <0741
Lambert
II
Lantbertus
91
91
~0925
Lady
De
Brioude
~0918 - 0950
Joseran
De
Semur
32
32
~0920
Ricoaire
~0880 - >0892
Seigneur
De Semur
Froilan
12
12
~0993
Sire De
Vergy
Robert
~0930 - 22 FEB 977/78
Lambert
D'Autun
0945
Gerberga
of
Ivrea
~0940
Herbert
'the
Younger'
~0890 - 16 APR 956
Count of
Chalon-sur-
Soane Giselbert
~0890 - 0935
Ermengarde
de
Dijon
45
45
~0916
Liutgard
de
Bourgogne
~0880 - >0901
Count
of Dijon
Eiran
21
21
~0859 - >0873
Count
de Dijon
Raoul
14
14
~0900 - ~0960
Vicomte
de Dijon
Robert
60
60
~0829 - >0870
Count of
Troyes
Eudes
41
41
~0829
Wandilmode
of
Worms
~0799
I
Aleran
~0799 - >0844
Count of
Soissons
Guiguin
45
45
~0860 - 31 OCT 920
I
Manasser
~0860 - 12 APR 935
Ermengarde
de
Bourgogne
~0894
II
Manasser
~0910
Ermengarde
de
Chalons
~1192 - 1250
Aléanor
De St.
Valery
58
58
~0840 - <0893
II
Thierry
53
53
~0836
daughter
of
Budwin
~0820 - 0869
Count of
Autun and
Metz Budwin
49
49
~0810
Engeltrude
~0838 - 0887
II Boso
49
49
0850 - 0915
Regnier
I
"Longhals"
65
65
Adelheid
~0805 - 0855
III
Bonifacio
50
50
~0805
Bertha
~0835 - 0889
I
Adalberto
54
54
~0819 - 0864
Marquis of
Transjurane
Burgundy Herbert
45
45
~0775 - 0826
II
Bonifacio
51
51
~0745 - <0785
I
Bonifacio
40
40
~0715
Richbald
~0800 - 0825
Count of
Amiens
Richard
25
25
~0808 - 0879
Thierry
I "The
Treasurer"
71
71
* "the Treasurer", Count of the Autonois and Chaumois; Chambelain of Charles "the Bald". source: Merrill - Royals.ged, http://library.monterey.edu/merrill/family/dorsett6/persons.html
~0820 - 0883
Richilde
of
Arles
63
63
~0830 - 0868
I
Bernard
38
38
~0873
Kunigunde
De
Provence
~0850
Warnier
of the
Autunois
~0870
Haduich
Von
Franken
~0778 - >0818
II
Childebrand
40
40
~0780
Dunnee
of
Autun
~0760
Thierry
d'Autun
~0730 - 0793
Count of
Autun
Thierry
63
63
0684 - 0752
I
Childebrand
68
68
~0912 - 0954
Richilde
of
Rouergue
42
42
~0762 - 0812
Count of
Autun
Guillaume
50
50
~0737
Gibert
Sigibert
~0748 - 9 OCT 768
Nibelung
I 'The
Historian'
~0934 - >0990
Sire de
Vergy
Uralon
56
56
~0934
Judith
de
Fonvens
~0912 - ~0990
I
Gerard
78
78
~0914
Rudolph
De
Vergy
~0990
Lambert
de
Semur
~0945
Gerard
de
Semur
~0830 - >0864
Seigneur
de Semur
William
34
34
27 MAR 971 - 1031
Robert II
'the Pious'
Capet
Robert II (of France) Robert II (of France), called Robert the Pious (970?-1031), king of France (996-1031), the son of King Hugh Capet, born in Orléans, and educated at Reims under the French scholar Gerbert, who later became Pope Sylvester II. In 996 Robert married, as his second wife, his cousin Bertha of Burgundy. Two years later Pope Gregory V excommunicated him and annulled this marriage, which was considered incestuous by the church; in 1003 Robert submitted to the pope and married the daughter of the marquis of Provence, Constance of Arles, by whom he had four sons. He recognized Hugh, the eldest of these sons, as his successor. After Hugh's death in 1025, the other sons, aided by their mother, revolted; Robert was still fighting them at the time of his own death. Robert was called The Pious because of his humility and charity; he was also esteemed as a soldier and ruler. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0973 - 1032
Constance
de
Toulouse
59
59
1008 - 1060
Henry
I
Capet
52
52
Henry I (of France) Henry I (of France) (circa 1008-60), king of France (1031-60), son of King Robert II and grandson of Hugh Capet, founder of the Capetian dynasty. From the beginning of his reign he was occupied with putting down rebellions led by members of his family and other French nobles. Between 1035 and 1047 he assisted his nephew William, duke of Normandy, later William the Conqueror, king of England, in establishing William's authority over rebellious Norman nobles. Henry later grew jealous of William's power and waged unsuccessful war against him in 1054 and 1058. Henry was succeeded by his son Philip I. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1007
Hugh II
Capet
1009 - 8 JAN 1078/79
Adela
(Alix)
Capet
~0950 - 26 JAN 1002/03
Rosalie
Susanna
of Ivrea
0969 - 1016
Bertha
of
Burgundy
47
47
0938 - 24 AUG 996
Hugh
Capet
Hugh Capet (circa 938-96), king of France, and founder of the Capetian dynasty, son of Hugh the Great, count of Paris, whom he succeeded in 956. His lordship over many fiefs around Paris and Orléans made him the virtual ruler of France, and when King Louis V of France, the last of the Carolingian line, died without an heir in 987, Hugh's numerous vassals enabled him to win the election to the throne, defeating the Carolingian candidate, Charles, duke of Lorraine. Charles and many other great nobles of the realm attempted to resist his authority but, through force of arms and by judicious purchasing of allegiance, as well as through the support of the church, of which he was a devout member, Hugh established a measure of order within his kingdom. He had his son, Robert the Pious (later Robert II), elected and crowned his associate and successor in 988, thereby confirming the house of Capet, which ruled France until 1328. See also Capet. Capet, family name of the dynasty of kings that ruled France from 987 to 1328. In 987, on the death of Louis V, the last of the Carolingian kings of France, Hugh Capet, duke of France and count of Paris, was elected king by the nobility and the clergy. The feudal domain of the Capet family was Île de France, the area around Paris. The Capetian kings greatly strengthened the royal power in France by insisting on the principles of heredity, primogeniture, and indivisibility of crown lands. Shortly after Hugh became king, he had his son Robert crowned as Robert II (known as the Pious). Hugh appointed Robert his associate, and this practice of the father having his eldest son rule with him was followed until the late 12th century. The greatest of the Capetian kings were Philip II Augustus, Louis IX (St. Louis), and Philip IV. The dynasty secured direct overlordship of almost all France by the process of incorporating additional fiefs, large and small, with their own territories. In 1328, when Charles IV died without male heirs, the Capetians were succeeded by the Valois, a younger branch of the family, which ruled France until 1589. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0945 - 1006
Adelaide
of
Poitou
61
61
~0972 - >1013
Hedwige
Avoise
Capet
41
41
~0968
Gisele
Capet
~0973
Alice
Capet
0964
Gauzlin
de
Bourges
~0929 - 3 APR 963
Guillaume
III
'Towhead'
~0925 - 14 OCT 962
Adele
of
Normandy
0937 - 3 FEB 994/95
Guillaume
IV "Fier
de Bras"
0947
Ebles
D'Aquitaine
0866 - 0931
Robert
'Rollo'
Ragnvaldsson
65
65
~0899
Poppa
de
Valois
~0921 - 17 DEC 942
William
I
'Longsword'
~0923
Count of
Corbeil
Robert
~0927
Crespina
Gerletta
Kathlin
~0884 - <0930
Berenger
de
Senlis
46
46
~0944
Count de
Bayeux
Balso
~0922
Count of
Bayeux
Ancitel
~0914 - 0952
Juhel
Berenger
38
38
0840 - 0897
Count de
Rennes
Gurrand
57
57
0840
Princess
of
Brittany
0810 - 0857
King of
Brittany
Erispoe
47
47
0835
Solomon
II of
Brittany
0780 - 7 MAR 850/51
King of
Brittany
Nominoe
0780
Argantael
0750
Eridpoe'
~0830
Ragnvald I
'the Wise'
Eysteinsson
~0848
Ragnhild
'Hildr'
Hrolfsdottir
Torf
Ragnvaldsson
of More
~0860
Eynar
"Turf"
Rognvaldsson
Thori 'The
Silent'
Ragnvaldsson
~0874
Hrollagar
~0818
Hrolf
Nefia
~0800 - 0860
Eystein 'the
Noisy' Glumra
Iversson
60
60
Jarl of the Uplanders
~0816
Ascrida
Ragnvaldsdottir
~0845 - ~0895
Malahule
Haldrick
Eysteinsson
50
50
~0832
Sigurd I Riki
'the Powerful'
Eysteinsson
~0914
Hakon
I
Halfdan
~0830
Jocunda
Huthiofsdatter
~0798 - 0850
Rognvald
Olafsson
52
52
~0780 - 0840
Olaf
Gudrodsson
60
60
~0822
Helgi
Olafsson
~0765 - 0821
Gudrod
"Jagtkonge"
Halfdansson
56
56
King of Vestfold, Haithabu, Oplandene, Varmaland, Vestmar & Hedmarken
~0764
Alfhild
Alfarinsdatter
~0790 - 0854
Eiric I
Gudrodsson
64
64
~0810 - 0863
Halfdan
Gudrodsson
'The Black'
53
53
~0739
King of
Alvheim
Alfarin
~0748 - 0800
Halfdan
"the Meak"
Eysteinsson
52
52
~0750
Hlif
Dagsdatter
~0730
King of
Westmare
Dag
~0726 - 0780
Eysteinn
"Fret"
Halfdansson
54
54
~0730
Hildi
Eriksdatter
~0755
Geva
of
Westfold
~0715
Eirik
Agnarson
~0693
Agnar
Sigtrysson
~0671
Sigtryg
~0704 - 0750
Halfdan
"Hvitbein"
Olafsson
46
46
~0708
Asa
Eysteinsdatter
~0730
Godfrey
Halfdansson
~0668 - 0710
Eystein
"Haardrade"
Throndsson
42
42
~0670
Solveig
Halfdansdatter
~0700
Hogne
Eysteinsson
~0655
Halfdan
~0625
Thrond
~0682 - ~0710
Olof I
"Tractelle"
Ingjaldsson
28
28
~0684
Solveig
Halfdansdatter
~0654
Halfdan
"Guldand"
Solfasson
~0660
Ingiald "Braut
the Wicked"
Onundsson
~0664
Gauthild
Algautsdatter
~0632
Algaut
Gautreksson
~0618
Gautrek
Gautsson
~0638
Onund
"Braut"
Ingvarsson
~0616
Ingvar
"the Tall"
Eysteinsson
~0594
Eystein
Adilsson
~0572
Adils "The
Great"
Ottarsson
~0572
Yrsa
Helgasdatter
~0540
Olaf "The
Mighty"
Halfdansson
~0528
Helgi
Halfdansdatter
~0503
Halfdan
Frodasson
~0507
Sigris
~0529
Hraeric
Hroar
Halfdansson
~0524
Signi
Halfdansdatter
~0479 - 0548
Frodi
Frideifsson
69
69
~0456
Fridleif
Frodasson
~0433
Frodi
Dansson
~0412
Dan
Olafsson
~0391
Olaf
Vermundsson
~0369
Vermund
Frodasson
~0347
Frodi
Fridleifsson
~0303
Fridleif
Frodasson
~0281
Frodi
Fridleifsson
~0259
Fridleif
Skjodsson
~0237
King of
the Danes
Skjold
~0215
Woden
(Odin)
Odin, in Norse mythology, king of the gods, father of Thor. He was god of war, wisdom, poetry, and magic. His two black ravens flew forth daily to gather tidings of events all over the world. Odin held court in Valhalla, where all brave warriors went after death in battle. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0219
Frigg
(Frigida)
Frigg or Frigga, in Norse mythology, goddess of the sky and wife of the chief god Odin. The protector of married love and housewives, Frigg was symbolized by a bunch of keys. She had two sons, Balder, the god of light, and Hoder, the blind god of darkness. In German mythology, Frigg was sometimes identified with Freya, the goddess of love. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0243
Baeldaeg
(Balder)
~0762
King of
Mercia
Witglaff
~0250
Wecta
~0255
Casere
Seaxneat
Waegdaeg
Winta
~0243
Hoder
Owain Ap
Marius
(Meric)
~0215
Jord
~0190
Frithuwald
Bor
~0160
Freothelaf
(Friallaf)
~0130
Finn
Frithuwulf
~0100
Floowald
Godwulf
(Gudolfr)
Geata
(Jat)
Taetwa
Beaw
(Bjaf)
Sceldwa
(Skjold)
Heremod
Itermon
Hathra
Hwala
Bedwig
Seskef
Magi
Moda
Vingener
Vingethor
Einridi
Loridi
Tror
(Thor)
Sibil
(Sif)
King of
Troy
Munon
~0551
Ottar
Egilsson
~0530
Egil
Anunsson
~0509
Aun "the
Aged"
Jorudsson
~0487
Jorund
Yngvasson
~0466
Yngvi
Alreksson
~0445
Alrek
Agnasson
~0449
Dagreid
Dageith
Dagsdotter
~0431
Dag
"the
Powerful"
~0424
Agni
Dagsson
~0428
Skjalf
Frostadotter
~0402
King in
Finland
Frosti
~0403
Dag
Dyggvasson
~0382
Dyggvi
Domarsson
~0361
Domar
Domaldasson
~0361
Drott
Danpsdotter
~0340
Danp
Rigsson
~0340
Domaldi
Visbursson
~0319
Visbur
Vanlandasson
~0298
Vanlandi
Svegdasson
~0302
Driva
Snaersdotter
~0275
Snaer
Svaer
Jokulsson
~0277
Svegdi
Fjolnarsson
~0277
Vana
~0240
Jokull
Frostasson
~0320
Thorri
Snaersson
~0210
Frosti
Karasson
~0185
Kari
Fornjotsson
~0160
King in
Kvenland
Fornjotor
~0187
Logi
Fornjotsson
~0189
Hlessey
Fornjotsson
~0191
Hler
Fornjotsson
~0256
Fjolnir
Yngvi
Freysson
~0235
King of the
Swedes
Yngvi-Frey
~0239
Gerd
Gymersdotter
~0214
Gymer
~0218
Orboda
~0196
King in
Turkey
Yngvi
0764
Ivar
Halfdannsson
~0784
Eyesteinsdatter
~0740
Eystein
"Glumura"
Hognasson
~0700
Halfdan
"the Aged"
Sveidasson
~0650
Sveidi Sverithi
"the Sea"
Svidrasson
~0600
Svidri
Heytsson
~0425
Heytir
Gorrsson
~0365
Gorr
Thorrasson
~0876
Ebles
II de
Poitiers
~0912
Ælfgifu Elgiva
, Princess of
England
~0931
Abbot of
Saint Martin
Ebles
0871 - 17 JUL 924
Edward
the
Elder
Edward the Elder (died 924), king of Wessex (899-924), son of King Alfred. He succeeded as king of the Angles and Saxons in 899, despite a rebellion led by his cousin Ethelwald with the support of the Danes of Northumbria and East Anglia. After a protracted struggle he defeated the Danes, and in 912, on the death of his brother-in-law Ethelred, alderman of Mercia, he annexed the cities of London and Oxford and their environs. The Danes submitted formally in 918, and soon thereafter the sovereignty of Edward was acknowledged by the North Welsh, the Scots, the Northumbrians, and the Welsh of Strathclyde. Edward was succeeded by his son Athelstan. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0878 - 0920
Queen of
England
Ælflaeda
42
42
~0904 - 0951
Ogive
Eadgina of
England
47
47
~0908 - 26 JAN 944/45
Ædhilda
~0900
King of
England
Ælfweard
~0902
Sub King
of Kent
Edwin
~0903
Nun
Ælflaeda
~0916
Abbess of
Romsey
Æthelflaeda
~0910 - 26 JAN 945/46
Ædgyth
(Editha)
~0906
Æthelhilda
~1007 - 1031
Emeric
Árpad of
Hungary
24
24
Princess
of Kiev
Eupraxia
~1032 - 1067
Monomachus
35
35
~0840
Ealdorman
of Mercia
Æthelwulf
~0822
Æthelred
'the Great'
Mucil
Ealdorman of the Gainas
~0822
Eadburga
~0852
Ælhswith
of the
Gaini
~0792
Wigmund
of
Mercia
~0792
Elflega
of
Mercia
Wistan
D. 0823
King of
Mercia
Ceolwulf
Cuthbert
Bassa
Cynreow
Centwine
Cundwalh
Coenwalh
King of
Mercia
Pybba
King of
Mercia
Creoda
Cynewald
Cnebba
Icel
Eomer
Angeltheow
Offa
King of
Angel
Wermund
Whitlaeg
<0843 - 0872
I
Æthelred
29
29
a
Kentish
princess
0795
King of
England
Æthelwulf
Religion, 855 The king of the Kentishmen Ethelwulf makes a pilgrimage to Rome with his 6-year-old son Alfred. Political Events, 858 The Kentish king Ethelwulf dies after having given up the kingdom of the West Saxons to his rebellious son Ethelbald and is succeeded by his son Ethelbert, who will reign until 866. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~0810
Osburger
(Osburga)
0846 - 26 OCT 899
Alfred
the
Great
Alfred, called The Great (849-899), king of the West Saxons (871-899), and one of the outstanding figures of English history. Born in Wantage in southern England, Alfred was the youngest of five sons of King Ethelwulf. On the death of his brother Ethelred, Alfred became king. By early 878 the Danes had conquered much of his territory, but he then defeated them. By 886 he had captured the city of London, and soon afterward he was recognized as the king of all England. When the Danes invaded England again in 893, Alfred made his kingdom the rallying point for all Saxons, thus laying the foundation for the unification of England. Alfred was a patron of learning. He began a court school and invited British and foreign scholars, notably Welsh monk Asser and Irish-born philosopher and theologian John Scotus Erigena, to come there. Alfred's laws, the first promulgated in more than a century, were the first that made no distinction between the English and the Welsh peoples. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Æthelbald
Æthelbert
~0844 - >0890
Princess
Judith Martel
of Aquitaine
46
46
~0780
Earl
Oslac
the Dane
Judith
son of
Wihtgar
D. 0544
King of Isle
of Wight
Wihtgar
daughter
of
Elesa
~0439
Elesa
<0495 - 0534
King of
Wessex
Cerdic
39
39
King of West Saxons, 519-534, was a Saxon Earldorman who founded a settlement on the coast of Hampshire, England in 495, assumed the title of King of the West Saxons in 519, and became the ancestor of the English royal line. "A.D. 495. This year came two leaders into Britain, Cerdic and Cynric, his son, with five ships. 519. This year Cerdic and Cynric undertook the government of the West Saxons. The same year they fought with the Britons at a place called Charford. From that day have reigned the children of the West Saxon Kings. 530. They conquered the Isle of Wight ...534. This year died Cerdic, The first King of the West Saxons. Cynric, his son succeeded to the government and reigned afterwards twenty-six winters." (ASC, TEXT BY INGRAM, EVERYMAN'S EDITION. SEE THE FOLLOWING DATES: 495,519 530, 854: CCN 230). (SEE ALSO TREAWNEY DAYRELL REED, THE RISE OF WESSEX, CHART P.31, GENS. 1-8. THIS ALSO DISCUSSES CERDIC'S PARENTAGE.)
~0411
Elsa
~0383
Gewis
~0355
Wig
(Uvigg)
~0327
Freawine
(Freovin)
~0299
Frithogar
(Frjodigar)
~0271
Brond
(Brandr)
~0247
Nanna
~0217
King in
Norway
Gewar
~0852
Ealhswith
(Alswitha)
of the Gaini
~0868 - 7 JUN 929
Æfthryth
Ethelswida
(Elfrida)
~0869
Æthelflaed
(Elfridam)
0873
Edmund
~0875
Abbess of
Shaftesbury
Æthelgeofu
~0880
King of the
Saxons
Æthelweard
0769 - 4 FEB 838/39
III
Ecgbert
Egbert (775?-839), king of Wessex (802-39), and the first Saxon king recognized as sovereign of all England (828-39). He was the son of a Kentish noble but claimed descent from Cerdic (reigned 519-34), founder of Wessex, the kingdom of the West Saxons in southern England. During the late 8th century, when King Offa of Mercia (reigned 757-96) ruled most of England, Egbert lived in exile at the court of Charlemagne. Egbert regained his kingdom in 802. He conquered the neighboring kingdoms of Kent, Cornwall, and Mercia, and by 830 he was also acknowledged as sovereign of East Anglia, Sussex, Surrey, and Northumbria and was given the title of Bretwalda (Anglo-Saxon, "ruler of the British"). During succeeding years Egbert led expeditions against the Welsh and the Vikings. The year before his death he defeated a combined force of Danes and Welsh at Hingston Down in Cornwall. He was succeeded by his son Ethelwulf, the father of Alfred. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0758 - ~0802
Under-King
of Kent
Ealhmund
44
44
daughter
of
Æthelbert
Nun
Alburga
~0784
Heluna
Bleja
~0552 - 0616
II
Æthelbert
64
64
Ethelbert (552?-616), Anglo-Saxon king of Kent (560-616). In 590, after many battles, he was recognized as Bretwalda, or ruler of the Britons. He married Bertha, a Frankish princess of the Christian faith, and was himself converted to Christianity and baptized by St. Augustine of Canterbury in 597. Shortly afterward he had episcopal sees created at Canterbury (his capital), Rochester, and London. Ethelbert promulgated a Saxon code of laws, the first of its kind, based on Roman law. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Princess of
the Franks
Bertha
~0732
Eaba
(Eafa)
Gorm
Enske
~0706 - 0718
Eoppa
12
12
~0680 - 0718
Ingild
38
38
~0644 - >0694
Cenred
50
50
King of
Wessex
Ine
Abbess
Cwenburh
Cuthburh
~0622 - >0688
Ceolwald
66
66
<0593
Cuthwulf
(Cutha)
King of
Wessex
Cyneglis
~0564 - 0584
Cuthwine
20
20
KILLED IN BATTLE 584, SON OF CEAWLIN AND FATHER OF CUTHA OR CUTWULF, DID NOT RULE. "A.D. 577. THIS YEAR CUTWINE AND CEAWLIN FOUGHT WITH THE BRITONS, AND SLEW THREE KINGS... AND TOOK FROM THEM THREE CITIES, GLOUCESTER, CIRENCESTER, AND BATH." (ASC 577, 854). (SEE: THE RISE OF WESSEX, TRELAWNEY D. REED, P.31).
Chad
(Cedda)
Cynebald
~0547 - 0593
King of West
Saxon's
Ceawlin
46
46
SON OF CYNRIC, UNDERTOOK THE GOVERMENT OF THE WEST SAXON'S, 560, AND REIGNED THIRTY WINTERS. "IN 560, ETHELBERT CAME TO THE KINGDOM OF KENT, AND HELD IT FIFTY-THREE WINTERS. IN HIS DAY THE HOLY POPE GREGORY SENT US BAPTISM. AND COLUMBIA, THE MASSPRIEST, CAME TO THE PICTS...591. THIS YEAR THERE WAS A GREAT SLAUGHTER OF BRITONS AT WANBOROUGH: CEAWLIN WAS DRIVEN FROM HIS KINGDOM...593. THIS YEAR DIED CEAWLIN. " (ASC 560, 568, 591, 593, 854: CCN 227)
~0510 - 0560
King of West
Saxons
Cynric
50
50
Son of Cerdic, was King of the West Saxons 534-560. "A.D. 552. This year Cynric fought with the Britons on the spot that is called Sarum, and put them to flight... 556. This year Cynic and Cealin fought at Beranbury" (ASC 534, 538, 552, 560, 854).
King of
Wessex
Cutha
~0480
Creoda
of
Wessex
~0855
II
Ranulph
~0856
Adelaide
Adbelahide ,
Princess Of France
1 NOV 846 - 10 APR 879
Louis
II 'The
Stammerer'
~0844 - 2 NOV 879
Princess of
Burgundy
Ansgarde
~0863 - 5 AUG 882
Louis
III
Carolingian
~0864
Princess
of France
Gisaele
~0866
King of
France
Carloman
~0964
Charles
Carolingian
0870
Ermentrude
de
France
17 SEP 879 - 7 OCT 929
III
Charles
Charles III (of France) (879-929), king of France (898-922). Called Charles the Simple, he was the posthumous son of King Louis II. Charles claimed the throne after 893, during the reign of Odo, or Eudes, count of Paris, but was not acknowledged king until 898. His reign was plagued by raids of Scandinavian Vikings, to whom he finally ceded (911) much of what later was called Normandy. Charles was deposed in 922 by his chief vassals and imprisoned in Péronne from 923 until his death. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
13 JUN 823 - 6 OCT 877
Charles
II 'le
Chauve'
* King of the West Franks Charles II (Holy Roman Empire), called The Bald (823-877), Holy Roman emperor (875-877), and, as Charles I, king of France, born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. He was the fourth son of Holy Roman Emperor Louis I; his mother, Louis's second wife, was Judith of Bavaria. Judith's determination to secure a kingdom for her only son led to civil war with Louis's other two surviving sons, Holy Roman Emperor Lothair I and King Louis II of Germany. The war ended with the signing of the Treaty of Verdun in 843. Charles received the western portion of the empire, which from this time may be called the kingdom of France, or the West Frankish Kingdom. Charles was a weak ruler; the great nobles were rapidly becoming independent, and the Vikings pillaged the country without meeting much resistance from Charles, who preferred to buy them off. Nevertheless, when Holy Roman Emperor Louis II died in 875, Charles received the imperial crown through the favor of Pope John VIII. Charles was succeeded as king of France by his son, Louis II, but the imperial throne was vacant until 881. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
27 SEP 830 - 6 OCT 869
Hermintrudis
(Ermengarde)
of Orleans
0865
Hersent
de
Lorraine
0845
King Of
Aquitaine
Charles
0846
Carloman
~0847
Prince of
France
Lothaire
0850
Rotrude
of
Orleans
~0853
Abbess
of Hasnon
Ermentrud
~0856
Hildegarde
of
Orleans
~0858
Gisaele
of
Orleans
~0845 - 0912
Richaut
of
Metz
67
67
~0980 - 1037
II
Eudes
57
57
Adelaide
~0872
Prince of
France
Phepin
~0873
Dreux
(Drogo)
23 MAR 874/75
Prince of
France
Louis
10 OCT 876
Prince of
France
Charles
~0808 - 19 APR 843
Judith
of
Bavaria
Eudes
(Odo)
Engeltrude
~0820 - 1 JUL 874
Gisela
de
Francia
~0778 - 3 OCT 818
Ermengarde
of
Hesbaye
0795 - 29 SEP 855
Lothaire
0802
Hildegard
0805 - 0879
Louis
II 'The
German'
74
74
Louis II (of Germany), called The German (circa 806-76), king of Germany (843-76), the third son of Holy Roman Emperor Louis I. An active participant in the civil wars that marked the last ten years of his father's reign, he became ruler of all Germany east of the Rhine by the Treaty of Verdun in 843. Even after that, however, he continued to fight his kinsmen, winning the eastern part of Lorraine in 870. An able ruler, Louis strengthened government in his lands and encouraged the development of vernacular literature. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0797
Pepin
0799
Adelaide
0800
Rotrud
0787 - 0818
Guelf
(Welf) III of
Alemannia
31
31
~0780 - >0833
Hedwig
(Eigilwich)
53
53
Louis
de
Debonaire
0795 - ~0840
Eticho
45
45
~0804
Count of
Troyes
Rudolf
~0806
Emma
of
Bavaria
0745 - 0800
Welf
55
55
~0760
Ermentrude
of
Vinzgau
Lord of
Altorf
Isenbart
~0725 - <0776
Count in the
Argengau
Ruthard
51
51
~0725 - >0757
Hermenlindis
32
32
~0685
Berthold
~0705 - <0761
Count in the
Breingau
Richbald
56
56
~0705
Ermengarde
~0680 - 0741
Duke of
Alsatia
Adalbertus
61
61
~0703
Duke of
Alsatia
Everhard
~0640
Duke
Alsatia
Adalricus
~0857
Gauzbert
de
Poitiers
~0859
Ebles
de
Poitiers
~0815 - 0844
I
Bernard
29
29
~0817
Bilichilde
d'Anjou
~0839
Emenon
De
Poitiers
~0841
Gauzbert
de
Poitiers
~0837
Bernard
d'Auvergne
~0790
Count of
Maine
Roricon
~0794
Countess
of Maine
Blichilde
~0820 - 3 MAY 886
Count of
Agenois
Woulgrim
~0795 - 23 JUN 843
Count of
Poitiers
Renaud
~0810
Hervbe
d'
Auvergne
0947 - 1037
III
Guillaume
90
90
~0942 - 1026
Adelaide
Blanche
d'Anjou
84
84
~0983 - <1018
IV
Guillaume
35
35
~0970
Toda
of
Provence
~0990
Ermengarde
of
Arles
~0930
Arsenda
of
Commings
~0918 - 13 SEP 935
II
Boson
~0920
Constance
De
'Vienne
~0909 - 11 NOV 958
Foulques
II 'The
Good'
~0920 - ~0952
Gerberga
de
Gatenais
32
32
~0937 - 1002
I
Bouchard
65
65
~0825 - ~0900
Viscount
of Orleans
Geoffroi
75
75
~0840
Aubri
Dux
~0900 - 0949
II
Rotbaud
49
49
~0903
Countess
of
Arles
~0885 - 0936
III
Boso
51
51
~0887
Willa
de
Bourgogne
~0899
Willa
de
Tuscagne
~0900
Bertha
de
Tuscagne
0847 - 0911
Rudolph
64
64
~0858 - 14 JUN 929
Willa
De
Vienne
~0830
Ermentrude
of
Alsace
~0798 - 0865
III
Luitfrid
67
67
~0902 - 11 AUG 937
Rudolph
~0890
Waldrada
of
Burgundy
~0883 - 5 JUN 928
III
Louis
Louis III (Holy Roman Empire), called The Blind (880?-928), Holy Roman emperor (901-05), king of Provence (890-928), and king of the Lombards (900-05), son of Boso, king of Provence (died 887). His control of northern Italy was challenged by Berengar I, king of Italy (d. 924), who captured Louis in 905, blinded him, and banished him to Provence for the rest of his life. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0870
Engelberga
De
Vienne
~0825 - 12 AUG 875
Louis
Louis II (Holy Roman Empire) (circa 825-75), Holy Roman emperor (855-75) and king of Italy (844-75), the eldest son of Holy Roman Emperor Lothair I. Louis was coemperor with his father from 850 to 855, when he became sole emperor, but his authority was in fact confined to his Italian kingdom. Although he was successful in some campaigns against the Saracen invaders of Italy, he was constricted by the jealousies of local Italian princes. He acquired much of Provence on the death of his brother Charles, but he was a weak ruler, and his empire declined. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0825 - 0896
Engelberge
of
Alsace
71
71
~0775
Count in
Alsace
Erchanger
~0820
Queen
of Italy
Dode
~0834
Princess
of Italy
Gisle
~0833
Princess
of Italy
Rotrud
~0830
Princess
of Italy
Helletrude
~0828
King of
Provence
Charles
~0832
Ermengarde
d'Lorraine
~0860 - 17 AUG 915
II
Adalberto
0853
Carloman
of Italy
0852
Bertha
of
Avennay
~0747
Count of
Hasbania
Ingram
~0717 - 0778
Count of
Hasbania
Gunderland
61
61
~0687
Count of
Hasbania
Sigramine
~0700
Count in
Hesbaye
Robert
0863 - 8 MAR 924/25
Bertha
of
Lorraine
~0880
Hugues
of
Tuscany
~0895 - >0932
Ermengarde
of
Tuscany
37
37
~0835
Valtrude
(Waldrada)
~0838 - <0895
Count
of Arles
Theobald
57
57
~0868 - <0948
Teutberga
of
Arles
80
80
~0880 - 0947
King
of Italy
Hughes
67
67
~0863 - 26 OCT 907
Gisella
Matilda of
Lotharingia
0867
Prince of
Lorraine
Hughes
0869
Ermengarde
of
Lorraine
~0839
Princess in
Tuscany
Teutberge
~0835
Rohaut
Rotilda of
Spoleto
1142 - 1186
III
Goffrey
44
44
~0804 - 0858
I
Guido
54
54
~0804 - 0860
Itana
Judith of
Benevento
56
56
Holy Roman
Emperor
Lambert
Sico
of
Benevento
~0779 - 1 SEP 836
Count
d'Nantes
Lambert
~0772 - 0814
Count on the
Breton
March Guido
42
42
~0935 - 1008
II
Rotbaud
73
73
~0900 - ABT JAN 961/62
Charles
Constantine
~0900 - ~0960
Teutberg
of
Troyes
60
60
~0920 - >0954
III
Guigues
34
34
Count De
Vienne
Patton
~0868
Vicomte of
Troys and
Sens Garnier
~0890 - ~0948
Count of
Vienne
Hugh
58
58
~0833 - 0921
Vicomte of
Troyes and Sens
Garnier Richard
88
88
0886 - ~0914
Empress of
the Byzantine
Empire Anna
28
28
19 SEP 866 - 12 MAY 912
VI
Leon
~0870 - ~0905
Zoë
Carbonopsina
35
35
0905 - 9 NOV 959
VII
Constantine
Constantine VII, called Constantine Porphyrogenitus (905-59), Byzantine emperor (913-59). Constantine was dominated by his father-in-law and co-emperor, Romanus I, and he continued Romanus's policies- protection of the small landholders of Anatolia and aggression against the Muslim states of Mesopotamia and Syria- even after Romanus was banished from Constantinople (present-day Istanbul) in 944. He also maintained contact with the Russians and encouraged their conversion to Christianity. Constantine is mainly remembered as a scholar and patron of scholarship. His own works include De Thematibus (On the Provinces), a history of the various territories of the Byzantine Empire; De Administrando Imperio (On Imperial Administration), a treatise on foreign policy containing valuable information on the peoples of eastern Europe in the 10th century; and De Ceremoniis Aulae Byzantinae (Byzantine Court Ceremonies). Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Political Events, 913 The Byzantine emperor Alexander II dies and is succeeded by his 8-year-old nephew, son of the late Leo VI, who will reign until 959 as Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus ("born to the purple"). The government is administered by a regency composed of Constantine's mother Zoë Carbonopsina, the patriarch Nikolas, and John Eladas. Food Availability, 927 Famine devastates the Byzantine Empire. Constantinople's Constantine VII and his co-emperor father-in-law Romanus Lecapenus push through stringent laws to prevent great landed magnates from buying up the small holdings of poor farmers. Political Events, 959 The Byzantine emperor Constantine VII dies after a reign of 47 years. His young son Romanus II will begin a 4-year reign of dissipation. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~0865
Theophano
~0887
Princess of the
Byzantine
Empire Eudoxia
~0874
Eudoxia
Baiana
~0900
Prince of the
Byzantine
Empire Basileos
~0840 - 0899
Stylinos
"Bassileopator"
Tzautzes
59
59
~0810
Tzautzes
"Strategoes"
of Macedonia
0812 - 29 AUG 886
I
Basileos
Basil I (812-886), Byzantine emperor (867-886) and founder of the Macedonian dynasty. Born in Macedonia to a peasant family, Basil worked during his youth as a groom in the imperial stables in Constantinople (now Istanbul). He won the favor of Emperor Michael III, who made him his chamberlain. In 866 Basil became coruler of the Byzantine Empire with Michael and a year later had Michael assassinated. As sole ruler of the empire, Basil began the reform of the legal code completed by his son Leo VI, introduced other administrative reforms, and restored the scholar Photius to the patriarchate. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0835
Eudoxia
Ingerina
0869
Prince of the
Byzantine Empire
Stephanos
~0872
II
Alexander
~0848
Maria
of
Macedonia
~0862
Prince of the
Byzantine Empire
Konstantinos
0785
Konstantinos
Pancalo
Bardas
'Magistros'
0755
a
Mamikonid
Hmayeak
0720
a
Mamikonid
Artavazo
0680 - >0720
a
Mamikonid
Hmayeak
40
40
~0653 - ~0690
a
Mamikonid
Artavazo
37
37
~0623
III
Hamazasp
1026 - 1086
Guillaume
VIII (Guy
Geoffroy)
60
60
~0910 - 14 MAR 963/64
Hedwige
von
Saxony
0939 - 23 AUG 987
Princess
of France
Bâeatrice
0943
Emma
of
France
0944
Otto
Eudes
0946
I
Heinrich
0950
Raingarde
0971
Herbert
Hugues de
Burgundy
0902
Judith
0876 - 2 JUN 936
Heinrich
I "the
Fowler"
* King of Saxony * Note: Henry I (of Germany), called Henry The Fowler (876?-936), king of Germany (919-36), the first of the Saxon line of German kings. In 912 Henry succeeded his father as duke of Saxony. Following the death of Conrad I, king of Germany, in 918, Henry was chosen king by the Franconian and Saxon nobles. Bavaria, Swabia, and Lotharingia refused to acknowledge him at first, and it was not until 925 that he managed to win recognition from all the German states. In 926 Henry secured a nine-year truce from warfare with the Magyars. During that period he transformed many of the small towns of Germany into fortified cities with trained troops of mounted warriors. His military preparations were successfully tested in a war against the Wends in 929. When the Magyars invaded Thuringia in 933, Henry repulsed them decisively. He defeated the Danes in the following year and seized territory from them. Henry was the first to create a united Germany, and, although he never received the imperial crown, he is generally recognized as one of the Holy Roman emperors. He was succeeded by his son, Otto. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0892 - 14 MAR 967/68
Matilda
von
Ringelheim
23 NOV 912 - 7 MAY 973
Otto I
"the
Great"
* King of Saxony * Note: Otto I (Holy Roman Empire), called Otto the Great (912-73), Holy Roman emperor (962-73), king of Germany (936-73), the son of the German king Henry I. After subduing an uprising of nobles incited by his brother, Otto consolidated his kingdom by granting duchies to faithful relatives and followers. In 951 he marched to Italy to assist Adelaide, the widowed queen of Lombardy, against Berengar II, who had usurped the kingdom. Otto defeated Berengar and married Adelaide, thereby becoming ruler of northern Italy. When he returned to Germany, he again crushed a rebellion of nobles led by his son Liudolf and halted a Hungarian invasion in 955. In 962 he was crowned Holy Roman emperor. In 963 he deposed Pope John XII and had Leo VIII elected in his stead. Otto sought to make the church subordinate to the authority of the empire but assisted in spreading Christianity throughout his domain. He negotiated unsuccessfully with the Byzantine emperor Nicephorus II Phocas for an alliance between the Byzantine and Holy Roman empires, but was able to arrange a marriage between his son Otto II and Theophano, daughter of the Byzantine emperor Romanus II. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0913 - 5 MAY 984
Gerberga
von
Saxony
6 MAY 972
II
Henry
I
Bruno
~0880
Countess of
Merseburg
Hatheburg
~0906
Princess of
the Saxons
Thankmar
~0853 - 8 DEC 917
Theodoric
Dietrich
~0868
Ludmilla
Ragnhildis
~0890
Amalrada
of
Ringelheim
~0891
Count of
Louvain
Lambert
~0900
Frederuna
of
Ringelheim
~0834 - >0905
King of
Haithabu
Godefrid
71
71
~0800 - 0844
King of
Haithabu
Harold
44
44
~0774 - 0810
King of
Haithabu
Halfdan
36
36
~0828
Reginhart
Walpert
~0833 - >0909
Countess of
Ringelheim
Matilda
76
76
~0800
Echbert
of
Ittergau
~0800
Grafein
of
Riparian
~0775
Graf of
Riparian
Dietrich
~0810 - 0891
Graf of
Threkwitigau
Wolpert
81
81
~0812
Altburgis
of
Ringleheim
~0785
I
Immed
Ionias
Ben
Juddual
Odrud
0836 - 30 NOV 912
Otto
"The
Illustrious"
~0855 - 24 DEC 903
Hedwige
Von
Sachsen
~0870
Oda
Von
Sachsen
Brunchilde
Von
Sachsen
~0865 - 29 JUN 910
Duke of
Lorraine
Gebhard
0863 - 0899
Arnulf
of
Carinthia
36
36
Arnulf (died 899), king of Germany (887-99) and Holy Roman emperor (896-99). He was an illegitimate son of the East Frankish ruler Carloman, who was a great-grandson of Charlemagne. In 887 Arnulf led the revolt that forced Charles III (The Fat), king of France and Holy Roman emperor, to abdicate and was elected king of the East Franks, that is, of Germany. In 891 he repulsed the Vikings, who were invading his kingdom. He campaigned in Italy in 894 and again in 895-96. In early 896, he captured Rome and was crowned Holy Roman emperor, the last Carolingian to be so invested. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0840
Oda
of
Bavaria
0893
Louis
III 'the
Child'
~0815
Theodore
of
Bavaria
0828 - 22 SEP 880
King of
Bavaria
Carloman
~0824
Litwinde
of
Carinthia
King of the
Saxons
Louis
0839 - 0888
III
Charles
49
49
Charles III (Holy Roman Empire), called The Fat (839-888), Holy Roman emperor (881-887), king of the East Franks, or Germans (876-887), and, as Charles II, king of the West Franks, or French (884-887). He was the son of Emperor Louis II and the great-grandson of Charlemagne. Charles was deposed from his thrones in 887 by his nephew, Arnulf, duke of Kärnten (Carinthia). His deposition marked the dissolution of the Frankish Empire. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0806 - 6 SEP 864
Count in
Saxony
Liudolf
0816 - 0913
Oda
of
Thuringen
97
97
0849
Duke
Bruno
0853
Luitgarde
of
Saxony
0859
Abbess of
Gandersheim
Hathumoda
Abbess of
Gandersheim
Gerberga
Abbess of
Gandersheim
Christine
Princess
of Saxony
Enda
~0780
I
Billung
~0784
Aeda
~0804
I
Poppo
~0788 - 0843
Duke Of
East Saxony
Bruno
55
55
~0795
Suana
of
Montfort
~0789 - ~0851
Duke of
Sachsen
Wigebart
62
62
~0755
Hasalda
Simon
'The Just'
ben Ionius
~0728 - 0807
Wittekind
(Widukind)
79
79
Geva
~1119 - <1189
Clemence
d'Alencon
70
70
~1050 - ~1103
Agnes
de
Ponthieu
53
53
~1032 - 1101
Gui
69
69
~1030
Ada
of
Amiens
~1113
Eldredus
de
Plumpton
~1005
Elisenda
de
Ponthieu
~1000
Bertha
d'Aumale
~0970
Count of
Aumale
Guerinfroi
~0980 - 1046
Enguerrand
66
66
~0980
Adele
Adelaide
of Ghent
~0963 - 18 SEP 993
Arnulf
I de
Gand
~0963 - 14 MAY 995
Luitgarde
de
Cleves
1056
Louis
IV
Capet
~1045 - 1091
Aelis
Beatrix de
Beaumont
46
46
0918 - 28 OCT 998
Count of
Luxembourg
Siegfried
Count in the Moselgau
~0927 - 13 DEC 992
Countess of
Luxembourg
Hedwig
~0970
Countess of
Luxembourg
Kunigunde
~0945 - 1019
Frederick
74
74
~0967
Countess of
Luxembourg
Eva
~0900 - 18 DEC 973
Eberhard
~0887 - 1005
Liutgarde
von
Trier
118
118
~0928 - 0984
Hugues
56
56
~0929
Count in
Nordgau
Albrecht
~0915 - 7 APR 963
Uda
Von
Metz
~0860
Otto
Von
Erlauchten
~0932
Count in the
Nordgau
Gerhard
1239
Claricia
De
Ruffo
~0849 - 0918
Count of
Ardennes
Voiry
69
69
1220
Pierre
De
Dreux
Luitgared
D'Ardennes
~0805
Count of
Saundis
Rainier
~0770 - ~0840
Arnoul
70
70
~0735 - ~0790
Agnorald
de
Chaumontois
55
55
~0700 - 0743
Arnoul
43
43
~0665 - 0708
Count of
Champagne
Dreux
43
43
Anstrude
Anoflede
~0862 - 0940
Hugh
78
78
~0862
Hildegard
~0902
Hugo
~0904
Count in the
Nordgau
Guntrum
~0832 - ~0898
Eberhard
66
66
~0832
Adelaide
de
Vermandois
~0802 - 0881
Eberhard
79
79
~0810
Evesa
~0840 - >0898
Meginhard
58
58
~0772 - 0844
Meginhard
72
72
~0730 - >0777
Eberhard
47
47
~0730 - 0777
Elisabeth
de
Lundville
47
47
~0698 - 0735
Count of
Lower Alsace
Alberic
37
37
~0938 - 5 JUN 988
Dietrich Dirk II ,
Count of West
Friesland
0934 - 10 APR 990
Hildegarde
of
Flanders
~0961
Count of
Holland
Egbert
~0965
Countess
of Holland
Erlinda
0873 - 27 MAR 964
Arnolph
I
'Magnus'
~0940 - 1 NOV 962
III
Baudouin
~0932
Elstrude
of
Flanders
~0935 - 18 OCT 961
Liutgarde
of
Flanders
~0937
Egbert
of
Flanders
~0863 - 10 SEP 918
II
Baudouin
~0835 - 0879
Baudouin
I "Iron
Arm"
44
44
~0865
Widinille
of
Flanders
~0882 - 0950
Guinidilda
of
Flanders
68
68
~0867
Raoul
Rudolf
~0805 - 0864
Count Odacer
(Anachar)
"Great Forester"
59
59
~0775 - 0850
Count of
Flanders
Engurrand
75
75
~0750
Liderie
of
Flanders
~0900
I
Dietrich
~0903
Countess
of Holland
Geva
~0920 - 0983
Wichmann
II de
Gand
63
63
~0961
Hildegarde
de
Holland
~0800 - >0839
Vassal
Gerulf
39
39
~0845 - >0885
Count in the
Kennemerland
Gerulf
40
40
~0939
Gerberge
De
Vermandois
~0770 - >0834
Ruler in middle
Friesland
Gerulf
64
64
~0740 - 0810
Ruler of middle
Friesland
Nordalah
70
70
~0710 - <0786
Alfbad
76
76
~0680
Poppon
~0964 - 1000
Hughes
36
36
~0920 - >0981
Hilduin
De
Ponthieu
61
61
~0965
Count de
Bretevil
Hildouin
~1039 - >1087
Count de
Château-
Porcien Roger
48
48
~1041
Ermengarde
~1026 - 1086
Mabel
Talvas
d'Alencon
60
60
Roger had married in the year 1048, Mabel, daughter and heiress of William de Talvas, Count of Belˆsme and Alen‡on, whose large estates he succeeded to in 1070, on the death of William's brother, Ives of Belˆsme, Bishop of S‚es. The monkish chroniclers of the times give to Mabel a not very enviable character; in their estimation, "she was a wicked, unnatural, and cruel woman;2 "haughty, worldly-minded, crafty, and a babbler."3 But Ordericus does not pass her without some commendation, for he adds, "she always loved Theodoric, the man of God, and failed not to obey him in certain things."4 Her cruelties at last brought upon her a violent death. Among those whom either her ambition or her hatred had led her to despoil of their rights, was Hugh, Seigneur de la Roche Ig‚, whom she had deprived of his castle. On the night of December 2, 1082, Hugh entered her chamber at the Chƒteau de Bures, on the Dive, near Troarn, and killed her with his sword. Her mutilated body was buried three days after at the convent of Troarn; while her murderer and his brothers disappeared from Normandy, and were unsuccessfully pursued by her sons, who thus vainly endeavored to take vengeance for their mother's death on the assassin.5 1 Blaev's edition, Amsterdam, 1646. See also Burke's General Armory; and Antiq. and Topog. of Sussex, ii. 7. Her enmity to the Monks of St. Evroult in particular, had earned for her the harsh character she is displayed in on the pages of the history written within the walls of that monastery. The following is her epitaph, written by her friends of Troarn, taken from Forester's translation of Ordericus Vitalis: "Sprung from the noble and the brave, Here Mabel finds a narrow grave; But above all woman's glory, Fills a page in famous story. Commanding, eloquent, and wise, And prompt to daring enterprise; Though slight her form, her soul was great, And, proudly swelling in her state, Rich dress, and pomp, and retinue, Lent it their grace and honours due. The border's guard, the country's shield, But love and fear her might revealed, Till Hugh, revengeful, gained her bower, In dark December's midnight hour. Then saw the Dive's o'erflowing stream The ruthless murderer's poignard gleam. Now, friends, some moments kindly spare, For her soul's rest to breathe a prayer."
~1058 - 1123
Roger 'Le
Poitevin' de
Montgomery
65
65
ROGER DE MONTGOMERIE, called le Poitevin, Earl of Lancaster, and Count of Marche,5 was involved in the misfortunes of his family, which taking part with Robert, Duke of Normandy, in his vain efforts to supplant Henry I. on the throne of England, lost all its possessions both in England and Wales, as well as many of those in Normandy. In 1094, he gave the priory of St. Martin's, in Lancaster, to the abbey of St. Martin de S‚es in France. He married Almodis, daughter and heiress of Adelbert, Count of Marche, whose son dying in 1091, Roger and his wife succeeded to his estates and honors. Upon the expulsion of his family from England in 1102, he withdrew to the country of his wife, and fixed his residence at the castle of Charroux, which gave him the surname of le Poitevin. He had a long war to sustain against Hugh de Lusignan, his wife's cousin, who claimed the County of Marche, with arms in his hands. He left this quarrel as a heritage to his descendants.
~1042 - 1107
Mathilde
Maud de
Montgomery
65
65
~1066
Sybil
de
Montgomery
~1067 - 1125
Arnulph
de
Montgomery
58
58
ARNOLD DE MONTGOMERY who in the reign of William II with a party of knights invaded Pembrokeshire and conquered it; seems to have been created Earl of Pembroke; in the reign of Henry I erected a slender fortress at Penbrock, "the head of the estuary or brook adjoining the territory of Ros, and which is separated from it by an arm of the sea," and which, upon returning to England, he consigned to the care of Geraldus de Windsor, his Constable and Lieutenant-General, a worthy and discreet man and the ancestor of the Geraldines of Ireland; granted much land in Pembrokeshire to the mother church at St. Martin's at Seez; gave to St. Martin's the church of St. Nicholas, within the walls of the castle at Pembroke, in 1098, which was afterwards erected into a priory by William Mareschal; married Lapracoth, daughter of Murrough, King of Leinster (ped. 161), and appears to have played an important part in the wars between the Norwegians and the Irish; for a long time resided with Robert de Belesme but, having lost the whole of his estates through joining in his rebellion, he appears to have quarreled with him and to have gone over to the party of the Duke of Normandy, to whom he ceded the Castle of Almeneches, which he had taken by surprise, and collected about him many of his brother's partisans; the following year, notwithstanding his supposed forfeiture, he seems to have still been in possession of his Welsh estates, for it is asserted that the Irish, terrified at the power of the Norwegian King, called in the aid of the Normans and that Arnold and the men of Pembroke hastened to bring them succor; at this time, apparently, Governor of Pembroke Castle in Milford Haven. The Irish entrapped the Norwegian King Magnus and killed him through treachery and even attempted to massacre the Normans, resolving to kill Arnold as the reward of his allegiance, and the King actually carried off Arnold's wife, his own daughter, and married her to one of his own relations. Arnold discovered in time the treachery of the Irish and made his escape from the country and Ordericus relates that for twenty years afterwards he wandered abroad a homeless man. We hear again of Arnold in Normandy in 1118, when Stephen, Earl of Moreton, who held the Castle of Alencon for King Henry, so offended the inhabitants that they implored the aid of Fulk, Earl of Anjou. Arnold was their envoy on this occasion. Ordericus relates that, true to his early love, he rashly returned to ireland some twenty years after he was so badly treated there and became reconciled with the King, according to appearances, and married the princess of his love, from which it would seem that on the former occasion she had only been betrothed to him. "On the morrow of his nuptials he fell asleep after a banquet and, shortly expiring, left the guests to listen to funeral dirges instead of an epithalamium." (*)Yeatman's History of the House of Arundel, pp. 8, 56.
~0913 - 1078
William
"Talvas"
165
165
WILLIAM II, surnamed Talvas, who in 1033 or 1034 succeeded his brother Robert as Count of Belesme and Alen‡on; died 1048; married, first, Hildeburge, daughter of a chevalier named Arnold; second, HADEBURGE, daughter of Raoul, Vicomte de Beaumont, and widow of Tescelin, Seigneur de Monrevau WILLIAM II., of Belˆsme, surnamed de Talvas, a name derived from a species of buckler he wore, or as some writers assert, a nickname denoting his great cruelty. He married Hildeburga, daughter of a chevalier pamed Arnulph, who is spoken of as a very noble man. By her he had a son Arnulph, and a daughter Mabel, married to the Count of Montgomerie. He was a man of savage and violent temper. On his wife's protesting against his enormities and condemning them openly, he caused her to be strangled. His treatment of William Giroie brought on him the fierce vengeance of Giroie's brothers, who ravaged his territories. Finally, his subjects and even his only son joined themselves to his enemies, and expelled him from his lands about the year 1048. Houseless and homeless he a long time wandered from house to house without obtaining succor or shelter. But, finally he found himself in the neighborhood of the Count of Montgomerie, who gave him a home. To Roger he gave his daughter in marriage, and made him a cession of all the wealth which by his perversity and baseness had been lost to him; and with him he spent the remainder of his days.2 To his daughter he left a heritage of cruelty, ambition, and pride.
~1056
Philip
de
Montgomery
PHILIP DE MONTGOMERIE, known as the Clerk, or the Grammarian, a title given by cotemporary historians, from the fact of his having received an education beyond the ordinary standard, with a view, probably, of taking upon himself holy orders. In 1096 he accompanied Duke Robert in his crusade to the Holy Land, and died at the siege of Antioch, which continued from December, 1097, to the month of June following.
~1064
Mabel
de
Montgomery
~1060 - 4 MAR 1112/13
Emma
de
Montgomery
~1044
Hughes
de
Montgomery
HUGH DE MONTGOMERIE, Earl of Shrewsbury and Arundel, succeeded his father in his English possessions. The Welsh gave him the name of Hugh Goch, i. e. Red headed.1 This might be presumed to be a term of reproach, applied as it was by a people who had but little love for the new race which had taken possession of England, and less even for the family, which from its estates on the borders, was foremost in their oppression. While Roger pushed the dominion of his master successfully over the refractory Welsh, his memory is not charged with the same severity and cruelty as adhere to some of his sons in their dealings with them. Hugh survived his father but four years; dying in 1098,2 unmarried, his possessions and honors came to his brother Robert. He met his death at the hands of the Norwegians, who at the time were apparently redressing the wrongs the Welsh were suffering under. "Owen, a Welsh lord, father-in-law of Griffith and Cadagan, kings of Wales, having been disobliged by his sons-in-law, privately invited the Earls of Chester and Shrewsbury into his country, promising them a great booty. The two earls levying some troops, were received by Owen into Wales, where they committed unspeakable cruelties. The two kings, surprised by this unexpected attack, were forced to fly into Ireland, and leave the country to the mercy of the English. Their flight giving their enemies an opportunity to continue their march, they penetrated as far as the Isle of Anglesey, where they destroyed all with fire and sword."3 "Magnus, the son of Harold, King of Norway, having taken possession of the Orkneys and of the Isle of Man, arrived accidentally upon the coast of Anglesey. Hearing of the cruelties committed by the English, and touched with a sense of generous pity, he determined to land his forces, and to preserve the miserable inhabitants from destruction. The English endeavored to oppose the Norwegians. In the attempt, the Earl of Shrewsbury was slain. The prince of Norway, observing that nobleman resolute in opposing his landing, and whose impetuous valor had carried him into the sea, levelled an arrow, which through the opening of his armor pierced his right eye, and reaching the brain, he fell down convulsed in the water. The Norwegian prince, on seeing him fall, cried 'Let him dance,' or rather, 'Let him depart.' This accidental stroke of justice seen by the eye of superstition, made the Welsh to conclude, that the arrow had been directed by the immediate hand of the Almighty."4 In Llandyfrydog being mentioned as the place of Hugh's death, superstition goes further, when it states that one night his dogs being put into the church ran mad, "and the Earl himself died miserably in less than a month after." Another account states that the Earl of Shrewsbury arrived with his vassals first at Diganwy, the place of rendezvous, and waited several days for his auxiliaries. On a threatened landing of the northmen one day, Earl Hugh mounting his horse, put himself at the head of his men, and rushed into the water to meet the enemy. He was immediately killed by an arrow from the hands of Magnus. "His bow string twangs,--its biting hail Rattles against the ring-linked mail. Upon the land in deadly strife, Our Norse king took Earl Hugo's life."6 His body was not recovered until the ebbing of the tide, and was brought from Anglesey, and buried alongside of his father at the great Abbey of Shrewsbury.1 He built the castle at Cleobury, of which there are now scarcely any remains.2 And he added considerably to the endowments of his father's abbey at Shrewsbury, "with a heavy curse on the violator."3 "He was the only one of Mabel's sons who was courteous and amiable; and he conducted himself with great moderation during the four years he held the family honors and domains. 1 Rapin's History, i. 187. 2 Gough's Camden, iii. 9. 3 Rapin's History, i. 187. 4 Warrington's Wales, i. 358-9. 5 Gough's Camden, iii. 205. 6 Saga of King Magnus, quoted in Wiffen's Mem. of House of Russell.
~0960 - ~1048
Seigneur
de Belleme
William
88
88
WILLIAM I who in 997 succeeded to the Seigneurie of Belesme, which was joined to the County of Perche; received the Castle of Alen‡on and its dependencies and became Count of Alen‡on; died 1028; married MATHILDA, of the race of Ganelon WILLIAM I. succeeded his father in the seigneury of Belˆsme, to which he added the county of Perche; and Duke Richard II. gave him the castle of Alen‡on and its dependencies. And it is thought that the county of Domfront was also given to him, since he built the castle of that name, and founded about the year 1025, in the neighboring forest, the abbey of Lonlai. Notwithstanding this act of piety, William was none the less unprincipled in his character. Envious and sanguinary, this disposition had made him commit great disorders.
~0962
Mathilde
~0955
Arnulf
~0996 - ~1026
Seigneur de
Domfront
Warin
30
30
~0942 - >1005
Yves
de
Belleme
63
63
~0942 - >1005
Godchilde
De
Ponthieu
63
63
~0960
Juhel I
de
Mayenne
~0972
Hilderouge
Godehaut
de Belesme
~0982
Godchilde
de
Belleme
~0912 - 0997
Yves
de
Creil
85
85
1 better known under the name of Belˆsme, was son of Fulcoin and Rothais, and is described as a man wise and prudent. He was in possession, toward the end of the year 940, of the town of Belˆsme, but not of the county of Perche, which he appears never to have been in possession of, at least not of the whole of it. He can be better called owner of the Canton of Sonnois. He was brother of Sigenfroi, Bishop of Mans. It was by the counsel of Yves, that Osmond, in the year 942, saved from the hands of King Louis d'Outremer, young Richard, Duke of Normandy, whom this prince had retained a prisoner at Laon. Many modern writers place his death in A.D. 980, but it is certain that he was yet living in the reign of King Robert. He died towards the end of the year 997. Some years before his death, and in 994 or later, he had lost a portion of the Sonnois, which Hugh I., Count of Maine, had despoiled him of.
~0912
Geile
~0985 - <1056
Roger
I de
Montgomery
71
71
ROGER DE MONTGOMERY, founder of Troarn 1022, who was exiled in 1037
~0989
Josceline
De
Ponteaudemer
~0955
Senfrie
de
Crépon
~0911 - 1002
Herbastus
de
Crépon
91
91
~1023 - 1057
Ralph
"The Timid
" de Gael
34
34
~0936 - 1031
Gunnora
De
Crepon
95
95
~0952
Eva
Duceline
de Crépon
~1004
Avelina
Wevia de
Crépon
28 AUG 933 - 20 NOV 996
Richard
I 'The
Fearless'
~0950
Hugues
de
Montgomery
~0968
Josceline
Harcourt de
Pontaudemer
~0949
Tourade
Harcourt de
Pontaudemer
~0980 - 1044
Humphrey
Harcourt
de Vieilles
64
64
~0982
Herbrand
Harcourt
~0982
Gilbert
Harcourt
~0984
Richard
Harcourt
~0988
Turchetil
de
Pontaudemer
~0990
Ilbert
Harcourt
~0920 - ~0955
Torf "The
Rich"
Harcourt
35
35
1080
Lord
Walter De
Scudamore
~0951 - >1024
Turchetil
de
Harcourt
73
73
Turchetil, the 2nd son, Seigneur de Turqueville and Turquerange, in France, was governor to William, 2nd Duke of Normandy
~0953
William
Harcourt de
Pontaudemer
1052
Titus
De
Scudamore
0912 - 0955
Bernard
"the Dane"
de Harcourt
43
43
Bernard, Lord of Harcourt, Carleville and Beaufidel in Normandy, was a nobleman of royal blood of Saxony, who acquired in 876, when Rollo the Dane made himself master of Normandy, the above lordships in that principality. It is from him that this ancient and eminent family traced its pedigree, and acquired the name of Harcourt.
~0900
Spota
de
Bourgogne
~0930
Roger
de
Montgomery
~0910
Roger
de
Montgomery
ROGER, son of Rogerus Magnus (Normannus ex Northmannis), refounded the Abbey of St. Oppertuna 911; accompanied Rollo at the Conquest of Normandy
~1054
Robert
De
Belleme
1061
Henri II
Capet
~1000 - 1048
III
Adalbert
48
48
~0995
Clemence
De
Foix
1031 - >1058
Ermensinde
de
Longwy
27
27
~0995 - 1038
Bernard
Rodgar
De Foix
43
43
0992 - ~1038
Gersinda
De
Bigorre
46
46
~1003 - 1077
Bernard
II De
Foix
74
74
~1005
Gerberge
De
Foix
~0957
Garcia
Arnaldo
~0957
Ricar
of
Astarac
~0927
I
Guillermo
~0937
I
Arnold
~0917 - >0956
Count of
Bigorre
Raymund
39
39
~0917 - ~0960
Faquilena
Garsida of
Astarac
43
43
~0887 - ~0960
Count of
Astarac
Arnaldo
73
73
~0857 - 0920
Garcias
Sanchez
63
63
~0857
Aminiana
~0872
Acibella
of
Gascony
~0861
Orneca
Fortunez
~0900 - >0972
Gersinde
de
Toulouse
72
72
III
Sancho
<1069 - 1096
Felice de
Montdidier.
Queen of Aragon
27
27
~0854
Urraca
Rebella of
Sancossa
I
Pedro
~0806
Sancha
of
Gascony
~0822
Aznar
Galindez
~0788 - 0819
IV
Loup
31
31
~0770 - 0812
Duke of
Gascony
Cantule
42
42
~0752 - 0812
Duke of
Gascony
Adelrico
60
60
~0785 - 0816
Garcia
Jimenez
31
31
~0734 - 0778
II Loup
44
44
~0715 - 0768
Waifar
of
Aquitaine
53
53
~0715
Adele
De
Gascony
~0695
Loup
Centull
~0755
Count of
Bigorre
Mancio
~0675 - 0774
Duke of
Aquitaine
Hunold
99
99
~0618
Valtrude
De
Verdun
~0887
Lopa
Sanchez
0865 - 0925
Sancho
I 'El
Reparador'
60
60
~0857
a
handmaid
~1158
Prince of
Aragaon
Pedro
1113 - 1162
Rambon
Berenguer
49
49
Velasquita
of
Navarre
~0875 - 0932
Gonsalo
Fernandez
57
57
Nunila
Xemina of
Navarre
~0845 - >0890
Garcia
Jimenez of
Navarre
45
45
Ximeno
Garces
~0815
Jimeno
Garcia
~0815
Iniga
Ximena
~0785
Munia
~0848
I Dato
~0815 - >0910
Llope
Donat
95
95
~0845 - >0920
Count of
Paliares
Raymond
75
75
~0775
Donat
Loupa
~0785
Faquilla
of
Bigorre
~0935 - 1019
I
Rodgar
84
84
~0942 - >1011
Adelaide
De
Pons
69
69
~0975 - 1 MAR 1057/58
Ermensinde
De
Carcasonne
~0912 - 0957
I
Arnaud
45
45
~0912
Arsinde
De
Carcassonne
Count of
Rasez
Eudes
~0882 - 0935
Count of
Carcassonne
Acfrid
53
53
~0885
Adelaide
d'Auvergne
~0850 - 0886
II
Bernard
36
36
~0845
Ermengarde
de
Chalons
~0875
III
Bernard
~0868 - 0920
Viscount
of Macon
Ranulf
52
52
~0830
Luitgarde
~0847 - ~0885
II Oliba
38
38
~0817 - 0857
I Oliba
40
40
~0797
Ermentrude
~0790 - >0829
Bellon
(a
Goth)
39
39
~0820 - 0850
Count
of Urgel
Sunifred
30
30
~0829 - 0848
I
Suniario
19
19
~0890 - ~0920
Count of
Conserans
Asnarius
30
30
~0950 - ~1033
II
Adalbert
83
83
~0950
Judith
von
Oeningen
~0977
I
Gerhard
0940 - >0980
Count of
Dagsburg
Ludwig
40
40
~0970
Count of
Rheinfelden
Kuno
~0972 - 1046
Heilwig
Von
Dagsburg
74
74
~0948
Count of
Ohringen
Kuno
~0952 - 0999
Richilde
von
Saxony
47
47
~0952 - 1020
Itha
von
Ohningen
68
68
~0968
Himma
Von
Ohningen
~0982
Von
Ohningen
~1032
Hughes
De
Bourgogne
~0931
Lutigarde
von
Saxony
Duke of
Swabia
Ludolf
0931 - 16 DEC 999
St.
Adelaide of
Lombardy
~0955 - 7 DEC 983
II Otto
Otto II (955-83), Holy Roman emperor (967-83), king of Germany (961-83), the son of Otto I, with whom he ruled jointly from 967 to 973. In 976 he suppressed a rebellion that was led by his cousin Henry II, duke of Bavaria. Two years later, having been attacked by Lothair, king of France, Otto drove the French out of Lorraine but was unsuccessful in besieging Paris. Later Lothair renounced Lorraine, and peace was established. Otto next invaded southern Italy, gaining possession of Naples, Salerno, and Taranto, but he was overwhelmingly defeated by the Greeks and Saracens at Crotona in 982. He died in Rome while planning a second invasion. His wife, Theophano, brought Byzantine refinement and culture to the German court. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1034
Sibyl
De
Bourgogne
~1036
Gisele
De
Bourgogne
~0958 - 1026
II
Richard
68
68
0982 - 1017
Juetta
(Judith) de
Bretagne
35
35
~0997 - 1028
III
Richard
31
31
Gerberge
De
Boulogne
~1000
Eleanora
of
Normandy
~1005
William
(Nicholas)
~1011
Stephanie
of
Normandy
Estrith
(Margaret)
of Denmark
~0960
Papia
of
Envermeu
~1023
Archbishop
of Rouen
Mauger
~1025
Count of
Arques
William
~0945
Emma
De St.
Valery
~0944 - 27 JUN 992
I
Conan
~0980 - 1008
Duke of
Brittany
Geoffrey
28
28
~0914
Gerberge
~0940
I Mien
~0942
Martin
Berenger
de Vitre
~1018
Adela
d' Eu
~0965 - 1087
Robert
d'Evereux
122
122
~0967
Earl of
Corbeil
Mauger
Archbishop of Rouen
~0982 - ~1017
Matilda
De
Normandy
35
35
~0982 - 6 MAR 1051/52
Emma
of
Normandy
~0990 - 18 JAN 1034/35
Beatrice
of
Normandy
~1160
Ralph
Basset
~0969 - 21 FEB 1032/33
Hawise
of
Normandy
Concubine
~0909
Anflec
Lancelot de
Brioquibec
0939
Concubine
~0956
Muriella
de
Normandy
Papia
of
Normandy
~0957
Fredesende
de
Normandy
1018 - 1047
Earl De
St. Clare
Waldron
29
29
~0890 - >0935
Rollo Hrolf
Thurstan
Brico (Bigod)
45
45
~0925
Asperlin
de
Vaudrevil
~0955
Count
of Ivry
Raoul
0911
Neil
De St.
Sauveur
0944
Roger
de St.
Sauveur
~0936 - <0989
I Hugh
53
53
~0985
II
Renaud
~0980
Beatrice
de
Perche
Hugo
of
Blois
~0952 - 1003
Countess
of Blois
Emma
51
51
Ildegarde
De
Blois
Theobald
De
Blois
~0962 - 1026
Count of Burgundy
& Macon
Othon-Guillaume
64
64
0958 - 5 MAR 1004/05
Ermentrude
De
Roucy
~0975 - 1005
Mathilda
De
Bourgogne
30
30
~0984
Gui I
De
Macon
~0985 - 1023
Gerberge
de
Bourgogne
38
38
~0995 - 1068
Agnes
de
Macon
73
73
~0949 - 0982
II
Alberic
33
33
~0925 - 0971
Count of
Macon
Lietaud
46
46
~0931 - 10 MAY 967
Count of
Roucy and
Reims Renaud
~0930 - 15 MAR 972/73
Alberade
de
Lorraine
~0956 - 1000
Count of
Roucy
Giselbert
44
44
~0915 - 2 OCT 939
Duke of
Lorraine
Gislebert
~0935 - >0978
Gerberga
de
Lorraine
43
43
~0932
Henri
de
Lorraine
~0937
Duchess
of Bavaria
Wiltrude
~0870 - 0932
Regnier
62
62
~0890
Adelaide
de
Bourgogne
~0918
Rudolph
of
Mons
~0976 - 1033
Baudouin
II De
Talvas
57
57
~0860 - 1 SEP 921
Richard 'the
Justicer'
D'Autun
0849
Adelaide
of
Auxerre
~0894
Hugh
'the
Black'
~0898
Willa
of
Burgundy
~0900
Rudolf
De
Bourgogne
~0902
Boso
De
Bourgogne
~0860
Alberad
de
Lorraine
~0910
Albreda
de
Hainault
~0828 - ~0892
Giselbert
64
64
~0800 - 0842
Count in the
Maasgau
Giselbert
42
42
~0800
Countess
d'Hesbaye
Count
d'Hesbaye
Count
d'Hesbaye
Echard
~0770 - 0800
Count in the
Maasgau
Gainfroi
30
30
~0770 - >0795
Theidlines
De
Blois
25
25
~0740
Aubri
~0710
Aubri
~0680
Adela
of
Austrasia
Lothair
~0740 - 0796
Duke of
Sens
Rainier
56
56
~0740
daughter
of Duke
Haudre
~0710
Duke
Haudre
~0896 - >0926
Ragnvald
30
30
~0947 - 30 APR 971
King of
Lombardy
Adalbert
~0950 - >1002
Gerberga
de
Chalon
52
52
~0942
King
of Italy
Urracus
0880 - 0932
Count and
Margrave of
Ivrea Adalbert
52
52
~0947
Margrave
of Ivrea
Wido
~0995 - ~1027
Anselmo
32
32
~0949
Gisela
of
Ivrea
~0910 - 0940
Anscario
Anskar
30
30
Camerino
Anskar
~0882 - 13 JUN 910
Gisele
de
Friuli
~0842 - 7 APR 924
I
Berenger
Marquis of Friuli
~0850
Berthila
of
Camerino
~0889
Gerberge
de
Friuli
~0820 - >0888
Marchese
di Friuli
Eberhard
68
68
~0835 - 0902
Judith
de
Friuli
67
67
~0840 - 0874
III
Hunroch
34
34
~0854 - 0936
Heilwich
of
Friuli
82
82
~0880
Uruoch
von
Sulichgau
~0864 - 7 JUN 918
Kunigunde
of
Swabia
~0860 - 4 JUL 907
Liutpold
von
Babenberg
~0760 - >0839
Conte
di Friuli
Unruoch
79
79
~0730
Duke of the
east Franks
Berenger
~0790 - >0827
Count in the
Payn de Langres
Amadee
37
37
~0810
daughter of
Unruoach
di Friuli
~0802
Comte de
Toulouse
Berenger
~0804
II
Unroch
~0850 - 1 DEC 898
Anchier
Ansker
~0850
Gisela
Volsea
1487 - 1512
Peter
Constable
25
25
1620 - 1664
John
Knowlton
44
44
1622
Robert
Knowlton
1628
Mary
Knowlton
1630
Sarah
Knowlton
~1625
John
Wilson
~1625
Augustine
Ellis
~1619
Elizabeth
Kenning
~1582
Capt.
John
Tucker
~1617
Jane
Kenning
John
Kenning
~1581 - 1682
Margaret
Lovett
101
101
~1624 - 1660
Susanna
Knowlton
36
36
1633 - 1684
John
Knowlton
51
51
1635 - <1688
Abraham
Knowlton
53
53
1639
Elizabeth
Knowlton
1628 - 31 JAN 1714/15
Benjamin
Balch
1630 - JAN 1661/62
John
Balch
1633
Freeborn
Balch
~1550 - ~1600
George
Balch
50
50
~1554
Jane
Ashford
~1520
Nicholas
Ashford
~1525
Henry
Balch
1633
Mary
Conant
1581
George
Balch
Agnes
Annis
Patch
~1500
Henry
Balch
~1475
James
Balch
~1450
George
Balch
~1425
John
Balch
~1635
Mary
Balch
1848 - 1934
George
Alexander II
Thompson
85
85
1853 - 1910
Ahne
(Anna)
Andersdatter
57
57
Emigrated in 1877 to Irving Township, Jackson Co., Wisconsin
~1830
Levis
1857 - 1929
Berndt
Börresson
72
72
~1840 - ~1866
Börre
Christianson
26
26
1842
Berthe
Börresdotter
1847
Anne
Börresdotter
1853
Marie
Börresdotter
1822 - 1894
George
Thomson
72
72
~1780 - 1822
George
Alexander
Thomson
42
42
~1790 - >1850
Mary
Harvey
60
60
Daughter of an aristocratic family who owned a distillery in Edinburgh, Scotland, the descendants of Sir William Henry Harvey, physician to King James I and King Charles I. When she married a commoner, a ship's carpenter, her father disowned her and even when her husband died at sea while she was pregnant, the family refused to allow her return. In later years she emigratated to America with her son and grandson. The Harvey family in England traces its ancestry to the time of the Conquest. The progenitor is believed to be Herveus de Bourges or Hervey of Bourges, who came with William the Conqueror and according to the Domesday Book was in 1086 a great baron in county Suffolk. He was a grandson of Geoffry, third viscount of Bourges, an ancient city of France, who rebuilt the abbey of St. Ambrose or Bourges in 1012. Harvey, the surname, is undoubtedly derived from the more ancient baptismal name, variously spelled Herveus, Hervey, Harvey, etc. Surnames came into general use in England about the year 1200.
1828 - 1898
Elizabeth
Milne
69
69
1872
Mary
Thompson
1853
William
I
Thompson
1855
Thomas
Thompson
1857
Richard
Thompson
1859
Alexander
I
Thompson
1862
Flora
Harvey
Thompson
1864
William
II
Thompson
1864
Alexander
II
Thompson
1868
Frank
Thompson
1869
Harry
Thompson
1871
Edward
Thompson
1918
Manfred
Thompson
1917
Laura
(Kunert)
Nortman
Living
Thompson
Living
Thompson
Living
Thompson
1920
Harlon
Thompson
1922
Evelyn
Smikrud
Living
Thompson
Living
Shroeder
Living
Thompson
Living
Thompson
Living
Dow
1926
Ruth
Arlene
Thompson
1921
Laurence
Isensee
Living
Isensee
Living
Isensee
Living
Isensee
Living
Peterson
Living
Isensee
Living
Huber
1928
Ardyth
Elaine
Thompson
Mynard
Smikrud
Living
Smikrud
Living
Crivits
Living
Smikrud
Living
Dahl
1950 - 1950
Edry
Smikrud
2m
2m
Living
Smikrud
Living
Campbell
Living
Smikrud
Living
Arnold
Living
Smikrud
Living
Johnson
Living
Thompson
Living
Sanders
Living
Sanders
Living
Sanders
1964 - 1964
John
Lang
Thompson
4d
4d
1853 - 1921
Julia
Emoline
Levis
67
67
1875
Mamie
Thompson
Henry
Secord
Will
McDonald
1878 - 1960
Frank
Thompson
82
82
Lottie
Turner
1880 - 1923
Benjamin
Thompson
42
42
1886
Clara
Brownell
1882
Daisy
Thompson
Adolph
Sander
1885
Bessie
Thompson
Wilfred
Flood
1888
Nell
Thompson
Harry
Schoolcraft
1890 - 1962
Rose
Thompson
72
72
Oscar
Sprague
1896 - 1986
John
Harold
Thompson
90
90
1900 - 1975
Reithel
Bowen
75
75
Sylvia Amy
(Nason)
Stoffel
1829 - 1890
Anders
Pederson
60
60
Anders Pederson purchased his farm in Irving Township, near Black River Falls, Jackson County, Wisconsin on 24 January 1881. It was purchased for the sum of $235 from John and Mary Benson. The farm is described as being the South half of the Northeast quarter of Section No. Eleven and the South West quarter of the North West quarter of Section No. Twelve in the Township of Irving, twenty North of Range Five West, containing 120 acres more or less. The land was deeded to Christ Pederson upon the death of his father, but the son died only a year later. On 16 May 1899, the land was deeded to Marit Pederson and her daughter, Anna Boreson.
1829 - 1903
Maret
Christensdatter
73
73
A newspaper obituary reads that Mrs. Maret Peterson Bram died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Bernt Borreson, in the town of Irving, in the vicinity of Trout, on Monday, the 21st, at the age of 74 years. She had been nearly three years an invalid, the result of being hurt by a calf.
1891 - 1955
Elmer
O.
Börreson
63
63
1893 - 1947
Amanda
Anne
Huxsahl
54
54
1893
Bertha
M.
Börreson
1891 - 1985
George
Olson
94
94
1895 - 1953
Chris
Börreson
58
58
1897 - 1946
Alfred
Börreson
49
49
Alvina
Pischke
1897 - 1978
Manfred
Börreson
80
80
1900 - 1954
Edith
Hoag
54
54
1900
Ida
Börreson
1898
Harvey
Wallert
1901 - 1974
Rachel
Börreson
73
73
Fred
Wolf
1902 - 1974
Clara
Börreson
72
72
1888 - 1965
Frank
Curda
77
77
1905 - 1905
Oscar
Börreson
1908
Marie
Bonzak
1907 - 1969
Ellis
Eugene
Börreson
61
61
1909
Myrtilla
Börreson
1904
Edry
Ayen
1910
Infant
Börreson
1921
Kathryn
Marie
Börresson
Morris
Nason
Amy
Goodenough
1844 - 1921
Oline
Johannesdatter
77
77
1848 - 1935
Ole
Evanson
86
86
Ouden
Hrövig
Johannes
Olson
1869 - 1938
Oline
Evanson
69
69
Emil
Olson
1873
Evan
Evanson
Anna
Nelson
1877 - 1951
Julia
O.
Evanson
74
74
1879
Berthe
Evanson
Couyt
Kinyon
1883 - 1913
Olaf
Evanson
30
30
Sophia
Jenson
1884
Oscar
Evanson
1887
Sever
R.
Evanson
1890 - >1951
Albert
John
Evanson
61
61
Gertrude
Kelly
Peder
Hanson
Abelone
Andersdatter
1852 - 1891
Christ
Andersson
39
39
1874 - 1950
William
Simmons
Lang
76
76
1875 - 1922
Gertrude
Cheney
47
47
1865 - 1930
William
Lincoln
Wade
64
64
1871 - 1962
Dora
Bell
Fengal
90
90
1928
Henry
Warren
Lang
1928
Georgia
May
Rose
Living
Lang
Living
Brannan
Living
Lang
Living
Bram
1840 - 1881
Richard
Simmons
Lang
41
41
Richard S. Lang was a farmer, born in England in 1840. He lived there for 11 years. He then moved to Canada with his parents, living there until 1863 when he moved to New York. He lived there for three years, during which time he met and married Hannah "Fannie" Wigston, also from England. They then moved to Kentucky in 1866, lived there for 4 years, then moved to Kansas, making a home near Burlington. He engaged in masonry for eight years while living and working his farm. He was a member of the International Order of Oddfellows and of the Congregational Church. His last days were spent in very ill health,and in the end he hung himself to end the suffering.
1842
Fannie
E.
Wigston
1846 - 1922
Henry
B.
Cheney
76
76
Henry B. Cheney was a Civil War Veteran, serving as a Private in Company B of the 13th Michigan Infantry. He enrolled on 4 January 1864 and was honorably discharged on 25 July 1865 at Louisville, Kentucky at the age of 18. His army record describes him as being 5 foot 5 inches, of light complexion and light brown hair with gray eyes.
1845 - 1926
Frances
Esther
Merritt
81
81
1900
Edward
Willis
Lang
Opal
Corum
1903 - 1991
Dorothy
May
Lang
87
87
1902 - 1984
Otto
Tripp
81
81
1905
Francis
Esther
Lang
Floyd
Howard
1908
Pauline
Gertrude
Lang
William
Carl
Henry
1912 - 1993
Charles
Leonard
Lang
80
80
Elizabeth
(Betty) I.
Brown
1818 - 1893
William
Wigston
74
74
William Wigston and Jane Bassett were married at the Church of St. Margaret at Leicester, England. His great-grandfather, William Wigston was the founder of the City of Wigston in Leicestershire, England.
1812 - 1893
Jane
Basset
80
80
1876
Clara
Lang
1879
Earl
Lang
William
Wigston
Mary
Robert
Bassett
1819
Alston
Wigston
1821 - 1890
John
Wigston
69
69
1823 - 1844
Hannah
Wigston
21
21
1824 - 1865
Mary
Wigston
41
41
1832 - 1909
John
Wade
77
77
1836 - 1873
Carolyn
Pringle
36
36
1838 - 1928
John
Peter
Fengal
89
89
Peter and Frildo left Iowa in a covered wagon drawn by a team of mules, along with their three children, Clara, John Peter and Dora. They arrived at his Uncle Henry Fengel's farm at Woodbine, Kansas on October 24, 1873, just a few days before the first grasshopper invasion. Before coming to Kansas Mrs. Fengel had been almost a complete invalid, and it was feared that she would not survive the journey west. Not only did she do that, but she had another child after arriving in Kansas and lived to a good old age. They bought a farm three miles west of Woodbine on West Branch Creek where they prospered until retiring from farming in October 1898. They then moved to Herington, Kansas. Peter was accidentally killed by a train of cars in Lincolnville, Kansas and was buried in the Herington, Kansas cemetery. Frildo died of a stroke of paralysis at Herington.
1845 - 1917
Frildo
Wilkins
72
72
1893 - 1980
Arnold
William
Wade
86
86
Mary
Emily
White
1896 - 1955
Pera
Belle
Wade
58
58
D. 1961
Roy
Love
1900 - 1979
Vergie
Fields
Wade
79
79
D. 1954
DeWitt
"Dee"
Henderson
D. 1979
Roy H.
Stevenson
1903 - 1907
Opal
Marie
Wade
3
3
1909
Howard
Lincoln
Wade
1911
Esther
L.
Morrison
Luman
Pringle
Annise
Martin
Naoma
Vroman
1858
George
Henry
Wade
Melvina
(Fanny)
Pringle-Morse
Clara
M.
White
1860 - 1928
Henry
James
Wade
68
68
Pheba
Jane
Gager
1861
Julie
E.
Wade
Charles
H.
Drew
1867
Edward
W.
Wade
Etta
Marie
~1870 - 1898
Emma
J.
Wade
28
28
Milton
D.
Gager
1807 - 1878
John
Peter
Fengel
71
71
John Peter Fengel II and his wife, Anna Margaret, were born near Deutenhofen, Germany, and lived there until their emigration to the United States in 1843. Their reason for leaving Germany was to insure the exemption from military service of their sons, so abhorrent to them was the idea of war. So in the spring of 1843, at Pentecost, with their four children, they set forth from Darmstadt to Gernsheim in a wagon. From Gernsheim they traveled by steamer, going down the Rhine. While at sea, their sailing ship encountered severe storms, causing them to be 54 days upon the water. At one point of the journey the captain of the ship noticed that there were sharks following close to the boat and said, "There must be someone dead on the ship." He searched and found a mother carrying a dead baby in her arms, wrapped in a blanket. He took the baby from her and tossed it into the Atlantic Ocean. After that occurred they did not see any more sharks. In the final days of the voyage their food supplies ran so low that they only ate one meal a day. Finally, they landed in New York instead of Baltimore as they had originally planned. Upon arriving in New York, they went directly to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to visit some relatives. Then they continued their journey westward as far as Burlington, Iowa. They remained here a short time and then moved into the country, some ten miles west of Burlington and near the little town of Danville, where they purchased some land and established their home. According to family legend, the name of " Fenchel " was changed to it's current spelling of " Fengel " over an inheritance dispute. There was old law in Germany, that when the father died leaving an estate, all of the estate fell into the hands of the eldest son, who then divided the estate as he saw fit. There were two Fenchel brothers, and the younger brother felt that he did not get his fair share, so he changed the spelling of his name to "Fengal". The word fengel ( fennel in English ) is the name of a plant used in making yeast. The Fenchels had been bakers for several generations. It has also been mentioned that Johann Peter Fenchel II and his wife Anna Margaretha were "closer related that first cousins are". It may be noted that her father is listed as Peter Fenchal and her mother as Maria Magdalena Kratz, but that Anna Margaretha was registered by her mother's maiden name. It may also be noted that Kratz was the maiden name of Johann Peter II's mother, as well. INFORMATION SOURCES: Genealogical Records of Patricia Wade Riebel and Martin I. Shields Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society, 1915-1918, by Clara M. Fengel-Shields Parish Records of the Lutheran Church at Deutenhofen, Germany, translated by M.I. Shields
1812
Anna
Margaretha
Kratz
William Henry
Harrison
Wilkins
Matilda
Scoggins
1869 - 1931
Clara
Matilda
Fengal
62
62
Joseph
Burkholder
Shields
1870 - 1956
John
Peter
Fengal
85
85
Jenny
May
Rudd
Emma
Mowrer-
Ball
1876 - 1945
Fannie
Florence
Fengal
68
68
1895
Orville
Hays
Duvall
Andrew
Jackson
"Doc" Ramsey
Johann
Peter
Fenchel
Anna
Katherina
Kratz
Peter
Fenchel
Maria
Magdelena
Kratz
1832 - 1915
Heinrich
(Henry)
Fengal
82
82
: In 1850, at age 17 he accompanied his uncle Henry Fengel and two other men to California when the 1849 Gold Rush was on. They traveled the Oregon Trail across the great plains and mountains in a Prairie Schooner pulled by five yoke of oxen. They started from Burlington, Iowa, driving to St. Joseph, Missouri, where they awaited their goods, which came by boat. On May 1 they loaded their goods and were on their way. Traveling up the South Platte, they crossed over and made for a ferry on the North Platte. At the ferry they found such a crowd that they were obliged to wait a day and a half for their turn to cross. The ferry charge was $10 for each wagon, and the stock had to swim. They arrived at Hangtown, California on August 10, having made the journey in a little over three months. Hangtown is now known by the more euphonious name of Placerville. Young Henry did not stay in California very long. In the fall he left his uncle in San Francisco and returned by way of the Isthmus of Panama. He first took a ship to Acapulco, Mexico, then traveled by mail boat to Panama. There was no canal yet, at that time, so he walked across it with the other passengers, although a few rode on donkeys. It was a twelve hour trip, leaving in the evening and arriving in the morning. At the Chagres River all embarked in small boats, going down the river to the large boat waiting in deep water. There they took a steamer bound for Havana, where some of the passengers left the boat to go on up the coast to New York. Henry had gotten a job as cabin boy, and stayed on board the ship as it crossed the Gulf of Mexico to New Orleans. From there he went to Galveston, whre he spent the winter. Early in the spring he returned to New Orleans and took a boat up the Mississippi River to Burlington, Iowa, returning on the first Monday in April, 1951. His uncle Henry started home by ship by the way of Cape Horn but the ship went down and perished, along with the gold that they had accumulated. Young Henry and family came to Kansas in a mover wagon in 1868, buying a farm one mile east of Woodbine from his brother-in-law Rev. Charles Heidel. He and his wife visited California again in 1915 for the San Francisco World Fair.
1862
Mary
Ann
Lee
1833
Peter
Adolph
Fengal
1833
Maria
Magdelina
Fengal
Rev.
Charles
Heidel
1840 - 1939
Sibella
Christina
Fengal
98
98
William
Lee
(Leigh)
1843 - ~1945
Peter
Ernest
Fengal
102
102
~1845
Infant
Fengal
1850 - 1937
Charlotte
P.
Fengal
87
87
Jacob
Helt
~1852
Katherine
Fengal
Henry
Funck
~1855 - 1931
Louise
Fengal
76
76
Henry
Mummy
Azariah
Ben
Shallum
Shallum
Ben
Zadok
Zadok
Ben
Meraioth
Meraioth
Ben
Ahitub
Ahitub
Ben
Amariah
Amariah
Ben
Azariah
Azariah
Ben
Johanan
Johanan
Ben
Azariah
Azariah
Ben
Ahimaaz
Ahimaaz
Ben
Zadok
Zadok
Ben
Ahitub
Ahitub
Ben
Amariah
Amariah
Ben
Meraioth
Meraioth
Ben
Zarahiah
Zarahiah
Ben
Uzzi
Uzzi
Ben
Bukki
Bukki
Ben
Abishuab
Abishuab
Ben
Phineas
Phineas
Ben
Eleazor
Eleazor
Ben
Aaron
Putiel
Bint
Naashon
Aaron
ben
Amron
Simar
Kiya
Tsherit
Elisheba
Bint
Aminadab
~1133
Walter
De
Burgh
Jacobed
Tey
Micah
Bint
Haran
Haran
Milcah
Bint
Terah
~1693
Elizabeth
Chase
Aram
Ram
Arni
Phozib
Hezron
Kanita
Kiya
Tadukhepa
Mery-Amon
Aram
Yawnu
Nilman
Iyosaka
Princess
of Mitanni
Gilukhipa
Tiye-
Nefertari
Tuya
III
Amenemhet
Igrath
Bint
Esau
III
Senusret
Mereret
II
Senusret
Nofret
Mahalath
Raba
Mudad
Isaac
Ibn
Abraham
Isaac (Hebrew, "laughter"), Old Testament patriarch, the son of Abraham,half brother of Ishmael, and father of Jacob and Esau. The birth of Isaacwas promised (see Genesis 17:19, 21) to Abraham and his wife Sarah, aftera long and childless marriage, as a sign that the blessings originallybestowed by God upon Abraham would be continued in Isaac, heir of theCovenant. The events of Isaac's life are recounted in Genesis 21-28. The dominant story in the narrative, and one of the most widely knownstories in the Bible, is that of the projected sacrifice of Isaac (seeGenesis 22). According to this account, God tested Abraham's faith byasking him to sacrifice his beloved son. At the last moment, after Godwas convinced of the perfect obedience of both father and son, heaccepted a ram as a substitute for the youth. This story is thought toexpress the Hebrew rejection of human sacrifice, practiced by surroundingnations. The ram is recalled today in synagogue ritual at the solemnblowing of the shofar, or ram's horn, during the Jewish High Holy Days,Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The New Testament alludes to Isaac as a precursor of Christ and of thechurch (see Galatians 3:16, 4:21-31), and the obedience to his father tothe extent of self-sacrifice is associated with that of Christ (seeHebrews 11:17-19). These themes were developed by several of thepatristic writers, and Isaac appears often in Christian art, particularlyin association with the Eucharist. Archaeologists and biblical scholars have drawn parallels between thebiblical narrative of Isaac and the history of the Semitic tribes.Abraham is thought to represent the nomadic stock out of which the Hebrewand Edomite tribes separated. Isaac is believed to represent the tribesthat joined to form the Hebrew confederacy and to give allegiance to theGod, Yahweh, or Jehovah, originally a tribal deity; and Ishmael isbelieved to represent the tribes of Edom. Isaac was a relatively minorfigure compared to the other two great biblical patriarchs, Abraham, hisfather, and Jacob, his son; but a number of the details of the biblicalaccount are believed by scholars to have major symbolic importance. The story of his birth is believed to be a deliberate attempt by earlyHebrew writers to alter the traditions of the Semitic tribes in order tostrengthen adherence to the Hebrew confederacy, a military and politicalalliance, by suggesting that it had divine inspiration. In making Isaacthe legitimate son, and Ishmael the illegitimate son, of their commonancestor, the Hebrews claimed superiority over the independent Edomitetribes. Finally, the rivalry between Isaac's two sons is thought toreflect again the rivalry between Edom and the Hebrews. Source: "Isaac," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Isaac (Hebrew, "laughter"), Old Testament patriarch, the son of Abraham,half brother of Ishmael, and father of Jacob and Esau. The birth of Isaacwas promised (see Genesis 17:19, 21) to Abraham and his wife Sarah, aftera long and childless marriage, as a sign that the blessings originallybestowed by God upon Abraham would be continued in Isaac, heir of theCovenant. The events of Isaac's life are recounted in Genesis 21-28. The dominant story in the narrative, and one of the most widely knownstories in the Bible, is that of the projected sacrifice of Isaac (seeGenesis 22). According to this account, God tested Abraham's faith byasking him to sacrifice his beloved son. At the last moment, after Godwas convinced of the perfect obedience of both father and son, heaccepted a ram as a substitute for the youth. This story is thought toexpress the Hebrew rejection of human sacrifice, practiced by surroundingnations. The ram is recalled today in synagogue ritual at the solemnblowing of the shofar, or ram's horn, during the Jewish High Holy Days,Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The New Testament alludes to Isaac as a precursor of Christ and of thechurch (see Galatians 3:16, 4:21-31), and the obedience to his father tothe extent of self-sacrifice is associated with that of Christ (seeHebrews 11:17-19). These themes were developed by several of thepatristic writers, and Isaac appears often in Christian art, particularlyin association with the Eucharist. Archaeologists and biblical scholars have drawn parallels between thebiblical narrative of Isaac and the history of the Semitic tribes.Abraham is thought to represent the nomadic stock out of which the Hebrewand Edomite tribes separated. Isaac is believed to represent the tribesthat joined to form the Hebrew confederacy and to give allegiance to theGod, Yahweh, or Jehovah, originally a tribal deity; and Ishmael isbelieved to represent the tribes of Edom. Isaac was a relatively minorfigure compared to the other two great biblical patriarchs, Abraham, hisfather, and Jacob, his son; but a number of the details of the biblicalaccount are believed by scholars to have major symbolic importance. The story of his birth is believed to be a deliberate attempt by earlyHebrew writers to alter the traditions of the Semitic tribes in order tostrengthen adherence to the Hebrew confederacy, a military and politicalalliance, by suggesting that it had divine inspiration. In making Isaacthe legitimate son, and Ishmael the illegitimate son, of their commonancestor, the Hebrews claimed superiority over the independent Edomitetribes. Finally, the rivalry between Isaac's two sons is thought toreflect again the rivalry between Edom and the Hebrews. Source: "Isaac," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia
II
Amenemhet
Keminebu
I
Senusret
Nefru
I
Amenemhet
Amenhotep
III
Nubmastre
IV
Tuthmosis
Mutemwiya
Mitanni
King
Mitanni
Artatama
III
Sobekemsaf
Amenhotep
II
Akheperure
Tyo
Thutmose
III
Menkheperre
Ahmes
Nefertari
Akheperenre
Thutmose
Isis
Iset
I
Thutmose
Mutnefert
Ahmose-
Sipari
Inyotef
Sekenenre
Tao
~1140
Sir
Robert
Corbet
Nebpehtyre
Ahmose
Akhotpe
Sekenenre
Tao
Tetisheri
I
Nebiryerawet
Tjenna
Neferu
II
Sobekemsaf
1329
Lleucu
verch
Madog
I
Sobekemsaf
1690 - 1743
Samuel
Chase
53
53
1696 - 1756
Stephen
Chase
59
59
~1699
Hannah
Chase
1703
Joseph
Chase
1708
Benoni
Chase
Benoni, son of Moses Chase, was born April 5, 1708. In October, 1768, he was dismissed from the Sutton church to the Douglas church. He married, September 4, 1728, Mary Rogers, born June 23, 1708, died February 29, 1788. Children: Thomas, born April 3, 1732, married Mrs. Mary White; Rogers, June 20, 1734; Stephen, March 29, 1736; Moses, mentioned below; Mary, September 8, 1739, died October 8, 1745; Hannah, September 5, 1744; Elijah, February 18, 1747-48, died 1748; Mary, December 13, 1749; David, April 17, 1752.
1685 - 1768
Daniel
Chase
82
82
~1692
Hannah
Emery
1705
Ann
Adams
1715
Francis
Chase
9 JAN 1716/17
Amos
Chase
23 MAR 1719/20
Hannah
Chase
1724
Mary
Chase
1727
Anne
Chase
1728 - 1769
Samuel
Chase
41
41
Samuel Chase, (1741) associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and signer of the declaration of independence.
1728
Benjamin
Chase
1731
Mary
Chase
3 FEB 1734/35
Benjamin
Chase
1739
Betty
Chase
1740
John
Chase
1732 - 1813
Sarah
Stewart
80
80
1753
Mary
Chase
1755
Anna
Chase
1757
Robert
Chase
1759
Benjamin
Chase
1760
Sarah
Chase
1763
Samuel
Chase
1764
Elizabeth
Chase
1768
Hannah
Chase
1770
Amos
Chase
John
Emery
Mary
Sawyer
1676 - 1763
Abraham
Adams
86
86
1683 - >1739
Ann
Longfellow
56
56
1722
Henry
Adams
1706
William
Adams
1707
Mary
Adams
1712
Stephen
Adams
1713
Sarah
Adams
1715
Abraham
Adams
1717
Samuel
Adams
8 MAR 1717/18
Joseph
Adams
8 MAR 1717/18
Benjamin
Adams
1721
Nathan
Adams
1639 - 1714
Abraham
Adams
75
75
1652 - 1705
Mary
Pettingell
53
53
1728
Samuel
Stewart
1736
Anna
Stewart
11 MAR 1737/38
Mary
Stewart
10 MAR 1739/40
Elizabeth
Stewart
1743
Robert
Stewart
1745
Stephen
Stewart
1748
Abraham
Stewart
William
Longfellow
Anne
Sewall
1792 - 1794
Samuel
Chase
2
2
1685 - 1753
James
Chase
67
67
1461 - 1522
Sir
Thomas
Boteler
61
61
~1505
Margaret
Bould
~1503
Sir
Thomas
Ireland
~1528
Margaret
Ireland
~1524
Dorothy
Bould
~1519
John
Holcroft
~1550
Alice
Holcroft
Robert
Ireland
Margaret
Daniell
1422 - 1495
Sir
John IV
Savage
73
73
~1376 - 1450
Sir
John II
Savage
74
74
~1378
Matilda
Maud
Swynnerton
~1403 - >1450
Margaret
Savage
47
47
~1355 - 1396
Sir
Robert
Swynnerton
41
41
~1355
Elizabeth
Beke
~1335 - ~1381
Sir
Thomas
Swynnerton
46
46
~1329
Matilda
Maud
Holand
~1285 - 1328
Sir
Robert III
Holand
43
43
1290 - 1349
Maud
La
Zouche
59
59
1267 - 1314
Alan
La
Zouche
46
46
~1270
Eleanor
De
Segrave
~1242 - 1285
Sir
Roger La
Zouche
43
43
~1246 - 1276
Ela De
Longespee
30
30
~1216 - 23 JAN 1273/74
Stephen
De
Longespée
~1223 - 1276
Emmeline
De
Ridelisford
53
53
~1248
Ida De
Longespee
<1173 - 7 MAR 1224/25
William
De
Longespée
~1210 - 8 FEB 1249/50
William
De
Longespee
~1212 - 1269
Ida De
Longespée
57
57
~1178 - 1261
Ela
Fitzpatrick
83
83
1133 - 1189
Henry II
Curtmantle
Plantagenet
56
56
First king of the Plantagenet line 1154-1189. Acceded 19 Dec 1154, Crowned at Westminster Abbey, 19 Dec 1154. Tough and athletic, Henry II was strongly built, with a leonine head, freckled face, and red hair. . Henry II, King of England, was born in 1133 and died July 6, 1189, aged 57. On the death of his father he found himself Count of Anjou and heir to a great empire in France, strong and consolidated, to which his marriage with Eleanor, of Aquitiane, in May, 1152, further added Aquitiane. On the death of King Stephen, Henry was recognized as King of England, Dec. 19, 1154, at the age of 21. 1. William, the Conqueror, married Matilda of Flanders. 2. Henry I, King of England. 2. Adela married Stephen of 3. Maud m. Geoffrey Plantagenet. Blois. 4. Henry II, King of Eng., 1154-1189. 3. King Stephen, 1135-1154. King Henry II inherited a greater extent of territory than ever had been held by an English sovereign, which he still further increased by the conquest of Ireland and Brittany, and by his marriage with the richly portioned daughter and heiress of William V, Duke of Aquitiane and Count of Poictou. He was styled "Rex Angliae, Dux Normandie and Aquitiane." By his Princess, who died June 26, 1202, Henry had issue: William, Henry Richard (called Coeur de Lion), Geoffrey, John, Matilda, Eleanor and Joan. He was succeeded by Richard I, who in turn was succeded by his brother, Henry II (of England) (1133-1189), king of England (1154-1189), first monarch of the house of Anjou, or Plantagenet. Born in Le Mans, France, Henry became Duke of Normandy in 1151. He claimed the English kingship through his mother, Matilda. She had been designated the heiress of Henry I but had been deprived of the succession by her cousin, Stephen of Blois. In 1153 Henry defeated Stephen's armies and compelled the king to choose him as his successor; on Stephen's death in 1154 Henry became king. In 1164 Henry became involved in a quarrel with Thomas à Becket, archbishop of Canterbury, over Henry's efforts to subject the church to his courts. In 1170 Becket was murdered by four of Henry's knights. Widespread indignation over the murder forced the king to recognize Becket as a martyr. Henry instituted important judicial reforms, establishing a centralized system of justice. He began the process of replacing the old trial by ordeal with modern court procedures. He was succeeded by his son Richard I, called Richard the Lion-Hearted. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1124
Guillaume
XI "le Hardi"
D'Aquitaine
1158 - 1186
Geoffrey
Plantagenet
27
27
28 FEB 1153/54 - 1183
Henry IV
'The Young'
Plantagenet
Duke of Normandy
1157 - 1199
Richard
I
'Lionheart'
41
41
1222 - 1262
Richard
De
Clare
39
39
8th Earl of Clare, Herford and Gloucester
~1120
Roger
Bigod
Mary
Bigod
~1428
Eleanor
Savage
~1425
Margaret
Savage
~1441
Margery
Savage
~1427
Jane
Savage
~1430
Elizabeth
Savage
~1432
Helein
Savage
~1434
Ann
Savage
<1469
Margaret
Savage
~1443
Katherine
Savage
~1393
William
Arnold
Savage
~1394
George
Savage
~1396
Roger
Savage
~1385
Maud
Savage
~1398
Alice
Savage
~1402
Blanche
Savage
~1404
Beatrice
Savage
~1406
Ann
Savage
~1408
Parnella
Savage
~1416
Margery
Savage
~1422
Ellen
Savage
~1375
Thomas
Swynnerton
~1329 - >1369
Sir
Nicholas
Beke
40
40
~1255 - 8 FEB 1297/98
Sir Roger
De
Swynnerton
ROGER (Sir), knt. who, in the 34 EDWARD I. had a charter for freewarren in all his demesne lands in his manor of Swinnerton, as also for keeping a market there on Wednesday (*) Erdeswick, in his Survey of Staffordshire, says that 20 Conquerour, Comes Alanus held Swinnerton of Robert de Stafford, and that this Alain is ancestor of the Swinnertons. Holinshed, in his Chronicle, states that whilst the Conqueror held siege before York, he advanced at the request of his Queen Maud, his nephew Alane, Earl of Britain, with the gift of all those lands that some time belonged to Earl Edwine, and calls him a man of stout stomach, and one that would defend what was given him. In Tailleur's Chronicle of Normandie in the catalogue of the noblemen that came into England with the Conqueror, this Alain is called Alain Fergant, Earl of Britaine. A day every week, and a fair yearly upon the festival of our Lady's assumption; and in the 4 EDWARD II. He was in the wars in Scotland. In 11EDWARD II. He was governor of the town of Stafford, and in three years after of the strong castle of Hardelagh, in Wales. In the 15th of the same reign he had the custody of Eccleshall Castle (during the vacancy of the bishoprick of Lichfield and Coventry, whereunto it belonged), and was in some years after constituted constable of the Tower of London. In the 2 EDWARD III. being then a banneret, he had an assignation out of the Exchequer of œ145. 13s. 8d. as well for his wages of war in that expedition made into Scotland as for his services in attending Queen ISABEL. In the 9 EDWARD III. he was again in the Scottish wars, and in two years subsequently had summons to parliament among the barons of the realm. He m. Johanna, daughter of Sir Robert de Hastange, and dying in 1338, left two sons, ROGER, his heir, and Robert, aged fifteen at the death of his father.
~1255 - >1299
Joanna
Hastang
44
44
~1229
Robert
Hastang
~1231
Joane
Curli
~1225 - ~1276
Stephen
De
Swynnerton
51
51
~1230
Joan
De
Waure
~1204
Roger
De
Waure
~1200 - <1251
John
De
Swynnerton
51
51
~1200 - <1257
Margery
Swynnerton
57
57
~1172 - 20 JAN 1223/24
Robert
Swynnerton
~1170
Mabel
~1202
Robert
Swynnerton
~1390
Ellen
Massey
~1110
Robert
Swynnerton
~1080
Robert
Swynnerton
~1050
Aslyn
Swynnerton
~1170 - ~1226
John
De
Swynnerton
56
56
~1310
Elizabeth
Holand
~1308
Margery
Holand
~1312
Robert
Holand
1271 - 1309
Joane
de
Fiennes
38
38
~1316
Otho
Holand
~1318
John
Holand
~1320
Alan
Holand
~1325
Margaret
Mary
Holand
~1326
Jane
Holand
~1327
Alianore
Holand
~1328
Isabella
Holand
~1322
Elizabeth
Holand
1288
Ela La
Zouche
~1296
Mary
La
Zouche
~1298
Elizabeth
La
Zouche
1238 - 1295
Sir Nicholas
De Segrave
57
57
Nicholas de Segrave, who in 43rd of Henry III attended that monarch into France, but soon after espoused the cause of the Barons, and became one of their most active leaders. In 47th of Henry III, 1263, he was amongst those who appeared openly in arms and fortified Northampton, for which reason his lands were seized by the crown. Upon the subsequent fall of Northampton to the royalists, Nicholas fled to London, where the citizens, having raised a large army for the barons, made him their General. At the head of this force, he marched with Gilbert de Clare and Henry de Hastings to Rochester, and thence to Lewes, at which place the celebrated battle so disastrous to the King commenced, by a charge made by Segrave at the head of the Londoners; in this he was worsted by Prince Edward, who, flushed with success, pursued his advantage too far and thus mainly contributed to the defeat which the royal cause sustained. The King, Edward and their chief adherents became prisoners to the rebels, who followed up their triumph by immediately summoning a Parliament in the King's name, to which Nicholas Segrave was summoned as Baron Segrave Dec. 25, 1264. But, the tide soon ebbing, he was among the defeated at Evesham, where he was wounded and made prisoner. He received full pardon and in four years attended Prince Edward to the Holy Land, and when that Prince ascended the throne as Edward I, he appears to have enjoyed a large share of royal favour. He was later in the Scottish and Welsh wars and had a second summons to Parliament June 24, 1295. He married Maud de Lucy, and had John, Nicholas, Geoffrey, Peter, Gilbert, Annabel and 6. Eleanor Segrave married Alan le Zouch. (See Zouch line in report in descent from Saire de Quincey.)
~1245 - 1337
Maud
De
Lucy
92
92
~1256 - 1325
John
De
Segrave
69
69
~1258
Nicholas
De
Segrave
~1260
Henry
De
Segrave
~1262
Stephen
De
Segrave
1156 - 1189
Matilda
Plantagenet
33
33
1156 - 1191
Berengaria
Jimenez
35
35
1165 - 1199
Joana
Plantagenet
33
33
1099 - 1137
Guillaume
X
38
38
~1103 - MAR 1129/30
Eläeonore
De
Chatellerault
~1203 - 1270
Sir Alan
II La
Zouche
67
67
~1222 - 1296
Ela De
Quincey
74
74
~1242
Helene
La
Zouche
~1244 - 1279
Eudo
la
Zouche
35
35
~1246
William
La
Zouche
~1248
Alan III
La
Zouche
~1250
Oliver
La
Zouche
~1252
Henry
La
Zouche
~1253
Alice
La
Zouche
~1251
Margaret
Mary La
Zouche
1074
William
De
Mauduit
William was Chamberlain to Henry I, and was granted by Henry I the Barony of Hameslape, together with the office of Exchequer to the King, and all lands belonging thereto in Normandy and England, particularly the Castle and Honour of Porchester. He married Maud de Mameslape, whose family name originated from a parish on the border of Buckinghamshire, extending to Northampton, later called Hameslape. There was a William de Hameslape on the Humdred rolls of County Bucks, 1273 A. D. Maud's father Michael de Hameslape is addressed by King Henry I, in a charter made at Rockingham about the year 1101 in favor of the See of Lincoln. He is also mentioned as once lord of the fief which Henry I bestowed on William Malduit; but Bank's Dormant and Extinct Baronetcies says, "Mauduit marrying Maude, daughter of Michael de Hameslape, acquired with her the barony of Hameslape in County Buckingham," she being the sole daughter and heir. There seems to be no earlier history of the Hameslape family than the mention of the charter in 1101.
~1196 - 1245
Helen
of
Galloway
49
49
1098
William
De
Mauduit
William was Chamberlain to Henry II.
1162 - 1224
Isabel
Basset
62
62
~1146
Eva
MacDonal
~1174 - ~1212
Helen
De
L'Isle
38
38
~1668 - 1732
Elizabeth
Cash
64
64
~1045 - >1084
Lord of
Allerdale
Maldred
39
39
~1050
Edith
Aglithia
Morcarson
~1125 - 1174
Lord of
Galloway
Uchtred
49
49
~1119
Gunnild
of
Dunbar
A descendant of Ethelred II, King of England, died 1016.
~1081
Fergus
fitz
Maldred
~1128 - ~1157
Matilda
29
29
1130
Margery
De
Bohun
~1030
Henry
De
Bohun
1180
Maud
De
Mameslape
1098
Henry
D'
Oyly
1053
Hawyse
1048
William
De
Mauduit
William de Mauduit or Malduith was living 1086, the year the survey was recorded in the Domesday Book, and at that time possessed seven lordships in Southampton. He also is styled by Dugdale in his "Baronage" as Chamberlain to Henry I. The two baronial houses of Mauduit were Mauduit of Hanslape, County Bucks, hereditary Chamberlains of the Exchequer; and Mauduit of Warminster, County Wilts, and of Castle Holgate, County Salop, sometimes Chamberlains Royal. These were closely related by intermarriages.
~1186
Arabella
De
Quincy
~1160 - 1229
Henry
de
Newburgh
69
69
Henry de Newburgh, 5th Earl of Warwick, a minor at his father's decease, committed to the guardianship of Thomas Basset, of Hedendon, who accordingly had livery of his lands, with the castle of Warwick. His lordship attained majority in the 15th King John [1214] and, although that monarch had, during his minority, taken away his inheritance of Gower, in Wales, and bestowed it upon William de Braose, his lordship, nevertheless, adhered to the royal cause in all the subsequent conflicts between the crown and the barons in the reigns of King John and his son Henry III. His lordship m. 1st, Margery, elder dau. and co-heir of Henry d'Oyly, of Hook Norton, co. Oxford, by whom he had issue, Thomas, his successor, and Margery, m. 1st to John Mareschal, and 2ndly, to John de Plessetis, both of whom, in her right, assumed the Earldom of Warwick. The earl m. 2ndly, Philippa, one of the three daus. and heirs of his guardian, Thomas Basset, of Hedendon, but had no issue. This countess, outliving his lordship, paid 100 marks to King Henry III that she might no be compelled to marry again, but that she might select her own husband, provided he were a loyal subject. She afterwards m. Richard Siward, a turbulent person, but of a martial disposition from his youth, who took an active part with the barons. From this boisterous soldier her ladyship was, however, eventually divorced. Henry, 5th Earl of Warwick, was s. at his decease in 1229, by his son, Thomas de Newburgh, 6th Earl of Warwick. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 399-400, Newburgh, Earls of Warwick] ---------- Henry de Beaumont was first styled earl in June 1213, and died in Oct. 1229. His son, Thomas, had only a brief career, for he was recognized as earl in 1233 and died in June 1242, leaving his sister Margaret (d. 1263) as his heiress. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 23, p. 375, EARLS OF WARWICK]
1153
Michael
De
Hameslape
~1127 - BEF MAR 1196/97
Robert
de
Quincy
1242
Sarah
De
Furnival
1123
Richard
De
Bohun
1258
Eleanor
De
Furnival
~1100 - ~1157
Saher
I De
Quincey
57
57
~1093 - 1140
Maud
De Saint
Liz
47
47
~1125
Saher
II De
Quincey
~1138
Roger
De
Quincey
~1060 - 1115
Simon
de St.
Liz
55
55
Earl of Northampton and Huntington
1072 - 23 APR 113
Matilda
Maud De
Huntington
~1092
Waltheof
De Saint
Liz
~1096 - 1153
Simon II
De Saint
Liz
57
57
~1046 - 1076
II
Waltheof
30
30
1054 - >1086
Judith
De
Lens
32
32
1106
Simon
De
Toeni
~1020 - 1054
Count
of Lens
Lambert
34
34
~0991
Kilvert
de
Lumley
~1008 - 1035
Robert
II "the
Magnificent"
27
27
Robert contributed to the restoration of Henry King of France tohis throne, and received from the gratitude of that monarch, the Vexin, asan additional to his patrimonial domains. In the 8th year of his reign,curiosity or devotion induced him to undertake a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, where the fatigues of the journey and the heat of the climate so impaired his consitution he died on his way home.
1003 - ~1050
Herleva
Arlette De
Falaise
47
47
1024 - 1087
William
'The
Conqueror'
62
62
William I (of England), Duke of Normandy, King of England William I (of England), called The Conqueror (1027-1087), first Norman king of England (1066-1087), who has been called one of the first modern kings and is generally regarded as one of the outstanding figures in western European history. Born in Falaise, France, William was the illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy. Upon Robert's death, the Norman nobles accepted William as his successor. During a visit in 1051 to his childless cousin, Edward the Confessor, king of England, William is said to have obtained Edward's agreement that he should succeed to the English throne. When King Edward died, however, the witenagemot (royal council) elected Harold, earl of Wessex, as king. William secured the sanction of Pope Alexander II for a Norman invasion of England. The duke and his army landed at Pevensey on September 28, 1066. On October 14, the Normans defeated the English forces at the Battle of Hastings, in which Harold was slain. William proceeded to London and was crowned king of England in Westminster Abbey. William met opposition with strong measures. By 1070 the Norman conquest of England was complete. William invaded Scotland in 1072 and forced the Scottish king Malcolm III MacDuncan to pay him homage. During the succeeding years the Conqueror crushed insurrections among his Norman followers. One feature of William's reign as king was his reorganization of the English feudal and administrative systems. In 1087, during a campaign against King Philip I of France, William's horse fell in the vicinity of Mantes, fatally injuring him. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1004 - 1049
I
Eustache
45
45
~0984
Mahaut
De
Louvain
~1030
II
Eustache
~1020 - 1055
Siward
Bjornsson
35
35
~1031
Ælflaed
Elfleda of
Bernicia
~1050
Osbeorne
of
Northumbria
~1048
Sybil
of
Northumbria
~0994 - ~1039
Ealdorman
of Bernicia
Ældred
45
45
~1021 - 1049
Bjorn
Ulfiusson
28
28
~0993 - 1027
Ulf
Thorgilsson
34
34
~1221 - 1265
Princess of
Kalisch and Great
Poland Salomea
44
44
~1047
Asmund
Bjornsson
~1016
Niels
Ulfiusson
~1226 - 1273
I
Konrad
47
47
~1020
Githa
Ulfsdatter
~1023
Asbjorn
Ulfiusson
~1030
Odo
Ulfsdatter
~0960 - 2 FEB 1013/14
Svend
I 'Fork
Beard'
Sweyn I, in Danish, Svend I, called Sweyn Forkbeard (960?-1014), king of Denmark (985?-1014). He made an expedition against England in 994 and extorted a large amount of tribute money. Following a massacre of Danes in England in 1002, he conducted a further series of raids and in 1013 led an invasion with the object of effecting a permanent conquest. The fall of London and the flight of the English king Ethelred II to Normandy early in 1014 made Sweyn master of the country. After his death the throne of England eventually passed (1016) to his son Canute II. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0888
Gunhild
Halfdansdatter
~0922 - 25 MAY 992
I
Mieszko
~0931 - 0977
Princess
of Bohemia
Dbubravka
46
46
~0967
Boleslaw I
"Chrobny"
"the Brave"
~0972
Prince of
Poland
Wladiwoj
~0960
Earl of
Gautland
Wolf
~0935
Princess of
the Ostmark
Oda
~0982
Prince of
Poland
Meszko
~0984
Prince of
Poland
Swietopelk
~0986
Prince of
Poland
Lambert
~0900
I
Boleslav
~0901
Bozena
Biagota
~0920
II
Boleslav
~0924
Mladbe
Maria
28 SEP 929
Prince of
Bohemia
Stachkvas
~0877 - 13 FEB 920/21
I
Vratislav
~0881
Drahombira
ze
Stodor
~0899
I
Vbaclav
~0902
Prince of
Bohemia
Spitihnev
~0904
Princess
of Bohemia
Pribislava
~0842 - ~0894
I
Borijov
52
52
~0853 - 16 SEP 921
Lidmila
ze
Psova
~0875
I
Spytihniv
~0827
Zupan
of Psov
Slavibor
~0820 - 0870
Duke of
Bohemia
Hostivbit
50
50
~0824
Duchess
of Bohemia
Miloslava
~0800 - 0873
Duke of
Bohemia
Neklan
73
73
~0795
Duchess
of Bohemia
Ponislava
~0822
Prince of
Bohemia
Mstivoj
~0780 - 0851
Duke of
Bohemia
Kresomysl
71
71
~0782
Duchess
of Bohemia
Libuse
~0758 - 0833
Duke of
Bohemia
Unislav
75
75
~0737
Duke of
Bohemia
Vojen
~0738
Duchess
of Bohemia
Blanka
~0760
I
Vratislav
~0716 - 0804
Duke of
Bohemia
Mnbata
88
88
~0711
Duchess
of Bohemia
Strezislava
~0718 - 0783
Duke of
Bohemia
Nezamysl
65
65
~0720
Duchess
of Bohemia
Hruba
~0720
Lidomira
of
Bohemia
~0694 - 0745
Duke of
Bohemia
Premysl
51
51
~0700
Duchess
of Bohemia
Libuse
~0667
Krok
(Cracus)
~0696
Duchess
of Bohemia
Kasa
~0698
Duchess
of Bohemia
Tetka
Czechus
of
Bohemia
~0892 - <0964
Prince of
Poland
Ziemomysl
72
72
~0940 - 0997
Adelajda
"The
White"
57
57
~0928
Prince of
Poland
Czcibor
~0933
Prince of
Poland
Prokuj
~0865 - 0921
IV
Leszek
56
56
~0835 - 0892
Prince of
Poland
Ziemowit
57
57
Duke of
Poland
Chosciszko
~0978
Gyda
Svendsdatter
~0980
Thyre
Svendsdotter
~0973
Queen of
Denmark
Gunhild
~0995
Canute
II 'The
Great'
~0997
Harald
II
Svendsson
~0910 - 1 NOV 987
Harald II
Blåtann
Gormsson
~0936
Aelips
D'Anjou
~0957
Erik
(Hring)
~0873
Thora
~0930
Hakon
Haraldsson
~0925
Saum-
Aesa
~0925
Cyrid
Olafsdatter
~0947 - 1000
Thyra
Haraldsdatter
53
53
~0949
Gunhild
Haraldsdatter
~1292 - <1391
John
Ireland
99
99
~0945
Avelina
Haraldsdatter
~0840 - 0931
Gorm
"The Old"
Haroldsson
91
91
Gorm, the Old, so called from the length of his reign. He married the beautiful Thyra Dannebod (Ornament of Denmark), daughter of Harold Klak. They had twin sons, Knud and Harold, rivals in glory. Knud was the favorite of his father, and had been absent sometime, and the King fearing his death had vowed to kill the one that brought the news of his death. Finally the notice of his death was given and the Queen, not risking to tell it to the King, made all the courtiers observe an unusual silence at the table and had the apartment covered with black. Guessing the reason, Gorm cried out: "Surely Knud, my dear son, is dead as all Denmark is mourning." "Thou sayest so, not I." answered the Queen; upon which the King sickened with grief and died in a good old age, in 941
~0844 - ~0935
Thyra
of
Jutland
91
91
~0904
Gunhild
Gormsdatter
~0906
Knud
"Dunaast"
Gormsson
~0914
Val-
Toke
Gormsson
~0795 - ~0852
Harold
Klack
57
57
~0755 - 0837
Hemming
of
Jutland
82
82
~0715 - 0800
Halfdan
Sigfrid of
Jutland
85
85
~0755 - 0770
Harold
Hilditonn
15
15
Margrave
of Frisia
Halfdan
~1084 - 1153
David I
'the
Saint'
69
69
David I (1084-1153), king of Scotland (1124-53), son of Malcolm III. When his oldest brother, King Edgar, died, he left the Scottish domains north of the Forth of Clyde to another brother, who became King Alexander I, while David inherited southern Scotland with the title of earl of Cumbria. Six years later, David married the daughter of the earl of Northumbria and thereby became earl of Huntingdon and a vassal of the English crown. In 1124 King Alexander died, and David became king of Scotland. From 1136 to 1138, he tried unsuccessfully to help his niece Matilda secure the English throne. Thereafter David devoted himself to ruling Scotland. He replaced the traditional Scottish tribal organization with a feudal one modeled after that of Norman England and was noted for the castles he built and the monasteries he founded. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0755
Rurik
Sligeband
~0715
King of
Lethra
Hroerekr
~0655
Harald
Hraereksson
~0625
Hraerek
Halfdansson
~0633
Aud
Ivarsdatter
~0612 - 0647
Ivar
"Vidfame"
Halfdansson
35
35
~0614
Gauthild
Gyrithe
Alfsdatter
~0580
Alf
Olafsson
~0590 - ~0650
Halfdan
Haraldsson
60
60
~0594
Moalda
"Digri"
Kinriksdatter
~0568
Harald
Valdarsson
~0572
Hildur "Hildis"
"Hevor"
Heidreksdatter
~0592
Gutrud
Haraldsson
~0552
Hilderic
"Ulfhamr"
Angantyrsson
~0556
Amfleda
"The
Younger"
~0574
Hjorvard
Heidreksson
~0532
Angantyr
Heidreksson
~0512
Heidrek
Hofundsson
~0512
Helga
Haraldsdatter
~0536
Hervor
Heidreksdatter
~0516
Sifka
Humlisdatter
~0535
Hlodr
Heidreksson
~0488
Hofund
Gudmundsson
~0492
Hervor
Angantyrsdatter
~0516
Angantyr
Hofundsson
~0472
Angantyr
Arngrimsson
~0474
Svofu
Bjartmarsdatter
~0452
Arngrim
"Berserkur"
Grimsson
~0454
Eyfuru
Svaflamassatter
~0428
Grim
Hergrimsson
~0432
Bauggerd
Starksdatter
~0408
Stark
"Aludregn"
Alfhild
Finnalfsdatter
~0410
Hergrim
Arngrimsson
~0380
Arngrim
~0452
Arngrim
"Berserkur
Grimsson
~0547
Valdar
Hroarsson
~0530
Princess of
Northumberland
Ogne
Harold
I
Hroarsson
~0549
Agnar
Hroarsson
~0501
King of
Northumberland
Norbril
~0810
Harold
Parcus
Ælgiva
Sida
~0927
Mahon of
the Dál
gCais
~0911
Bebinn
of West
Connaught
Bjorne
I of
Upsala
~0879
King of
Dublin
Ivarr
Thora
Alaf
~0800
Sigurd
Fojnislana
~0851 - 0891
Murrough
40
40
~0881 - 0944
Lord of West
Connaught
Areadh
63
63
Earl of
Alfhein
Ganda
Earl of
Alfhein
Alfgeir
~0821
Maonach
D. 0794
Rayner
Lodbrok
Aslanga
Sigurd
Ring
~1114 - 1152
Henry
Canmore
38
38
~1113
Prince of
Scotland
Malcolm
~1115
Princess of
Scotland
Clarice
~1117
Hodierna
of
Scotland
1018 - 1080
Landry
de
Senlis
62
62
Ermengarde
~0988 - 1050
Foulques
de
Senlis
62
62
~0958 - ~0995
Rothold
de
Senlis
37
37
~1030
Drogo
De
Montecute
~1078
Rollo
Filbert de
Falaise
Rollo, or Filbert, Chamberlain to Robert, Duke of Normandy, had gift of the castle and honor of Croy, in Pickardy, from whence his posterity assumed this surname, which was afterwards changed from Croy to Grey. They had a daughter Heruela, or Herlotta, mother of William, the Conqueror. Arms for Grey of Codnor and Rotherfield: Barry of six, argent and azure. Occupation: Tanner & Ferrier
~1080
Doda
Duxia
~0998
Beatrice
de
Falaise
1215 - 1265
Ralph
Bassett
50
50
~1028
Ida De
Boulogne
0950 - 1015
I
Lambert
65
65
~0975 - >1017
Duchess
of Brabant
Gerberga
42
42
~0990 - 1038
Henry
I de
Louvaine
48
48
~1000
Adelaide
Langrade
De
Louvain
~0885 - 0944
Adalbert
De
Metz
59
59
~0945 - >0992
Bonne
Adelaide de
Vermandois
47
47
~0932
I
Robert
~0973
Orthon
of lower
Lorraine
~0979
Eudes of
Lower
Lorraine
~0953
Agnaes
de
Vermandois
~0991
Louis
de
Lorraine
~0991
Charles
de
Lorraine
~0911
Count of
Vermandois
Henri
~0955
I
Etienne
10 SEP 921 - 10 SEP 954
Louis
IV
"d'Outremer"
Louis D'Outremer", (Louis from Overseas), also called Louis IV "Transmarinus" . During father Charles III "the Simple"'s struggle with Hugh the Great, Ogive (Eadgifu) daughter of Saxon Kind Edward took Louis to England. Recalled to France in 936, crowned June 19 at Laon. Louis IV, in German, Ludwig IV, called The Bavarian (1287?-1347), Holy Roman emperor (1314-47) and king of Germany (1314-47), son of Louis II, duke of Bavaria (1228-1294). Louis IV warred with Frederick III, called the Fair, a rival candidate for the imperial crown, from 1314 to 1322, and then until 1326 with Leopold I, Frederick's brother, also a rival emperor. Pope John XXII refused to crown Louis IV and excommunicated him in 1324. Louis invaded Italy in 1327, occupied Rome from 1327 to 1330, and secured his coronation in 1328 from Nicholas V, whom he proclaimed pope in 1328. Nicholas abdicated as antipope in 1330. During the series of armed conflicts that began in 1337 between England and France, called the Hundred Years' War, Louis at first sided with England but later aided France. In 1338 the electoral princes of the Holy Roman Empire declared that emperors no longer needed papal confirmation of their election. He was succeeded as Holy Roman emperor by Charles IV of the house of Luxembourg. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0943 - 27 JAN 979/80
Princess
of France
Matilda
0941
King of
France
Lothair
~0944
Princess
of France
Hildegarde
~0945
Prince of
France
Carloman
~0948
Prince of
France
Louis
~0953
Prince of
France
Henri
~0952
Princess
of France
Alberade
~0879
Concubine
~0898
Duchess of
Normandy
Gisele
~0865
Concubine
~0917
Amulph
de
France
~0901
Concubine
~0923
Drogo
de
France
~0903
Concubine
0925
Bishop
of Laon
Roricon
~0887
Concubine
~0927
Alpais
de
France
~0887
Queen of
France
Frebederune
~0908
Princess
of France
Ementrude
~0910
Princess
of France
Frebederune
~0913
Princess
of France
Gisele
~0914
Princess
of France
Hildegarde
~0916
Princess
of France
Rotrude
0920 - 0973
III
Regnier
53
53
~0920 - 0961
Adele
of
Louvain
41
41
~1112
Agnes
de
Beaugency
~0890
daughter
of
Ricfried
~0860 - 0950
Count in
the Betuwe
Ricfried
90
90
~0860
Hersinde
~1000
Rosetta
(Rosella)
de Saint Pol
~0942 - 0972
Gui "White
Beard" De
Talvas
30
30
~0959
Mahaud
(Matilda) de
Boulogne
~0960
Eustache
de
Boulogne
~0922 - 0972
Ernicule
De
Talvas
50
50
~0944
Maud
de
Boulogne
~0946
Ernicule
le
Brun
~0730
Nithard
Carolingian
1098
Reginald
de
Argenteyn
~0690
Hieronymus
Carolingian
1103
Lora
de
Montfort
1072
Robert
de
Montfort
~0996 - 1081
Richard
de
Beauffoe
85
85
~0970
Henri
de
Beaumont
Ealdgyth
of
Bernicia
Æthelthryth
of
Bernicia
~0989 - 1016
Uthrea
Ughtred
27
27
~0993
Countess of
Northumbria
Ecgfrida
~0992
Eadulf
of
Bernicia
1009 - 1045
Maldred
of
Scotland
36
36
Lord of Allerdale and Carlisle Regent of Strathclyde 1034
~1016
Ealdgyth
Edith of
Northumberland
~0968 - 1016
Æthelred
II 'The
Unready'
48
48
Ethelred II, called The Unready (968?-1016), Anglo-Saxon king of England (978-1016), son of King Edgar and half brother of Edward the Martyr. His reign was marked by bitter military struggles. After negotiating a treaty with Richard II, duke of Normandy (reigned about 996-1026), Ethelred married Richard's sister Emma. This marriage provided the basis for the subsequent Norman claim to the English throne. Although Ethelred paid tribute to the plundering Danes, Sweyn I (the Forkbeard), king of Denmark, invaded England in 1013 and proclaimed himself king. In 1014 Ethelred fled to Normandy but returned a few months later upon Sweyn's death. Sweyn's son and successor, Canute II, invaded the country a year later and, following Ethelred's death, became king of England. Ethelred's sobriquet, "The Unready," is a corruption of the Old English unraed, "bad counsel," which is a reference to his misfortunes. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0968 - 1003
Ælflaed
(Elfreda)
35
35
~0943 - 1018
Bishop of
Durham
Ealdhun
75
75
~0960 - 1006
I
Waltheof
46
46
~0960
Elfeda
~0930 - 0965
Maldred
Uswulf
35
35
~0900 - >0936
Lord of
Bamborough
Ealdred
36
36
~0870 - ~0918
Lord of
Bamborough
Eadwulf
48
48
~0940 - 0985
Torgil
"Sparkalägg"
Styrbjörnsson
45
45
Ruler of Skåne
~0941
Sigrid
~0995
Eilif
Thorgilsson
~0997
Gytha
Sprakalegg
Thorgilsdatter
~0930 - 0984
Styrbjorn
"the Strong"
Olafsson
54
54
~0885 - ~0985
Olaf
"Mitkg"
Bjornsson
100
100
~0885
Ingeberg
Thrandsdatter
Earl of
Sula
Thrando
~0867 - ~0950
Bjorn
"the Old"
Eriksson
83
83
~0867
Ingeborg
Thrandsdotter
~0935 - 0995
Eric VI '
Victorious'
Bjornsson
60
60
Thrand
~0849 - 0906
Eric
Edmundsson
57
57
King of Sweden and Goten
~0832
Edmund
I
Eriksson
Lodbrok
Ragnar
Lodbrok
~0814
Erik III
Refilsson
~0833
Bjorn
Eriksson
~0796
Refill
Bjornsson
~0777
Bjorn
"Ironside"
Ragnarsson
~0798
Eric
Bjornsson
~0812
Asleik
Bjornsson
~0765 - 0845
Ragnar
"Lodbrok"
Sigurdsson
80
80
~0765
Aslaung
Sigurdsdatter
~0779
Sugurd
"Snake-Eye"
Ragnarsson
~0787
Ivar 'the
Boneless'
Ragnarsson
~0790
Hvitserk
Ragnarsson
~0791
Rognvald
Ragnarsson
~0765
Thora
Herraudsdatter
~0782
Eric
Ragnarsson
~0784
Agnar
Ragnarsson
~0786
Olof
Ragnarsson
~0794
Ingvar
Ragnarsson
~0796
Ubbi
Ragnarsson
~0735
Sigurd
"Falnisbana"
Sigmundsson
~0738
Brynhild
Budlasdatter
~0680
Budli
Leinfnisson
~0734
Oddrunn
Budlasdatter
~0736
Bekkhild
Budlasdatter
~0740
Atli
Budlasson
~0625
Lienfni
Attipsson
~0670
Atli
Leinfnisson
~0675
Sorli
Leinfnisson
~0565
Attip
Budlasson
~0502
Budi
Halfdansson
~0450
Halfdan
"The Old"
Hringsson
~0455
Almveigu
Eymundsdatter
~0480
Skelfi
Halfdansson
~0486
Audi
Halfdansson
~0498
Lodi
Halfdansson
~0492
Bragi
Halfdansson
~0494
Dag
Halfdansson
~0496
Siggari
Halfdansson
~0499
Nefli
Halfdansson
~0500
Hildi
Halfdansson
~0430
King in
Holmgard
Eymund
~0406
Hring
Raumsson
~0370
Raum
"the Old"
Norsson
~0371
Hildur
Gudraudsdatter
~0392
Finnalf
Raumsson
~0395
Goodbrand
Raumsson
~0400
Gudraud
Raumsson
~0402
Haud
Raumsson
~0404
Jotunbjorn
Raumsson
~0405
Hadding
Raumsson
~0345
Norr
Thorasson
~0385
Thrand
Norsson
~0355
Goe
Thorrasson
~0705
Sigmund
Volsungsson
~0710
Hjordis
Eylimasdatter
~0707
Signy
Volsungsdatter
~0735
Sinfjolti
Sigmundsson
~0731
Helgi
Sigmundsson
~0733
Hamund
Sigmundsson
~0688
Eylimi
Elina
Hjalmthersson
~0715
Gripri
Eylimasson
~0638
Hiamther
Egdirsson
~0598
Egdir
Skulasson
~0548
Skuli
Lofdasson
0680
Volsung
Rersson
~0688
Ljod
Hrimnirsdatter
~0707
Signey
Volsungsdatter
~0664
Hrimnir
"the
Giant"
~0655
Rer
Sigarsson
~0625
Sigar
Odinsson
~0600
Odin
~0730
Sigurd
"Ring"
Randversson
~0730
Alfhid
Gandolfsdatter
~0710
Gandolf
Alfgeirsson
~0388
King in
Vingulmork
Alfgeir
~0670
Randver
Radbartsson
~0638
King of
Garderige
Radbart
~1080
Robert
fitz
Richard
~1132
Maud
Fitz
Robert
~1135 - 1198
Walter
Fitzrobert
De Clare
63
63
~1211
Ela De
Longespée
~1134
Henry
De
Clifford
~1150 - 1196
William
fitz
Patrick
46
46
1158 - 1232
Alianore
de
Vitres
74
74
1132 - 1173
Robert
II de
Vitre'
41
41
1136 - 1208
Emma
de
Dinham
72
72
1170
Alain
de
Vitres
~1027
Viscount
de Dinan
Bertrand
~1092
Alianor
de
Penthievre
1121
Oliver
IV de
Dinham
Gunnor
1125
Alan
de
Dinham
~1055 - 1136
Lord of
Richmond
Stephen
81
81
~1064 - ~1136
Countess of
Guincamp
Hawise
72
72
1102
Olive
de
Penthievre
~1068
Emma
de
Lacy
1116 - 1165
Alan III
'The
Black'
49
49
~1101
Count of
Brittany
Henri
~1103
Theophania
of
Brittany
~1106
Geoffrey
II
Botererl
0999 - 7 JAN 1078/79
Count of
Penthievre &
Brittany Eudes
~1024
Agnes
de
Cornouaille
~1045
Geoffrey
I
Botererl
~1047
Count of
Brittany
Brian
~1048
Alan I
Rufus
~1049
Alan II
Niger
~1040
William
of
Brittany
~1042
Robert
of
Brittany
~1044
Richard
of
Brittany
~1040 - ~1104
Bardolf
FitzEudon
64
64
1003 - 1058
Alain
Canhiart
55
55
~1004
Judith
of
Nantes
1010
V Hoel
0977 - 1026
Count de
Cornouaille
Benedict
49
49
~0977
Countess
de Porhoet
Guinodeon
~0960 - 1037
Count of
Nantes
Judicael
77
77
~0970
Melisende
Du
Maine
~1018 - 1072
Hawise
de
Brittany
54
54
~1275 - <1344
Elizabeth
la
Zouche
69
69
~0940
I Hoel
~0910 - 0952
Alain II
"Barbetorte"
42
42
Judith
~0880 - 0930
Count of
Poher
Matuedoi
50
50
de
Bretagne
Alan
de
Bretagne
Droguen
~0850 - >0877
Count of
Vannes
Pasquitan
27
27
0940
Budig
Castilin
0910
Budig
Berhuc
0890
Diles
Heiguer
Chebre
0890
Alava
de
Cornouaille
~0855
Louvenam
~0789
Count de
Cornouaille
Judael
~0775 - ~0790
Arant
ap
Constantine
15
15
0750
Constantine
ap
Judon
Barlic
0790
Justin
ap
Constantine
0710
Judon
ap
Concar
0660
Concar
Cheronnog
ap Urbien
0642 - 0700
King of
Dumnonia
Urbien
58
58
0615 - 0658
King of
Domnonee
St. Judicael
43
43
Morone
0580 - 0620
Judhael
Hoel
40
40
0600
Fratelle
verch
Tewdwr
0585 - 0650
King of
Dumnonia
Tewdwr
65
65
0560 - 0620
King of
Dumnonia
Peredur
60
60
0540 - 0600
King of
Dumnonia
Cador
60
60
Duke of Cornubia & King of Dumnonia.
0520 - 0550
King of
Dumnonia
Geraint
30
30
~0480 - 0550
King of
Dumnonia
Erbin
70
70
~0440 - 0546
Constantine
Corneu
106
106
~0210
St.
Clydog ap
Gwynnar
~0345 - 0480
Gwrfawr
Morfawr
ap Gadeon
135
135
~0380
Ffrwdwr
ap
Gwrwawr
~0340 - 0450
Gadeon
ap Cynon
(Conan)
110
110
~0375
Ystradwel
verch
Gadeon
~0335 - ~0420
Conan "The
Barbarian"
Meriadoc
85
85
Conan was the son of Octavius the Old's brother, Gerontius, (or Octavius himself according to the Dream of Macsen Wledig). He had expected to inherit his uncle's position of influence in what is now Wales, until his cousin, Helena, married the Roman citizen, Magnus Maximus. Originally, Conan was considerably put out by this man's rise to power and he organised a rebellion against him, aided by Picts & Scots. However, being defeated, Conan became great friends with his rival and travelled with Maximus to the continent to help him become Emperor of the West. He was given control over Armorica (modern Brittany) as a reward for killing the previous holder of the title. His new province, was well settled by his men-at-arms, however they lacked wives. Therefore, in order to populate the area, he sent to his uncle's old ally, Donaut of Dumnonia for numerous Cornish ladies. Conan proposed to cement the alliance of their two peoples by marrying Donaut's daughter, Ursula. Though Donaut was delighted at the match, Ursula had her heart set on a life devoted only to God. She agreed to the marriage, on the condition that she first be allowed to go on a pilgrimage throughout Europe. Conan appears to have joined her in Rome, where the two must have been married, probably by Pope Cyriacus himself. He apparently did not travel to Cologne where Ursula died. In later years, he gained considerable influence in Dumnonia after the death of his father-in-law. The Governorship of Armorica & Dumnonia was united for only a short time. As his second wife, Conan married Dareca of Ireland, a supposed, though unlikely, sister of St. Patrick. Upon Conan's death, around AD 395, control of each region fell to the sons of his two marriages, Gadeon and Gradlon.
~0320
St. Ursula
verch
Dynod
~0280
Dynod
Donaut
(Welsh: Dynod; Latin: Donatus; English: Donat) Not a king, but probably a powerful man in the Roman administration, Donaut was brother of Caradoc of Dumnonia and appears to have inherited his influence in the Civitas Dumnoniorum. He gave his daughter, St. Ursula, in marriage to Conan Meriadoc, but she would only consent if she was first able to go on a pilgrimage with eleven thousand virginal followers. They were all massacred in Cologne
~0286
Eudaf
Hen
(Latin: Octavius; English: Odda) Eudaf Hen (the Old) first appears in the old Welsh mythological tale, the "Dream of Macsen". The future Roman Emperor, Magnus Maximus, dreamt of Eudaf's beautiful daughter, Elen Lluyddog (of the Host), and sent emissaries across the Empire to find her. She was discovered in her father's palace at Caer-Segeint (Caernarfon) where the old man sat, carving 'gwyddbwyll' pieces (like chess-men). Maximus came to Britain, married the girl and eventually inherited her father's kingdom, much to the disgust of his male heir, Conan Meriadoc. If he existed at all, Eudaf lived in the mid-4th century. He would, therefore, have been a Romano-Briton, living an extremely Romanized lifestyle. The Latin Octavius the Old is therefore a much more appropriate form of his name. His daughter was Helena. The Dream story clearly indicates that Octavius was the monarch around Caernarfon in North Wales, but later writers - chiefly the mistrusted Geoffrey of Monmouth - made him "Duke of the Giwissei" or "Iarl Ergyng ac Ewias": evidently ruling in Ergyng and Gwent. This may have arisen from his supposed descent from so-called pre-Roman Kings of Siluria (named after the Celtic tribe who lived in that area). Though the connection is persistent and it is equally possible that the Caernarfon association is due to Maximus and Helena's later residence there. Octavius would not have been a king at this date, but perhaps a decurion of one of these civitates (Roman towns). However, he is also called one of the High-Kings of Britain. Such a title would, clearly, not have existed either but it may indicate that he held a position of considerable importance in the Roman administration. The official with control of both the Caernarfon and Gwent areas was the Praeses of Britannia Prima. Geoffrey's mythology has Octavius taking up the British High-Kingship after defeating King Coel Godhebog (the Magnificent)'s brother, Trahearn, in battle near Winchester. So perhaps he took office by force. Early records are confused about Eudaf's descendants. Some stories claim that he had various sons, Conan, Adeon/Gadeon and Eudaf II. Others, that Helena was his sole direct heiress and that Conan, his male heir, was only his nephew. This appears to fit best. Magnus Maximus and his wife probably inherited Eudaf's position in society, helping the former to put himself forward as Emperor of the West. Conan made excellent marriages and was placated with vast estates given by his cousin's husband. Adeon/Gadeon alias Cadfan was actually his son. Eudaf II appears very late and is probably mythological. Generally considered Legendary.
~0250
Einnyd
ap
Gwrddwfn
~0215
Gwrddwfn
ap Gorac
Mawr
~0180
Gorac Mawr
ap Merchion
Fawdfilr
~0140
Merchion
Fawdfilr
ap Owain
~0125
Owain
ap
Cyllin
<0100
St.
Cyllin ap
Caradoc
St. Cyllin (Cyllinus) - biographical and/or anecdotal: Also known as Coellyn ap Caradoc King of Siluria, was sainted by the early Church of Britain. "He first of the Cymry gave infants names, for before names were not given except to adults, and then from something characteristic in their bodies, minds, or manners." His brother Linus the Martyr, his sister Claudia and her husband Rufus Pudens aided the Apostle Paul in the Christian Church in Rome, as recorded in II Timothy 4:21 and Romans 16:13 (Rufus Pudens and St. Paul are shown to be half-brothers, with the same mother but different fathers. "His mother and mine." She thus appears to have been the mother of an elder son, Paul, by a Hebrew husband, and a younger son, Rufus, by a second marriage with a Roman Christian.) notes or source: ancestry.com & HBJ
~0127 - 0170
Coel
(Coilus)
ap Cyllin
43
43
D. 0154
Caradoc
Caratacus
biographical and/or anecdotal: King of Siluria (now Monmouthshire, etc.), where he died. He was born at Trevan, Llanilid, in Glamorganshire. His valiant services to his country have been told in connection with the attempted invasions of the island. The Bards record his wise saying: "Oppression persisted in brings on death." notes or source: ancestry.com & HBJ King Caradoc's birth-book (pedigree register) records his own as well as others' descent from illustrious ancestors, through thirty-six generations from *Aedd Mawr Caratacus, the First British Hero An historical person with some legendary accretions, Caratacus (also spelled Caractacus) was the king of the Catuvellauni at the time of the Roman invasion under their commander, Aulus Plautius. Caratacus emerges from history as one of the few early Britons with a distinct personality, thanks in large part to the accounts of Tacitus and Cassius Dio. He and his brother, Togodumnus, were said to be sons of the British king, Cunobelinus, and, after the king's death, became the leaders of the anti-Roman campaign that managed to resist the invaders for a period of nearly nine years.* After some early defeats in the east, Caratacus moved west into more rugged territories that would be easier to defend. His numerically inferior forces survived an indecisive engagement with the Romans in the land of the Silures (modern-day Glamorgan in Wales) and so Caratacus moved north, to the land of the Ordovices (central Gwynedd, southern Clwyd, northern Powys) to find the ideal location for a battle which he intended to be decisive. Caratacus' final defeat came at the hands of the Roman governor, Ostorious Scapula, in 51 AD. Although his forces were defeated, Caratacus was not killed in the battle and managed to escape to the land of the Brigantes in northern Britain, where he hoped to find safety and a base for future resistance to the Romans. Unfortunately for him, Cartimandua, the Queen of the Brigantes, was bound by a client-ruler relationship with the Romans, so she handed Caratacus over to them. He was sent to Rome along with other captives, where he came to Claudius' attention for his courtesy and bearing and so was pardoned. He and his family were permitted to live out their lives in peace in Italy, but the date of his death is unknown. The account of these events is taken from Tacitus' "Annals," Book XII (translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb): The army then marched against the Silures, a naturally fierce people and now full of confidence in the might of Caratacus, who by many an indecisive and many a successful battle had raised himself far above all the other generals of the Britons. Inferior in military strength, but deriving an advantage from the deceptiveness of the country, he at once shifted the war by a stratagem into the territory of the Ordovices, where, joined by all who dreaded peace with us, he resolved on a final struggle. He selected a position for the engagement in which advance and retreat alike would be difficult for our men and comparatively easy for his own, and then on some lofty hills, wherever their sides could be approached by a gentle slope, he piled up stones to serve as a rampart. A river too of varying depth was in his front, and his armed bands were drawn up before his defences. Then too the chieftains of the several tribes went from rank to rank, encouraging and confirming the spirit of their men by making light of their fears, kindling their hopes, and by every other warlike incitement. As for Caratacus, he flew hither and thither, protesting that that day and that battle would be the beginning of the recovery of their freedom, or of everlasting bondage. He appealed, by name, to their forefathers who had driven back the dictator Caesar, by whose valour they were free from the Roman axe and tribute, and still preserved inviolate the persons of their wives and of their children. While he was thus speaking, the host shouted applause; every warrior bound himself by his national oath not to shrink from weapons or wounds. Such enthusiasm confounded the Roman general. The river too in his face, the rampart they had added to it, the frowning hilltops, the stern resistance and masses of fighting men everywhere apparent, daunted him. But his soldiers insisted on battle, exclaiming that valour could overcome all things; and the prefects and tribunes, with similar language, stimulated the ardour of the troops. Ostorius having ascertained by a survey the inaccessible and the assailable points of the position, led on his furious men, and crossed the river without difficulty. When he reached the barrier, as long as it was a fight with missiles, the wounds and the slaughter fell chiefly on our soldiers; but when he had formed the military testudo, and the rude, ill-compacted fence of stones was torn down, and it was an equal hand-to-hand engagement, the barbarians retired to the heights. Yet even there, both light and heavy-armed soldiers rushed to the attack; the first harassed the foe with missiles, while the latter closed with them, and the opposing ranks of the Britons were broken, destitute as they were of the defence of breast-plates or helmets. When they faced the auxiliaries, they were felled by the swords and javelins of our legionaries; if they wheeled round, they were again met by the sabres and spears of the auxiliaries. It was a glorious victory; the wife and daughter of Caratacus were captured, and his brothers too were admitted to surrender. There is seldom safety for the unfortunate, and Caratacus, seeking the protection of Cartimandua, queen of the Brigantes, was put in chains and delivered up to the conquerors, nine years after the beginning of the war in Britain. His fame had spread thence, and travelled to the neighbouring islands and provinces, and was actually celebrated in Italy. All were eager to see the great man, who for so many years had defied our power. Even at Rome the name of Caratacus was no obscure one; and the emperor, while he exalted his own glory, enhanced the renown of the vanquished. The people were summoned as to a grand spectacle; the praetorian cohorts were drawn up under arms in the plain in front of their camp; then came a procession of the royal vassals, and the ornaments and neck-chains and the spoils which the king had won in wars with other tribes, were displayed. Next were to be seen his brothers, his wife and daughter; last of all, Caratacus himself. All the rest stooped in their fear to abject supplication; not so the king, who neither by humble look nor speech sought compassion. When he was set before the emperor's tribunal, he spoke as follows: "Had my moderation in prosperity been equal to my noble birth and fortune, I should have entered this city as your friend rather than as your captive; and you would not have disdained to receive, under a treaty of peace, a king descended from illustrious ancestors and ruling many nations. My present lot is as glorious to you as it is degrading to myself. I had men and horses, arms and wealth. What wonder if I parted with them reluctantly? If you Romans choose to lord it over the world, does it follow that the world is to accept slavery? Were I to have been at once delivered up as a prisoner, neither my fall nor your triumph would have become famous. My punishment would be followed by oblivion, whereas, if you save my life, I shall be an everlasting memorial of your clemency." Upon this the emperor granted pardon to Caratacus, to his wife, and to his brothers. Released from their bonds, they did homage also to Agrippina who sat near, conspicuous on another throne, in the same language of praise and gratitude. Tacitus, in his account, gives us all the other details but fails to name the location of Caratacus' final battle. "One particular problem that has prompted much debate centres on locating the so-called last stand of Caratacus - who had strategically chosen to move the scene of his activities from the territory of the Silures to that of the Ordovices. Folk memory or antiquarianism has given the name Caer Caradog (Caratacus' fort) to three hillforts, one dominating the Church Stretton gap, another south of Clun and the third in Clwyd. Although the second is relatively close to known Roman marching camps around Leintwardine, none have produced and evidence of investment. Moreover, all lack the nearby river required by the Tacitean narrative. . ."A more likely possibility is offered by the massive limestone spur of Llanymynech which dominates the western edge of the north Shropshire plain. Evidence of a Roman campaign base has now emerged at the western foot of the massif close to a newly discovered Julio-Claudian fort at Llansantffraid to make Llanymynech a strong candidate for identification as Caratacus' chosen position." ** Excavations done at the above-mentioned locales have failed to produce any conclusive archaeological fruit. So, it would seem that any location that one chooses as one's favourite candidate for Caratacus' "last stand," so long as it meets Tacitus' topographical qualifications and is found in northeastern Wales or western Shropshire, is as valid a place as any. Some investigators have come to the conclusion that Caratacus is the historic original for King Arthur, while others insist that he and Arviragus, another early British figure in the anti-Roman resistance, are one and the same. .................................................... * Cottrell, Leonard, "The Roman Invasion of Britain," Barnes & Noble, New York, 1992, p.91 ** Jones, Barri and David Mattingly, "An Atlas of Roman Britain," Blackwell Publishers, Oxford, 1990. p. 66-7
Lleyn
(Linus) ap
Caradoc
Cynon
ap
Caradoc
St. Eurgain
Verch
Caradoc
Gladys
Claudia verch
Caradoc
Following the pardon of Caractacus, a close relationship developed between the two former enemies and their households evolving into a startling climax. Emperor Claudius greatly admired the character and extraordinary beauty of Gladys, the daughter of Caractacus. It grew into a deep paternal affection with the result that Emperor Claudius adopted Gladys as his own daughter, a girl who was an exceptionally devout Christian! The Emperor was well aware of the strong Christian convictions of Gladys, and what strikes one forcibly is the fact that the record states that the terms of her adoption did not require her to recant from her faith. Gladys was not to remain long under the royal roof. The year after her adoption was to see a beautiful romance destined to culminate later in heartbreaking tragedy. In her teens, Claudia was betrothed and married. In the year AD 53, she became the wife of Rufus Pudens Pudentius, an epochal event history could well make as momentous. Pudens, as he is most commonly referred to, was a Roman Senator and former personal aide-de-camp to Aulus Plautius. Pudens went to Britain with the Commander-in-Chief at the commencement of the Claudian campaign AD 42. What could be a stranger circumstance than that of the British Pendragon Caractacus permitting his favorite daughter to become adopted by the remorseless enemy who had brought about his defeat at Clune and see his sister and daughter married to Plautius and Pudens, the leaders he had opposed in battle for nine long years? Claudia was seventeen years of age when she married Rufus Pudens. The nuptials did not take place at the Imperial Palace of her adopted father, as one might expect, but at the palace of her natural father, the Plautium Britannicum, a Christian household. It was a Christian marriage performed by the Christian Pastor, Hermas, which proves that Pudens was already a Christian convert. It is interesting to note that they continued to live at the Plautium Britannicum; interesting because Pudens was an extremely wealthy man, owning vast estates in Umbria, but he chose to live at the Place of the British, where their four illustrious children were born. The first Christian Church at Rome, known first as the "Titulus," is now called St. Prudentiana. Here the nuptials of Claudia and Rufus Pudens Prudentinus were celebrated AD 53. Four children were the issue of this marriage-- St Timotheus, St. Novatus, St. Prudentiana, St. Praxedes. Of the sons of Caradoc, Cyllinus and Cynon returned to Britian, the former succeeding on his death to the Silurian throne. The second, Lleyn, or Linus, remained with his father, and was subsequently, consecrated by St. Paul first bishop of the Roman Church.
Bran
Fendigaid ap
Llyr Llediaith
biographical and/or anecdotal: Bran, King of Siluria, also commander of the British fleet. In the year A.D. 36 (should that be 0136?) he resigned the crown to his son Caradoc and became Arch-Druid of the college of Siluria, where he remained some years until called upon to be a hostage for his son. During his seven years in Rome he became the first royal convert to Christianity, and was baptized by the Apostle Paul, as was his son Caradoc and the latter's two sons, Cyllinus and Cynon. Henceforth he was known as Bran the Blessed Sovereign. "He was the first to bring the faith of Christ to the Cymry." His recorded proverb is: "There is no good apart from God." He introduced the use of vellum into Britain. notes or source: ancestry.com & HBJ King Caradoc's birth-book (pedigree register) records his own as well as others' descent from illustrious ancestors, through thirty-six generations from *Aedd Mawr.
Anna
Enygeus
Llyr
Llediaith
ap Baran
* King Lear * Note: biographical and/or anecdotal: He was educated in Rome by Augustus Caesar. Among the "wise sayings" recorded by the Bards we find this attributed to Llyr: "No folly but ends in misery." notes or source: ancestry.com & HBJ King Caradoc's birth-book (pedigree register) records his own as well as others' descent from illustrious ancestors, through thirty-six generations from *Aedd Mawr.
Penardim
Verch
Lludd
Baran
ap
Ceri
Ceri Hir
Lyngwyn ap
Caid (Ceidio)
Caid (Ceidio)
ap Arch
(Arthen)
Arch
(Arthen)
ap Meirion
Merion
ap
Geraint
Geraint
ap
Greidiol
Greidiol
ap
Dingad
Dingad
ap Annun
(Albon)
Annun ap
Alafon
(Albon)
Alafon
(Albon) ap
Brywlais
Brywlais
ap Gertaint
Feddw
Gertaint
Feddw Ap
Berwgn
~0540 - ~0585
King of
Domnonee
Judual
45
45
~0510 - 0540
King of
Domnonee
Jonas
30
30
~0480 - 0580
King of
Domnonee
Deroch
100
100
~0450 - 0520
II
Riwal
70
70
~0420
King of
Domnonee
Riwal
0870 - 0952
Ulfret
Alesrudon
82
82
0830
Alfrond
ap
Justin
Countess
de
Maine
~1070 - >1122
II
Geoffroy
52
52
~1070
Radegonde
Oriel
~1116
Joyce
De
Dinan
~1055 - >1075
II
Olivier
20
20
~1040
I
Geoffroy
~1040
Orieldis
~1025 - ~1066
Vicount
de Dinan
Olivier
41
41
~1010 - >1070
Vicomte
de Dinan
Josceline
60
60
~0970 - >1030
Vicount
de Dinan
Hamon
60
60
~0980
Rantlina
~0954
1st Vicomte
de Dinan
Ammon
~1087 - 1161
Robert
I de
Vitre'
74
74
1090 - 1161
Emma
de la
Guerche
71
71
~1060 - ~1094
Sire de la
Guerche
Gualtier
34
34
~1065
Basilie
~1030
Sire de la
Guerche
Geoffroy
~1000 - 1096
Sire de la
Guerche
Silvestre
96
96
~0970
1st Sire de
la Guerche
Manguene
~0940
Baron of
Rennes
Thibault
~0945
Genargaud
~0910
Loscoran
~1054 - 1139
Andre
de
Vitre'
85
85
~1059
Agnes
de
Mortaigne
~1036 - 1088
Henry
I de
Ferrers
52
52
Henry accompanied William the Conqueror to England and who received 114 manors in County Derby and other vast estates
1031 - 1090
Robert
de
Mortaigne
59
59
~1022 - 1075
Adelmode
de la Haute
Marche
53
53
~1064 - 1140
William
de
Mortaigne
76
76
WILLIAM, Earl of Cornwall, who rebelled against Henry I., supporting the claims of Duke Robert to the throne, and joining the party at the head of which was his uncle Robert de Belˆsme. He was attainted, and died a prisoner.
~1058
Denise
de
Mortaigne
1001 - >1087
Viscount de
Conteville
Herluin
86
86
~1032 - FEB 1095/96
Earl of Kent
and Bishop of
Bayeux Odo
~0885 - ~0950
Baldwin
De
Blois
65
65
lineally descended from Charles, Duke of Ingeheim, the fifth son of Charlemagne.
1050
Muriel
de
Conteville
~0969
Jean de
Bourg de
Tonsburgh
General of the French King's forces & governor of his chief towns. Descendants include Baldwin, 2nd King of Jerusalem.
~0994
Oda
de
Conteville
1035
Robert
de
Vitre'
1040
Bertha
de
Craon
Ennoguende
de
Vitre'
1012 - ~1050
Guerin
de
Craon
38
38
1020
Anne
de
Crequy
1002 - ~1057
Baudouin
de
Crequy
55
55
1005
Marguerite
de
Louvaine
0967 - ~0986
Ramelin
II de
Crequy
19
19
0990
Maud
de
Lorraine
0976
Alice
d'Oisy
0934
Arnoul
III de
Crequy
0940
Adele
d'Arkel
0899 - 0937
Arnoul
II de
Crequy
38
38
0908
Valpurge
d'Argouins
0869
Odooere
de
Crequy
0875
Yolande
of
Cleves
0850 - 0917
Count of
Cleves
Baldwin
67
67
0855
Maud
0825 - 0881
Count of
Cleves
Luitgarde
56
56
0830
Bertha
0800 - 0835
Count of
Cleves
Eberhard
35
35
0805
Bertha
0775 - 0830
Count of
Cleves
Baldwin
55
55
0836 - 0897
Arnoul I
de Crequy
le Vieil
61
61
0840
Ignode
de
Harlebec
~0815 - 0862
Godfrey
de
Boullion
47
47
The Great Forrester
~0805
Count of
Harlebec
Rowland
~0982
Suhard
de
Craon
~0952
Lisois
de
Craon
~0922 - ~0961
Sire de
Craon
Andin
39
39
~0927
Agnes
~1005
Tristan
de
Vitre'
~0997
Ennoguende
de
Fougeres
~0970 - 1048
Baron de
Fougeres
Alfred
78
78
~0885
II Mien
~0975
Ruivallon
de
Vitre'
~0980
Genergan
de la
Vicaire
André
de
Vitre'
~0945
Ruivallon
de
Vitre'
~0915
I
Martin
~1110 - 1167
Patrick
d'Evereaux
57
57
~1120 - 1174
Ella Le
Despencer
de Ponthieu
54
54
1118 - 1146
William
De
Warren
28
28
~1140 - 1199
Isabel
De
Warren
59
59
~1005 - >1079
Guisla
of
Lluca
74
74
~1102 - 28 FEB 1190/91
Countess de
Bourgogne
Alice
Beatrice
De
Bourgogne
~1005 - 1035
Raymond
Berenguer
30
30
~0975
Ermensenda
of
Balsareny
~0975
Sunifredo
II of
Lluca
~1082 - 1143
Hugues
II "le
Pacifique"
61
61
0972 - 25 FEB 1018/19
Raymund
Borrel
~1003
Estefania
of
Barcelona
~0942 - 30 SEP 992
II
Borrel
~0942
Ledgarda
of
Toulouse
0975 - 1010
I
Ermengaud
35
35
~0891 - 0960
Raymond
III
Pons
69
69
~0947 - 1037
Guillaume
III
Taillefer
90
90
~0857 - 0923
II
Raymond
66
66
~0896
Guinhilde
of
Urgel
~0850 - 11 AUG 898
I
Wilfred
~0898
II
Miron
~0912 - 15 OCT 950
Count of
Barcelona
Suniairo
~0820
Ermensinde
of
Carcassone
~0827 - 0919
Count of
Toulouse
Eudes
92
92
~0827
Gersinde
d'Albi
II
Raymond
~0797 - <0878
Count
of Albi
Ermengaud
81
81
~0797 - 0864
I
Raymond
67
67
~0797
Bertha
De
Remy
~0812 - 0886
Fulk
de
Limoges
74
74
Count of
Toulouse
Bernard
0767
Remigius
De
Remy
~1242
Amaury
de
Montfort
~0767 - ~0836
Count of
Rouerge
Foucaud
69
69
~0777
Senegonde
D'Autun
~0737
Fredelon
~0758
Berthe
Auba
D'Autun
~0862 - 0937
Count of
Rouergue
Armengol
75
75
~0882
Adelaide
Etienne
de
Gevaudan
~1087 - 1147
Walter
FitzEdward
d'Evereaux
60
60
~1090 - <1147
Sybil
de
Chaworth
57
57
~1127 - 1165
Sybil
d'Evereaux
38
38
~1113
Hawise
d'Evereaux
~1133
William
d'Evereaux
~1137
Walter
d'Evereaux
~1052 - ~1096
Patrick
De
Chaworth
44
44
~1074
Matilda
De
Hesding
~1083
Morgan
de
Chaworth
~1084
Robert
de
Chaworth
~1085
Hugh
de
Chaworth
~1088
Cecily
de
Chaworth
~1252
Eve
de
Chaworth
~1095
Pagen
de
Chaworth
~1010 - <1065
Warin
De
Hesdin
55
55
~1025
Hugh
de
Chaworth
~1000
Ernald
de
Chaworth
<1060 - 1130
Edward
d'Evereaux
70
70
~1072
Matilda
fitz
Hubert
~1093
Maud
d'Evereaux
~1030
Girold
Dapifer
~1250 - 1291
Emmeline
De
Longespee
41
41
~1238
Sir
Maurice de
Windsor
Hugh
de
Lacy
~1204 - 1244
Sir
Walter de
Ridelisford
40
40
~1206
Alianore
de
Vitre'
~1140 - >1226
Walter
de
Ridelisford
86
86
~1140
Amabilis
Fitz Henry
Plantagenet
1168
William
de
Cogan
~1105 - 1157
Henry fitz
Henry
Plantagenet
52
52
~1135
Meiler Fitz
Henry
Plantagenet
~1068 - 1135
Henry
I
Beauclerc
67
67
Henry I (born 1068, ruled 1100-35). The youngest son of William the Conqueror was born in England. His nickname, Beauclerc, which means "good scholar," was given him because of his fine education. He seized the crown in the year 1100, when his brother King William II was killed in a hunting accident and his brother Robert, duke of Normandy, who was next in the line of succession, was absent on a crusade At his accession Henry I issued the famous Charter of Liberties, which, over a hundred years later, was used as the basis of Magna Carta, the foundation of the liberties of the Anglo-Saxon world. He also favored the church in order to gain its backing against the claims of his brother Robert to the English throne. The Charter of Liberties helped gain Henry the support of the nobles. He conciliated the English, conquered by his father, by marrying Matilda, who was the daughter of King Malcolm III of Scotland and who was descended from the Anglo-Saxon kings. The support of the common people was assured by the justice he administered through the King's Court. Henry's only son, William Aetheling, was drowned in 1120 when the White Ship sank in the English Channel. According to legend, the king never smiled again. The accident left his daughter Matilda, widow of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V, and his nephew Stephen contestants for the throne at his death. Henry I (of England) Henry I (of England) (1068-1135), third Norman king of England (1100-1135), fourth son of William the Conqueror. Henry was born in Selby. On the death of his brother William II in 1100, Henry took advantage of the absence of another brother- Robert, who had a prior claim to the throne- to seize the royal treasury and have himself crowned king at Westminster. By defeating Robert, who was Duke of Normandy, at Tinchebray, France, in 1106, Henry also won Normandy. Henry designated his daughter Matilda as his heiress. After his death in 1135, however, Henry's nephew, Stephen of Blois, usurped the throne, plunging the country into a protracted civil war that ended with the accession of Matilda's son, Henry II, in 1154. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1060 - 1093
Rhys Ap
Tewdwr
Mawr
33
33
~1070 - >1157
Sybil Adela
Lucy
Corbet
87
87
~1110 - 1175
Reynold
de
Dunstanville
65
65
~1084
Rohese
FitzHenry
a
concubine
Edith
~1086 - 1120
Matilda
of
England
34
34
1070 - 1144
II
Routrou
74
74
~1120
Hamon
D'Aubigny
~1090 - 1147
Robert "The
Consul" de
Caen
57
57
unknown
mistress
~1089
Elizabeth
Joan
Plantagenet
Eustacia
of
England
Alice
of
England
~1100
Constance
of
England
1085 - 1120
Maud
of
England
35
35
1079 - 1118
Matilda
(Edith)
39
39
1103 - 1167
Matilda
the
Empress
64
64
Political Events, 1136 The English princess Matilda asserts her right to the throne of her late father (see 1135; 1138). Political Events, 1138 The Battle of the Standard fought in August near Northallerton ends in defeat for Scotland's David I who has invaded England in support of Matilda against Stephen, but David does take possession of Northumberland. Political Events, 1139 Civil war begins in England as Matilda lands at Arundel with an army to support her claims to the throne. Political Events, 1142 England's Matilda is expelled from Oxford after a long siege by Stephen, who forces her to take refuge in the western part of the country. A 5-year period of anarchy begins. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
1101
Euphamia
Beauclerc
~1105
Richard
Beauclerc
1103
William
the
Aetheling
1113 - 1151
Geoffrey
V 'the Fair'
Plantagenet
38
38
Count of Anjou and Maine Geoffrey Plantagenet, the Handsome, Count of Anjou 1129-1151. King Henry I, in 1127, when a new alliance was made at Rouen, betrothed his daughter Maud, or Matilda, to Geoffrey Plantagenet, and the marriage was celebrated at Le Mans, France, June 2, 1127. She was called the Empress Maud, being the widow of Henry V, Emperor of the Roman Empire and later of Germany, whom she had married Jan. 7, 1114. From the first Geoffrey tried to profit by his marriage, and after the death of Henry I, Dec. 1, 1135, laid the foundation for the conquest of Normandy, by a series of campaigns; about the end of 1135 or beginning of 1136 he entered that country and rejoined his wife, the Countess Maud. After many battles he received the submission of Argentan, Domfront, Bayeux, Caen and Falaise. In March, 1141, on hearing of his wife's success in England he entered Normandy, and many towns surrendered, and in 1144 he entered Rouen and received the ducal crown of Normandy in its cathedral. Finally in 1149, after crushing a last attempt at revolt, he handed over the Duchy to his son Henry, who received the investiture at tfhe hands of the King of France. Geoffrey Plantagenet had, by Maud, who died Sept. 10, 1167, a son and successor Henry, Count of Anjou, who ascended the throne of England as Henry II. (He also had a natural son, Hameline Plantagenet, who married Isabel de Warren, and took the name of de Warren, and became through his wife the Earl of Warren and Surrey, from whom you descend in several different ways.) Geoffrey Plantagenet, a prince of great justice and charity, died Sept., 1150, and was buried at Mans, in St. Julien's Church. Political Events, 1058 William of Normandy defeats Godfrey of Anjou at the Battle of Varaville. Political Events, 1143 Geoffrey of Anjou, son-in-law of England's late Henry I, becomes duke of Normandy upon news of the death last year of his father Foulkes le Jeune, who was king of Jerusalem from 1131 until his death at age 51. Political Events, 1151 Geoffrey of Anjou dies September 7 at age 38. He has been called "Plantagenet" for his habit of wearing a sprig of broom (genet) in his cap and is succeeded as count of Anjou by his son Henry, 18, to whom he gave the duchy of Normandy last year. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved. Sources: 1. Title: Ancestors of Henry II (Plantagenet) King of England Author: Douglas McMartin Publication: 15 Nov 1995 Repository: Note: WWW http://intermid.com/DoutBerg/genealog.y/royhenry.htm Call Number: Media: Electronic 2. Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" Publication: P.O. Box 577, Bayview, ID 83803 Note: Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous other reference works" Note: very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's Repository: Note: Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore. Call Number: Media: Letter Page: Vermandois Text: no parents, no title 3. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript 4. Title: Royal Highness, Ancestry of the Royal Child Author: Moncreiffe Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: p 61 5. Title: Pedigrees from Mike Talbot of Metairie, LA Repository: Call Number: Media: Book 6. Title: Washington Ancestry & Records of McClain, Johnson & Forty Other Colonial American Families Publication: Chart: The Ancestry of Mourning Adams Garner, pp 54-55, Vol I Repository: Note: 3 volume set Call Number: Media: Book Text: s of Fulk V & Melisinda 7. Title: World Family Tree Volume 2 Tree # 1822 Publication: Brøderbund BannerBlue Division Repository: Call Number: Media: Family Archive CD 8. Title: Descent of Hughes Author: Graham Milne Repository: Note: WWW http://www.cogent-comms.co.uk/tree.htm Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: b 1113 9. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 118, line 1 pp 1-4 Text: no place 10. Title: Descent of Hughes Author: Graham Milne Repository: Note: WWW http://www.cogent-comms.co.uk/tree.htm Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: d 1151 11. Title: Royal Genealogies DB Author: Denis R. Reid Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258 Note: 216/237-5364 Note: OK Repository: Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@@cleveland.freenet.edu Call Number: Media: Electronic 12. Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" Publication: P.O. Box 577, Bayview, ID 83803 Note: Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous other reference works" Note: very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's Repository: Note: Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore. Call Number: Media: Letter Text: d 1151 13. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript Text: d 07 Sep 1150 14. Title: Ancestors of Henry II (Plantagenet) King of England Author: Douglas McMartin Publication: 15 Nov 1995 Repository: Note: WWW http://intermid.com/DoutBerg/genealog.y/royhenry.htm Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: 11th Comte de Anjou 15. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript Text: 10th Count of Anjou 16. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: p 3 Text: 10th Count of Anjou 17. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 118 Text: no dates 18. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc Repository: Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@@tardis.ed.ac.uk Call Number: Media: Electronic 19. Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" Publication: P.O. Box 577, Bayview, ID 83803 Note: Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous other reference works" Note: very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's Repository: Note: Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore. Call Number: Media: Letter 20. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 118, line 1 pp 1-4 Text: m 03 Apr 1127, no place, her 2nd m 21. Title: Washington Ancestry & Records of McClain, Johnson & Forty Other Colonial American Families Publication: Chart: The Ancestry of Mourning Adams Garner, pp 54-55, Vol I Repository: Note: 3 volume set Call Number: Media: Book Text: no date/place, her 2nd m 22. Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" Publication: P.O. Box 577, Bayview, ID 83803 Note: Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous other reference works" Note: very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's Repository: Note: Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore. Call Number: Media: Letter Text: "associated", no date 23. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript Text: did not marry an unknown mistress, issue was Hamelin Plantagenet, no date
~1129 - 1202
Hamelin
Plantagenet
73
73
1134
Geoffrey
VI of
Anjou
1136
William
Plantagenet
~1031 - 1093
Malcolm
III
Caennmor
62
62
Notes for King of Scotland Malcolm III Canmore: Source: WFT CD #037 - Tree #0514 - Malcolm III founded the house of Canmore, which ruled Scotland for more than 200 years and consolidated the power of the Scottish monarchy. He was the son of Duncan I, who was killed by MacBeth in 1040. Malcolm lived in exile until 1057, when he defeated and killed MacBeth near Lumphanan in Aberdeenshire. He succeeded to the throne in 1058 after the death of Lulach, MacBeth's stepson. Malcolm's second wife was Margaret (later canonized as Margaret of Scotland) of the English royal house of Wessex, who fled to Scotland after the Norman conquest of England in 1066. She introduced a powerful English influence in Scotland. Malcolm invaded England many times, after 1068 supporting the claim of his brother-in-law Edgar Atheling to the English throne. In 1072, however, he was forced to pay homage to William I, and in 1091, to William II. He was finally defeated and killed by Norman forces at Alnwick. He was succeeded briefly by his brother Donald Bane and them by his son Duncan II. Three other sons also succeeded to the throne--Edgar(1097-1107), Alexander I(1107-24) and David(1124-53). More About King of Scotland Malcolm III Canmore: Burial: 1093, Holy Trinity Church, Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Scotland
1045 - 1093
Margaret
"the Saint"
of England
48
48
Her remains were removed to Escorial, Spain & her head to Douai, France Canonised 1250 and her feast day is 16th November. In 1057 she arrived at the English court of Edward the Confessor. Ten years later she was in exile after William defeated Harold at the Battle of Hastings. She fled to Scotland where she was married against her wishes to King Malcolm to whom she bore six sons and two daughters. Her unlerned and boorish husband grew daily more graceful and Christian under the queen's graceful influence.
~1080
Mary
of
Scotland
~1070
King of
Scotland
Edgar
~1060 - 1094
II
Duncan
34
34
Edward
Caennmor
I
Edmund
Abbot of
Dunkeld
Ethelred
1078
Alexander
I 'The
Fierce'
Ingibiorg
Finnsdottir
Malcolm
of
Scotland
Donald
of
Scotland
~1016 - 1057
Edward
the
Ætheling
41
41
EDMUND ÆTHELING, the nephew and next of kin of the English king Edward the Confessor. Edmund was exiled to Europe in 1016, during the reign of the Danish king Cnut. He married Agatha, daughter of Stephen I, King of Hungary and Saint. Their children were Edgar, Margaret, and Christina. He returned to England and died under mysterious circumstances in 1057. Spent much of his life in Hungary, returned to England in 1057 only to die. If he had lived, probably would have been the undisputed ruler of England & thus his son, the last Prince of Wessex, was still a minor when he died.
~1020 - 1054
Agatha
Von
Brunswick
34
34
~1040
Christina
Ætheling
~1036 - >1126
Edgar
'Ætheling'
90
90
Edgar Atheling [O.E. ætheling,=son of the king], 1060?–1125?, English prince, grandson of Edmund Ironside. After the death of King Harold at the battle of Hastings in 1066, Edgar was chosen king, but he submitted to William I in the same year. In 1068 he fled to the Scottish king Malcolm III , who soon married Edgar’s sister St. Margaret of Scotland. Edgar took part in the unsuccessful Northumbrian uprising (1069) in which the Danes also joined. After Malcolm made his peace with William in 1072, the Atheling probably lived in Flanders until he himself came to terms with William in 1074 and settled in France. After William’s death Edgar joined Malcolm in raiding England in 1091, but after that he seems to have been at peace with William II of England. He led the English expedition that in 1097 dethroned Donald III and seated the Atheling’s nephew Edgar (d. 1107) on the throne of Scotland. The Atheling went on the crusade of 1099 with Robert II, duke of Normandy, and later fought for Robert against Henry I of England. He was taken prisoner at the battle of Tinchebrai (1106) but was released. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2001 Columbia University Press.
~1008 - 1038
Ludolphe
Von
Brunswick
30
30
~1004 - 1077
Countess of
Eguisheim
Gertruda
73
73
I
Egbert
~0958 - 1049
IV
Hugh
91
91
~0995
Countess
of Nordgau
Hildegarde
~0990 - 1049
V
Hugo
59
59
~0988
I
Gerhard
~0997
Countess
in Nordgau
Gepa
1002
Count in
Nordgau
Bruno
~0930
Berlinda
of
Ortenberg
~1103 - 1151
Adeliza
de
Louvain
48
48
~0953
Count in
Nordgau
Gerhard
~0957
Matfried
of
Nordgau
~1158 - 1235
I
Henry
77
77
~0960 - <1012
Brunon
II Von
Brunswick
52
52
11 NOV 999 - 14 FEB 1041/42
Duchess
of Swabia
Gisele
~0958 - 1003
II
Hermann
45
45
0973 - 1016
Gerberga
of Upper
Burgundy
43
43
0989 - 1033
Mathilde Maud
, Duchess of
Swabia
44
44
11 NOV 999 - 14 FEB 1042/43
Beatrix
Bridget of
Swabia
0991
III
Herman
0925 - 19 OCT 993
Conrad
I 'The
Peaceful'
0960
Matilde
of
Burgundy
~0962
III
Rudolph
0975
Gisele
of
Burgundy
~0950 - 12 MAR 995/96
I
Eudes
~0982
I
Renaud
~0985
Heloise
de
Blois
~0895 - 2 JAN 965/66
Bertha
of
Swabia
0885 - 29 APR 926
Burkhard
Richard II , Duke
of Swabia
~0885 - 0958
Reginlinde
of
Nellenburg
73
73
~0890
II
Eberhard
D. ~0890
Grisela
~0915
III
Eberhard
~0867 - 0911
III
Adalbert
44
44
0837 - 0905
Adalbert
II "The
Illustrious
68
68
~0807 - 0856
I
Adalbert
49
49
~0865
Count in
the Baar
Burkhard
~0777 - ~0830
Count
of Istria
Hunfrid
53
53
~0920 - 20 JUL 997
Duke of
Swabia
Conrad
~0928
Judith Jutta
, Duchess
of Swabia
~0887 - 2 DEC 949
Count in the
Welterau
Udo
~0925 - 0992
I
Heribert
67
67
~0934
Countess of
the Wetterau
Judith
~0922
Count of the
Wetterau
Gebhard
~0926
Count of the
Wetterau
Udo
~0828 - >0879
Count in the
Nieder-Lahngau
Gebhard
51
51
Ruthildis
~0799 - >0844
Count in the
Nieder-
Lahngau Udo
45
45
~0930 - 0994
Ekebert
Von
Brunswick
64
64
~0900 - 21 FEB 943/44
Wichmann
Von
Brunswick
0989 - 1016
Edmund
II
'Ironside'
27
27
Edmund II, called Ironside (981?-1016), Saxon king of the English (1016), son of King Ethelred the Unready. When Ethelred died, Edmund was chosen king by the people of London, but Canute II, king of Denmark, who was leading an invasion of England, secured the support of the council (witenagemot) at Southampton and of Edric (flourished 1001-17), Ethelred's son-in-law. Edmund met the Danes in battle, winning several engagements and relieving Canute's siege of London. He was defeated at Assandun (now Ashington), however, through the treachery of Edric, who had pretended to desert Canute. A truce was arranged between Canute and Edmund; Edmund was permitted to rule the south of England until his death later in the year, when it reverted to Canute. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0992 - 1075
Edith
(Eadgyth)
83
83
~1006
Edmund
0986
Athelstan
~0987
Ecgbert
~0990
Edred
~0991
Edwig
~0992
Edward
~0994
Edgar
of
England
~0995
Edith
~0996
Wulfhilda
~1000
Edric
1002
Edward
the
Confessor
~1017 - ~1055
Goda
(Godgifu)
of England
38
38
~1004
Alfred
the
Æthling
0944 - 8 JUL 975
Edgar
'the
Peaceful'
Edgar, called The Peaceful (944-75), Saxon king of the English (959-75), younger son of King Edmund I. In 957, during the rule of his brother, King Edwy, Edgar was chosen by the Mercians and Northumbrians to be their sovereign. One of his first acts was to recall the monastic reformer St. Dunstan, whom Edwy had exiled; Edgar subsequently made Dunstan bishop of Worcester and London and archbishop of Canterbury. In 959 Edgar succeeded to the entire English Kingdom. His reign was notable for the establishment of national consolidation, reformation of the clergy, improvement of the judiciary system, and formation of a fleet to defend the coast against the Scandinavian Vikings. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0945 - 1000
Ælfthryth
(Elfrida)
55
55
~0965
Edmund.
Prince of
England
0944
Queen of
England
Ethelfleda
0962
Edward
'the
Martyr'
~0944
Queen of
England
Wulfryth
~0961
Princess
of England
Edgyth
~0917
Ealdorman
of Devon
Ordgar
~0917
Wulfrith
0921 - 26 MAY 946
Edmund
I "The
Magnificent'
Edmund I (921-46), Saxon king of the English (939-46), the son of King Edward the Elder. He participated in the Battle of Brunanburh in 937 and succeeded his half brother Athelstan as king in 939. The following year Olaf Godfreyson, a Viking ruler of Dublin, seized the territory of Northumbria in northern England and extended his rule as far south as Leicester. After Olaf's death in 941, Edmund made war on the Vikings, expelling them from the country three years later. In 945 Edmund occupied the kingdom of Strathclyde, west of Northumbria, and turned it over to his ally Malcolm I MacDonald, king of Scotland. The following year Edmund was stabbed to death by a robber and was succeeded by his brother Edred (reigned 945-55). Edmund was known as a legal reformer, especially for his restrictions on the blood feud. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation.
~0922 - ~0944
Ælfgifu
Elgiva , " The
Fairies Gift"
22
22
0942
Edwy
(Ædwig)
'the Fair'
0924
Queen of
England
Ethelfleda
~0896
Ædgifu
(Edgiva)
of Kent
~0918
Edburga
~0924
King of
England
Ædred
~0922
Abbot of
Einsiedlen
Gregory
~0916
Princess
of England
Edgiva
~0874
Queen of
England
Ecgwyn
~0894
King of
England
Athelstan
~0896
Ædgyth
Edith of
England
~0871
Ealdorman
of Kent
Sigehelm
~1001 - 1040
Duncan
I 'the
Gracious'
39
39
Duncan I (1001?-40), king of Scotland (1034-40), grandson of King Malcolm II Mackenneth, whom he succeeded. Before his accession to the Scottish throne he was ruler of the kingdom of Strathclyde. Macbeth, who ruled the neighboring kingdom of Moray and served Duncan as a general, killed him and became king of Scotland. Shakespeare's tragedy Macbeth is based on the struggle between the two kings. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. King Duncan I killed in battle at Pitgavney, near Elgin, by his cousin Macbeth.
~1014 - 1040
Ælflaed
(Sybil)
Fitzseward
26
26
~1033
Donald
"Bane"
~1035
Maelmuir
of
Atholl
~1037
Margaret
of
Scotland
~1590
Daniel
Poore
~1120
Cecilia
~1117
Sir
William
De Lucy
0954 - 1034
Malcolm
II
MacKenneth
80
80
Notes: conquered Lothian 1018. King of Alba, King of Strathclyde. said to have married an Irishwoman from Ossory. Killed by his kinsman. Version: 25 Mar 2001 © 1994-2001 Brian Tompsett Sources: bibliography
an
Irishwoman
~0985
Dovada
~0972
Princess of
Scotland
Anleta
~0986
Donalda
~0930 - 0995
II
Kenneth
65
65
~0930
Princess
of
Leinster
~0952
Malcolm
I of
Alba
~0966
Dungal
MacKenneth
~0899 - 0954
I
Malcolm
55
55
~0870 - 0900
II
Donald
30
30
~0840 - 0877
Constantine
II of
Alba
37
37
~0820 - 0859
Kenneth
I
MacAlpin
39
39
Kings of Picts and Alba. King of Galloway
~0777 - 0834
Alpin
MacEochaid
57
57
~0745 - 0778
Eochaidh 'the
Venemous'
MacFergus
33
33
Eochaidh Rinnamail
~0750
Princess
of the Picts
Unuisticc
~0720
Pictish Princess
Royal of
Fortrinn Bruide
Matrilinear Pictish Princesses Royal of Fortrinn (Verturiones) from at least Ca 250, whose brothers reigned as High Kings of Alba (Albany) by 5th Century, probably in pagan times with throne name of Bruide.
King of
the Picts
Constantine
King of
the Picts
Unuist
~0700 - 0778
Aedh 'the
White Find'
of Argyl
78
78
~0680 - 0733
Eochaidh
III
MacEchdach
53
53
~0660 - 0697
Eochaidh
'Crook-
Nose'
37
37
~0630 - 0673
Domangart
II
MacDomnaill
43
43
~0600 - ~0643
Domnall 'the
Speckled'
Brecc
43
43
~0570 - ~0629
Eochaidh
Buidhe
MacAidan
59
59
~0540 - ~0608
Aidan
MacGabhran
of Argyll
68
68
Consecrated by his cousin, St. Columba.
~0510 - ~0559
Gabhran
MacDomangairt
of Argyll
49
49
~0515
Ingenach
Lleian
~0490
Brychan
of
Manau
~0495
Princess
of
Strathclyde
~0465
Dyfnwal
Hen of
Strathclyde
Cynbelin
~0435
Ceretic
(Coroticus)
'the Gwledig'
Reproached by St. Patrick
~0480 - ~0506
Domangart
MacFergusso
'Réti'
26
26
~0450 - 0501
Fergus
Mor
MacEarca
51
51
Fergus Mor Mac Earca, 131st Monarch of Ireland, in 498 A.D., with five of his brothers, went into Scotland with a complete army to assist his grandfather Loarn, King of Dalriada, in overcoming his enemies, the Picts. Upon the King's death, Fergus was unanimously elected king, and became the first absolute king of Scotland, of the Milesian race.
Arthur
MacAidan
of Dalriada
~0954
Mormaer
of Athol
Duncan
Lord or Mormaer of the Isles.
~1051
Prince of
England
Pepin
1031 - 1083
Matilda
of
Flanders
52
52
Matilda, daughter of Baldwin the Seventh, Count of Flanders, descended from the Emperor Charlemagne, through Judith, wife of Baldwin the Forester of Arden, created by his father-in-law, Charles the Bald, and first Count of Flanders, and descended from Alfred the Great through Alfritha, his daughter, who married Baldwin the Second, Count of Flanders
~1052
Prince of
England
Charles
~1053 - 10 FEB 1133/34
II
Robert
~1054
Prince of
England
Richard
~1055
Princess
of England
Gundreda
~1057
William
II
'Rufus"
~1059
Princess
of England
Mathilda
~1062 - 8 MAR 1135/36
Princess
of England
Adaela
Became a Nun at Cluniac Priory in widowhood.
~1056
Princess
of England
Cecilia
~1058
Prince of
England
Louis
~1018
Ranulph
Perverel
~1054 - JAN 1112/13
William
"the Elder"
Peverell
William de Peveral is usually said to be an illegitimate son of the Conqueror. He had at least four children, William, d. s. p., and William again, who succeeded him, and two daughters, Maud and Adelise, the wife of Richard Redvers. The Conqueror gave William Peveral the custody of Notts Castle, when it was built in 1068, and extensive possessions, afterwards known as the honour of Peveral, consisting of 100 lordships in counties Notts and Northants, 14 in Derby, and some 20 others in other counties. William Peveral died Jan., 1113.
1012 - 1067
Baldwin
V 'the
Pious'
55
55
~1121 - ~1148
Enguerrand
II de
Coucy
27
27
~1033 - 1093
Robrecht
le
Frison
60
60
~1035
Count of
Flanders
Henri
~1050
Richard
Thurston de
St. Sauveur
1021
Alix
De
Normandy
~0986 - 1040
I
Renaud
54
54
~0956 - 1028
III
Laundry
72
72
~1028 - 1110
Robert II "the
Burgundian"
de Nevers
82
82
~0986 - 1035
IV
Baldwin
49
49
Count of Valanciens, Earl/Count of Flanders
~0986 - 21 FEB 1029/30
Otgina
(Ogive) of
Luxembourg
~1030 - 22 FEB 1093/94
I Hugh
~1030 - 4 MAR 1093/94
Judith
de
Flanders
~0948
Countess
of Gleiberg
Irmentrude
~0975 - 1059
Count de
Luxemburg
Giselbert
84
84
~0990 - 1055
Ermengarde
de
Luxembourg
65
65
~0990
Countess of
Luxembourg
Irmtrude
0972 - 1052
I
Walram
80
80
~1006
Frederick
II de
Luxembourg
~1065 - 1134
William
FitzNigell
69
69
~0925
Countess
of Avalgau
Irmentrude
Amalrade
~0888
I
Megingoz
~0895 - ~0995
Gerberga
100
100
~0865
Count
Palatine
Godfrey
~0961 - 30 MAR 987
II
Arnolph
~0948 - 1008
Lady Matilda
Billung of
Saxony
60
60
~0960
John
De
Bourg
~0962
Countess
of Flanders
Bertha
~0932 - 1005
Godfrey
"The
Captive"
73
73
0975 - 1011
I
Adalbert
36
36
~0969 - 1029
Count of
Verdun
Hermann
60
60
~0971
Emmentrude
de
Verdun
~0924 - 27 MAR 973
Herman
Billung
~0925
Hildegarde
von
Westerbourg
~0953 - 9 FEB 1010/11
Bernard
I
Billung
~0986 - 1034
III
Dietrich
48
48
~0960
Liudger
Billung
~0968
Abbess of
Hereford
Imma
~0874 - 26 MAR 967
Count of
Saxony
Billung
~0896
Wichmann
Billung
~0899
Bishop of
Verden
Amelung
~1215 - 1254
Sir
Gilbert de
Segrave
39
39
Gilbert de Segrave. This feudal lord, having married Annabil, daughter and co-heir of Robert de Chaucombe, obtained a grant in 15th of Henry III, 1231, from Simon de Montfort, Lord of Leicester, of the whole town of Kegworth, County Lancaster, and two years later had a grant from the crown of the manor of Newcastle-under-Lyme, County Stafford, and was constituted Governor of Bolsover Castle. In 26th of Henry III he was made Justice of all the royal forests south of the Trent, and Governor of Kenilworth Castle. He died 1254.
~1225 - >1282
Amabilia
de
Chaucombe
57
57
~1255
Agnes
1278
John
De
Somery
~1175 - ~1209
Sir
Robert de
Chacomb
34
34
~1180
Juliana
~1150 - ~1200
Hugh
de
Chacomb
50
50
~1150
Hodierne
~1176 - 1241
Stephen
de
Segrave
65
65
Stephen de Segrave, who in the 5th of King John was Constable of the Tower of London, and remaining faithful to that monarch in his conflicts with the barons, obtained a grant in 17th of King John of the lands of Stephen de Gant lying in Lincoln and Leicester, with the manor of Kinton in Warwickshire. In 4th of Henry III he was made Governor of Saubey Castle in Leicester, and next year constituted Sheriff of Essex and Hertford, and afterwards of Leicestershire. About this time we find this successful person, whom Matthew Paris says "in his young days from a clerk was made a knight," acquired large landed property by purchase, and at length he so enriched and advanced himself that he was ranked amongst the highest nobility, was made Lord Chief Justice, and managed almost all the affairs of the nation as he pleased. He was a member of the King's Council for several years, and in the 16th of Henry III held the great office of Justiciary of England and was Governor of Dover, Canterbury and Rochester, and Constable of the Tower of London. After this we find him opposed to the bishops and barons, and his manor house of Segrave was burned to the ground by the populace. The King, too, in this perilous crisis deserted him, and cited him with others to appear forthwith at court in order to answer any charge regarding the wasting of the public treasury which might be preferred against them. In 12 months subsequently, however, Stephen de Segrave made his peace by paying 1000 marks to the King, and afterwards grew into such favor that in the 21st of Henry III, 1237, he was the means of reconciling the King with some of his most hostile barons. Later being made Justice of Chester and the King's Chief Counselor and being now, says Dugdale, "advanced in year, deported himself by experience of former times, with much more temper and moderation than heretofore." This eminent person married twice: 1st Rohese, daughter of Stephen de Spenser, and 2nd Ida, sister of Henry de Hastings, who was mother of his son Gilbert. Ida de Hastings was the daughter of William de Hastings, who fought in the cause of the Great Charta, but was not one of the Sureties, and his wife Margery or Margaret Bigod, daughter of Roger Bigod, Surety for the Magna Charta, and his wife Isabel de Warren, daughter of Hameline Plantagenet de Warren and Isabel de Warren, daughter of William de Warren and Ada de Talvas or Talvace; daughter of William, Count of Alencon and Ponthieu, and Alix; daughter of Eudes Count of Burgundy 1102; son of Henri, Duke of Burgundy 1166; son of Robert, King of Portugal; son of Robert, the Pious, King of France. Stephen de Segrave departed this life 1241 and was succeeded by his son, 4. Gilbert de Segrave.
~1144 - <1201
Gilbert
de
Segrave
57
57
. Hereward was the first of this family of whom mention is made, and his son, 2. Gilbert de Segrave, Lord of Segrave, assumed the surname of Segrave from a lordship of that name in County Leicester, where he had his chief residence in the time of Henry II; in the 12th of Henry II, 1166, he held the fourth part of one knight's fee of William de Newburgh, Earl of Warwick, and in the 4th of Richard I, 1193, he was Joint Sheriff with Reginald Bassett for Warwick and Leicester under Hugh de Novant, Bishop of Coventry, in which office he continued two years. He subsequently, in 10th of Richard I, gave 400 marks to the King toward the support of his wars.
~1114 - ~1166
Hereward
de
Segrave
52
52
~1150
Rohese
de
Segrave
1131 - 1190
William
De
Hastings
59
59
1182 - 1237
Margaret
Le
Bigod
55
55
1150 - 1221
Roger
Le
Bigod
71
71
Steward of the Houshold of King Richard I. 1 of 4 earls who carried silken canopy over Richard's head at his 2nd coronation One of the 25 sureties of the Magna Carta
~1320 - 1351
John
Tempest
31
31
~1334 - 1386
Sir
Richard
Tempest
52
52
~1225 - 1294
Thomas
de
Multon
69
69
~1225 - <1294
Isabel
De
Bolteby
69
69
1154
Isabel
De
Warren
~1200
Adam
De
Bolteby
~1170
Nicholas
De
Bolteby
~1175
Philippa
De
Tyndall
~1145
Adam
De
Tyndall
~1115
Robert
De
Tyndall
~1200 - 1246
Lambert
De
Multon
46
46
~1200
Amabel
De
Lucy
~1170 - 1213
Richard
de
Lucy
43
43
~1172 - >1230
Ada
de
Morville
58
58
~1115 - 1172
Hugh
De
Morville
57
57
Forester of Cumberland Beatrice's lover attacked Hugh de Morville with a sword but that she cried out in English to warn Hugh. It was used as evidence that the Scoto- Normans could speak English, perhaps in preference to French. Hugh and Beatrice are commemorated on a plaque at Dryburgh Abbey and at least Hugh is supposed to be buried there, possibly Beatrice was, too.
~1135 - >1226
Helwise
De
Stuteville
91
91
~1107 - 1150
Beatrice
de
Beauchamp
43
43
One source says Beatrice's father was Robert de Beauchamp. If she was the heiress of her grandfather, though, she probably didn't have surviving brothers or uncles. (Granted, her inheritance from her grandfather does not prove that she got ALL his property, and I haven't traced his holdings to see.) Her lover attacked Hugh de Morville with a sword but that she cried out in English to warn Hugh. It was used as evidence that the Scoto- Normans could speak English, perhaps in preference to French. Hugh and Beatrice are commemorated on a plaque at Dryburgh Abbey and at least Hugh is supposed to be buried there, possibly Beatrice was, too. W.H. Turton, _The Plantagenet Ancestry_ (1928, reprinted Baltimore 1968), says Beatrice de Beauchamp was the daughter of Pagan de Beauchamp and Rohese de Vere; Pagan was the son of Hugh de Beauchamp (c. 1066) and Rohese the daughter of Alberic de Vere (d. 1141) and Adeliza de Clare.
~1155
Hugh
De
Morville
~1094 - 1167
Simon
De
Morville
73
73
~1000
Adam
fitz
Swayn
~1105 - 1183
Robert
V De
Stuteville
78
78
~1114
Helwise
Murdac
~1110
Geoffrey
Murdac
Source: * Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" Publication: P.O. Box 577, Bayview, ID 83803 Note: Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous other reference works" Note: very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's Repository: Note: Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
~1108
Patrick
De
Stuteville
~1075
Lady of
Skipwith
Erneburga
~1040
Robert
III De
Stuteville
Robert de Stuteville or D'Estuteville, called Grundeboef or Fronteboe, in 7th of Henry I was made prisoner by the king at the Battle of Tenerchbray, where he was taken fighting on the part of Robert Curthose (Robert of Normandy, Crusader, son of William, the Conqueror, and older brother of Henry I) against that king, for which his lands were seized and given to Nigel de Albini.
~1030 - ~1107
Robert
II De
Stuteville
77
77
~1140 - 11 JAN 1197/98
Reginald
De
Lucy
~1145
Amabilis
Fitz
William
~1115 - 1154
William 'The
Noble' Fitz
Duncan
39
39
~1120 - 1187
Alice
De
Rumilly
67
67
~1100 - ~1132
William
de
Meschines
32
32
Lord of Skipton-in Craven, Yorkshire
~1096 - ~1155
Cecily
De
Rumilly
59
59
1130
II
Eudes
~1070 - ~1106
Robert
de
Rumilly
36
36
Lord of Skipton-in Craven, Yorkshire
~1070 - JAN 1127/28
III
Ranulph
Lord of Cumberland, Vicomte de Bayeux in Normandy Ranulph probably began building Appleby Castle around 1100, passing it to the Crown when he was made Earl of Chester in 1121. Commander of the Royal Forces in Normandy, 1124
1115 - 1186
Hugh
De
Lacy
71
71
~1136
Basilia
de
Clare
~1197 - 1271
Philip
Basset
74
74
~1065
Aelfred "the
Englishman"
de Taillebois
1040
Lucia
of
Mercia
~1266 - 1329
Sir
Alfonso
de Vere
63
63
<1002 - 1059
III
Ælfgar
57
57
0997
Ælfgifu
Elgiva of
Northumbria
~1035 - >1070
Ealdgyth
of
Mercia
35
35
0938
Thored
Gunnarsson
14 MAY 968 - 1057
III
Leofric
A dominant figure in government of Edward the Confessor. Founder of the Church of Coventry Seen as Thegn from 1005, Dux from 1026, Earl of Mercia by 1032
0980 - 1067
Lady
Godiva of
Coventry
87
87
Godiva, Lady (flourished about 1040-80), Anglo-Saxon noblewoman, wife of Leofric, earl of Mercia (flourished 1005-57). She is known to have persuaded her husband to found monasteries at Coventry (1043) and Stow. According to legend, she obtained a reduction in the excessive taxes levied by her husband on the people of Coventry by consenting to ride naked through the town on a white horse. Only one person disobeyed her orders to remain indoors behind closed shutters; this man, a tailor known afterward as Peeping Tom, peered through a window and immediately became blind. The oldest form of the legend is in the 13th-century Flores Historiarum (Flowers of the Historians). A festival in her honor was instituted as part of Coventry Fair in 1678. Source: 'The World Book Encyclopedia', 1968, p G235. 'Godiva, Lady,' Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation
0955
Thorold
of
Buckingham
0950 - 1023
Earl of Mercia
and Staffordshire
Leofwine
73
73
0955
Alwara
of
Mercia
0925
Athelstan
Mannesson
0921
Edulph
of
Wessex
0905
Lady of
Mercia
Ælfwyn
Dispossed of her territories by her uncle, Edward I the Elder, King of Wessex Sent as an honourable captive into Wessex. Married a West Saxon Nobleman.
~1322
Margaret
Verch
Philip
1050 - 1089
Ranulf
II le
Meschines
39
39
~1052 - >1084
Maud
D'Avranches
32
32
~0998 - >1082
Richard
d'Avranches
84
84
Lord of Hiesmes
~1030
Emma
De
Conteville
1040
Judith
D'Avranches
~1050
Hugh de
Avranches
'le Gros'
1000 - >1041
Richard
Toustien
le Goz
41
41
Beliarde
~0925
Baldwin
II De
Blois
0970 - >1035
Ansfred
II Onfror
le Goz
65
65
1186 - 18 FEB 1223/24
Hugh
Le
Bigod
Surety, and Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk
~1188
William
Le
Bigod
~1190
Margaret
de
Sutton
~1190
Thomas
Le
Bigod
~1192
Adeliza
Le
Bigod
~1190
Alberic
de
Vere
~1140
Robert
Taillebois
~1518
Agnes
Wyvill
1095 - 9 MAR 1175/76
Hugh
le
Bigod
Supported Stephen over Matilda & Henry II in Civil War of seccession to Henry I Steward and chancellor to Henry I First Earl of Norfolk.
~1113 - 1199
Juliane
de
Vere
86
86
1060 - 1107
Roger
le
Bigod
47
47
* founded the Abbey of Thetford in County of Norfolk * Note: ROGER BIGOT,(*) first of the family to settle in England in the reign of the Conqueror, held six lordships in Essex, one hundred and seventeen in Suffolk and several in Norfolk; founded the Abbey of Thetford in County of Norfolk and was buried there, 7 Henry I (1107) being the date of his death; married Adeliza, daughter of Hugh de Grentesmaisnill, High Steward of England
~1065
William
de
Saye
~1065
Adelise
De
Toeni
~1090
Jane
le
Bigod
~1093
Gunnora
le
Bigod
1035 - 1107
Roger
Le
Bigod
72
72
1045 - <1090
Billeheude
de St.
Sauveur
45
45
0935 - 0978
Ansfred
I
Hrolfsson
43
43
0937
Countess
De Beulac
Helloe
1017
Ranulf
le
Meschines
Vicomte de la Bessin. Fought at the Battle of Val-es-Dunes, 1047. 1st Earl, Vicomte de Bayeux before the Conquest
0992
Viscomte
de Bayeux
Ancitel
Vicomte de la Bessin.
~1065
Athelreda
of
Dunbar
~1050
Mathilde
of
England
0960
High Reeve of
Northumbria
Morcar
0960
Ealdgyth
Edgitha
of Mercia
~0997
Ælgifu
of
Northumbria
~0930
Ælfthryth
of
Tamworth
Wulfrun
of
Tamworth
~0930
Earngrim
~0930
Hildeswinde
De
Croatie
~0870
Count von
Brunswick
Brunon
1341
Henry
de
Percy
1042
Æthelreda
of
England
~1060 - 1138
II
Gospatric
78
78
Witnessed the foundation of the great Abbey of Holyrood House
~1062 - 1138
Waltheof
of
Dunbar
76
76
Lord of Allerdale
1329
William
de
Ros
0975 - 1045
Crinan
Grimus
'The Thane'
70
70
Lord of the Isles. Governor of the Scots Islands. Mormaer of Atholl. Earl of Strathclyde. Abthane of Dule Related to St. Columba Hereditary Lay Abbott of DunkeldLay abott of Dunkeld
~0984 - 1043
Bethoc
(Beatrix)
59
59
1180
Sarah
De
Flete
~1140
Richard
de
Flete
~1155
Juliana
~1162
Sir
Thomas
de Multon
~1164
Eleanor
De
Boston
~1142 - 1190
Lambert
de
Multon
48
48
~1143
Hawise
De
Briwere
1230 - 1293
Maud
De
Vaux
63
63
1255
Aline
de
Multon
~1220
John
de
Multon
~1520
Elizabeth
UNKNOWN
RFN137
~1097
Arnaud
II De La
Flotte
~1075
Arnaud
de la
Flotte
~1075
Adelais
De
Comps
~1050
Henri
De La
Flotte
~1118
Robert
De
Briwere
1175
Hawise
de
Multon
1165
Henry
De
Beke
1200
Walter
De
Beke
~1072 - 1143
Fulk V
'the
Younger'
71
71
Fulk V, Count of Anjou, was born 1092, and was Count 1109-1142. He married 1st Ermengarde, daughter of Helias, Count of Maine, and had by her his heir, Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, Helias, who became Count of Maine or Mayenne, and two daughters, Sybilla and Matilda. He married 2nd Melesenda, daughter of Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, and became King of Jerusalem at the death of his father-in-law Sept. 4, 1131. Fulk V was son of Bertrada de Montford, who eventually deserted her husband and became the mistress of Philip I of France. Fulk became Count of Anjou in 1109, and showed himself a doughty opponent to Henry I, King of England, against whom he continually supported Louis VI of France until, in 1127, Henry I won him over by betrothing his daughter Matilda to Fulk's son Geoffrey Plantagenet. Already in 1120 Fulk V had visited the Holy Land and became a close friend of the Templars. On his return he assigned to the Order of the Templars an annual subsidy, while he also maintained two knights in the Holy Land for a year. In 1128 he was preparing to return to the East when he received an embassy from Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, who had no male heir to succeed him, offering his daughter Melisinda in marriage, with the right of eventual succession to the kingdom. Fulk accepted the offer, and in 1129 he came and married Melisinda, receiving the towns of Acre and Tyre as her dower. In 1131, when Baldwin died, he became King of Jerusalem. His reign is not marked by any considerable events; the kingdom which had reached its zenith under Baldwin II, and did not begin to decline till the capture of Edessa in the reign of Baldwin III, was quietly prosperous under his rule. In the beginning of his reign he had to act as Regent of Antioch, and provide a husband, Raymond of Poitou, for the infant heiress Constance, daughter of Bohemund. (Her 2nd husband was Raymond of Chatillion, from whom you descend, and which gives you Bohemond, her grandfather, Leader of the First Crusade.) Twice in Fulk's reign the Eastern Emperor John Comnenus appeared in northern Syria, in 1137 and 1142, but his coming did not affect the King, who was able to decline politely a visit which the Emperor proposed to make to Jerusalem. In 1143 he died, leaving two sons by Melisande, who both became Kings of Jerusalem, as Baldwin III and Almaric I. Fulk had continued the tradition of good statesmanship and sound churchmanship which Melisande's father and grandfather, Baldwin I and II had begun. His son by his first wife succeeded him as Count of Anjou. Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith Call Number: CS71.S643 Bibliographic Information: Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith. Privately Published.
~1085 - 1136
Ermengarde
de
Maine
51
51
~1144
Yolande
de
Hainault
1109
Isabella
(Matilda)
~1116
Count of
Mayenne
Helias
~1097
Melisinda
De
Réthel
~1130
Baldwin
~1132 - 1174
I
Almaric
42
42
1033 - 1109
Fulk IV
'the
Rude'
76
76
Fulk IV, Count of Anjou, 1068-1109, surnamed the Rude, who succeeded as Count of Anjou at the decease, in prison, of his brother Geoffrey, the Bearded. Fulk died April 14, 1109, leaving by Bertrade, daughter of Simon de Montfort, a daughter Ermengarde and a son,
~1059
Bertgrade
De
Montfort
~1065 - 1110
Comte
du Maine
Helias
45
45
~1060 - 1097
Bertha
De
Bourgogne
37
37
1071 - 10 FEB 1125/26
Guillaume
IX 'The
Troubadour'
0975 - 31 JAN 1029/30
Guillaume
V "The
Great"
~1020 - 1077
Agnaes
of
Aquitaine
57
57
~1023
VI
Pierre-
Guillaume
~1027
Bbeatrice
D'
Aquitaine
~0990
Bisque
De
Gascogne
~1012
Eudes
De
Gascogne
~1015
Thibaud
(Theobald)
De Poitiers
~0977
Almodie
De
Limoges
~1004
Guillaume
VI De
Guyenne
~0977
Ebles
D'Aquitaine
~1036 - ~1114
Ivo de
Roumare
Taillebois
78
78
ANCESTORS OF RICHARD RATCLIFF OF LANCASHIRE, ENGLAND AND TALBOT COUNTY, MARYLAND Addendum to Clarence Ratcliff's genealogy by Donald Ratcliff Dr. A. Wayne Ratcliff, M.D. (50 N. Liberty Street #1, Delaware, OH 43015) has extended the Ratcliff line backwards to the earliest known ancestor, Ivo de Tailbois. He spent eleven years, made two trips to England, and hired a professional genealogiest to secure this information. Most of this information is taken from The Book of the Ratcliffs, while generations 17-21 were taken from wills located at the courthouse in Preston, Lancashire.
Hildegarde
de
Baugency
1075 - 1146
Ermengardis
D'Anjou
71
71
~1224 - 1265
Sir
Hugh le
Despencer
41
41
Hugh de Spenser, born in or before 1223. He had Loughborough. Burton, Freely, and Arnesby in Co. Leicester; Parlington and Hillam in Co. York; Sibsey and Aukborough in Co. Lincoln; Ryhall and Belmesthorpe in Rutland. He took part with the barons and was nominated under the baronial power in 44th of Henry III, 1260, Justiciary of England. After the battle of Lewes he was one of those to whom the custody of the captive monarch was committed, and he was entrusted with the castles of Orford in Suffolk, of Devises in Wilts and Barnard Castle in Duram. He was summoned to Parliament on Dec. 14, 1264, as "Hugh le Despenser Justic' Angliae" and lost his life under the baronial banner at Evesham, where he joined the Earl of Leicester and was slain with him Aug. 4, 1265, and was buried in Evesham Abbey. His lordship married Aliva, daughter of Philip Bassett of Wycomb, Co. Bucks, by whom he left at his decease Hugh, of whom presently, and a daughter Alinore. Aliva's mother was Hawise, daughter of Sir Matthew de Lovaine of Little Easton in Essex. Some Genealogists say she was a daughter of John de Grey. After the forfeiture and decease of Lord Despenser, his widow Aliva found such favor with the king, that she was enabled to retain a considerable proportion of his property, and at her death, in the 9th of Edward I (1729), it devolved upon her son Hugh, when he paid a fine of 500 marks. Hugh and Alivas, daughter Alinore, mentioned above, who married Hugh de Courtenay
~1025 - 1087
Simon
de
Montfort
62
62
1038
Agnes
d'Evereux
~1070 - 1137
Amaury
IV de
Montfort
67
67
~1026
Isabel
de
Broyes
~1046
Isabelle
de
Montfort
1037
Ralph
III de
Toeni
~1095 - 1181
Agnes
de
Garlende
86
86
~0986 - 1067
Count
d'Evereux
Richard
81
81
~1004 - ~1051
Alice Godehilde
Fitzwilliam
Borrel
47
47
~0970 - 1051
Ralph
Rodulf II
de Toeni
81
81
Seigneur of Tosni and Conches
~0990 - 1039
Roger I "the
Spainiard"
de Toeni
49
49
Hereditary Stand Bearer of Normandy; quarelsome leader, contemptuous of bastard William, proud of connection with Dukes of Normandy; founded benedictine Abbey of St. Peter and Paul at Chatillon. aka The Spainard Fought the Muselmans in Catalogne
~0992
Ralph
de
Toeni
~1009
Robert
de
Toeni
~0990
Miss
d'Evereux
~0968
Herleve
Gunnois
~0996 - 4 FEB 1030/31
II
Amaury
~0996 - ~1053
Bertrade
de
Gommetz
57
57
~0940 - 1003
Baron de
Montfort
Guillaume
63
63
~0920
Lady
de
Cambray
~0897
Sire de
Cambray
Isaac
~1004 - 1046
Geoffrey
II
Ferole
42
42
~1008 - 18 MAR 1075/76
Ermengard
D'Anjou
~0960 - ~1019
Elizabeth
de
Vendôme
59
59
~1000
Geoffrey
Martel
0995 - 1060
Adelaide
d'Anjou
65
65
Robert
De
Trevers
~0930
Elizabeth
~1075 - 1111
Bohemond
36
36
~0895
Osmond
the
Dane
~1035
Geoffrey
II 'The
Bearded'
~1037
Hildegarde
De
Gastinois
~0970 - >1010
Geoffrey
40
40
~0974
Beatrice
De
Macon
~0871 - 28 FEB 942/43
I Aubri
~0885
Countess
de
Macon
I
Humbert
~0851 - 15 JUN 911
Viscount of
Narbonne
Mayeul
~0851 - <0911
Raimodis
60
60
~0882
Francon
de
Narbonne
~0825 - >0878
Viscount of
Narbonne
Lievin
53
53
~0953 - 0990
Count of
the Gatinais
Aubri
37
37
~0923 - >0987
Count of
the Gatinais
Geoffrey
64
64
~0900 - >0966
Count of
the Gatinais
Aubri
66
66
~0875 - >0942
Viscount
of Orleans
Geoffroi
67
67
~0890
Rogerus
Magnus de
Montgomery
~0992
Hadeburge
de
Beaumont
~0960
Vicomte de
Beaumont
Raoul
Seigneur de
Monrevau
Tescelin
~0880
Hereditary
Count of the
Corbonnais Fulk
Rothais
~0990 - 1060
III
Pons
70
70
~1080
Helene
Plantagenet
~1060
Helie
Plantagenet
~1288
Isabelle
D'Artois
Count of
Toulouse
Bertrand
~1138 - 1200
Mathilda
De
Clermont
62
62
~1168
Juliane
De
Dammartin
Adelaide
de
Puiset
Hugh
de
Puiset
III
William
Foulques
de
Belleme
Robert
de
Belleme
~0996 - 1038
III
Geoffrey
42
42
Archbishop
of Tours
Hugh
Bishop of
Senles
Ives
~1020
Arnulph
d'Alencon
ARNULPH was in the enjoyment of his father's large possessions but a short time. In the same year of his father's exile, he was found strangled in his bed.
~1062 - 1116
Adelmode
de la
Marche
54
54
~1034
Ponce
de la
Marche
Hugh de
Chateau-
neuf
~0980 - 1047
Harmon
de
Creully
67
67
~1020
Harmon
de
Crevecouer
~0750
Rowland
~0780
Juliana
Von
Ingelheim
~0891
Richilde
De
Bourges
~0965
Etienette
de Dol
~0913
Gerlotte
de
Blois
0862 - 0892
Hugh II
d'
Alsace
30
30
0871 - 22 MAR 927/28
Rothilde
Caroling of the
West Franks
~0866 - ~0901
Comte
de Maine
Roger
35
35
~1066 - 1099
Agnes
Paganal De
Saint Clare
33
33
~0840
Sigebert
Meroving
de Razes
William
Meroving
de Razes
de
Bourges
~0832 - 0864
Etienne
d'
Alsace
32
32
~0815
Comte de
Bourges
Rainhard
~0810 - ~0853
I Hugh
43
43
Count of Auxerre and Nevers
~0865
Hrollaug
Rognvaldsson
1019
Garsende
De
Maine
1015 - 1089
Theobald
II De
Champaigne
74
74
Haribert
De
Maine
~1045 - 1102
Etienne
Henri
57
57
Count of Blois, Champagne, Chartres and Tourain, a crusader under Godfrey de Bouillon, who fell, gallantly fighting against the Infidels at Rames. (Battle of Ascalon actually). Count of Meaux.
~1130
Annora
De St.
John
~1097 - 1154
Stephen
De
Blois
57
57
~1099
Bishop of
Winchester
Henry
~1092
Bishop of
Chalon
Philip
~1086
William
De
Champaigne
~1100 - 1151
Countess
of Boulogne
Matilda
51
51
~1126
Baldwin
De
Blois
~1114 - 1153
IV
Eustace
39
39
~1135
William
De
Blois
~1136
Mary
De
Blois
~1080
III
Eustace
~1130 - 1173
Matthew
I Von
Lothringen
43
43
~1162 - 1211
Matilda
De
Boulogne
49
49
~1110 - 17 JAN 1167/68
Thierry
II De
Lorraine
1050 - 23 JAN 1114/15
I
Thierry
~1140
Count of
Flanders &
Artois Philip
~1124 - 1168
Countess
de Namur
Alix
44
44
~1055 - 1117
Gertrude
De
Flanders
62
62
~0981 - 1039
Dietrich Dirk
III , Count of
Holland
58
58
I
Goswin
~1053
II
Robert
1217 - 1291
Elâonore
Bâerenger
74
74
~1015
Dietrich Dirk
IV, Count of
Holland
0985 - 9 MAR 1043/44
Ulfhilde
Otelhilde of
Franconia
1010 - 6 MAR 1069/70
III
Gerhard
1011 - ~1080
Hedwig
De
Namur
69
69
1092 - 1149
Amadeus
III De
Maurienne
57
57
~1079
III
Louis
~0881 - 0923
Count in the Trier
& Ardennesgaus
Wigerich
42
42
~0975 - 1019
Adelheid
Ermengarde,
Princess of France
44
44
~0942 - 21 MAY 993
Charles
de
Lorraine
0992 - 1070
II
Gerhard
78
78
~0966
Countess
of Alsace
Gisela
1243
Princess
of Brabant
Elisabeth
~1200
Mathilde
De
Brabant
~1191 - 1267
Mary
De
Brabant
76
76
1201
Maria
von
Hohenstaufen
1210 - 1234
V
Floris
24
24
1227 - 28 JAN 1254/55
II
William
Count of Holland
~1360
William
de
Ipstones
~1390
Alice
de
Ipstones
~1340 - <1397
Joan
de
Stafford
57
57
1301 - 1372
Ralph
de
Stafford
70
70
Sir RALPH DE STAFFORD, K. G., 2d Baron de Stafford (died 1372). He had a principal command in the van of the English at the battle of Cressy, and in 1351 was created by Edward, as a reward for his eminent services, Earl of Stafford Ralph, 1st Earl of Stafford, K. G., d. 1372, great great grandson of Robert, Standard Bearer of Conquest who founded house. Baron Stafford, who was summoned to Parliament 1337-1350. This nobleman attaining his majority in 17th of Edward II, 1324, and then doing his homage, had livery of his father's lands, and the next year became a Knight by Bathing, and other sacred ceremonies, had robes, etc., as a banneret, allowed him out of the King's wardrobe for the solemnity; after which he soon became a personage of celebrity in the wars of Edward III, and after many years service to the King he was elected a Knight of the Garter, being one of the original members of that noble order. Ralph Stafford was made a Knight-Baroner Jan. 20, 1327, when he served against the Scots. In 1330 he acted in concert with the Lords in maintaining a quarrel against Roger IV de Mortimer, fourth Earl of March. In 1332 he was appointed guardian of the peace for Staffordshire. In 1337, steward of the King's household. In 1340 he accompanied on his hurried return to England and was sent by the King to John de Stafford, Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1345 was appointed Seneshal of Aquitaine. He was much praised for the valor and daring. For his eminent services he was created March 5, 1351, Earl of Stafford, and constituted Lieutenant and Captain General of the Duchy of Aquitaine, in France, and in right of his wife acquired a considerable inheritance, and the Barony of Audley is supposed to have merged with that of Stafford. They had Ralph, Hugh, Beatrice, Joane, Elizabeth and Margaret. Ralph Stafford died Aug. 31, 1372.
1325 - 1345
Margaret
de
Audley
20
20
Margaret d'Audley, only daughter and heiress, was aged 18 or 20 when her mother died in 1342, and was then the wife of Ralph Stafford,
~1223 - ~1256
Sir
William de
Samlesbury
33
33
~1220
Sir
John
Hesketh
~1280
Elizabeth
de
Holand
1242
John
de
Ireland
~1260 - >1311
Elizabeth
De
Samlesbury
51
51
~1190
Margaret
fitz
Walter
Margaret
de
Stafford
1289 - 1347
Hugh
De
Audley
58
58
1292 - 1342
Lady
Margaret
De Clare
49
49
Margaret de Clare, married Hugh d'Audley, 2nd son of Hugh, Lord Audley and Isolt, daughter of Edmund de Mortimer of Wigmore. He was summoned to Parliament in the lifetime of his father as Hugh de Audley, junori, 1317-1321, and after that nobleman's decease from 1326-1336. Little is known of him before his marriage with a great heiress. They were married April 28, 1317, at Windsor, his wife being a granddaughter of King Edward I; she was usually called Countess of Cornwall, but in 1316 she is called Countess of Gloucester and Hertford, being Lady of Tewksbury Town and Hundred. Hugh d'Audley, Hugh le Despenser and Roger Damory were called "Vices Comites," Viscounts of Gloucester, for they had married sisters. Margaret died April 9, 1342. He died s. p. m. (without male issue) Nov. 10, 1347, and was buried in Tonbridge Priory.
~1284 - 1312
Piers
De
Gavestone
28
28
6 JAN 1311/12 - >1334
Amy
De
Gavestone
1243 - 1295
Lord
Gilbert
De Clare
52
52
Gilbert de Clare, surnamed the Red, 7th Earl of Hertford and 3rd Earl of Gloucester, who by the King's procurement, married Alice, daughter of Guy, Earl of Angouleme, and a niece of the King of France, which monarch bestowed upon the lady a marriage portion of 5000 marks. This baron, who like his predecessors was zealous in the cause of the barons, but later abandoned the baronial cause, and having assisted in procuring the liberty of King Henry and Prince Edward, commanded the Second Brigade of the Royal Army at Evesham, which restored the kingly power to its former lustre. In reward of these eminent services he received a full pardon for himself and his brother Thomas, of all former treasons, and the custody of Bergavenny, during the minority of Maud, wife of Humphrey de Bohun. His Lordship veered again in his allegiance, and he does not appear to have been sincerely reconciled to the royal cause until 1270, in which year, demanding from Prince Edward repayment of the expenses he had incurred at the Battle of Evesham with livery of all the castles and lands which his ancestors had possessed, and these demands having been complied with, he thenceforth became a good and loyal subject of the crown. Upon the death of King Henry III, Gilbert de Clare was one of the lords who met at the New Temple in London, to proclaim Prince Edward, then in the Holy Land, successor to the crown, and so soon as the new monarch returned to England, his Lordship was the first to entertain him and his whole retinue with great magnificence for several days at his castle in Tonebridge. In the 13th of Edward III, 1285, his Lordship divorced Alice, the French Princess, and in consideration of her illustrious birth, granted for her support during her life, six extensive manors and parks, and he married in 1289 Joane of Acre, daughter of King Edward I, upon which occasion he gave up the inheritance of all his castles and manors, in England and Wales, to his royal father-in-law, to dispose of as he might think proper, which manors, etc., were entailed by the King upon the Earl's issue by the said Joane, and in default, upon her heirs and assigns, should she survive him. By this lady he had Gilbert, Alinore, wife of Hugh le Despenser, Margaret, wife of Hugh d'Audley, and Elizabeth, wife of John de Burgh. Gilbert de Clare died 1295 and Joane married 2nd a plain esquire, Ralph de Montheimer, clandestinely, without the King, her father's permission, but to which alliance he was reconciled and became eventually much attached to his new son-in-law.
1272 - 1307
Joan
Plantagenet
35
35
1291
Gilbert
de
Clare
1295 - 1360
Elizabeth
de
Clare
65
65
1292 - 1337
Alianor
(Eleanor)
de Clare
44
44
Geoffrey
de
Geneville
1239 - 1307
Edward
I
'Longshanks'
68
68
Edward I, Earl of Lancaster Edward I (1239-1307), king of England (1272-1307). He was born in Westminster, the eldest son of King Henry III. Following his father's death in 1272, Edward was recognized as king by the English barons. In the first years of his reign, he suppressed corruption in the administration of justice, restricted the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts to church affairs, and eliminated the papacy's overlordship over England. The major conflict in Edward's reign was an ongoing conflict with the people of Scotland. In agreeing to arbitrate among the claimants to the Scottish throne, Edward, in 1291, had required that he be recognized as overlord of Scotland. The Scots later repudiated him, and Edward invaded and conquered Scotland in 1296, declaring himself king of the realm. In 1298 he again invaded Scotland to suppress the revolt led by Sir William Wallace. However, he failed to crush Scottish opposition. In 1303 he again undertook the conquest of Scotland. Wallace was captured and executed in 1305, but a new revolt broke out, and Robert Bruce became king of Scotland. In 1307 Edward died while traveling to fight the Scots again. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1244 - 1290
Lady
Eleanor
of Castile
46
46
1275 - 14 FEB 1316/17
Marguerite
Capet
de Hondi
1300
Thomas
Plantagenet
Marshal of England
1301 - 19 MAR 1329/30
Edmund
Plantagenet
Edmund Plantagenet, husband of Margaret Wake, was born Aug. 5, 1301, surnamed of Woodstock, from the place of his birth, 2nd son of King Edward I by his 2nd wife Margaret, daughter of Philip, the Hardy, King of France, son of Louis IX, Saint Louis. "Edmundo de Woodstock" was summoned to Parliament by writ Aug. 2, 1320, about two years before he attained his majority. He had previously been in the wars of Scotland and had obtained considerable territorial grants from the crown. In the next year he was created Earl of Kent, and had a grant of the castle of Okham, in the County of Rutland, and shrievalty of the county. About the same time he was constituted Governor of the castle of Tunbridge in Kent; and upon the breaking out of the insurrection, under Thomas Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster (son of Edmund Plantagenet, 2nd son of Henry III, King of England), he was commissioned by the King (Edward II) to pursue that rebellious prince, and to lay siege to the Castle of Pontefract. The Earl of Lancaster was subsequently made a prisoner at Boroughbridge, and this Edmund Plantagenet, Earl of Kent, was one of those who condemned him to death. From this period, during the remainder of the reign of his brother, Edward II, Edmund Plantagenet, of Woodstock, was constantly employed in the cabinet or the field. He was frequently accredited on embassies to the court of France, and was in all the wars in Gascony and Scotland. But on the accession of his nephew, King Edward III, he was arrested and sentenced to death for having conspired with other nobles to deliver his brother, the deposed Edward II, out of prison. Whereupon, by the management of Queen Isabel (wife of Edward II) and her paramour, Mortimer, he was beheaded at Winchester, in 1380, after having remained on the scaffold from noon until five in the evening, waiting for an executioner, no one being willing to undertake the horrid office, till a malefactor was procured to perform it. Margaret Wake married 1st John Comyn of Badenaugh, who died sine prole, and married 2nd this Edmund Plantagenet, who was created Earl of Kent July 28, 1322 (15th of Edward II) and was beheaded March 19, 1330 (Margaret died Sept. 29, 1349). By him she had 4 children: (1) Edmund Plantagenet was restored in blood and honours by Parliament the year his father suffered death, and thus became Baron Woodstock and Earl of Kent, but died soon in his minority, unmarried, and was succeeded by his brother, (2) John Plantagenet, 3rd Earl of Kent, who married Elizabeth, daughter of the Duke of Juliers, but died sine prole in 1352, when the Earldom of Kent, and the Baronies of Woodstock and Wake, Honours the first two of father and last one of their mother, devolved upon his only surviving sister Joane, Fair Maid of Kent. (3) Margaret Plantagenet married Amaneus, eldest son of Bernard, Lord de la Brette, and died sine prole. (4) Joane Plantagenet, of whom further.
1306
Eleanor
Plantagenet
1245 - 1285
Philip III
"The Bold"
Capet
40
40
Philip III (of France), called The Bold (1245-85), king of France (1270-85), the son of King Louis IX, born in Poissy, near Paris. A weak ruler, he was dominated at various times by his chamberlain, his wife, his mother, and especially his uncle Charles I of Anjou, king of the Two Sicilies. In 1285, the last year of his reign, Philip made an unsuccessful attempt to annex the kingdom of Aragón. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1253 - 12 JAN 1320/21
Marie
of
Brabant
1276 - 1319
Comte
D'Evereaux
Louis
43
43
1243 - 28 JAN 1270/71
Isabella
of
Aragón
1268 - 1314
Phillip IV
"The Fair"
Capet
46
46
Philip IV (of France) Philip IV (of France), called The Fair (1268-1314), king of France (1285-1314), known for his conflict with the papacy. He was born in Fontainebleau. The great event of Philip's reign was his struggle with Pope Boniface VIII, which grew out of Philip's attempt to levy taxes against the clergy. Boniface forbade the clergy to pay taxes to a secular power and in 1302 issued the bull Unam Sanctam, a declaration of papal supremacy. Philip's partisans then imprisoned Boniface. The pope escaped but died soon afterward. In 1305 Philip obtained the election of one of his own adherents as pope, Clement V, and compelled him to reside in France. Thus began the so-called Babylonian Captivity of the papacy (1309-1377), during which the popes lived at Avignon and were subjected to French control. In 1307 Philip arrested Grand Master Jacques de Molay of the Knights Templars, and in 1312 he forced the pope to suppress the religious and military order. Their wealth was confiscated by the king, and many members were burned at the stake. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1292
Isabel
De
Valois
1214 - 1270
St.
Louis IX
Capet
56
56
Louis IX Louis IX, called St. Louis (1214-70), king of France (1226-70), son and successor of Louis VIII. Louis's mother, Blanche of Castile, daughter of Alfonso IX, king of Castile, was regent during his minority and again from 1248 until her death in 1252. During the latter years Louis was in the Holy Land on the Seventh Crusade (see Crusades: The Later Crusades). Louis and his forces were defeated and captured in Egypt in 1250, and the king remained in Palestine for four years before returning to France. In 1258 Louis signed the Treaty of Corbeil, relinquishing to the kingdom of Aragón all French claims to Barcelona and Roussillon, in return for which the Aragonese renounced their claims to parts of Provence and Languedoc. In 1259 he signed the Treaty of Paris, by which Henry III of England was confirmed in his possession of territories in southwestern France and Louis received the provinces of Anjou, Normandy, Poitou, Maine, and Touraine. In 1270 Louis embarked on another Crusade and died en route at Tunis in northern Africa. He was succeeded by his son Philip III. Louis, an outstanding monarch of medieval times, was canonized in 1297. His feast day is August 25. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1220 - 1295
Marguerite
Bâerenger
75
75
~1204 - 1237
Princess
of Hungary
Maria
33
33
~1238 - 1273
Alix
De
Bourgogne
35
35
~1235 - 1261
III
Henry
26
26
1212
Yolande
De
Dreux
1260 - 1327
Agnès
Capet
67
67
1231 - 1267
Jean
Capet
36
36
1185 - 3 MAR 1233/34
Robert
III
Capet
~1154 - 1218
Robert
II
Capet
64
64
~1164 - 18 MAR 1221/22
Yolande
de
Coucy
1196
Yolande
De
Dreux
~1192 - 17 MAR 1240/41
Philippa
de
Dreux
1199
Jeanne
De
Dreux
1200
Geoffroy
De
Dreux
1108 - 1171
Baldwin
IX "Le
Batisseur"
63
63
~1249
Peter
Capet
~1137 - 1181
Laurette
De
Hainault
44
44
~1251
Isabella
Capet
1345
Agnès
Capet
~1075 - 1143
Ermenside
de
Luxembourg
68
68
~1105 - 1160
Beatrix
de
Namur
55
55
~1090
Jutta
of
Geldern
II
Gerard
~1032 - 1097
Melesinde
de
Montlhery
65
65
1092
Elizabeth
De
Namur
~1055 - 1129
Clemence
of
Poitou
74
74
~1070
Adelbert
II Von
Dagsburg
~1109
Luitgarde
Von Moha
& Sulzbach
~1072
Mathilda
of
Luxembourg
1062 - 1139
Ida de
Louvain
77
77
1033 - 1053
Gerard von
Heinsberg-
Falkenburg
20
20
1058 - 1092
Dietrich
Flamens
34
34
~1035 - 1102
Ida Relinde
von
Saxony
67
67
<1035 - 1102
III
Adalbert
67
67
0991
II
Lambert
~1070 - 1126
Henry
I de
Namur
56
56
1234
Bâeatrice
de
Provence
~1015
Bertrade
Haraldsdatter
D. 0970
Harald
II
Eriksson
~0885 - 0954
Erik
"the
Bloodaxe"
69
69
~0860 - 0934
Harald I
Hårfarger
Halfdansson
74
74
Harold I (of Norway), called The Fairhaired (860?-940?), king of Norway (885?-933?), the first person to rule, at least nominally, the entire country. Harold inherited three small domains in eastern, central, and western Norway from his father, Halfdan the Black, and set out to conquer the rest of the country. After many years of campaigning, during which the chieftains of western Norway offered the most stubborn resistance, Harold gained his final victory in the Battle of Hafrsfjord, which probably took place around 885, although it may have been some years later. Once in power, Harold ruled with a strong hand and consolidated his realm. One result of his firm rule was the acceleration of the immigration that had begun shortly before to pioneer settlements in Iceland. Many chieftains also fled to the Western (British) Isles, from where they and their kinsfolk in the Orkneys, Shetlands, and Hebrides raided the Norwegian coast. Harold was finally compelled to send a punitive expedition across the North Sea to flush out these Vikings. For the same purpose he entered into an alliance with King Athelstan of England; but he made no actual conquests. In his old age Harold abdicated in favor of his eldest legitimate son, Eric Bloodaxe, who was deposed by his half brother Håkon I after a few years of misrule. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
King of
South
Jutland Eric
Ragnhild
Ericsdatter
Snefrid
Svåsedatter
~0835
Eyvind
Lambe
Karesson
~0880
Sigurd
Hrise
Haraldsson
Alofo
Haraldsson
~0910
Olav
Haraldson
Alfhild
0825
Raginhild
Sigurdsdatter
0810 - 0856
Sigurd
Hart
Helgisson
46
46
0810
Tyrne
Klacksdatter
~0778
Kvasse
Helge
~0796
Aslaug
Sigardsdatter
~0780
Ålfild
Gangvaldsdatter
0784
Heluna
Ellusdatter
~0805
Tora
Sigurdsdatter
~0801
Erik II
Sigurdsson
~0800
Harda-
Knut
Sigurdsson
~0762
Olav
of
Ringerike
~1000 - 1064
II
Adalbert
64
64
0660
Sigurd
"Ring"
Randversson
~0665
Alfhild
Gandolfsdatter
~0745
Ring II of
Ringerike
Sigurdsson
<0976 - 1011
Hildegarde
von
Stade
35
35
<0929 - 1 MAY 976
Count von
Stade
Henry
~0967 - 1044
Gozelo
D'Ardennes
77
77
1004 - 1037
Regilinde
D'Ardennes
33
33
~0975
Marg
of
Antwerp
~1006
Godfrey
IV
D'Ardennes
~1342
William
Fitz-
Warren
1030 - 1069
Godfrey
"the
Bearded"
39
39
Berthe
~0915
Otto
von
Trier
~0935
Ermengarde
Von
Trier
~0890 - >0923
Kunigunde
Carolingian
33
33
~0895 - 0923
Richinius
De
Ardennes
28
28
0922
Siegried
II De
Ardennes
0870
Princess of
West Franks
Ermentrude
~1215 - 1249
Jean I
De
Dreux
34
34
~0911 - 18 OCT 943
Gonzelon
von
Ardennes
~0912 - 22 JUL 954
Platzgraf
of Bavaria
Arnulf
~0930 - 1032
Thierry I
(Dietrich
I)
102
102
~0890
Uda
Von
Saxony
~0885 - ~0920
Gerhard
Von
Metz
35
35
<0907 - 0946
Count of
Namur
Berenger
39
39
~0894 - 0924
Symphorienne
30
30
1089
Yolande
von
Wassenberg
1110
Hugh
De
Toeni
~0890
Count of
Hainaut
Giselbert
1088 - 1120
VIII
Baldwin
32
32
~1111
Richilde
De
Hainault
~1055 - ~1138
Count of
Wassenberg
Gerald
83
83
~1056 - 1098
VII
Baldwin
42
42
~1100
Henry
I von
Guelders
~1090
Arnulph
de
Roeux
~1085
Ida de
Hainault
~1015
Sophia
~1000 - 1028
I Louis
28
28
1060 - 25 JAN 1139/40
Godfrey
I
"Labarbe"
~1078
Ida de
Namur
1103
Henri II
de la
Roche
~1108 - 1143
II
Godfrey
35
35
~1113 - <1180
Count of
Louvaine
Josceline
67
67
~1000
Ada
D'Ardennes
~0985
I Otto
~0938 - >0982
I
Arnold
44
44
~0905 - 0964
Count in
the Drenthe
Dietrich
59
59
~0925
Amalrada
of
Hamaland
~0898
Dietrich
of
Hamaland
~0937
Dobromir
of West
Silesia
0967 - 1025
I
Boleslaw
58
58
Boleslaw I, called The Brave or The Mighty (circa 966-1025), first king of Poland. In 992 he succeeded his father Mieszko as prince of Poland and embarked on a vigorous program of expansion, beginning by declaring his country's independence of the Holy Roman Empire. In the west he conquered Lusatia and Meissen, and in 1003 he forced Bohemia to acknowledge him as its prince. Later losing these territories to the German king Henry II, he finally regained them by the Treaty of Bautzen (1018). In the same year, he invaded the Russian state of Kyyiv, giving its throne to his son-in-law Svyatopolk. Boleslaw continued his father's support of Christianity and made the Polish church independent under the papacy, establishing Gniezno as an archbishopric. Crowned king in the year of his death, he left Poland one of the strongest states in Europe. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Political Events, 1000 Poland's Boleslav the Brave unites Bohemia and Moravia and persuades the Holy Roman Emperor Otto III to create the independent archbishopric of Gnesen. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~0835 - ~0904
I
Erenfried
69
69
~0850 - ~0902
Adalgunde
De
Burgundy
52
52
Waldrada
~1030 - 1070
Baldwin
VI "the
Peaceable"
40
40
~1032 - 15 MAR 1085/86
Countess of
Hainault and
Namur Richilda
1024 - >1075
Anna
Yaroslavna
51
51
0995 - 1039
Mathilde
de
Verdun
44
44
~0995
Count of Mons
in Hainnault
Reinier
~0975
Mathilde
von
Dagsbourg
1052 - 1108
Philippe I
'the Fair'
Capet
56
56
Philip I (of France) Philip I (of France) (1052-1108), king of France (1060-1108), the eldest son of Henry I, king of France. The first six years of his reign were spent under the regency of his mother and his uncle. Philip's reign was troubled by many clashes with his powerful vassals, particularly in Normandy, but he succeeded in enlarging his dominions. Philip was excommunicated in 1095 because he had repudiated his wife, Bertha of Holland, and married Bertrada, the wife of the count of Anjou. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
0950 - 1013
IV
Regnier
63
63
1057 - 1101
Hugues III
'Magnus'
Capet
44
44
1053 - 1094
Bertha
of
Holland
41
41
~1081 - 1137
Louis VI
"the Fat"
Capet
56
56
Louis VI Louis VI, called The Fat (1081-1137), king of France (1108-37), son and successor of Philip I; he was married to Adelaide of Savoy. Almost his entire reign was spent in subduing the robber barons, who preyed on the environs of Paris but were finally forced to yield to royal authority. For some 20 years during the period from 1109-1135, Louis waged war against Henry I, the Norman king of England, and against Henry's son-in-law, Holy Roman Emperor Henry V; he successfully repelled an invasion by Henry V in 1124. Louis greatly strengthed the royal power in France, granted benefactions to the church and privileges to towns, and became known as the protector of the peasants and as a fearless military leader. He was succeeded on the throne by his son Louis VII. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1078
Constance
Capet
~1062 - 1124
Adelaide
De
Vermandois
62
62
~1071 - 1130
Matilde
Maud
Capet
59
59
~1065 - ~1115
Raoul
50
50
~1082
Beatrice
Capet
~1085 - 17 FEB 1130/31
Elizabeth
(Isabel)
Capet
~1090
Agnes
Capet
~1087
Alice
Capet
1045 - 1080
Herbert
35
35
~1032 - ~1080
Adela
De
Valois
48
48
~1060
Eudes
de
Vermandois
~1088
Raoul
Capet
~1086
Constance
Capet
~1091
Henry
Capet
~1093
Charles
Capet
~1094
Guillaume
Capet
~1025
III
Raoul
~1012
Adele de
Bar-Sur-
Aube
~1032
Hildeburge
De
Nantes
~1020 - 1077
Geofroy
III de
Mayenne
57
57
1000 - 1060
Seigneur De
Beaugency
Lancelin
60
60
Hildegarde
de
Beaugency
Agnes
de
Beaugency
~0997 - 1040
III Alan
43
43
~0970 - ~1000
Seigneur de
Beaugency
Landry
30
30
~1000 - 1045
Count of
Vermandois
Otho
45
45
~1015
Adelle
de
Vermandois
1030
Eudes I 'Pied
de Loup' de
Vermandois
1032
Peter
de
Vermandois
~0955 - 1015
Herbert
60
60
~0955 - >1035
Ermengarde
de
Bar-sur-Seine
80
80
~0977
Albert
~0925 - >0997
Count of
Bar-sur-
Seine Renald
72
72
~0895 - >0981
Count of
Bar-sur-
Seine Raoul
86
86
0920
I
Nocher
~0946
Eudes
Otto de
Vermandois
~0950
Gisael
de
Vermandois
~0957
Lindulf
de
Vermandois
~1073 - 1130
Thomas
I de
Coucy
57
57
~1080 - ~1147
Melesinde
de
Crecy
67
67
~1054
Richilde
De
Creil
1037 - ~1108
Guy II
de
Montlhhery
71
71
Beatrice
de
Coucy
~1038 - >1104
Isabel
de
Ramerput
66
66
~1073
Lady
de
Montlhery
~1076
Lusiane
de
Montlhery
~1069 - 1118
Anselm
de
Garlende
49
49
~1110 - 13 MAR 1180/81
Simon
III de
Montfort
~1124
Agnes
de
Montfort
~1039
Guillaume
I de
Garlende
Guillaume
II de
Garlende
~1038 - ~1073
Hilduin
IV de
Roucy
35
35
~1040 - 1062
Countess
de Roucy
Adele
22
22
~1040
Beatrix
de
Montdidier
~1035 - ~1068
Adelheid
de
Ramerput
33
33
1028 - ~1110
Margaret
de
Montdidier
82
82
~1020 - 1063
I
Ramiro
43
43
~1030 - 1088
Walter
Gauthier
58
58
~1048
II
Ebles
~1052
Adela
de
Roucy
~0992 - 1033
Ebles
41
41
~0997 - >1035
Beatrix
de
Hainault
38
38
~1016
Avise
de
Roucy
~0980 - >1037
III
Hildouin
57
57
~0980
Lesseline
~0960 - ~0992
II
Hildouin
32
32
~0930 - >0970
Count of
Arcis-sur-
Aube Helpuin
40
40
~0934
Hersende
de
Rameru
~0990 - 1057
Count of
Dammartin
Manasses
67
67
~1009 - 1095
I Guy
86
86
Lord Of Chateaufort
~1014 - 1074
Hodierne
de
Gometz
60
60
~1040
Isabel
de
Montlhbery
~1042
Elizabeth
De
Montlhery
~1100
Hildegarde
Des
Marets
~1045
Adele
de
Montlhhery
~1030 - 1118
Miles
le
Grand
88
88
Viscount of Troyes
~0984
Guillaume
de
Gometz
~0979 - >1057
I Milon
78
78
~0990
Thibauda
De
Montlhery
~0970
Thibault de
Montlhery et
Chevreuse
~0950 - ~1028
Bouchard
II de
Montmorency
78
78
~0955
Elizabeth
de
Crecy
~0930 - ~0978
Bouchard
I de
Montmorency
48
48
~0941
Hildegarde
de
Blois
~0966 - ~1026
II
Geoffrey
60
60
~0968
Melisende
de
Chateaudun
~0910
Prince of
England
Alberic
~1042 - 1116
Engerrand
I de
Coucy
74
74
~1054
Ada
de
Marle
~1024
Seigneur
of Marle
Letgarde
~0994
Seigneur
of Marle
Lietaud
~1012 - 1059
Dreux
de
Boves
47
47
~1012
Adele
de
Coucy
~0982 - 1071
Seigneur
de Coucy
Alberic
89
89
~0982
Adela
d'Amiens
~0952 - 1037
Siegneur
de Coucy
Leon
85
85
~0952
Mathilde
~0982
Seigneur
de Boves
Hugh
~1201 - 1221
Alix
De
Bretagne
20
20
1193
Henri
De
Dreux
~1123 - 1188
Robert
I
Capet
65
65
~1125 - 1218
Agnes
de
Baudemont
93
93
~1146 - >1217
Alice
de
Dreux
71
71
~1140
Guy II
de
Chatillon
~1184 - 1253
Thomas
II de
Coucy
69
69
~1141 - 1191
Sir
Raoul de
Coucy
50
50
~1170
Gauthier
III de
Chatillon
~1092 - 1154
Adelaide
De
Maurienne
62
62
~1095
Guy
de
Baudemont
~1100
Alice
~1065
André
de
Baudemont
~1070
Agnes
Helvide
de
Baudemont
Agnes
de
Baudemont
Eustace
de
Baudemont
~1119 - 1180
Louis VII 'the
Younger'
Capet
61
61
Louis VII Louis VII, called The Young (1121?-80), king of France (1137-80), son and successor of Louis VI. In the first year of his reign he married Eleanor of Aquitaine, daughter of William X, duke of Aquitaine. Louis soon aroused the opposition of Pope Innocent II because of his support of a rival to the papal candidate for the archbishopric of Bourges, and his lands were placed under papal interdict. Louis next fought a 2-year war and conquered Champagne in 1144. In 1147 he joined the unsuccessful Second Crusade as one of its two chief military leaders (the other was Conrad III of Germany). Louis returned to France two years later, and in 1152 his marriage to Eleanor was annulled; in the same year she married Henry of Anjou, later Henry II, king of England. Louis warred with Henry for the possession of Aquitaine but renounced all rights to the duchy in 1154, the year Henry became king of England. Between 1157 and 1180 Louis continued sporadic warfare against Henry, who held many of the French provinces. Louis was succeeded by his son Philip II (Philip Augustus). Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1116
Philippe
Prince of
France
~1121
Archbishop
of Rheims
Henry
~1123
Prince of
France
Hughes
~1014 - 1176
Constance
Capet
162
162
~1125
Arch Dean
of Paris
Philippe
1128 - 1183
I
Pierre
55
55
~1070 - 1103
Humbert
II 'the
Fat'
33
33
1070 - >1133
Gisela
de
Bourgogne
63
63
~1030
Elena
de
Ventimiglia
~1020 - 1091
Margavine
of Sousa
Adelaide
71
71
~1045 - 1059
II
Amadeus
14
14
~0970
I
Amadeo
~1083
Henri
Capet
~1085
Charles
Capet
~1087
Eudes
Capet
~1017 - 1061
I
Florent
44
44
~1028 - 1113
Gertrude
Von
Sachsen
85
85
~1052 - 1091
Dietrich Dirk
V , Viscount
of Holland
39
39
~1059
Count of
Holland
Floris
~1051
Count of
Holland
Albrecht
~1053
Count of
Holland
Pieter
~1057
Countess
of Holland
Machteld
~1061
Adela
Christina
~1019
Countess
of Holland
Luitgard
~1021
Countess
of Holland
Bertrade
~1023
Countess
of Holland
Swanhilde
0947 - 1006
Duke of
Carinthia
Otto
59
59
0947
Judith
Adela de
Bayern
I
Conrad
~0970
Count in the
Speyergau
Henry
Pope
Gregory
~1058 - 1130
IV
Arnold
72
72
~0920 - ~0953
Count of
Verdun
Heinrich
33
33
0898 - 14 JUL 937
Arnulf
'the
Bad'
Gisela
~0925 - 28 JUN 987
Judith
of
Bavaria
~0912
Duke of
Bavaria
Eberhard
~1024 - 1075
Ernst
"The
Valiant"
51
51
~0917
Hermann
~0952
Burchard
Bucco , of
Nordgau
~0930
Ludwig
~0935 - 0994
Luitpold
'the
Illustrious'
59
59
~0888
Rudolf
von
Sulichgau
~0854 - >0890
Count of
Ostrevant
Hucbold
36
36
~0810
Liutfried
~0860 - >0888
Count of
Sulichgau
Eberhard
28
28
~0840
Ava
~0885
Adalhard
von
Sulichgau
~0884 - 0926
Count of
Ostrevant
Raoul
42
42
~0840 - 0910
Count Palatine
in Swabia
Berthold
70
70
1054
Emma
Capet of
France
1055
Robert
Capet
Matilda
of
Germany
1057
Hugh 'the
Great' de
Crépi
0980 - 20 FEB 1053/54
Jarolaus
(Yaroslav)
I 'the Wise'
Dukes and Tsars First ruler to consolidate Slavic tribes was Rurik, leader of the Russians who established himself at Novgorod, ad 862. He and his immediate successors had Scandinavian affiliations. They moved to Kiev after 972 and ruled as Dukes of Kiev. In 988 Vladimir was converted and adopted the Byzantine Greek Orthodox service, later modified by Slav influences. Important as organizer and lawgiver was Yaroslav, 1019-1054, whose daughters married kings of Norway, Hungary, and France. His grandson, Vladimir II (Monomakh), 1113-1125, was progenitor of several rulers, but in 1169 Andrew Bogolubski overthrew Kiev and began the line known as Grand Dukes of Vladimir. The World Almanac® and Book of Facts 1997 is licensed from K-III Reference Corporation. Copyright © 1996 by K-III Reference Corporation. All rights reserved. Political Events, 1019 The Prince of Kiev Jaroslav the Wise begins a 35-year reign in which he will codify Russian law and build cities, churches, and schools. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
1001 - 10 FEB 1049/50
Ingigerd
(Anna)
Olafsdottir
1023 - >1074
Anastasiya
Agmunda
Yaroslavna
51
51
1025 - 1078
Izyaslav
I Dmitrij
Yaroslavich
53
53
1027 - 1076
Svyatopolk
II
Yaroslavich
49
49
1030 - 1093
Vsevolod
63
63
1032
Ellisif
(Elizabeth)
Jaroslavna
1020 - 1052
Valdimar
'the
Nimble'
32
32
1034
Prince of
Smolensk
Viacheslav
1036
Prince of
Vladimir
Igor
1019
Dobreonega
(Maria)
~0970 - 1022
Olaf III
"Skötkonung"
Eriksson
52
52
0979
Princess
Astrid of the
Obotrites
~1003
Anund
Jacob
Olafsson
~0975
Edla
von
Mecklenburg
1005 - 1054
Emund II
"The Old"
Olafsson
49
49
0999
Astrid
Olafsdatter
0919 - 0999
Prince of
Obotrites
Mieceslas
80
80
~0921
Sophia
~0893 - 0985
II
Mistui
92
92
~0870
I Mistui
0956 - 1015
Vladimir
'the
Great''
59
59
Vladimir, Saint (circa 956-1015), grand prince of Kyyiv, whose baptism made Orthodox Christianity the official religion of Russia. Born in Kyyiv, Vladimir was a pagan at the beginning of his reign, which was at first devoted to consolidating his territories into a unified Russian state. In exchange for helping the Byzantine emperor Basil II suppress a rebellion, Vladimir was allowed to marry the emperor's sister, Anne, at which time (988) he accepted Christianity. Allied to Byzantium by religious and family ties, Vladimir introduced Byzantine civilization into Russia by building churches, suppressing paganism, and making social reforms. Nonetheless, he remained open to Western influences, which are reflected in his legislation. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0956 - 1014
Rogneda
von
Polotzk
58
58
~0978
Prince of
Polotzk
Iszyaslav
~0988
Grand Prince
Tschernigow
Mtsislav
~0984
Premislava
of
Kiev
~0984
Predslava
of
Kiev
~0986
Prince of
Novgorod
Wizeslau
~0960
Malfriede
of
Bohemia
~0983
Svyatoslav
Vladimirovich
13 MAR 962/63 - ~0980
Princess of
the Byzantine
Empire Anna
~1011 - 1087
Dobronegra
Mariya
Vladimirovich
76
76
0929 - 15 MAR 962/63
II
Romanus
~0936
Theophano
Anastasia ,
Byzantine Empress
1016 - 1058
Kazimierz
I "The
Restorer"
42
42
Kazimierz I, called The Restorer (1016-58), duke of Poland (1038-58). Son of Poland's King Mieszko II, Kazimierz succeeded his father in 1034 but was deposed by a rebellion of the nobles in 1037. The following year he returned to power as duke of Poland with the support of Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II, whom he then recognized as his overlord, as well as Henry III of Germany. Allying himself with Yaroslav the Wise, ruler of the Russian state of Kyyiv, he subjected the Polish tribes to his rule and drove the Czechs from Silesia. His successor, Boleslaw II, reassumed the royal title. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0962
Grand
Duchess of
Kiev Predislava
~0959
Grand
Duchess of
Kiev Adlaga
~0959
Grand
Duchess of
Kiev Olava
~0977
Vysheslav
Vladimirovich
Princess
of Bulgaria
Milolika
~0982
Boris
David
Vladimirovich
~0983
Gleb
Roman
Vladimirovich
~0984
Stanslav
Vladimirovich
~0985
Pozvizd
Vladimirovich
~0986
Sudislav
Vladimirovich
0936 - 0963
Count of
Polotsk
Rognwald
27
27
~0915 - 0972
Svyatoslav
I
Suitislaus
57
57
~0927 - 1002
Malusha
of
Lubech
75
75
~0945
Princess
of Bulgaria
Predislava
~0960
I
Yaropolk
~0962
Grand
Prince of
Dereva Oleg
~0897
Prince of the
Drevlianes
Malk
~0867 - >0897
Prince
of Kiev
Dir
30
30
~0837 - ~0882
Swedish
Ruler of
Kiev Askold
45
45
0875 - 0945
Igor
70
70
0881 - 11 JUL 969
Regent
of Kiev
Olga
Halgu
Oleg
~0850 - 0879
Grand Duke
of Novgorod
Ryurik
29
29
0877 - 0945
Efenda
(Edvina)
68
68
1284 - 1327
Edward
43
43
Edward II Edward II (1284-1327), king of England (1307-1327). Edward was born in Caernarvon, Wales. In 1301 he was proclaimed Prince of Wales, the first heir apparent in English history to bear that title. When Edward became king in 1307, the English nobles quarreled with his friend Piers Gaveston. In 1311 the barons, led by Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, forced the king to create a committee of nobles, called the lords ordainers. They transferred the ruling power to themselves, excluded the commons and lower clergy from Parliament, and had Gaveston kidnapped and executed. In the meantime, Edward was at war with Scottish king Robert Bruce. After Edward's 1314 defeat, the Earl of Lancaster virtually ruled the kingdom for eight years. In 1322, with the help of the baron Hugh le Despenser, and his son, also Hugh le Despenser, Edward defeated Lancaster in battle. The le Despensers became de facto rulers of England. Edward's wife, Queen Isabella, wanted to depose the le Despensers, and she traveled to France and allied herself with some exiled English barons. In 1326 they raised an army and invaded England. Edward was imprisoned, forced to resign, and then murdered by his captors. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1282 - 1316
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
33
33
1264 - 1298
Eleanor
Plantagenet
34
34
1266 - 1272
John
Plantagenet
6
6
1267 - 1272
Henry
Plantagenet
5
5
1271
Juliana
'Katherine'
Plantagenet
1273 - 1284
Alfonso
Plantagenet
10
10
1254 - 1291
Marguerite
Capet
37
37
1276
Berengaria
Plantagenet
11 MAR 1278/79 - 1337
Nun at
Amesbury
Mary
12 MAR 1277/78
Isabella
Plantagenet
12 MAR 1279/80
Alice
Plantagenet
1286
Beatrice
Plantagenet
1290
Blanche
Plantagenet
~1262
John
De
Botetourt
1201 - 1252
III
Ferdinand
50
50
Ferdinand III (of Castile and León) Ferdinand III (of Castile and León), called The Saint (1199-1252), king of Castile (1217-52) and of León (1230-52); he was the son of King Alfonso IX of León and Castile. In 1217 Ferdinand's mother, Berengaria, renounced her title to the Castilian throne in favor of her son. Alfonso, who had himself expected to acquire Castile, was angered at his wife's action, and, aided by a group of Castilian nobles favorable to his claim, made war upon his newly crowned son. Ferdinand, however, with the wise counsel of his mother, proved more than a military match for Alfonso, who at length was forced to abandon his plan of conquering Castile. Through the good offices of Berengaria, Ferdinand was able to effect the peaceful union of León and Castile upon the death of his father in 1230. Ferdinand devoted his energies to prosecuting the war against the Moors, conquering Córdoba in 1236 and Seville in 1248. He was rigorous in his suppression of the heretical Albigenses, a fact largely responsible for his canonization more than two centuries later. In 1242 Ferdinand reestablished at Salamanca the university originally founded by his grandfather. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1216 - 15 MAR 1278/79
Jeanne
De
Dammartin
~1236
Marguerite
De
Montfort
1243
Luis
of
Castile
1245
Simon
of
Castile
1246
Juan
of
Castile
~1202 - 1236
Beatrice
Elisabeth von
Hohenstaufen
34
34
1236
Violante
De
Aragon
1224
Fadrique
Fernandez
15 JAN 1226/27
Fernando
Fernandez
~1230 - 1304
Enrique
Fernandez
74
74
~1231
Felipe
Fernandez
~1232
Leonor
Fernandez
~1233
Sancho
Fernandez
~1234
Berenquela
Fernandez
~1235
Maria
Fernandez
10 FEB 1440/41
Henry
Plantagenet
~1137 - 1174
William
de
Chesney
37
37
~1085
Adelaide
Alice de
Cheney
1180 - 1239
Simon
de
Dammartin
59
59
1199 - 1250
Marie
Jeanne
51
51
~1214
Philippa
De
Dammartin
~1179 - 1221
Guillaume
IV
Talvas
42
42
~1170 - 1218
Alice Alix
Capet, Princess
of France
48
48
~1120 - 1206
Adelaide
de
Champagne
86
86
1165 - 1223
Philip II
"Augustus"
Capet
57
57
Philip II (of France) Philip II (of France) (1165-1223), king of France (1180-1223), one of the most powerful European monarchs of the Middle Ages. Philip was born near Paris. From 1181 to 1186 Philip combated a coalition of barons in Flanders, Burgundy, and Champagne and at their expense increased the royal domain. He later fought the English kings Richard I and John I over control of French territories ruled by the English kings. A coalition of European powers challenged the growing power of France in 1214, but Philip's forces decisively defeated the coalition at the Battle of Bouvines, establishing France as a leading country of Europe. Philip increased royal power by extending the royal domain and by reducing the power of the feudal lords. France prospered from his reorganization of the government. Philip established Paris as the fixed capital of France, paved its streets, and had many new buildings constructed in the city. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1171
Agnaes
Capet
~1122
Concubine
~1146
Philippe
Capet
~1122 - 1204
Duchess of
Aquitaine
Eläeonore
82
82
1145 - 11 MAR 1197/98
Marie
Capet
1151
Alice
Capet
~1126
Aiz
Pernella
De Poitiers
~1096
Emma
De
Limoges
1075 - 1151
I
Aimeri
76
76
1079 - >1119
Dangerause
Maubergeonne De
L'Isle Bouchard
40
40
1049
Barthelemy
De L'Isle
Bouchard
~1053
Gerberge
De L'Isle
Bouchard
1019
Seigneur
of Borel
Archimbaud
1023
Dame De L'Isle
Bouchard
Agnes
1036 - 1092
II
Boson
56
56
~1054 - 1109
Eleanor
De
Thouars
55
55
~1015 - 1093
IV
Aimery
78
78
1017 - <1069
Aurengarde
de
Mauleon
52
52
~1060
Audearde
de
Thouars
~1040
III
Geoffroy
~1013 - 1060
Hugh
V de
Lusignan
47
47
~0994 - ~1055
II
Geoffroi
61
61
~0994
Aenor
~0970 - 1003
III
Savaric
33
33
~0934 - BEF JAN 986/87
I
Herbert
~0934 - 13 MAY 988
Hildegard
d'Aulnay
~0972
I Raoul
~0904 - <0967
II
Cadelon
63
63
~0904
Senegonde
~0919 - 1009
III
Cadelon
90
90
~0874
Rimi
~0874
Odelgarde
~0874 - 0950
I
Cadelon
76
76
~0884 - ~0931
Geila
de
Melle
47
47
~0864
Vicomte
of Melle
Atton
~0844 - 0925
Vicomte
d'Aulnay
Maingaus
81
81
~0904 - ~0955
II
Aimery
51
51
~0904
Alienor
Hardoine
~0874 - 0936
I
Amauri
62
62
~0874
Arembourg
~0844 - >0876
Vicomte
de Thours
Geoffrey
32
32
1020
Hugues I De
La Roche
Foucauld
1034
Viscountess
De Chatellerault
Gerberge
0990
Foucauld
I De La
Roche
0994
Gersende
0960
Aymar
De
Lusignan
~0930
Henri I
De
Lusignan
1039 - 1085
Pierre
De
Melgueil
46
46
1073 - 1117
Philippa
De
Toulouse
44
44
~1100
Maud
of
Aquitaine
~1075
Ermengarde
D'Anjou
~1101
Henri
D'Aquitaine
~1102
Adbelahide
D'Aquitaine
~1104
Agnaes
D'Aquitaine
Ramiro
II
Sanchez
~1073
Hildegarde
D'Aquitaine
1040 - 1093
IV
Guillaume
53
53
~1052
Emma
de
Mortaigne
~1073
Countess
of Toulouse
Mathilde
~0949
Emma
Venaissin
~0980 - 1047
I
Bernard
67
67
~0989 - 1058
Amelie
d'Aulnay
69
69
~1034
III
Alberic
~1023
Lucia de
la Haute
Marche
~0930 - ~1033
IV
Cadelon
103
103
V
Cadelon
~0918
Arsendis
of
Saintes
~0905 - 0986
Vicomte
de Saintes
Mainard
81
81
~0905
Rixenie
~0950 - 0997
I
Adalbert
47
47
~0950 - 1011
Almode
de
Limoges
61
61
~0930 - 20 APR 991
Vicount of
Limoges
Geraud
~0930
Rothilde
de
Brosse
~0949
I Gui
~0950
Aimeri
I "The
Ostofrancus"
~0952
Rotilde
de
Limoges
~0905 - <0958
I
Archambaud
53
53
~0960 - 0992
II
Archembaud
32
32
~0910
Vicomte
de Brosse
Radulf
~0865 - 0940
Hildegar
Eldegaire
75
75
~0865
Teutberga
de
Bourges
~0835 - >0877
Count of
Bourges
Geraud
42
42
~0805
Boso
de
Parthois
~0835 - ~0876
Vicomte of
Limoges
Adalbert
41
41
~0835
Adeltrude
~0875
Seigneur
of Segur
Foucher
~0920 - 0968
I Boso
48
48
~0919
Countess
de Perigord
Emme
~0870 - 0920
I
Guillaume
50
50
~0864
Regilinde
de
Paris
~0850 - 29 MAR 916
I
Alduin
~0800
Marquis of
Septimania
Bernard
~0904
Sulpice
de
Charroux
~0885
Geoffrey
de
Charroux
~0973
Emengarde
de
Provence
~0945
Arsinde
'Blanche'
D'Anjou
~0986
Constance
De
Toulouse
>1140
Constanza
of
Castile
1158
Marguerite
Capet
1160
Adelais
Capet
~1088 - 8 JAN 1151/52
III
Theobald
~1097 - 1160
Matilda
Von
Sponheim
63
63
1118
IV
Theobald
1127 - 16 MAR 1180/81
I Henri
~1421
George
Mainwaring
~1122 - 1190
Marie
De
Champagne
68
68
~1129
Elizabeth
de
Champagne
~1075 - 1141
Engilbert
II Von
Sponheim
66
66
~1075
Countess
of Carinthia
Edith
~1065
Utha
Von
Sulzbach
III
Engilbert
1046 - 1127
II
Henry
81
81
~1057 - 1154
Margravine
of Austria
Sophia
97
97
~0930
Arbo
von
Austgau
~1055 - 1096
Leopold
"The
Fair"
41
41
~1020
Diego
De
Oviedo
~0840
Rudolf
II Von
Austgau
~0870
Rudolf
III Von
Austgau
~1030
Christina
Fernandez
~1005
I
Diepold
0985 - 1055
II
Rapoto
70
70
~1008
III
Rapoto
~0965
I
Rapoto
~1010
Gilbert
II De
Mello
~1190
Beatrice
De
Montlucon
1070 - 1116
Ramiro
II
Sanchez
46
46
1402
Jane
de
Beaufort
~0986 - 1030
II
Thietmar
44
44
~0988
Rainhilda
of
Beichlingen
~0956
Margrave of
the Saxon
Ostmark Gero
~0951
Adelaide
~0941
I
Dietmar
~0941 - 1014
Schwanhilde
Billung
73
73
~0986
Matilda
of
Meissen
~1018
Count of
Wettin
Thimo
~0956
I
Ekkehard
~0926 - 19 JUL 982
II
Gunter
~0937 - 0977
Dubrawka
of
Bohemia
40
40
~0905 - 15 JUL 967
Boleslaw
I "The
Cruel"
~0905
Bolgene
of
Stockau
~0935
II
Boleslaw
~0875 - 13 FEB 920/21
I
Wratislaw
~0875
Drahomira
of
Luticz
~0845
Lord
of
Luticz
~0845 - 0894
I
Borziwoj
49
49
~0845 - 15 SEP 921
Ludmilla
of
Psow
~0815
Princling
of Psow
Slawibov
~0815 - 0890
Prince of
Prague
Gostivit
75
75
~0896 - 6 SEP 954
II
Echard
~0866 - 17 MAY 925
Count in
Thuringia
Gunther
~0836 - 2 JUN 871
I
Eckhard
~0956 - 1009
II
Dietrich
53
53
~0956
Thietburga
of
Haldensleben
~0908 - 19 DEC 985
Count of
Haldensleben
Dietrich
~0994 - 1049
II
Thimo
55
55
~0878
Count of
Haldensleben
Benno
~0848
Count of
Haldensleben
Bernard
~0818
Count of
Haldensleben
Dietrich
~0788
Count of
Haldensleben
Ezard
~0926 - <0976
Count in the
Hessegau
Dietrich
50
50
~0926
Jutta
of
Merseburg
~0900
Count of
Merseburg
Bion
~0896 - 14 MAR 956/57
I Dedi
~0857 - ~0919
Burkhard
III of
Grabfeldgau
62
62
~0857
Mathilda
of
Hesse
~0827 - 0909
II
Burkhard
82
82
~0827 - >0936
Adred
of
Loingau
109
109
~0797
Bardo
of
Loingau
~0797 - >0866
Burkhard
I
"Comes"
69
69
1053 - 1099
Rodrigo
Diaz "el Cid"
De Vivar
46
46
~0966
Glismode
of
Saxony
~0936
II
Immed
~0950
Adela
of
Hamalant
~0956
Theodric
de
Gand
~0958
Hildegarde
de
Gand
~0960
Wickmann
III de
Gand
~0906 - 0953
I
Immed
47
47
~0984
Juette
of
Austria
~0960
Richenza
of
Sualafeld
~0985 - 1015
I Ernst
30
30
~0986
Margrave
of Austria
Heinrich
~0988
Poppo
of
Austria
~0991
Leopold
of
Austria
~0990
Kunegunde
of
Austria
~0992
Christine
of
Austria
~0993
Heinrich
of
Austria
~0994
Hemma
of
Austria
~0934 - ~0974
IV
Ernst
40
40
~0930
Pilfridus
of
Freissing
~0950 - ~0986
V
Ernest
36
36
~0900 - 29 MAR 980
II
Rabold
~0880 - 20 DEC 919
Lord of Ebersburg
and Persenburg
Ratbold
~0880
Engelmut
~0850 - 10 OCT 906
II
Sieghard
~0860 - 20 DEC 906
Cottine
of
Ebersburg
~0885
II
Sieghard
~0830
Count in
Amper
Rabold
~0820 - >0861
Count in
Kraichgau
Sieghard
41
41
~0855 - ~0947
III
Ernst
92
92
~0825 - ~0889
II Ernst
64
64
~0825
Adelheid
~0861
Markgraf of the
von Bavarian
Ostmark Luitpold
~0850 - 0906
I Aribo
56
56
~0795 - 0865
I Ernst
70
70
~0805
Fredeburg
of
Frommen
~0765
Louis
of
Frommen
~1020 - 1076
III
Markwart
56
56
~1015
Hadamut
de
Friuli
~0980 - <1040
Werigand
Wezzelin
60
60
~0985 - 1065
Wilibirg
of
Ebersberg
80
80
Luitgarde
de
Friuli
Azzica
de
Friuli
~0950 - 1029
I
Udalrich
79
79
~0950 - 1013
Richardis
of
Eppenstein
63
63
~0910 - >0950
II
Markwart
40
40
~0870 - >0916
I
Markwart
46
46
~0880 - >0977
Advocate
of Preising
Papo
97
97
~0920
Luitgard
~0910 - 11 SEP 969
I
Adalbero
~0840
Count in the
Fiero-Mark
Pilgrim
~0990 - 1039
Duke of
Carinthia
Albert
49
49
~0968 - 1000
II
Markwart
32
32
~0960
Hadamut
of
Ebersberg
~1040 - 1096
Engelbert
I Von
Sponheim
56
56
~1047 - 1112
Hedwig
von
Eppenstein
65
65
Richgarde
of
Spanheim
Richardis
of
Ortenberg
~1020
Bernard
of
Finsbach
~1025
Cecilia
~1010 - 1 FEB 1064/65
Count of
Levanthal
Siegfried
~1010 - 1064
Richardis
la Vente of
Pusterthal
54
54
~0980 - ~1023
Count of
Spondheim
Eberhard
43
43
~0980
Hedwig
of
Nellenburg
~0940 - >0980
IV
Aribo
40
40
~0960
Guntperga
~0915
III
Aribo
~0890 - 0925
I
Ottocar
35
35
~1150 - >1204
Beatrice
De Saint
Pol
54
54
~1100 - 1174
Anselme
Candaven
74
74
~1130
Oliver
De
Beauchamp
~1068
Hugues
III
Canadavene
~1070
Beatrix
De Saint
Pol
~1045 - 1130
II
Hugues
85
85
~1049
Elizabeth
de Saint
Pol
~1115 - 1147
Gui II
Le
Despencer
32
32
~1115
Ida De
Saint
Pol
~1077 - 10 MAR 1148/49
I
Renaud
~1110 - 20 JAN 1182/83
Clemence
of
Bar-Le-Duc
~1108 - 1162
II
Renaud
54
54
~1177
Agnes
De
Dammartin
~1090 - >1141
Gisele
De
Vaudemont
51
51
~1057 - ~1120
IV
Gerhard
63
63
<1078 - >1126
Helwide Edith
, Countess of
Eguisheim
48
48
~1050
II
Gerhard
~1054
Countess of
Eguisheim
Richarda
~1018 - 1065
I
Heinrich
47
47
~1028
Countess
of Moha
Mathilda
~1052
Count of
Eguisheim
Bruno
~1054
VIII
Hugo
~1056
I
Albrecht
~1060
II
Adelbert
~1002
Count
of Moha
Albert
~0994
Mechtild
de
Dabo
~1020
Countess of
Dagsburg
Gerberga
~1081 - 1112
III
Thierry
31
31
~1082
Frederic
De
Bar
~1020 - 1076
II
Louis
56
56
~1045 - 2 JAN 1104/05
Thibaud
Thierry
~1083
Guillaume
De
Bar
~1085
Etienne
Mortbell
~0985
Eremgarde
of
Namur
~0990
Luitgarde
Emma de
Namur
~1000
II
Albert
~1087
Agnes
De
Bar
~1089
Gunthilde
Mortbell
~1018 - 21 JAN 1092/93
Countess of
Bar-le-Duc
Sophia
~1040
Beatrice
de
Montbelliard
~1050
Sophia
of
Mousson
~1056
Brunon
De
Montbelliard
~1058
Frederic
De
Montbelliard
~1060
Mathilde
de
Montbelliard
~0985 - 1027
II
Frederick
42
42
~0990 - ~1028
Count of
Scarpone
Richwin
38
38
~0955 - FEB 994/95
Richilde
of
Metz
~0980
Adela
de Bar
~0935 - ~0995
III
Folmar
60
60
~0935 - >0996
Bertha
von
Fries
61
61
~0905 - >0950
Folmar
45
45
~0875
Folmar
~0875
Richilde
0922 - 23 AUG 994
I
Frederick
~0970 - ~1022
Louis I
of
Mousson
52
52
~1400
Margaret
Warren
~1396 - <1470
William
Mainwaring
74
74
1110 - 1181
Count de
Dammartin
Alberic
71
71
High Chamberlain of France
~1137
Agnes
~1158
Thibault
~1080
Aubrey
De
Mello
1084
Aelils
De
Dammartin
~1050 - 25 FEB 1083/84
Baron
of Mello
Gilbert
1114
Joan
Basset
~0980
Dreux
I De
Mello
~1030 - 1080
Viter
De
Moeslain
50
50
~0950
Gilbert
I De
Mello
~1095 - 1205
Gilbert
Basset
110
110
1094 - 1165
Edith
d'Oilly
71
71
~1352
Thomas
FitzAlan
~1065 - 1142
Baron
d'Oilly
Robert
77
77
~1075 - 1152
Edith Eda fitz
Forne De
Greystoke
77
77
~1053 - ~1130
Forne fitz
Sigulf De
Greystoke
77
77
~1083 - 1156
Ivo fitz
Forne De
Greystoke
73
73
~1030
Sigulf
fitz
Forne
~1000 - >1086
Thegn
Forne
86
86
~1048 - ~1112
Nigel
d'Oilly
64
64
~1070 - 1120
Thomas
Basset
50
50
~1037 - 1120
Ralph
Basset
83
83
1014
Sire
D'Oilly
Gilbert
~1106
Thurston
Basset
~0995
Fulk
De
Basset
~1030
Thurston
II
Basset
~0965
Osmond
De
Centerville
~1042 - 1103
Count of
Dammartin
Hugues
61
61
~1046
Countess
of Bulles
Roaide
~1124
Alan
Basset
~1050
Alice
De
Buci
~1020
Robert
De
Buci
~0915
Norman
D'Oilly
~0870
Duke of the
Normans
Basset
~1008 - >1066
Thurston
De
Basset
58
58
1171 - 1230
Alfonso
IX
Fernandez
59
59
JAN 1179/80 - 1246
Queen of
Castile
Berenguela
1198 - 1237
Princess of
Castile and Läeon
Berenguela
39
39
1200 - 1222
Princess of
Castile and
Läeon Constanza
22
22
1202
Princess of
Castile and
Läeon Leonor
~1220
Mayor
Alfonsa de
Meneses
~1190
Teresa
Gil De
Sousa
~1218
Martin
Alfonso
De Leon
~1220
Mayor
Arias
De Leon
~1222
Maria
De
Aulada
~1224
Urracca
Alfonso
De Leon
~1184
Aldonza
Martinez
De Silva
~1207
Rodrigo
Alfonso
De Leon
~1208
Teresa
Alfonso
De Leon
~1209
Pedro
Alfonso
De Leon
~1174
Inez
Iniquez De
Mendoza
~1192
Urraca
Alfonsez
De Leon
~1176
Tereza
Sanchez
~1192
Prince of
Läeon
Fernando
~1193
Princess
of Läeon
Sancha
~1194
Princess
of Läeon
Aldonza
1155 - 1214
Alphonso VIII
'the Good'
Sanchez
58
58
1162 - 1214
Eleanor
Plantagenet
52
52
~1190
Blanche
of
Castile
1204
I
Enrique
~1185
Princess
of Castile
Urraca
1181
Prince of
Castile
Sancho
1189
Prince of
Castile
Fernando
1202
Princess
of Castile
Leonor
20 MAR 1181/82
Princess
of Castile
Sancha
~1191
Princess
of Castile
Constance
~1192
Princess
of Castile
Mafalda
4 MAR 1187/88
Blanca
Alphonsa
~1203
Princess
of Castile
Constanza
1187 - 1226
Louis VIII
"The Lion"
Capet
39
39
Louis VII Louis VII, called The Young (1121?-80), king of France (1137-80), son and successor of Louis VI. In the first year of his reign he married Eleanor of Aquitaine, daughter of William X, duke of Aquitaine. Louis soon aroused the opposition of Pope Innocent II because of his support of a rival to the papal candidate for the archbishopric of Bourges, and his lands were placed under papal interdict. Louis next fought a 2-year war and conquered Champagne in 1144. In 1147 he joined the unsuccessful Second Crusade as one of its two chief military leaders (the other was Conrad III of Germany). Louis returned to France two years later, and in 1152 his marriage to Eleanor was annulled; in the same year she married Henry of Anjou, later Henry II, king of England. Louis warred with Henry for the possession of Aquitaine but renounced all rights to the duchy in 1154, the year Henry became king of England. Between 1157 and 1180 Louis continued sporadic warfare against Henry, who held many of the French provinces. Louis was succeeded by his son Philip II (Philip Augustus). Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1170 - 15 MAR 1189/90
Isabella
de
Hainault
1216 - 1250
Count of
Artois
Robert
34
34
1218
Count of
Poitou
Alphonse
1220
I
Charles
1140 - 1195
Baldwin
X
55
55
~1145 - 1195
Margarite
de
Lorraine
50
50
~1175 - 1219
Yolande
of
Flanders
44
44
1171 - 1205
Baldwin
XI
33
33
~1176
I Henri
~1178
Sibyl
of
Flanders
~1155 - BEF JAN 1217/18
Pierre
II de
Courtenay
1193 - 1233
Yolande
De
Courtenay
40
40
~1195
Marie
de
Courtenay
~1197
Robert
I de
Courtenay
~1205
II
Baldwin
~1247
John
Capet
1114
Sybil
D'Anjou
~1235
Mahaut
de
Bourgogne
~1146
Lawrence
de
Hainault
1067 - 1139
Count of
Namur
Godfrey
72
72
1251 - 1294
I Jean
43
43
~1105
Clemence
De
Namur
~1099
I Henri
1253 - 1321
Blanche
Capet
68
68
~1068 - ~1110
Sibylle de
Château-
Porcien
42
42
~1019 - 1086
I
Konrad
67
67
1030 - 1118
Hugues
I de
Réthel
88
88
~1094
Mathilda
von
Dagsburg
~1045 - 1086
Conrad
41
41
~1050 - 1086
Clemence
of
Longwy
36
36
1195 - 1245
Raymond
Bâerenger
50
50
~1201 - 1266
Bâeatrice
de
Savoie
65
65
1068 - 1124
Adelaide
of
Namur
56
56
Count de
la Roche
Henri
~1055 - 1125
II Otto
70
70
~1083 - 1122
Ida de
Namor
39
39
<1011 - 1059
Bernard
II
Billung
48
48
<1017 - 1059
Elika
von
Schweinfurt
42
42
~1020 - 1072
Duke of
Saxony
Ordulph
52
52
1221
Raymond
Bâerenger
~1030
Hermann
von
Saxony
~1020 - 1070
Princess
of Norway
Ulfild
50
50
~1044 - 1095
Zsofia
of
Hungary
51
51
~1047
Ulfhild
von
Saxony
~1360
John
Plantagenet
1177 - 1 MAR 1232/33
I
Thomas
~1180 - 1257
Margaret
of
Geneva
77
77
1197 - 1253
Amadeus
56
56
1130 - 1195
I
Guillaume
65
65
~1150
Beatrix
de
Faucigny
~1170
II
Guillaume
~1120 - 1178
I
Aimon
58
58
~1120
Clemencia
of
Berancon
~1090 - >1125
I
Rodolph
35
35
~1060 - 1119
William
"The
White"
59
59
~1060
Utilia
~1020 - 1070
I Louis
50
50
~1030
Thietburga
of
Savoy
~1065 - 1091
Ida De
Faucigny
26
26
~1000 - <1052
I
Aimon
52
52
~1015
Adelaide
of
Albon
~1023 - <1080
II
Geraud
57
57
~1125
Priziosa
de
Orrubu
~1090 - 1147
Conarcio
II de
Torres
57
57
~1025 - 1132
IV
Guigues
107
107
1127
Constantine
I de
Torres
~1095
Elina
de
Gunale
~1010
II
Guichard
~0959 - 1016
I
Humbert
57
57
~0941 - 0998
Hermelt
57
57
~0911 - 0966
Sire de
Beaujeu
Berard
55
55
~0920 - >0967
Windelmode
de
Escuens
47
47
~0890
Count of
Escuens
Gui
~0875 - 0920
II
Guillaume
45
45
~0913 - 0960
I
Artaud
47
47
~0845 - ~0890
I
Guillaume
45
45
~0970 - >1034
II
Guiges
64
64
~0971
Gotelene
of
Clerieu
~0941
Sire de
Clerieu
Silvy
~0941
Willa
~0950 - <0996
I
Guiges
46
46
~0950 - >1012
Fredeburga
of
Vienne
62
62
~0922 - ~0962
Richard
de
Vienne
40
40
~0900
II
Guigues
~0900
Wandelmoda
of
Provence
~0860 - FEB 888/89
I
Guigues
~0838 - <0889
II
Rostaing
51
51
~0830 - >0889
Berthilda
59
59
~0800 - 0844
Seigneur in the
south Viennois
Rostaing
44
44
~0800
Sufficia
~1000 - 1048
Umberto
I "Bianca
Mano"
48
48
~0975
Ancilia
de
Noyen
~1021 - 19 JAN 1059/60
Otto
(Odo)
~0945
Count of
Noyen
Anselm
~0945
Adelaide
of
Oltigen
~0928 - ~0976
Humbert
of
Vienne
48
48
~0990 - 1030
Lord de
Faucigny
Aimeraud
40
40
~0990
Aalgert
1100 - 1178
Amadeo
Von
Gemf
78
78
~1110 - 1137
Mathilde
de
Cuiseaux
27
27
~1086
Hugh
Pons
~1088
Laura
de
Senecy
~1050
Pons I
de
Cuiseaux
~1030
Renaud
de
Cuiseaux
~1060 - >1134
Aimon
I Von
Gemf
74
74
~1016 - <1060
Gisele
44
44
~1040 - ~1095
Jeanne
of
Geneva
55
55
~1012
I
Geraud
~0960
I
Aymar
1136 - 4 MAR 1187/88
Humbert
III 'the
Saint'
1145 - 1230
Beatrice
De
Macon
85
85
~1179
Eleanore
de
Savoy
~1142 - 1184
Count de
Vienne
Gerard
42
42
~1140 - 1184
Maurette
de
Salins
44
44
~1163
Ida de
Vienne
~1110 - 1175
IV
Gauthier
65
65
~1080 - 1149
III
Humbert
69
69
~1096
Elizabeth
of
Salins
~1050 - >1100
III
Gauthier
50
50
~1050
Beatrice
~1025 - >1044
II
Gauthier
19
19
~1025
Aremburge
~0980 - <1028
II
Humbert
48
48
~1007 - >1028
Erembourge
de
Semur
21
21
~0960
I
Gauthier
~0920 - 0958
I
Humbert
38
38
~0920
Adela
de
Salins
1090 - 1155
Count de
Macon
Guillaume
65
65
~1112 - >1156
Poncette
de
Trave
44
44
~1141 - 1195
IV
Geoffroi
54
54
~1096 - ~1153
Renaud
de
Trave
57
57
~1054 - 1102
Etienne I
"Tete-
hardi"
48
48
~1058 - >1112
Beatrice
de
Lorraine
54
54
~1100 - 19 JAN 1147/48
Renaud
III de
Macon
~1125 - 1162
Marguerite
de
Macon
37
37
~1188
Lope
Diaz
~1055 - 1133
V
Guiges
78
78
~1075 - ~1143
Princess
of England
Matilde
68
68
~1098
Getsende
de
Albon
~1180
Maria
de
Torres
~1075 - 1142
Petronilla
de
Annonay
67
67
~0995
Sire de
Annonay
Artaud
~0995
Petronel
de
Grenoble
1013 - 1038
IV
Hermann
25
25
~1020 - 27 JAN 1055/56
V
Hermann
~1091
Alice
de
Savoy
Agnes
de
Maurienne
~1025
I
Gebhard
Princess
of Swabia
Richwara
~1015
Marchese Di
Montferrat
Enrico
~0989
Marchese
de Sousa
Meginfred
~1015 - 28 JAN 1077/78
Marquessa
of Sousa
Irmgarde
1180 - FEB 1208/09
III
Alphonso
~1181 - 1224
Gersende
de
Sabran
43
43
~1200
Countess of
Provence
Gersinde
~1159 - 1224
Reinier
De
Sabran
65
65
~1202
Gertrude
de
Nesle
~1200
Raoul
De
Clermont
Guillesme
1190
Guillaume
de
Sabran
~1130 - 1208
IV
Guillaume
78
78
~1130
Marguerite
de
Bourbon
~1104 - 1150
I
Bertrand
46
46
~1105
Josceranne
de la
Flotte
~1085 - 1129
I
Guillaume
44
44
1056 - 1092
IV
Ermengaud
36
36
~1054 - 1129
Countess de
Forcalquier
Adelaide
75
75
Luciara
de
Rasez
V
Ermengaud
Mayor
de
Urgel
~1025 - 1067
Guillaume
Bertrand
42
42
~1035 - >1113
Adelaide
de
Ivrea
78
78
~1015 - 1089
II
Ardocino
74
74
~0980 - >1029
Ardicino
of
Ivrea
49
49
~0980 - >1019
Willa
of
Tuscany
39
39
~0950 - 1001
Marquis of
Tuscany
Hugh
51
51
~0920 - 0970
Duke of
Tuscany
Humbert
50
50
~0920 - >0978
Willia
of
Camerino
58
58
~0940 - ~1000
Count of
Pombia
Dadone
60
60
~0955
Valdrada
of
Tuscany
~0890 - 0953
Bonifacius
of
Camerino
63
63
~0860 - ~0893
Count in
Bologna
Hubaldus
33
33
~0830 - 0893
Hucbold
63
63
~0830
Andaberta
~0880
Wandelmodis
~0960 - 1015
I
Ardoino
55
55
~0950
Bertha
of
Tuscany
~0925 - >0962
II
Adalbert
37
37
~1008 - ~1054
Guillaume
Bertrand
46
46
~1008
Aldegarde
~1018 - 1062
I
Geoffroi
44
44
1033 - 1065
III
Ermengaud
32
32
~1033 - 1065
Clemence
of
Bigorre
32
32
~1003 - >1062
Clemence
59
59
1009 - 1038
II
Ermengaud
29
29
~1000
Constantia
de
Besalu
~0970
I
Bernard
Gersinde
de
Besalu
~0940 - 0990
II Oliva
50
50
~0940 - 0994
Ermengarde
of
Ampurias
54
54
~0895 - >0931
I
Gausberto
36
36
~0910
Trudegarda
~0847 - >0915
II
Suniario
68
68
~0870
Ermengarda
~0898
Ava
of
Ribagorza
~0875 - >0950
Count of
Paliares
Bernardo
75
75
1152 - ~1154
Prince of
Aragaon
Pedro
2
2
~0900 - >0970
II
Ramon
70
70
~0845 - 0920
Galindo
Aznarez
75
75
~0815 - <0893
Aznar
Galindez
78
78
~0825
Onneca
Iniga of
Navarre
0807 - 0882
Garcia
I
Iniguez
75
75
1245
Joanna
de
Montfort
~0827
Sancho
Garces of
Pamplona
1045
Constanza
De
Maranon
~0842 - <0912
Jimena
Garces
70
70
~0830
Flora
Valdez
~0792
Oneca
~0760
Inigo
Jimenez
~0730
Jimeno
Sanchez
~0785 - >0867
Galindo
Aznarez
82
82
~0785
Guldregut
~0755 - ~0839
Aznar
Galindez
84
84
~0725
Galindo
~0845
Guinigenta
~0970 - >1010
Gerberga
Tetberga de
Provence
40
40
~0945
Eimildis
of
Gevaudan
Emma
de
Provence
~1133 - 16 FEB 1207/08
Rostaing
III de
Sabran
~1135 - 1206
Rosine
d'Uzes
71
71
~1115 - >1200
Raynier
de
Cailor
85
85
~1115
Beatrice
d'Uzes
~1085 - >1168
Bermond
de
Uzes
83
83
~1085
Rose
~1055 - 1138
Raimond
of
Avignon
83
83
Faydide
de
Uzes
~1025 - 1097
Dean of
Avignon
Raimon
72
72
~0995 - <1065
Vicomte of
Avignon
Berenger
70
70
~0995
Gerberge
de
Nice
~0965 - >1041
Miron
de
Nice
76
76
~0965 - >1041
Odile
of
Venice
76
76
~0970
Judge of
Avignon
Adelelme
~0970
Beliede
de
Marseilles
~1000
Amic
de
Avignon
~0940 - ~1008
I
Guillaume
68
68
~0940 - 1036
Belielde
96
96
~0940 - >0967
Judge of
Avignon
Bereguer
27
27
~1115 - 1199
Guillaume
II de
Sabran
84
84
~1135
Guillaume
III de
Sabran
~1060 - >1109
Guillaume
de
Sabran
49
49
~1090
Constance
Amic
~1060 - 1113
Giraud
Amic
53
53
~1060
Ayelmna
~1030 - <1113
Pierre
Amic
83
83
~1030
Agnes
~1000
Ermengarde
~1030 - >1043
Rostaing
II de
Sabran
13
13
~1000 - >1043
Emenov
de
Sabran
43
43
~0970 - >1006
Rostaing
de
Sabran
36
36
~0970
Beletrude
1151 - 1196
Alphonso
II "The
Chaste"
45
45
~0917
Bernard
I De
Milhaud
1176 - 1213
Pedro II
Alphonsez
"The Catholic"
37
37
18 JAN 1173/74
Princess of
Aragaon
Constanza
~1186
Princess of
Aragaon
Sancha
~1184
Prince of
Aragaon
Sancho
~1182
Princess of
Aragaon
Leonor
~1188
Ramon
Berenguer
~1190
Prince of
Aragaon
Fernando
~1192
Princess of
Aragaon
Dulce
1 MAR 1104/05 - 1157
Alphonso
Raimond
~1135 - 1166
Richilde
(Ryksa)
of Poland
31
31
1153
Prince of
Castile and
Leon Fernanco
~1106
Gontrode
Perez Diaz
de Asturias
Urraca
of
Castile
~1128
Sancha
Fernandez
de Castro
~1150
Estefania
Alfonso
de Castilla
Adelaide
1134 - 1158
Sancho III
"The Desired"
Alfonsez
24
24
1137 - 22 JAN 1187/88
Fernando
II
Alfonsez
~1140
Princess
of Castile
Constanza
~1043
Almode
De
Toulouse
1136
Prince of
Castile
Raimundo
MAR 1141/42
Prince of
Castile
Garcia
1144
Prince of
Castile
Alfonso
1105 - 1159
Wladislav
II "The
Exile"
54
54
~1111 - 25 JAN 1156/57
Agnes
von
Brandenburg
11 JAN 1125/26
Countess
of Sulzbach
Adelheid
~1134
Prince of
Silesia
Wojciech
~1138
I
Mieszko
~1139
Prince of
Glogau
Konrad
~1127 - FEB 1177/78
Princess
of Saxony
Christine
1073 - 1136
Leopold
III "The
Saint"
63
63
~1073 - 1143
Princess of the
Holy Roman
Empire Agnes
70
70
3 FEB 1106/07
Prince of
Austria
Adalbert
1108
IV
Leopold
1109
Prince of
Austria
Otto
~1110
Princess
of Austria
Jhutte
~1112 - 13 JAN 1176/77
II
Heinrich
~1113
Prince of
Austria
Ernst
~1070 - 1137
Marquis de
Montferrat
Raynier
67
67
23 FEB 1118/19 - 1150
Princess
of Austria
Gertrud
1120
Prince of
Austria
Konrad
1123
Princess
of Austria
Elisabeth
~1124
Princess
of Austria
Berthe
~1050 - 1105
Friedrich
55
55
1090 - 1147
Friedrich
57
57
1091
Princess
of Swabia
Gertrud
1093
Konrad
1095
Richilde
de
Swabia
1050 - 1106
IV
Heinrich
55
55
Henry IV (Holy Roman Empire) (1050-1106), Holy Roman emperor (1056-1106). He was born in Goslar, Germany. A struggle with Pope Gregory VII over the authority to appoint church officials culminated in Henry declaring the pope deposed in 1076. Pope Gregory then excommunicated him. When the nobles threatened not to recognize Henry unless he secured absolution, Henry did penance and obtained readmission to the church. The German nobles, however, elected Rudolf, Duke of Swabia, to replace Henry. This election caused a civil war. In 1080 the pope recognized the kingship of Rudolf and again excommunicated Henry, who declared Pope Gregory deposed and recognized Pope Clement III in his stead. Rudolf was killed in 1080, and Henry regained control of Germany. In 1084 he captured Rome, where he was crowned emperor by Clement III. A Norman army then drove Henry from Rome. In 1105 Henry was taken prisoner by his son, later Emperor Henry V, and forced to abdicate. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
12 FEB 1073/74
Konrad
III Von
Hohenstaufen
1081
V
Heinrich
1017 - 1056
III
Heinrich
38
38
Henry III (Holy Roman Empire), called The Black (1017-1056) German king (1028-1056) and Holy Roman emperor (1046-1056), son and successor of Conrad II. When, in 1041, the Bohemians invaded the lands of the Poles, who were Henry's vassals, Henry brought them to submission, compelling the duke of Bohemia to recognize his suzerainty. Between 1043 and 1045 Henry campaigned successfully to restore the deposed Hungarian king to his throne and for a short time afterward controlled Hungary. Henry was greatly concerned with church reform and went to Rome in 1046 to settle the conflict caused by three rival claimants to the papacy. Setting aside the three antipopes, he appointed a German bishop, who, as Pope Clement II, crowned Henry Holy Roman emperor. During the rest of his reign Henry appointed three succeeding popes, all Germans. Returning to Germany, he contended with domestic rebellions. Henry supported the church's attempts to check clerical abuses; he also strengthened the power of the papacy, which proved disadvantageous for his son, Henry IV. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1045
Princess of the
Holy Roman
Empire Mathilde
1047
Judith
Marie
1048
Princess of the
Holy Roman
Empire Adelheid
~1052
III
Konrad
1020
Gunhild (Kunigunde)
Knutsdatter of
Denmark
1037
Princess of the
Holy Roman
Empire Beatrix
0990 - 1039
II
Konrad
49
49
Conrad II (990?-1039), king of Germany (1024-39) and Holy Roman emperor (1027-39), a descendant of Emperor Otto I, the Great. Before his election as emperor, Conrad was duke of Franconia. When Henry II, the last of the Saxon emperors, died in 1024, Conrad was chosen to succeed him as king of the Germans. Conrad was crowned Holy Roman emperor by the pope in 1027. Before his coronation he suppressed rebellions in northern Italy, and in 1026 he was crowned king of the Lombards. During his reign the boundaries of the empire were increased by his inheritance of the kingdom of Burgundy from its last ruler, Rudolf III. Conrad died while trying to suppress a second rebellion in northern Italy. He transmitted his power to his son, who became emperor as Henry III. Conrad's descendants, known as the Franconian, or Salian, dynasty, ruled the empire until 1125. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1020
Princess
of Bavaria
Beatrix
1022
Princess
of Bavaria
Mathilde
~0969 - 28 MAY 989
Count of
Speyergau
Heinrich
~0979 - 1040
Countess
of Alsace
Adelheid
61
61
0992
Bishop of
Regensburg
Gebhard
~1110
Adelaide
1060 - ~1102
Countess
of Cham
Ida
42
42
~1075
Gerberge Helbirg
, Princess of
Austria
~1078
Princess
of Austria
Adelheid
~1080
Princess
of Austria
Elisabeth
~1076
Princess
of Austria
Ida
~1082
Princess
of Austria
Jutte
~1086
Princess
of Austria
Eufemie
~0900
Chadacho
Von
Austgau
1032 - ~1080
Rapoto
IV Von
Cham
48
48
1034
Mathilda
Von
Ebersburg
~1022 - 1100
Countess
of Diessen
Haziga
78
78
~1030 - 1106
II
Arnulf
76
76
~1015
Duke of
Swabia
Leopold
~1040
VI
Hermann
~1041
Count
of Kastl
Friedrich
~1019 - 23 JAN 1074/75
II
Friedrich
~1034
Countess
of Gilching
Irmgarde
~1021
Hadmut
Von
Eppenstein
~1058
Countess
of Diessen
Luitgard
~0972 - >1030
I
Friedrich
58
58
~0990
Countess of
Ohningen
Hemma
~1015
II
Berthold
~1017
I Otto
~1021
Countess
of Diessen
Christine
~1023
Countess
of Diessen
Pilihild
~0965
Count of
Ohningen
Kuno
~0942 - 26 AUG 990
I
Berthold
~0948
Princess
of Lorraine
Beatrix
~0974
I
Dietrich
1041 - 26 JAN 1070/71
Margravine of
the Ostmark
Adelheid
~1056
Margravine
of Austria
Adelheid
~1058
I
Adalbert
~1060
Margravine
of Austria
Justizia
~1028
Margravine
of Austria
Swanhilde
~0992 - 1075
II Dedi
83
83
~1017 - 1067
Oda
of the
Ostmark
50
50
1077 - 1116
Christina
Elvira Diaz
De Vivar
39
39
~0990 - 1053
Adalbert
"The
Victorious"
63
63
~0991 - 17 FEB 1057/58
Frowila
Orseolo
~1021
Margrave
of Neumark
Leopold
~0970
Ottone
Pietro
Orseolo
~0982
Maria
Helena
Empress of
Byzantium
Helena
~0983
Princess
of Hungary
Sarolta
0945 - >0988
Princess of
Transylvania
Sarolta
43
43
~0915
Duke of
Siebenbürgen
Gyula
~0970
Princess
of Hungary
Judit
0931 - 0972
Prince of
Hungary
Takson
41
41
~0955
Prince of
Hungary
Mihaly
~0959
Princess
of Hungary
Agnes
~0961
Princess
of Hungary
Beatrix
0896 - 0947
Prince of
Hungary
Zoltan
51
51
daughter
of
Marot
0850 - 0907
Prince of
Hungary
Arpad
57
57
0891
Prince of
Hungary
Liuntin
~0892
Prince of
Hungary
Tarkacz
~0893
Prince of
Hungary
Jelek
~0894
Prince of
Hungary
Jutocz
~0820 - 0894
Prince of
Hungary
Almos
74
74
~0796 - >0820
Prince of
Hungary
Ogvek
24
24
~0800
Emcsc
~0991
Margravine
of Austria
Adelheid
1085 - 1138
Boleslaw
III "Crooked
Mouth"
53
53
~1087 - 1113
Sbyslava
Svyatopolkovna
26
26
~1111
Princess
of Poland
Zbyslawa
~1099
Countess of
Berg-Schelkingen
Salome
~1114
Princess
of Poland
Adelajda
~1115
Prince of
Poland
Leszek
1116 - 1155
Richiza Ryksa
"Sventoslava",
Queen of Sweden
39
39
~1120
Princess
of Poland
Zofia
1122
Prince of
Poland
Kazimierz
~1124
Princess
of Poland
Gertuda
1125
Boleslaw
IV "The
Curly"
~1126 - 13 MAR 1201/02
Miesko
III "the
Old"
1128
Dobronega
Ludgarda
~1132
Prince of
Sandomierz
Henryk
~1132
Princess
of Poland
Judyta
~1137
Princess
of Poland
Agnieszka
~1138 - 1194
Kazimierz
II "the
Just"
56
56
~1139
Princess
of Poland
Pribislawa
1050 - 1113
Svyatopolk
II
Mikhail
63
63
~1051 - 1103
Princess
of
Coumanie
52
52
~1066 - 1123
Yaroslav
I
Svyatopolkich
57
57
~1073 - >1136
Anna
Svyatopolkovna
63
63
~1075
Premislava
Svyatopolkovna
~1055
Helena
of the
Polowzes
~1075
Zbyslava
of
Kiev
~1072
Elena
Tugorovna
~1083
Princess of the
Byzantine
Empire Barbara
1104
Bryacheslav
Svyatopolkich
~1105
Izyaslav
Svyatopolkich
~1106
Mariya
Svyatopolkovna
Tougor
Khan
~1025 - 4 JAN 1106/07
Princess
of Poland
Gertrude
~1044
Mistislav
Izyaslavich
~1052
Yaropolk
Petr
Izyaslavich
~1054
Vsevolod
Izaslavich
~1056
Igor
Izyaslavich
JAN 1071/72
Evpraksya
Izaslavana
Princess of Kiev
0990 - 1034
II
Miescyslaw
44
44
~0995 - 1063
Richenza of
Pfalz-
Lorraine
68
68
~1015
King of
Poland
Casimir
~1020
Princess
of Poland
Rixa
~0955 - 1034
Pfalzgraf
of Lorraine
Ezzo
79
79
0981 - 1024
Matilda
von
Saxony
43
43
~0992
Count of
Zutphen
Ludolph
~0956 - 15 JUN 991
Theophano
of
Byzantium
0980 - 1002
III Otto
22
22
Otto III (980-1002), Holy Roman emperor (996-1002), king of Germany (983-1002), son of Otto II, born in Kessel, Germany. He reigned under the coregency of his mother, Theophano, and his grandmother, Adelaide, from 983 to 991 and then under the regency of a council from 991 to 996. In 996 Otto assumed control, and having been crowned king of the Lombards, he went to Rome and established his cousin Bruno as Pope Gregory. After Gregory's death Otto made his own former tutor, Gerbert, pope as Sylvester II. Otto remained in Rome until his death, striving to make the city the capital of the Holy Roman Empire and to restore many of the customs of the ancient Roman Empire. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0975
Adelheid
von
Saxony
~0925 - 16 JUL 996
Count in the
Bonngau
Hermann
~0925
Heilwig
of
Dillingen
Adolf
~0905 - 0955
I
Theobald
50
50
~0885 - 0910
I
Hupald
25
25
~0895 - 0970
II
Erenfried
75
75
~0895 - <0963
Richwara
68
68
~0876 - >0913
Count in the
Bonngau
Eberhard
37
37
~0967 - 1017
Emnilda
of
Silesia
50
50
0922 - 25 MAY 992
I
Miescyslaw
~1043 - 1102
Wladislaw
I
Herman
59
59
~1056 - 1085
I
Judita
29
29
~1077
Prince of
Poland
Zbgniew
~1090
Princess
of Poland
Agnieszka
~1091
Princess
of Poland
Adelajda
~1035 - 14 JAN 1091/92
II
Vratislav
~1038 - 27 JAN 1061/62
Princess
of Hungary
Adelaida
~1058
II
Bretislav
~1060
Prince of
Bohemia
Vratislav
~1061
Princess
of Bohemia
Lidmila
~1044 - 1126
Princess
of Poland
Swietoslawa
82
82
~1064
Prince of
Bohemia
Boleslav
~1065
II
Borivoj
~1067 - 1125
I
Vladislav
58
58
~1069
II
Judita
~1071
Prince of
Bohemia
Oldrich
~1075
Sobeslav
I
Oldrich
1001 - 1060
I
Andras
59
59
~1053
King of
Hungary
Salamon
~1054
Prince of
Hungary
David
~1050
Prince of
Hungary
Gyorgy
~1005 - 10 JAN 1054/55
I
Bretislav
~1007 - 1058
Judith Jutha
, Princess of
Schweinfurt
51
51
~1031
II
Spitihnev
~1033
Boleslava
of
Bohemia
~1037
Dymuta
of
Bohemia
~1039
I
Kunrbat
~1041
Jarombir
of
Bohemia
~1042
I Ota
1205 - 1248
Václav
I
(Wenzel)
43
43
~1213 - 1267
III Otto
54
54
~1004
III Otto
~1009
Burkhard
von
Schweinfurt
~1015 - 1043
II
Heinrich
28
28
~0943 - >1008
Otto II
von
Tullfeld
65
65
~0913 - >0982
Otto I
von
Tullfeld
69
69
~0883 - 0945
III
Poppo
62
62
~0835 - >0906
II
Poppo
71
71
~0819 - >0839
I
Poppo
20
20
~1167 - 1218
Thomas
De St.
Valery
51
51
~0793 - >0812
Count of
Oberheingau
Heinrich
19
19
~0793
Hadaburg
~0763 - 5 MAY 795
Count of
Oberheingau
Heimerich
~0723 - >0782
Rupert
of
Thurgau
59
59
~0733
Angila
~1155 - 1230
Premysl
Otakar
75
75
~0956
Otto
von
Nordgau
~0954
Heilika
von
Nordgau
~0900
Count of
Walbeck
Lothar
~0966 - 1034
Duke of
Bohemia
Oldrich
68
68
~0984 - 1052
Duchess
of Bohemia
Bozena
68
68
~1007
Vratislav
of
Bohemia
~1041
Boleslaw
II "The
Bold"
~0958
Princess of
the Byzantine
Empire Agatha
1045
Prince of
Poland
Mieszko
~1046
Prince of
Poland
Otton
~0955
Princess of the
Byzantine
Empire Theodora
~0957
Theophana
Skleros
~0958
II
Basileos
~0960
VIII
Constantine
0943
Princess of
Provence
Berthe
~0906 - 19 SEP 961
Eleni
Lekapene
~0920
Prince of the
Byzantine Empire
Kristophoros
~0930
Princess of
the Byzantine
Empire Agatha
~0946
Empress of the
Byzantine
Empire Theodora
~0935
Maria
Irini
~0869 - 15 JUN 948
I
Romanus
~0874 - 0937
Empress of the
Byzantine
Empire Theodora
63
63
0892
Throphylanos
Lekapenos
0894
Christophoros
Lekapenos
0897
Stephanos
Lekapenos
0900
Konstantinos
Lekapenos
0915
Agatha
Lekapene
~0843
Theophylactes
Asbastaktos
~0990
II
Mieszko
~1102
Princess of
Castile and
Leon Sancha
~1081 - 6 MAR 1125/26
Urraca
Alfonsez
of Castile
1043 - 1109
Alfonso
VI 'the
Valiant'
66
66
Alfonso I (of Castille), called The Brave (1030-1109), king of Castile (1072-1109), and as Alfonso VI, king of León (1065-1109). His father, King Ferdinand I of Castile and León, died in 1065 and left his kingdom, divided into three parts, to his three sons. Alfonso received only León, but he succeeded to nearly all his father's dominions as a result of a war with his brothers, and he also added Toledo and New Castile to his holdings. In 1086 the Abbadids of Seville, with Almoravid help, defeated him at Zalaca and stopped the gradual reconquest of Spain by the Christian rulers. Alfonso regained some of his power, but in 1108, a year before his death, the Almoravids defeated him again and killed his only son. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1016 - 1065
Ferdinand I
Sanchez
"the Great"
49
49
Ferdinand I (of Castile and León), called The Great (1005?-65), king of Castile (1035-65) and of León (1037-65); he was the second son of King Sancho III of Navarre. Ferdinand married Sancha, the sister of Bermudo III, king of León, and heiress to the throne of León. In 1037 Ferdinand defeated Bermudo in a battle at Tamaron, acquiring León through Sancha's right of succession. Ferdinand won the Battle of Atapuerca over his brother in 1054 and was recognized as the emperor of Spain in 1056. By his territorial acquisitions from the Moors between 1058 and 1065, Ferdinand inaugurated the period of Christian reconquest of Spanish land from the Muslims. Before his death Ferdinand provided that his estates be divided among his three sons, thus bequeathing a legacy of fratricidal strife that did not end until the accession of Alfonso I to the throne of Castile in 1072. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1083
Elvira Sancha
Alfonsez of
Castile
~1048
Ximenia
Nunez de
Guzman
~1068
Elvira
Alfonso
de Castilla
~1070
Teresa
Alfonso
de Castilla
~1070
Agnes
of
Aquitaine
~1100
Sancha
Alfonsez
~1098
Sancho
Alfonsez
~1102
Elvira
Alfonsez
D. MAR 1094/95
Fath
al-Mamun
of Cordoba
1013 - 1067
Princess
of Lâeon
Sancha
54
54
Matheode
~1080
Bbeatrice
of
Aquitaine
~1034
Princess of
Castile and
Lâeon Urraca
1036
II
Sancho
1038
Princess of
Castile and
Lâeon Elvira
~1042
King of
Castile
Garcia
0996 - 1027
Alfanso
V De
Leon
31
31
0993 - 1022
Elvira
Melendez
29
29
~1015
Ximenia
of
Leon
~1011
Nuno
de
Amaya
0961 - 1008
Melendo
Gonzales
47
47
0953 - 0999
Bermudo
46
46
~0967 - ~1017
Elvira
Garces
50
50
~0933 - 30 MAY 995
Garcia
Fernandez
0935 - ~0995
Aba
of
Ribagorza
60
60
~0975 - 1032
Sancho
Garces
57
57
~0905 - ~0961
Garsende
of
Fesenzac
56
56
~0875
Count of
Fresenzac
Guillaume
1010
Sancho
Fortun De
Maranon
~0938
Gonsalo
Fernandez
~0830 - 0905
Fortuno
Garces
75
75
0990 - 1035
Sancho
III
Garces
45
45
~0875 - >0935
Nuna
Domna
Munia
60
60
~0910
Nuna
Gonsalez
of Castile
~0845 - >0909
Munio
Nunez
64
64
0840 - >0860
Nuno
Nunez De
Branosera
20
20
~0934
Ilduara
Pelaez
~0845 - >0910
Fernando
Nunez
65
65
~0800
Valdo
Diaz De
Valdez
~0825 - 0885
Diego
Porcelos
Rodriguez
60
60
~0808 - 5 OCT 873
Rodrigo
Ramirez
~0790 - 1 FEB 849/50
Ramiro
~0782
Paterna
of
Castile
0830 - 27 MAY 866
Ordono
~0812
Count of
Vierzo
Gaton
~0750 - 0797
Bermundo
47
47
~0752
Ursinde
Nunliona
~0713
Count of
Coimbra
Atulpho
~0755
Count of
Coimbra
Theudo
~0693 - ~0714
Count of
Coimbra
Sisibuto
21
21
~0675 - 0710
Witika
of
Spain
35
35
~0655 - 0701
Egika
of the
Visigoths
46
46
~0657
Cixila
of the
Visigoths
~0630 - 15 NOV 687
King of the
Visigoths
Ervigo
~0630
Liubigotona
of
Spain
~0682
Pedro
(Visigoth)
0584 - 0633
Suntilo
of
Spain
49
49
0584
Theodora
of
Spain
~0564 - 0620
Sisibuto
Sigebut
56
56
~0555 - 0601
Recared
of the
Visigoths
46
46
~0563
Chodoswintha
De
Austrasia
~0523 - 0575
Sigibert
52
52
~0570
Childebert
~0574
Ingunda
of
France
~0513 - 0613
Athanagildo
of
Spain
100
100
~0529 - 0586
Leovigild
of
Spain
57
57
~0530
Theodosia
~0566
St.
Hermengild
~0485
Count of
Cartagena
Severinus
~0485
Theodora
De
Ostrogoths
~0520
St.
Isadore
0363
Galla
Placidia
0387
Siegse
of the
Thuringians
~0477
Thiudigotha
De
Ostragoths
~0425 - 0475
Theodemer
50
50
~0430
Erchiva
~0400 - 0459
Wandalar
59
59
~0370 - >0400
Winithar
Withemir
30
30
0346 - 0395
Theodosius
49
49
~0477 - 0507
Alaric
30
30
Alaric II (died 507), king of the Visigoths (484-507), succeeding his father, Euric. He ruled all Gaul beyond the Loire and Rhône rivers and most of Spain. Like most Visigoths, Alaric adhered to Arianism; this gave the Frankish king Clovis I, an orthodox Christian, an excuse for making war on him. Alaric's forces were completely routed at Vouillé, near Poitiers (in present-day France), and he himself was overtaken and slain by Clovis. This defeat brought to an end the rule of the Visigoths in Gaul. Alaric is also known for the Breviary of Alaric, an abstract of Roman laws and decrees prepared at his direction for use in his domains. This document is a primary source of knowledge about the application of Roman law in nations formed from the disintegrated Roman Empire. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0450 - 0485
Eorik
of
Spain
35
35
~0418 - 0451
Theodorick
I of
Spain
33
33
~0440
Theodorick
I of
Spain
~0390 - 0419
King of
Toulouse
Wallia
29
29
~0632
Godo
~0632
Ardebasto
~0600
Athanagildo
~0610
Flavia
Juliana
~0580
Pedro
Agusto
~0550
Paulus
of
Arasisso
~0555
Joanna
~0722 - ~0760
Count of
Bardulia
Fruela
38
38
Ramiro
I of
Leon
Rodrigo
Frolaz
Count
of Lara
Gonsalo
I
Alfonso
0926 - 0955
Orduno
29
29
~0825
Faralando
Rolandez
~0905 - ~0959
Pelayo
Gonzalez
54
54
~0905 - ~0936
Hermensinda
Gutierrez
31
31
0858
Diego
Valdez
~0875 - ~0924
Gutierre
Menendez
49
49
~0875 - ~0958
Ilduara
Eriz
83
83
~0904
Froila
Gutierrez
~0845
Ero
Fernandez
~0845
Adosinda
~0875
Teresa
Eriz
~0815
Count
of Lugo
Fernando
~0842 - ~0912
Hermenegildo
Gutierrez
of Portugal
70
70
~0842 - ~0912
Hermesinda
Gatonez
of Vierzo
70
70
~0872 - ~0921
Elvira
Menendez
of Portugal
49
49
~0877 - ~0942
Ildonca
Menendez
65
65
~0812
Egilona
~0812
Gutier
of
Portugal
~0812
Elvira
~0845
Osorio
Gutierrez
~0875
Gonzalo
Betote
~0845
Alfonso
Betote
~0892 - 5 JAN 950/51
Ramiro
~0895 - ~0941
Adasinde
Gutierrez
46
46
~0927
Teresa
of
Lâeon
~0929
Sancho
I of
Lâeon
Ortiga
~0943
Alboazar
Andonio
Ramirez
~0875 - ~0941
Gutierre
Osoriz
66
66
~0872 - JAN 923/24
Orduno
0848 - 20 DEC 910
Alfonso
III "The
Great"
~0875
Fruela
II of
Lâeon
~0832
Munia
of
Gascony
~0850
Nuno
Belchides
of Lâeon
~0980 - FEB 1034/35
III
Sancho
* Note: byname SANCHO THE GREAT, Spanish SANCHO EL MAYOR, OR EL GRANDE,king of Pamplona (Navarre) from about 1000 to 1035, the son ofGarc¡a II (or III). Sancho established Navarrese hegemony over all the Christianstates of Spain at a time when the caliphate of C¢rdoba was in a state of turmoil. Sancho was uninterested in a crusade againstthe Moors, but he was interested in the expansion of Pamplona,which he began by the seizure of the ancient Frankish countiesof Sobrarbe and Ribagorza (1016-19). A skilled politician,Sancho pursued his aims more by subversion than by force of arms. He persuaded the Count of Barcelona, Berenguer Ram¢n I, to accept him as overlord. Gascony did likewise, giving him direct sovereignty over Labourd. As a consequence of his marriage(1010) to Munia, daughter of Count Sancho Garc¡a (d. 1017) of Castile, Sancho secured his own acceptance as count when Sancho Garc¡a's son, the child Count Garc¡a, was assassinated (1029).He then took up Castilian irredentist claims in eastern Leon andoccupied the Leonese capital, where he was crowned(1034)--taking the imperial title. Sancho, who introduced some feudal practices into his new dominions, also encouraged theCluniac reformers and established much closer contacts generallybetween Christian Spain and trans-Pyrenean Europe. In his will,however, he deliberately destroyed the empire he had created: hedivided it into four kingdoms and left these to his four sons,thus making inevitable the fratricidal wars that followed hisdeath. Sancho created the kingdom of Aragon and was responsible for the elevation of Castile from county to kingdom, though hetransferred some Castilian territory to Pamplona, which he left to his eldest son, Garc¡a III (or IV).
~0995 - 1067
Munia
Mayor
72
72
~0955 - 1000
Garcia
II 'El
Trembloso'
45
45
~0960
Chimine
Ximena
~0910 - 0994
II
Sancho
84
84
0935
Urraca
Fernandez
~0835
Bertha
De
Toulouse
~1159
Dulce
Aldonza of
Barcelona
~0887 - >0970
Tota
of
Aragon
83
83
~0854
Aznarius
Sanchez
~1144
Ramon
Berenger De
Barcelona
~1161
Prince of
Aragaon
Sancho
1135 - 1173
Petronella
Ramirez
of Aragon
38
38
~1024 - 1054
III
Garcia
30
30
1080 - 1131
Raimund
Berenguer
50
50
~0997 - 1029
Garcia
Sanchez
32
32
~1010
King of Sobrarbe
and Ribagorza
Gonzalo
~1040
Sancho
IV
Garces
0878 - 0930
Garcia
Diaz
Valdez
52
52
~0919 - 0970
Garcia
III
Sanchez
51
51
~1055 - >1107
Gilbert
de
Milhaud
52
52
~1100 - 1154
II
Roger
54
54
Ximena
Ximeno
Nunila
Ximena
~0824 - ~0875
II
Sancho
51
51
~1094 - 1147
Ramiro II
Sanchez
'the Monk'
53
53
~0794 - ~0872
I
Sancho
78
78
~1053 - 1094
Sancho
V
Ramirez
41
41
I
Alfonso
Marie
~1095 - 1190
Dulce
Aldonza
de Milhaud
95
95
0965 - 1004
Jimena
Fernandez
39
39
~1057
Countess of
Provence
Gerberge
~1033 - >1095
Stephanie
Dulcia of
Marselle
62
62
~0995
Count of
Marselle
Bertrand
~1029 - >1073
Berenger
De
Milhaud
44
44
~1031
Viscountess
De Carlat
Adyle
~1005
II
Gilbert
~0985
I
Gilbert
~1003 - <1051
Richard
II De
Milhaud
48
48
~1005
Rixinde
De
Narbonne
~0979 - 1066
I
Berenger
87
87
~0981
Garsinde
De
Bezalu
~1008
Bernard
De
Narbonne
~0955
Bernard
Taillifer
~0977 - >1049
Richard
I De
Milhaud
72
72
~0979
Senegonde
Bezieres
~0953
William
Bezieres
~1055
Raimund
Berenguer
~1055
Mathilda
Maud D'
Apulia
1020
Arnal
Mir De
Pallars
~1030 - 1089
Sichelgaita
of
Salerno
59
59
Sybille
de
Hauteville
~1000 - 1052
V
Guaimar
52
52
~0970 - 1027
IV
Guaimar
57
57
~0975
Gatelgrima
of
Capua
Pandulph
IV of
Salerno
~0945 - 1014
III
Pandulph
69
69
~0915 - 0968
V
Landulph
53
53
VI
Landulph
~0885 - 0961
IV
Landulph
76
76
~0860 - 0943
III
Landulph
83
83
~0865 - 0961
Gemma
of
Naples
96
96
~0840 - 0900
II
Athanasius
60
60
~0815 - 0866
Duke of
Naples
Gregory
51
51
~0790 - 0862
I
Sergius
72
72
~0835 - 0910
I
Atenulph
75
75
~0840
Sichelgaita
of
Gaeta
~0880 - ~0910
I
Guimar
30
30
~0810
II
Landulph
~0780
I
Landulph
Cleogia
di
Capua
~0940 - ~0974
III
Guaimar
34
34
~0910
II
Guaimar
~0910
Gatelgrima
of
Capua
~0870
Duke of
Capua
Atonalph
~0885
Yota
of Italy
~0855 - 0894
Holy Roman
Emperor
Guido
39
39
Political Events, 891 The king of Italy Guy (Guido) of Spoleto is crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Stephen V. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~0860
Ageltrudra
of
Beneventuna
~0850
Prince of
Salerno
Guaifar
~0830
Prince of
Beneventuna
Adelchie
~0835
Engelberte
~0800
I
Radelchis
~0805
Haretrude
~0825 - 0879
Lambert
I of
Spoleto
54
54
1023 - 1076
Raymund
Berenger
53
53
~0820
Dauferius
0964
Garcia
IV
Sanchez
1207 - 1272
Henry
III
Plantagenet
65
65
Henry III (of England) Henry III (of England) (1207-1272), king of England (1216-1272) and a member of the house of Anjou, or Plantagenet. Henry ascended the throne at the age of nine, on the death of his father, King John (Lackland). In 1232 Henry commenced ruling without the aid of ministers. He displeased the barons by filling government and church offices with foreign favorites and by squandering money on Continental wars. In 1258 he was forced to accept the Provisions of Oxford, whereby he agreed to share his power with a council of barons. Henry soon repudiated his oath, however, and the struggle for power culminated in 1265 when Henry's son and heir, Edward, later King Edward I, led the royal troops to victory over the barons at Evesham. The barons agreed to a compromise with Edward, and from 1267 Edward ruled England. When Henry died, Edward succeeded him as king. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1240 - 1272
Margaret
Plantagenet
32
32
1242 - 24 MAR 1273/74
Beatrice
Plantagenet
16 JAN 1244/45 - 1296
Edmund
Crouchback
Plantagenet
1249
Richard
Plantagenet
1237
John
Plantagenet
1247
William
Plantagenet
1253 - 1258
Katherine
Plantagenet
5
5
1238
Henry
Plantagenet
1166 - 1216
John
Lackland
50
50
John (jòn) Known as John Lackland. 1167?-1216 King of England (1199-1216). The youngest son of Henry II, he schemed against his father and his brother Richard I. During his reign, the English lost most of their possessions in France. The nobility rose against John and forced him to sign the Magna Carta (June 15, 1215), a cornerstone of English freedom. Excerpted from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition © 1996 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from INSO Corporation; further reproduction and distribution in accordance with the Copyright Law of the United States. All rights reserved. Source: 'The World Book Encyclopedia', 1968, p J110. 'Royalty for ommoners', Roderick W. Stuart, 1993, p 38.: Reigned 1199-1216. Signed Magna Carta in 1215 at Runnymede. His reign saw renewal of war with Phillip II Augustus of France to whom he lost several continental possesions including Normandy by 1205. He came into conflict with his Barons and was forced to Sign the Magna Carta. His later repudiation of the charter led to the first barons war 1215-17 during which John died. Burke says he was born in 1160. John 'Lackland' King Of England was known as one of England's worst kings; however, modern analysis notes he was actually much better than his infamous reputation allows. His barons forced him to grant the famous charter of liberties, Magna Carta, in 1215. He was often cruel, but he showed both administrative and military ability. John succeeded his brother Richard the Lion-Hearted as king of England and duke of Normandy in 1199. His rule began badly. By inept politics and the murder of his nephew Arthur, he lost the allegiance of many of his French barons. King Philip Augustus of France then declared war. In 1205 John was beaten, and lost all the English holdings in France except Aquitaine. John persued a policy in England that brought him into conflict with Pope Innocent III. In 1208 the pope placed England under an interdict, which banned church services. The following year John was excommunicated. The king then showed his capacity for strong rule. He forced Scotland into a subordinate position, kept the Welsh princes in check, and held a firm grip on Ireland. But his foreign favorites, professional troops, and autocratic financial policy stirred up discontent among the English barons. When John failed to reconquer the lost French territories in 1214, most of the barons and many of the clergy revolted. On June 15, 1215, the king was forced to approve the Magna Carta at Runnymede meadow beside the River Thames. A few months later, John fought the barons. They were aided by Prince Louis of France, heir to Philip Augustus, and appeared certain to win. But John penned his enemies in London and the adjacent counties. He died suddenly in 1216, but his throne was saved for his son, Henry III. Buried in Worcester Cathedral Concubine at Kings Manor House, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England Divorced Isabel Fitzrobert 29 August 1189. Political Events, 1215 The Magna Carta signed at Runnymede in mid-June limits the power of the English monarchy. Feudal barons supported by Scotland's new king Alexander II meet with England's John Lackland between Staines and Windsor and exact major concessions reaffirming traditional feudal privileges contained in the accession charter signed by Henry I a century ago. John immediately appeals to Pope Innocent III, who issues a bull annulling the charter. John imports foreign mercenaries to fight the barons, but the Magna Carta will remain the basis of English feudal justice. Political Events, 1216 England's John Lackland comes down with dysentery in October after crushing resistance in the north. He crosses the Wash and reaches Newark Castle but dies there October 19 at age 38. The king is succeeded by his 9-year-old son, who will reign until 1272 as Henry III; the earl of Pembroke William Marshal serves as regent, and the moderate party takes control, thus ending the need for opposition to royal authority. The People's Chronology is licensed from Henry Holt and Company, Inc. Copyright © 1995, 1996 by James Trager. All rights reserved.
~1180 - 1246
Lady Isabella
Taillefer
d'Angoulême
66
66
5 JAN 1208/09 - 1272
Richard
Plantagenet
King of the Romans
1210
Joan
Plantagenet
1214 - ~1241
Isabella
'Elizabeth'
Plantagenet
27
27
~1215 - 1273
Eleanor
Plantagenet
58
58
~1168 - 1236
Agatha
de
Ferrers
68
68
~1143
Tangwystl
ferch
Llywarch
1173 - 1240
Llewelyn
"The
Great"
67
67
Defeated his Uncle Dafydd I in 1194 and by 1203 had regained all Gwynedd, becoming overlord of all of Welch princes. In Gwynedd, Llywelyn ap Iorwerth had come to power in the classic way of Welsh princes bedeviled by the dividing rule of Welsh inheritance - he seized it from his uncle. He proved to be the greatest and most constructive Welsh statesman of the Middle Ages. In his long career he succeeded, by constant warfare, by tactful yielding under pressure and by masterly resilience the moment that pressure was relieved, in bringing under his control most of Pura Wallia. When he died in 1240, full of honor and glory, he left a principality which had the possibility of expanding into a truly national state of Wales. There was a moment when an independent Wales seemed about to become a reality. Llywelyn deliberately set out on a policy of reconstructing the whole basis of Welsh political life, and not every Welshman was happy about it. Llywelyn lived in an age which saw the emergence of the centralized feudal state. Both France and England presented the spectacle of societies elaborating their administrative machinery, putting their taxation on a new and sounder footing and systematizing their codes of justice, but Llywelyn's principality was small and lacking resources. Hostile English observers could wax satirical about its pretensions to international status. Gwynedd had always been the core of the power of the princes, and the expansion of Llywelyn's territory gave him the ability to do many things beyond the power of previous Welsh rulers. We find Llywelyn ap Iorwerth (the Great) and Llywelyn ap Gruffydd (the Last) developing castle building on a considerable scale. The remains of Castell y Bere or of Ewloe, Dolbadarn and Dolwyddelan even show distinctive Welsh style. The princes gave charters to the small towns growing in their domains. They supported the abbeys and the friaries. We sense a new Wales coming into being, and, at the moment, it was basically an independent Wales. The great question was, would this new Wales be able to develop to its full potential without interference from without or protests from within? Looming over it was the king of England. For over all this hung the vexing yet vital question of the exact terms of Llywelyn's homage to the king. The king was always acknowledged as being at the head of the pyramid and by the 13th century Welsh rulers also accepted the principle that homage should be paid to the King of England. Hywel Dda had done do, far back in the 10th century, and both Owain Gwynedd and the Lord Rhys had done homage to Henry II. The problem was that Llywelyn claimed that the status in relation to the King of England was the same enjoyed by the King of Scotland - that barons were to pay their homage directly to him and not the king, but King John took a different view. He felt that the barons should also do their homage to him. This gave him the right of continual interference in Welsh affairs. At times the relationship between Llywelyn and the king were mutually supportive, in part because Llywelyn managed to marry Joan, the illegitimate daughter of King John, in 1205. But even this family tie soon broke down over the question of homage and disputed territories. When the Welsh princes were strong they could enforce a grudging acknowledgement of their position from the king. When they were weak, the king granted treaties firmly maintaining his view of homage. Llywelyn the Great had sought to solve the problem before his death. He had two sons, Gruffydd by a Welsh lady and the younger, David, by his wife Joan. Welsh law at the time said that both sons should inherit - a law which had been the cause of so many of those disputed successions which had brought ruin to Wales in the past. Llywelyn made a bold and successful attempt to put this dangerous Welsh law aside in favor of the English system, and finally got the consent of King Henry III - or his advisors - to agree to the succession of David as his sole heir. Then, shortly before his death, he called all the princes of Wales together at Strata Florida Abbey in 1238 and made them swear allegiance to David. Henry III allowed him to succeed, but refused David the direct homage of the barons, eventually leading to war between the king and the new Welsh prince. David and his forces had no change against Henry's large army and withdrew. David died childless shortly thereafter, and it would be up to Llywelyn's grandson, Llywelyn ap Gruffydd, to assert Wales' independence once again. Wales - A History, Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, Michael Joseph Ltd. Publishing, London WC1, 1985. A well written novel based on the life of Llywellyn the Great is "Here Be Dragons" by Sharon Kay Penman, Ballantine Books, Division of Random House, New York, 1985
~1208 - 1265
Margaret
Marared ferch
Llewellyn
57
57
~1134
Llywarch
Goch ap
Iorwerth
~1209
Dafydd
ap
Llewelyn
1191
Joanna
Plantagenet
Joanna was the wife of Lewellyn the Great, but her mother Clemence D'Arcy was a fictional character created by Sharon Kay Penman for her book "The Reckoning". Most sources agree that her true mother was Agatha Ferrers, also a girl born into a noble family and taken as mistress by King John, and so I have opted to use this as a possibly more accurate information source. I have also left this entry in place as a tribute to Ms. Penman's excellent novel.
~1140 - 1190
William
de
Ferrers
50
50
WILLIAM DE FERRERS, third Earl of Derby, who 12 Henry II certified to holding seventy-nine knights fees
~1149 - 5 FEB 1224/25
Sibyl
de
Braose
~1185
Matilda
Gifford
~1205
Osbert
Gifford
Plantagenet
~1167
Hawise
FitzWarin
~1187
Oliver
FitzRoy
Plantagenet
~1168
Concubine
~1192
Geofrey
FitzRoy
Plantagenet
~1160 - 1243
Thomas
I de
Berkeley
83
83
~1186
Richard
FitzJohn
~1168
Hawise
De
Tracy
~1192
Isabel "la
Blanche"
FitzRoy
~1170 - 1217
Isabel Avisa
FitzRobert
De Clare
47
47
John divorced her on the ground of consanguinity; her grandfather Robert being an illegitimate son of Henry I. Burke also names her as Avisa. Also known as Hawise, Joan, Eleanor. The Complete Peerage vol.V,pp689-692.
~1160 - 1218
Aymer
Taillefer
58
58
~1160 - 1218
Alice
de
Courtenay
58
58
~1138 - 1205
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
67
67
~1160
Countess de
Nevers &
Auxerre Agnes
~1164
Constance
de
Courtenay
~1166
Clementia
De
Courtenay
~1168 - 1239
Robert
de
Courtenay
71
71
~1162 - >1235
Eustachia
de
Courtenay
73
73
~1164
Guillaume
de
Courtenay
~1166
Isabelle
de
Courtenay
~1168
Phillippe
de
Courtenay
~1185
Maud
de
Courtenay
~1120 - 1194
Seigneur de
Courtenay
Reginald
74
74
~1122 - ~1160
Matilda
de
Donjon
38
38
~1055 - ~1129
Ranulf
Avenal
74
74
~1170
Robert
de
Courtenay
~1174
Reginald
de
Courtenay
~1175
Egelina
De
Courtenay
~1176
Henri
de
Courtenay
~1074
Frederick
de
Donjon
~1100 - 1194
Seigneur de
Courtenay
Renaud
94
94
~1103 - 1155
Hawise
De
Donjon
52
52
~1127
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
~1129
Isabel
De
Courtenay
~1230 - 1271
Ida De
Longespée
41
41
~1140
Robert
De
Courtenay
~1127
Maud
de
Courtenay
~1080 - >1138
Frederick
du
Donjon
58
58
~1083
Hedwige
~1101
Guy
De
Donjon
~1055
Everard
du
Donjon
1069 - 1127
Sir
Miles de
Courtenay
58
58
1073 - >1127
Ermengarde
de
Nevers
54
54
~1096
Josceline
De
Courtenay
~1098
Guillaume
De
Courtenay
~1047 - ~1089
II
Renaud
42
42
~1055 - 1085
Ida de
Forez
30
30
Agnes
de
Beaugency
II
Guillaume
~1025 - 1085
V
Artald
60
60
~1030
Ida
~1000 - 1076
IV
Artaud
76
76
~1005
Raymonde
~0970 - 1058
II
Giraud
88
88
~0968
Alice
de
Gevaudan
~0940
Etienne
de
Gevaudan
~0969
Philippe
de
Gevaudan
~0948 - 1007
II
Artaud
59
59
~0950
Theodeberge
~0930 - 0990
I
Giraud
60
60
~0915
Gimberge
Taresie
~1030 - 1100
I
William
70
70
~1016 - >1085
Ermengarde
de
Tonnerre
69
69
~1046
Ermengarde
de
Nevers
~1049
Guillaume
de
Nevers
~0980 - >1039
Count of
Tonnerre
Renaud
59
59
~0980
Erviz
~0995 - 1055
IV
Engilbert
60
60
~1095 - 1188
III
Geoffroi
93
93
~0930 - 0992
I Gui
62
62
~1203
Maud
De
Hampden
~0890 - 0987
Count de
Tonnerre
Milan
97
97
~0900
Engeltrude
de
Brienne
~0880 - ~0969
I
Engilbert
89
89
~0882
Mainfrede
~1197 - 1269
Ingelram
Enguerrand
De Fiennes
72
72
~0860 - >0970
Count of
Tonnerre
Gui
110
110
~0865
Adele
de
Salins
~0840
I
Humbert
~0840
Windelmode
de
Escuens
~0863
I
Gauthier
~0820
Count of
Escuens
Gui
~0830 - >0880
II Milo
50
50
~0800 - >0850
I Milo
50
50
~0800
Atila
~0926
Bodo
de
Maers
Bodo
de
Nevers
~0896
II
Laundry
~0866 - ~0893
I
Laundry
27
27
~0866
Hilesinde
~1034 - >1075
Josceline
de
Courtenay
41
41
~1072
Josceline
de
Courtenay
~1074
Geoffrey
de
Courtenay
~0985 - >1033
Athon
de
Courtenay
48
48
~0955
Count de
Chateau
Renard Renaud
~0935 - 0996
I
Renaud
61
61
~0905 - 0951
I
Fromond
46
46
~0880
Count
de Sens
Ganier
~1130 - 1178
IV
William
48
48
~1130
Marguerite
de
Turenne
~1152 - 1233
III
Wulgram
81
81
~1068
IV
Adhemir
~1098
V
Adhemir
~1080 - 1122
I
Raymond
42
42
1105 - 1143
Maude
de
Perche
38
38
1103
Philippe
de
Perche
~1046 - 1100
IV
Geoffrey
54
54
~1067 - >1156
Margaret
De
Perche
89
89
1178
Blanca
De
Navarre
~1075
Countess
of Perche
Maud
~1026 - 1079
I
Rotrou
53
53
~1026
Adeline
de
Domfront
~1048
III
Hughes
~1000
Melisinde
de
Tours
~0996
Helvise
de
Mortagne
~0966 - ~1031
Count of
Mortagne
Fulk
65
65
~0936 - 0954
Count of
Mortagne
Herve
18
18
~0966
Milasinde de
Nogent-le-
Retrou
~0936 - 0978
Seigneur of
Nogent-le-
Retrou Rotrou
42
42
~0906 - 0963
I
Geoffrey
57
57
~0906
Hermengarde
~0876
Seigneur De
Mortagne
Warin
~0880
Melisende
~0846
William
I
d'Alencon
~1055 - 1092
I Boso
37
37
~1060 - 1103
Gerberge
De
Terrasson
43
43
1100 - 1162
William
VI De
Montpellier
62
62
~1025
Count of
Terrasson
Pierre
~1020
Vicount of
Turenne
Guillaume
~1020
Matilde
~0990 - 1030
II
Ebles
40
40
~1010
III
Archambaud
~0960
Suplice
de
Turenne
~0930 - ~0980
Vicomte of
Turenne
Bernard
50
50
~0930
Deda
~0895
Robert
de
Turenne
~0900
Ermesinde
~0850 - 0897
Seigneur
de Turenne
Ranulf
47
47
~0850
Elizabeth
~0820
Seigneur
de Turenne
Geoffrey
~0820
Gerberga
~0790 - ~0824
Seigneur
de Turenne
Ranulf
34
34
~0790
Aygua
1089 - 1160
Wulgrim
II
Taillefer
71
71
1078 - ~1153
William
Peverell
75
75
A chief supporter of King Stephen; commander at Battle of Standard, 1137
~1100
Ponce
de
Montgomery
~1088 - >1149
Avise
de
Lancaster
61
61
~1114
Margaret
Peverell
~1060 - 1118
Guillaume
III
Taillefer
58
58
~1066
Vitapoy
de
Benauges
~1118
Graule
Taillefer
~1060
Seigneur de
Benauges
Amanjeu
~1015 - 1087
Foulques
Taillefer
72
72
~1032
Condole
Vagena
~1002
Qunormau
Vagena
~0986 - 1048
Geoffrey
I
Taillefer
62
62
~0994 - >1048
Petronille
d'Archiac
54
54
~1017 - 1075
Geoffrey
Galfridus
Taillefer
58
58
~1019
Arnold
Amaud
Taillefer
~1021
Guillaume
Taillefer
~1023
Aymar
Ademar
Taillefer
~1035 - 1075
Humberge
Taillefer
40
40
~0973
Mainard
"le
Riche"
~0977
Hildegarde
~0958 - 1028
Guillaume
II
Taillefer
70
70
~0988
Alduin
Taillefer
~0924 - 0992
Arnaird I
"Manzer"
Taillefer
68
68
~0926
Hildegarde
~0895 - 6 AUG 962
Guillaume
I
Taillefar
~1223 - 10 MAR 1287/88
Maud
de
Lacy
1245 - 1287
Thomas
De
Clare
42
42
1258
Eleanor
De
Clare
1252 - >1316
Rohesia
Agnes
de Clare
64
64
1248
Bevis
Benet
De Clare
1249
Robert
De
Clare
1249 - FEB 1311/12
Margaret
De
Clare
1254
Maud
De
Clare
1240
Isabel
De
Clare
1257
Eglantine
De
Clare
~1254 - 1297
Sir
Roger de
Mowbray
43
43
1st Lord Mowbray of Thirsk & Hovingham BET. 1295 - 1297 Minister of Parliament
1286 - 23 MAR 1320/21
Sir
John de
Mowbray
Executed for having been connected with the rising of the Northern Earls against Despencers, and his estates were seized by the Crown.
~1300
Alice
de
Swillington
~1244 - 1264
Robert
de
Vespont
20
20
~1286 - 1333
Margaret
De
Clare
47
47
~1279 - ~1326
Maud
de
Clare
47
47
1221
Margaret
Burgh
1192 - 1262
John
de
Lacy
70
70
Earl of Lincoln , in England. 1232. Constable of Chester John de Lacie the Surety, was 15th in descent from Alfred the Great and 28th in descent from Cerdic. He married second Margaret, granddaughter of the Surety Saire de Quincey and had 26 Maud Lacie married to Richard de Clare, died 1262 JOHN DE LACIE, Earl of Lincoln and one of the Magna Charta Barons. He was one of the chief nobles present in Westminster Hall when (40th Henry III.) Boniface, Archbishop of Canterbury, pronounced that solemn curse with candles lighted against all those who should thenceforth violate Magna Charta. He died 1262
1208
Margaret
de
Quincey
~1230
Edmund
de
Lacy
~1226
Idonea
de
Lacy
~1188 - 1257
Robert
de
Quincey
69
69
1181 - 1241
Hawise
de
Keveliock
60
60
~1210
Roger
de
Quincey
~1212
Hawise
de
Quincey
~1214
Mabel
de
Quincey
1147 - 1181
Hugh
de
Kevelioc
34
34
1155 - 1219
Saher
IV de
Quincey
64
64
Surety for the Magna Charta, Earl of Winchester
~1156 - 12 JAN 1234/35
Margaret
de
Bellomont
~1174 - 1264
Roger
de
Quincey
90
90
~1172
Lorette
de
Quincey
~1182
John
de
Quincey
~1184
Reginald
de
Quincey
~1185
Beatrice
de
Quincey
~1190 - 3 FEB 1262/63
Lady
Hawyse
de Quincey
~1194 - 1263
Hugh
de
Vere
69
69
~1225 - 1269
Hawise
de
Courtenay
44
44
1240 - 1296
Robert
De
Vere
56
56
~1112
Adelicia
De Saint
Liz
~1218 - 12 MAR 1279/80
Margaret
de
Quincey
~1220 - 1282
Elizabeth
Isabel De
Quincey
62
62
1114
Matilda
De Saint
Liz
Countess of
Pembroke
Maud
Alianore
de
Quincey
~1290
Eve
De
Bulmere
~1122
Lorette
de
Quincey
~1121 - 1196
Robert 'Blanchmains'
Harcourt de
Bellomont
75
75
3d Earl of Leicester, Lord High Steward of England
~1124 - 1212
Petronella
de
Grentmesnil
88
88
~1156
Robert
"Fitz-Parnell"
Harcourt
~1158
Roger
Harcourt
~1159
William
Harcourt
~1160 - 1215
Amicia
de
Bellomont
55
55
~1161
Geoffrey
de
Beaumont
~1162
Mabel
de
Beaumont
~1140 - 1208
Hawise
de
Paynell
68
68
~1166
Pernel
de
Harcourt
~1092
Hugh II
de
Grentmesnil
Lord High Steward of England
~1105
Alice
de
Beaumont
~1130
Rohesia
'Rose' de
Grentmesnil
~1136
Alice
de
Grentmesnil
~1064 - 1118
Ivo
(Ives)
54
54
~1070
Felia
de
Gaunt
~1090
Ivo II
de
Grentmesnil
~1048 - 1094
Gilbert
de
Gand
46
46
Gilbert de Gant, son of Baldwin, Earl of Flanders, by Maud, sister of William the Conqueror, accompanied his uncle into England and, participating in the triumph of Hastings, obtained a grant of the lands of a Danish proprietor named Tour, with numerous other lordships. This Gilbert happened to be at York, anno 1069, and had a narrow escape when the Danes in great force, on behalf of Edgar Etheling, entered the mouth of the Humber and, marching upon that city, committed lamentable destruction by fire and sword, there being more than 3,000 Normans slain. Like most of the great lords of his time, Gilbert de Gant disgorged to the church a part of the spoil which he had seized, and amongst other acts of piety restored Bardney Abbey, co. Lincoln, which had been utterly destroyed many years before by the Pagan Danes, Inquar and Hubba. He m, Alice, dau. of Hugh de Montfort, and had issue, Hugh, who assumed the name Montfort; Walter, his successor; Robert, Lord Chancellor of England, anno 1153; and Emma, m. to Alan, Lord Percy. This great feudal chief d. in the reign of William Rufus. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 227, Gant, Earls of Lincoln] NOTE: Both Burke and Brian Tompsett agree that Baldwin, [6th] Count of Flanders, was Gilbert's father. However, I cannot find any reference to William the Conqueror having a sister named Maud - the only documented sister I find is Adelaide. Brian Tompsett shows Baldwin VI "the Peaceable," Count of Flanders and Artois, and Richilda, Countess of Hainault and Namur, as the parents of Gilbert, and that's what I'm sticking with.
~1050
Alice
de
Montfort
~1071 - 1135
Emma
de
Gaunt
64
64
~1072
Henry
de
Gaunt
~1074
Ralph
de
Gaunt
~1077 - 1139
Walter
de
Gaunt
62
62
~1090 - ~1124
Hugh
IV de
Gaunt
34
34
~1080
Geoffrey
de
Gaunt
~1082
Matilda
de
Gaunt
~1084
Robert
de
Gaunt
~1086
Gilbert
de
Gaunt
~1088
Alice
de
Gaunt
~1020 - >1068
Hugh II
de
Montfort
48
48
~1015
Alice
de
Beauffou
~1043
Hugh
III de
Montfort
~1045
Robert
de
Montfort
~0975 - >1037
Hugh I
de
Montfort
62
62
Hugh de Montfort, commonly called Hugh with a Beard, son of Thurstan de Bastenburgh, accompanied William the Conqueror into England and aided that prince's triumph at Hastings, for which eminent service he obtained divers fair lordships and, at the time of the General Survey, was possessor of twenty-eight in Kent, with a large portion of Romney Marsh; sixteen in Essex; fifty-one in Suffolk; and nineteen in Norfolk. This gallant soldier eventually lost his life in a duel with Walcheline de Ferrers, and was s. by his son, Hugh de Montford. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, p. 377, Montfort, Barons Montfort]
~0928 - 0990
Thurston Toussaint
de Montfort de
Bastembourg
62
62
~0953
Adeline
de
Montfort
~0972
Gisela
Bertrand de
Bastenburg
~1022 - >1058
Ralph
de
Gand
36
36
~1018 - >1058
Gisele
de
Luxembourg
40
40
~1050
Comte
de Gand
Baudouin
~0983
Adalbert
de
Gand
~1005
Ermengarde
de
Flanders
~1052
Robert
de
Grentmesnil
~1054
William
de
Grentmesnil
~1058
Halewise
de
Grentmesnil
~1060
Hugh
de
Grentmesnil
~1062
Rohese
de
Grentmesnil
~1066
Alberic
de
Grentmesnil
~1068
Matilda
(Maud) de
Grentmesnil
~1070
Agnes
de
Grentmesnil
~1072
Hawise
de
Grentmesnil
~1065 - 1111
Adeliza
De
Grentmesnil
46
46
~1007 - >1080
Ivo
(Yvres)
73
73
~1008 - 1099
Judith
Adela de
Gournay
91
91
~1035
Adeliza
de
Beaumont
~1040
Agnes
de
Beaumont
~0977 - ~1035
Ivo
(Yvres)
58
58
~0980
Gisele
de
Chevreuse
~0947 - ~0978
Yvres
de
Beaumont
31
31
~0990 - 1039
Robert
de
Grentmesnil
49
49
~1007
Hawise
d'Eschauffon
~1024
Robert
II de
Grentmesnil
~1032
Adeliza
de
Grentmesnil
~1034
Arnold
de
Grentmesnil
~0968 - ~1020
Geroy (Giroie)
Le Goz de
Montreuil
52
52
~1002
Arnold
Giroie
~1004
Herembergh
Giroie
~1006
William
Giroie
~1008
Fulk
Giroie
~1010
Robert
de Saint
Cyneri
~1012
Emma
d'Eschauffon
~1014
Ralph
Mala
Corona
~1016
Hugh
Giroie
~1018
Adelaide
d"Eschauffon
~1020
Giroie
II
d'Eschauffon
~0942
Arnold "le
Gros" of
Courcerant
~0972
Hillard
de
Montreuil
~0909
Abboli
le
Breton
~0960
Gervase
le
Breton
1104 - 1168
Robert
de
Beaumont
64
64
~1100 - >1168
Amicia
de
Gael
68
68
~1122
Isabel
De
Beaumont
~1125
Margaret
de
Beaumont
~1128
Roger
de
Beaumont
1129
Hawise
de
Beaumont
1120
Mabel
De
Beaumont
~1138
Gervais
de
Beaumont
~1140
Elizabeth
de
Beaumont
~1142
William
de
Beaumont
~1144
John
de
Beaumont
~1146
Geoffrey
de
Beaumont
~1148
Henry
de
Beaumont
>1075
Ralph
de
Waiet
~1075
Avise
fitz
Borne
~1043 - ~1097
Ralph
II de
Gael
54
54
~1045 - ~1097
Emma
FitzWilliam
52
52
~1076
William
de
Gael
~1080
Alan
de
Gael
1080 - 1071
William
fitz
Osbern
9
9
1033 - 1066
Adeleiza
De
Toeni
33
33
~1052
William
FitzWilliam
~1056
Roger
de
Breteuil
~1058
Ralph
FitzWilliam
~1060
John
FitzWilliam
~1062
Richard
FitzWilliam
1049
Emma
Aldreda
Auberee
~1034
Richildis
de
Hainaut
~0975
William
FitzOsbert
~1025
Elbert
de
Toeni
~1027
Eliant
de
Toeni
~1032
Helbert
de
Toeni
~1033
Gazon
de
Toeni
~1034
Eliance
de
Toeni
~1110
Maud
De
Longspee
~1038 - ~1098
Robert
de
Toeni
60
60
~0992
Estephania
de
Barcelona
~0940 - ~1018
Ralph
Rodulf
78
78
~0890
Hugo
de
Calvacamp
~0930
Hugh
de
Tosni
~0956
Count de
Bayeux
Ralnulph
~0880
Richard
De St.
Sauveur
~0985 - 1035
Osborne
fitz
Herfast
50
50
~0998
Emma
de
Ivry
~0960
Aubree
Erneburge
de Caux
~0930
Canville
de
Caux
~0965
Herfast
de
Crepon
~0926
Herphast
de
Crépon
~0970
de
Crepon
~1174
Simon
De
Clifford
~1044
Hardwin
of
Suffolk
~1172
Richard
De
Clifford
~1012 - 1035
Dreux
Drogo
23
23
~1022 - <1096
Osborne
II de
Bolbec
74
74
~0944 - 1027
Gauthier
II "le
Blanc"
83
83
~0944
Adela
de
Senlis
~0970
Alix
de
Vixen
~0884 - >0965
Eldegarde
of
Valois
81
81
~0972 - <0984
Raoul I
de
Crespy
12
12
~1102
Adeline
Newburgh
de Beaumont
1104
Waleran
de
Beaumont
~1106
Hugh
de
Beaumont
~1110
Havoise
de
Beaumont
~1112
Amicade
de
Beaumont
~1114 - >1189
Maud Matilda
Alberade de
Beaumont
75
75
~1014 - 1081
Adelise
de
Meulan
67
67
~1045 - 1119
Henry
de
Beaumont
74
74
~1047
William
de
Beaumont
~1049
Hugh
de
Beaumont
~1050
Aubreye
de
Beaumont
~0990 - 1069
Waleran
Beaumont
79
79
~1018
Hugh
de
Meulan
~0965 - 0997
Count of
Meulan
Hugh
32
32
~0935 - 18 DEC 967
I
Robert
~0984 - 1045
Aubreye
de la
Haie
61
61
~1018
William
de
Vieilles
~1020
Robert
de
Beaumont
~1024
Dunelme
de
Vieilles
1268
Isabel
~1133 - 1181
Orbella
Orbillus de
Lechars
48
48
~1159
Simon
de
Quincey
~1137
Eva
~1170
John
de
Quincey
~1107 - ~1180
Ness
of
Leuchars
73
73
~1087
William
of
Leuchars
1170 - 1208
Filbert
De
Douvres
38
38
1198
Joan
Peche
~1218
Margaret
FitzRichard
De Chilham
~1220
Richard
FitzRichard
De Chilham
1292 - 1358
Isabella
"The Fair"
Capet
66
66
~1330
Elizabeth
De
Mohun
1137 - 1198
Baldwin
De
Wake
61
61
Baldwin le Wac or de Wake, called from his maternal grandfather, Baldwin FitzGilbert, was one of the barons at the coronation of Richard I, and died 3rd of King John, 1201. In 12th of Henry II, 1154-1189, in 1166, on the assessment in aid of marrying the king's daughter, certified the number of his knight's fees to be ten, and that they were bestowed upon his ancestors by Henry I. He married Agnes, daughter of William de Humet, Constable of Normandy, by whom he acquired the manor of Winchendon.
~1184 - 1233
Isabel
de
Briwere
49
49
1312 - 1377
Edward
64
64
Edward III (1312-1377), king of England (1327-1377), who initiated the long, drawn-out struggle with France called the Hundred Years' War (1337-1453). Edward was born at Windsor, the older son of King Edward II. He was proclaimed king after his father was forced to abdicate in 1327. Before Edward came of age, power resided with his mother, Isabella of France, and her lover, Roger de Mortimer. In 1330 the young king had Mortimer hanged and confined his mother to her home. In 1333 Edward battled and defeated the Scots. In 1337 France came to Scotland's aid, and Edward declared war on France. The English armies had numerous successes, culminating in the Peace of Calais, which in 1360 gave England all of Aquitaine; in return, Edward renounced his claim to the French throne, which he had first made in 1328. In 1366 Edward renewed the war with France, disavowing the Peace of Calais. This time, however, the English armies were unsuccessful. After the truce of 1375, Edward retained few of his previously vast possessions in France. Edward was succeeded by his grandson, Richard II. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Edward III (1312-77), King of England (1327-77). " Evil be to him who evil thinks." Quoted in: Polydore Vergil, Anglicae Historiae. Alleged remark at the falling of the Countess of Salisbury's garter, presumably when the order of Garter was founded in 1344: no contemporary evidence whatsoever, but the traditional tale was current in Henry VIII's reign. (See: Thomas de Beauchamp) The Columbia Dictionary of Quotations is licensed from Columbia University Press. Copyright © 1993, 1995 by Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- EDWARD III was born Nov. 13, 1312, at Windsor Castle, and was the eldest son of Edward II and Isabella, dau. of Phillip IV, of France. His mother's life was stained with the foulest crimes and his father's death was revenged by the perpetual imprisonment of Isabella, and the public execution of her paramour, Mortimer. On the 29th of January, 1327, he was crowned King of England. Edward would not accept the crown without his father's consent which was obtained five days before the coronation. He was m. at York on the 24th of January, 1328, to Philippa, dau. of the Count of Hainault. Edward's mother and the Countess of Hainault were grandchildren of Philip III of France. The times in which Edward lived, the circumstances under which he was placed, the influences brought to bear on his conduct, conspired to make his life restless and turbulent. To meet the demands thrown on him, he had to exert to the utmost all the energy of mind that he possessed and his whole life was of continual strife. As a legislator he was shrewd and magnanimous and as a general on the field of battle he was vigilant and courageous and he was successful in many of the conflicts which gave glory to the English arms. Conquerors, though usually the bane of human kind, proved often in these feudal times, the most indulgent of sovereigns. They stood most in need of supplies, and not being always able to compel the people by force to submit to the necessary impositions, they were obliged to compensate them by equitable laws and popular concessions. Edward took no steps of moment without consulting his parliament, and generally obtained their approbation and support for his measures. The parliament, therefore, rose into greater consideration during his reign, and acquired a more regular authority than in any former time; and even the House of Commons, which, during turbulent and factious periods, was naturally oppressed by the greater power of the crown and barons began to appear of some weight in the constitution. In the later years of Edward, the King's ministers were impeached in parliament and fell a sacrifice to their authority. Some attention was paid to the elections of their members; and lawyers, who were, at that time, men of very interior character, were totally excluded from the House during several parliaments. One of the most popular laws, enacted by any prince, was the statute, which passed in the twenty-fifth year of his reign, and which limited the cases of high treason, before vague and uncertain, to three principal heads: (1) the conspiring of the death of the King. (2) the levying war against him and (3) the adhering to his enemies. The Judges were prohibited, if any other cares should occur, from inflicting the penalty of treason, without application to parliament. Edward granted above twenty parliamentary confirmations of the Magna Charla; and these concessions are commonly appealed to as proof of the great indulgence to the people, and his tender regard for their liberties. But the contrary presumption is much more naturai. If the maxims of Edward's reign had not been, in general, somewhat arbitrary, and if the great charter had not been frequently violated, the parliament would never have applied for these frequent conformations which could add no force to a deed regularly observed, and which could serve no other purpose than to prevent the contrary precedents from turning into a rule and acquiring authority. It was the effect of the irregular government during those ages, that a statute, which had been enacted some years, instead of acquiring, was imagined to loose force by time, and needed to be often renewed by subsequent statutes of the same sense and tener. The frequent confirmations in general terms of the churches' privileges proceeded from the same cause and all would appear ridiculous if we did not consider the circumstances of the times. It is a clause in one of Edward's statutes, "that no man of what estate of condition secver, shall be put out of land or tenement, nor taken, nor imprisoned, nor disherited, nor put to death without being brought in answer by due process of the law." This privilege was sufficiently secured by a clause of the Great Charter, which had received a general confirmation in the first chapter of the same statute. Why this clause? Plainly because there had been some late infringement of it which gave ?? umbrage to the Commons. But there is no article, in which the laws are more frequently repeated during the reign, almost in the same terms, than those of purveyance, which the parliament always termed an outragrous and intolerable grievance, and the source of infinite damage to the people. The parliament tried to abolish the prerogative altogether by prohibiting any one to take goods without the consent of the owners, and by changing the name of the purveyors, as they call it, into that of buyers, but the arbitrary conduct of Edward still brought back the grievance upon them, namely, that it was contrary to the Great Charter and to many statutes. The disorder was in a great measure derived from the state of the public finances and could, therefore, the less admit of any remedy. The prince frequently wanted ready money, yet his family must be provided for and so was frequently obliged to employ force and violence for that purpose, and to give tallies, at what rate he pleased to the owners of the goods which he took into his possession. The kingdom abounded so little in commodities, that had the owners been strictly protected by law, they could easily have exacted any price from the King. Especially in his frequent exploits, when he came to distant and poor places, where the Court did not usually reside, and where a regular plan for supplying it could not be easily established. There was no act of arbitrary power more frequently repeated in this reign, than that of the imposition of taxes without the consent of parliament. Though that assembly granted the King more supplies than had ever been obtained by any of his predecessors, the great undertakings of the King and the necessity of his affairs obliged him to levy still more, and his great success against France added still more weight to his authority. These tax impositions came frequently in spite of the opposition of the Commons. The continual remonstrances of the Commons, however unavailing, served to prevent the arbitrary practices of the court from becoming an established part of the constitution. It is easy to imagine that a prince of so much sense and spirit as Edward would be no slave to the Court of Rome. Though the old tribute was paid during the years of his minority, he afterwards with-held it, and when the Pope in 1367 threatened to cite him to the Court of Rome for default of payment, he laid the matter before his parliament. That assembly unanimously declared, that King John could not, without a national consent, subject his Kingdom to a foreign power against the exorbitant pretention. During Edward's reign, the statute of provisors was enacted, rendering it penal to procure any presentations to beneficies from the Court of Rome, and securing the rights of all patrons and electors, which had been extremely encroached on by the Pope. By a subsequent statute, every person was outlawed who carried any cause or appeal to Rome. The laity at this time seem to have been extremely prejudiced against the papal power, and even somewhat against their own clergy, because of their own connection with the Roman pontiff. They pretended that the usurpations of the Pope were the cause of all the plagues, injuries, famine; and poverty of the realm; was more destructive to them than all the wars, and was the cause why it contained not a third of the inhabitants and commodities, which it formerly possessed; that the taxes levied by him exceeded five times those paid to the King; that everything was venal in that sinful city of Rome; and that even the patrons in England had thence learned to practice simony without remorse or scrupple. They petitioned the King to employ no Churchman in any office of state, and they even spoke, in plain terms, of expelling by force the papal authority, and thereby providing a remedy against oppression which they neither could nor would any longer endure. Men who talked in this strain were not far from the Reformation. But Edward did not think it proper to second all this zeal. Though he passed the statute of provisors, he took little care with its execution, and the parliament made frequent complaints of his negligence. He was content with having reduced such of the Romish ecclesiastics, who possessed revenues in England, to depend entirely on him by means of that statute. As to the police of the Kingdom, during this period it was still bad but certainly better than during the time of faction, civil war, and disorder, to which England was so often exposed. Yet there were several vices in the constitution, the bad consequences of which all the power and vigilance of the King could not prevent. The barons, by their confederacies with those of their own order, and by supporting and defending their retainers in every iniquity, were the chief abettors of robbers, murderers and ruffians of all kinds, so law could not be executed against their criminals. The nobility were brought to give their promise in parliament, that they would not avow, retain or support any felon or breaker of the law; yet this engagement was never regarded by them. Commerce and industry were certainly at a very low ebb during this period. The bad police of the country alone affords a sufficient reason. The only exports were wool, skins, hide, leather, butter, tin, lead and such unmanufactured goods of which wool was by far the most considerable. Edward endeavored to introduce and promote the woolen manufacture by giving protection and encouragement to foreign weavers, and by enacting a law, prohibiting everyone to wear any cloth but of English make. The parliament prohibited the exportation of woolen goods, which was not so well judged, especially while the exportation of unwrought wool was made against the exportation of iron. The staple of wool, leather and lead was fixed by act of parliament in particular towns in England. But Edward, who commonly deemed his prerogative superior to law, paid little attention to the statutes, and when parliament remonstrated with him, on account of such acts of power, he told them, plainly, that he would proceed in the matter as he thought proper. There is not a reign among those of ancient English monarchs, which is more interesting than that of King Edward III, nor one where the domestic transactions will better discover the true genius of that kind of mixed government which was then established in England. Edward was a prince of great capacity, not governed by favorites, nor led astray by any unruly passion, sensible that nothing could be more effectual to his interests than to keep on good terms with his people. It appears, however, that the government, at best, was only a barbarous monarchy, not regulated by any fixed maxims, nor bound by any certain undisputed rights, which were in practice regularly observed. The King conducted himself by one set of principles and the barons by another; the Commons by a third and the Clergy by a fourth. All these systems of government were contrary and incompatible. Each of them prevailed according as incidents were favorable to it. A great Prince rendered the monarchical power predominant, the weakness of a King gave reins to the aristocracy; a superstitious age saw the clergy triumphant and the people, for whom alone government was instituted, and who alone deserve consideration, were commonly the weakest of the whole. However the Commons, little obnoxious to any other order, though they sunk under the violence of the tempests, silently raised their head in more peaceful times, and while the storm was brewing, were courted by all sides, and thus received some accession to their privileges or some conformation of them. Edward III died on the 21st of June, 1376, and was buried in Westminster Abbey near the body of his Queen, Philippa of Hainault. __________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________
1316
John
of
Eltham
1318
Eleanor
Plantagenet
~1270 - 1305
Heiress of
Navarre
Jeanne
35
35
~1294
Louis
X
Capet
~1286 - 3 JAN 1320/21
Philiip
V
Capet
1368 - 1422
Charles VI
"The Beloved"
Capet
53
53
~1245 - 1274
Henry
I 'The
Fat'
29
29
1248 - 1302
Blanche
d'Artois
54
54
1281 - 1345
Henry
Plantagenet
64
64
Thomas
Plantagenet
1176 - 1208
Philip II
von
Hohenstaufen
32
32
King of Germany, Duke of Swabia and Tuscany
1312
Jeanne
de
Bourbon
~1226 - 1288
Maud
(Matilda)
De Brabant
62
62
1184 - 1208
Irene
Angelica
24
24
~1240 - 1270
Laure
De
Montfort
30
30
~1154 - 1204
Isaakois
II
Angelus
50
50
~1167
Margaret
of
Hungary
~1185
IV
Alexius
1148 - 1196
Bela
48
48
1154 - 1184
Anne
de
Chatillon
30
30
~1176 - 1235
Andreas
59
59
1174
Emeric
~1131 - 1174
Countess
of Thuringia
Jutte
43
43
~1129 - 1186
Renaud
De
Chatillon
57
57
1122
Constance
of
Antioch
Bohemund
III of
Antioch
~1185
Marie
of
Antioch
Philippa
of
Antioch
1107 - 1131
Bohemond
24
24
~1093 - 1131
Alix
De
Réthel
38
38
~1058 - 1131
Baldwin
II De
Réthel
73
73
Baldwin II (of Jerusalem) (died 1131), king of Jerusalem (1118-31), cousin and successor of Baldwin I, with whom he participated in the First Crusade. In 1104 he was captured by the Muslims, who detained him until 1108. After his election as king, on the death of Baldwin I, he campaigned against the Turks, winning control of Halab (Aleppo) and Damascus. Baldwin II was succeeded by his son-in-law Fulk V the Young, count of Anjou. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1063
Morphia
of
Melitene
~1095
Hodierna
De
Réthel
1201 - 1262
Senena
verch
Caradog
61
61
~1033
Duke of
Melitene
Gabriel
1105
Sibyl
Del
Vasto
~1040
Melisende
de
Corbeil
~1010
Guitchard
(Bouchard)
~1015
Adelaide
de
Crecy
Elise
de
Corbeil
~0987 - ~1060
Count de
Corbeil
Guillaume
73
73
~0947
Albert
de
Corbeil
~0969
Germaine
de
Corbeil
~0925 - ~0960
Count de
Corbeil
Aymon
35
35
~1045 - 1085
Robert
de
Hauteville
40
40
~1050
Alvareds
Roger
de
Hauteville
Emma
de
Hauteville
~0990 - 1051
Tancred
De
Hauteville
61
61
1215
Margaretha
von
Hohenstaufen
William 'Iron
Arm" de
Hauterville
Drogo
de
Hauteville
Humphrey
de
Hauteville
D. 1219
Stepanie
of
Armenia
~1241
Conrad
IV von
Hohenstaufen
Moriella
Godrey
de
Hauteville
~1095 - 1130
Henry
I de
Chatillon
35
35
~1109
Ermengarde
de
Montjay
~1125
Elizabeth
de
Chatillon
~1127
Gauthier
II de
Chatillon
~1089
Alberic
de
Montjay
~1064 - 1096
Gauthier
I de
Chatillon
32
32
~1034 - ~1070
Guy I
de
Chatillon
36
36
~1039
Ermengarde
de
Choisy
~0994
Miles
de
Chatillon
0947
Hervie
de
Chatillon
~0917
Eudes
de
Chatillon
~0880
Ursus
~0890
Bertha
~1128 - 1161
Geza
33
33
1130 - 1186
Helena
(Euphrasyna)
of Kiev
56
56
~1155
Istvan
1076 - 1132
Mstislas
56
56
~1100 - >1168
Lyubava
Demetria
Savidich
68
68
~1126
Yziaslav
~1128
Grand Prince
of Kiev
Rostislav
~1074
Dmitrij
Savidich
1053 - 1125
Vladimir
72
72
1065
Gytha
Haroldsdatter
1083
Grand Duke
of Kiev
Vyacheslav
1082
Yaropolk
1085
Yuri
Dolgoruki
~1022 - 1066
Harold
II
Godwineson
44
44
Harold II (1020?-1066), king of England (January 6, 1066-October 14, 1066) and last of the Saxon rulers. In 1053 Harold succeeded his father, Godwin, as Earl of Wessex, becoming chief minister to King Edward the Confessor and the most powerful man in the realm. After a revolt against Harold's brother Tostig, Earl of Northumbria, Harold banished Tostig. Upon the death of King Edward, Harold was crowned king of England. William, Duke of Normandy, immediately asserted his claim to the throne, which was supported by Tostig and Harold III of Norway. Tostig and his Norwegian ally were routed by the English forces in September 1066. William then defeated Harold at the Battle of Hastings on October 14, 1066. Harold was killed, and William, thereafter called The Conqueror, became ruler of England as King William I. His conquest marks the beginning of Norman England. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Edgyth
of
Wessex
1066
Prince of
England
Ulf
1067
Prince of
England
Harold
Druella
of
Kent
~1030
Burhheard
of
Mercia
~1028
Earl of
Mercia
Edwin
~1032
Earl of
Northumbria
Morcar
~0995 - 1018
Ealdorman
of Wessex
Godwin
23
23
Earl of
Northumbria
Tostig
~0965 - 1015
Wulfnoth
Cild
50
50
~0935 - ~1015
Aethelmaer
Cild
80
80
~0915 - ~0998
Thegn
Aethelwerd
83
83
~0885
Ealdorman of
Northumbria
Eadric
~0865 - 0927
Ealdorman of
Northumbria
Aethelfrith
62
62
~0860 - ~0898
Ealdorman
of Wiltshire
Æthelhelm
38
38
~0860
Aethelgyth
(Elswitha)
of Mercia
~1005 - >1031
Princess of
Byzantium
Argyra
26
26
~0981 - ~1017
Romanos
Argyros
36
36
~0955
Leo
Argyrus
Anna
Corressid
0974
Pulcherra
Argyrus
~0925
Eustathius
Argyrus
~0899
Argyrus
0969 - 1038
Istvan
(Stephen)
69
69
0985 - 1033
Gisela
of
Bavaria
48
48
~1008
Hedwig
of
Hungary
~1010
Otto
of
Hungary
0951 - 28 AUG 995
Henry
II 'the
Wrangler'
<0957 - 1006
Gisela
de
Burgundy
49
49
~0919 - 1 NOV 955
Henry
I 'the
Quarrelsome'
0975
Bishop of
Augsburg
Bruno
~0978
the
Nun
Brigetta
~0980
Archbishop
of Ravenna
Arnold
~0925 - 0963
Adelania
von
Logenahe
38
38
~0959
Kuno
de
Burgundy
~0895 - 0948
Gebhard
Konradiner
53
53
~0890
Adela
de
Vermandois
~0920
I
Conrad
~0866 - 0903
Eberhard
Konradiner av
Niederlahngau
37
37
0862 - 0933
Wiltrud
71
71
~0848 - ~0879
Count in
Franconia
Eudes
31
31
0868
Count in
Oberlahngau
Conrad
~0865
Rudolph
of
Wurtsburg
~0878
Gebhard II
der Jüngere
of Logenahe
~0875
Count of
Soissons
Witichin
~0870
Gisela
of
Franconia
~0840
Judith
of
Auxerre
~0842
Mahaud
de
Burgundy
~0838
Itta of
Auxerre
~0844
Abbot of
St. Riquier
Rudolph
Abbess of
Hildesheim
Gerberga
0936
Hadwig
of
Bavaria
~0844
Daughter of
Erchange
of Breisgau
0894
Grafin von
Sulichgau
Jutte
Erchange
of
Breisgau
~0820
Chadaloh
II de
Fruili
0798 - 0826
Berthold
II de
Fruili
28
28
~0770 - 0819
I
Chadaloh
49
49
~0749 - 0802
Berthold
I de
Fruili
53
53
~0830
II
Ernest
~0835
Adelheid
~0800 - 0865
I
Ernest
65
65
~0785
Louis
of
Frommen
0949 - 1 FEB 996/97
Great Prince
of Hungary
Géza
0980
Empress of
Byzantium
Zoë
~1098 - 13 FEB 1140/41
II Bela
~1110 - 1157
Ilona
Nemanjics
47
47
~1130
II
Ladislaus
~1115 - 1174
Isaak
Comnenus
59
59
~1089 - 1140
Bejela
Urosch
51
51
~1093
Anne
~1059
Htliubomir
Voulkan
Nemanj
~1013
a Greek
priest
Stephanus
~1068 - 1129
King of
Hungary
Almos
61
61
~1084 - >1116
Premislava
Svyatopolkovna
32
32
~1038
I Géza
~1043
Synadene
of
Byzantium
King of
Hungary
Colcman
Theodul
Synadenos
~1008 - ~1063
I Bela
55
55
~0978 - <1038
King of
Poland
Vasul
60
60
~1170 - 1240
Princess
of Bohemia
Lidmila
70
70
~1046
King of
Hungary
St. Ladislas
~0958
Mihaly
(Michael)
~1124 - 1185
Andronicusa
Angelus
61
61
~1129
Euphrosine
Kastaminites
~1141
Ioannnis
Dukas
Palaeologus
~1084 - 1166
Konstantinos
Angelus
82
82
15 JAN 1095/96
Theodora
Comnena
~1121 - ~1200
Ioannis
Konstantinos
Angelus
79
79
~1048 - 1118
Alexius
I
Comnenus
70
70
Alexius I Comnenus Alexius I Comnenus (1048-1118), Byzantine emperor (1081-1118). Coming to the throne at a time when the Byzantine Empire was threatened by foreign enemies on every side, Alexius began his reign by combining with the Venetians to resist Norman invaders led by Robert Guiscard in Greece. In 1091 he defeated the Pechenegs, a Turkic tribe raiding the empire from the north; in the same year he stabilized the situation in the east by concluding a treaty with the Seljuk Turks. In 1095 Alexius appealed to Pope Urban II for help in recovering Anatolia from the Seljuks, thus helping to inspire the First Crusade. He exacted an oath of allegiance from the Crusade's leaders (among them, Bohemond, the son of his old enemy Robert Guiscard) when they arrived in Constantinople (present-day Istanbul) the following year. With their help, he regained control of western Anatolia, but he failed to prevent them from establishing independent states in Syria and Palestine. A dispute with Bohemond over the lordship of Antioch ended when the Norman acknowledged Alexius as his overlord in 1108. Alexius's biography, the Alexiad, was written by his daughter, Anna Comnena. It is considered a valuable source of historical information. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1139 - 1189
Mathilde
Von
Heinsburg
50
50
~1092
Anna
Comnena
~1140
Manolis
Lascaris
~1095
Isaakois
Comnenus
~1030 - 1077
Andronicus
Dukas
47
47
~1040
of the West
Bulgars
Maria
~1010
Tsar of the
West Bulgars
Trajan
~0975 - 1014
King of
Bulgaria
Samuel
39
39
~0950
Agatha
Chryselia
~1005
John
Dukas
~1010
Maria
1089 - >1107
Oda
Von
Walbeck
18
18
1055 - 1096
I
Goswin
41
41
~1023
Anna
Dalassena
~1050
Isaac
Comnenus
~0988
Manuel
Comnenus
~0993
Anna
~1007 - 1061
I Isaac
54
54
~0958
Isaak
Comnenus
~1063
Maria
Erotica
~1064 - 1081
Manolis
Angelus
17
17
1122 - 1190
Frederick
I
"Barbarossa"
68
68
Frederick I (Holy Roman Empire), called Frederick Barbarossa (1123?-1190), Holy Roman emperor and king of Germany (1152-1190) and king of Italy (1155-1190). He was born in Waiblingen, the nephew of King Conrad III of Germany. After the death of his uncle in 1152, Frederick Barbarossa was made German king and elected Holy Roman emperor. From the 1150s to the 1170s Frederick was occupied with asserting his power in Italy. He fought with popes Adrian IV and Alexander III, and also with the Lombards. The Lombard League, consisting of the cities of Milan, Parma, Padua, Verona, Piacenza, Bologna, Cremona, Mantua, Bergamo, and Brescia, was formed in 1167 and acknowledged Pope Alexander as its leader. In 1176 Frederick was defeated by the Lombard League at Legnano. The defeat was significant in military history because it was the first major triumph of infantry over a mounted army of feudal knights. After the defeat, Frederick acceded to the demands of the Lombards for autonomy but retained imperial suzerainty over the towns. Meanwhile, Frederick made Poland tributary to the Holy Roman Empire, raised Bohemia to the rank of a kingdom, and made Austria into an independent hereditary duchy. He also consolidated his power in Germany. Frederick initiated the Third Crusade in 1189, and the next year he set out for Asia Minor. After gaining two victories over the Muslims, he was drowned in the Calycadnus (now Göksu) River in Cilicia (now in Turkey). Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1133 - 1184
Beatrix
de
Macon
51
51
1165 - 1197
Heinrich
VI von
Hohenstaufen
32
32
1164
Frederick
von
Hohenstaufen
1170
Agnes
von
Hohenstaufen
~1141
II
Etienne
~1109
Agatha
de
Lorraine
~1082 - 1139
I
Simon
57
57
1113 - 2 JAN 1144/45
Duchess of
Saffenberg
Maud
~1111
Helvide
de
Lorraine
~1115 - 1176
Duke de
Lorraine
Matthieu
61
61
~1048
Count of
Supplinburg
Gebhard
1050 - ~1095
Hedwig
von
Formbach
45
45
~1115
Floris
"De
Zwarte"
~1024
Count of
Formbach
Frederick
~1030 - 1116
Gertrude
of
Haldensleben
86
86
~1000 - 1056
Count of
Haldensleben
Conrad
56
56
~0970 - ~1053
II
Bernard
83
83
~0940 - 1018
I
Bernard
78
78
I
Egbert
~0964 - 1002
I
Thimo
38
38
~0934
Ulric
1100 - 22 FEB 1124/25
Judith
von
Bavaria
~1124 - ~1195
Bertha
Judith of
Suabia
71
71
1200
Countess
of the Rhein
Ermengard
~1075 - 1126
Wulfhilda
von
Saxony
51
51
1195
Heinrich
Welf
VI von
Bavaria
Sophia
von
Bavaria
Count of
Weimar
Ulric
Count of
Weimar
Poppo
0992 - 1030
St.
Olav II
Haraldsson
38
38
Olaf II, also called St. Olaf (995-1030), king of Norway (1015-28). A Viking (full name Olaf Haraldsson), he was converted to Christianity in Rouen, Normandy, in the service of the exiled King Ethelred II of England. He returned to Norway in 1015 and, as a descendant of King Harold I, quickly won recognition, displacing the ruling earls. He introduced a strong central administration, completed the conversion of the Norwegians begun by Olaf I, and built churches throughout the land. Many local chieftains, alienated by Olaf's domineering ways, sided with Canute II, king of Denmark and England, when he invaded Norway in 1028; Olaf was compelled to take refuge with his brother-in-law, Grand Duke Yaroslav of Novgorod. Returning with a force to Norway in 1030, he was defeated by a peasant army and killed at the Battle of Stiklestad. Olaf was subsequently worshiped as Norway's patron saint and was canonized in 1164. He was also revered throughout Scandinavia and in England, Germany, and the Baltic countries. His feast day is July 29. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~0958 - 0998
Harold "The
Greenlander"
Gudrodsson
40
40
Alfhild
~1024
Magnus I
"The Good"
Olafsson
~0967
Asted
of
Uplands
~0937
Gundbrand
Kul
~0942
Ulfhild
~0907
Earl of
Uplands
Gudbiorg
~0912
Ulfhild
~0877
Olaf
of
Uplands
~0847
Ivar
Beitel
~0932 - 0960
Gudrod
Biornsson
28
28
~0900
Bjørn "the
Merchant"
Haraldsson
~0900 - 0951
Ceinnedigh
51
51
0870
Swanhilda
Eysteinsdottir
1036 - 1101
Welf
65
65
~1072
Welf
1009 - 1047
Azo
38
38
1012 - 21 MAR 1043/44
Cunigunde
von
Bavaria
~0972 - 10 MAR 1029/30
Guelph
~0927 - 10 APR 985
Rudolph
II von
Altdorf
~0901 - ~0940
Rudolph
I Von
Altdorf
39
39
~0903
Siburgis
~0875 - ~0920
Henry
45
45
~0875
Beata
of
Honenwarth
~0850 - 0892
Eticho
42
42
~0850
Adelaide
0827 - 0903
Rudolph
76
76
Judith
~0979 - 1015
Azo
36
36
~0975
Valdrada
d'Venice
~0950 - 0976
Pietro
Candiano
26
26
~0920 - 0959
Peitro
Candiano
39
39
~0925
Arciilda
Vitale
Candiano
~0885 - 0939
Pietro
Candiano
54
54
~0850 - 0887
Pietro
Candiano
37
37
0947 - 1014
Oberto
II of
Tuscany
67
67
~0940 - <0999
Railende
of
Como
59
59
~1040
Gisela
d'Este
~0925 - ~0999
Wiprand
of
Como
74
74
~0895
Olderado
di
Como
~0895
Railenda
di
Verticilio
~0865
Auprando
(a
Lombard)
0912 - 0975
I
Oberto
63
63
0914 - 1012
Guilla
of
Spoleto
98
98
Adalberto
of
Tuscany
~0895 - 0928
Duke of
Spoleto
Bonefacio
33
33
~0870
Ubaldo
di
Spoleto
~0895 - 0960
II
Adalberto
65
65
~0865 - 0894
IV
Bonifacio
29
29
~1138 - 1173
Margaret
von
Limbourg
35
35
~1148 - >1203
Imaine
of
Loos
55
55
~1164 - 1226
Godfrey
de
Louvaine
62
62
Matilda
~1120 - >1162
Luitgarde
of
Sultzbach
42
42
1072 - 1125
I
Berenger
53
53
~1077 - 1120
Adelheid
of
Diessen
43
43
~1047 - 1082
Count of
Diessen
Otto
35
35
~1050
Justicia
~1017
Count of
Diessen
Berthold
Count of
Andech
Arnold
~0987 - ~1050
Count of
Diessen
Rapoto
63
63
~0957 - ~1025
Count of
Diessen
Otto
68
68
~0932 - ~1020
Count of
Diessen
Frederick
88
88
~0937 - 1020
Cunigunde
of
Deningen
83
83
~0902 - 0975
Rapoto
III of
Norithal
73
73
~0868 - 0956
Rapoto
II of
Norithal
88
88
~0838 - ~0870
Rapoto
I of
Norithal
32
32
1032 - 1080
I
Gebhard
48
48
~1030 - 1109
Irmengarde
of
Roth
79
79
~1000 - 1077
Count
of Roth
Cuno
77
77
~1005
Countess of
Diessen &
Andech Utha
~0970 - ~1010
Count
of Roth
Poppo
40
40
~0975
Hazaga
of
Carinthia
~0940 - 0992
Popo
Babo
of Roth
52
52
~1014
II
Ernest
~1007
Elizabeth
of Lower
Alsace
~0950 - 0999
V
Eberhard
49
49
Eberhard
of Lower
Alsace
Hughes
V of
Alsace
~1157
Josceline
De
Percy
~1158
Eleanor
De
Percy
Clemence
of
Burgundy
1021 - 1078
II
Henry
57
57
1023 - >1086
Countess
of Betuwe
Adelaide
63
63
~1015 - 1068
II
Louis
53
53
1001 - ~1067
Count in
the Betuwe
Eberhard
66
66
~0970 - 1018
Count in
the Betuwe
Godizo
48
48
~0940 - >1026
Unruoch
Hunerich
86
86
~0960
Bertha
Bave
~0938 - 0992
Mathilde
of
Chiny
54
54
~0910 - 10 MAY 966
III
Eberhard
~0882 - 0966
II
Eberhard
84
84
~0882
Mathilda
0916
I Otto
~0882 - 1 MAY 902
Count of
Niederlahngau
Eberhard
~1109 - 1166
Rohese
De
Vere
57
57
1102 - 1144
Geoffrey
De
Mandeville
42
42
~1130 - 1166
Geoffrey
II De
Mandeville
36
36
1062 - 1141
Alberic
II de
Vere
79
79
ALBERIC DE VERE, Junior, was successor to his father; appointed Chamberlain of England by King Henry I; Justice of England during Henry I's reign; about 5 Stephen was killed in a tumult in London; married Adeliza, daughter of Gilbert de Clare (ped. 79) and Adeliza de Clermont,
~1080 - 1117
Adeliza
de
Clare
37
37
~1120 - 1194
Aubrey
III de
Vere
74
74
~1115 - >1185
Alice
de
Vere
70
70
~1055 - 1117
Gilbert
FitzRichard
De Clare
62
62
~1060
Adeliza
de
Clermont
1088 - 1171
Baldwin
Fitzgilbert
De Clare
83
83
daughter
Becket
~1086
Walter
De
Clare
1093
Margaret
de
Clare
~1115
Rohesia
'Rose"
De Clare
~1030 - 1112
Alberic
De
Vere
82
82
ALBERIC DE VER, Senior,(*) so written in Domesday Book, held lordships in several counties and fourteen in Essex, whereof Hedingham was his castle, chief seat and head of his barony; married Beatrix, Countess of Ghisnes in her own right, daughter of Henry Castellan, of Baurborough, by Sybilla, daughter and heir of Mansasses, Count of Ghisnes; was styled Alberic Senior; became a monk and was buried in the Church of Colne Priory which he had founded.
1100 - 6 JAN 1146/47
Gilbert
De
Clare
1035 - 1090
Richard "de
Tonbridge"
fitz Gilbert
55
55
1034 - 1115
Rohese
Giffard
81
81
1058
Walter
De
Clare
1050
Roger
FitzRichard
De Clare
1062 - 1107
Richard
FitzRichard
De Clare
45
45
~1053
Avoye
De
Clare
~1064
Adeliza
De
Clare
1067 - 1121
Rohese
de
Clare
54
54
~1010 - 1085
Walter
Giffard de
Bolebec
75
75
~1000 - 1040
Gislebert
Crispin
40
40
~1120 - <1191
William
D'Avranches
71
71
~1120
Ernulph
De
Mandeville
~1126
William
De
Mandeville
~1128
Robert
De
Mandeville
~1082 - 1157
Payne
'Peganus' De
Beauchamp
75
75
~1171 - 1211
Roger
de
Lacy
40
40
~1184 - 1213
Maud
(Matilda)
de Clare
29
29
~1194
Roger
de
Lacy
~1175
Alice
De
Aquila
1162 - 1218
Richard
De
Clare
56
56
RICHARD DE CLARE, 4th Earl of Hertford, and one of the twenty-five Magna Charta Barons (died 1218) Surety for the Observance of the Magna Charta,
1160 - 1 JAN 1223/24
Amicia
FitzRobert
1182 - 1230
Gilbert
de
Clare
48
48
5th Earl of Hertford, became Earl of Gloucester
~1178
Isabel
de
Clare
1186
Richard
de
Clare
~1184
Joane
de
Clare
1116 - 1183
William
FitzRobert
67
67
~1148
Hawise
FitzRobert
~1151
Robert
FitzWilliam
~1155
Mabel
FitzRobert
~1090 - 1157
Mabel
Fitzhamon
67
67
~1130 - 1181
Thomas
Basset
51
51
~1210
Hawise
de
Louvaine
~1112
Roger
FitzRobert
~1118
Hamon
FitzRobert
~1114
Richard
FitzRobert
~1120
Mabel
FitzRobert
~1128
Robert
FitzRobert
~1060 - 10 MAR 1106/07
Robert
Fitz
Hamon
~0950
Richard
de
Creully
1116 - 1173
Roger "The
Good" De
Clare
57
57
1132 - 1193
Maud
de St.
Hilary
61
61
1164
James
De
Clare
~1142
Alice
d'Aubigny
1168
Roger
De
Clare
1170
John
De
Clare
~1172 - 1225
Aveline
de
Clare
53
53
1172
Henry
De
Clare
~1173
Robert
De
Grey
~1100
James
de St.
Hilaire
~1102
Aveline
~1084 - 1136
Richard
fitz Gilbert
de Clare
52
52
Richard de Clare, 3rd Earl of Clare, was born before 1105. He was created Earl of Hertford about 1136 for his miltary services, and being one of those who lived by the power of his sword, entered Wales, there planted himself and became lord of vast territories, but was finally slain in a skirmish with a few Welsh noblemen on April 15, 1136. He married Alice, daughter of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, who died in 1128, and married Lucia, daughter of Algar, Earl of Mercia, son of Leofric and "Lady Godiva." His lordship died 1139 and was succeeded by his eldest son, Gilbert, 2nd Earl of Hertford, who died in 1151, and having no issue was succeeded by his brother, Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford.
~1094 - 1136
Adeliza de
Meschines
De Gernon
42
42
~1110 - 1151
Gilbert
De
Clare
41
41
~1010
Richard
FitzGerold
~1120
Richard
De
Clare
~1124
Rohesia
De
Clare
~1132
Agnes
de
Clare
~1074 - 1136
Lucia
Taillebois
62
62
~1175
Joan
de
Clare
~1134
Baldwin
de
Clare
~1102
Agnes
de
Meschines
1160 - 24 FEB 1240/41
Walter
De
Lacy
1140
Elaine
De
Lacy
1143
Alice
De
Lacy
1136
Hugh
De
Lacy
1148
Robert
De
Lacy
1150
Gilbert
De
Lacy
Rhodesia
fitz
Baderon
~1085 - >1163
Ilbert
de
Lacy
78
78
~1105 - >1176
Alice
de
Gaunt
71
71
Robert
De
Lacy
Henry
De
Lacy
~1077
Maud
Matilda of
Brittany
~1119 - 1180
Roger
de
Mowbray
61
61
Roger de Mowbray, 1st Baron by tenure, eldest son, who succeeding to the lands of Mumbrey or Mowbray, became known by the surname Mowbray. In 1148 he accompanied Louis VII, King of France, to the Holy Land and acquired great renown. On a subsequent journey to the Holy Land he was captured, but was redeemed by the Knight Templars. Dying soon after in the East, he was buried at Sures. He married Alice, daughter of Gilbert, Baron de Gant, or Gaunt, and his wife Richildis, Countess of Hainault and Namur, great-granddaughter of King Hugh Capet of France. Roger de Mowbray, once a principal proprietor and resident of Kilburn, was a descendant of the first Duke of Northumberland, who was the bow-bearer of William the Conqueror. At Hode, within the limits of the parish of Kilburn, the famous Roger de Mowbray established a church, priory and castle, in 1138. During the Crusades, Mowbray fought in the Holy Land, and was taken prisoner by Guy, King of Jerusalem, but was redeemed by the Knights Templars. On his return to England, he is said by Dugdale to have "fought with dragons and lions in the valley of Sarranell," and then to have returned to his castle at Kilburn. He was buried at Byland Abbey, where, in 1819, his bones were discovered and re-interred after a repose of between six and seven hundred years.
~1144 - 1191
Nigel
de
Mowbray
47
47
Nigel de Mowbray, 2nd Baron by tenure, like his father, was a Crusader and died on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1192-3. He married Mand or Mabel, daughter of Roger de Clare.
~1096
Agnes
de
Gaunt
~1045 - 1084
Walter
de
Lacy
39
39
~1038
Emma
Ermeline
~1020
Hugh
De
Lacy
~1028
Emma
~1048
Ilbert
de
Lacy
Hawise
~1070
Robert
de
Lacy
~1082
Hugh
de
Lacy
~1030 - 1103
Count of
Clermont
Hugh
73
73
~1020
Ermentrude
~1066
Ermentrude
de
Clermont
~1000 - >1098
Renaud
de
Clermont
98
98
~1010
Emengardis
de
Clermont
~0990 - ~1042
II
Baudouin
52
52
~0965 - ~1023
I
Baudouin
58
58
~0970 - ~1060
Hugh
de
Creil
90
90
~0970 - >1047
Renaud
de
Creil
77
77
~1064 - <1080
Robert Fitz
Richard
De Clare
16
16
~1060
Ronais
De
Clare
~1014
Ermentrude
Agnes
Fleitel
1030 - 1102
Walter
Giffard
72
72
~1036
Adelaide
Giffard
~1038
William
Giffard
~1041
Isabella
Constance
Catherine Giffard
~1043
Lora
Giffard
~1045
Hugh
Giffard
1055
Agnes
De
Ribemont
~1110
Walter
de
Bolebec
~0984
Girard
Fleitel
~1016
Basilie
Fleitel
~1020
William
Fleitel
~1012
Berenger
de
Bolebec
1005
Godfroi de
Bolbec de
Arches
~1019 - <1096
Osborn
Giffard de
Bolebec
77
77
~0945 - ~1027
Osbern
I de
Bolbec
82
82
1040
Gunmore
d'Aunou
~1024 - 1072
Hesila
Crispin
48
48
~1038
Seigneur
de Tellieres
Gilbert
~1128 - 1160
Richard
FitzEustace
Clavering de Lacy
32
32
~1138
Maud
de
Mandeville
Walkelin
Maminot
~1112
Sir
Robert
De Vere
~1040
Beatrix
Castellan
~1064
Geoffrey
de
Vere
~1066
Roger
de
Vere
~1068
Robert
de
Vere
~1070
Roheise
de
Vere
~1072
William
de
Vere
~1078
Aubrey
II de
Vere
~1005
Henry
Castellan
de Ghent
~1005
Sibylla
Manasses
~0975
Count of
Ghisnes
Manasses
~1000
Alphonso
De
Vere
~1062 - 1130
William
de
Mandeville
68
68
~1065
Margaret
de Rie
1098
Walter
De
Mandeville
1100 - 1197
Beatrix
De
Mandeville
97
97
1104
William
De
Mandeville
1106
Gilbert
De
Mandeville
1063 - 1080
Eudo
de Rie
17
17
~1045
Hubert
de Rie
~1036 - >1085
Geoffrey
de
Magnavilla
49
49
~1040
Adeliza
de
Balts
~1066
Geoffrey
de
Mandeville
~1081
Beatrice
de
Mandeville
~1144 - 1190
John FitzRichard
Clavering de
Lacy
46
46
~1144
Alice
De
Mandeville
~1170
Henry
Leigh
de Lacy
~1174
Sir
Robert
de Lacy
~1175
Joanna
de
Lacy
~1128 - >1193
Albreda
(Aubrey)
de Lisoures
65
65
~1156 - ~1190
Mary FitzRichard
Clavering de
Lacy
34
34
~1155
Aubrey
De
Lacy
~1158
Albreda
FitzRichard
Clavering
~1159
Roger FitzRichard
Clavering de
Lacy
~1097
Robert
de
Lisoures
~1097
Albreda
de
Lacy
~1074
Maude
du
Perche
~1106
Ibert II
de
Lacy
~1108
Henry
de
Lacy
~1062
Fulk
de
Lisoures
~1080
Eustace Fitzjohn
Clavering de
Lacy
~1084 - 1166
Matilda
Agnes
FitzNigel
82
82
~1040 - 1134
Baron of
Widness
Yarfrid
94
94
~1062
Miss
de
Widness
~1060
John
"Monoculus"
FitzNigell de Lacy
~1078
Payne
FitzJohn
~1082
William
FitzJohn
~1084
Agnes
FitzJohn
~1086
Payn
FitzJohn
~1104
Alice
FitzJohn
~1043
Nigell
de
Lacy
~1008 - 1059
Yvron
Bellomontensis
51
51
1200 - 17 JAN 1238/39
Isabella
(Marshall)
Mareschal
~1215
Maud
De
Clare
~1216
Joan
De
Clare
~1217
Susan
De
Clare
1220
Amica
De
Clare
1226 - 1264
Isabella
De
Clare
37
37
1228
William
De
Clare
1228
Adeliza
De
Clare
1229
Gilbert
De
Clare
1230
Agnes
De
Clare
1146 - 1219
William
Mareschal
73
73
~1172 - 1220
Isabel
FitzGilbert
de Clare
48
48
~1190 - 1231
William
Mareschal
41
41
Surety for the Magna Carta
~1192 - 1248
Maud
Mareshal
56
56
~1194 - <1246
Eve
Mareschal
52
52
~1190
Margaret
Mareschal
~1196
Gilbert
Mareschal
~1198 - 1245
Sibyl
Mareschal
47
47
~1200
Richard
Mareschal
~1202 - ~1235
Joane
Mareschal
33
33
~1204
Walter
Mareschal
~1206
Anselm
Mareschal
1130 - 1176
Richard
"Strongbow"
de Clare
46
46
~1141 - 1177
Aoife
(Eve)
McMurrough
36
36
1100 - 1171
Diarmait
MacMurchada
71
71
~1114 - 1191
More
(O'Toole)
ua Tuathail
77
77
~1089
Muirchertach
(O'Toole)
ua Tuayhail
~1094
Inghin
O'Byrne
~1064 - 1115
Donal
O'Byrne
51
51
(1st O'Brien)
~1034
Donchad
of
Leinster
~0994 - 1052
King of
Leinster
Bran
58
58
~0954 - 1014
King of
Leinster
Maclmordha
60
60
~0910 - 0970
Lord of
Naas
Murchad
60
60
~0929
O'Mahony
~0950 - 1030
Gormflaiyh
of
Nass
80
80
~0909
Bron
O'Mahony
~0889
Cian
~0859
Spellan
~0829
Cathniath
~0799
Concobhar
~0769
Cucongeilt
~0739
Olioll
~0709
Conaicce
~0679
Ferdaleithe
~0639
Bice
~0582
Fergus
~0549 - ~0585
King of
Munster
Fedlemidth
36
36
~0519
Tighernach
~0489 - ~0520
Aodh-
Uargarbh
31
31
~0459
Criomhthan
~0429
Eochaidh
Cruadh
~0399
Cas
~0404
Beibhionn
~0374
Cheif
of
Corealaidhe
~0369 - ~0420
Conall
Core
51
51
~0397
King of
Munster
Natfraich
~0427 - 0490
King of
Munster
Aonghus
63
63
~0870 - 0921
Lord of
Naas
Finn
51
51
~0882
O'Sullivan
~0830 - 0906
Lord of
Naas
Maelmordha
76
76
~0840
Joan
O'Neill
0791 - 0845
III Nial
54
54
~0790 - 0859
Gormlaith
of
Meath
69
69
~0830
VII
Adoh
~0740 - 0797
I
Donchad
57
57
~0780
King of
Meath
Maulruanaia
~0700 - 0758
King of
Ireland
Donal
58
58
~0670 - 0715
King of
Meath
Murcertac
45
45
~0675
Alpin
~0645
Congal
~0640 - 0689
King of
Meath
Dermot
49
49
~0610
Airmeadhac
~0580 - 0634
King of
Meath
Conal
54
54
~0550 - 0600
King of
Meath
Suibne
50
50
~0575 - 0641
Huaisle
of
Meath
66
66
~0520 - 0581
King of
Meath
Colman
61
61
~0490 - 0554
King of
Ireland
Dermot
64
64
~0495
Mungan
~0465
Congearvin
~0435 - 0502
King of
Connaught
Duach
67
67
0715 - 0778
II Nial
63
63
~0475
Duabsech
~0460 - ~0500
Fergus
40
40
~0465
Corhach
~0435
Maine
~0430 - 0481
King of
Meath
Cremthoinn
51
51
~0751 - 0818
VI
Aodh
67
67
~0766
Maeve
of
Connaught
~0736
King
of
Connaught
~0696 - 0723
King of
Connaught
Inreachtac
27
27
~0656 - 0702
King of
Connaught
Muredac
46
46
~0616
King of
Connaught
Fergus
~0586 - 0649
King of
Connaught
Raghalach
63
63
~0556 - 0601
King of
Connaught
Vadhach
45
45
~0536 - 0577
King of
Connaught
Aodh
41
41
~0516 - 0551
King of
Connaught
Echoaid
35
35
~0496
Fergus
~0476
Muredac
~0456
Eochan
~0720
Dunflaith
of
Tireconnel
~0690 - 0734
King of
Ireland
Flaherty
44
44
~0645 - 0704
King of
Ireland
Loing-Seach
59
59
~0655
Muirion
~0635
Ceallach
~0605
Aonghus
of
Tirconnel
~0575 - 0642
II
Donal
67
67
~0580
More
of
Desmond
~0560 - 0619
II
Aodh
59
59
~0565
Damnaton
~0530 - 0619
King of
Desmond
Aodh
89
89
~0500
Crimthann
~0555 - 0599
II
Aodh
44
44
~0580 - 0615
King of
Ireland
Malcoya
35
35
~0515 - 0571
King of
Ireland
Ainmire
56
56
~0520
Bridget
~0490
Cobthaigson
of
Oiliolla
~0485
Seadhna
of
Tireconnel
~0445 - ~0500
Prince of
Tireconnel
Fergus
55
55
~0415 - 0464
Conal
Culban
49
49
~0660 - 0722
King of
Ireland
Feargal
62
62
~0680
Athiochta
~0630
Cian
~0600
Conot
~0620 - 0706
Maeldouin
86
86
~0615
Cacht
of
Tirconnel
~0590 - ~0628
Maelfitric
38
38
~0550 - 0607
III
Aodh
57
57
~0510 - 0561
I Donal
51
51
~0530
Erica
~0495
Orca
~0465
Carthan
~0470 - 0533
I
Murcertac
63
63
~0440 - 0480
Muredac
40
40
~0445
Erca
~0415
Loarn
Mor
~0400 - 0465
King of
Tyrone
Eochan
65
65
~0415
Indorba
~0370 - 0405
I Nial
35
35
Ineachtfec
~0800 - 0862
Lord of
Naas
Muregain
62
62
~0770 - 0831
Lord of
Naas
Dermot
61
61
~0720 - 0789
King of
Leinster
Ruadrach
69
69
~0690 - 0737
King of
Leinster
Faolan
47
47
~0695 - 0749
Tualath
of
Munster
54
54
~0665 - 0742
King of
Munster
Cathal
77
77
~0635 - 0696
King of
Munster
Finguine
61
61
~0605 - 0665
King of
Munster
Cuigenmathair
60
60
~0575 - 0620
King of
Munster
Cathal
45
45
~0545 - 0601
King of
Munster
Aodh
56
56
~0515 - 0571
King of
Munster
Cairbre
56
56
~0495 - 0542
King of
Munster
Criomthann
47
47
~0467 - 0523
King of
Munster
Eschaid
56
56
Foidhlimidth
~0670 - 0726
King of
Leinster
Murchad
56
56
~0710 - 0755
King of
Leinster
Muireadhach
45
45
~0640 - 0689
Bran
Muit
49
49
~0600
King of
Leinster
Conal
~0570 - 0663
King of
Leinster
Faolan
93
93
~0530 - 0576
Colman
Mor
46
46
~0500 - 0546
King of
Leinster
Cairbre
46
46
~0470 - 0567
King of
Leinster
Cormac
97
97
~0435 - 0526
King of
Leinster
Lillial
91
91
~1055 - 1119
Gillacomghall
O'Toole
64
64
~1030 - 1056
Doncuan
O'Toole
26
26
~0990 - 1041
Gillachomhghaill
O'Toole
51
51
~0970 - 1018
King of
Leinster
Donncuan
48
48
~0955 - 1014
King of
Leinster
Dunlang
59
59
~0890 - 0956
Tuathal
O'Toole
66
66
~0860 - 0915
King of
Leinster
Ugaire
55
55
~0830 - 0869
King of
Leinster
Oilliol
39
39
~0800 - 0869
King of
Leinster
Dunlaing
69
69
~0770 - 0818
King of
Leinster
Muredac
48
48
~0740 - 0795
King of
Leinster
Bran
55
55
~0745 - 0795
Eithne
50
50
~0715
Donal
Mideach
~1085 - 1126
Enna
of
Lienster
41
41
~1050 - 1115
Donnhadh
McMurchada
65
65
~1055
Orlaith
~1025 - 1070
King of
Leinster
Murchadh
45
45
~1030
Sadb
Mac
Bricc
~1000
Mac
Bricc
~0995 - 23 FEB 1071/72
Diarmait
Mac
Mael
~1000 - 1080
Dearbhforghaill
(Devorgilla)
80
80
~0975 - 1064
Morough
O'Brien
89
89
0941 - 1014
Brian
Boroimhe
73
73
Brian Boru, High King of Ireland Brian Boru or Brian Boroimhe (940?–1014), clan prince, succeeded his brother Mathghamhain, who had seized the throne of Munster from the Eogharacht rulers (963). The Battle of Bealach Leachta, in 978, marked the first major defeat of the Danes in Ireland and established Brian Boru as a serious contender for position of Ard Rí (High King) of Ireland. Brian subjugated all Munster, then extended his power over all S Ireland, and in 1002 became high king of Ireland by right of conquest. The battle was the climax of a power-struggle between the Dál gCais of North Munster and the Lords of Carbery. Mahon of the Dál gCais was captured by Imar, a Limerick Dane who was allied to the O'Donovans and O'Mahonys of Carbery. Imar delivered Mahon, a brother of Brian Boru of Kincora, into the hands of Maolmuidh of the O'Mahonys, who killed him at Aghabullogue. Brian Boru came seeking revenge, first despatching Imar the Dane, then picking off O'Donovan, and then meeting the O'Mahonys at Bealach Leachta. A fierce battle was waged all day on the riverside plain. Brian's army had swelled as many minor chieftains began to recognise his potential, and Maolmuidh had the support of the remains of the O'Donovan clan and 1500 Danes. Maolmuidh and his troops were forced back, and Maolmuidh took refuge at Leacha Dubh (present site of Macroom Golf Course), where he was found and killed. Fulfilling a curse put on him for the assassination of Mahon, Maolmuidh is buried on the north side of the hill, where the sun never shines, under a harsh wind. Three standing stones were erected on the site of the battle (of which two remain). One is known as Leacht Mahon. Following the battle Brian Boru was crowned King of Munster. Brian took over all Munster, then extended his power over all Southern Ireland, and in 1002 became high king of Ireland by right of conquest. As his power increased, relations with the Norse rulers on the Irish coast grew steadily worse. Sitric, king of the Dublin Norse, formed a coalition of the Norse of Ireland, the Hebrides, the Orkneys, and Iceland as well as Brian's Irish enemies against Brian. On Good Friday (Apr. 23), 1014, Brian's forces met and annihilated the allies at Clontarf, near Dublin. Soon afterward he was murdered in his tent. Brian's victory broke the Norse power in Ireland forever, but Ireland fell into anarchy.
~0950
King of Ireland
Mael-Sechnaill
~0927 - 0981
Olaf
Kvaaran
54
54
~1047
Maredydd
Powys ap
Bleddyn
~0914
Pyll
~0977
Slani
O'Brien
~0918 - 0927
King of
Dublin and
York Sigtryg
9
9
King of
Limerick
Harald
~0899
King of
Dublin
Guthorm
~0900
Lady
of
Northumberland
~0920
King of
Dublin
Ranald
~0860
King of
Northumberland
Ivar-Beinlaus
~0830 - 0875
Frotho
Staelland
45
45
King of
Limerick
Sigtryggr
~0835
Asloga
of the
Huns
Olaf
'The
Young'
~0861
King of
Dublin
Godfrey
~0800
Horda
Knut
Sigurdsson
~0805
Alflild
of
Alfheim
~0885
Earl of
Alfhein
Ganda
~0855
Earl of
Alfhein
Alfgeir
~0770 - 0830
King of
Denmark and
Sweden Sigurd
60
60
~0861
Fingal
~0791
Flathnia
~0831
Fingal
~0800
Lord of
Connaught
Awly
~0770
King of
Connaught
Canfaolo
~0863 - 0942
Lorean
79
79
~0823
Lachna
~0783
Core
~0733
Anluan
0683
Maithan
0641
Turloch
~0611
King
of
Munster
~0925
King of
Munster
Mathghamhain
~0965 - 1006
Donchad
Maolruinbo
41
41
~0935 - 0989
King of
Lienster
Dermot
54
54
~0905 - 0974
King of
Lienster
Donal
69
69
~0885 - 0947
King of
Leinster
Caellach
62
62
~0855 - 0935
King of
Leinster
Cinacth
80
80
~0825 - 0876
King of
Leinster
Cairbre
51
51
~0795
Dermot
~1105 - 1164
John "le
Mareschal"
fitz Gilbert
59
59
~1144
John
Mareschal
~1147 - >1243
Margaret
Mareschal
96
96
~1154
Anselm
Mareschal
~1156
Henry
Mareschal
~1109
Aline
Pipard
~1131
Gilbert
FitzJohn
~1133
Walter
FitzJohn
~1096 - ~1130
Gilbert
le
Mareschal
34
34
~1096
de
Venuz
~1066
Geoffrey
de
Venuz
~1056
Geoffrey
le
Mareschal
~1036
Goisfried
de Bec le
Marshal
~1018
Rollo
de
Bec
~0968
Crispin
de
Bec
~0970
Heloise
de
Guines
~1008
Gilbert
Crispin
~0884
Sigefred
"the Dane"
de Guisnes
1160
Rose
de
Halesworth
~0948
Prince of
Monaco
Grimald
Crispina
1267 - 1326
Hugh
De
Audley
59
59
~1275 - 1338
Isolte
De
Mortimer
63
63
~1200
Marared
ferch
Llewelyn
~1270
Rosamond
Clifford
~1252 - 1304
Edmund
De
Mortimer
52
52
~1270 - 7 FEB 1332/33
Margaret
Eleanor de
Fiennes
~1307 - 1345
Maud
De
Mortimer
38
38
~1286 - 1315
Maud
De
Mortimer
29
29
~1245 - 1302
William
II de
Fiennes
57
57
1245 - 1302
Blanche
de
Brienne
57
57
1225 - 1296
Jean II
de
Brienne
71
71
1227 - >1265
Jeanne
de
Chateaudun
38
38
~1195 - 1249
Geoffrey
IV de
Chateaudun
54
54
~1195 - >1255
Clemence
des
Roches
60
60
~1175 - 1222
Guillaume
des
Roches
47
47
~1177
Marguerite
de
Sable
Jeanne
des
Roches
~1147 - 1196
Robert
IV de
Sable
49
49
1150
Clemence
de
Mayenne
~1115 - 1161
Juhel II
de
Mayenne
46
46
~1120
Etiennette
de Dol
~1159
Geoffrey
II de
Mayenne
1050 - 1126
Gautier
de
Mayenne
76
76
~1067
Alice
de
Beaugency
~1002 - 1084
Bertha
de
Blois
82
82
~1040
Adelberge
~1030 - 1081
II
Lancelin
51
51
1148
Juhel
III de
Mayenne
~1010
Paule
De
Maine
~0940
Wigerus
II De
Beaugency
~0980 - 1036
Comte
de Maine
Heribert
56
56
~1012
Garsende
De
Maine
~0960
III
Hugues
~1072
Maud
Margaret
31 OCT 900 - ~0945
I
Hugues
~0927
Melisende
de
Maine
~0929
Godehilde
de
Maine
~0990 - 1059
Geofroy
II de
Mayenne
69
69
~1008
Almodie
de
Blois
~1004 - 1047
II
Stephen
43
43
~1001
Gervase
de Chateau
Gontier
~0915 - 0975
Thibaud
II "le
Tricheur"
60
60
~0989
Eleanor
de
Blois
~0920
Geofroy
I de
Mayenne
~0962
Ivres
de
Belleme
~0930
de
Bretagne
~0890 - ~0922
Aubert
de
Mayenne
32
32
~0895
Melesinde
de
Mayenne
~0865
Ruellan
de
Mayenne
~0870
Auvert
~0835 - ~0872
1st Sire de
Mayenne
Meen
37
37
~0860
Geslin
de
Mayenne
~1117
Robert
III de
Sable
~1122
Hersende
D'Anthenaise
~1087 - 1145
Lisiard
de
Sable
58
58
~1057 - 1110
Robert
II de
Sable
53
53
~1035 - <1067
Avise
"Blance"
de Sable
32
32
~0997
Geoffrey
de
Sable
~1010
Adelais
~0950
Hubert
de Maine
de Sable
~0920
Viscount
de Maine
Raoul
1145
Baudouin
des
Roches
1120
Herbert
des
Roches
~1159 - 1218
III
Geoffrey
59
59
~1158
Alice
de
Freteval
~1095 - ~1187
Seigneur
de Freteval
Ursion
92
92
~1120 - >1187
Gracia
de
Faye
67
67
~1100
Raoul
de
Chastellerault
~1100
Elizabeth
de
Faye
~1070
Sire de
Faye
Aimery
~0993
Hugh
de
Bouchard
~1045
II
Nivelon
~1055
Eustachie
de
Lavardin
~1002
Seigneur
de Freteval
Foucher
~1015
Hildeburge
de
Freteval
~0962 - >1050
I
Nivelon
88
88
~0962
Ermentrude
~0992
Payn of
Freteval de
Chaworth
~1129
Hugh
V de
Chateaudun
~1134
Jean
de
Preuilly
~1104
Giselbert
de
Preuilly
~1109
Adele
(Adelaise)
de Vendome
~1099
Hugh
IV de
Chateaudun
~1104
Margaret
de
Montdoubleau
~1069
Hugh
III de
Chateaudun
~1039
Hugh II
de
Chateaudun
~1009
Hugh I
de
Chateaudun
1178 - 23 MAR 1236/37
Jean
de
Brienne
* King of Jerusalem, 12109-1215; Emperor of Constantinople; Crusader. * Note: He became King of Jerusalem by election of the Barons, in right of his wife, Mary, who died shortly, leaving a daghter and heiress, Yolande, in whose right he reigned. On the marriage of Yolande, he returned to Europe, where he married his third wife, Berengeria. He was elected Latin Emperor of Constantinople in 1228. He was once considered for the throne of England, which made him an enemy of Henry III, although they were later reconciled. Jean's first marriage, to Mary, was arranged by Philippe II Augustus because Jean was having a scandalous affair with Blanch de Navare, widow of the Count de Champagne. Jean's second wife, Stephanie, was suspected of having tried to poison Jean's seven year old daughter, Iolande. When Jean found out, he beat her so severely that she eventually died from her injuries. Jean took Franciscan orders before his death, and endeared himself to several Popes during his lifetime.
~1140 - 8 FEB 1189/90
Erard
II De
Brienne
1226
Alphonse
de
Brienne
~1235
Louis
de
Brienne
~1108 - 1150
II
Richard
42
42
~1149
Agnes
de
Montfaucon
~1110 - 1148
Agnes
de
Montbelliard
38
38
~1070 - 1110
Amadeus
de
Montfaucon
40
40
~1045 - 1080
Richard
I de
Montfaucon
35
35
~1020
Conan
de
Montfaucon
~1110 - 1161
Walter
Gauthier
51
51
~1105
Humberline
de Soissons
D'Eu
~1060 - ~1116
Jean
de
Soissons
56
56
~1080 - ~1115
Aveline
de
Perrefonds
35
35
~1055
Nivelon
II de
Perrefonds
~1159
Hadwide
~1027 - >1076
William de
Soissons
D'Eu
49
49
~1030
Aelis
of
Soissons
Lituaise
de
Soissons
~1000 - 1057
Viscount of
Troyes and
Soissons Renaud
57
57
~1005
Aelis
de
Roucy
~0982
II
Nocher
~0987 - ~1019
Aelis
de
Soissons
32
32
III
Nocher
~0950 - 13 JUN 990
Gui de
Vermandois
~0950 - 1047
Countess
de Soissons
Adelaide
97
97
~0925
Giselbert
Gilbert
<0901 - ~0950
Archard of
Ferte-sur-
Aube
49
49
~0929
Archarda
<0875
Regenald
"the
Viking"
0984 - 2 JAN 1053/54
I
William
~0996 - 1058
Leceline
de
Harcourt
62
62
1030
Robert
De
Clifford
~1020
Hugh
De
Talboth
1032
Margaret
D'Eu
~0951
Sporta
de
Normandy
~0932
Nigel
De St.
Sauveur
~0952
Eperleng
de
Vaudreuil
~0975
Ralph
de
Bayeaux
~0990
Ebal II
de
Turenne
~1020
Guillaume
de
Turenne
~1131
Ralph
Basset
~1194
Joan
Beaumont
1006 - 1066
III Neil
60
60
Helena
~0907
Ansfred
Rollosson
~1090 - 1553
Roger
de
Newburgh
463
463
~0971
Thurstan
de
Montfort
~0935
Lancelot
Anslech
Turstain
~0865
Ermina
~1078 - 1114
I Erard
36
36
>1090 - >1143
Alice
Agnes
de Roucy
53
53
~1112
Félicité
de
Brienne
~1058 - >1118
André de
Roucy de
Baudemont
60
60
~1064 - >1118
Adele
Agnes
de Braine
54
54
~1107
Helivide de
Roucy de
Baudemont
1281 - 1326
Sir Maurice
III de
Berkeley
45
45
~1005
Azeka de
Bar-sur-
Seine
~1048
Eustache de
Bar-sur-
Seine
~1060
Ade
de
Roucy
~0998 - 1066
Milon V de
Bar-sur-
Seine
68
68
~0970
III
Engilbert
~0950 - >0998
IV
Milon
48
48
~0960
Windismodis
of
Salins
Engeltrude
de
Brienne
~1000
Petronille
Adelaide
de Joiny
~0960
III
Fromond
~0965
Manfrede de
Monstier-
Ramey
~1231 - 1298
Maud
De
Fiennes
67
67
~1250
Giles
De
Fiennes
~0904 - 1025
II
Engilbert
121
121
~1233
Robert
De
Fiennes
~1229
Reginald
De
Fiennes
~1235
Enguerrand
De
Fiennes
~1199
Isabel
De
Conde
~1177
Robert
De
Hampden
~1175 - 1241
William
De
Fiennes
66
66
~1207
Baldwin
De
Fiennes
~1212
Maud
De
Fiennes
~1214
Michel
De
Fiennes
~1147 - 1190
Ingelram
De
Fiennes
43
43
~1151 - >1223
Sibyl
De
Tingrie
72
72
~1174
Ingelram
II De
Fiennes
~1176
John
De
Fiennes
~1177
Thomas
De
Fiennes
~1179
Eustache
De
Fiennes
~1125
Pharamus
De Boloin
De Tingrie
~1121
Alan
De
Fiennes
~1095
John
De
Fiennes
~1069
James
De
Fiennes
~1043
John
De
Fiennes
~1231 - ~1282
Roger
De
Mortimer
51
51
~1225 - 23 MAR 1299/00
Maud
De
Braiose
1249 - 1274
Isabella
De
Mortimer
25
25
~1262 - ~1296
Margaret
de
Mortimer
34
34
1204 - 1230
William
V De
Braiose
26
26
Executed by LLwelyn The Great on suspicion of intimacy with Llwelyn's wife, Joan Plantagenet
~1226 - 1255
Eve
de
Braiose
29
29
~1227 - ~1254
Eleanor
De
Braiose
27
27
~1229
Bertha
De
Braiose
~1230
Matilda
De
Braiose
~1226
Isabel
De
Braiose
~1178 - 1228
Reginald
De
Braose
50
50
~1186 - 1223
Grecia
Alice De
Briwere
37
37
~1200
Mary
De
Braose
~1202 - 1232
Lord
John De
Braose
30
30
~1204
Loretta
De
Braose
~1194 - ~1251
Gwladys
"Ddu" ferch
Llewelyn
57
57
~1145 - 1226
William
De
Briwere
81
81
~1149 - 24 MAR 1216/17
Beatrice
De
Vaux
~1166
Margaret
De
Briwere
~1175
Richard
De
Briwere
~1178
William
De
Briwere
~1183 - >1233
Alice
de
Briwere
50
50
1183 - 1224
Baldwin
De
Wake
41
41
1156 - 1198
Sir
Henry
De Percy
42
42
~1114
Henry
De
Briwere
~1120
Miss
Walton
~1147
Richard
De
Briwere
~1149
John
De
Briwere
~1151
Peter
De
Briwere
~1153
Alice
De
Briwere
~1155
Engelesia
De
Briwere
~1086
William
De
Briwere
~1060
William
De
Briwere
~1036
Radulph
De
Briwere
~1153 - 1211
William
III De
Braose
58
58
~1155 - 1210
Maud
Matilda De
Saint Valery
55
55
~1169
Robert
De
Braose
~1170
Flandrina
De
Braose
~1171
Roger
De
Braose
~1173 - 1210
Matilda
De
Braose
37
37
~1174
Joan
Alice De
Braose
~1175
Giles
De
Braose
~1176 - 1210
William
IV De
Braose
34
34
~1175
Thomas
De
Braose
~1177
Walter
De
Braose
~1180
Hugh
De
Braose
~1181
Henry
De
Braose
~1182
John
De
Braose
~1183
Bernard
De
Braose
~1184
Isabel
De
Braose
~1185
Eleanor
De
Braose
~1188
Fulk
De
Braose
~1204
Philip
De
Braose
~1117
Bernald IV
De Saint
Valery
~1156
Guy II
De Saint
Valery
~1125
Alanor
(Elenor) De
Dommart
Bernard
DeSaint
Valery
~1161
Elenor
De Saint
Valery
~1162
Reginald
De Saint
Valery
~1164
Thomas
De Saint
Valery
~1166
Henry
De Saint
Valery
~1094 - 1166
Reginald
II De Saint
Valery
72
72
~1120
Walter
De Saint
Valery
~1122
Laura
De Saint
Valery
~1065
Bernard III
De Saint
Valery
~1096
Guy De
Saint
Valery
~1035
Walter
(Gauthier) De
Saint Valery
~1068
Reginald
De Saint
Valery
~1005 - 1066
Bernard II
De Saint
Valery
61
61
~0977
Gilbert
(Gautier) De
Saint Valery
~0980
Pappia
De Saint
Valery
~1008
Richard
De Saint
Valery
~0947
Bernard
De Saint
Valery
~0950
Emma
De Saint
Valery
~0919
Reginald
(Renault) De
Saint Valery
~1126 - ~1192
William
II De
Braose
66
66
* Sheriff of Hertfordshire * Lord of Abergavenny and Brecknock * Note: WILLIAM DE BRAOSE was Sheriff of Hertfordshire 1174-5; gave King Henry II 1,000 marks of silver for part of the honor of Barnstaple, his right from his grandfather Johel de Totenais, and 10 Henry II, 1164, was one of the subscribers to the Constitution of Clarendon; married Bertha, second daughter and eventually co-heiress of Milo de Gloucester (ped. 107), Lord of Brecknock http://www.my-ged.com/db/page/draper/09470 William was very fortunate in his marriage to Berta. All of her brothers died young without heirs so she brought a number of important lordships to the de Braoses in 1166. These included Brecon and Abergavenny. William became Sheriff of Herefordshire in 1174. His interest in Sussex was maintained as he confirmed the grants of his father and grandfather for the maintenance of Sele Priory and extended St. Mary's, Shoreham. [Internet source: http://freespace.virgin.net/doug.thompson/BraoseWeb/William2.htm]
~1130 - 1170
Bertha
de
Gloucester
40
40
~1162 - 1247
William
de
Ferrers
85
85
~1150
Roger
de
Braose
~1150
Matilda
de
Braose
~1151
Philip
De
Braose
~1154
Isabel
de
Braose
~1154
Engeram
de
Braose
~1155
Reginald
de
Braose
~1158
Gillian
de
Braose
~1160
John
de
Braose
~1165
Giles
de
Braose
~1171
Bertha
De
Braose
~1170
Robert
de
Ferrers
~1165
Millicent
de
Ferrers
~1175
Hugh
de
Ferrers
~1180
John
de
Ferrers
~1134
Godehold
de
Toeni
~1171 - 1240
Isabel
De
Ferrers
69
69
Berta
de
Hereford
Earl of
Hereford
Milo
~1090 - 1162
Robert
de
Ferrers
72
72
~1090
Elizabeth
Boteler
~1062 - 1139
Robert
de
Ferrers
77
77
~1069
Hawise
d'Vitre
~1142 - 1192
Walcheline
De
Ferrers
50
50
~1152
Petronel
de
Ferrers
~1144
Henry
de
Ferrers
~1146
Hugo
de
Ferrers
~1148
Isolde
de
Ferrers
~1150
Robert
de
Ferrers
~1036
Bertha
de
Gostenois
~1075
William
Engenulf
de Ferrers
~1010 - 1089
Walcherine
de
Ferrers
79
79
Wacheline Ferrers, a Norman, whose son Henry accompanied William the Conqueror to England and who received 114 manors in County Derby and other vast estates
1100 - 1143
Miles
fitz
Walter
43
43
~1096 - >1143
Sibyl
De
Neufmarche
47
47
~1124
Walter
de
Gloucester
~1126
Margaret
De
Glouchester
~1128
Henry
Fitz
Miles
~1128
William
Fitz
Miles
~1130
Mabel
de
Hereford
~1118
Roger
Fitz
Miles
~1136 - >1220
Lucy
fitz
Miles
84
84
~1132
Mahel
Fitz
Miles
~1050 - 1103
Bernard
de
Neufmarche
53
53
~1079
Nesta
ferch
Osborn
~1099
Mabel
De
Neufmarche
~1102
Adam
De
Neufmarche
<1495 - 1527
Robert
Wyvill
32
32
~1052
Nesta
ferch
Gruffydd
~1081
Hugh
fitz
Osborn
~1044 - 1081
Trahaern
ap
Caradawg
37
37
~1011 - 1063
Gruffydd
ap
Llewelyn
52
52
* Gruffydd ap Llywelyn who inflicted a series of defeats on the English, and made alliances with the enemies of King Edward the Confessor. Gruffydd fought a long campaign against rival kings to win overall control of Wales. By 1055, he had become master of Deheubarth and had expanded his rule to the lesser kingdoms of Morgannwg (Glamorgan) and Gwent. In 1063, Earl Harold Godwinsson (later Harold II) and his brother Tostig made a joint attack on Gwynedd. At the same time, Deheubarth rebelled against Gruffydd's rule. Gruffydd fled and was murdered by his own men. *
~0980 - 1023
Llewelyn
I ap
Seisyll
43
43
~1057
Idwal
Ap
Gruffydd
~1055
Maredudd
ap
Gruffydd
* Maredudd ap Gruffydd, the son of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn, was excluded from the throne by his uncles Bleddyn ap Cynfyn and Rhywallon ap Cynfyn.
~0982
Angharad
Verch
Maredydd
~1002
Cynfyn
ap
Gwerystan
~1024
Everydd
ferch
Cynfyn
~1015
Dominus
Gherardini
~1026 - 1072
Bleddyn
ap
Cynvyn
46
46
~1027
Gwerdd
Verch
Cynvyn
~1029
Caradoc
ap
Cynfyn
~0938 - 0999
Maredydd
Ap
Owain
61
61
Maredudd ap Owain, Prince of Deheubarth who succeeded his father Owain ap Hywel Dha as ruler of South Wales/Deheubarth in 986. Maredudd conquered Gwynedd and temporarily united Wales once more, but his reign was a troubled one. From their strongholds in Dublin and the Isle of Man, the Norsemen ravaged the coast of Wales. It was recorded in 987 that two thousand men of the island of Anglesey were seized and sold as slaves. In 989 Maredudd was obliged to raise a penny poll-tax to bribe the Norsemen to stay away.
~0963
Rhys
Ap
Maredydd
~0966
Cadwallon
Ap
Maredydd
~0972
Lleucu
Verch
Maredydd
~0913 - 0987
Owain
Ap
Hywel
74
74
Sources: Llantarnam Abbey; Kraentzler 1446; History of Morgan Family, AF; A. Roots 176; Young. Roots: Owain ap Hywell Dda. Young: Owain, died 988, prince of Deheubarth. Abbey: Owen ap Hywell Dda, ob. 987. King of South Wales, 950. Duran says "Prince of South Wales and Powis." Hist: "Descended on his mother's side from Votiporix, the third century Irish invader of South Wales. Married Angharad, Queen of Powys, to settle claims of her father Llewelyn to the throne of Powys. Had sons Cadwallon, who became King of South Wales, and Einon," says "History." ***** Owain ap Hywel Dda, king of Deheubarth, where he ruled for nearly 40 years, paid tribute of 300 wolves' heads to Edgar, King of England, 962; tried to recover the throne of Gwynedd, and died 988, having had a son, Einion ap Owain. [Source 1] "Descended on his mother's side from Votiporix, the third century Irish invader of South Wales. Married Angharad, Queen of Powys, to settle clains of her father Llewelyn to the throne of Powys. Had sons Cadwallon, who became King of South Wales, and Einion." King of South Wales, 950. [Source 2] Owain ap Hywel Dda, King of Deheubarth was a man of historical interests. A great deal of genealogy and the Annales Camriae were compiled at his request. Angharad and her husband were second cousins. [Source 3] SOURCES: 1. Burke, Sir Bernard, C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms. _Landed Gentry_ (entry under Powell), page 577. 2. Morgan, Dennis. _A History of the Morgan Family_. 3. Bartrum, Peter C. _Welsh Genealogies, AD 300-1400_. University of Wales Press, 1978; page 42. Sources: Dictionary of National Biography; AF. Dictionary: Owain was a descendant of Hywel Dda, who "had been a vigorous ruler over Gwynedd."
~0918
Angharad
Verch
Llewelyn
~1031
Raduplha
of
Dublin
~0935
Cadwallen
Ap
Owain
~0940
Llywarch
Ap
Owain
~0942
Iestyn
Ap
Owain
~0880
Llewellyn
ap
Merfyn
Llewelyn ap Mervyn who was excluded from his crown by his uncle Cadell, and his cousin, Hywel Dha.
~0859 - 0900
Merfyn
Ap
Rhodri
41
41
~0879
Tryffin
Ap
Merfyn
~0889
Iarddur
Ap
Merfyn
~0891
Afandreg
Verch
Merfyn
~0789 - 0878
Rhodri
"Mawr"
Ap Merfyn
89
89
Rhodri Mawr (the Great) ap Merfyn, Prince of Wales, who became King of Gwynedd in 844 on the death of his father Merfyn Frych, King of Powys in 855 on the death of his uncle Caell ap Brochwell, and King of Seisyllwg in 871 on the death of his brother-in-law Gwgon. Rhodri Mawr was the first ruler recognised as Prince of Wales. He defeated the Danish leader Horn in 856. Died in 877 or 878, killed in battle with the English as was his son Gwriad. Rhodri Mawr ap Merfyn married Angharad, daughter of Meuric ap Dyfnwal ap Asthin ap Sitsllt, Lord Caerdigan, Rhodri Mawr, (Roderick the Great) born in 844. Uniting three kingdoms, he became King of all Wales, having inherited North Wales from his father, Powys from his mother and South Wales from his wife. He was slain in b attle in 878, having married Ankaret, Queen of South Wales, thirteenth in descent from Cunedda, No. 1 of this line. The kingdoms he united were at his death divided among their three sons: (a) Anarawd, heir to North Wales and ancestor of Llewellyn the Great; (b) Mervyn, heir to Powys, mentioned under Owen, No. 19 of Pedigree X; and (c) Cadell.
~0825
Angharad
Verch
Meurig
~0855 - 0916
Anarawd
Ap
Rhodri
61
61
Anarawd ap Rhodri Mawr became King of Gwynedd in 878 on the death of his father. He abandoned an alliance with the Danish Kingdom of York and acknowledged Ælfred the Great as overlord; as did his brothers and other lesser rulers. The precise nature of this overlordship is not known, and there was an attempt to portray this submission as a desire for unity among Christian rulers against the pagan Danes. However, this recognition by Welsh rulers that that the King of England had claims upon them would be a central fact in the subsequent history of Wales. Died in 916
~0861 - 0909
Cadel
"Mawr"
ap Rhodri
48
48
Cadell ap Rhodri Mawr, King of Seisyllwg in South Wales, followed the lead of his brother Anarawd ap Rhodri Mawr, King of Gwynedd, abandoned an alliance with the Danish Kingdom of York and acknowledged Ælfred the Great as overlord. The precise nature of this overlordship is not known, and there was an attempt to portray this submission as a desire for unity among Christian rulers against the pagan Danes. However, this recognition by Welsh rulers that that the King of England had claims upon them would be a central fact in the subsequent history of Wales.
~0862
Aeddan
Ap
Rhodri
~0863
Tudwal
"Gloff"
Ap Rhodri
~0865
Meurig
Ap
Rhodri
~0866
Rhodri
"Fychan"
Ap Rhodri
~0867
Gwriad
Ap
Rhodri
~0869
Gwyddelig
Ap
Rhodri
~0850
Nest
Verch
Rhodri
~0871
Angharad
Verch
Rhodri
~0780
Meurig
Ap
Dyfnwallon
~0823
Gwgon
Ap
Meurig
~0755
Dyfnwallon
Ap
Arthen
~0730
Arthen
Ap
Seisyll
~0764 - 0844
Merfyn
"Frych" Ap
Gwriad
80
80
Merfyn Frych (the Freckled), who became King of Gwynedd in 825 on the death of his mother Ethyllt's uncle Hywel ap Rhodri. Died in 844 Merfyn married Nest, daughter of Cadell ap Brochwel, King of Powys, and they had a son: Rhodri Mawr
~0740
Esyllt
Verch
Cynan
Ethyllt (also Esyllt and Ethil), Queen of Gwynedd who married Gwriad of Man, a Manx chieftan descended from Llywarch Hen, a 6th century British prince who was a grandson of Coel Hen, "Old King Coel" of nursery rhyme fame. Gwriad's father was Elidur, Prince of Deheubarth.
~0725 - 0817
Cynan
"Dindaethwy"
Ap Rhodri
92
92
Cynan Tindaethwy ap Rhodri who shared the Kingdom of Gwynedd with his brother Hywel ap Rhodri, King of Gwynedd.
~0690 - 0754
Rhodri
"Molwynog"
Ap Idwal
64
64
~0664 - 0712
Idwal
"Iwrch" Ap
Cadwaladr
48
48
~0615 - 0664
Cadwaladr
"Fendigaid"
Ap Cadwallon
49
49
Cadwaladr Fendigaid (the Blessed) ap Cadwallon, King of Gwynedd Cadwalader, the third Blessed Sovereign, last king of the ancient Britons, gave protection within all his lands to the Christians who fled from the pagan Saxons. A great warrior, he became a monk, made a pilgrimage to Rome to receive the Habit of a religious Order from Pope Sergius, and died in the great plague of 664.
~0591 - 0635
Cadwallon
Ap
Cadfan
44
44
Cadwallon ap Cadfan, King of Gwynedd. He killed Edwin of Northumbria at the battle of Meigen (Hatfield near Doncaster) in 632. In 633, he killed Edwin's successors, Osric of Deria and Eanfrith of Bernicia. The Venerable Bede declared that it was Cadwallon's intention to exterminate the English race. However, Cadwallon himself was killed in late 633 or 634 by Eanfrith's brother Oswald. This defeat denoted the extinction of the possiblility of restoring Brythonic supremacy in Britain. In the battles of 632 and 633, Cadwallon's ally was Penda, King of Mercia, who carried on the struggle with Northumbria after Cadwallon's death. Oswald was killed in the battle of Cogwy (Oswestry) in 641, and Penda was killed by Oswy, brother of Oswald in the battle of Cai (Winwaed) in 654. Cadwallon died in late 633 or 634, killed in battle. Cadwallon married a daughter of Pebba who was a sister of Penda, King of Mercia; and they had a son: *
~0569 - 0617
Cadfan
Ap
Iago
48
48
~0569
Tandreg
"Ddu" Verch
Cynan
~0589
Efeilian
Verch
Cadfan
~0544
Cynan
"Garwyn"
ap Brochwel
~0540 - ~0613
Iago
Ap
Beli
73
73
Iago ap Beli, King of Gwynedd and reputed benefactor of Bangor Cathedral
~0517 - 0599
Beli
Ap
Rhun
82
82
~0492 - 0586
Rhun
"Hir" Ap
Maelgwn
94
94
~0496
Perwyr
Verch
Rhun
~0470 - ~0549
Maelgwn
"The Tall" Ap
Cadwallon
79
79
Maelgwn ap Cadwallon, who was also known as Maelgwn Gwynedd and Maelgwn Hir (the Tall) was the King of Gwynedd. Maelgwn has been portrayed as a ruthless, wicked ruler of impressive sinfulness. He was also a man of culture, and many poets and musicians attended his court at Deganwyand. He entered a monastery, perhaps to in an attempt to atone for previous sins. Died in 547 or 549 at Rhes of the yellow plague which had originated in Egypt.
~0471
Gwallwen
Verch
Afallach
~0442 - 0517
Cadwallon
"Lawhir"
Ap Einion
75
75
"Lawhir" is Welsh for "Long-Handed"
0446
Meddyf
verch
Maeldaf
~0417
Einion
"Yrth" Ap
Cunedda
~0422
Prawst
Verch
Tidlet
~0444
Einion
Ap
Einion
~0446
Owain
"Danwyn"
Ap Einion
~0448
Llyr
"Marini"
Ap Einion
~0450
Tegog
Ap
Einion
~0386 - ~0460
Cunedda
"Wledig"
Ap Edern
74
74
Cunedda Weledig (Cunedda the Great), was the first in the dynasty of Cunnedda, the line of Gwynedd. According to Davies tradition states Cunneda and eight sons and one grandson came down from the north and drove the Irish from Gwynedd. notes or source: ancestry.com & HBJ "A History of Wales" by John Davies A group of Votadini Picts (nominal Britons from the Pictish border areas) under Cunedda Wledig were transferred by Magnus Maximus to secure Western Britain from Irish raiders, moving from the Manau Goutodin kingdom. In Wales, Cunedda governed most of the north (hence "King of North Wales"). His father and grandfather bore Roman names and in true Celtic fashion, Cunedda could trace his lineage back to Beli Mawr. Following that Celtic tradition, upon Cunedda's death the territory under his control was divided between his sons. Most of these were "regained" by the main Gywneddian kingdom within a generation or two. Ceredigion, along the upper west coast of Wales, remained independent for much longer. The name of [Sub-Kingdoms of Gwynedd] Gwynedd either derives from the Latin Venedotia, or more probably from Cunedda (=Weneda =Gwynedd). Cunedda (or Cunedag) was a northern British chieftain, a sub-King of Gododdin who ruled Manau Gododdin on the Firth of Forth around Clackmannan. He was requested by the northern Welsh to help them expell the invading Irish from their lands, and he eagerly obliged. With his many sons, Cunedda settled down in the area and founded a number of Royal dynasties: Gwynedd Rhos Ceredigion Meirionydd Dunoding Dogfeiling Rhufoniog: founded by Rhufon around Denbigh Edeyrnion: founded by Edeyrn around Bala Afflogion: founded by Afloyg on the Lleyn Peninsula Osmaeliog: founded by Osfael probably on Anglesey Cunedda Wledig (or Cunedag) hailed from Manau Gododdin, a sub-division of the greater Kingdom of Gododdin (Lothian) in modern Scotland. His capital may have been in the Clackmannan region. His father, grandfather & great grandfather bore Roman names and were probably confederate allies of the Roman administration living just north of Hadrian's Wall. The appendage to Paternus' name is particularly telling. Like many prominent men of his era, Cunedda claimed descent from Beli Mawr, the Celtic Sun-God, through his son, Lludd Llaw Ereint, God of Healing & grandson, Afallach, God of the Underworld. Marwnad Cunedda (Elegy for Cunned - in Welsh) Mydwyf taliessin deryd gwawt godolaf vedyd. Bedyd rwyd rifedeu eidolyd. kyfrwnc allt ac allt ac echwyd Ergrynawr cunedaf creisseryd. ygkaer weir achaer liwelyd. Ergrynawt kyfatwt kyfergyr. kyfanwanec tan tramyr ton. llupawt glew ygilyd. kan kafas y whel uch eluyd. mal vcheneit gwynt wrth onwyd. kefynderchyn ygwn ygyfyl kyfachetwyn achoelyn kerenhyd. Gwiscant veird kywrein kanonhyd. marw cunedaf agwynaf agwynit. Cwynitor tewdor tewdum diarchar. Dychyfal dychyfun dyfynveis dyfyngleis dychyfun. Ymadrawd cwdwdawd caletlwm. kaletach wrth elyn noc ascwrn. ys kynyal cunedaf kyn kywys athytwet. ywyneb a gatwet kanweith cyn bu lleith yndorglwyt Dychludent wyr bryneich ympymlwyt. Ef canet racyofyn ae arswyt oergerdet. kyn bu dayr dogyn ydwet. heit haual am wydwal gwnebrwyt. gweinaw gwaeth llyfred noc adwyt. Adoet hun dimyaw agwynaf amlys am grys cynedaf Am ryaflaw hallt am hydyruer mor. Am breid afwrn aballaf. gwawt veird aogon aogaf. Ac ereill arefon arifaf. Ryfedawr yn erulawd Anaw cant gorwyd kyn kymun cuneda. Rymafei biw blith yrhaf. Rymafei edystrawt ygayaf. Rymafei win gloyw ac olew. Rymafei torof keith rac vn trew. Ef dyfal ogressur o gyflew gweladur. Pennadur pryt llew lludwy uedei gywlat rac mab edern kyn edyrn anaelew. Ef dywal diarchar diedig. Am ryfreu agheu dychyfyg. Ef goborthi aes ymanregorawl gwir gwrawl oed y vnbyn. Dymhun achyfatcun athal gwin kamda. diua hun o goelig. <http://www.fortunecity.com/images/fc_logo_white122x30.gif>
~0388
Gwawl
Verch
Coel
~0410
Edern
Ap
Cunedda
~0411
Rhufon
Ap
Cunedda
~0413
Ceredig
Ap
Cunedda
~0414
Afloeg
Ap
Cunedda
~0416
Ysfael
Ap
Cunedda
~0419
Dunog
Ap
Cunedda
~0420
Tegid
(Tegeingl)
Verch Cunedda
~0422
Dogfael
Ap
Cunedda
~0424
Gwen
Verch
Cunedda
~0426
Gwron
Ap
Cunedda
~0408
Tybion
Ap
Cunedda
~0363 - 0420
Coel
Hen
57
57
COEL HEN is a familiar figure in many ancient Welsh genealogies. Most of the Celtic British kings of the north of Britain could trace their descent from him in one form or another, as could many Welsh kings. In the short time after his life that Central and Northern Britain remained free of the invading Angles, between the start of the fifth century and mid-sixth century, all of the kingdoms that were established were by his sons or grandsons. Although the evidence is typically patchy, he appears to have lived from around 350 - 420, during the time when the last Roman officials returned to the heart of the faltering empire, leaving Britain and her people to fend for themselves. Coel's particular association with the north of Britain has led to the well-founded suggestion that he was the last of the Roman Duces Brittanniarum (Dukes of the Britons). Only one existed at any time. They were selected as generals of the army with direct authority from the governor of Britannia to defend the coast from the increasing barbarian raids). The Roman dux disappear from the Notitia Dignitatum in about 400 and it is not unnatural to presume that Coel took his place. He seems to have made his headquarters at Britain's northern capital of Eburacum (York), and he certainly imposed his power over a great swathe of the country. Coel Hen can be considered by tradition to be the first king in, and of, Northern Britain, as seems to have overseen the transition from direct Roman rule to an independent Britain which took care of its own defence. In the Celtic tradition, because of his dominance, he is known fully as the High King of Northern Britain* (as opposed to other major kings of his generation, such as Cunedda Wledig, who was King of North Wales - later Gwynedd, or Antonius Donatus Gregorius (Anwn), who was King of South Wales - Demetia). From his headquarters Coel Hen governed the territory between Eburacum and Hadrian's Wall (which formed the later British kingdoms of Ebrauc, Deywr, and Bernaccia), and west to cover the area of Rheged, (later North Rheged, South Rheged, Dunoting, Elmet, Caer-Guendoleu, and a kingdom which, to deduce its name from the later Saxon Pecset, was probably called the Kingdom of the Peak). According to later claims, he also had a hand in structuring the Goutoddin in the eastern territory between the Walls after the departure of Cunedda Wledig. As a result of the many kingdoms which were inherited by his immediate descendants, Coel became the founding ancestor of what came to be known as The Men of the North (Gwy^r y Gogledd). These were the Britons of the surviving kingdoms who were fighting the advancing Angles in the 6th and 7th centuries. They were drawn from the kingdoms of Goutoddin and Rheged, from Strathclyde and various minor principalities, and together they upheld the tradition of battling Celtic warriors, feasting together before riding out with the warband to do battle with the enemy. Their stubborn resistance was dealt a fatal blow at Catreath (Catterick) in around 600, and these events (detailed in The Mabinogion) cemented the reputation of The Men of the North in their glorious, but ultimately futile, efforts of resistance to the Teutonic invaders. Most people today will have heard of Coel Hen (or "King Coel" - with "Hen" the Brito-Welsh word for "old"), even if they don't realise it. He is immortalised in verse: Old King Cole was a merry old soul And a merry old soul was he. He called for his pipe, And he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers, three The legends of the Northern British were preserved by Rhodri Mawr, when he became King of Gwynedd. One of those legends concerned Coel Hen's last campaign. It was during Coel's time as High King that immigrant Irishmen from the Scotti tribe of Dalriata (in the region of Ulster) began to settle the western coast of Pictland, around Argyle. Coel, fearing that the two peoples would unite against the British, sent raiding parties across his northern border to stir up discord between them. The plan backfired as the Picts and the Scots were not taken in. Coel merely succeeded in pushing the two even closer together, and they began to attack the British Kingdom of Strathclyde. Coel declared all out war and moved north to expel the invaders. The Picts and Scots fled to the hills ahead of Coel's army, who eventually set up camp at what became Coylton alongside the Water of Coyle (Ayrshire). For a long time, the British were victorious, while the Scots and Picts starved. Desperate for some relief, the enemy advanced in a last-ditch attack on Coel's stronghold. Coel and his men were taken by surprise, overrun and scattered to the winds. It is said that Coel wandered the unknown countryside until he eventually got caught in a bog at Coilsfield (in Tarbolton, Ayrshire) and drowned. Coel was first buried in a mound there before being removed to the church at Coylton. The year was circa AD 420. After his death, Coel's Northern Kingdom was divided between two of his sons: Ceneu (St) assumed control of the kingdoms of the North & Midland Britain, remaining based at Ebrauc. Gorbanian founded the dynasty that ruled over the Kingdom of Bernaccia (Bryneich), which was later taken over by the Angles, who pronounced it Bernicia. Because of Coel's, and his son's, apparently continued use of Eburacum as a base of operations and also as the traditional Roman capital of North Britain, it makes sense to list the Kings of North Britain alongside the Kings of Ebrauc (as the evolving Brito-Welsh language dubbed it). There were only three of the former, with the next in line ruling only half the land of his father, as the rest of it had been inherited by his brother. OLD KING COLE AND THE COLE RACE http://family-tree.hypermart.net/old__king__cole.htm Meurig (Mathew) Hen was related to Coel Hen (Old King Cole) and is thought to have written of him, from which the poem was later written. As smoking was not then invented it must be assumed that the pipe and bowl were musical instruments equivalent to the modern flute or drum. The children’s nursery song is now believed to have derived from the historical story of Coel Hen (Old King Cole) and because of this, or perhaps for younger readers the poem is reproduced below. Hen is the Welsh word for old. Old King Cole was a merry old soul, And a merry old soul was he. He called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers three. Now every fiddler had a fine fiddle, And a very fine fiddle had he. Tweedle dum, tweedle dee, went the fiddlers three, Tweedledum-dee, dum-de-dee, dum-de-dee. Old King Cole was a merry old soul, And a merry old soul was he. He called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl, And he called for his harpers three. Every harper had a fine harp, And a very fine harp had he. Twang-a-twang, twang-a-twang, went the harpers three, Twang-a-twang, twang, twang-a-twang-a-twee. Old King Cole was a merry old soul, And a merry old soul was he. He called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl, And he called for his drummers three. Every drummer had a fine drum, And a very fine drum had he. Rub-a-dub, rub-a-dub, went the drummers three, Rub-a-dub, dub, rub-a-dub-a-dee. The Cole family, referred to as the Cole race, ruled the biggest area of Britain (which at that time consisted of a combined England, Scotland and Wales) which encompassed present day Southern Scotland, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Northumberland and Cumbria. This compared with Wales which was split into five regions and extended east to Lichfield and the rest of Britain consisting of dozens of kingdoms. The arrival and subsequent departure of the Romans did not much alter the Cole dynasty and it was the Danes and Saxons who eventually wiped them out, being completed by about 616. Coel Hen himself (Old King Cole) reigned from about 350 to 420 and prior to Arthur, 'fighting duke' of the Coles, who later became a king. Coel Hen is thought to have ruled South West Scotland, Cumbria, Northumbria and Yorkshire down to York. At the time of which we are speaking the outline of Britain was very much different than it is today. The land mass was much bigger in these dark ages, an example of which is that much of Cardigan Bay was land and a triangle of land existed between the North Wales coast to north of the Ribble. This latter area was occupied by a race of people known as the Setantii. Why no approximate maps exist showing the outline of this island prior to the huge rise in water levels during the dark ages is not understood as it would make the understanding of history very much easier. Not much is known of the Cole race earlier than Coel Hen and his brothers. The brothers were Hen (the oldest) d about 420, Dyfynwal of Dumbarton and Clyde d about 440, Amlauit Wledic (or Lluch) d about 440, ruling East Cumbria, North Lancashire and most of Yorkshire, whose wife was Gwen, daughter of Cunedda and Arthur's maternal Great grandfather. The ruler of Setantii and lower Lancashire was Seithenin. Two of Coel's sons were Ceneu and Gorbanian of whom nothing else is known. Another son was thought to be Meirchawn whose uncle Mor and cousin Morydd were thought to be father and brother of Merlin. Meirchawn had two sons, March 500 - 530 and Llyr Merini, with two sisters Eliffer and Gwenddoleu. Rhodric Mawr was an ancestor of Coel Hen, as was Mathew Hen, son of Brochfael Ysgythrog King of Powys. Seithenin's family was Gwyddno, a son, who died about 470, by which time the sea had submerged his and his fathers kingdom. Another son was Arwystal Cloff who married Tywanwedd, the sister of Arthur's mother Ygerne, and therefore became Arthur's uncle. Arwystal Cloff had a daughter Machell. Another son of Seithenin was Llyr Merini (the 1st of that name, see above) whose name meant Sea Marine. Senewr d. 470 was another son of Seithenin and the last was named Menestry. Seithenin also had a grandson Cei who became one of Arthurs closest companions. Other notes about the Cole or Coel family are as follows. Padarn Peisrudd was the grandfather of Cunedda of Gododin, who with Urien of Rheged and Gwallauc of Elmet were the warrior leaders of the Cole dynasty. Owein the son of Urien was a Cole family member so must have married into the family. Talhearn, who lived at the time of Arthur, was a family member and his son Aneirin died about 600. By the 6th century the Anglo Saxons were pressing the Cole empire seriously, hampered severely by 'King' Arthur and by 547 the Saxon King Ida had taken Northumbria. This was the beginning of the end for the Coles. Although much material is held on the Cole race, nevertheless reference has been made extensively to 'Old King Cole and the Real King Arthur' to collate and extend notes to write this article. Source: Britannia EBK Biographies http://www.britannia.com/bios/ebk/coelhnt.html Coel Hen, King of Northern Britain (c.350-c.420) (Welsh-Coel, Latin-Coelius, English-Cole) Coel Hen or Coel the Old is known to most of us through the famous nursery rhyme: Old King Cole was a merry old soul And a merry old soul was he. He called for his pipe, And he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers, three. He is also a familiar figure in ancient Welsh genealogies, for most of the Celtic British monarchies claimed descent from him in one form or another. He appears to have lived around the turn from the 4th to the 5th century, the time when the Roman officials returned to Italy, leaving Britain and her people to fend for themselves. Coel's particular association with the north of Britain has led to the suggestion that he may actually have been the last of the Roman Duces Brittanniarum with his headquarters at York. He certainly imposed his power over a great swathe of the country, and can be considered the first King in Northern Britain. (This Coel should not be confused with the legendary Coel Godhebog "the Magnificent", Lord of Colchester, whose daughter, St. Helen, supposedly married the Emperor Constantius Chlorus two centuries earlier.) There is an old story told in the north about Coel's last campaign. What is now Scotland was originally inhabited by the Pictish race. It was during Coel's time that immigrant Irishmen from the Scotti tribe began to settle the Western coast around Argyle. Coel, fearing that the two peoples would unite against the British, sent raiding parties across his northern border to stir up discord between them. The plan, however, backfired for the Picts and the Scots were not taken in. Coel merely succeeded in pushing the two even closer together, and they began to attack the British Kingdom of Strathclyde. Coel declared all out war and moved north to expel the invaders. The Picts and Scots fled to the hills ahead of Coel's army, who eventually set up camp at what became Coylton alongside the Water of Coyle (Ayrshire). For a long time, the British were triumphant, while the Scots and Picts starved. Desperate for some relief, however, the enemy advanced an all-or-nothing attack on Coel's stronghold. Coel and his men were taken by surprise, overrun and scattered to the winds. It is said that Coel wandered the unknown countryside until he eventually got caught in a bog at Coilsfield (in Tarbolton, Ayrshire) and drowned. Coel was first buried in a mound there before being removed to the church at Coylton. The year was about AD 420. After his death, Coel's Northern Kingdom was divided between two of his sons, Ceneu and Gorbanian.
~0395
Meirchawn
(Marcus)
Coel
~0388
St.
Cenue
ap Coel
~0320
Tegfan
Ap
Teuhvant
~0300
Teuhvant
Deheuwaint
Ap Telpwyll
King of Northumbria
~0280 - ~0340
Telpwyll
Ap
Urban
60
60
~0260 - ~0314
Urban
(Erb) Ap
Gradd
54
54
~0230 - ~0288
Gradd
(Gratus) Ap
Rhyfedel
58
58
~0200
Rhyfedel
Ap
Rhyddrech
~0170
Rhyddrech
Ap
Eddigan
~0140
Eddigan
Ap
Eudeyrn
~0120
Eudeyrn
Ap
Eifydd
<0100
Eifydd
Ap
Eudos
Eudos
Ap
Euddolen
Euddolen
Ap
Afallach
<0100
Alfallach
ap
Llud
~0339
St. Padarn
"Beisrudd"
Ap Tegid
Paternus of the Red Robe Padarnn Peisrud A priest, afterwards venerated as a Saint.
~0314
Tegid
Tacitus
Ap Iago
~0738 - 0825
Gwriad
ap
Elidir
87
87
~0762
Nest
Verch
Cadell
~0768
Cadrod
Ap
Gwriad
~0740 - 0808
Cadell
ap
Brochwel
68
68
~0887 - 0950
Hywell
"Dda" ap
Cadell
63
63
Hywel Dda (the Good) ap Cadell, Prince of Deheubarth, acquired the Kingdom of Dyfed on marrying Elen, the daughter of the King of Dyfed. He may have ordered the killing of his brother-in-law, Llywarch of Dyfed in order to secure the kingship of Dyfed for himself (John Davies: A History of Wales, London, 1993, pg. 87). He is remembered as "Hywel the Good" and was responsible for sponsoring a compilation of Welsh Law, making St. Davids in Dyfed the ecclesiastical centre of Wales, and for issuing the first Royal coinage of Wales. However, there is no evidence that coinage was used in any scale in Wales before the time of Hywel's grandson Maredudd ap Owain. Disorder reigned after Hywel's death, with Viking raids and English incursions spreading havoc, which the rivalries of competing petty kings and princes did nothing to mitigate. No fewer than 35 violent deaths of rulers are recorded in the Brut y Tywsogion (Chronicle of the Princes) between 950 and the Norman Conquest. Died in 950. Hywel Dha (Howell the Good) Prince of South Wales. He compiled a justly famous code of laws and, after a long and peaceful reign, died in 948. He married Eleanor, daughter of the last king of Dyfed (Pembrokeshire) and ninth in descent from Cadwgan, living in 650. His daughter Ankaret and her husband Tewdwr, were grandparents of Tudor Mawr, from whom descend the Carew, Awbrey and other families.
~0935
Cuhelyn
ap
Iarddur
~0887 - 0943
Eleanor
Verch
Llywarch
56
56
~0914
Angharat
ferch
Hywel
~0850 - 0903
Llywarch
ap
Hyfaidd
53
53
~0820 - 0892
Hyfaidd
ap
Bledri
72
72
~0790
Bledri
ap
Iudon
~0790
Tangwystyl
ferch
Owain
~0758 - 0811
Owain
ap
Maredudd
53
53
~0700 - 0796
Maredudd
ap
Tewdos
96
96
~0760
Iudon
ap
Maredud
~0700
Twedos
ap
Rhain
~0670 - ~0710
Rhain
ap
Catgocaun
40
40
~0640
Catgocaun
ap
Caten
~0610
Caten
ap
Cloten
~0580
Cloten
Gwlyddien ap
Nougoy Noe
~0580
Ceindrech
ferch
Rhiwwallon
~0550
Rhiwallon
ap
Idwallon
~0520
Idwallon
ap
Llywarch
~0490
Llywarch
ap
Rhigeneu
~0470
Rhigeneu
ap Rhain
Dremrudd
~0452
Rhain
Dremrudd
ap Brychan
~0437
Brychan
ap
Anlach
~0427
Prawst
ferch
Tudwal
~0460
Gunred
ferch
Brychan
~0469
Meleri
ferch
Brychan
~0471
Tudglid
ferch
Brychan
~0475
Gwawr
ferch
Brychan
~0496
Lleian
ferch
Brychan
~0375 - 0500
Tudwal ap
Gwefawr
Morfawr
125
125
~0377
Gratiana
ferch Macsen
Wledig
0324 - 0388
Macsen Wledig
(Magnus
Maximus)
64
64
Magnus Clemens Maximus .......................................................................... ............... According to Welsh legend, the Emperor Magnus Maximus, known as Macsen Wledig (the Imperator), was a widowed senator living in Rome. Being a minor member of the Constantinian Imperial family, he felt it unjust that the Empire was ruled by the Emperors, Gratian & Valentinian, but there was little he could do about it. In about 365, Maximus was out hunting one day when he rested beneath a tree and fell asleep. He had a long dream about a palace far away. He entered the palace and encountered an ageing King and two young men playing chess. Turning, his eyes met the most beautiful woman he could ever have imagined, sitting on a golden throne. On waking, Maximus immediately sought out a local oracle who urged him to search out this beautiful maiden. So messengers were sent out across the Empire but, dispite exhaustive searches, all returned empty handed. There was no sign of Maximus' beauty. Meanwhile, at the edge of the Empire, High-King Eudaf Hen of Britain was getting very old. He decided it was time to appoint his official heir to the British Kingdom. His nephew, Cynan Meriadog, was perhaps the most obvious choice, though the King's direct heir was his only daughter, Elen. Eudaf's chief advisor, Caradog, the King of Dumnonia, advocated strengthening Roman links by marrying Elen to a man with Imperial connections. The two could then inherit the Kingdom together. He knew of such a steady young man in Rome who would make an ideal husband. Eudaf was intrigued. So had Caradog send his son, Meurig, to seek this Roman out. Meurig arrived in Rome at the house of Magnus Maximus, just as he had received the unfortunate news that his dream girl could not be found. Glad of the distraction and persuaded by Meurig's suggestion that he might find support in Britain for his Imperial claims, Maximus gladly agreed to return with him. Comes Theodosius' historical expedition to Britain in order to quell barbarian risings actually brought Magnus Maximus to these shores in 368. Legend tells how the arrival on the island of a large army of men caused quite a stir and, not realising who it was, Eudaf sent Cynan with an army to disperse them. Fortunately, Meurig persuaded all of their good intentions and Maximus was able to ride off to Eudaf's court at Carnarfon (Caer-yn-Arfon alias Caer-Segeint). Upon being introduced to everyone, Maximus was astounded to find that Eudaf was the old man in his dream and Cynan, one of the chess-players (some say the other was his son, Cadfan). He was then overjoyed to find that Eudaf's daughter, Elen, was his dream-girl. The two fell in love immediately and were married with great pomp and ceremony. Eudaf died soon afterward, and Maximus and Elen inherited his Kingdom. Cynan was extremely annoyed and rode north to gather an army of Picts & Scots to overthrow them. However, Maximus defeated him and, being magnanimous in victory, the two made peace. Cynan became Maximus' dearest friend and also his magister militum. [The Emperor Magnus Maximus from a Contemporary Coin] At this point, we return to more historic details. News reached Britain that Maximus' relative, Theodosius had been elevated to the Eastern Imperial throne. Incensed, Maximus invaded the Western Empire, in 383, along with his son Victorius and Prince Cynan. They withdrew troops from Carnarfon (Caer-Segeint) & elsewhere in Britain and his men quickly proclaimed Maximus as Emperor. His armies marched across the continent, establishing his rule as they went. Cynan eventually killed the Western Emperor, Gratian, in battle (being given Brittany as a reward), and Maximus became sole ruler of the West. Maximus set up his capital at Trier and ruled well over Britain, Gaul & Spain for four years. He was baptised a Christian, and was recognised as Emperor by Theodosius who was occupied with his own troubles elsewhere. Eventually however, Maximus was forced to make a move against Gratian's younger brother, Valentinian, the Southern Emperor, who threatened his rule from Rome. He invaded Italy, took Milan and for a whole year besieged Rome, before Cynan arrived once more and finished the job. Unfortunately though, Valentinian escaped. He soon returned, backed up by the Roman Emperor of the East, Theodsoius. Maximus' forces were twice defeated at Illyricum, before he was finally killed, with his son, at Aquileia. Sources .............. Geoffrey Ashe (1990) Mythology of the British Isles. Gildas Badonicus (c.540) The Ruin of Britain. Peter C. Bartrum (1993) A Welsh Classical Dictionary. A.H.M. Jones (1964) The Later Roman Empire 284-602: A Social, Economic, and Administrative Survey. Geoffrey of Monmouth (1136) The History of the Kings of Britain. Nennius (c.829) The History of the Britons. The Red Book of Hergest (14th c.) The Dream of Macsen Wledig . William Smith & Henry Wace (1877) The Dictionary of Christian Biography. The White Book of Rhydderch (14th c.) The Dream of Macsen Wledig. Return to Arthurian Biographies Page <http://www.britannia.com/history/images/clear.gif>
~0410
Marcus
Cynfawr
Conomari
~0330
Elen
"Luyddog"
ferch Eudaf
~0318
Eudaf
ap
Eudaf
~0938
Seisyll
Ap
Ednywain
~0370
Severa verch
Macsen
Wledig
~0280 - 0325
Flavius Julius
Crispus
Maximian Caesar
45
45
~0290
daughter of
Maximus
Galerius Daia
~0260
Maximus
Galerius
Daia
~0340
Ceindrech
verch
Rheiden
~0322
Gadeon
ap
Eudaf
17 FEB 264/65 - 0336
Constantine the
Great (Flavius
Valerius Aurelius
Constantine received only a meager education. He took up soldiering early, and proved his valor in the wars against Egypt and Persia. He was of British birth and education, and is known as the first Christian Emperor. He fought with his father in the Boulogne campaign and shared in a British campaign. The Gallic army, deeply loyal to the humane Constantius, came to love his handsome, brave, and energetic son; and when the father died at York in 306, the troops proclaimed Constantine not merely as "Caesar" but as Augustus - emperor. He accepted the lesser title, excusing himself on the grounds that his life would be unsafe without an army at his back. Consequently Constantine fought successfully against the invading Franks. Later, with a British army he set out to put down the persecution of Christians forever. The greatest of all Roman Emperors, he annexed Britain to the Roman Empire and founded Constantinople. In the year 321 he decreed that the Christian Sunday be truly observed as a day of rest. In 325 he assembled the Council of Nicea in Bithynia, Asia Minor, which he attended in person. This Council formulated the Nicene Creed. The following edict of Constantine sets forth the standards of his life: "We call God to witness, the Savior of all men, that in assuming the government we are influenced solely by these two considerations - the uniting of the empire in one faith, and the restoration of peace to a world rent in pieces by the insanity of religious persecution." notes or source: ancestry.com & HBJ Constantine the Great (Flavius Valerius Aurelius Constantinus), born 265, died in May, 336 or 337, buried in the church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople. He was of British birth and education, and is known as the first Christian Emperor. With a British army he set out to put down the persecution of Christians forever. The greatest of all Roman Emperors, he annexed Britain to the Roman Empire and founded Constantinople. In the year 321 he decreed that the Christian Sunday be truly observed as a day of rest. In 325 he assembled the Council of Nicea in Bithynia, Asia Minor, which he attended in person. This Council formulated the Nicene Creed. The following edict of Constantine sets forth the standards of his life: "We call God to witness, the Savior of all men, that in assuming the government we are influenced solely by these two considerations - the uniting of the empire in one faith, and the restoration of peace to a world rent in pieces by the insanity of religious persecution." By his first wife (1) Minervina he was father of Flavius Valerius Crispus Caesar. He married (2) Fausta, sister of his step-mother, Theodora. Fausta and Theodora and their brother Maxentius were children of Maximinus, Roman Emperor (286-305). One writer, Brewer, said he was a giant, eight feet, six inches tall! His son Maxentius, Emperor (310-311), married Valeria, daughter of Galerius, Emperor (310-311), and his wife, Valeria, who was daughter of Diocletian, Emperor (284-305). Fausta and Constantine the Great had three sons: Constantine II., Constantius II., and Constants I., and a daughter, Helen, wife of Julian the Apostate.
Minervina
0242 - 25 JUL 306
I
Constantius
Constantius I (Flavius Valerius Constantius Chlorus) "the Pale", Emperor of Rome Governor of Dalmatia, appointed Caesar to rule Gaul and Britain March 1, 293. He was the son of *Eutropious, a Dardanian nobleman descended from the *Gordiani, and his wife, *Claudia, daughter of *Claudius II (Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius Gothicus), a virtuous and worthy Roman Emperor (268-270), who was a soldier, statesman, and a distinguished officer. Born in Illyria 214, he was trained in the hard school of warfare on the Danube frontier, and died of the Plague in 270, aged 55, whereupon his brother Marcus Aurelius Claudius Quintillus became Emperor. Constantius I became Emperor of Rome in May 305, and in right of his wife, King of England. He was born in 242 and died at Eboracum (present day York, England) on July 25, 306. On becoming "Caesar," he was required by Diocletian to put aside *Helena and to take Maximian's stepdaughter, Theodora, as his wife. From the first union, *Helena and *Constantius I had an illegitimate son, *Constantine the Great. He married (2) Theodora, daughter of Maximinus, Roman Emperor. Gibbon says *Claudia was the niece of *Claudius II (Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius Gothicus). Encyclopedia Brittanica maintains Constantius I's descent from Claudius Gothicus was a fiction.
0248 - 0336
Helen (St.
Helena of the
Cross) of Britain
88
88
Helen (Helena) of the Cross, called also "Britannica", born in 248, died in 328. The arms of Colchester were "a cross with three crowns." She was the first wife of Constantius I. Chlorus (Falvius Valerius Constantius), governor of Dalmatia, appointed Caesar to rule Gaul and Britain March 1, 293. He was the son of Eutropious, a Dardanian nobleman descended from the Gordiani, and his wife, Claudia, daughter of Claudius II. (Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius Gothicus), a virtuous and worthy Roman Emperor (268-270), who was a soldier, statesman, and a distinguished officer. Born in Illyria 214, he was trained in the hard school of warfare on the Danube frontier, and died of the Plague in 270, aged 55, whereupon his brother Marcus Aurelius Claudius Quintillus became Emperor. Constantius I became Emperor of Rome in May 305, and in right of his wife, King of England. He was born in 242 and died at Eboracum (present day York, England) on July 25, 306. He married (2) Theodora, daughter of Maximinus, Roman Emperor. The son of Helen and Constantius I. was Constantine the Great.
7 AUG 317 - 3 NOV 361
Constantius
~0270
Fausta
Constans
Helen
~0240 - 0310
Emperor
of Rome
Maximian
70
70
Maximian (Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus), Emperor of Rome
~0220
King of
Colchester
(Camulud) Coel
~0225
Strada
"the
Fair"
~0180
Cadvan
of
Cambria
~0181
Gladys verch
Lleuver
Mawr
~0147 - 0181
Lleuver
Mawr
34
34
Lleuver Mawr (Lucius the Great) , the Second Blessed Sovereign (Cadwalader was the Third Blessed Sovereign), was baptized by his father's first cousin, St. Timothy, who suffered martyrdom at age 90 on August 22, 139. When in 170 A.D. Lucius succeeded to the throne of Britain he became the first Christian king of the world. He married Gladys, daughter of Eurgen, granddaughter of Marius and his wife, the daughter of Boadicea (Victoria). Lucius built the Cathedral at Llandaff, the first Christian church in Britain, and changed the established religion of Britain from Druidism to Christianity. He died in 181, leaving an only one recorded child, a daughter, Gladys.
~0145
Gladys
verch
Eurgen
0218
Eutropius
of
Dardania
0220
Claudia
Crispina
~0165
Son of
Gordiani
and Claudia
~0115
Gordiani
of
Dardania
~0125
Claudia
II
Claudius
0177
Commodus
Lucius
Aurilius
Marcus Aurelius
Claudius
Quintillus
~0186
Bruttia
Crispina
0137 - 0180
Marcus
Aurelius
43
43
0141
Faustina
~0100
Juliano
Calpernius
Piso
~0100
Domitia
Lucila
Tranjanus
D. 0117
Marcus
Ulpius
Tranjanus
Pompeia
Plotina
Claudia Piso
Arrius
Antoninus
Calpernius Piso
Boionia
Procilla
Sevilla
Gaius
Calpernius
Piso
Mariamne
Caecin
Arria
T.
Flavius
Sabinus
Mariamne
Arria
~0407
Anlach
ap
Coronac
~0407
Marchell
ferch
Tewdrig
~0550
Nougoy
Noe ap
Artor
~0530
Artor
ap
Petr
~0510
Petr
ap
Cunocar
~0490
Cunocar
ap
Voteporix
~0475 - >0545
Voteporix
ap
Agricola
70
70
~0460
Agricola
ap
Tribunos
~0430
Tribunos Tryffin
ap Aed Brosc
Owain Fraisg
~0430
Gwledyr
ferch
Clydwyn
~0400
Aed Brosc
Owain
Fraisg
~0400
Clydwyn
ap
Ednyed
~0380
Ednyfed
ap
Annun
~0395
Tudwal
ap
Ednyfed
~0354
Victor
ap
Macsen
~0857
Rheingar
~0940
Prawst
Verch
Elise
~0984
Cynan
ap
Setsyll
~0885 - 0942
Elisedd
Ap
Anarawd
57
57
~0899
Inyr
ap
Cadfarch
~0913
Ednywain
Ap Einnyd
Bach
~1494
Ann
Norton
~1010
fitz
Winmarch
~1027
William
fitz
Richard
~0985 - 1071
Robert "The
Deacon" fitz
Winmarch
86
86
~1015
Suain
of
Essex
~0955
Wymarche
~0965
Scrob
~1020
Geoffrey
de
Neufmarche
~1030
Ada
de
Hugelville
~1008
Richard
de St.
Valerie
~1005
Ada
de
Hugleville
~0985
Herlouin
De
Hugleville
~0970 - >1011
Gilbert
de St.
Valery
41
41
~0974
Papia
of
Normandy
~1005
Bernard
II de St.
Valery
~0947
Bernard
I de St.
Valery
~0990
Thureyitel
de
Neufmarche
~1065 - <1129
Walter
FitzRoger
64
64
~1067
Berthe
~1045
Roger
De
Pitres
~1150
Eunice
De
Baalun
~1125
Lord
Drew De
Baalun
~1029 - 1094
Robert
I De
Brus
65
65
ROBERT DE BRUS,(+) a noble Knight of Normandy, came to England with the Conqueror; was at the Battle of Hastings; received ninety-four lordships in Yorkshire, of which the manor and castle of Skelton was the capital of his barony; died 1094 or 1100
~1025
Emma
of
Brittany
~1118 - 1164
Adam
de
Bruce
46
46
Agnes
Annand
~1049 - 1087
William
I De
Braose
38
38
WILLIAM DE BRAOSE,(+) a Norman Baron, received large grants from the Conqueror after the Conquest in several counties, Bramber Castle, in Sussex, being his headquarters; married Agnes, daughter of Waldron de St. Clare. In Normandy William de Braose was Lord of the Honor of Braose or Brieuze, a castle situated within two leagues of Falaise, where William the Conqueror was born
~1050 - 1194
Robert
De
Bruce
144
144
~1041 - 1080
Adam
De
Bruce
39
39
Went to England in 1050 as attendant to Queen Emma Daughter of Richard I of Normandy.
~1056
Matilda
De
Braose
~1070 - 1134
Philip
De
Braose
64
64
~1040 - 1080
Agnes
De
Clare
40
40
~1071
Adam
De
Braose
~1072
John
De
Braose
~1074
Hortense
De
Braose
~1084
Eleanor
De
Totenais
~1098
John
De
Braose
~1172 - 1210
Maud
De
Braose
38
38
~1112
Philip
De
Braose
~1114
Gildon
De
Braose
~1116 - >1151
Maud
De
Braose
35
35
~1051
Judael
De
Totenais
~1054
Pecquign
~1047
William
De
Clare
1001 - 1046
Rognvald
Brusesson
45
45
General in the army of King Olaf of Norway
1017
Duchess
of Russia
Arlogia
~0987 - 1031
Brusse
Sigurdsson
44
44
~0985
Ostrida
of
Gothland
~1030
Thora
Rognvaldsdatter
William
De
Bruce
~1140
Walter
Toft
~0987
Duke of
Russia
Valdemar
~0957
Earl of
Orkney
Segurt
~0927
Earl of
Orkney
Lother
~0930
Alfrica
~0897
Earl of
Orkney
Torfin
Gerberta
Earl of
Duncan
Caithness
~0867
Earl of
Orkney
Eynor
~0837
Earl of
Orkney
Raynwold
~0800
Enalin
~0810
Princess
of Norway
Aseda
~0770
King of
Norway
Rongwald
~0770
Duke of
Schleswig
Thebotow
~1050
Emma
Ramsay
~1070
Robert
De
Bruce
~1520
Lucy
Wyvill
~1110 - 1196
Adam
II de
Bruce
86
86
~1110
Johanna
de
Meschines
~1085
Robert
III de
Bruce
~1087 - 1142
Agatha
de
Bruce
55
55
~1085 - 1168
Ralph
Taillebois
83
83
~1110
Euphemia
~1108
Robert
De
Bruce
1142 - 1215
William
De
Bruce
73
73
1144
Christine
1164 - 1245
Robert
De
Bruce
81
81
~1145
Joanna
de
Meschines
~1179 - 1251
Isabel
De
Huntington
72
72
~1149
Isabel
De
Meschines
1210 - 1295
Robert 'The
Competitor'
De Bruce
85
85
1243 - 14 JAN 1303/04
Robert
De
Bruce
1252 - 1292
Margaret
Galloway
40
40
~1284
Elizabeth
De
Bruce
~1282
Margaret
De
Bruce
~1278
Nigel
De
Bruce
1293 - 1326
Walter
Allan
Stuart
33
33
2 MAR 1315/16 - 1390
Robert II
De Bruce
Stuart
Ruled from 1371 thru 1390. the High Stewart of Scotland. Earl of Strathern. He was crowned on Mar 27,1371 in Scone. Robert & Elizabeth had 4 sons and 6 Daughters. Robert & Euphemia had 2 sons and 1 daughter. one source says he died Apr 19, 1390. some sources indicated he had many concubine. "de Bruce."
~1442 - 1495
John
Stuart
53
53
1st Earl Darnley Baron Torbolton
~1169
Margaret
De
Huntington
1166 - 1240
William
De
Warenne
74
74
~1156 - ~1212
Maud
Plantagenet
de Warenne
56
56
~1078 - 1138
William
de
Warenne
60
60
1044 - 1089
William
de
Warenne
45
45
WARENNE or WARREN, WILLIAM, first EARL of SURREY (d. 1088), appears to have been the son of Rodulf or Ralph, called 'filius episcopi,' by his second wife, Emma, Rodulf himself being the son of Hugh (d. 1020), bishop of Coutances, by a sister of Gunnor, wife of Richard I (d. 996), duke of the Normans (G. Waters, Gundrada de Warenne, p. II; Archæological Journal, iii. 7; Cont. of Will. Jumièges, viii.37, makes his mother a niece of Gunnor). His name was derived from his fortress situated on the left bank of the Varenne, and called after that river, though later called Bellencombre (Seine-lnférieure), where there are some ruins of a castle of the eleventh century. He was a knight at the battle of Mortemer in 1054; and when, after the battle, Roger de Mortemer, his kinsman (he is incorrectly called his brother, ib. ; Stapleton says that he was uncle), offended Duke William, the duke gave the castle of Mortemer to William Warenne (Orderic, p. 658). At the time of the Conquest, William of Warenne accompanied William the Conqueror across from Normandy, fighting at the Battle of Hastings. William of Warenne was rewarded with huge amounts of land and helped his Lord, William the Conqueror put down revolts. He was responsible for putting up many castles in the quest to dominate the areas under his control. After the Conqueror's death, William supported William Rufus' claim to the throne and as a reward was granted the title of Earl of Surrey. He died in 1088 leaving a massive dynasty that would be powerful for several centuries. He was one of the lords consulted by the duke with reference to his complaints against Harold (d. 1066) [q.v.], and was present at the battle of Hastings (Will. of Poitiers, p. 135). When the Conqueror returned to Normandy in March 1067 he appointed William, with other lords, to assist the two vice-roys in England. Grants of land were given him by the king; in Sussex he held Lewes, where he erected a castle, and about a sixth part of the county. He is said to have built another castle at Reigate in Surrey, and a third at Castle Acre in Norfolk. In 1069 he received Conisborough in the West Riding, with its appendages, and he became wealthy, for in 1086 he held lands in twelve counties (Ellis, Introduction to Domesday, i.213; Watson). He fought against the rebels in the Isle of Ely in 1071, and is represented as having a special grudge against Hereward, who is said to have slain his brother Frederic (Liber de Hyda, p. 295; Gesta Herewardi, pp. 46, 54, 61; Liber Eliensus, c.105; Frederic occurs as a landholder in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, see Domesday, ff. 196, ii, 465b, 170b, 172b, but was dead in 1086). During the absence of the king in 1075 Warenne was joint chief justiciar with Richard de Clare (d. 1090? ) [q.v.], and took a leading part in suppressing the rebellion of the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk. In 1077 he and his wife Gundrada [q.v.] founded the priory of St. Pancras at Lewes, the first house of the Cluniac order that was founded in England; and in that year Lanzo was sent over by the mother-house of Cluni as the first prior (for the first and genuine charter of foundation see Sir G. Duckett, Charters and Records of Cluni, i. 44-5). In a spurious charter of foundation recited in 1417 (ib. pp. 47-53; Monasticon, v.12), which should not entirely be disregarded, William is made to say that he and his wife had been advised by Lanfranc [q.v.] to found a religious house, and that they determined on their foundation in consequence of a visit that they made to Cluni when they were intending to go on a pilgrimage to Rome, but were prevented by the war between the pope and the emperor, and when they were admitted into the brotherhood of the house. William made large grants to his priory (Manuscript Register of Lewes), it received a charter from the Conqueror, and held a high place among the 'daughters of Cluni' (Duckett, u.s.). In January 1085 William and other lords were engaged in the siege of Ste.-Susanne in Maine, which was held against the Normans by the viscount Hubert de Beaumont; they had no success, and were most of them wounded (Orderic, p. 649). William of Warenne remained faithful to William Rufus in the rebellion of 1088, and the position of his castle at Lewes rendered his loyalty especially useful to the king (ib. p. 667; Freeman, William Rufus, i. 59). Probably in that year Rufus gave him the earldom of Surrey; Orderic (p. 680) represents the grants as made at an assembly that the king held at Winchester in 1090, probably at Easter (see Freeman, u.s.), and adds that the earl died shortly afterwards. He also (p. 522) speaks of a grant of 'Surrey' as made to him by the Conqueror, and William's name occurs in the testes of two charters of the Conqueror to Battle Abbey as 'comes de Warr' (see Monasticon, iii. 244-5); but these testes are certainly spurious, indeed the charters themselves are not above suspicion. Nor does Orderic's notice of the grant of 'Surrey' necessarily imply a grant of the earldom; taken with his account of the grant by Rufus, it seems rather to exclude such a grant. Freeman indeed considers that William must have received a grant of the earldom from the Conqueror, and accordingly gives him the title of earl before l087 (see Norman Conquest, iv. 471n., 584, 659); but considering the number of times that his name occurs in genuine records of the Conqueror's time without the title of earl, as specially in 'Domesday,' there is no valid reason for Freeman's supposition. (The question is well discussed by Mr. Round in the Complete Peerage, vii. 322, art. 'Surrey.' The assertion of some genealogists that William held a Norman earldom of Warenne is contrary to an invariable Norman usage. On the custom of describing English earls by their Christian names followed by their title, and in some cases with a distinctive suffix, as 'Willelmus comes Warenna,' where Warenne is used as a surname to distinguish Earl William from other earls of the same name, see Round, Geoffrey de Mandeville, p. 145.) It is said that the earl was wounded in the leg by an arrow at the siege of Pevensey, and was carried to Lewes, where he died, after leaving his estates in England to his elder, and in Flanders to his younger, son (Liber de Hyda, p. 299; the authority, though late, may be accepted, see William Rufus, i.76n.; the estates in Flanders must have come to the earl by his marriage). The earl's death may then be dated 24 June 1088, for Pevensey was surrendered probably in May in that year (the day is given in the Manuscript Register of Lewes Priory, f. 105, and the date is also noted in Annales de Lewes ap. Sussex Archæological Collections, ii. 24; Dugdale, followed by Doyle, gives 24 June 1089). He was buried in the chapter-house of Lewes, with an epitaph given by Orderic (p. 680). He is described as remarkably valiant (Benoit de Ste. More, i. 189). He married (1) Gundrada [q.v.], sister of Gerbod, a Fleming, earl of Chester, and by her had two sons, William de Warenne (d. 1138) [q. v.] and Rainald or Reginald, who fought on the side of Duke Robert in 1090, was taken prisoner at Dive in 1106, and pardoned by Henry I (Orderic, pp. 690, 819, 821), and a daughter Edith [see under Gundrada], whose daughter Gundred married Nigel de Albini, and was mother of Roger de Mowbray I (d. 1188? ) [q.v.] After the death of Gundrada in 1085, William married (2) a sister of Richard Goet, or Gouet, of Perche Gouet (Eure et Loire) (0. Waters, u.s., p. 20; Bermondsey Annals, iii. 420). Besides the priory of Lewes, he founded the priory of Castle Acre as a dependency of Lewes (Monasticon, v. 49), and is said to have been a benefactor of St. Mary's at York (ib. iii. 546, 550). He is accused of having unjustly held lands belonging to the abbey of Ely, and it is related that on the night of his death the abbot heard his soul crying for mercy, and that shortly afterwards his widow sent a hundred shillings to the church, which the monks refused to receive as the money of one who was damned (Liber Eliensis, c. 119). The story is no doubt connected with a long dispute between his descendants and the monastery. His remains were discovered at Lewes in 1845, and were reinterred at Southover in that borough (Sussex Archæological Collections, ii. II, xl. 170; Archæologia, xxxi. 439). [Authorities cited in the text; Watson's Earls of Warren and Surrey; Stapleton's Norm. Excheq. and ap. Archæol. Journal, iii. I ; Registrum de Lewes, Cotton. MS. Vespasian, F. xv.; AdditMS. (Eyton's MSS.) 31939.] W. H. <http://patpnyc.com/pics/spacer.gif>
~1122
Reginald
de
Warenne
~1100
Gilbert
De
Lancaster
~1116 - 1187
Humphrey
III De
Bohun
71
71
~1086
Gundred
De
Gournay
1084
Edith
De
Warenne
~1011 - ~1093
Hugh
III de
Gournay
82
82
~0998
Sire de
Warenne
Rudolphus
~1020
Beatrice
De
Vascoeuil
~1149
William
II De
Lancaster
~1119 - 1 JAN 1168/69
William
I De
Lancaster
1184 - 1236
Walcheline
(Walter) De
Beauchamp
52
52
~1151 - 1 JAN 1190/91
Avice
De
Lancaster
~1153
Gilbert
de
Lancaster
~1070 - ~1150
Ketel
de
Lancaster
80
80
~0860
Alypsius
of
Devon
~1034
Alfgifu
Malet
~1040
Sheriff of
Lincoln
Thorold
~0955
Bishop of
Coutances
Hugh
~1055
Gerard
de
Gournay
~1086
Rainald
de
Warenne
1080 - 1129
Nigel
de
Albini
49
49
Sir Nigel d'Albini, who came to England with the Conqueror and obtained several extensive lordships after the Battle of Hastings. He was knighted by Henry I, who conferred many grants and favors upon him, and so attached him to his sovereign that he served him faithfully in his cause against Robert Curthose (Robert of Normandy, Crusader), the King's brother, whom he captured and delivered over to King Henry, for which he had further rich grants of confiscated manors. For distinguished military services in Normandy he was remunerated by a royal grant of the forfeited lands and castles of his maternal uncle, Robert de Mowbray, both in Normandy and England. These grants made him possessor of 240 knight's fees, and consequently one of the most influential barons of his time. He died at an advanced age and was buried with his ancestors in the Abbey of Bec in Normandy. He married first his Aunt Maud (wife of his Uncle Robert), daughter of Richard, Baron Aquila. by papal dispensation, her husband Robert aforesaid being then alive, but in prison for rebellion. From her, by whom he had no issue, he was separated by the Pope on account of consanguinity and the scandal the marriage caused. He married 2nd in 1118 Gundreda, daughter of Gerald, second Baron de Gournay by his wife Edith, daughter of William de Warren, first Earl of Surrey and his wife Gundreda, daughter of William the Conqueror. "KILBOURNE(*) or KILBURN, (Middlesex,) England, a hamlet in the Parish of St. John's, Hampstead, three miles from Hyde Park Corner, London. At the date of the Domesday Survey (A. D. 1080,) a part of the lands of Kilburn were owned and cultivated by Archil, a Dane, who was Lord of the adjacent Manor of Tormorbi, and by Hugo, son of Baldric the Norman. The Lords de Stuteville here held lands in 1095, at which date they were confiscated and given to Nigil de Albini, from whom they came to Roger de Mowbray, the second Baron of that name. Among the objects of interest now standing in the immediate vicinity of Kilburn, may be named, Newburgh Priory, the seat of Sir George Wombwell; Helmsley Castle, which was besieged and captured by Lord Fairfax, during the civil wars; and Shandy Hall, once the residence of the facetious Laurence Sterne, where he wrote "Tristram Shandy."
Gundred
de
Warenne
Ella de
Warenne
William
de
Glanville
1110 - 1170
John
D'Eu
60
60
~1168 - ~1220
Ella De
Warenne
Plantagenet
52
52
~1160
Geoffrey
Griffin
Plantagenet
~1162
Adela
Plantagenet
~1160
Sir
William
FitzWilliam
1231 - 1304
John
De
Warenne
73
73
1224 - 1275
Alice
De
Lusignan
51
51
1251 - 1282
Eleanor
De
Warenne
31
31
12 JAN 1253/54 - 1286
Sir William
De
Warenne
~1258 - 1295
Isobel
De
Warenne
37
37
1235 - 1272
Sir
Henry
de Percy
37
37
1188 - 1246
Hugh
X "le
Brun"
58
58
1221
Hugh
XI
1225 - 1296
Sir
William de
Valence
71
71
~1226
Isabelle
De
Lusignan
~1224
I
Geoffroy
~1139 - 1219
Hugh
IX De
Lusignan
80
80
~1170
Mathilde
de
Angouleme
~1132
Hughes
II
D'Amboise
~1152
Elizabeth
D'Amboise
~1137
Matilde
De
Vendome
~1238 - 1270
Hugh
XII
32
32
~1244
Alice
d'Angouleme
~1205 - 1256
Seigneur of
Fourgeres in
Brittany Raoul
51
51
Isabel
De
Craon
1191
Amaury
I De
Craon
Jeanne
De
Roches
>1226
Geoffrey
de
Geneville
1261 - 1293
Joan
de
Vere
32
32
~1287 - 1338
Alice
de
Warenne
51
51
~1317
Alice
Fitz
Alan
1257 - 1331
Robert
de
Vere
73
73
Robert de Vere, 6th Earl of Oxford; fought against Scots at Battle of Falkirk 1298; opposed Edward II's favourite Gaveston but fought for Edward against the rebel Earl of Lancaster 1322;that he tried unsuccessfully to have the office of Master Chamberlain restored him is further evidence that it had not been restored to his father; married Margaret (died 1296/7), sister of Edmund, 1st Lord (Baron) Mortimer, and dsps 17 April1331. [Burke's Peerage]
1231 - 1317
Alicia
de
Sanford
86
86
~1204 - ~1249
Gilbert
De
Sanford
45
45
Chamberlain to the Queen
~1215
Loretta
La
Zouche
1174
John
De
Sanford
~1025
Robert
de
Beaumeis
~1055
Richard
de
Beaumeis
~1085
Walter
de
Belmeis
~1210
Eudo
La
Zouche
~1115 - >1147
Philip
de
Belmeis
32
32
1136 - 1190
Alan
La
Zouche
54
54
~1140
Alice
de
Belmeis
1112 - 1141
I
Geoffrey
29
29
~1090
Hawise
Fergant
~1354
Eleanor
FitzAlan
~1322 - 20 JAN 1385/86
Alaive
FitzAlan
~1311 - 11 JAN 1370/71
Alianor
Plantagenet
of Lancaster
~1352 - 17 MAR 1414/15
Alice
FitzAlan
1350 - 1397
Richard
III
FitzAlan
47
47
~1348 - 1379
Sir
John
FitzAlan
31
31
~1344 - 1419
Joan
FitzAlan
75
75
~1350 - 1385
Elizabeth
de
Bohun
35
35
24 MAR 1340/41 - 16 JAN 1372/73
Humphrey
De
Bohun
~1315
Isabel
Le
Despencer
~1348 - 1397
Sir
Thomas
Holand
49
49
Knight of the Garter. Marshall of England.
1199 - 1238
Roger
La
Zouche
39
39
1282 - 1322
Maud
De
Chaworth
40
40
~1179 - 28 JAN 1231/32
Annora
Margaret
Biset
~1205
William
La
Zouche
~1122 - >1190
Maud(Mathilda)
De
Meschines
68
68
~1213
Alice
La
Zouche
1155 - 1214
Roger
De
Mortimer
59
59
ROGER DE MORTIMER, Lord of Wigmore, who was engaged in constant strife with the Welsh; married, first, Millicent, daughter of Robert Ferrers, Earl of Derby (ped. 110); second, Isabel, sister and heir of Hugh de Ferrers, of Oakham, in Rutlandshire; died 1215. By first marriage had JOAN DE MORTIMER
~1083 - 1158
Conan
III 'Le
Gross'
75
75
~1050
IV
Alan
~1230 - 1281
Aliva
Basset
51
51
1245 - 1328
Alinore
le
Despencer
83
83
1 MAR 1259/60 - 1326
Hugh
le
Despenser
1248
Anne
le
Despencer
~1211 - 1291
Thomas
Furnival
80
80
1249 - 20 FEB 1290/91
Hugh
de
Courtenay
1269 - 1308
Eleanor
de
Courtenay
39
39
1273 - 1340
Hugh
De
Courtenay
67
67
1277
Philip
de
Courtenay
1278
Thomas
de
Courtenay
1279
Margaret
de
Courtenay
1281
Avelina
de
Courtenay
1283
John
de
Courtenay
~1173
William
de
Roucestre
1285
Robert
de
Courtenay
1287 - 1335
Egeline
De
Courtenay
48
48
1289
Alice
de
Courtenay
1218 - 1258
Patrick
de
Chaworth
40
40
~1285 - 1334
Isabel
Le
Despenser
49
49
~1290 - 1326
Hugh
Le
Despencer
36
36
~1287 - 1313
Sir
Philip Le
Despenser
26
26
~1294
Margaret
Le
Despenser
1240 - 24 JAN 1297/98
Sir
William de
Ferrers
30 JAN 1270/71
William
de
Ferrers
1282 - 1342
Henry
De
Grey
60
60
1193 - 24 MAR 1253/54
William
de
Ferrers
1220 - 1260
Henry
De
Tibetot
40
40
Henry de Tibetot, in the 1st year of Henry III, 1216, being in arms for the King, had a grant in conjunction with Thomas Botteral of the possessions lying in the counties of York and Lincoln, of Adam Painel, who fought on the other side.
1242 - 1279
Robert
de
Ferrers
37
37
1244 - 1281
Agnes
de
Ferrers
37
37
~1174
Isabel
de
Ferrers
1226
Sibyl
de
Ferrers
1230 - 12 MAR 1297/98
Maud
De
Ferrers
1236
Eleanor
de
Ferrers
1218 - 1281
Maurice
II de
Berkeley
63
63
~1346
Anne
Tiptoft
~1178 - 1247
Agnes
de
Meschines
69
69
~1196
Alianore
de
Ferrers
~1194 - 1247
Sibyl
De
Ferrers
53
53
~1172 - ~1232
Mabel
de
Meschines
60
60
1138 - 1189
Bertrade
de
Montfort
51
51
~1174 - 1 FEB 1220/21
William
V
d'Aubigny
~1138 - 1193
William
IV d'
Aubigny
55
55
~1125 - ~1162
Robert
II de
Mohaut
37
37
~1224
Richard
D'Amundeville
~1196 - 1241
Maud
D'Aubigny
45
45
~1178
Amicia
de
Meschines
~1112 - 1168
Countess
of Evereux
Maud
56
56
~1100 - 1153
Ranulph "de
Gernon" de
Meschines
53
53
~1106 - 1189
Maud
FitzRobert
83
83
~1150 - 1195
Helewise
de
Glanville
45
45
~1235
Margery
Basset
~1192 - 1258
Matthew
de
Louvaine
66
66
~1185
Muriel
~1165
Alice
De
Hastings
~1140 - ~1189
Robert
de
Hastings
49
49
~1140 - >1219
Maud
de
Flamville
79
79
~1110 - 1169
Roger
de
Flamville
59
59
~1080 - 1206
Ivelta
de
Arches
126
126
~1090 - >1154
William
de
Arches
64
64
~1101
Ivetta
~1090 - <1130
Hugh
de
Flamville
40
40
~1109
Erneburga
de
Flamville
~1110 - <1166
William
fitz
Robert
56
56
~1120 - >1219
Hawise
de
Guerres
99
99
~1090
Robert
de
Guerres
~1060
Richard
de
Guerres
~1080 - ~1128
Robert
fitz
Walter
48
48
~1080
daughter of
Walter "The
Deacon"
~1050 - >1100
Walter
"The
Deacon"
50
50
~1020
tenant of
Queen Ealdyth
in Essex Tedric
~1032 - ~1100
Walter
fitz
Other
68
68
~1040
Beatrice
~1070
Gerald
of
Windsor
Otho
~1118
Count
of Loos
Louis
~1123
Agnes
of
Metz
~1093
V
Folmer
~1088 - 1139
V
Arnold
51
51
~1093
Agnes
of
Rheineck
Count of
Rheineck
Otho
Agnes
of
Loos
~1058 - ~1100
III
Gerard
42
42
~1068
Bertha
~1015
II
Gerard
~0985 - 1016
Count of
Wetterau
Gerard
31
31
~0965 - 0997
Herbert
of
Wetterau
32
32
Amalrade
~1028
Count
of Loos
Emmon
~1033
Ermengarde
of
Hornes
~1003
Count of
Hornes
Conrad
~0990 - 1021
Count
of Loos
Otto
31
31
~0960
Louis
of
Loos
~0965
Lutigarde
of
Tours
~0928
Count
of Loos
Rudolph
~0900 - 0930
Reiniet
30
30
~0870 - 0943
Neveling
73
73
~0840
Reinier
~1155 - ~1233
Alan
Basset
78
78
~1160
Aline
De Gai
~1189 - >1224
Aliva
Basset
35
35
~1154 - 1205
William
II De
Lanvaley
51
51
~1152 - 1213
William
de
Lovel
61
61
~1122
Philip
FitzRobert
~1130
de
Berkeley
~1134 - >1186
Alice
Adeliza de
Dunstanville
52
52
~1156 - 1220
Thomas
Basset
64
64
~1158 - 1207
Gilbert
Basset
49
49
~1104 - <1156
Alan
de
Dunstanville
52
52
Langetot
~1136
Cicely
de
Dunstanville
~1074 - ~1124
Reginald
de
Dunstanville
50
50
~1074
Adelaide
de
Lisle
~1044 - >1091
Humphrey
de
Lisle
47
47
~1044 - >1104
Robert
de
Dunstanville
60
60
1313 - 24 JAN 1375/76
Sir
Richard II
fitz Alan
~1334
Fulk II
le
Strange
~1066
William
De Monte
Acuto
WILLIAM MONTACUTE erected a Monastery at Montacute Mountain and endowed it with the borough and Market of Montacute. An ancient record written about 1538 states, that--- "within the ruins of the Castle at Montacute is now a mean house for a farmer, the town hath a poor market and is builded of stone as commonly all towns thereabout be" -(Leland's Itinerary, Vol. 1, Oxford, 1710.") But little is known with regard to this William Montacute except that, one author says---, "He was an only son" ---and that he took care of the estate left him by his father, and died leaving it entire to an only son.
~1314 - 1342
Edward
Le
Despencer
28
28
~1312 - 1374
Sir
Hugh Le
Despencer
62
62
~1322 - 1389
Elizabeth
Le
Despencer
67
67
1330 - 1368
Maurice
'The Valiant'
De Berkeley
38
38
5 JAN 1351/52 - 1417
Thomas
de
Berkeley
~1330
John
Bluet
~1356
John
de
Berkeley
~1358
Maurice
de
Berkeley
~1296 - 1361
Thomas
'The Rich'
De Berkeley
65
65
~1302 - 1337
Margaret
de
Mortimer
35
35
~1332
John
de
Berkeley
~1321 - 13 MAR 1384/85
Katherine
Clivedon
21 JAN 1350/51 - 1428
Sir
John de
Berkeley
1287 - 1330
Roger
De
Mortimer
43
43
Mortimer (môr´te-mer), Roger de. Eighth Baron of Wigmore and First Earl of March 1287-1330 Welsh rebel and lover of Edward II's wife, Isabella (1292-1358), with whom he raised an army to invade England from France (1326). They deposed Edward (1327) and ruled until 1330, when Edward III seized power and Mortimer was condemned to death by Parliament. Excerpted from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition © 1996 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Electronic version licensed from INSO Corporation; further reproduction and distribution in accordance with the Copyright Law of the United States. All rights reserved. English Magnate. He led the baronial opposition to Edward II's favourites (1320-22) and was imprisoned before fleeing to France. There he became the lover of Edwards Queen Isabella with whom he secured Edward's deposition and murder in 1327. He then ruled England in the name of Edwards son Edward III, until the latter caused him to be executed.
2 FEB 1284/85 - 1356
Joan
de
Geneville
~1306 - ~1331
Edmund
De
Mortimer
25
25
1272 - 1315
Guy
de
Beauchamp
43
43
Guy de Beauchamp, 2nd Earl of Warwick, acquired high military honors in the martial reign of Edward I, distinguishing himself at the Battle of Falkirk, for which he was rewarded with extensive grants of land in Scotland, at the seige of Caerlaverock, and upon different occasions and also beyond the seas. In the reign of Edward II (1306-1326) he likewise played a very prominent part. In 1310 his lordship was in the commission appointed by parliament to draw up regulations for "the well governing of the kingdom and the king's household," in consequence of the corrupt influence at that period by Piers Gaveston, in the affairs of the realm, through the unbounded partiality of the king; and in two years afterwards, when that unhappy favorite fell into the hands of his enemies, upon the surrender of Scarborough Castle, his lordship violently seized upon his person, and after a summary trial caused him to be beheaded at Blacklow Hill near Warwick. The Earl's hostility to Gaveston is said to have been much increased by learning that the favorite had nicknamed him "the Black Dog of Aedenne." For this unwarrantable proceeding his lordship, and all others concerned therein, received in two years the royal pardon, but he is supposed to have eventually perished by poison, administered by the partisans of Gaveston. The Earl married Alice, daughter of Ralph de Toni, son (by Alice de Bohun) of Ralph de Toni of Flamstead, County Herts, and had Thomas, his successor, John, Maud, Emma, Isabel, Elizabeth and Lucia. This great Earl of Warwick was, like most of the nobles of his time, a munificent benefactor to the church, having bestowed lands upon several religious houses, and founded a chantry of priests at his Manor of Elmley. His will bears date "at Warwick Castle" on Monday next after the Feast of St. James the Apostle 1315, and by it he bequeaths to Alice, his wife, a proportion of his plate, with a crystal cup, and half his bedding; as also all the vestments and books belonging to his chapel; the other moiety of his beds, rings and jewels he gives to his daughters. To his son Thomas his best coat of mail, helmet and suit of harness, and to his son John his second suit of mail, etc., appointing that all the rest of his armour, bows and other warlike "provisions" should remain at Warwick Castle for his heir. His widow married 2nd William la Zouche of Ashby, County Leicester. The Earl died at Warwick Castle August 12, 1315, succeeded by his eldest son, then but two years of age He distinguished himself at the battle of Falkirk, and caused Piers Gaveston to be beheaded, whose partisins afterward poisoned him, and he died at Warwick Castle, 12 August 1315 Giles de Beauchamp, youngest son, succeeded his elder brother Walter in 1328, and also inherited the estates of his brother William, and had already inherited by the settlement of his elder brother the lordship of Alcester, the manor house of which called Beauchamp's Court, he had license to fortify in the 14th of Edward III (1340), with a wall of stone and lime, and to embattle it, and he obtained similar permission regarding his house at Fresh-Water in the Isle of Wight, in the 16th year of the same reign, 1342/3
~1312 - ~1368
Lady
Agnes de
Mortimer
56
56
~1331
Hugh
De
Audley
~1255 - 1292
Sir
Piers de
Geneville
37
37
~1255 - 1323
Jeanne
de
Lusignan
68
68
Isabelle
de
Geneville
Beatrice
de
Geneville
~1232
Maud
de
Lacy
~1235 - 1269
Jeanne
De
Fougeres
34
34
Simon
de
Geneville
Jeanne
de
Geneville
1206 - 1240
Gilbert
De
Lacy
34
34
~1192
Christian
De
Vipont
~1255
Reynold de
Verdun-
Burghersh
~1208
Ralph
Le
Bigod
~1208
Berta
Furnival
~1158 - 1227
Robert
De
Vipont
69
69
~1210
Isabella
FitzGeoffrey
~1246
Richard
FitzJohn de
Mandeville
~1223
Isabel
Bigod
~1248
John
FitzJohn de
Mandeville
1145 - 1213
John
De
Builly
68
68
~1194 - 1241
John
De
Vipont
47
47
~1200 - 1238
Sir
Thomas
Furnival
38
38
Sir Thomas de Furnival, succeeded to the feudal barony, and Henry III committed to his wardship William de Moubray, son of Roger de Moubray, a great Yorkshire baron. Of this Thomas nothing more is known than his being slain by the Saracens in the Holy Land, where he had journeyed on a pilgrimage, and that his body was brought from thence by his brother Gerard and buried at Worksop. By Bertha, his wife, he had a son and successor, Thomas de Furnival, who had license in the 54th of Henry III to make a castle of his manor house of Sheffield, County York.
~1180
Bertha
~1146 - 1219
Gerard
de
Furnival
73
73
GERARD DE FURNIVAL,(*) with King Richard I at the siege of Acon in the Holy Land, had GERARD DE FURNIVAL, son and heir, who married Maud, daughter and heir of William de Lovetot (ped. 121), a great baron in Nottinghamshire, who had livery of her lands 5 John; died at Jerusalem 3 Henry III Girard de Furnival, who married Maud, daughter and heiress of William de Luvetot, a powerful Nottinghamshire baron, and had livery of her lands in the 5th year of King John, 1204. This feudal lord, being one of the barons who adhered to King John, was included in the commission to treat, on the part of the monarch, with Robert de Roos and other insurrectionary lords, and was appointed by the King to reside at Bolsover Castle, County Derby, for the better preservation of the peace in those parts. He died at Jerusalem, in the 3rd of Henry III, 1219, leaving three sons, Thomas, Gerard, and William.
~1164 - 1247
Maud
De
Lovetot
83
83
~1186
John
Furnival
~1188
Henry
III
Furnival
~1140
William
de
Lovetot
1146
Maud
Fitz-
Walter
1133 - 1198
Walter
FitzRobert
65
65
Walter FitzRobert, 2nd Lord of Dunmow Castle, who in the controversy between the Earl of Moreton, brother of Richard I, and the Bishop of Ely, Walter adhered to the Bishop, and was given custody of the Castle of Eye in Suffolk. He married 1st Maud, died 1140, daughter of Richard Lucie, and with her had the lordship of Disce in Norfolk. Married 2nd Margaret de Bohun and dying in 1198 was succeeded by his eldest son, Robert.
~1080
Richard
de
Lovetot
~1050
William
de
Lovetot
~1210 - 1266
Sir
Hugh Le
Bigod
56
56
~1212 - >1255
Sir
Simon
le Bigod
43
43
~1214
Roger
Le
Bigod
1177 - 1210
Margaret
De
Braose
33
33
1195 - 1266
Petronilla(Pernel)
De
Lacy
71
71
~1200
Egidia
De
Lacy
1198
Katherine
De
Lacy
~1194 - 1249
Sir
Simon de
Geneville
55
55
~1201
Beatrix
d'Auxonne
~1171
Etienne
~1174 - 1227
Beatrice
de
Chalons
53
53
~1144 - 1203
Guillaume
59
59
~1159
Beatrice
von
Hohenstaufen
~1146
Judith
de
Lorraine
~1150
Matthieu
II de
Lorraine
~1148
Sophie
de
Lorraine
~1152
Alix
De
Lorraine
~1145 - 1195
Helvide
de
Dampierre
50
50
~1090 - 1151
Guy I
de
Dampierre
61
61
~1106 - 1165
Helvide
de
Baudemont
59
59
~1140
Agnes
de
Dampierre
1126 - 1161
Guillaume
I de
Dampierre
35
35
~1075
Andre
de
Baudemont
~1080
Agnes
Guy
de
Baudemont
Agnes
de
Baudemont
Eustace
de
Baudemont
~1060 - 1106
Thibault
de
Dampierre
46
46
~1065
Isabel
de
Montlhery
~1271 - 1314
Eve la
Zouche
43
43
~1030
Lithuise
de
Troyes
~1294 - >1322
Ela De
Berkeley
28
28
~1298 - 1362
Isabel
de
Berkeley
64
64
~1250 - 4 JAN 1297/98
Milicent
de
Canteloup
~1276 - 11 MAR 1350/51
Sir
William la
Zouche
~1277
Lucy
la
Zouche
~1278
Eleanor
la
Zouche
~1279
Joan
la
Zouche
~1216 - 1254
William
III de
Cantelupe
38
38
~1186
William
II de
Cantelupe
~1188
John
de
Cantelupe
~1126 - ~1182
Nicholas
de
Cantilupe
56
56
~1156 - 1239
Nicholas
II de
Cantilupe
83
83
~1242 - <1271
Joan
Eve de
Cantelou
29
29
~1252
George
de
Cantelou
~1131
Eustachia
fitz
Ralph
~1101
Ralph
fitz
Ralph
~1102
William
de
Cantilupe
1245 - 1321
Sir Thomas
II de
Berkeley
76
76
1238 - 1267
Joan
de
Ferrers
29
29
~1283
Margaret
de
Berkeley
~1275
Alice
de
Berkeley
~1223 - 1276
Isabel
FitzRichard
De Chilham
53
53
~1170 - 1276
Joan
de
Somery
106
106
~1198 - 1265
Rohese
de
Dover
67
67
~1154 - 1211
Ralph
de
Somery
57
57
~1175
Ralph
II de
Somery
~1201 - 1273
Roger
De
Somery
72
72
~1180
William
Perceval
de Somery
~1153 - <1193
John
de
Somery
40
40
~1189 - ~1254
Sir
Ralph
Bassett
65
65
1120 - 1190
Maurice
'Make-Peace' fitz
Robert de Berkeley
70
70
~1127 - 1190
Alice
de
Berkeley
63
63
Jane
Green
~1107 - 1170
Roger
III de
Berkeley
63
63
~1077 - ~1130
Roger
II de
Berkeley
53
53
~1047
Roger
I de
Berkeley
~1050
Rissa
1096 - 1171
Robert 'The
Devout' fitz
Harding
75
75
~1099 - 12 MAR 1168/69
Eva
fitz
Estmond
~1065 - ~1125
Harding
fitz
Eadnoyh
60
60
~1036 - 1068
Eadnoyh
32
32
~1275
Beatrice
~1250 - 1283
Sir Patrick
II de
Chaworth
33
33
~1298
Maud
Plantagenet
1340 - 1368
John
de
Mowbray
28
28
John de Mowbray, 5th Baron Mowbray of Axlholme, married Elizabeth de Segrave, daughter of Margaret, Duchess of Norfolk, and her husband John, Lord Segrave, daughter of Thomas de Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk and Marshal of England, son of Edward I, King of England, by his 2nd wife, Margaret, daughter of Philip III, King of France.
~1314
Mary
Plantagenet
1386 - 1405
Eleanor
Holand
19
19
~1370
Humphrey
de
Stafford
6 JAN 1381/82
Edmund
Holand
~1375 - 1439
Margaret
de
Holand
64
64
1406
Ralph
Neville
1434
Joan
Holand
1314 - 1360
Thomas
Holand
46
46
Thomas Holland, Original Knight of the Garter, and Joan Plantagenet, Lady of the Garter
1374 - 1398
Roger
de
Mortimer
24
24
1388
Anne
de
Mortimer
~1392
Edmund
de
Mortimer
~1395
Isabel
de
Mortimer
1371 - 14 MAR 1419/20
Sir Edward
De
Cherleton
5th Lord Cherleton and Lord of Powys. He was a Knight of the Garter and feudal lord of Powys, Mongtomeryshire, Wales. He was brother and heir of John, 4th Lord Cherleton. He was summoned to Parliament from December 2, 1401, as "Edwardo de Cherleton de Powys." In 1410 he sustained great losses form the rebellion of Owen Glendower.
1403 - 27 JAN 1441/42
Joyce
de
Cherleton
~1400
Joane
De
Cherleton
1 FEB 1350/51 - 1381
Edmund
De
Mortimer
1355 - 1382
Philippa
Plantagenet
27
27
~1375
Edmund
De
Mortimer
12 FEB 1370/71 - 1417
Elizabeth
de
Mortimer
1375 - 1400
Philippa
De
Mortimer
24
24
~1373
John
de
Mortimer
1338 - 1368
Lionel
Plantagenet
29
29
II.--The second son of King Edward (John and the two Williams having d. in infancy), was Lionel, who was b. at Antwerp Nov. 29, 1338. He was a man of great strength and beauty of person. He was m. in 1352 to Elizabeth DeBergh, dau. of Lord of Connaught, and third Earl of Ulster and head of one of the greatest of the Anglo-Norman houses in Ireland. Her mother was Maud, dau. of Lancaster, who after the death of her husband, who was murdered in 1332, was m. to Ralph Ufford. On Nov. 13, 1362, Lionel was created Duke of Clarence. This latter title was derived from the town of Clare in Suffolk, the lordship of which with other shares in the divided Gloucester estates had been inherited by Elizabeth from her grandmother, Elizabeth of Clare, the sister of Gilbert, the last Earl of Gloucester, of the house of Clare. Elizabeth d. in 1368 and left a dau. who m. Edmund Mortimer, Earl of Northumberland and Earl of March. He was sent by his father as Viceroy into Ireland and there proved himself inefficient as a ruler. After the death of his wife in 1336 a second marriage was proposed, and Humprey Bohun, Earl of Hereford, was sent to negotiate a match with Violanti Galeazzo, dau. of the Lord of Paria and with elaborate arrangements the marriage was consummated in 1368. Soon after the ceremonies he was taken ill and died. Personally, Lionel does not appear to have had any lofty aspirations. Thomas de Bergh, brother of Elizabeth, the wife of Lionel, who m. Lucy de Bellague, dau. of John de Bellaque, was grandfather of Margaret de Bergh, who m. Sir John Zouche. Margaret de Bergh was grandmother of Elizabeth Bowett, wife of Sir John Dunham, who was dau. of Nicholas Bowett who m. Elizabeth Zouche, dau. of John Zouch and Margaret de Bergh. Edmund Mortimer, who m. Philippa was the father of Anne Mortimer, who m. Richard, the son of Richard, Earl of Cambridge, and Maud Clifford and grandson of Edmund, Duke of York. Their son Richard, Duke of York, m. Cicely Neville, dau. of Ralph Neville, first Earl of Westmorland. These were the parents of Richard the 3rd. Duke of Gloucester, who m. Anne Neville, dau. of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, and Ann Beauchamp, dau. of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick. Elizabeth Mortimer, a sister of Edmund, m. Henry Percy, known as Hotspur. They had Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland and Elizabeth Percy, who m. Lord John Clifford. She had Thomas Clifford, 1414, and Maud Clifford who m. Richard, Earl of Cambridge, who was executed in 1415, and second, John Neville, Lord Latimer. John Clifford was the grandson of Roger Clifford, b. July 10, 1333, and Maud Beauchamp, and son of Thomas Clifford, sixth Baron of Westmorland, and Elizabeth Ross. Mary, a sister of Thomas Clifford, m. Philip Wentworth
1332 - 1363
Elizabeth
de
Burgh
31
31
1311 - 1369
Philippa
D'Avesnes
58
58
1330 - 1376
Edward
Plantagenet
46
46
Edward, surnamed the Black Prince, from the colour of his armour. He was born 1361 and died July 8, 1376. This gallant soldier, the immortal of Crecy and Poiters, married this Joane, daughter and heiress of his great uncle, the Earl of Kent, Edmund of Woodstock, son of Edward I. (Chart shows their relationship.) By him she had two sons, Edward, who died young, and the only surviving son Richard, born 1366, afterwards King Richard II, 1377-1399. (The Black Prince, Edward, died in the lifetime of his father, Edward III, and had he survived him Joane would have been Queen of England
~1247 - 1304
Jean II
D'Avesnes
57
57
FEB 1333/34
Joan
Plantagenet
16 FEB 1335/36
William
Plantagenet
of Hatfield
1340 - 3 FEB 1397/98
John
Plantagenet
III.--Edward's third son was John of Gaunt, so-called from Ghent, the place of his birth. On August 6, 1335, he was created Duke of Lancaster. He m. three times: first, to Constance of Castile, by whom he had Constance; second, to Blanche, dau. of Henry Plantagenent, Earl of Derby, grandson of Edmund Crounchback, brother of Edward I; lastly, he m. Mary Bohun, dau. of Earl of Hereford and sister to the wife of his uncle, Thomas, Duke of Gloucester. By Catharine Swynford, he had John Beaufort, who was created Duke of Somerset, and Joan Beaufort, who was the second wife of Ralph Neville, who was the father of Anne Neville, who d. in 1480, and who had m. Humphrey Stafford, b. 1402, d. 1460, who was the first Duke of Buckingham. This duke was the father of Margaret Stafford, the wife of Robert Dunham. Richard, son of the Black Prince, a boy of eleven years of age, succeeded to the Crown under the title of King Richard II, in accordance with a decree of his grandfather. The great change from a sovereign of consummate wisdom and experience to a youth of such an age was not immediately felt by the people. They were ready to admire him for the sake of his brave father. He was flattered by the lords and ladies of the court, who declared him to be the most beautiful, the wisest and best of mankind. To flatter a boy in this manner did not have a tendency to develop any good in him. Being a minor, the government was vested in the hands of his three uncles, the dukes of Lancaster, York, and Gloucester. The duke was supposed to have some thoughts of the throne himself, but he was not popular, and the memory of the Black Prince to the people was enough to force him to submit to his nephew, though on different occasions he took measures to embarrass the King in some of his enterprises. CHILDREN OF JOHN OF GAUNT, son of Edward III. By Blanche, dau. of Henry of Lancaster; d. 1369. Henry IV was b. 1367, m. Mary Bohun, dau. of the Earl of Hereford. Began to reign Oct. 1, 1399. Died March 20, 1413. II.--Phillippa, m. John of Portugal. III.--Elizabeth, m. John Holland, Earl of Huntington, and Duke of Exeter. He d. 1400. By Constance of Castile; d. 1394. IV.--Cathrine, m. Henry, Prince of Austria, afterwards King of Castile. Before marrying by Cathrine Swynford, d. May 10, 1403. V.--John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset. VI.--Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Lincoln, Winchester and Cardinal. VII.--Thomas Beaufort, Earl of Dorset and Duke of Exeter. VIII.--Joan Beaufort, m. Robert Ferrers, and second, in 1397, Ralph Neville, first Earl of Westmoreland, who d. on October 21, 1425. By her marriage to Neville she had Anne Neville, who m. Humphrey Stafford, first Duke of Buckingham, parents of Margaret Stafford, who m. Robert Dunham. STAFFORD. Lord Edmund de Stafford m. Margaret, dau. of Ralph, Lord Basset, of Drayton, Staffordshire, who d. in 1299 and granddaughter of Ralph Basset, who d. in 1265. Edmund d. in 1308.
1341 - 1402
Edmund
Plantagenet
61
61
IV.--The fourth son of the royal family was Edmund, b. at King's Langly Hertfords, June 5, 1341. He was created Earl of Cambridge by his father, and in 1385 Duke of York of the court, who declared him to be the most beautiful, the wisest and best of mankind. To flatter a boy in this manner did not have a tendency to develop any good in him. Being a minor, the government was vested in the hands of his three uncles, the dukes of Lancaster, York, and Gloucester. The duke was supposed to have some thoughts of the throne himself, but he was not popular, and the memory of the Black Prince to the people was enough to force him to submit to his nephew, though on different occasions he took measures to embarrass the King in some of his enterprises. IV.--The fourth son of the royal family was Edmund, b. at King's Langly Hertfords, June 5, 1341. He was created Earl of Cambridge by his father, and in 1385 Duke of York by Richard II, his nephew. He was twice married: first, to Isabel, of Castile, who d. Nov. 3, 1393, and second, in 1395, to Joan, dau. of Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent, who surviving him m. three other husbands and d. in 1434. In 1347 he received a grant of land beyond the Trent, belonging to John de Warren, Earl of Surrey. He d. at Langley, August 1, 1402. Edmund was the least remarkable of his father's sons. He was an easy going man of pleasure and had no care for worldly riches and was very much under the guidance of his elder brother and Duke of Lancaster. During the minority of Richard II he acted with his brother as guardian and when Richard took the government into his own hands, for three successive years, was made regent during the absence of the King. In transacting business the Duke of Gloucester paid little attention to the will of Edmund, as Lancaster had him under his control. Richard II was unable to cope with the machinations of his uncle, the Duke of Lancaster, and he was accused of certain accusations which were presented against him and in consequence of which he was deposed. Lancaster immediately put his forces in motion and procured the election of his son, Henry IV, instead of Richard. This began the contest between the houses of York and Lancaster. The Yorkists were designated by the white and the Lancasters by the red rose. These wars extended from 1452 to 1494. Philippa, dau. of Lionel, second son of Edward III, sided with the Yorkists. CHILDREN OF EDMUND, Duke of York, son of Edward III. By his first wife: I.--Edward, during his father's life, was Earl of Rutland and Duke of Aumale and succeeded as second Duke of York. He was killed at the battle of Agincourt in 1415. II.--Richard, Earl of Cambridge, d. in 1415. He had been m. to Maud Clifford. III.--Constance, m. Thomas le Dispenser, Earl of Gloucester. She d. Nov. 28, 1416.
1344
Mary
Plantagenet
1346
Margaret
Plantagenet
MAR 1341/42
Blanche
Plantagenet
7 JAN 1354/55 - 1397
Thomas
Plantagenet
~1281 - 1337
Willem
III
D'Avesnes
56
56
~1291 - 7 MAR 1341/42
Jeanne
De
Valois
12 MAR 1269/70 - 1325
Charles
III
Capet
~1302 - 1332
Thomas
de
Burgh
30
30
~1307
Maud
of
Lancaster
~1335
Thomas
II de
Burgh
Ralph
Ufford
Lucy
de
Bellague
John
de
Bellaque
1328 - 1360
Roger
De
Mortimer
32
32
~1342 - 5 JAN 1379/80
Phillipa
De
Montague
1352
Margery
De
Mortimer
1313 - 1355
Elizabeth
De
Badlesmere
42
42
1274 - 1322
Bartholomew
De
Badlesmere
48
48
1304
Giles
De
Badlesmere
1306 - 1363
Margery
De
Badlesmere
57
57
1310 - 1366
Maud
De
Badlesmere
56
56
1314
Margaret
De
Badlesmere
~1232 - 1301
Gunceline
II de
Badlesmere
69
69
~1266 - 1310
Joan
fitz
Bernard
44
44
~1277
Margaret
de
Badlesmere
~1208 - 1306
Ralph
fitz
Bernard
98
98
~1210
Joan
Aguilion
~1180
Robert
Aguillon
~1185
Agatha
Beaufoe
~1155
Fulk
de
Beaufoe
~1188 - 1271
Ralph
fitz
Bernard
83
83
~1158 - 1214
Thomas
fitz
Bernard
56
56
~1163
Alice
Jarenville
~1128
Thomas
fitz
Bernard
~1205 - 1248
Guncelin
de
Badlesmere
43
43
~1210
Miss
Peyferer
~1231
Bartholomew
III de
Badlesmere
~1170
Fulk
Peyferer
~1181
Bartholomew
II de
Badlesmere
~1151
Bartholomew
de
Badlesmere
1375 - 1415
Richard
Plantagenet
40
40
1411 - 1460
Richard
Plantagenet
49
49
York, House of, English royal line that in the 15th century disputed the throne of England with the house of Lancaster. Both York and Lancaster were branches of the royal house of Plantagenet. Their dynastic rivalry developed into the Wars of the Roses (1455-1485). When Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, laid claim to the throne occupied by King Henry VI, who was head of the house of Lancaster, it was agreed that the house of York should inherit the throne on Henry's death. Henry's wife, Margaret of Anjou, however, wanted her son Edward to succeed his father. In 1455 she raised an army to defend her claim. Richard was killed in battle in 1460, but in 1461 his eldest son was proclaimed King Edward IV, the first Yorkist king. On the death of Edward IV in 1483, his 12-year-old son, King Edward V, was promptly imprisoned by his paternal uncle, who had himself crowned King Richard III. Edward V and his brother later disappeared, and tradition holds Richard responsible for their deaths. In 1485 Richard III was killed in the Battle of Bosworth Field. With his death, the York dynasty came to an end as the Tudor family took the throne. Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
~1413
Isabel
Plantagenet
1355 - 1392
Isabel of
Leon and
Castile
37
37
~1377
Edward
Plantagenet
~1374
Constance
Plantagenet
1415 - 1495
Cecily
de
Neville
80
80
1439 - JAN 1475/76
Anne
Plantagenet
1442 - 1483
Edward
IV
Plantagenet
40
40
Earl of March Edward IV ascended to the throne in 1461 finally achieving the goal of seating a member of the York family pushed forth by his father, Richard, duke of York, for the entire decade of the 1450s. He fought alongside his father at the battle at Ludford after which Edward fled to Calais with the earl of Warwick and the earl of Salisbury. Edward defeated the Lancastrians at Mortimor's Cross and was proclaimed king in March 1461. In 1464 he married Elizabeth Woodville which became the root of many future troubles. Unable to muster enough forces to confront a set of Lancastrian armies (one of which was led by Richard Neville, earl of Warwick), Edward fled to Holland in September 1470. The next year he returned and defeated the Lancastrian forces at the battle of Tewkesbury. That same year he had Henry VI executed. Upon his death in 1483, his legacies include two young sons, Edward V and Richard, both of which would be murdered in the Tower of London that year.
1443
Edmund
Plantagenet
1449 - FEB 1477/78
George
Plantagenet
1452 - 1485
Richard
III
Plantagenet
32
32
Duke of Gloucester, RICHARD III - A MAN AND HIS TIMES <http://www.richard111.com/richardpict.gif> In 1399, the English Crown changed hands. The childless Richard II, last king in an unbroken line of descent since the Norman Conquest, was deposed and murdered by his cousin Henry of Bolingbroke, who became King Henry IV. The Lancastrian kings - Henry IV, Henry V of Agincourt fame, and Henry VI - descended from John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, the third surviving son of Edward III. The heirs of Richard II, stemming from Lionel, Duke of Clarence and Edward, Duke of York, the second and fourth sons of Edward III, were disinherited from the throne. When Henry V died in 1422, his son Henry was an infant of nine months. A regency directed by a council of leading peers and churchmen were put in place until Henry VI came of age to rule. As was the case with a royal minority, Henry's childhood and youth were dominated by squabbling nobles determined to control the young king. Unfortunately, Henry VI remained governed by various groups throughout his adult life. Richard Plantagenet, was born on the 2nd of October, 1452 at Fotheringhay Castle. His father, the Duke of York, the heir of Richard II, possessed a better claim to the English throne than did Henry VI. His mother, Cecily Neville, known as "The Rose of Raby" was a member of the numerous and powerful Neville family. When Richard was a young child, the political scene in England changed. Henry VI spent large parts of his reign in a catatonic state, unable to recognize his chief ministers or govern the kingdom. The Duke of York, as the leading peer of the realm, was appointed Protector while the king was in a catatonic state. Meanwhile, Henry's French queen, Margaret of Anjou, established her own court party and was jealous of the Duke of York's power and position. She pursued a policy that deliberately alienated the Duke and deprived him of a role and voice in the government. Margaret, by her partisan politics, made the mistake of attaching the English crown to a faction. Thus, families such as the Nevilles, who were unable to get impartial justice from the king, turned to the Duke of York to redress their local grievances. It was in this fashion that York, who was positioned as a reformer, built his support. At the Battle of St. Albans , matters came to a head. Over the next five years, the Duke of York's family lived in a state of uncertainty and risk, their fortunes changing with each battle. In 1459, York was defeated at Ludlow and fled to Ireland. Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, and York's eldest son, Edward, escaped to Calais in France. The Duke of York claimed the throne; and in December of 1460, York, and his seventeen year old son, Edmund, Duke of Rutland were ambushed and killed at the Battle of Wakefield. The Yorkists accepted York's eldest son, Edward of March as king. by the He cemented his title by soundly defeating the Lancastrians at Towton thus deposing Henry VI. During the struggle, Richard, along with his brother, George, were sent to the Netherlands for their safety. Richard and George returned back to England. Edward IV created George, Duke of Clarence, and shortly thereafter, Richard, was created Duke of Gloucester. In November of 1461, Richard was sent to Middleham Castle in North Yorkshire to begin his knightly training under his cousin, Richard Neville, known as the "Kingmaker". Richard spent the next three years of his life beginning his apprenticeship in knightly conduct. His training consisted of learning Latin, French, law, mathematics, penmanship, music, horsemanship and military training. He learned to practice with sword, dagger and battle-axe, and how to manage a hawk and learn to hunt. He learned the fine arts of his time - harping, singing, piping and dancing. While he was at Middleham, he would have been in the company of Warwick's second daughter, the Lady Anne Neville, who was four years his junior. In 1464, the political scene changed again. While Warwick was conducting negotiations for Edward IV to marry a French princess, Edward took the unprecedented step of secretly marrying a commoner, a Lancastrian widow named Elizabeth Woodville. Elizabeth Woodville had a large family which included two sons, and twelve brothers and sisters. All of the Woodvilles were now entitled to good marriages, which in effect cornered the market on English heirs and heiresses. By elevating the queen's family, Edward IV was attempting to build a court of his own, dependent upon him, in an effort to assert his independence from Warwick. The Woodvilles were known for their greediness, snobbery and grasping ways. The result of the situation was that the only prospective bridegrooms left of sufficient rank for Warwick's two heiresses were Edward IV's young brothers, George and Richard. Edward, who had pulled away from Warwick, forbade the marriages. With Warwick moving from estrangement to open rebellion, Richard of Gloucester's time at Middleham came to an end. He was forced to chose between his brother and his cousin of Warwick. In an effort to win their support, Warwick offered the brothers his daughters as a bribe. George and the older daughter, Isabel were married in Calais in 1469, and George went over to Warwick's side. His personal motto of "Loyaulte Me Lie" was a testament of his unswerving loyalty for his brother, Edward IV. Warwick and George raised a rebellion which resulted in the deaths of two of the Woodvilles - the father and brother of the Queen. In 1470, Warwick and Clarence formed an alliance with the exiled Lancastrians, including the ex-queen Margaret of Anjou. To seal the bargain, Warwick married his 14 year old daughter Anne to Margaret's son, Edward of Lancaster. The new alliance invaded England forcing Edward and Richard to flee the country. The victorious Warwick put Henry VI back on the throne, but his success was short lived. Edward and Richard returned to England after the winter and mustered their forces. Richard persuaded George into a reconciliation, and together the three brothers defeated the Lancastrians at Barnet where Warwick and his brother, John Neville were defeated and killed. Shortly thereafter, Prince Edward of Lancaster was killed in the Battle of Tewkesbury. Contemporary sources state that he was cut down by George of Clarence's men while fleeing the battlefield. Shortly after Tewksbury, Henry VI died in the Tower of London on the orders of Edward IV leaving no Lancastrian heir. After the battle of Tewkesbury, George of Clarence took Anne Neville into his charge by sending her to her sister Isabel. Richard was kept occupied helping Edward IV with the reins of the country and was preparing to go north against the Scots. Richard was then Constable and Admiral of England. He additionally received Warwick's old office of Great Chamberlain and the stewardship of the Duchy of Lancaster beyond Trent. Edward transferred Richard's seat of power from the Welsh Marches to Yorkshire. Richard relinquished the offices of Chief Justice and Chamberlain of South Wales. Before he set forth for the north, he was given the Warwick estates of Middleham, Sheriff Hutton and Penrith, and later received the remaining portions of the Warwick properties in Yorkshire and Cumberland. By early August, James III was willing to negotiate the violations of the truce between England and Scotland. By September, Richard returned to London and sought Anne at the residence of George of Clarence. Clarence wanted the vast Neville inheritance for himself. Richard quietly appealed to his brother, Edward IV, and when Richard returned to Clarence' home, he was informed that Anne was no longer in his household. Clarence hid her in a London cook shop disguised as a servant. Richard found Anne and placed her in the sanctuary of St. Martin Le Grand. It was the only refuge where she would be protected from Clarence and also not placed in any obligation to Richard. Edward IV requested that his two brothers meet before his council to debate Clarence' claim over the inheritance of Anne Neville. Clarence claim was illegal and unreasonable. After a long and bitter legal struggle with George, Richard kept the Warwick property already bequeathed to him by Edward IV. Richard relinquished the remainder of Warwick's lands and property, and surrendered the office of Great Chamberlain of England for the modest office of Warden of the Royal Forests beyond Trent and agreed to George receiving the earldoms of Warwick and Salisbury. He married Anne Neville in 1472 and they retired to Middleham Castle and began to establish their household. During 1473, Anne gave birth to a son who was named Edward. Richard spent the twelve years of his life bringing peace and order to an otherwise troublesome area of England. Through his hard work and diligence, he attracted the loyalty and trust of the northern gentry. His ability for fairness and justice became his byword. He had a good working reputation of the law, was an able administrator and was militarily formidable. He encouraged trade in Middleham and secured a license from Edward IV so the village could hold two fairs a year. One of his greatest achievements was the Scottish Border campaigns during the years of 1481-82. Under his leadership, on behalf of Edward IV, he won a brilliant campaign against the Scots that is diminished by our lack of understanding of the regions of his times. Richard III enjoyed a special relationship with the City of York. His affiliation with the City of York and their affection for Richard is evident in their archives. When in York, he often stayed at the Augustinian Friars in Lendal. In 1477, Richard and Anne became members of the Corpus Christi Guild. Richard III, known to be a pious man, was instrumental in setting up no less than ten chantries and procured two licenses to establish two colleges, one at Barnard Castle in County Durham and the other at Middleham. It is known that his favorite residence was Middleham Castle and he was especially generous to the church raising it to the status of collegiate college. The statutes, written in English rather than Latin, were drawn up under his supervision. In 1478, Richard's brother, George of Clarence, continued to dabble in treason. George's wife Isabel had died in childbirth causing George to overstep his bounds for the last time. He accused one of Isabel's servants of poisoning her and the baby. He took it upon himself to put her on trial and execute her on a malicious charge, thus subverting the king's justice. George was imprisoned by Edward IV under a sentence of death. Richard hurried south to try to prevent the sentence from being carried out. Hostile chroniclers remarked on how strongly Richard pleaded with Edward for his brother's life. George of Clarence, was privately executed in a butt of Malmsey in the Tower of London in 1478. After that, Richard went back to Middleham and rarely came to court. In April of 1483, Edward IV died suddenly. Richard was appointed "Protector" in Edward's will since Edward's oldest son was too young to govern on his own. The Woodvilles fearing their power was at an end ignored the will and tried to take control of the young king. If they could crown young Edward before Richard came to London, his protectorship would lapse and the Woodvilles would govern the country. Richard was notified of his brother's death by William Hastings, Edward IV's Lord Chamberlain and friend. Hastings warned Richard of the conspiracy against him and advised him to "get you to London and secure the person of your nephew". Taking 100 men with him, Richard stopped at York where a requiem mass was said for the soul of his brother; he also led his men in an oath of fealty to his nephew and king. The Woodvilles had raised Edward exclusively and attempted to rule through him once he was crowned. Richard, aided by his cousin, Henry Stafford, the Duke of Buckingham, caught up with the young king's escort at Stony Stratford. Richard arrested the Woodville conspirators, confiscated barrels of arms and armor and brought Edward V to London for his coronation. Elizabeth Woodville, hearing of the news, fled into sanctuary with her other children. While in London, Richard discovered another plot against his life, this time led by William Hastings. While Richard was preparing for his nephew's coronation, Robert Stillington, who had been the Chancellor of England twice under Edward IV, informed Richard that Edward V could not be legally crowned king. Stillington revealed that Edward had been betrothed to another woman when he married Elizabeth Woodville, making all of the royal children illegitimate. Medieval church law held a consummated betrothal to be as legally binding as a marriage, and illegitimate children were not allowed to inherit. With the untimely death of his brother, Edward IV in 1483, he was petitioned by the Lords and Commons of Parliament to accept the kingship of England. <http://www.richard111.com/1page.gif> On July 6 1483, Richard III was crowned. His first and only Parliament was held during January and February of 1484. He passed the most enlightened laws on record for the Fifteenth Century. He set up a council of advisors that diplomatically included Lancastrian supporters, administered justice for the poor as well as the rich, established a series of posting stations for royal messengers between the North and London. He fostered the importation of books, commanded laws be written in English instead of Latin so the common people could understand their own laws. He outlawed benevolences, started the system of bail and stopped the intimidation of juries. During his royal progress of 1483, Richard refused great gifts of cash from various cities saying he would rather have their goodwill than their money. Bishop Thomas Langton said: "He contents the people where he goes best that ever did prince, for many a poor man hath suffered wrong many days, hath been relieved and helped by him, and his commands on his progress. And in many great cities and towns were great sums of money given to him, which he hath refused. On my troth, I never liked the conditions of any prince so well as his. God hath sent him to us for the weal of us all." He re-established the Council of the North in July of 1484 and it lasted for more than a century and a half. He established the College of Arms that still exists today. He donated money for the completion of St. George's Chapel at Windsor and King's College in Cambridge. He modernized Barnard Castle, built the great hall at Middleham and the great hall at Sudeley Castle. He undertook extensive work at Windsor Castle and ordered the renovation of apartments at one of the towers at Nottingham Castle. In October of 1483, Richard learned that Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham had begun an uprising against him. Buckingham, who also had a claim to the throne might have thought of himself as another "Kingmaker". In any event, the rebellion was not as successful as Buckingham had hoped; he was captured and executed for treason. Richard III called him "the most untrue creature living". Despite his attempt to safeguard the country, Richard's kingship was filled with personal tragedy. In 1484, while Anne and Richard were at Nottingham Castle, they received word that their beloved son, Edward, who was at Middleham, died suddenly after a brief illness. The Croyland Chronicler reported "In the following April, on a day, not far from King Edward's anniversary, all hope of the royal succession raised, died at Middleham castle after a short illness, in 1484, and in the first year of King Richard's reign. You might have seen the father and mother, after hearing the news at Nottingham where they were then staying, almost out of their minds for a long time when faced with the sudden grief." Richard appointed his nephew, John De La Pole, Earl of Lincoln, as his new heir. His wife, Anne, never recovered from the loss of her son, and died almost a year later. Her body was borne to Westminster Abbey and laid to rest on the south side of St. Edward's Chapel. Richard wept openly at her funeral and shut himself off for three days. In eighteen months, Richard lost his brother, son and wife. In eighteen months, he lost, brother, son and wife. Throughout these personal tragedies, the endless plots against his life, he remained steadfast to his obligations. <http://www.richard111.com/boar.gif> A hostile chronicler reported that while Queen Anne was ailing, Richard hastened her death to marry his niece, Elizabeth of York. The comment arose from a chronicler because his niece appeared in a dress made from the same material as that of the Queen. The dress was due more to the Queen's kindness to her niece. Upon hearing the rumor, Richard sent Elizabeth away to join the household at Sheriff Hutton Castle where his other nieces and nephews lived. Then he gathered together the most influential men in London and publicly denounced the rumor. This act demonstrates his integrity and courage. The unofficial heir to Lancaster was now Henry Tudor. Tudor was descended on his mother's side from John of Gaunt's illegitimate Beaufort children, and on his father's side from an unauthorized liaison between Henry V's widowed French queen, Katherine of Valois and Owen Tudor, a Welsh esquire. With the backing of the French king and an army gathered from the jails and mercenaries of France and the remnants of the Lancastrian army, they prepared to invade England in the summer of 1485. By May, Richard left London for the last time and journeyed to Windsor. His Knights and Esquires of his Household accompanied him. Francis, Viscount Lovel, was sent to Southampton to lead the forces in case Tudor landed in the southern counties. John, Duke of Norfolk, was stationed in Essex. Sir Robert Brackenbury, the Constable of the Tower, was defending the capital. Richard left Windsor and departed for Kenilworth. By the middle of June, he was at the centre of his realm at Nottingham Castle. He sent his niece, Elizabeth of York, along with her sisters, his nephews and his illegitimate son, John of Gloucester, to Sheriff Hutton. From Nottingham, he sent instructions to the commissioners of array in all the shires alerting them to the invasion. On the 11of August, a messenger brought news to Richard, who had been at Beskwood Lodge, that Henry Tudor had landed at Milford Haven in South Wales on Sunday, the 7th of August. Richard sent word to Northumberland, Brackenbury, Lovel and Norfolk commanding them to join him in Leicester. On Friday, August 19th, Richard left Nottingham and traveled south toward the city of Leicester. On the 20th of August, Richard was in Leicester with his captains mustering his men. By late afternoon, he learned from his scouts that the army of Lord Stanley was at Stoke Golding while William Stanley was at Shenton. Henry Tudor and his men were at Atherstone. On Sunday, the 21st of August, Richard and his royal army left the city of Leicester. Richard and his commanders took their position on Ambion Hill at Bosworth Field. The Duke of Northumberland and Lords Thomas and William Stanley, along with their troops, waited out the start of the battle while the rest of Richard's army engaged Henry's exiles and French mercenaries. After Richard's commander, the Duke of Norfolk was killed, Richard tried to win the conflict by a surprise charge at Tudor, before the waiting armies of the Stanley and Northumberland chose sides. Richard led his household men against Tudor. Richard killed Tudor's standard bearer, William Brandon, and a giant of a man named Sir John Cheyney. When Richard was only a few feet away from Tudor, Stanley's army moved, surrounding and killing Richard and the men of his Household. As he swung his battle-axe, he was known to have shouted "Treason - Treason - Treason" as he was slain. Northumberland and his army remained waiting on the sidelines and never engaged in battle to assist Richard. Richard was 32 years old when he was killed at the Battle of Bosworth. His reign showed great promise. He was the only king from the north, the last of the Plantagenet kings and the last king of England to die in battle. Polydore Vergil, Henry Tudor's official historian wrote "King Richard, alone, was killed fighting manfully in the thickest press of his enemies". Through betrayal, Henry Tudor became Henry VII. Henry attempted to backdate his reign to the date before the battle in order to attaint for treason men who had fought for King Richard III. John Spooner, rode into the city of York the day after the battle. The Mayor and Alderman of York assembled in the council chamber and recorded "it was recorded by John Spooner that King Richard, late mercifully reigning upon us, was piteously slane and murdered to the grete heaviness of this citie". The citizens of York who regarded Richard as their "right high and mighty prince" did not forget nor forgive the betrayal of Richard. The Duke of Northumberland, who commanded a large army, was motivated by jealousy because of Richard's success as Lord of the North had eclipsed Northumberland's power, and Richard's wife's family were his family's greatest rivals. Several years later, Northumberland was pulled from his horse and hanged on the spot while trying to collect taxes for Henry. Henry VII's reign was not the golden age his writers proclaimed. Rumors and Yorkist pretenders plagued his reign. Henry VII wanted to glorify the Tudors and justify his kingship. In the Tudor view of English history, the coming of Henry VII saved England from disorder, bloodshed and evil, as personified by the king Henry had defeated. Thus chroniclers and historians under Tudor began a campaign to blacken Richard's name and reputation. With the accession of James I, his defenders began to speak out, and into the present day, the defenders of King Richard III continue to speak out in his defense. King Richard III appealed to the ideals of loyalty, lordship and honor. He knew how to command, how to reward, but most of all, he knew how to inspire. Sir Clements Markham stated: "The true picture of our last Plantagenet king is not unpleasant to look upon, when the accumulated garbage and filth of centuries of calumny have been cleared off the surface". The handiwork of the Tudor historians against this much maligned monarch can be summed up best in Paul Murray Kendall's 1955 biography - "What a tribute this is for art - what a misfortune this is for history". ©The Richard III Foundation, Inc. <http://www.richard111.com/richardpict.gif>
1444
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
1446 - 1503
Margaret
Plantagenet
57
57
1364 - 1425
Ralph
De
Neville
61
61
Sir RALPH DE NEVILLE, K.G., 6th Baron de Neville of Raby, created in 1377, Earl of Westmoreland, Earl Marshal of England. He was Constable of the Tower and member of the Privy Council of King Richard. He died 1425 Sixth BARON NEVILLE. Ralph Neville, sixth Baron Neville and first Earl of Westmoreland, eldest son of Raby and Maud Percy, dau. of Henry Percy, who d. in 1352. In 1380, in his sixteenth year, he entered the service, in the French expedition under the King's uncle, Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of Buckingham, afterwards Duke of Gloucester, who knighted him. In 1384 he was associated with his father in receiving the last instalments of David Bruce's ransom. In 1385 he was appointed joint governor of Castile, with the eldest son of Lord Clifford. On the death of his father in 1388, at the age of twenty-four, he became Baron of Raby. On the 24th of May, 1389, he was made warden of the royal forests north of Trent. The following year he was employed in negotiations with Scotland. Neville's power was great in the north country where he, as Lord Raby and Brancepath in the bishopric of Durham and Middleham, and Sheriff Hutton in Yorkshire, was fully the equal, simple baron though he was, of his cousin, the head of the Percies. His support was therefore worth securing by King Richard when, in 1397, he took his revenge upon the Duke of Gloucester and other lords. The Lord of Raby was already closely connected with the crown and the court partly by marriages and alliances. He had secured for his eldest son, John, the hand of Elizabeth, dau. of the King's step-brother, Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent, who was deep in Richard's counsels, and he himself had taken for his second wife, Joan Beaufort, dau. of John of Gaunt, the King's uncle. In the distribution of rewards among the King's supporters, on Sept. 29, 1397, Neville was made Earl of Westmoreland. When Richard drove his brother-in-law Henry, Earl of Derby, out of the realm, and refused him possession of the Lancaster estates, on John of Gaunt's death, Westmoreland took sides against the King, and was one of the first to join Henry when he landed in Yorkshire in July, 1399. He and his relative, Northumberland, who had joined Henry at the same time, represented the superior lords temporal in the parliamentary deputation, while on Sept. 29, 1399, received in the tower, Richard's renunciation of the crown. The next day Westmoreland was granted for life the office of Marshal of England, which had been held by the banished Duke of Norfolk. When Henry IV was crowned on the 13th of October, Westmoreland bore the small sceptre, his younger half brother, John Lord Latimer, who at the time was a minor, carried the sceptre royal. The garter vacated by the death of Edmund, Duke of York, in August, 1402, was bestowed on Westmoreland. During the following year the Percies revolted and Westmoreland found an opportunity of weakening the great rival house in the north. One of Hotspur's grievances was the transference of his captaincy of the Roxbury Castle to Westmoreland in 1402. The day after the battle of Shrewsbury, in which Hotspur was slain, Henry wrote to Westmoreland and other Yorkshire chiefs, charging them to levy troops and intercept the Earl of Northumberland, who was marching from the north, Westmoreland drove the old Earl back to Warkworth and sent an urgent message to Henry, advising him to come into the north, where reports of his death were being circulated by the Percies. The King came and three days later transferred the wardenship which Northumberland had held since 1399, to Westmoreland. On his return south, Henry directed Westmoreland and his brother, Lord Furnival, to secure the surrender of the Percy castles. Soon after Northumberland was pardoned by the King and reconciled to Westmoreland. Westmoreland and Somerset were the only two Earls in the council of twenty-two whom, the King was induced, by the urgency of the Commons, to designate in parliament as his regular advisors. Northumberland's reconciliation was not sincere. In 1405 he was again in revolt and remembering how his plans had failed and how he had been foiled by Westmoreland, two years before, he began with an attempt to get his cousin into his power by surprise. Westmoreland happened to be staying in a castle belonging to Sir Ralph Eure when it was suddenly beset one night by Northumberland at the head of four hundred men. But Westmoreland had received timely warning and was already flown. The flame of rebellion broke out in three different points. Northumberland was moving from the north to effect a junction with Sir John Faucenburg and other Cleveland connections of the Percies and Mowbrays who were in arms, and with youthful Thomas Mowbray, Earl Marshal and Archbishop Scrope, who raised a large force in York and advanced northward. One of Mowbray's grievances was that the office of Marshal of England had been given to Westmoreland and that he therefore had an additional spur to prompt action against the threatening combination. Taking with him the young Prince John, he threw himself between the two main bodies of rebels and routed the Cleveland force and intercepted the Archbishop and Mowbray little more than five miles north of York. Westmoreland finding himself the weaker in numbers had to recourse to strategem. Explanations were exchanged between the two camps and Westmoreland expressing approval of the articles of grievance submitted to him by Scropy, invited the Archbishop and Earl Marshal to a personal conference. They met with equal retinues between the two camps. Westmoreland declared their demands most reasonable and promised to use his influence with the King. They there joyfully shook hands over the understanding. The unsuspecting archbishop was now easily induced to dismiss his followers with the cheerful news. As soon as they were dispersed Westmoreland laid hands upon Scrope and Mowbray and soon after handed them to the King, under whose order they were executed. The crisis over, Westmoreland returned to his employment, associating with him his eldest son, John, and during the rest of the reign was constantly engaged on the frontiers. He had made himself one of the great props of his brother-in-law's throne. Two of his brothers, Lord Furnival, who for a time was war-treasurer, and Lord Latimer were Pcers, and towards the close of the reign he began to make those fortunate marriages for his numerous family by his second marriage, which enabled the younger branch of Neville to play so decisive a part in after years. One of the earliest of these marriages was that of his dau. Catherine in 1412 to the young John Mowbray, brother of the unfortunate Earl Marshal, who had been entrusted to his guardianship by the King. Westmoreland d. Oct. 1, 1425. His wife, Catharine Swynford, widow of Sir Robert Ferrers, survived him and d. Nov. 13, 1440
1379 - 1440
Joan
de
Beaufort
61
61
~1398
Joan
De
Neville
1399 - JAN 1477/78
Katherine
de
Neville
1400 - 1460
Richard
De
Neville
60
60
~1402
Henry
De
Neville
1402 - 1480
Anne
de
Neville
78
78
She was godmother to the unfortunate Prince Edward, son of Henry VI, and did not die until Sept. 20, 1480, surviving a second husband, Walter Blount, Lord Mountjoy.
~1403
Thomas
De
Neville
1403
William
de
Neville
~1405
Cuthbert
De
Neville
1407 - 1476
Sir
Edward
de Neville
69
69
~1407 - 1472
Eleanor
de
Neville
65
65
~1408
Robert
De
Neville
~1413
John
De
Neville
~1414
George
Neville
~1365 - 1396
Lady
Margaret
de Stafford
31
31
1386 - 26 FEB 1457/58
Ralph
de
Neville
1389
Lady
Alice De
Neville
1386
Lady
Philippa
de Neville
~1390
Lady
Margaret
de Neville
1387
Sir John
De
Neville
~1392
Lady
Matilda
de Neville
~1334 - 1386
Sir Hugh
De
Stafford
52
52
HUGH DE STAFFORD, 3d Baron and 2d Earl of Stafford, served in the retinue of the Black Prince and was distinguished in all the wars of Edward III. (died 1386). Hugh Stafford, second Earl of Stafford, was b. in 1342, m. Philippa de Beauchamp, dau. of Thomas de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, who d. in 1369. He was created Baron in 1371. He was the son of Ralph Stafford, first Earl of Stafford. He accompanied the Prince of Wales to Aquitaine, 1363, followed him in his Spanish expedition. On the death of his father and his elder brother, he succeeded as second Earl of Stafford. He was present at and assisted in the coronation of Richard II on July 16, 1377. He was afterward appointed member of the committee of lords to advise the Commons. In 1379 he was appointed to examine the public finances and in 1380 to regulate the royal household. He d. Sept. 26, 1386, on his way homeward from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. CHILDREN OF HUGH STAFFORD, second Earl, son of Ralph Stafford, first Earl. I.--Ralph, was a great favorite with the King and Queen whose companion he had been from boyhood. In 1385 he marched, with his father, northward with the King's army. While the army was near York, he was slain by Sir John Holland. II.--Thomas, succeeded his father as third Earl of Stafford, and d. in 1392. III.--William, succeeded his brother Thomas, a fourth Earl and d. in 1395. IV.--Edmund, succeeded his brother William as fifth Earl of Stafford. He was killed at the battle of Shrewsbury, July 21, 1403, fighting on the King's side. V.--Margaret, m. Ralph Neville, first Earl of Westmoreland. VI.--Catharine, married Michael de Pole, third Earl of Suffolk. VII.--Joan, m. after her father's death, Thomas Holland, Duke of Surrey. Humphrey Stafford, Earl of Devonshire, son of Ralph Stafford, first Earl Stafford was sheriff of Somerset and Dorset and Kinsman of Humphrey, first Duke of Buckingham. He m. Elizabeth Dunham, the heiress of the Dunhams of Hook, near Beaminster, Dorset, who had as her first husband, Sir John Mattravers
1334 - 1386
Lady
Phillippa de
Beauchamp
52
52
~1368 - 1392
Sir Thomas
De
Stafford
24
24
~1372 - 1395
Sir
William de
Stafford
23
23
~1375
Katherine
de
Stafford
2 MAR 1376/77 - 1403
Edmund
de
Stafford
14 FEB 1312/13 - 1369
Sir
Thomas de
Beauchamp
Thomas Beauchamp, the fourteenth Earl of Warwick, descended from Gundred, daughter of William the Conqueror, wife of William De Warren, the first Earl of Surrey. Thomas de Beauchamp, 3rd Earl of Warwick, one of the Original Knights of the Garter. When four years old the king, Edward II, soliciting a dispensation from the Pope to enable him to marry his cousin Catherine, daughter of Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, under whose guardianship the young Earl had been placed. An alliance eventually formed when his lordship had completed his 15th year. In two years afterwards the Earl, by special license from the Crown, was allowed to do homage and to assume his hereditary office of Sheriff of Worcestershire and Chamberlain of the Exchequer. This nobleman sustained in the brilliant reign of Edward III the high military renown of his illustrious progenitor, and became distinguished in arms almost from boyhood. He was at Cressy in France, with Edward, the Black Prince, and after their heroic achievements in France he arrayed himself under the banner of the cross and reaped fresh laurels on the fields of Palestine. This nobleman almost rebuilt Warwick Castle, which had been demolished in the time of the de Maudits, adding strong gateways with fortified gates and embattled towers, and rebuilt the walls. He likewise founded the choir of the collegiate church of St. Mary, built a booth hall market place and made the Town of Warwick toll free. His lordship had 7 sons and 9 daughters. He died November 13, 1369, of the plague at Calais, where he was employed in a military capacity, and had just achieved a victory over the French. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Thomas, 4th Earl of Warwick Thomas de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, b 1313, was a knight of the Garter. He was a descendant of the Sureties Roger and Hugh Bigod and Henry de Bohun. At the age of two years he succeeded his father as Earl of Warwick and later took an active part in the wars in Scotland and in France. One of the chief commanders of the battle of Crecy, he distinguished himself at Poitiers, and was constituted marshal of England. he and his wife Catherine Mortimer are both buried in a splendid tomb at Warwick, where their effigies may still be seen. Samuel Richardson and Josiah Ellsworth Author: Ruth Ellsworth Richardson Call Number: CS71.R52 This book contains the history and genealogy of the Richardson and Ellsworth families of Massacusetts. Bibliographic Information: Richardson, Ruth Ellsworth. Samuel Richardson and Josiah Ellsworth. Privately Published. 1974. Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick Born: 14th February 1314 Died: 13th November 1369 at Calais, France This eminent person, the son of Guy, Earl of Warwick, by Alice, sister and heiress of Robert, Lord Tony of Flamsted (Herts), passed an active life in the service of his country; having been, from an early period, constantly entrusted with high and confidential employments. His father dying in 1315, when the subject of this memoir was in his infancy, the custody and tuition of his person were first committed to the King Edward II's favourite, Hugh Le Despenser; but, upon the accession of Edward III , Warwick Castle and his other extensive possessions were granted to Roger, Lord Mortimer, afterwards Earl of March, until he should attain his majority. Before that event, however, he was armed by the King; and, as a special favour, admitted to the livery of his lands. The Earl of March having, in 1337, received a grant of the benefit of his marriage, bestowed on him, his eldest daughter, the Lady Katherine Mortimer, having first obtained a Papal dispensation on account of the consanguinity of the parties in the third and fourth degrees. In 1342, Thomas was in the retinue of Henry, Earl of Lancaster on the march of the army into Scotland for the establishment of John Balliol as King; and, in the following year, was constituted Marshal of England; having, about the same time, the distinguished honour of being numbered, together with his younger brother, John, Lord Beauchamp, amongst the founders of this Most Noble Order of the Garter. In 1346, he attended the King on his military expedition into France; and it is recorded of him that, upon landing at La Hogue, he gave immediate proof of his valour by attacking, with only one esquire and six archers, a body of one hundred Normans. After slaying sixty of them, he made way for the disembarkation of the English host. Earl Thomas was one of the chief commanders who, under Edward, Prince of Wales, led the van at the Battle of Crécy. In 1347, he was at the Siege of Calais with a considerable retinue. At the Battle of Poitiers, in 1356, he added greatly to his fame and acquired other advantages. For he obtained £8,000 as the ransom for William De Melleun, Archbishop of Seinz, whom he had made prisoner in that memorable conflict. His heroic spirit induced him, during the truce with France, in 1362, to seek renown in the crusade against the Lithuanians, to which he devoted three years. At his return, Thomas brought, with him, the son of their sovereign, whom he caused to be baptized in London and, as his sponsor, gave him his own Christian name. In 1366, the Earl was despatched by the King into Flanders upon special service; and, in the same year, had a renewal of the grant of the office of Marshal. King Edward, having in consequence of an infraction of the treaty with France, in 1368, sent into that Kingdom, John, Duke of Lancaster and Humphrey De Bohun, Earl of Hereford, with an army, which lay encamped near Calais. However, from a scarcity of provisions, many died of famine and pestilence. The Earl of Warwick, hearing that the French army had manifested a disposition to give battle, hastened, at the head of a chosen band, to the coast of the enemy, who, thus surprised, fled with precipitation. Upon disembarking, he expressed himself indignant at the delay which had occurred in the attack, saying, "I will go on and fight before the English bread we have eaten be digested;" and thereupon entered and wasted the Isle of Caux. But, on his return towards Calais, he died on the 13th November 1369. Apparently having fallen sick with the pestilence, though rumours later emerged concerning his poisoning by Humphrey De Bohun. Thomas left "not behind him his equal in warlike qualities and fidelity to the King and Kingdom." His body was conveyed to England and interred in the Collegiate Church of St. Mary in Warwick, where a splendid tomb, with the effigies of himself and his countess, is still extant to their memory. Previous to his departure upon his last and fatal expedition, he made his will, dated at Chelsea, 6th September 1369. By Katherine, his countess, he had seven sons and nine daughters. The sons were: Guy, who predeceased him, leaving three daughters; Thomas , who succeeded him as Earl of Warwick; Reyburn, who died without male issue; William, Baron of Bergavenny; Roger, who died without issue; John; and Jerome. The two last probably died young, as they are not mentioned in any of the entails. Edited from George Frederick Beltz's "Memorials of the Most Noble Order of the Garter" (1861). Thomas de Beauchamp, 3rd Earl of Warwick, one of the Original Knights of the Garter. When four years old the king, Edward II, soliciting a dispensation from the Pope to enable him to marry his cousin Catherine, daughter of Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, under whose guardianship the young Earl had been placed. An alliance eventually formed when his lordship had completed his 15th year. In two years afterwards the Earl, by special license from the Crown, was allowed to do homage and to assume his hereditary office of Sheriff of Worcestershire and Chamberlain of the Exchequer. This nobleman sustained in the brilliant reign of Edward III the high military renown of his illustrious progenitor, and became distinguished in arms almost from boyhood. He was at Cressy in France, with Edward, the Black Prince, and after their heroic achievements in France he arrayed himself under the banner of the cross and reaped fresh laurels on the fields of Palestine. This nobleman almost rebuilt Warwick Castle, which had been demolished in the time of the de Maudits, adding strong gateways with fortified gates and embattled towers, and rebuilt the walls. He likewise founded the choir of the collegiate church of St. Mary, built a booth hall market place and made the Town of Warwick toll free. His lordship had 7 sons and 9 daughters. He died November 13, 1369, of the plague at Calais, where he was employed in a military capacity, and had just achieved a victory over the French. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Thomas, 4th Earl of Warwick.
~1310 - 1363
Lady
Katherine
de Mortimer
53
53
1337
Guy
de
Beauchamp
16 MAR 1337/38 - 1401
Thomas
de
Beauchamp
Thomas de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, son of Thomas de Beauchamp, Original Knight of the Garter. This Thomas was Knight of the Garter and was appointed by Parliament as Governor of the young king, Richard II (son of Joan, Maid of Kent, and Edward, Black Prince, son of Edward III), but did not long enjoy the office as he joined the Duke of Gloucester in constraining the assembling of the Parliament, for which he was seized at a feast given to him by the king, tried and condemned to death, the sentence was commuted by the king and he was sent to the Isle of Man and his castles and manors, etc., granted to Thomas Holland, but brought back and kept in the Tower during the remainder of Richard's reign, but was released upon the accession of Henry IV and all his honors and possessions restored. He died 1401 and left Richard, Katherine, Margaret and Elizabeth.
1339 - 1361
John
De
Beauchamp
22
22
~1335 - JAN 1401/02
Maud
de
Beauchamp
~1342
Roger
de
Beauchamp
1343
Joan
de
Beauchamp
1343
Hurom
(Jerome) de
Beauchamp
1344
Reynburn
de
Beauchamp
1345 - 1383
Alice
De
Beauchamp
38
38
1345
Elizabeth
de
Beauchamp
1347
Richard
de
Beauchamp
1348
Agnes
de
Beauchamp
1350
Margaret
de
Beauchamp
1352
Juliana
de
Beauchamp
1354
Catherine
de
Beauchamp
1356
Isabel
de
Beauchamp
1358 - 1411
William
De
Beauchamp
53
53
William de Beauchamp, Knight of the Garter, Lord of Abergavenny. (He was cousin of John, Lord Hastings, Lord of Abergavenny and Earl of Pembroke, whose grandmother was Agnes Mortimer, sister of William's mother, Catherine de Mortimer.) He succeeded to the Castle and Honour of Abergavenny by virtue of the entail made by John, Earl of Perbroke, who was Seignior of Wieseford and Bergavenny. He served under the gallant Chandos and subsequently, in the wars with France, with great distinction, and in 1375/6 was, by Edward III, nominated Knight of the Garter. Having succeeded to the lands of Abergavenny, he was summoned to Parliament from July 23, 1392, to December 18, 1409, as a baron as Lord Bergavenny of Beauchamp of Bergavenny. All the writs being directed to "Willilmo Beauchamp de Bergavenny." In 1399 he was appointed Justiciary of South Wales and Governor of Pembroke. He married Joan, sister and eventually (1415) co-heir of Thomas FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel, and daughter of Richard Fitz-Alan, Earl of Arundel, by Elizabeth, daughter of William de Bohun, Earl of Northampton. He died May 8, 1411. His widow, who was born 1375, held the Castle and Honour of Abergavenny in dower until her death on November 14, 1435.
~1242 - 1309
William
de
Leyburne
67
67
1303
Isabel
de
Beauchamp
1305 - 1359
Elizabeth
de
Beauchamp
54
54
1307
John
de
Beauchamp
1308 - 1369
Matilda
Maud De
Beauchamp
61
61
1311
Emma
de
Beauchamp
1315
Lucia
Jane de
Beauchamp
1255 - 1295
Ralph
De
Toeni
40
40
~1230
Alice
de
Bohun
1276
Robert
De
Toeni
~1208 - 1275
Humphrey
De
Bohun
67
67
~1208 - 1241
Maud
de
Lusignan
33
33
~1210
Henry
De
Bohun
~1178 - 1219
Raoul
de
Lusignan
41
41
~1176 - 1220
Henry de
Bohun 'the
Surety'
44
44
Henry de Bohun the Surety, was Earl of Hereford and was 5th in descent from Malcolm III, King of Scotland, a crusader, he died on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1220. His wife was Maud Fitz-Geoffrey
~1180 - 1236
Maud
FitzGeoffrey
De Mandeville
56
56
~1143 - 1182
Humphrey
IV de
Bohun
39
39
Earl of Hereford and Constable of England
1151 - 1228
Margaret
De
Huntington
77
77
~1178
Margaret
De
Bohun
~1120 - 1178
Adeline
de
Warenne
58
58
20 MAR 1140/41
IV
Malcolm
1143 - 1214
William
I "The
Lion"
71
71
* King of Scotland from 1165 to 1214; although he submitted to English overlordship for 15 years (1174-89) of his reign, he ultimately obtained independence for his kingdom. William was the second son of the Scottish Henry, Earl of Northumberland, whose title he inherited in 1152. He was forced, however, to relinquish this earldom to King Henry II of England (reigned 1154-89) in 1157. Succeeding to the throne of his elder brother, King Malcolm IV, in 1165, William joined a revolt of Henry's sons (1173) in an attempt to regain Northumberland. He was captured near Alnwick, Northumberland, in 1174 and released after agreeing to recognize the overlordship of the king of England and the supremacy of the English church over the Scottish church. Upon Henry's death in 1189, William obtained release from his feudal subjection by paying a large sum of money to England's new king, Richard I (reigned 1189-99). In addition, although William had quarreled bitterly with the papacy over a church appointment, Pope Celestine III ruled in 1192 that the Scottish church owed obedience only to Rome, not to England. During the reign of King John in England, relations between England and Scotland deteriorated over the issue of Northumberland until finally, in 1209, John forced William to renounce his claims. In his effort to consolidate his authority throughout Scotland, William developed a small but efficient central administrative bureaucracy. He chartered many of the major burghs of modern Scotland and in 1178 founded Arbroath Abbey, which had become probably the wealthiest monastery in Scotland by the time of his death. William was succeeded by his son Alexander II. (source: www.scotlandroyalty.org)
1148
Princess of
Scotland
Matilda
Christina
de
Ireby
1146 - 11 JAN 1203/04
Princess of
Scotland
Ada
1240
Gerard
De
Furnival
~1080 - >1131
Humphrey II
"the Great"
de Bohun
51
51
~1228 - 1295
Roger
Ralph
De Toeni
67
67
~1260 - >1283
Mary
23
23
1189
Ralph
De
Toeni
1233 - 11 FEB 1264/65
Constance
De
Toeni
~1159
Roger 'de
Conches'
De Toeni
~1168
Constance
De
Beaumont
1237 - 1298
William
De
Beauchamp
61
61
William de Beauchamp inherited not only the feudal barony of Elmley from his father, but had previously derived from his mother the Earldom of Warwick (originally possessed by the Newburgh's) and also the barony of Hanslape, which had belonged to the de Maudits. This eminent nobleman was a distinguished captain in the Welsh and Scottish Wars of Edward I. "In the 23rd year of which reign (1294/5), being in Wales with the king," as Dugdale relates, "he performed a noble exploit, namely: Hearing that a great body of the Welsh were got together in a plain, betwixt two woods, and to secure themselves had fastened their pikes to the ground, sloping toward their assailants, he marched thither with a choice company of cross-bowman and archers, and in the nighttime encompassing them about, put betwixt every 2 horseman, one crossbowman, which cross-bowman killing many of them that held the pikes, the horse charged in suddenly and made a very great slaughter." This was done near Montgomery. His lordship married Maud, widow of Girard de Furnival, and one of the four daughters and co-heiresses of Richard FitzJohn, son of John FitzGeoffrey, Chief Justice of Ireland, by whom he had surviving issue: Guy, his successor, Isabel, who married Peter de Chaworth (from whom you descend in several ways. E. E. W.), Maud, Margaret, Ann and Amy. William de Beauchamp, first Earl of Warwick of that family, died 1298, having previous to his mother's death used the style and title of Earl of Warwick, with what legality appears very doubtful.
1262 - 1306
Isabel
De
Beauchamp
44
44
1271
Robert
De
Beauchamp
1273
John
De
Beauchamp
1274
Anne
De
Beauchamp
1276
Amy
De
Beauchamp
1278
Margaret
De
Beauchamp
1281 - 1322
Geoffrey
III De
Saye
41
41
1210 - 1269
William
De
Beauchamp
59
59
William de Beauchamp, feudal lord of Elmley, called the Blind Baron. This nobleman attended King Henry III in the 37th year of his reign (1252/3) to Gascoigne in France, and in two years afterwards marched under Robert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester against the Scots. In the 41st of the same monarch, 1257, he had summons (with other illustrious persons) to meet the king at Chester on the feast day of St. Peter de Vincula, well fitted with horse and arms to oppose the incursions of Llewellyn, Prince of Wales. Lord Beauchamp married Isabel de Maudit, daughter of William de Maudit of Hanslape, County Bucks, heritable Chamberlain of the exchequer, and sister and heiress of William de Maudit, Earl of Warwick, who died 1267, sine prole, and who had inherited the dignity of Earl of Warwick from his cousin, Margery de Newburgh, Countess of Warwick, in the year 1263 William de Beauchamp made his will in 1268, the year in which he died, and was succeeded by his eldest son, William de Beauchamp.
1217 - <1268
Isabel
de
Mauduit
51
51
Isabel de Maudit married William de Beauchamp, Baron of Elmly, from whom the Beauchamps, Earls of Warwick, descend. This nobleman attended King Henry III in 1252 into Gascoigne, and in two years afterwards marched under the banner of Robert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, against the Scots. Isabel was a sister of William de Mauduit, Earl of Warwick, who inherited the dignity of Earl from his cousin, Margery de Newburgh, Countess of Warwick, in 1263
1243 - 1303
Walter
De
Beauchamp
60
60
Walter de Beauchamp became Baron of Alcester in Warwickshire and Powyck in Worcestershire. He purchased from Reginald FitzHerbert a moiety of the Manor of Alcester and made that one of his principal seats, calling it Beauchamp's Court, Powyck being the other. This Walter, who was a very eminent person at the period in which he lived, being signed with the cross for a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, had a legacy of 200 marks bequeathed him by his father for the better performance of that voyage. He was Steward of the household of King Edward I and attended that monarch to Flanders and into Scotland, where he shared in the honors of Falkirk on 22 July, 1298. In the 29th of the same reign he was one of the lords in Parliament of Lincoln, being styled Dominus de Alcester, who signified to the Pope, under their seals, the superiority of King Edward over the Kingdom of Scotland. His lordship married Alice de Toney and had issue three sons: Walter, who succeeded his father and died sine prole, and was succeeded by his brother William, who also died without issue, and the estates devolved upon the other brother,
1245
John
De
Beauchamp
1247
James
De
Beauchamp
1247
Thomas
De
Beauchamp
1239 - >1298
Joan
de
Beauchamp
59
59
1251
Sybil
De
Beauchamp
1253 - 1306
Sarah
De
Beauchamp
53
53
1255 - 1306
Isabel
De
Beauchamp
51
51
1185
William
de
Maudit
Chamberlain of the exchequer, Baron of Hanslape
~1220
William
de
Maudit
~1154 - 1221
Robert
De
Mauduit
67
67
~1187 - 1263
Alice
de
Newburgh
76
76
~1134 - 1203
Waleran
de
Newburgh
69
69
Waleran de Newburgh, son of Roger, succeeded his brother William as 4th Earl of Warwick. Dugdale says' that this nobleman had much ado a great part of his time touching his inheritance, there starting up one who feigned to be his brother, Earl William, deceased in the Holy Land, which occasioned him no little trouble and vexation; so that it is thought by some that the grant which he made to Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, then Chancellor of England, of the advowson of all the prebendaries belonging to the collegiate church in Warwick to hold during his life, was to purchase his favor in that weighty business. He married 1st Margery, daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, and had Henry, his successor, Waleran and Gundred, 2nd Alice, daughter of John de Harcourt, and widow of John de Limisi, by whom he had an only daughter Alice.
~1146
Alice
de
Harcourt
~1118 - 1202
Sir
Robert de
Harcourt
84
84
Sir Robert de Harcourt, Knight, Sheriff of Warwick and Leicester in 1199-1201 and 1202, in which last year he died. He married Isabel, only child and heir of Richard de Camville, by Millicent, his wife, who was cousin to Adeliza or Adelaide, daughter of Godfrey, Count of Louvain, in France, and 2nd wife of Henry I, King of England. By this lady Sir Robert had issue: William, his heir; Oliver, who joined Louis, Prince of France, and his party against King John, but was made a prisoner at the battle of Lincoln; John, seated at Rodeley, County Lancaster; Robert married Dionysia, daughter of Henry Pipard.
~1121
Dionysia
Pipard
~1120
Isabel
De
Camville
~1145 - 1223
Sir
William de
Harcourt
78
78
~1147
Oliver
de
Harcourt
~1091
Henry
Pipard
~1100
Ivo de
Harcourt
~1120
Sir
John de
Harcourt
~1080
William
de
Harcourt
William de Harcourt was Lord of Harcourt, Carleville and Beaufldel in France, and lord of the manor of Stanton-under-Bardon, in Leicestershire, England. He had issue Robert, Seignor and Baron Harcourt, Ivo, the 2nd son, Simon and Beatrix, who married Robert de Bassett.
~1102
Robert
de
Harcourt
~1104
Simon
de
Harcourt
~1106
Beatrix
de
Harcourt
~1060 - ~1100
Robert
"The
Strong"
40
40
Robert de Harcourt, built the castle of Harcourt in Normandy, A. D. 1100. He had, besides 3 younger sons, William, his heir, Richard, a Knight Templar, and Phillip, Dean of Lincoln, who assisted in the coronation of Henry II, 1154.
~1059
Colede
d'Argouges
~1078
Anchitel
de
Harcourt
~1084
Richard
de
Harcourt
~1088
Philip
de
Harcourt
~1091
Rollo
de
Harcourt
~1025 - ~1072
Seigneur
de Harcourt
Anchetil
47
47
Anchetel, Sire de Harcourt, being lord of the place, was the first to assume the surname of Harcourt. Of his seven sons, the eldest, Anguerrand, or Errand de Harcourt, attended William, Duke of Normandy, at the Conquest, and returned to Normandy in 1078
~1030
Eve
de
Boissay
~1050
Anguerrand
de
Harcourt
~1074
Amicia
de
Braose
~1072
Philena
de
Braose
~1124 - >1166
Gundred
De
Warenne
42
42
1195 - 1268
Joane
(Isabel) De
Mortimer
73
73
1214
Thomas
De
Beauchamp
1217
James
De
Beauchamp
1190 - 1246
Ralph
De
Mortimer
56
56
Fifth Lord of Wigmore, succeeding his brother Hugh in 1227. He and Gladys had four sons. Their descendants included Edward IV. Through this marriage the house of Mortimer became after 1283 the legitimate representatives of the old line of Gwynedd. K: Ralph de Mortimer, Baron of Wigmore. Roots: Ralph de Mortimer, Lord Mortimer of Wigmore. Powys Fadog: Ralph de Mortimer, Lord of Wigmore, fought successfully against Llwelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of Wales. Succeeded his brother Hugh. Ralph died in 1246 and was buried with his ancestors in the Abbey of Wigmore.
1191 - 1227
Hugh
De
Mortimer
36
36
1194
Roger
De
Mortimer
~1307
Matilda
Plantagenet
1198
Philip
De
Mortimer
1104 - 1158
Roger
De
Toeni
54
54
~1113
Ida
Gertrude
of Hainaut
1134
Ralph
VI De
Toeni
1137
Godehaut
De
Toeni
1142
Roger
De
Toeni
1145
Baldwin
De
Toeni
1148
Geoffroy
De
Toeni
~1090
William
De
Longspee
~1168 - 1235
Walter
De
Beauchamp
67
67
Walter de Beauchamp, 4th Baron of Elmley. This feudal lord was appointed Governor of Hanley Castle, County Worcester, in the 17th year of King John (1216) and entrusted with the custody of the same shire in that turbulent year. He married Bertha Braose, daughter of William, Lord Braose, by whom he had sons Walcheline and James. Of this nobleman we find further that being one of the barons-marchers he gave security to the king for his faithful services (with the other lords-marchers) until peace should be fully settled in the realm; and for better performance thereof gave up James, his younger son, as a hostage. He died in 1253 and was succeeded by his elder son.
Godehaut
De
Toeni
~1118 - 1185
Margaret
De
Toeni
67
67
1130 - 1212
William
De
Beauchamp
82
82
William de Beauchamp, who married Joane, daughter of Sir Thomas Walerie, and dying 13th of King John (1211-12), was succeeded by his son, a minor, whose wardship and marriage Roger de Mortimer and his wife Isabel obtained for 3,000 marks.
1196
James
De
Beauchamp
~1085 - 1126
Alice
Adeliza De
Huntington
41
41
1108
Isabel
De
Toeni
1069 - 1126
Ralph
IV De
Toeni
57
57
1154
Joane
Walerie
1174
William
De
Beauchamp
~1124
Sir
Thomas
Walerie
1105 - 1169
William
De
Beauchamp
64
64
William de Beauchamp, who for his zeal in the cause of the Empress Maud, was dispossessed of the Castle of Worcester by King Stephen, to which, and all his other honors and estates, however, he was restored by King Henry II, and in that monarch's reign, besides being sheriff of Worcestershire, which he enjoyed by inheritance, he was sheriff of Counties of Gloucester, Warwick and Hereford. Upon the levy of the assessment towards the marriage portion of the King's daughter, this powerful lord certified his knight's fees to amount to fifteen. He married Maud, daughter of William, Lord Braose of Gower, and was succeeded at his decease by his son, William de Beauchamp.
~1076
Walter
De
Beauchamp
Walter de Beauchamp, third son, of Elmley Castle, County Gloucester, married Emeline, daughter and heiress of Urso de Arbitot (who was a brother of Robert de Spenser and Constable of the Castle of Worcester, and hereditary sheriff of said county). Walter de Beauchamp was invested with that sheriffalty by King Henry I and obtained a grant from the same monarch (to whom he was Steward) of all the lands belonging to Roger de Worcester with the confirmation of certain lands given to him by Adeliza, widow of his father-in-law, the said Urso. He was succeeded as well in his estates as well as in the Royal Stewardship by his son, William de Beauchamp.
~1089
Emmeline
D'Abitot
~1107
Matilda
Maud De
Beauchamp
1107
Richard
De
Beauchamp
1109
Emma
De
Beauchamp
~1114
Stephen
De
Beauchamp
~1070
Urson
D'Arbetot
Despencer
URSON D'ABTOT, or ABITOT, who, after the Conquest, was made hereditary Sheriff of Worcestershire and Constable of Worcester Castle, wherefore he is sometimes called "Urson de Wincestre;" 11 William I was created Earl of Worcester
~1071
Adeliza
~1062 - >1124
Adeliza
Matilda
Taillebois
62
62
~1077
Robert
De
Beauchamp
~1110
William
Malbank
~1078
Stephen
De
Beauchamp
~1088
Beatrice
De
Beauchamp
~1090
Ellen
De
Beauchamp
~1080
Simon
De
Beauchamp
~1084 - 1142
Milo
De
Beauchamp
58
58
~1076 - ~1124
Adeline
De
Beauchamp
48
48
~1306 - 1388
John
Chidioc
82
82
~1262
Joan
Foliot
~1160
Walter
fitz
Osbert
~1223
Avina
Notton
~1339
Beatrix
De
Stafford
~1337 - 1361
Katherine
De
Stafford
24
24
~1338 - 1375
Elizabeth
de
Stafford
37
37
~1340
Margaret
De
Stafford
Katherine
de
Hastings
~1180
Roger
de
Samlesbury
1273 - 1308
Edmund
de
Stafford
35
35
~1283 - 17 MAR 1335/36
Margaret
Bassett
~1242 - 1299
Ralph
Bassett
57
57
~1239
Hawise
De
Grey
14 MAR 1279/80
Sir
Ralph
Basset
~1284
Joan
Bassett
~1286
Elizabeth
Bassett
~1287
Alinore
Bassett
~1290
Maud
Matilda
Bassett
~1205 - 18 MAR 1265/66
Sir John
De
Grey
Sheriff of Buckingham; Chief Justice of Chester; Governor of Dover Castle; Constable of Gannock Castle Sir John De Grey, was sheriff of Buckingham and Bedford in 1233. He was summoned with horse and arms to attend King Henry III. into Flanders in 1241. He married the Lady Joane, widow of Pauline Pevere. He was very loyal to the King and held many high offices and died in 1265. SIR JOHN DE GREY held the office of Sheriff for the counties of Buckingham and Bedford (1233.) Made an expedition into Flanders with King Henry III in 1241. In 1252, he was appointed governor of Northampton Castle and the next year was made Stewart of all Gascony. Four years later he was nominated to the governorship of Shrewsbury Castle, and constable of that of Dover. In 1262 he was Sheriff of Herefordshire and governor of Hereford Castle. The next year he had custody of all the lands of Anker de Frescheville, in the counties of Nottingham and Derby He was appointed Sheriff of Nottingham and Derby. He died in 1265 and was succeeded by his son, Reginald.
~1211
Lady
Joane
Peyvre
~1210
Emma
de
Cauz
~1237 - 1308
Reginald
De
Grey
71
71
~1210
Emma
de
Glanville
~1235
Emma
de
Grey
~1171 - 1219
Sir
Henry
De Grey
48
48
Sir Henry de Grey was in great favour with Richard, Coeur de Lion, as is manifested by the grant which that prince made to him of the manor of Turrock, in Essex, afterwards called Thurrock Grey, whereof also he had a confirmation by King John, with whom he continued in great estimation. In 8th of Richard I, William de Brewere, Sheriff, gave account of 100 s. of Henry de Grey scutage for 5 knights' fees, because he was in the King's service beyond the sea. In 1st of Henry III, 1216, he had a grant of the manor of Grimston, County Nottingham, from Robert Bardolph, for his support of the King's service. This Robert Bardolph died 9th of Henry III, 1225, when the said Henry Grey, having married Isolda Bardolph, daughter of Hugh and niece of the said Robert, shared with Maud Bardolph and others all the lands of the said Robert. They had six sons; Richard, whose principal seat was at Codnor, County Derby, John, Justice of Chester, ancestor of the Greys of Ruthven and Wilton, William, of Nottingham and Derby, Robert, of Rotherfield, Walter, Archbishop of York, and Henry. The manor of Thurrock, in the County of Essex, was conferred upon this Henry de Grey by King Richard I, in the sixth year of his reign (1194). The grant was afterwards confirmed by King John, who vouchsafed, by special charter, to permit said Henry de Grey to hunt the hare and fox in any land belonging to the crown, save the king's own demesne parks. In 1216 King Henry III gave him the manor of Grimston, in the County of Nottingham
~1168 - 1246
Isolda
(Iseude)
Bardolf
78
78
~1278
Joane
Fitz-
Payne
~1203
Hugh
De
Grey
~1204
William
De
Grey
~1206
Robert
de
Grey
~1208
Archbishop
of York
Walter
~1210
Henry
De
Grey
~1156
Hugh
Bardolf
~1274 - 1311
Adam
De
Welles
37
37
~1170
Juliana
Bardolf
~1172
Hugh
Bardolf
~1174
Robert
Bardolf
~1178
Cecelia
Bardolf
~1180
Matilda
Bardolf
~1182
Beatrice
Bardolf
~1125
Hugo
Bardolf
~1154
Robert
Bardolf
~1123
John
de
Grey
~1174
Elena
De
Clare
~1175
Walter
De
Grey
~1177
John
De
Grey
~1179
Eva
De
Grey
~1181
Agnes
De
Grey
~1131
Anchitel
de
Grey
~1142
Eva
de
Redviers
~1098
Richard
de
Grey
~1099
Mabilia
1164
John
D'Oyly
1138
Robert
D'Oyly
William
de
Grey
Monk
at
Eyneham
~1121
Anchitel
de
Grey
Anchitel de Grey, held divers lands in Oxfordshire, at Barton.
~1084 - >1127
Sir
Arnold
de Grey
43
43
~1089 - >1127
Joan
de
l'Arch
38
38
~1053
Baron
Pont de
l'Arch
~1033
John
de
Grey
John, Lord Grey of Groy, married Adela, daughter and co-heir of William FitzOsbert, son of Robert Crispin, Earl of Hereford, whose arms were: Gules a bend argent, over all a fesse or. Robert Crispin's wife was Aldreda, daughter of Ralph de Yvery, whose arms were: Or, three chevronels gules. In Howard's lately published "Life of L. J. Grey," the descent of this family is from Rollo to Sir Henry Grey of Turroc.
~1057
Adeliza
FitzWilliam
1073
Robert
De La
Haye
1050
Ralph
De La
Haye
1246
Roger
Bassett
~1229 - 1293
Margaret
De
Somery
64
64
1252
Maud
Bassett
~1156
Roger
de
Somery
~1206 - <1254
Nicole
D'Aubigny
48
48
~1232
Joan
de
Somery
~1109 - 1176
William
III
d'Aubigny
67
67
~1070 - 1139
William
II
d'Aubigny
69
69
~1151
Alice
D'Aubigny
~1088 - <1136
Maud
le
Bigod
48
48
~0888
Comte
de Senlis
Bormard
~1025 - 1070
Helena
Le
Bon
45
45
~1165
Isabell
~1015 - ~1066
William
I
d'Albini
51
51
~1045 - 1088
Roger
d'Aubigny
43
43
~1055 - <1084
Amice
de
Mowbray
29
29
~1040
Adeliza
d'Aubigny
~1020
Adeliza
du
Plessis
~1047
Olivia
D'Aubigny
~0990
Grimolt
du
Plessis
0953 - 1015
Count of
Brienne and
Eu Godfrey
62
62
~1135
Alice
~1102 - 1144
Richard
Basset
42
42
* Richard Basset, called the eldest son by Dugdale and the 2nd by others, succeeded his father as Justice of England, which high office he filled in the latter part of King Henry I's reign and through the whole of King Stephen's. In the 5th year of the latter monarch [1140], he was sheriff of Surrey, Cambridge, and Huntingdonshire, with Aleric de Vere, and he served the same office for Essex, Hertford, Buckingham, Bedford, Norfolk, Suffolk, Northampton, and Leicestershires. He m. Maud, only dau. and heir of Geoffrey Ridel, Lord of Witheringe, by Geva, dau. of Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, and had issue, Geoffrey, Ralph, and William. He was s. by his eldest son, Geoffrey de Ridel, who, from his mother, assumed the surname "de Ridel." [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 26, Basset, Barons Basset, of Welden]
~1097 - 1139
Matilda
De
Ridel
42
42
~1128
Geoffrey
Galfridus
Basset
~1132
Richard
Basset
~1134
William
Basset
~1135
Jordan
Basset
~1127 - >1185
Sibyl
Basset
58
58
~1136
Philip
Basset
~1075 - 1120
Geoffrey
Galfridus
De Ridel
45
45
~1076
Geva
d'Avranches
~1079
Geva
Lumpas
~1107
Robert
De
Ridel
~1109
Godfrey
De
Ridel
~1044
Geoffrey
Ridel
~1048
Miss
Le
Bigod
~1077
Hugh
De
Ridel
~1079
Philip
De
Ridel
~1081
Matthias
De
Ridel
~1083
Hewisa
De
Ridel
~1085
Petronilla
De
Ridel
~1018
Agnes
De
Perigord
~1043
Helias
Ridel
~0993
Albert
De
Perigord
~1243 - 1293
Nicholas
de
Stafford
50
50
~1248
Alianore
Clinton
~1218
Lord
of
Clinton
~1215
Robert
de
Stafford
~1215
Alice
Corbet
~1185 - 1273
Thomas
Corbet
88
88
~1190
Isabel
de
Valletort
~1219 - 1300
Peter I
Corbet
81
81
~1155
Robert
Corbet
~1125
Sir
Robert
Corbet
~1085 - >1155
William
Corbet
70
70
~1048 - 1133
Roger
Corbet
85
85
~1175 - 1237
Hervey
de
Stafford
62
62
~1145
Harvey
Bogot
~1150
Millicent
de
Stafford
~1125 - <1184
Robert
de
Stafford
59
59
~1130
Avice
~1095 - ~1138
Nicholas
de
Stafford
43
43
Maud
~1152
Robert
de
Stafford
~1050
Avice
De
Clare
1350 - 1403
Cathrine
Swynford
de Roelt
53
53
1373 - 1396
Sir
Robert de
Ferrers
23
23
~1393 - 1434
Elizabeth
de
Ferrers
41
41
~1395
Mary
de
Ferrers
~1370 - 1410
John
Beaufort
40
40
~1375 - 1447
Henry
de
Beaufort
72
72
~1377
Thomas
Beaufort
~1342 - 1369
Blanche
Plantagenet
27
27
1367 - 20 MAR 1412/13
IV
Henry
~1349
Prince of
Portugal
João
1443
Anthony
De
Grey
~1388
Thomas
Plantagenet
~1358
Alfonso
de
Portugal
1416 - 1490
Edmund
De
Grey
73
73
~1297
Henry
Grosmont
Plantagenet
~1280
Sir Patrick
III de
Chaworth
1223 - 1274
Hawyse
de
Londres
51
51
1198
Sir
Thomas de
Londres
1203
Eva
De
Tracy
1374
John
Plantagenet
~1372 - 1418
Katherine
Plantagenet
46
46
1379 - 1406
III
Henry
27
27
~1320
Sir
Payne
de Roelt
~1331 - 1388
Sir John
De
Neville
57
57
He was one of the most gallant officers of the Black Prince. John Neville's brother Alexander, was consecrated Archbishop of York at Westminster. June 4. 1374. His brother William was constable of Nottingham Castle. Neville was a friend of Wickliffe and one of the chiefest of his supporters, the Lollards. John was twice married: first, to Maud Percy, the dau. of Lord Henry Percy; and, secondly, to Elizabeth, the only dau. of William, Lord Latimer. He d. at Newcastle-on-Tyne, Oct. 17, 1388. In his will he was liberal in his donation to his employees and beneficent to the church. During his early years he proved himself to be a true and loyal knight, serving faithfully in all positions in which he was placed. He was closely associated with John of Gaunt at the siege of Brest. When scandals relating to Lancaster abounded, Neville did not escape the storm of national indignation which broke over the court in 1376. The wrath of the parliament was in the first place directed against Richard Lyons and William Latimer, whose seat was at Danby in Cleveland. He was a Yorkshire neighbor of Neville, who was to take Latimer's dau. for his second wife. Latimer induced Neville to use threatening language to the Commons on his behalf, but he was impeached in three courts for buying up the King's debts, like Latimer; for suffering the troops to plunder and outrage at Southhampton in 1372; and for causing the loss of several Breton fortresses by neglecting to supply the full force of men he had undertaken to furnish. Against the two latter charges he defended himself with some force. On the first count, two accusations were brought against him, one of which the complainant attempted to withdraw at the last moment. It looks as if he had been tampered with by the accused or his friends. In 1378, he was sent as the King's lieutenant to Aquitaine, to treat with the King of Arragon, and was ordered to send a force to aid the King of Navarre, against Henry of Castile, whose throne was claimed by John of Gaunt. He is credited with having recovered eighty-three towns, castles, and forts during his licutenancy. During the remaining years of his life he was constantly employed on the Scotlish border as warden. His last days were embittered by the misfortunes of his brother, Archbishop Alexander, who, in 1387, was driven from his Sec and country. As late as March 20, 1388, he was placed in commission to treat for peace with Scotland.
~1351
Marmaduke
De
Lumley
~1362 - 14 MAR 1405/06
Thomas
De
Neville
~1358
Alice
De
Neville
~1427 - 1479
Catherine
Chidiocke
52
52
~1362
Iolande
De
Neville
~1367
Maud
De
Neville
~1369
Elizabeth
De
Neville
~1291 - 1367
Sir Ralph
De
Neville
76
76
Ralph Neville was son of Ralph Neville, third Baron of Raby, who d. 1331, and Eupherma de Clavering, dau. of John of Warkworth in Northumberland, Western Essex. Neville was a man of energy and King Edward kept him busily employed. He was socially and warmly attached to Lord Henry Percy. He advanced wool from his Yorkshire estates to furnish the King money, for which he was rewarded by many privileges. When David Bruce invaded England, in 1346, he and his eldest son joined William la Zouche, Archbishop of York, and shared in the victory of Neville's cross. After this the rest of his life was almost entirely spent on the frontiers. He d. in 1367. Neville m. Alice Audley, dau. of Sir Hugh. She survived him and m. Ralph, Baron of Graystock, who d. in 1417.
~1304 - 11 JAN 1372/73
Alice
de
Audley
~1330
Catherine
De
Neville
~1332
Ralph
De
Neville
~1334 - 1394
Eupheme
De
Neville
60
60
~1335
Thomas
De
Neville
~1336 - 1438
Lady
Matilda
De Neville
102
102
~1338 - 1389
Sir
William
De Neville
51
51
~1340
Eleanor
De
Neville
13 FEB 1340/41
Margaret
De
Neville
~1342
Alexander
De
Neville
~1343
Elizabeth
De
Neville
~1344
Isabel
De
Neville
~1337
Robert
De
Neville
1299 - 1323
Ralph
De
Greystoke
23
23
6 JAN 1319/20
William
De
Greystoke
Eve
fitz
Warin
~1234
Helen
verch
Llewelyn
~1164 - 1201
Tangwystl
Goch ferch
Llywarch
37
37
~1158
Marared
Margaret of
Powys-Vadoc
~1140 - ~1176
Iorwerth
Drwyndwn
ap Owain
36
36
~1091 - 1159
Madog
Ap
Maredudd
68
68
~1110
Susanna
Verch
Gryffudd
1055 - 1137
Gruffydd
ap
Cynan
82
82
Gruffydd ap Cynan who defeated and killed Trahaearn ap Cardogog in the battle of Mynydd Carn in 1081 and became Prince of Gwynedd and/or King of North Wales from 1081 until his death in 1137. Born circa 1055 in Dublin, Ireland Died in 1137 and inttered at Bangor Cathedral Gruffydd ap Cynan married Angharad who was a daughter of Owain ap Edwin, Lord Tegeingl and a greatx2 granddaughter of Leofric, Earl of Mercia and his wife Godgifu who was the famous "Lady Godiva" who rode nude on her horse through Coventry. See Lady Godiva for more information.
~1065 - 1162
Angharad
Verch
Owain
97
97
~1110 - 1156
Gwenllian
Verch
Gruffydd
46
46
Sources: History of Morgan Family and Dictionary of National Biography. Married (1) Cadwgan ap Bleddyn and (2) Gruffydd ap Rhys. In 1136, Gruffydd ap Rhys, under attack in Gower, hurried into North Wales to obtain assistance from his brothers-in-law. His wife, meanwhile, "like an Amazon and a second Penthesilea," commanded his followers in the south. She was slain in battle by Maurice of London, Lord of Kidwelly. Morgan, one of her youthful sons by Gruffydd, perished with her, and a second, Maelgwn, was taken prisoner. But Owain and Cadwaladr, sons of Gruffydd ap Cynan, now came down from the north, destroyed Aberstwith Castle, and in the second week of October they fought along with Gruffydd ap Rhys a great battle near Aberteivi (Cardigan), in which they won a decided victory over Stephen, constable of Aberteivi and "all the Flemings, all the marchers, and all the French from Abernedd to Aberteivi." Quoted material from Dictionary. ***** Gruffydd ap Rhys, Prince of Deheubarth...m. shortly after 1116, Gwenllian (killed 1136 while leading an attack on the troops of Maurice de Londres, lord of Kidwelly, where the field of battle is called Maes Gwenllian), daughter of the royal house of Gwynedd (whose mother was Ragnhildr, dau of the royal house of the Scandinavians of Dublin)... [Source 1]
~1095 - 1169
Owain
Fawr ap
Gruffydd
74
74
Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd from 1137 until his death in 1170, took advantage of the troubled reign of King Stephen of England and seized some neigbouring territories. In 1157, Henry II led an army into Wales and Owain acknowledged Henry II as overlord. Owain kept all the territory he had gained with the exception of Tegeingl in the extreme north east. Owain died on November 28, 1170 and was interred at Bangor Cathedral. Owain married Gwladys, a daughter of Llywarch ap Trahaearn ap Cardogog whose father Trahaearn ap Cardogog had been killed in 1081 by Owain's father Gruffydd ap Cynan. Apparently, our ancestors didn't hold long grudges over killings and murders, perhaps because these events were so common. * _FA1: Acceded: 1137. Interred: Bangor. 9 10 * _FA2: Target of Henry II's campaign(s) in Wales. * _FA3: Threatened Madoc ap Maredudd Prince of Powys. * _FA4: Excommunicated by Thomas a' Becket when he didn't abjure his 2nd wife Cristin. 11 * _FA5: AKA Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd, Prince of Gwynedd. 12 9 3 * _FA6: Expanded borders & took back districts lost to the English & other Welsh Princes 13 * _FA7: Able to do so because of King Stephen's pre-occupation with English civil war. 13 * _FA8: Prince of North Wales. 14 * Note: REF: "Yale Genealogy and History of Wales", 1908, Rodney Horace Yale p. 40: During King Stephen's reign of 17 years in England, he left Wales much to itself and Owain materially added to the resources of his country & re-occupied several districts, which the Welsh had lost in former years. In the meantime however, he and Cadwaladr quarreld and the latter fled to England. Also during these years (C25) Rhys ap Gruffydd, a son of Gruffydd ap Rhun, who was son of Rhys ap Tewdwr, had won several comparatively important engagements and successes in the south. Sources: 1. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc Repository: Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@@tardis.ed.ac.uk Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd Prince of Gwynedd 2. Title: Royal Genealogies DB Author: Denis R. Reid Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258 Note: 216/237-5364 Note: OK Repository: Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@@cleveland.freenet.edu Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Owain Gwynedd ap Gruffydd 3. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 239 pp 202-203 4. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 239 pp 202-203 Text: no place 5. Title: Gwydir Family & Memoirs Author: J.Gwynfor Jones Publication: Gomer Press, 1990 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Text: Says died 1170. 6. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc Repository: Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@@tardis.ed.ac.uk Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Dec 1169, no place 7. Title: Royal Genealogies DB Author: Denis R. Reid Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258 Note: 216/237-5364 Note: OK Repository: Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@@cleveland.freenet.edu Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: 1170 given as end of reign 8. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 239 pp 202-203 Text: d 1170, no place 9. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc Repository: Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@@tardis.ed.ac.uk Call Number: Media: Electronic 10. Title: Royal Genealogies DB Author: Denis R. Reid Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258 Note: 216/237-5364 Note: OK Repository: Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@@cleveland.freenet.edu Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Reigned 1137-1170 11. Sharon Kay Penman "Here be Dragons", p. 248 12. Title: Gwydir Family & Memoirs Author: J.Gwynfor Jones Publication: Gomer Press, 1990 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book 13. Title: Yale Genealogy & History of Wales Author: Rodney Horace Yale Publication: 1908 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book 14. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 176 p 151 15. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 239 pp 202-203 Text: his 1st m, no date 16. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 Author: Frederick Lewis Weis Publication: 7th ed Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore 1992 Note: Same ref source as earlier ed, "Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists who Came to New England 1623-1650" ed 1-6 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: line 239 pp 202-203 Text: his 2nd m, they were cousins
~1044 - 1105
Owain
ap
Edwyn
61
61
~1048
Morwyl
ferch
Ednywain
1073 - 1124
Goronwy
ap
Owain
51
51
~1020 - >1079
Ednywain
"Bendew" I
ap Neiniad
59
59
0968
Neiniad
ap
Gwaethfoed
~0980
Gwerfyl
of
Herford
~0930 - 1037
Lluddica
ap
Tudor
107
107
~0948
Angharad
ferch
Iago
Llywarch
Garn
~0908
Iago ap
Idwal
Foel
~0974
Avendreg
ferch
Gwair
~1014 - ~1060
Cynan
ap
Iago
46
46
Cynan ap Iago who was exluded from the throne by Gruffydd ap Llewelyn and exiled in Dublin, Ireland where he met his wife Ragnhildir, a great granddaughter of Brian Bórú. Died circa 1060 Cynan ap Iago married Ragnhildir (also Ranult and Ragnaillt), daughter of Olaf who was a son of Sitric of the Silken Beard, Norse King of Dublin. Please click on Brian Bórú for details of this descent.
~0883 - 0942
Idwal
Foel ap
Anarawd
59
59
Idwal Foel (the Bald) ap Anarawd became Prince of Gwynedd (North Wales) in 916 on the death of his father. He accepted English overlordship in 918 In 942, he was slain along with his brother during an unsuccessful revolt against the English. Died in 942 in battle.
~0887
Mereddon
ferch
Cadwr
~0914
Tudor
Trevor
~0899
Rheingar
~0879
Llydocca
of
Herford
~0849
Carader
Yreichfras
~0869
Cadfarch
of
Whittington
~0839
Gyrgenan
~0944
Gwaithfoed
ap
Gwrydr
~0948
Eva of
Glamorgan
~0924 - 1030
Prince of
Glamorgan
Gyrgant
106
106
~0928
Angharat
~0904 - 0994
Ithel of
Glamorgan
90
90
~0888
King of
Gwent
Gwyn
~0884
Owen
of
Glamorgan
~0864 - 0974
Morgan
Hen
110
110
Nesta
~0844 - ~0926
King of
Gwent
Owen
82
82
~0824
King of
Gwent
Howel
~0804
King of
Gwent
Rhys
~0894
Gwrydr
"Hir" ap
Caradog
~0910
Caradog
ap
Lles
1020 - 1073
Edwyn
ap
Gronwy
53
53
~0970
Gwerystan
ap
Gwaithfoed
~0970
Nest
ferch
Cadell
~1152 - 15 JAN 1202/03
Gerald
de
Windsor
~0995
Letitia
ferch
Gwerystan
~0928
Cadel
ap
Brochwel
~0957
Gronwy
ap
Einion
~0963
Ethelfleda
ferch
Edwin
0933 - 0984
Einion
ap
Owain
51
51
~0934
Ellinor
Verch
Gwenston
~0953
Cadell
ap
Einion
~1000 - 1034
King of
Dublin
Olaf
34
34
~1000
Maelcorcre
Maelmuit
~0970
Sihtric
"Silken
Beard"
~0944
Gwyr
ap Pyll
~1063
Hunydd
Verch
Eunydd
~1020
Eunydd
ap
Gwernwy
~1024
Eva
Verch
Llewelyn
~0990
Gwernwy
ap
Gwrgeneu
~0995
Gwenllian
Verch
Rhys
~1025
Haer
Verch
Cynyllyn
~0995
Cynyllyn
ap Blai
1262 - 1331
Ralph
de
Neville
68
68
~1267 - ~1320
Eupherma Anastasia
FitzRobert de
Clavering
53
53
~1248 - 1310
Robert
FitzRoger
de Clavering
62
62
~1218 - 1249
Lord
Roger
FitzJohn
31
31
~1223
Isabel
~1276 - 23 JAN 1330/31
John
Fitzrobert
De Clavering
Elizabeth
FitzRobert
de Clavering
~1190 - 1240
Sir
John
FitzRobert
50
50
John Fitzrobert the Surety, was high sheriff of co. Northumberland and governor of New-Castle upon-Tyne
~1195 - 1251
Ada
de
Baliol
56
56
~1220
Hugh
FitzJohn
~1180 - 1228
Hugh
de
Baliol
48
48
~1214 - 1275
Hawise
De
Lanvaley
61
61
~1212 - ~1248
Sir John
De
Burgh
36
36
~1150 - 1205
Aleaume
de
Fontaines
55
55
~1156
Laurette
de St.
Valerie
~1245 - 9 MAR 1310/11
Béatrix
De
Montfort
~1241 - 1282
Robert
IV De
Dreux
41
41
<1061 - ~1096
Bernard
III De St.
Valery
35
35
~1035 - <1061
Gauthier
De St.
Valery
26
26
~1118 - ~1164
Enguerrand
de
Fontaines
46
46
~1090 - ~1119
Guillaume
de
Fontaines
29
29
~1095
Charlotte
de
Mailly
~1150 - 1210
Enetau
de
Baliol
60
60
~1150
Petronille
fitz
Piers
~1125 - 1194
Bernard
II de
Baliol
69
69
~1128
Agnes
de
Picquigny
~1145
Walter
de
Barclay
~1113 - ~1162
Walter
fitz Ivo De
Greystoke
49
49
~1100 - 1153
Bernard
de
Baliol
53
53
~1105
Matilda
~1065 - <1122
Hugh
de
Baliol
57
57
~1040 - ~1086
Reginald
de
Bailleul
46
46
<1178 - 1214
Sir Robert
fitz Roger
De Lacy
36
36
~1170 - 1230
Margaret
de
Chesney
60
60
~1111 - 1173
Roger fitz
Richard
De Lacy
62
62
~1175
William
de
Verdun
~1137
Albreda
de
Poynings
~1167 - 1222
Sarah
De
Chesney
55
55
~1107 - <1148
Adam
de
Poynings
41
41
~1107
Beatrice
~1077
William
fitz
Rainald
~1047
Rainald
fitz
Reiner
~1017
Reiner
~1107 - >1136
Robert fitz
Walter de
Chesney
29
29
~1107
Sybil
de
Caisneto
~1077 - >1086
Ralf
de
Caisneto
9
9
~1077
Maud
de
Watville
~1047 - ~1085
William
de
Watville
38
38
~1077 - >1086
Walter
de
Caen
9
9
~1085
Osbert
de
Cundi
~1115
Roger
de
Cundy
~1081
Richard
De
Lacy
~1240 - 1271
Robert
de
Neville
31
31
1244 - 1320
Mary
fitz
Randolph
76
76
~1220 - <1294
Ralph
fitz
Randolph
74
74
~1220
Anastasia
de
Percy
~1193 - 1245
William
de
Percy
52
52
1190 - 1233
Joan
De
Briwere
43
43
~1165
Isobel
de
Brus
~1200 - 1281
Ellen
de
Baliol
81
81
1273 - 1314
Sir
Henry
De Percy
41
41
~1170
Ingram
de
Baliol
~1175
Agnes
de
Barclay
~1105
Elias
de
Barclay
~1170
Livida
1045 - 1068
Eadnoth
23
23
~1196 - 1251
Mary
Le
Bigod
55
55
~1140
William
De
Glanville
~1125 - >1208
Bertha
De
Valoines
83
83
~1223 - 1256
Margery
(Margaret)
de Lacy
33
33
~1130
Maud
de
Valoines
~1075
Robert
de
Valognes
Agnes
~1100
Philip
de
Valoines
~1045 - ~1087
Peter
de
Valognes
42
42
~1048
Albreda
de Rie
~1020 - 1120
Hubert
de Rie
100
100
~0980
Eudes
de Rie
~0954
Geoffrey
de Rie
~1065 - 1147
Sir
Hervey de
Glanville
82
82
~1080
Matilda
~1110
Sir
Gerard de
Glanville
~1025 - ~1070
Ranulph
de
Glanville
45
45
~1035
Flandrina
~0999 - ~1054
Rainald
de
Glanville
55
55
~0979
Richard
de
Belfoi
~0960
Hammon
de St.
Sauveur
~0960
Godchild
~1050
Beatrix
of
Mercia
~0963
Neil II
de St.
Sauveur
~0955
Gisela
~1160
Sir
Roger
Maudit
~1160
Alice
De
Percy
~1164
Ralph
De
Percy
~1086 - ~1133
Baron
De Percy
William
47
47
~1087
Alice
De
Ros
~1057
Everard
de
Ros
1069 - 1135
Baron
De Percy
Alan
66
66
1034 - 1097
1st Baron
De Percy
William
63
63
Said to have accompanied Hugh d'Avranches, later Earl of Chester, from Normandy to England. See The Complete Peerage vol.X,p436.
~1035
Emma
la Port
~1005
Hugh
Gospatric
de Port
~1000
Sire de
Percy
Geoffrey
~1160
Richard
De
Percy
~1168
Maud
De
Louvain
~1000 - 1036
II
Heribert
36
36
~1036
Fulk
Paganel
~1041
Beatrice
~1125
Nesta
de
Windsor
~1020
William
Pagnel
~0976
Gervaise
Paganel
1220 - 1282
Robert
de
Neville
62
62
~1220
Ida
Bertram
~1200
Robb
Bertram
~1190 - 1242
Geoffery
de
Neville
52
52
~1187 - >1247
Joan
de
Monmouth
60
60
~1407 - 1490
Agnes
Harrington
83
83
~1174 - 1293
Agnes
de
Neville
119
119
~1157
John
de
Monmouth
~1170 - 1248
Robert
fitz
Maldred
78
78
~1179 - 1254
Isobel
de
Neville
75
75
~1150 - 1194
Geoffrey
de
Neville
44
44
~1149 - <1208
Emma
de
Bulmer
59
59
~1119
Butram
de
Balmer
~1124
Emma
Fossard
~1094 - ~1135
Robert
Fossard
41
41
~1080
Ascelina
~1125
Agnes
Fossard
~1050 - ~1120
Nigel
Fossard
70
70
~1070
Gertrude
Fossard
~1089
Ansketil
de
Bulmer
~1094
du
Humez
~1064
John
Powther
~1120
Geoffery
de
Neville
~1125
Philicia
~1085
Adm.
Gilbert de
Neville
~1045 - ~1086
Gilbert
de
Neville
41
41
~1004 - ~1066
Richard
de
Neuville
62
62
~0984 - ~1072
Robert
Malet
88
88
~1006
Robert
de
Courci
~0994
Fulk
D'Aunou
~1135 - ~1183
Maldred
fitz
Dolfin
48
48
~1145
de
Stuteville
~1127 - ~1184
John
de
Stuteville
57
57
Agnes
~1080
Robert
IV De
Stuteville
Robert de Stuteville, who in temp. Henry II laid claim to the Barony of Roger de Mowbray, which, on the rebellion of his father, had been given, as before stated, to Nigel de Albini, father of the said Roger de Mowbray; and coming to arbitrament, recovered some part thereof. He married Erneburga, daughter and heir to Hugh, son of Baldric, a great Saxon Thane, by whom he had issue 3 sons: Robert, Osmond and Patrick.
~1099
Osmond
De
Stuteville
1189
William
de
Stuteville
~1070 - 1160
Mathieu
de
Montmorency
90
90
~1010 - ~1090
Robert
De
Stuteville
80
80
~1100 - ~1136
Dolfin
fitz
Uchtred
36
36
Alice
~1075 - 1129
Uchtred
fitz
Maldred
54
54
~1042
Patrick
Canmore
3 FEB 1391/92 - 1455
Henry
de
Percy
1364 - 1403
Sir Henry
'Hotspur"
de Percy
39
39
~1040 - 1075
Earl of
Northumbria
Gospatric
35
35
Lord of Bamburgh. Lord of Carlisle & Allerdale. Visited Rome, 1061 Received the lands of Dunbar & other parts of Lothian from King Malcolm III, his cousin. Claimed earldom of Northumbria through his mother. In a "nasty" dispute w/ William the Conqueror, he fled to Scotland. He took with him Edgar Atheling (the Saxon heir), & Edgar's mother & sisters. This included Margaret, later Queen of Malcolm III & canonized as a saint. 1st Earl of Dunbar, 1072-1075. Earl of Northumberland, 1067-1072.
1414 - 1455
Thomas
De
Clifford
41
41
1421 - 1461
Henry
de
Percy
39
39
1425 - 1464
Ralph
Neville
de Percy
38
38
1423
Catherine
de
Percy
~1422 - FEB 1482/83
Eleanor
de
Poynings
~1440
Eleanor
De
Beaufort
~1470
Katherine
Spencer
~1472
Margaret
Spencer
1478 - 1527
Henry
de
Percy
49
49
~1495
Margaret
Percy
1449
Henry
de
Percy
~1453 - 1485
Maud
Herbert
32
32
~1480 - 13 FEB 1528/29
Alianore
de
Percy
~1487
Anne
de
Percy
~1423
William
Herbert
~1410
Anne
Devereux
~1392
Richard
de
Poynings
Margaret
de
Percy
Anne
de
Percy
~1390 - 1455
Eleanor
de
Berkeley
65
65
1395
Sir John
fitz
Alan
1417 - 1487
William
fitz
Alan
70
70
~1130
Osbert
~1142
Lord of
Samlesbury
Gospatrick
~1112
Lord of
Samlesbury
Swain
~1080
Lord of
Hindley
Leofwin
~1222 - 1275
Thurston
de
Holland
53
53
~1230
Margaret
de
Kellet
~1200
Adam
de
Kellet
~1154
Orm
de
Kellet
~1197 - ~1230
Robert
de
Holland
33
33
~1201
Cicely
de
Columbers
~1177
Adam
de
Columbers
~1181
Cicely
de
Waleton
~1151 - ~1199
Henry
de
Waleton
48
48
~1151
Juliana
~1125 - ~1205
Gilbert
de
Waleton
80
80
~1100 - ~1157
Waldeve
de
Waleton
57
57
~1147
William
de
Columbers
~1167 - ~1202
Matthew
de
Holland
35
35
~1135
Siward
de
Longworth
1439
Richard
Harding
~0990
Hugh
De
Mortimer
~0970
Ralph
De
Mortimer
~0950
Roger
De
Mortimer
~0932
Guy
D'Anjou
~0891
Herfast
Gormsson
A Danish Knight, who became a Norman Baron, is the original ancestor of the Warren family. The Normans and Danes were united in their efforts to make a settlement in the northern part of France, and ultimately succeeded in obtaining a foothold in that part of the country, from which the Normans took the name of Normandy. This Danish Knight became allied through marriage with some of the foremost families of noble lineage in Europe. He had Gunnora, who married Richard, first Duke of Normandy, and they were the great grandparents of William, the Conqueror, whose daughter Gundred married Wm. Warren, No. 5 in this lineage. He also had Werina, who was the mother of Hugh Capet, King of France, Wevia, Duvelina, Sainfra and a son,
~0910
Gunhilde
Olafsdatter
~1296
Agatha
de
Merton
~1292 - 1361
John
de
Stanley
69
69
~1290
Mabel
Hawksket
~1200
Robert
De
Pulford
~1254
Thomas
Orreby
~1261 - 1326
William
de
Stanley
65
65
~1261 - >1334
Joan
de
Baumville
73
73
~1231 - 4 FEB 1283/84
Philip
de
Baumville
~1095
Robert
de
Pulford
~1206
Agnes
de
Stourton
~1166
Alexander
de
Stourton
~1176
Annabella
Sylvester
~1181
Randulph
de
Sylvester
~1120
Alan
de
Stourton
~1231
Adam
de
Stanley
~1201
William
de
Stanley
~1171
William
de
Aldithley
~1176
Joan
de
Stanley
~1146
Thomas
de
Stanley
~1145
William
de
Aldithley
~1090
Henry
De
Stanley
~1173
Adam
De
Aldithley
~1270
Stephen
de
Merton
1273
Adam
de
Ireland
~1278
Avina
Ameria
de Holand
~1297
Sir
Thomas
de Ireland
~1260 - 1311
Robert
De
Holand
51
51
1218
Robert
de
Ireland
1248
Maude
Hesketh
1309
Margaret
~1223
Beatrice
Daresby
1199
William
Daresby
1192
Roger
de
Ireland
1166
John
de
Ireland
~1295
Sir
Robert de
Ireland
~1245
Margery
de
Ireland
~1192 - 1283
Adam
Hoghton
91
91
~1200
Agnes
~1141 - 1198
Adam
Hoghton
57
57
~1110 - 1189
William
Hoghton
79
79
~1084
Hamo
Pincerina
At his marriage to Maud, her father gave him the manor of Hocton, which became the family name. Later the name was changed to HOGHTON, And still later in America, it was changed to HOUGHTON. Eccleston, in the eastern part of Lancashire was also in the daughter's dowry.
~1086
Maud
Bussell
1114
Widow
Favarre
~1056
Richard
Bussell
~1067
Walter
Herverus
~1069
Maud
De
Valois
~1039
Theobald
De
Valois
~1045 - 1086
Herverus
41
41
Herverus came to England with William the Conqueror in 1066. After the battle of Hastings, he obtained large possessions in Norfolk, Suffolk, and Lancastershire.
~1237 - 1261
Robert
de
Banastre
24
24
1231
Alice
Woodcock
~1260
James
de
Banastre
~1197 - 1261
Gilbert
Woodcock
64
64
~1217 - 1237
Robert
de
Banastre
20
20
~1221
Clemence
de
Orreby
~1190 - ~1230
Phillip
de
Orreby
40
40
~1201
Leuca
de
Mohaut
~1220
Agnes
de
Orreby
~1170 - 1229
Roger
de
Mohaut
59
59
~1187 - 1260
Cecilia
D'Aubigny
73
73
~1130 - >1162
Leuca
Fitz-
Neel
32
32
~1085 - 1153
William
FitzNigel
68
68
Constable of Chester Sources: 1. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 150-27
~1100
Robert
I de
Mohaut
~1080
Hugh
de
Mohaut
~1160 - ~1230
Phillip
de
Orreby
70
70
~1165
Emme
de
Coventre
~1135
Seneschal
of Cheshire
Walter
~1140
Margery
de
Coventre
~1130 - ~1180
Herbert
de
Orreby
50
50
~1135
Agnes
de
Kyme
~1162
Herbert
de
Orreby
~1094
Simon
de
Kyme
~1094
Agnes
de
Lindsey
~1100
Roese
de
Bolington
~1124
Philip
de
Kyme
~1064
Baldric
de
Lindsey
~1064
William
de
Kyme
~1034
Simon
de
Kyme
~1039
Rafina
~1009
Rafin
~1004
William
de
Kyme
~1100 - ~1150
Alard
de
Orreby
50
50
~1110
Agnes
~1201 - 1265
John
de
Lea
64
64
~1171
Henry
de
Lea
~1174
Hawise
de
Lancaster
~1099
Godith
de
Taillebois
~1114
Roger
De
Lancaster
~1076
William
de
Taillebois
Margaret
~1059 - >1135
Lucy
Beatrice
Malet
76
76
~1057
Edgitha
of
Cumberland
~1014 - 1071
William
Malet
57
57
~0890
Ordgar
of
Devon
~1075
Aelfred "the
Englishman"
de Taillebois
~1103
Beatrix
De
Stuteville
1073
Christiana
~1070
Milo de
Bar-sur-
Seine
~1039
Lucy
Beatrice
Malet
~1037
Gilbert
Malet
~1041
Walter
Malet
~1025
Emma
Crispin
~1027
Osbern
de Cailly
Gilbert
~0989
Wigerius
de
Courcie
~0996
Richard
de
Brionne
~1016
Beatrice
de
Brionne
~1032
Nicholas
de
Bacqueville
Adelheide
of
Paris
~1000
Gunnor
D'Aunou
~0996
Baldric 'the
Teuton'
D'Aunou
1195 - 1237
Robert
de
Banastre
42
42
1172
Thurston
de
Banastre
1150
Robert
de
Banastre
~1258 - 1327
Lord
William de
Mobberley
69
69
~1264
Maude
Downes
~1290
Emma
de
Mobberley
~1284
Mary
Mobberley
~1315
Elizabeth
Mobberley
~1238
Robert
Downes
~1241
Margaret
Fitton
1204 - <1271
Sir
Hugh
Fitton
67
67
Hugh Phiton or Fyton or Fitton had a grant of Rushton and Eaton, with various privileges from John Scot, Earl of Chester. He had Edmund and a daughter Margery. Source: "Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith " Call Number: CS71.S643, Ormerod's Hist. Cheshire, Vol. 3, p. 379.
~1234
Edmund
Fitton
~1198 - 1246
Sir
Richard
Fitton
48
48
Sir Richard Fitton was justiciary of Chester 17-21 of Henry III (1216-1272). He died 30 of Henry III, 1246. Source: "Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith " Call Number: CS71.S643, Ormerod's Hist. Cheshire, Vol. 3, p. 379.
~1179
Ellen
~1215
Sir
Edward
Fitton
~1160
John
de
Fitton
The parish of Wilmslow--anciently Le Bolyn, was originally held by the Fittons under the Earl of Chester, but the grant by which it passed to them has escaped the Cheshire collectors, unless we suppose it to have passed under the general designation of "Falingbrome," which was afterwards a part of the lordship of Bolyn, in the grant of that place from Hugh de Kevelioc to Sir Richard Fytum. This lordship subsequently occurs in the charter subjoined under the general name of Fulshaw, taken from the principal members of the fee, but soon after wards, as appears by an abstract of a charter in Fulshaw, was called the lordship of Bolyn, from the contiguous river of that name. At this period the whole parish formed one manor and vill under Sir Richard de Phitum, grantee of Fallybrome from Hugh de Kevelioc, and not improbably (from the correspondence of the armorial bearings of the Fittons to the Earl of Chester) a kinsman of his local sovereign. Source: "Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith " Call Number: CS71.S643, Ormerod's Hist. Cheshire, Vol. 3, p. 379.
~1206
Robert
Downes
~1176
Robert
Downes
1213
Lord of
Mobberley
Ralph
1183
John
de
Mobberleigh
1155
Augustine
de
Brethmete
1316
William
Mainwaring
~1398 - 1452
Ralph
Egerton
54
54
~1289
Joan
Mobberley
~1224
Alicia
de
Bold
~1129
William
de
Bold
~1225
Gilbert
de
Haydock
~1245
Sir
Matthew de
Haydock
~1250
Gilbert
de
Haydock
~1290
Sir
Adam de
Hoghton
1310
Katherine
de
Houghton
~1240
Thomas
de
Banastre
~1235
Eleanor
de
Betham
~1155
Eustace
de
Mohaut
~1163
Robert
de
Mohaut
1008
Emme
Lupus
~1092
Agnes
de
Gaunt
1046
Lord of
Dutton
Odard
The First Duttons [Dutton Coat of Arms] In the eleventh century, there were a number of people in Cheshire, England who could have called themselves De Dutton, the original family surname. That was because they all were de (from) Dutton which was originally known as Duntune, meaning town on a hill. However, it was Odard, who came to England in the train of William the Conqueror and was granted a third of the township in 10861, that first used it as his surname. Odard probably wouldn't have been so fortunate if William the Counqueror hadn't been his great uncle and the Earl of Chester his uncle. It was the Earl, Hugh of Lupis that granted the land at Dutton to Odard. This is also why we know so much about Odard's ancestory. Both he and William were descended from Rollo, the first Duke of Normandy. Rollo, in turn, was descended from the King of Finland as described in Scandanavian sagas. The direct male Dutton line continued for some 600 years. The Warburtons claim consanguinity with the ancient blood-royal of England, being descended from Rollo, the first Duke of Normandy, through William, Earl of Eu, who married a niece of William the Conqueror. Richard, Duke of Normandy, (grand-son of Rollo) sur-named sans-peur, had Issue (besides his son Richard who succeeded him, his daughter Emma, Queen of England, and other children) two younger sons, Godfrey and William. To Godfrey, his father gave the earldoms of Eu and Brion. On His decease the latter earldom became the heritage of his posterity, branching out into the now extinct houses of the Earls of Clare and Pembroke, while William, the younger brother, succeeded him in the earldom of Eu. He had (besides others) his successor, Robert, father of William, who married a sister of Hugh Lupus, Earl of Avranches, (afterwards Earl of Chester) named Jeanne, and niece of William the Conqueror. There was Issue of this marriage (besides William's successor in the earldom of Eu and another child) six sons, named Nigel, Geffry, Odard or Huddard, Edard, Horswin and Wlofaith. These six brothers accompanied their uncle, Hugh Lupus, into England, in the train of William the Conqueror, their great-uncle; and on the establishment of the Norman power had various estates and honors conferred upon them. Nigel was created Baron of Halton and constable of Cheshire; Geffry was Lord of Stopfort; Odard, Lord of Dutton; Edard, Lord of Haselwell; Horswin, Lord of Shrigley; and Wlofaith, Lord of Halton. Odard, the third son, was the ancestor of the Duttons, now extinct in the male line; the Barons of Chedill, also extinct, and the Warburtons. --Burke's Landed Gentry, p. 1508. Odard, son of Yvron, viscount of Constantine, (whose name is written in most records of later date, Hodard or Hudard) was the Immediate ancestor of the ancient and numerous family of Dutton of Dutton.--Lysons' Magna Britannia, Vol. II.
~1054
Wolfaith
de
Hatton
~1003
Geoffrey
II of
Brittany
~1005
Hedwige
de
Normandy
1006
Sire de
Breval
Robert
~1003
Neil IV
de St.
Sauveur
~0978
Count
d' Ivry
Raoul
1589
Oliver
Bond
1590
John
Bond
1591
John
Bond
1592
Bartholomew
Bond
1595
William
Bond
12 MAR 1598/99
Elizabeth
Bond
1600
Margaret
Bond
1628
Henry
Bond
~1536 - 1608
George
Woode
72
72
~1540
Katherine
Buttal
1564
George
Woode
20 JAN 1565/66
John
Woode
~1567
Anne
Woode
~1569
Abraham
Woode
~1571
Eleazer
Woode
~1572
Elizabeth
Woode
~1574
Dorothy
Woode
~1576
Susan
Woode
~1578
Hester
Woode
John
Woode
1622
Thomas
Bond
6 MAR 1628/29
Elizabeth
Bond
1632
Francis
Bond
31 JAN 1634/35
Mary
Bond
1638
Jonas
Bond
1358
Gilbert
Halshall
1530 - 23 FEB 1594/95
Hugh
Sargent
Hugh Sargent, gentleman Hugh Sargent (Sariant), the earliest known ancestor of the family, lived in Courteenhall, County of Northampton. Courteenhall was the inheritance of the Wake family, which traces its descent back to Hereward the Wake, to a time anterior to the Norman Conquest. It is five and a quarter miles southerly from the town of Northampton, and in 1831 contained one hundred and forty-four inhabitants. The church is dedicated to Saint Peter and Saint Paul. Prefixed to the first volume of the parish register, which begins in the year 1538, and folded to its size, is a large piece of parchment, on which is very neatly transcribed many pedigrees. One of them is of the family of Sargent. There can be no doubt that this piece of work, which is both most useful and rare, was written by a former rector, who had at first hand the facts which he recorded. The rector of the church, Rev. Archibald Wake (1895) says, "The parchment shows that the family were in Courteenhall in 1554, and were of gentle blood; and possibly the Sargents were in the parish before a Wake entered it." Hugh Sargent must have been born about the year 1530. He died Feb. 23, 1595/6, (buried 1st of March). That he heeded the Scripture injunction, "Be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the earth," is evidenced by the fact that he was the father of fifteen children, the eldest having been born in 1556, and the youngest in 1579. From the section titled "Genealogical Research in England: Gifford-Sargent - From A Genealogical Chart in the Parish Registers of Courteenhall, Co. Northampton"; Contributed by G. Andrews Moriarty, Jr., A.M., LL.B., of Newport, R.I., and communicated by the Committee on English Research (appearing in Vol. 75, Jan. 1921, New England Historic and Genealogical Register, p. 59): In the "Sargent Genealogy," published in 1895 by the late Aaron Sargent of Somerville, Mass., the ancestry of WIlliam Sargent, one of the early settlers of Malden, Mass., is carried back to his grandfather, Hugh Sargent of Courteenhall, co. Northampton, England; but the statements about the English Sargents printed in this book contain several errors, the documentary evidence on which these statements are based is omitted, and comparatively little information is given about the ancestry of Margaret Gifford, wife of Hugh Sargent and grandmother of the New England immigrant.
~1535 - 28 FEB 1593/94
Margaret
Gifford
Margaret, wife of Hugh Sargent, was daughter of Nicholas and Agnes (Masters) Gifford, of the Abbey of St. James, which was a western suburb of the town of Northampton. This abbey was a religious estate of considerable note, founded before the year 1112, by William Peverel, natural son of William the Conqueror, and to which he (Peverel) gave forty acres of land. It is called St. James End. From the section titled "Genealogical Research in England: Gifford-Sargent - From A Genealogical Chart in the Parish Registers of Courteenhall, Co. Northampton"; Contributed by G. Andrews Moriarty, Jr., A.M., LL.B., of Newport, R.I., and communicated by the Committee on English Research (appearing in Vol. 75, Jan. 1921, New England Historic and Genealogical Register, p. 59): The following pedigree, based on the records already given in this article and on other records and authorities cited below, shows the descent of William Sargent of Malden, Mass., from John Gifford le Boef of Twyford, co. Bucks, in 1277, and traces the probable ancestry of John Gifford le Boef to Osbern de Bolebec, a Norman lord, whose sons settled in England in the time of William the Conqueror. It corrects in some important particulars the account of the family of the Giffards of Twyford contained in the late Maj. Gen. the Hon. George Wrottesley's "Giffards from the Conquest to the Present Time," published in 1902 in the Collections of The William Salt Archaeological Society, New Series, vol. 5, as well as certain errors in the printed Visitations of Northamptonshire and Oxfordshire and in the pedigree entered in the Heralds' College in the reign of Queen Elizabeth by Thomas Gifford, son of Sir George. It supplies, also, some corrections and additions to the Gifford pedigree published in the Register, vol. 71, pages 174-175, and includes the corrections which, as is found by an examination of the registers of the parishes of All Saints, Northampton, and of Courteenhall, should be made in the statements about the English Sargents in the early part of the "Sargent Genealogy." The Giffard-Gifford family is one of the most ancient and distinguished families of England. Planche, in his work entitled "The Conqueror and his Companions," describes Walter Giffard the Elder (vide infra, 1, i) as "the progenitor of a race from which the noblest families in England may be proud to trace their descent." The Gifford family of Twyford, co. Bucks, which sprang from a cadet of the great house of Brimsfield, co. Gloucester, was one of the most ancient families of the Buckinghamshire gentry. During the Middle Ages members of this family held lands in capite and served as high sheriffs, knights of the shire, commissioners of the peace, and arrayers for the French wars. They also did their part in the Scottish, Welsh, and French wars. In the Wars of the Roses they appear to have adhered to the House of York. In Tudor times George Gifford, of the younger branch, settled at Middle Claydon, co. Bucks, was the right-hand man of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, in the dissolution of the monasteries, and saw to it that his family profited by his activities and that his brothers were well provided for out of the monastic spoils. In the early history of the Twyford family its fortunes were greatly increased by the marriage of Sir John Gifford le Boef (vide infra, 11), about the year 1300, with Alexandra de Gardinis, heiress of the De Gardinis family, which brought to its part of the lands of the ancient Norman house of De Arsic, one of whose coheiresses was the great-grandmother of Alexandra and a descendant of William de Arsic, one of the eight knights appointed by William de Fiennes, in the reign of William the Conqueror, to the custody or guard of Dover Castle. By the marriage of Thomas Gifford of Twyford (vide infra, 15) with Alianora Vaux the family became connected with the great Lancastrian family of Vaux of Harrowden, co. Northampton, one of whose members was raised to the peerage by Henry VIII. In the reign of Elizabeth the younger branches sank into the ranks of the minor gentry and merchant class, one of the daughters marrying into the mercantile family of the Sargents of Courteenhall and Northampton, from which sprang William Sargent, the settler in Malden, Mass.
~1508 - 1546
Nicholas
Gifford
38
38
On 20 OCT 1530 Nicholas Gifford was recommended to Thomas Cromwell by John Plauden, "late clerk of the lands of Woolsley's College, Oxford." (Letters Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII). In 1538 he was one of the gentlemen to attend upon the King's household when required. In that year he was called of Brynon, Northants. He was active in the work of dissolving the monasteries; and by letters patent, date 12 SEP 1545, the house and lands of the dissolved monastery of St. James, in the parish of Duston near Northampton, with the annual fair held there, were granted to him and his heirs, and he died seised thereof, Roger Gyfford, a minor, aged eighteen years and three months, being his son and heir (NEHGR, Vol. 74, p. 236).
~1510 - 1581
Agnes
Anne
Maisters
71
71
1462 - 23 JAN 1541/42
Roger
Gifford
Roger Gifford, Esquire Testator of 1538 INEHGR, vol. 74, page 269) The Visitation of Northamptonshire states that Roger Gifford of Middle Claydon was son of Thomas Gifford of Twyford, co. Bucks, the testator of 1511; but the Harleian pedigree in the printed Visitation of Oxfordshire and also the pedigree of the Giffords of Middle Claydon i the Heralds' College make him the son of John and Agnes Gifford and therefore the brother of Thomas. The latter statement is clearly the correct one. Thomas Gifford, in his will, dated 10 OCT 1511 mentions only one son, Thomas, and his inquisition post mortem, of 10 NOV 1511, shows that this Thomas, the heir, was then aged thirty years and more, and therefore was born about 1481. The inquisition post mortem of Roger Gifford of Middle Claydon, of 22 NOV 1543, shows Thomas Gifford, son of Thomas, in his will, dated 2 NOV 1550, calls Roger's sons, George, William, Ralph, and John, his cousins; and in AUG 1538, in a complaint of injuries done to him by Roger Gifford and his sons, John, George, Ralph, William, and Nicholas, he calls them his kinsmen (Letters Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, vol. 12, part 2, p. 96, 97). On 24 FEB 1524 (1523/24?) Roger Gifford was commissioner of the peace in co. Bucks, and on 1 APR 1524 he was a collector of the subsidy for the French War (Letters Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII). In 1495 he leased the manor of Middle Claydon of the Verney family for ninety-nine years. In his will, dated 24 SEP 1538, he mentions his wife Mary, his sons John (eldest son), George (second son), Rauffe (third son), William (fourth son), and Nycholas (youngest son), and provides for the occupation of the manor of Middle Claydon by his sons. The Will of Roger Gyfforde of Mydle Cleydon in the County of Bucks, Esquire, 24 September 1538. To be buried in the parish of All Saints in Mydle Cleydon. To the parson of said church, for tithes omitted and forgotten, 6s. 8d. To the mother church of St. Paul in London 3s. 4d. Whereas I hold the manor of Mydle Cleydon, with appurtenances, in the County of Bucks, of Raufe Verney of Penley in the County of Hertford, Esquire, by his deed dated 14 November, 27 Henry VIII [1535], for the term of ninety-five years yet to come, which lease I purchased for the living of Mary, my wife, if she overlive me, and for my own natural sons, I will and bequeath said lease to George Gyfforde, my second son, to John Gyfforde, my eldest son, to Rauffe Gyfforde, my third son, to William Gyfforde, my fourth son, and to Nycholas Gyfforde, my youngest son, provided that the manner and form of occupation of said manor shall be observerd as herein expressed: my son George solely to have the occupation of said farm and every commodity thereof for the term of forty-one years; but if said George die during the forty-one years, said grant is then to cease. Said George is to pay all rents and charges due by virtue of said lease, during his occupation thereof, and is also to pay my said son John Gyfforde during his occupation of said lease, at the two usual terms of the year, 20 pounds yearly, and if said John die, said George shall pay 20 pounds yearly, equally, divided among his brethren. After the decease of said George said John Gyfforde shall have the occupation of said farm of Cleydon during the term of forty-one years; or if said George's term of forty-one years expires, said John shall hold the lease for forty-one years; and for lack of him the next brother in age, and so the remainder to follow to my other sons until the last of my said sons; and when my last son surviving shall die, then any years remaining shall be granted by him to the heir male of my eldest son John, to have and to hold to him, his heirs and assigns, the residue of years yet to come. All my other leases I will to my son George Gyfforde, to be ordered in like manner and form as the lease of the aforesaid manor of Cleydon. If I have not, at the time of my decease, paid the 100 pounds I promised my son Nycholas Gyforde, then my executors shall pay said Nycholas 100 pounds within one year of my decease. My said son George shall give to my said wife Mary the annuity of 100 markes [?] and meat and drink for her and her maid. To my son John Gyfford 100 pounds. I forgive my son George his debt of 220 pounds, he paying within thirteen months after my death to my son William Gyfforde 40 pounds and to my son Nycholas 40 pounds. I freely forgive my son Rauffe Gyfforde the 35 pounds he oweth me. Residuary legatee: my wife Mary. Executors: my wife Mary and my sons John Gyfforde, George, Rauffe, William, and Nycholas. I set my seal to this my last will and testament this 28 April, 34 Henry VIII [1542]. I give further to my son John Gifforde my three gilt goblets with the covers; to my son George my best down bed and my best counterpoint; to every other of my sons one of my best feather beds and beds of down, to be delivered to them after the death of my wife Mary Gifforde; to my godson Roger, my son John Gifforde's son, 3 pounds, 6s. 8d.; to my godson Roger, my son Rauffe Gifforde's son, 3 pounds, 6s. 8d.; to my godson Thomas, my son George's son, a cup of the value of 3 pounds, 6s. 8d., with this scripture on it: "My godfather & graunde father Roger gave me Thomas this cupp"; to my daughter Dawnsty a gilte spoon; to my sister Fongan a gilt spoon; to my brother Robert Gyfforde, 40s. [Signed] 2 December, 34 Henry VIII [1542], my mother Mary Gyfforde, William Smythe, John Mason, and Elyn Gyfforde being then present, on the Saturday in the morning, per me, George Gyfford, as commanded by my father, the said Roger, on the day and year last stated. Proved 8 February 1543/4 by Robert Alen, notary public, proctor for the relict, John Gyfford, George Gyfford, Rafe Gyfford, William Gyfford, and Nicholas Gyfford, the executors named, etc. (P.C.C., Pynnyng, 2).
1466 - >1542
Mary
Nanseglos
76
76
1431 - 1506
John
Gifford
75
75
John Gifford, Esquire In 1479 and 1483, John Gifford was a commissioner of the peace. He appears to have adhered to Richard III. He was high sherriff of co. Bucks in 1497 (Lipscombe's History of Buckinghamshire, vol. 1, page xvi). On 24 NOV 1487 he granted his lands in Fringford, co. Oxford, to his son Thomas and his (Thomas's) wife Joan and their heirs (NEHGR, vol. 74, page 235 - In the abstract of the inquisition post mortem of Thomas Gifford, printed in NEHGR, vol. 74, p. 235, either "Thomas" should be substituted for "John" in the second line, or "Thomas Gifford" (or an equivalent expression) should be substituted for "himself" in the fifth line.) On 23 SEP, 22 Henry VII (1506), his son Thomas received license to enter, without proof of age, upon the lands of his father, John Gifford of Twyford, a tenant in chief (Calendar of Patent Rolls).
1439
Agnes
Winslowe
1416 - 1463
Thomas
Winslowe
47
47
1420 - 1458
Agnes
Throckmorton
38
38
1382 - 1445
Sir
John
Throckmorton
63
63
1385 - >1466
Eleanor
De La
Spine
81
81
1356 - >1411
Thomas
De
Throckmorton
55
55
1360
Agnes
De
Besford
1329 - <1404
Alexander
De
Besford
75
75
1333 - 1404
Beatrice
De
Thornton
71
71
1297
John
De
Besford
~1318
Joan
De
Harley
~1320
Alice
De
Harley
~1480
Anne
Charlton
1260
Alexander
De
Besford
1276
Beatrice
De
Thornden
1251
John
De
Thornden
~1300
Egidia
Greig
1230 - 12 JAN 1266/67
Alexander
De
Besford
1234
Margaret
De
Nauton
1210
Walter
De
Besford
1214
Helen
1185
Vivian
De
Besford
1189
Miss
De
Nafford
~1160
Osbert
De
Nafford
1135
Vivian
De
Besford
1335
Robert
De
Throckmorton
1334
Lucy
Coleman
1309
Giles
De
Throckmorton
1314
Agnes
Abberbury
1271 - 1335
Robert
De
Throckmorton
64
64
1282 - 1315
Joan
De
Weston
33
33
1251
Simon
De
Throckmorton
1255
Isabel
De
Donnisley
1231
Robert
De
Throckmorton
1235
Prudence
De
Compton
1212 - 1246
Adam
De
Throckmorton
34
34
1215
Matilda
De
Dersinton
1172
Robert
De
Throckmorton
1146
John
De
Throckmorton
1389 - 1426
William
Winslowe
37
37
1379 - 1443
Agnes
Poure
64
64
1346 - 1398
Thomas
Poure
52
52
1350 - 1443
Joan
93
93
1321
William
Poure
1296 - <1338
Richard
Poure
42
42
1271 - 1316
William
Poure
45
45
1275 - >1332
Margery
Chasteleyn
57
57
~1220 - >1275
John
Poure
55
55
1179 - 1219
Hugh
Poure
40
40
1183
Katherine
1138
Walter
Poure
1143
Matilda
1333 - 1387
John
Winslowe
54
54
1337 - 1409
Mary
Crouchman
72
72
1300
William
Wiyncelowe
1408 - 1469
Thomas
Gifford
61
61
1405 - ~1470
Eleanor
De
Vaux
65
65
1370 - 1405
William
De
Vaux
35
35
1374 - <1454
Eleanor
Drakelowe
80
80
1350 - 1378
Thomas
Drakelowe
28
28
1356 - >1380
Ankeret
De
Salford
24
24
1354 - 1401
William
De
Vaux
47
47
1344
Joan
Thirning
1318
John
Thirning
1321 - <1373
William
De
Vaux
52
52
1325
Joan
1269 - 1330
Elias
De
Vaux
61
61
1274
Elizabeth
De
Hastings
1242
Roger
De
Vaux
1250
Alice
De St.
Liz
1222
Adam
De St.
Liz
1229
Iseud
Beckingham
1194 - 1275
Oliver
De
Vaux
81
81
1367 - 1409
Roger
Gifford
42
42
1365 - ~1440
Esebella
Stretele
75
75
~1332 - 1394
Sir
Thomas
Gifford
62
62
1339 - 1367
Elizabeth
Demissenden
28
28
1301 - 1368
John
Gifford
67
67
1305 - 1361
Lucy
De
Morteyn
56
56
1270 - 1328
John "Le
Boef"
Gifford
58
58
1279 - 1328
Alexandra
De
Gardinis
49
49
~1165 - 1200
John
Maltrevors
35
35
1188 - 1237
Osbert
Giffard
49
49
1211 - 1242
Isabel
De
Bokland
31
31
1130 - 1190
Elias III
Helias
Giffard
60
60
1160 - >1190
Maud
de
Berkeley
30
30
30 JAN 1554/55
Elizabeth
Sargent
~1556
Anna
Sargent
1559
Nicholas
Sargent
1565
Mary
Sargent
1566
John
Sargent
~1564
Jane
Sargent
1562 - 1649
Roger
Sargent
87
87
~1567
Alice
Sargent
~1569
Thomas
Sargent
1573
George
Sargent
1574
Magdeline
Sargent
1575
Robert
Sargent
1576
Michael
Sargent
8 FEB 1577/78
Dorothy
Sargent
~1280 - 1346
Sir John
De
Morteyn
66
66
~1280
Joan
De
Rothwell
~1245
John
De
Morteyn
~1250
Joan
Gobion
~1215
Hugh
Gobion
~1220
Matilda
~1178 - 1230
Richard
Gobion
52
52
~1180
Agnes
De
Merlay
~1143
Roger
De
Merlay
~1145 - 1202
Alice
De
Stuteville
57
57
~1120
Ralph
De
Merlay
~1485 - 1558
John
Maisters
73
73
Merchant Mayor of Sandwich, a warden of the Cinque Ports, and a member of Parliament (NEHGR, Vol. 71, p. 175). Died between 24 AUG 1558 and 14 JUN 1559 According to Burke's Landed Gentry of Great Britain, tenth edition, p. 1078, John Master is first mentioned in 1520, was mayor of Sandwich in 1528, 1543, 1552, and 1556; was a warden of the Cinque Ports and as such was one of the bearers of the canopy of Queen Anne Boleyn at her coronation, and was a baron of Parliament for Sandwich in 1544 and 1554. King Henry VIII granted to him the manor of East Langdon, co. Kent. Apparently his sons Thomas and Peter and his daughter Agnes were children by his first wife, and James and John were sons by his second wife. For this family see Burke's Landed Gentry and Philipott's Visitation of the County of Kent, taken in the year 1619, London, 1863, p. 44-48 The Will of John Maister of the Towne porte of Sandwiche [co. Kent], 24 August 1558. To be buried in the Chapel of Our Lady Saint Mary within the church of Sandwiche. To said church towards the reparation 20s. To the high altar of said church, for tithes and oblations negligently forgotten, 6s. 8d. To the poor people of said parish at my burial 40s., at my month's tide 40s., and at my twelve month's da 40s. I will there be said at my burial ten masses, at my month's day ten masses, and at my twelve month's day ten masses. My executors shall buy cancas and other necessary things for the renewing of the bedding at St. John's Youse, withint ht Twon of Sandwiches, to the value of 20s. To Elizaeth, my wife, 1000 pouns, to be paid within three months of my death. My household stuff shall be divided into five prts, whereof [I bequeath] to Elizabeth, my wife, one part, to Peter Maister, my son, one part, to James, my son, and John, my son, till full age or day of marriage, , she finding surety to my overseers for the same. If said Jams, John, or the child unborn die, or any one of them, then I will that such portion remain to Elizzbeth, my wife. To my brother-in-law, Richard Marten of Rye, my russet goen furred with fox. To Elziabeth, my wife, my scarlet gown. To THomas Maister, my son, my coat faced with foynes beofre and fox behind. to Peter ayster, my son, the residue of my apparel. To my sister Marten of Rye a gold ring with a red stone, which lieth in pawn for 40s. Whereas John Worme of London do owe me 30 pounds and upwards, if said John Worme do pay his sister Agnes Worme 20 marks, I forgive him th rest of the money he oweth me. I forgive John Benjamall all such money as he oweth me. I forgive all those that be not well able to pay me all such debts as be under 14s. 4d. Symond Lynche of Sandwiche shall have my best gelding. To Agnes Gifford, my daughter, 20 pounds, to be paid within twelve months of my death. To every cvhild that my said duaghter may now have alive 20 pounds, to be paid in like manner. T every godchild that I now have alive 12d. To my goddaughter Agnes Menys 13s. 4d. To my cozen Agnes Gryffyn 20s. To the child she now hath alive 6s. 8d. To John Sperte, sometime my servant, 20s. To Walter Woodcocke, my boy, 40s. To Jerome Jones 40s., my old cloak, my cote jerkyn, and my hoose clothe of marble, a gown of sheepes colour furred with foynes. Whereas I have given to Elizabeth, my wife, 100 pounds and the one fifth part of my household stuff and also a certain house and lands at Worthe, for the term of her life, if my said wife be not content to give unto my sons Thomas Maister and Peter Maister and my other sons a clear acquittance for any dower that she may claim on and above 10 pounds a year given her out of my manor of Stodmershe, then all such bequests unto said Elizabeth shall not stand as gifts until she hath given them a lawful discharge for her dowry as aforesaid. Residuary legatees: Elizaberth, my wife, James Maister, my son, John Maister, and the child yet unborn. Executors: Elizabeth, my wife, and Thomas Colwell. Overssers: My brother William Payne of Canterbury and Thomas Maister, my son, to either of whom I give 40s. and to Thomas Colwell 4 pounds. Concerning my lands, tenements, and hereditaments: I will that my eldest son Thomas Maister shall have all the manor of Stodmershe, in the County of Kent, with all appurtenances, etc., except such lands, marshes, and hereditaments hereafter mentioned willed to Peter Maister, my son, to belong to said Thomas Mayster, his heirs and assigns, for ever; so that neither said Thomas Maister nor his heirs nor assigns claim any part of the manor of Estlangdon, hereafter mentioned, nor any lands, etc., assigned unto James Maister, my son, and so that said Thomas Maister do release to said Peter all such lands, etc., hereafter mentioned willed to said Peter. And if said Thomas do claim any of said lands, etc., willed to said James Maister, my son, and any of the mershes, etc., willed to said Peter, then said James shall have two parts of the manor of Stodmershe, to said James and his heirs of his body; and for lack of such heirs [remainder] to my son John Maister and the heirs of his body; and for lack of such heirs [remainder] to the heirs of me, the said John Maister, and Elizabeth, now my wife; and for lack of such heirs [remainder] to Agnes Gifford and the heirs of her body lawfully begotten. To said Thomas Maister, my son, and to his heirs and assigns for ever all the houses and lands which I purchased of John Russell to the parish of Stodmersh, and also my garden at Matsle in the parish of St. Peter in the town of Sandwiche. To said Peter, my son, and the heirs of his body my house at Norwood, wherein Robert Williams now liveth, with the five acres of land thereto assigned, also mershes called Normeade, Guttermershe, Stowes Marshe, Newe Marhses, Harper Mershe, Poll Mershe, Coulde Mershe, Rifte Mershe, the Great Common Mershe, and the Little Common Mershe, and one piece of arable land containing fourteen acres, in the field called Northfield near the barne called Stod-mersh barnes, said Peter paying yearly to my said wife Elizabeth 10 pounds, given to her by me for marriage jointure, and paying to my son Thomas and his heirs the yearly rent of 10 pounds. If said Peter die without heirs, said premises assigned to my son Peter shall remain to John Maister, my godson, son of said Thomas Maister (my son), and to the heirs of said John. To said Peter 40 pounds, which John Parker hath of mine. To my son James Maister and the heirs of his body lawfully begotten all that manor of Est Langdon in the County of Kent, with all the lands, etc., thereto belonging. If James, my son, die without heirs, said manor of Est Langdon, with all lands, etc., shall remain to John Maister, my son, and his heirs, and for lack of such issue to the heirs of me, John Maister, and Elizabeth, my wife. To James Maister, my son, my mershe called Bexley Lees and the mersh called the Harp thereto adjoining. My friends tHomas Colwell, William Payne, Robert THomnopson, and Thomas Severne, by an indenture made by me, shall receive the rents, profits, etc., during the minority of James, my son, until he reach the age of twenty-one years, and shall pay to my wife Elizabeth 10 pounds for her own use, and also for every of the children of me and said Elizabeth 10 pounds during her widowhood for the bringing up of said children, the residue of such issues to be accounted for by said four trustees when said children or the survivors of them attain the age of twenty-one years or day of marriage. If Elizabeth, my wife, marry again, she shall have no part of said usses, but said Thomas Colwell, my executor, shall have 4 pounds yearly for his pains and 10 pounds yearly for the finding of schooling, meat and drink, and apparell for each child. concerning my little piece of ground at the Mayden Towre, my executors shall receive the yearly rents thereof until my son James come to the age of twenty-one years, employing the same yearly in buying wood to be distributed among the poor in the town of Sandwich; and when said James shall attain teh age of twenty-one years, I will the said land to him and his heirs for ever, providing yearly for ever four loads of wood for distribution to the poor of Sandwiche. Touching the disposition of my plate: To Thomas Maister, my son, a goblett with a cover, partly gilt, a pott of silver with a cover, partly gilt, and four silver spoons. To Peter Maister, my son, a goblet of silver, partly gilte, a pot of silver, partly gilt, and four silver spoons. To Agnes Gifforde, my daughter, a goblet of silver, partly gilt, a pot of silver, partly gilt, and four silver spoons. The residue of my plate shall be divided between my wife and the children of me and her. Witnesses: John Stewarde, Clerk, Vicar of the parish of Our Lady aforesaid, Thomas Severne of Sandwich, yeoman, Robert Redwoode of Wickhamborough, yeoman, and George Owen, of Little Borne [?]. Proved 14 June 1559 by Thomas Colwell and Elizabeth Maister, in the person of said Thomas Colwell, the executor named in the will. (P.C.C., Chaynay, 27). [Thomas Gifford, of Twyford, co. Bucks, the testator of 1511, and Roger Gyfforde, of Middle Claydon, co. Bucks, the testator of 1538, were brothers, being sons of John Gifford of Twyford, as appears from a comparison of the pedigree printed in Vol. 5, p. 176-181, of the Publications of the Harleian Society (The Visitations of the County of Oxford) with the pedigree printed on p. 93-94 of Metcalfe's edition of the Visitations of Northamptonshire, 1564 and 1618-19, and from a careful study of the two Gifford wills given above. The Giffard or Gifford family was a well-known family of Norman descent, which came into England in the days of the Conqueror. From an early date a branch of the family was settled at Twyford, co. Bucks, and for the earlier generations of this branch the Visitations of the County of Oxford, referred to above, may be consulted.)
~1062
Sybil
Morel
~1070
Thor
Leofwineson
FEB 1526/27 - 1591
Roger
Gifford
~1506
Anna
Gifford
~1095 - ~1166
Elias II
Giffard
71
71
1104 - >1167
Berta
FitzRichard
De Clifford
63
63
~1045 - 1130
Elias
Helias
Giffard
85
85
1065
Ala of
Evreaux
~1531
Barbara
Gifford
~1529
Anne
Gifford
~1004
Weva
De
Crepon
~1533
George
Gifford
~1537
Marie
Gifford
~1490 - 24 MAR 1546/47
Elizabeth
Payne
~1515
Thomas
Maisters
~1518
Peter
Maisters
~1520
James
Maisters
John
Maisters
~1483
Marten
Maisters
~1486
Alice
Gifford
~1487
George
Gifford
~1488
Joan
Gifford
~1489
Ralph
Gifford
~1491
William
Gifford
~1503
John
Gifford
~1443 - 3 FEB 1475/76
Walter
Nanseglos
~1446
Lucy
~1420
Thomas
Nanseglos
~1422
Mary
~1464
Thomas
Gifford
~1466
William
Gifford
~1468
John
Gifford
~1470
Edmund
Gifford
~1472
Robert
Gifford
~1474
Agnes
Gifford
~1445
Alice
Eleanor
Gifford
Isabel
Gifford
Allis
Gifford
Margaret
Gifford
~1441
Thomas
Winslowe
~1350 - 1427
Guy
De La
Spine
77
77
1354
Katherine
Holt
~1323
John
De
Holt
~1327
Alianore
Durvassel
~1303
Nicholas
Durvassel
~1308
Rose
De
Mountford
~1276
William
De
Mountford
~1280
Agneta
Holt
~1272
John
Durvassel
~1276
Sybil
Corbicon
~1244
Peter
Corbicon
~1239
Thomas
Durvassel
~1242
Margeria
~1215
Philip
Durvassel
~1217
Felicia
De
Camville
~1182
Thomas
De
Camville
~1186
Agnes
~1193
Roger
Durvassel
~1192
Eva
De
Ewenlode
~1166
John
Durvassel
~1134
William
Durvassel
~1290
Sir William
De La
Spine
~1326
Alice
De
Bruley
~1270
William
De
Bruley
~1243 - 1351
Henry
De
Bruley
108
108
~1247 - 1350
Katherine
Foliot
103
103
~1215
William
Foliot
~1211
Richard
De
Bruley
~1215
Millicent
~1185
Robert
De
Bruley
~1189
Joan
De
Kingwarton
~1157
Robert
De
Kingwarton
~1165
Joan
1260
Margery
Durvassel
~1319
William
Vamsage
~1319
Thomas
Corbet
~1276 - 1349
Robert
De
Harley
73
73
~1284
Margaret
Brampton
~1264
Bryan
Brampton
~1266
Eleanor
De
Hereford
~1244
Walter
De
Brampton
~1249
Johanna
D'Ewilly
~1255 - 1287
Richard
De
Harley
32
32
~1259
Burgo
De
Willey
~1230
Andrew
De
Willey
~1200
Warrin
De
Willey
~1204
Petronella
De
Kenley
~1178
Robert
De
Kenley
~1174
William
De
Willey
~1159
Walter
De
Nafford
~1291
Richard
Abberbury
~1294
Agnes
Shareshull
~1249
Richard
Chasteleyn
~1297
William
Crouchman
~1568
Elizabeth
Stevens
1571
Mary
Stevens
~1141 - >1240
William
De
Camville
99
99
~1150
Albareda
Marmion
~1114
Geoffrey
Marmion
~1075
Roger
Marmion
~1175
Geoffrey
De
Camville
~1090 - 1166
Richard
De
Camville
76
76
~1099 - >1144
Milicent
De
Réthel
45
45
~1128 - 1212
Gerard
De
Camville
84
84
~1127 - 1176
Richard
De
Camville
49
49
~1124
Maud
De
Camville
~1126
Walter
De
Camville
~1135
Matilda
De
Camville
1088 - ~1124
Gervaise
de
Réthel
36
36
~1085
Mathilde
de
Réthel
~1075
Cecilia
de
Rethel
~1080
Hodierna
de
Rethel
~1001
Bertrade
de
Gometz
~1038
Hodierna
de
Montlhery
0990 - 1055
Manasses
III de
Réthel
65
65
0988
Yvette
de
Roucy
~1036
Heribert
de
Rethel
~0925
Dada
de
Réthel
~0971
Alberade
De
Macon
0960
Odilie
0950
II
Manasses
~0920
I
Manasser
~1060
Gerard
de
Camville
~1010
Katherine
of
Flanders
~1095
Roger
II
Marmion
~0984
IV
Arnold
~1035 - <1106
Robert
De La
Marmion
71
71
~1040
Hawise
Hadeguisa
~1024
Richard
de
Camville
~1092
Thomas
De
Camville
~1088
Gerard
De
Camville
~1140 - 1231
Nicola
de la
Haye
91
91
1116 - 1156
Richard
de la
Haye
40
40
~1170
Richard
De
Camville
~1004
Gerard
De
Camville
1125
Matilda
de
Vernon
~1125 - 1194
II
Renaud
69
69
Sheriff of Devon & Castellan of Exeter
1130 - 1199
William
De
Mauduit
69
69
~1140 - ~1194
Gilbert
Malet
54
54
~1160 - ~1214
Egeline
de
Courtenay
54
54
1186
Eustacia
Basset
~1130 - 1219
Hawise
de
Abrincis
89
89
~1110
Robert
de
Abrincis
~1180 - 1235
Robert
Fitz
Walter
55
55
~1248 - 1293
Ela
Fitz
Walter
45
45
~1209 - 1 JAN 1250/51
Idonea
De
Camville
~1224 - 1258
Walter
Fitz
Robert
34
34
~1140
Maud
de
Lucy
~1246 - 1295
William
D'Odingsells
49
49
~1284
Margaret
D'Odingsells
~1280 - 1311
John
de
Grey
31
31
1300 - 1359
Sir John
De
Grey
58
58
Sir John de Grey, 2nd Baron Grey, one of the 25 chosen by Edward III to assist in founding the Most Noble Order of the Garter. He was born 1300, and in 15th of Edward II, 1322, making proof of his age, had livery of his lands; and in the 1st of Edward III, 1326, was in the wars of Scotland. In 6th of the same reign, upon some difference between his lordship and William le Zouch of Harringworth, another great baron, which was heard before the King, Lord Grey, under the irritation of the moment, drew a knife upon Lord Zouche in the royal presence, where-upon both lords were committed to prison; but Lord Zouche was soon released, while Lord Grey was remanded, and his lands seized upon by the crown. He was, however, within a short time, upon making submission, restored to favour; and in three years afterwards we find his lordship in Scotland, upon the King's service, being in the retinue of Henry, Earl of Lancaster. From this period for several years he was engaged in the French wars, and in 20th of Edward III he obtained license to improve his houses at Rotherfield, County Oxford, and Sculcotes, County York, with embattled walls of lime and stone. The next year, there being a tournament held at Etham, in Kent, amongst other accourtments prepared for that military exercise, his lordship had a hood of white cloth, embroidered with dancing men, in blue habits, buttoned before with pearls, very large, presented to him by the King. In 26th of Edward III, 1352, he was one of the commissioners in the Counties of Oxford and Berks, for arranging and arraying and arming all men of ability within those shires, and leading them against the King's enemies, invasion by the French being threatened at that time. In the next year he was steward of the King's household, and had a summons to Parliament from 1326 to 1359, inclusive. His lordship, in his minority, was not in possession of his lands, and they were granted to various persons by the crown, and an inspection of Hardwick and Rotherfield was ordered as far back as 1317, to safeguard his interests. When he was summoned to Parliament, by writ directed to Johanni de Crey, whereby he became Lord Grey. He married 1st Katherine, daughter of Bryan FitzAlan, and had a son John, his successor, and a daughter Maud. He married 2nd Avice, sister and co-heir of Robert, Lord Marmion, son and daughter of John, Lord Marmion. Robert Marmion died sine prole; being of infirm constitution, he was never summoned to Parliament. He arranged for the marriage of his younger sister Avice to Sir John Grey, upon condition that the issue of Sir John and Avice should bear the name of Marmion. At her brother's death the barony of Marmion of Witrington fell into abeyance between the two sisters, but Joan, the elder sister, married Lord Bernack, and died without issue.
~1240 - 1295
Robert
de
Grey
55
55
~1250 - 1312
Joan
de
Valoines
62
62
~1225 - ~1275
Thomas
de
Valoines
50
50
~1210
Walter
de
Grey
~1215
Isabel
de
Duston
~1185
William
de
Duston
~1318 - 20 MAR 1377/78
Avice
De
Marmion
~1336 - 1367
Sir
Robert
de Grey
31
31
~1339
Maud
de
Grey
~1287 - 1335
Lord
John De
Marmion
48
48
~1292 - 20 FEB 1359/60
Maud
Furnival
1246 - 1332
Lord
Thomas
Furnival
86
86
1258 - 1340
Joan
le
Despencer
82
82
~1262 - 1322
John
Marmion
60
60
~1244
Lorette
De
Chilham
~1236 - 1275
William
Marmion
39
39
~1200
Robert
V de
Marmion
~1207
Avice
de
Tanfield
~1225 - 1305
Hugh
De
Weston
80
80
Joan
~1259
Richard
De
Weston
~1231
Sarah
De
Stretton
~1225
Richard
De
Stretton
~1195
Hugh 'The
Palmer' De
Weston
~1199
Matilda
De
Betterton
~1230
William
De
Weston
1175
Homo
De
Betterton
Alice
~1169 - 1227
John
De
Weston
58
58
~1196
John
De
Weston
~1197
Henry
De
Weston
~1200
Nicholas
De
Weston
~1202
William
De
Weston
~1137
Hamo
De
Weston
~1141
Agnes
~1171
Robert
De
Weston
~1172
Osbert
De
Weston
~1175
Homo
Hayes De
Weston
~1113 - 1167
Robert
De
Weston
54
54
~1073
Ralph Fitz
Urnoi de
Weston
~1047
Urnoi
de
Weston
1236
John
De
Hastings
1265
John
De
Hastings
1208
Petronilla
De
Croun
1230 - 1287
John
de
Vaux
57
57
1170
Wido
De
Croun
1186
Isabella
Basset
1178 - ~1263
Alice
Mabel
Basset
85
85
~1180
Phillippa
Basset
This countess, outliving his lordship, paid 100 marks to King Henry III that she might not be compelled to marry again, but that she might select her own husband, provided he were a loyal subject. She afterwards m. Richard Siward, a turbulent person, but of a martial disposition from his youth who took an active part with the barons. From this boisterous soldier her ladyship was, however, eventually divorced. Henry, 5th Earl of Warwick, was s. at his decease in 1229, by his son, Thomas de Newburgh, 6th Earl of Warwick. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 399, Newburgh, Earls of Warwick]
1158
Philippa
Malbank
1135 - 1190
William
de
Malbank
55
55
1138
Andeline
De
Beauchamp
1173
William
Malbank
1135
Beatrice
De
Beauchamp
~1375 - 1432
Cecily
Bardolf
57
57
~1294 - 1339
Thomas
de
Poynings
45
45
1105
John
Comyn
~1096
Matilda
Maud
Giffard
1137
Berthoc
Comyn
~1128
William
Comyn
1088 - 1129
Richard
Fitzpons
41
41
1088
Maud
De
Pitres
1129
Gilbert
Giffard
1180 - 1249
Sir
Elias IV
Giffard
69
69
~1040
Pons
FitzWilliam
de Clifford
~0929
Anslec
de
Bertrand
1062
Joyce
De
Clifford
1026
Alexander
De
Scudamore
1030
Jane
Catchman
1005
Alexander
Catchman
1165
Robert
De
Vaux
1137
William
De
Vaux
~1144 - 1194
Robert
I de
Vaux
50
50
1118
Agnes
FitzWalter
1090
Ralph Fitz
Walter De
Strickland
1098
Matilda
De
Langetot
1069 - >1087
Harold
de
Vaux
18
18
1197 - ~1239
Henry
De
Hastings
42
42
1 JAN 1199/00 - 1245
Ada
of
Huntingdon
1218
Ada
D'Eu
1222
Margery
Maud
D'Eu
1235 - 5 MAR 1267/68
Henry
II De
Hastings
1238
Eleanor
D'Eu
~1144 - 1219
David
Canmore
75
75
Earl of Huntington, Garioch, and Lennox
~1156 - 1233
Matilda
Maud De
Keveliock
77
77
1188 - 1237
John
the
Scot
49
49
1185
Earl of
Huntingdon
Robert
~1180 - 1228
Margaret
Dunkeld
48
48
1169 - ~1226
William
De
Hastings
57
57
1165
Henry
De
Huntington
1140 - 1222
Maud
De
Banastre
82
82
~1090
Hugh
De
Hastings
1110
Thurston
De
Bannaster
1090
Ernburga
De
Flamville
1060
Hugh
De
Flamville
~1087
Geoffrey
de St.
Leger
~1091
Agnes
de
Clare
~1035
Roger
De
Builly
1058
Richard
de
Mortaigne
1060
Countess
D'Eu
Beatrice
~1025
Walter
de
Caen
~0990
Walter
de
Caen
~0942
Walter
de
Caen
~0922
Walter
Rolfsson
Elizabeth
1391
Thomas
Chase
Family name is Norman Le Chacur appears in Old English records and taken to mean "Chaser" meaning hunter name brought to England during time of William the conqueror in 1066.
~1424
John
Chase
~1463
Margaret
Delves
~1415 - 1471
John
Delves
56
56
~1420
Ellen
Egerton
~1465
Elizabeth
Delves
1429 - 26 FEB 1462/63
Sir
John
Boteler
~1430
Margaret
Stanley
1406 - 20 FEB 1458/59
Sir
Thomas
Stanley
~1402 - FEB 1457/58
Joan
Goushill
~1432
Sir
William
Troutbeck
~1459
Joan
Troutbeck
~1457
Adam
Troutbeck
~1434 - 1509
Thomas
Stanley
75
75
~1438 - 16 FEB 1494/95
Sir
William
Stanley
To follow the story of Aldford in the turbulent times of the Wars of the Roses, we look next at Sir William Stanley of Holt who purchased Aldford, Nether Alderley and Etchells from Sir John Stanley of Elford. This is covered in Chapter XVIII of "The House of Stanley". Holt is on the river Dee and just over the bridge from Farndon in Cheshire. Sir William Stanley of Holt in Denbighshire was the second son of Thomas the 1st Baron Stanley (1405-59). His elder brother was Thomas (1432-1504) who became the 2nd Baron Stanley and then the 1st Earl of Derby in 1485. Sir William supported the house of York in the Battle of Blore Heath in 1459. In 1461, Edward IV made Sir William Stanley the Chamberlain of Chester and Sheriff of Flintshire. He fought for the Yorkists at Hexham in 1466 and was given the Lordship and Castle of Skipton in Yorkshire which he subsequently exchanged for Chirk. He obtained additional land following the battle of Towton. After the battle of Tewkesbury in 1471 he took the news to Queen Margaret of her son's death and then took her to Coventry. Edward IV's successor, Richard III, courted Sir William's support by various grants of manors and by appointing him Chief Justice for North Wales and Chief Commissioner for Shropshire. Sir William was suspicious of Richard because of the disappearance of the two princes and changed his allegiance to Henry Tudor. At the Battle of Bosworth Field, Sir William Stanley rescued Henry Tudor at a critical moment in the battle, struck down the King and is said to have found his crown in a thorn bush. He handed the crown to his elder brother Thomas who put it on the head of Henry Tudor. Henry VII appointed Sir William Stanley the Lord Chamberlain and Knight of the Garter and granted him additional lands that made him the richest commoner in England. Sir William's wealth and power inevitably attracted enemies and he was disappointed that his services had not led to a peerage. In 1489 he became Constable of Caernarvon and Beaumaris, and in 1490 Henry VII gave him the Lordships of Bromfield, Chirk and the castles of Dinas Bran, Holt and Chirk in confirmation of earlier grants of the latter two by Richard III. Sir William as Lord Chancellor was arbitrator in the dispute between Sir John Stanley of Elford and his half-brother Sir Humphrey, mentioned above. He then bought the manors of Aldford and Nether Alderley in Cheshire from Sir John. Sir William was arrested and imprisoned in the Tower of London in 1494, on suspicion of being involved in the rebellion of Perkin Warbeck, who claimed to be the younger of the "princes in the tower" and therefore heir to Edward IV. At that time it was not known that the sons of Edward IV had both been murdered. Although Sir William had helped put Henry VII on the throne he was known to have been a strong supporter of Edward IV. He was quoted as saying that if Perkin Warbeck was the son of Edward IV he would not fight against him. This, and his unwillingness to confirm or deny his guilt, was sufficient to see him executed at the Tower on 16 February 1495. *
~1445
Sir
John
Stanley
~1451
James
Stanley
1432
Elizabeth
Stanley
~1435 - 1498
Katherine
Stanley
63
63
~1350 - 1403
Sir
Robert
Goushill
53
53
~1374 - 1425
Elizabeth
Fitz-
Alan
51
51
~1403
Elizabeth
Goushill
~1360
Sir William
De
Montague
~1366
Sir
Thomas de
Mowbray
Sir Thomas de Mowbray, Knight of the Garter, Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Nottingham, married Elizabeth Fitz-Alan, daughter of Richard Fitz-Alan, Earl of Arundel, and his wife, Elizabeth de Bohun, daughter of William de Bohun, Earl of Northampton, K. G., and his wife, Elizabeth de Badlesmere, son of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, and his wife, Princess Elizabeth, daughter of Edward I, King of England, by his 1st wife, Eleanor of Castile. (Humphrey de Bohun was great-great-grandson of Henry de Bohun, Surety for Magna Charta.
1385
Thomas
de
Mowbray
~1390
Margaret
de
Mowbray
~1392 - 1452
Isabel
De
Mowbray
60
60
~1394
Elizabeth
de
Mowbray
Sir
Gerard
Usflete
1449 - ~1505
William
Boleyn
56
56
~1368
Margaret
FitzAlan
1381 - 1416
Alice
FitzAlan
35
35
1310 - 1360
William
de
Bohun
49
49
~1276 - 16 MAR 1320/21
Humphery
de
Bohun
~1236
John
de la
Roche
1311 - 1391
Margaret
de
Bohun
80
80
~1249 - 1298
Humphery
de
Bohun
49
49
1310
Agnes
de
Bohun
1306 - 1335
John
de
Bohun
29
29
1309
Humphrey
de
Bohun
~1312
Edward
de
Bohun
~1314 - ~1343
Aeneas
de
Bohun
29
29
1316
Isabel
de
Bohun
1305 - 1361
Humphrey
de
Bohun
56
56
~1235 - 1265
Humphrey
De
Bohun
30
30
~1245 - 20 FEB 1312/13
Alianore
(Agnes)
de Bohun
~1250
Eleanor
de
Bohun
~1247
Maud
de
Bohun
~1240
Joane
de
Quincey
~1234 - 1253
Helen
Verch
Llewellyn
19
19
~1238
Anne
de
Quincey
~1242 - 1284
Hawise
de
Quincey
42
42
~1212
Ralph
De
Bohun
~1214
Margery
De
Bohun
~1251 - 1316
John
de
Windsor
65
65
~1165 - 1197
Beatrix
de
Saye
32
32
~1183
William
De
Mandeville
~1186
Geoffrey
De
Mandeville
~1152 - 1204
Sir
William de
Munchansey
52
52
~1206
Hawise
fitz
Geoffrey
1271 - 1321
Edmund
le
Boteler
50
50
~1208
Cecily
fitz
Geoffrey
~1132 - 1198
Piers
Lutegaresdale
66
66
~1124
William
I De
Lanvaley
~1185
Maud
De
Boclande
~1133 - 1177
William
de
Saye
44
44
~1136
Aufrica
de
Scotland
~1167
Maud
De
Saye
~1140
Isabel
Avenal
~1165
Isabel
De
Huntingdon
~1160 - 11 FEB 1231/32
Ermengarde
de
Beaumont
~1175
II
Alexander
Mistress
~1100
William
de
Saye
~1080
Jordan
de
Saye
~1105
Hugh
Maminot
~1085
Lucy
de
Rumilly
~1115
Agnes
de
Saye
~1070
Muriel
~1040
Seigneur de
Dunstanville
Rainfrey
~1046 - ~1113
Humphrey I
"the Bearded"
de Bohun
67
67
Humphrey de Bohun, the founder of this family in England, was kinsman and companion in arms of William, the Conqueror, and was generally known as "Humphrey with the Beard." Of this Humphrey little more is ascertained than that he possessed the lordship of Taterford, in Norfolk.
1385 - 1437
Sir
John
Stanley
52
52
~1374
Isabel
Harrington
1345 - >1397
Sir
Nicholas
Harrington
52
52
~1351 - <1397
Isabel
English
46
46
1392
William
Thomas
Morley
~1366
Nicholas
Harrington
~1369 - 1417
Sir
James
Harrington
48
48
~1321
Sir
William
English
~1307 - 1359
Sir
John
Harrington
52
52
~1307 - 1359
Katherine
de
Banastre
52
52
~1277 - 1314
Sir
Adam de
Banastre
37
37
~1283 - >1329
Margaret
de
Holand
46
46
~1281 - 1347
Sir
John de
Harrington
66
66
~1281
Juliana
Berlingham
~1305
Sir
Robert de
Harrington
~1245
Richard
Berlingham
~1255 - 1297
Robert
de
Harington
42
42
~1257 - 1293
Agnes
de
Cansfield
36
36
~1227 - <1289
Sir
Richard
Cansfield
62
62
~1227 - >1284
Eleanor
Alicia le
Flemming
57
57
~1207
William
le
Flemming
~1185
Sir
Michael le
Flemming
~1187
Agatha
Fitz
Henry
~1140 - >1212
Henry
Fitz
Hervey
72
72
~1284 - 1356
Henry
FitzHugh
72
72
~1143 - ~1190
Ralph
(Ranulf) De
Greystoke
47
47
~1147 - 1225
Annabel
de
Baliol
78
78
~1113
Beatrice
de
Folfeton
~1084
Agnes
Fitz-
Walter
~1100 - 1182
Hervey
fitz
Akaris
82
82
~1070 - >1140
Akaris
fitz
Bardolf
70
70
Mistress
0999
Count of
Brittany
Eudes
~1150 - 1203
William
le
Flemming
53
53
1167 - 1219
Ada
de
Workington
52
52
~1132 - 1200
Thomas
de
Workington
68
68
~1139 - 1174
Grace
Ireby
35
35
~1170
Patric
de
Culwen
~1110 - 1179
Lord of
Workington
Gospatric
69
69
~1109 - 1133
Egeline
Engaine
24
24
~1105
Ranulf
Engaine
~1090
Orm
de
Workington
~1092
Gunnilda
of
Dunbar
~1085 - ~1150
Michael
I le
Fleming
65
65
~1150
Gervase
Deincourt
~1230
Michael
de
Harrington
~1356 - 6 JAN 1412/13
Sir
John
Stanley
~1364 - 1414
Isabel
de
Lathom
50
50
~1392 - 1463
Sir
Thomas
Stanley
71
71
The Stanley family is very extensive and has been described in detail in a recent book by Peter Edmund Stanley entitled 'The House of Stanley from the 12th Century', a piece de resistance of genealogy. Chapter XLII deals with the Stanleys of Elford in Staffordshire. Here were learn that Sir Thomas Stanley was the third son of Sir John Stanley of Lathom in Lancashire. Sir Thomas was High Sheriff of Staffordshire from 1433 to to 1438, and a privy councillor from 1453-54. He married firstly in 1438 to Maud the daughter and heiress of Sir John Arderne who lived from 1378-1408. As a consequence Sir Thomas acquired extensive lands of the Arderne family in Staffordshire, Gloucestershire, Northamptonshire and Cheshire. The Cheshire estates were at Aldford, Nether Alderley and Etchells near Northenden. The direct male line died out in 1508 on the death of his grandson, Sir John Stanley. It is said that Henry Tudor stayed at Sir John's house at Elford en route from Lichfield to the Battle of Bosworth field at which he defeated Richard III and became Henry VII. Sir John sold the estates of Aldford, Etchells and Nether Alderley to Sir William Stanley of Holt ( see below) and these estates were forfeited to the crown in 1495. In 1602, Nether Alderley was purchased by Sir Thomas Stanley of Over Alderley. *
~1325 - 20 MAR 1380/81
Sir
Thomas
de Lathom
~1334
Joan
Venables
~1296 - 1368
Sir
Hugh
Venables
72
72
1300 - 1370
Sir
Thomas
de Lathom
70
70
~1305
Alianore
De
Ferrers
1271 - 1312
Sir
John de
Ferrers
41
41
1276 - 1375
Hawise
de
Muscegros
98
98
1309 - 1350
Sir
Robert de
Ferrers
41
41
~1311
Petronelle
De
Ferrers
1232 - 1275
Sir
John de
Muscegros
42
42
~1272 - 1350
Sir
John de
Bures
78
78
~1294 - >1355
Catherine
de
Bures
61
61
<1252 - 1280
Sir
Robert de
Muscegros
28
28
~1277
William
De
Mortimer
~1234 - 1301
Cecily
Avenal
67
67
1202 - 1236
Sir
William
Avenal
33
33
>1236
Aline
~1207 - 29 JAN 1252/53
Sir
Robert
Muscegros
~1200 - 1287
Hawise
Malet
87
87
~1229
Mabel
de
Muscegros
~1195
Sir
Hugh de
Poyntz
~1220
Sir
Nicholas
de Poyntz
<1175 - ~1216
William
Malet
41
41
~1193
Hugh
Malet
~1194
William
Malet
~1199
Mabel
Malet
~1198
Bertha
Malet
~1168
Alice
Mabel
Basset
~1140
Alice
Picot
~1110
Ralph
Picot
~1110 - 1170
William
Malet
60
60
Royal Steward and Baron of Curry Malet
1129
Maud
De
Mortimer
~1065 - <1155
Robert
Malet
90
90
Helewise
~1182 - >1228
Richard
de
Muscegros
46
46
~1190
Alice
de
Dives
~1164
Hugh
de
Dives
~1168
Agnes
~1158
Robert
de
Muscegros
~1136
Richard
de
Muscegros
~1273
Alianore
de
Ferrers
~1242
Mary
De
Lusignan
~1224
Robert
de
Lathom
~1252
Katherine
de
Knowsley
~1226
Sir
Thomas de
Knowsley
~1198 - 1286
Robert
de
Lathom
88
88
~1228
Amicia
de
Alfreton
~1176
Robert
de
Alfreton
~1172 - 1220
Richard
de
Lathom
48
48
~1176
Alice
~1135
Robert fitz
Henry de
Lathom
~1152
Emma
de
Grelle
~1130
Albert
de
Grelle
~1100
Henry
de
Lathom
~1330 - 1398
Sir
William
Stanley
68
68
~1339
Alice
Massey
~1307 - 1349
Hamon
VI
Massey
42
42
~1301 - >1349
Matilda
Timperley
48
48
~1276
Richard
Massey
~1251
Robert
Massey
~1212 - >1276
Hamon
V de
Massey
64
64
~1176 - >1250
Hamon
IV de
Massey
74
74
~1104
John
Massey
1100
Hamon
II de
Massey
~1102
Robert
Massey
~1076
Hamon
I de
Massey
~1077
Margaret
Sacie
~1145
Rowley
Corbet
~1175 - ~1235
Robert
De
Pulford
60
60
~1366
Sir
James
Hauskiet
~1250
William
de
Stanley
~1065 - 1100
Hugh
Fitz
Osberne
35
35
~1260
Walter
de
Stanley
~1234
William
de
Stanley
~1208
Adam
de
Stanley
~1168
William
de
Stanley
1124
William
Stanley de
Stoneley
~1150
Elizabeth
Sais
~1071
Joan
Stanley
~1045
Thomas
Stanley
~1145
Hugh
de
Pulford
~1150 - ~1180
Margery
Frodsham
30
30
26 FEB 1401/02 - 1430
Sir
John
Boteler
~1405 - 1441
Isabel
Harrington
36
36
~1432
Elizabeth
Boteler
~1368 - <1387
Margaret
de
Neville
19
19
~1345
Sir
Robert
de Neville
~1350
Margaret
De La
Pole
1469 - 1537
Elizabeth
Stanford
68
68
1340
Katherine
Wingfield
~1352
Blanche
de la
Pole
~1250 - 1329
Sir
Walter de
Norwich
79
79
Chief Baron of Exchequor Norwich
~1307
John
de
Norwich
~1309
Cecily
de
Norwich
~1287
Elena
de
Rotenhering
~1311 - >1373
Sir
Robert
de Neville
62
62
~1315 - >1348
Joan
de
Atherton
33
33
~1295
Henry
de
Atherton
~1300
Emma
de
Aintree
<1276 - >1313
Robert
de
Neville
37
37
~1286
Isabel
De
Byron
~1266
Robert
de
Byron
~1220 - 1285
Geoffrey
de
Neville
65
65
~1240 - FEB 1317/18
Margaret
de
Lungvilliers
~1211
John
de
Lungvilliers
~1409
Margaret
Harrington
~1375 - 1415
William
Boteler
40
40
~1376
Elizabeth
de
Standish
John
de
Wrottesley
~1337
Sir Robert
De
Standish
~1335 - 1399
Sir
John
Boteler
64
64
~1342 - 21 MAR 1399/00
Alicia
Plumpton
~1374 - 27 FEB 1441/42
Alice
Boteler
1381
Richard
Sherborne
~1360
Margaret
Sherborne
~1294 - 1362
Sir
William
Plumpton
68
68
~1320 - 1362
Christianna
De
Mowbray
42
42
~1277 - <1327
John
De
Widdrington
50
50
1340
Sir
Robert
Plumpton
~1280
Alexander
de
Mowbray
~1302 - 17 MAR 1379/80
William
le
Boteler
~1316 - ~1380
Elizabeth
de
Argenteyn
64
64
~1264 - ~1325
Robert
Plumpton
61
61
~1270 - >1332
Lucy
De
Ros
62
62
~1244 - <1310
Sir
William
De Ros
66
66
~1244 - <1310
Eustache
Fitz
Hugh
66
66
~1224
Ralph
Fitz
Hugh
~1229
Miss
de la
Haye
~1195
Hugh
Fitz
Ralph
~1200
Agnes
De
Greasley
~1192 - 1265
Sir
William
de Ros
73
73
~1205 - >1265
Lucia
Fitz
Piers
60
60
~1232
Sir
Robert
De Ros
~1230
Lucy
De
Ros
~1235
Peter
De
Ros
1248 - 28 JAN 1299/00
Alice
De
Ros
~1144 - 1192
Bertram
II de
Verdun
48
48
~1136 - <1204
Herbert
fitz
Herbert
68
68
<1117 - <1155
Henry
fitz
Herbert
38
38
~1084 - 1129
Herbert
fitz
Henry
45
45
~1040 - >1121
Robert
Corbet
81
81
~1118 - ~1066
Hugh
Corbet
52
52
~1050
Renaud
Corbet
~1084
Countess
de Blois
Emma
~1120
Archbishop
of York
St. William
1177 - 1227
Robert II
"Furfan"
de Ros
50
50
Knight Templar and one of the Twenty-five sureities appointed to observe the Magna Charta. He built the castles of Helmsley in Yorkshire, and Werk in Northunberland
~1153 - <1183
Everard
de
Ros
30
30
~1190 - 1269
Robert
De
Ros
79
79
~1155 - <1194
Roese
Trussebut
39
39
~1180
Alice
de
Ros
~1130 - 1176
William
de
Trussbutt
46
46
~1135 - 1205
Aubreye
de
Harcourt
70
70
~1091 - <1185
Rose
Peverel
94
94
~1065 - 1118
Robert
Peverell
53
53
~1065
Adelicia
Deincourt
~1124 - 1160
Robert
de
Ros
36
36
~1129 - ~1218
Sibyl
de
Valoines
89
89
~1099
Geoffrey
de
Valoines
~1088 - 1157
Peter
de
Ros
69
69
~1092 - <1155
Adeline
Espec
63
63
Emma
1116
Richard
De
Builly
~1129
Richard
de
Morville
~1120
Alice
de
Percy
~1161 - 1217
Helena
De
Morville
56
56
~0970
William
De
Percy
~0940
William
Galfrid
De Percy
~0910
Manfred
De
Percy
~1241 - 1297
Sir
Robert
Plumpton
56
56
~1243
Isabella
Westwick
~1217
Serlonis
Westwick
~1215 - 1271
Nigel
Plumpton
56
56
~1180 - 1244
Robert
De
Plumpton
64
64
~1180
Alice
De
Mowbray
~1155
Nigel
De
Plumpton
~1160
Juliana
De
Warwick
~1130
Richard
De
Warwick
~1133
Sir Peter
De
Plumpton
~1130
Lady
Helena
~1090 - 1166
III
Gospatric
76
76
~0920 - 0965
Mormaer
of Athol
Duncan
45
45
~1030 - 1095
Arkil
Morel
65
65
~1065
Winnoc
Morel
~1085
William
de
Merlay
1118 - 1187
Earl of
Angus
Gilbride
69
69
1152
Adam
of
Angus
1154 - ~1210
Sir
Gilchrist
Ogilvie
56
56
1156
Gilbert
of
Angus
1158
William
of
Angus
~1263 - 1311
Hugh
Venables
48
48
~1450
Sir
Richard
Lacon
~1338
Roger
Venables
~1340
Thomas
Venables
~1336 - 1403
Sir
Richard
Venables
67
67
~1280 - 1350
Agatha
De
Vernon
70
70
~1294
William
Venables
~1241 - >1325
Sir Ralph
De
Vernon
84
84
Succeeded the barony 16 Edw 1 (1287) by grants from his father and sister. Survived to the age of 150 years, [levied a fine 19 Edw 2 (1325)]. He added three garbs to the fesse, and was called Old sur Ralphe [or "Sir Ralph the Old"].
~1245
Margaret
De
Sandbach
~1205
Margery
De
Thornton
1203
Sir
William II
Brereton
It is said that a valet had the audacity to interrupt Sir William at dinner, whereupon seeing his master's anger, fled upstairs; but Sir William pursued him there and in his ungovernable rage, murdered him. Sir William, in fear and consternation of the deed and its probable consequences, went to London to plead for pardon with the King, for the royal authority was great in those days. Sir William went on his knees before the King and confessed his crime. The King was obdurate and refused to pardon him immediately, but offered to give him a chance. He said he would allow Sir William three days in which to invent a muzzle for a bear; if it proved efficacious, his life would be spared, if not -- well, the bear would provide his punishment! For three days Sir William was shut up in the tower. At the end of that time he was brought before a bear. The bear was let loose. The prisoner flung his newly invented muzzle over its head and escaped unharmed. From that time the muzzled bear became the emblem of the Breretons. (In olden days, bear baiting was a popular form of sport and the bear wore a leather muzzle to prevent it from biting the dog.) Sir William de Brereton, heir to his father, by deed without date, receives from Randle de Torhaunt, later called Thornton, in frank marriage with his daughter Margery, all the rents which Thomas de Warin held from Peter de Torhaunt, father of the said Randle, in Middlewich Hundred. This Randle de Torhaunt must have been Randle le Roter, Lord of Thornton, who became possessed of the Manor of Thornton and is stated by Collins to have been a son of David le Clerk, Secretary to Randle Blundeville, Earl of Chester. Randle assumed the name of le Roter, and also of Thornton from his place of residence, and is sometimes designated by both. Randle Thornton died before the 28th of Henry III, having married Amicia, daughter of Richard Kingsley and his wife Joan, daughter and co-heiress of Alexander Sylvester, Lord of Stourton and Forester of Wirral, and had a son Ranulph, who died sine prole, and 5 daughters: Amicia, Emma, Agnes, Joan and Margaret, of whom Amicia, the eldest, was mother of Margery Thornton, wife of Wm. Brereton
~1478
Alice
Savage
1357 - 1399
William
De
Dacre
42
42
1185 - 1286
Ralph
De
Dacre
101
101
1245 - >1292
William
Venables
47
47
~1245
Margaret
Dutton
~1264
Catherine
Venables
~1266 - ~1300
William
Venables
34
34
~1268
Cecilia
Venables
~1214 - 1272
Sir
Thomas
De Dutton
58
58
~1220
Phillippa
De
Standon
~1251 - 1294
Sir Hugh
De
Dutton
43
43
~1253
Thomas
Dutton
~1255
Robert
Dutton
~1259
Katherine
Dutton
~1190
Vivian
De
Standon
1176
Hugh
De
Dutton
1152
Hugh
De
Dutton
~1212
Hugh
Dutton
~1214
John
Dutton
~1216
Adam
Dutton
~1175
Muriel
Le
Despencer
~1154
Isabell
de
Massey
~1174
Thomas
Dutton
~1178
John
Dutton
~1180
Adam
Dutton
~1182
Alice
Dutton
~1243
Marjory
de
Fitton
~1125 - >1216
Agatha
de
Theray
91
91
~1152
Agatha
de
Massey
~1100
Eleanor
Beaumont
Joyce
1128
Hugh
De
Dutton
~1132
Alice
Prescott
~1127
John
de
Massey
~1131
Robert
de
Massey
~1154
Geoffrey
De
Dutton
~1156
Adam
De
Dutton
~1104
Richard
Prescott
1096 - 1130
Hugh
FitzOdard
34
34
~1106
Alice
Pichard
~1122
Sir
Geoffrey
Dutton
In about 1150, Dutton Hall was built by Sir Geoffrey de Dutton next to the Weaver River. It survived on that site, in one form or another, until 1933, when it was moved. The site is now a stud farm. The direct male line from Odard survived until 1665.
~1124
Roger
Dutton
~1126
Thomas
Dutton
~1130
Adam
Dutton
~1066
Sir
Nicholas
Pichard
1220 - ~1261
Roger
De
Venables
41
41
~1071
Alice
De
Dutton
~1223
Alice
de
Penninton
~1243
Margaret
Venables
~1247
Rose
Venables
~1249
Roger
Venables
~1251
Amy
Venables
~1193
Alan
de
Penninton
~1190
Hugh
De
Venables
~1195
Alice
Oxton
~1222
Beatrix
De
Venables
~1224
Elizabeth
De
Venables
~1342
Isabel
de
Langton
1370
Richard
Venables
1380
Hugh
Venables
1384
Joan
Venables
1377
Thomas
Grosvenor
~1405
Robert
Grosvenor
~1407
Ralph
Grosvenor
~1410
Thomas
Grosvenor
~1412
Randall
Grosvenor
~1414
Margery
Grosvenor
~1416
Joan
Grosvenor
~1285 - <1342
Robert
Grosvenor
57
57
~1324 - <1366
Ralph
Grosvenor
42
42
~1325
Joan
Eaton
~1342 - 1396
Robert
Grosvenor
54
54
~1345 - >1410
Joan
De
Pulford
65
65
~1415
Isabella
Pearshall
1455 - 1 MAR 1521/22
Randall
Grosvenor
1480
Randall
Grosvenor
1482
Margaret
Grosvenor
~1162 - >1190
Ralph
Avenal
28
28
~1162
Margaret
~1128 - >1178
Ralph
Avenal
50
50
~1098 - >1167
Robert
Avenal
69
69
~1068 - ~1129
Ralph
Avenal
61
61
~1035
William
Avenal
~1037
Emma
De
Redviers
~1037 - 1087
William
De
Abrincis
50
50
~1067 - 1130
Robert
de
Abrincis
63
63
Robert de Abrincis, who, upon the resignation of his uncle, Richard de Redvers, obtained a grant of the Barony of Okehampton, the office of hereditary sheriff of Devon, and the government of Exeter Castle. He m. a dau. of Godwyn Dole, and left an only dau. and heiress, Maud de Abrincis. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 140, Courtenay, Barons Courtenay, Earls of Devon]
~1107
Maud
de
Abrincis
~1132 - 1183
John I
Deincourt
51
51
John Deincourt, 4th baron, who, in the 22nd Henry II [1176], paid 20 marks in Nottinghamshire for trespassing the king's forests and 10 marks in Northamptonshire for a similar transgression. This John m. Ann, dau. of Ralph Murdac, and was s. by his son, Oliver. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 170, d'Eyncourt, Barons d'Eyncourt]
~1130
Hawise
Deincourt
~1080
Alice
~1020
Albreda
d'Avranches
~1039
Richard
de
Reviers
~1041
Robert
FitzGilbert
~1090
Maud
Avenal
~1065 - 1142
Adelise
FitzBaldwin
77
77
~1064
Helisende
d'Avranches
~1000
Albreda
d'Avranches
~1252
James
Hawksket
~1100
Maud
Avenal
~1110 - 1160
Robert
Frodsham
50
50
~1218 - 1266
Roger
de
Mowbray
48
48
Roger de Mowbray, 1st Baron de Mowbray of Axlholme, by writ, married Rose, daughter of Richard de Clare, Earl of Hertford and Gloucester, son of Gilbert de Clare, son of Richard de Clare, both Sureties for Magna Charta.
~0985 - 1074
Hugh II
de
Gournay
89
89
~1172 - 1223
William
de
Mowbray
51
51
Magna Charta Surety Crusader - 1193 William de Mowbray, Surety for the Magna Charta, 3rd Baron by tenure, eldest son, who was of age in 1194. He was early embittered against King John by being compelled by him to surrender the Barony of Front-Beouf (which Henry I had conferred upon his grandfather, Sir Nigel d'Albini) to a descendant of the original owner. This was probably because Mowbray, upon the accession of King John, was tardy in pledging his allegiance, and at length only swore fealty upon condition that the "King should render every man his right." At the outbreak of the Baronial War he was Governor of York Castle, and it is not surprising that he at once sided with the barons against King John, and was one of the most forward of them. He was selected one of the Sureties for the Magna Charta and was a party to the "Covenant for holding the City and Tower of London" and one of those whom the Pope Innocent III excommunicated by name. He died in 1223-4 at his castle in the Isle of Axlholme and was buried in the Abbey of Newburgh in Yorkshire. He married Agnes d'Albini, daughter of William d'Albini.
~1294 - 1311
Aline
Aliva De
Braose
17
17
~1151
Alan
De
Sylvester
~1201
Thomas
de
Baumville
~1235
Nichola
de
Pulford
~1125
Robert
de
Pulford
~1275 - 1322
William
VI De
Braose
47
47
~1275
Aliva
Moulton
~1250
Thomas
Moulton
~1240
William
V De
Braose
~1202
John
De
Braose
~1295 - 1349
Margaret
Wake
54
54
1310 - 1361
John
de
Mowbray
50
50
Lord Of Axholm, Bramber & Gower. John de Mowbray, 3rd Baron Mowbray of Axlholme, married Joan Plantagenet, daughter of Henry Plantagenet and his wife Maud de Chaworth, son of Edmund, Earl of Lancaster and his wife Blanche (daughter of Robert of Artois, son of Louis VIII, King of France), son of Henry III, King of England. (Joan is also descended from Hugh and Roger Bigod, Sureties. for Magna Charta.) Died of the Plague.
~1312 - 1349
Joan
Plantagenet
37
37
~1236 - 1273
Maud
De
Beauchamp
37
37
~1152 - ~1203
Mabel
de
Clare
51
51
~0961
Hugh I
de
Gournay
~1096
Hugh
IV de
Gournay
~0970
Vicomte
de Rouen
Tesselin
~0975
Avelina
de
Bolbec
~1168
Robert
de
Mowbray
~1170
Philip
de
Mowbray
~1175
Roger
de
Mowbray
1338 - 1376
Elizabeth
de
Segrave
38
38
1364
Alianore
de
Mowbray
~1387
Maud
de
Greystoke
~1235 - 1301
Isabel
d'Aubigny
66
66
1255 - 1316
William
de
Ros
61
61
~1263
Maud
de
Vaux
~1295 - 1342
William
de
Ros
47
47
~1344 - 1398
Margaret
De
Vere
54
54
~1340
Aubrey
De
Vere
~1360 - 1421
John
De
Welles
61
61
John de Welles, 5th baron, was summoned to parliament from 20 January, 1376, to 26 February, 1421. This nobleman served in the expedition made into Flanders in the retinue of John, Duke ofLancaster, in the 27th Edward III [1354], and in the 1st RichardII [1377] was in the wars of France. The next year he was in the garrison of Berwick, under Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, its governor. His lordship subsequently obtained license to travel beyond sea, and returning in the 8th Richard II [1385],had leave to go abroad again for the vindication of his honour, having received some affront from a knight in France. He seems to have come home solely to procure letters testimonial vouching for his credit and reputation. After this we find him in the Scottish wars, and in the 19th of the same reign, he was ambassador to Scotland, where, during his sojourn, being at a banquet where deeds of arms becoming the subject of conversation, his lordship exclaimed, "Let words have no place; if ye know not the chivalry and valiant deeds of Englishmen, appoint me a day and place when ye list, and ye shall have experience." This challenge was immediately accepted by David, Earl of Crawford, and London Bridge appointed as the place of combat. The battle was fought on St. George's Day, and the Scottish earl was declared victor. Indeed, he displayed such an extraordinary degree of prowess, that notwithstanding the spear was broken upon his helmet and visage, he remained so immovably fixed in his saddle that the spectators cried out that in defiance of the laws of arms, he was bound thereto. Whereupon he dismounted and got up again and ran a second course, but in the third, Lord Welles was unhorsed and flung to the ground, on which Crawford dismounting, embraced him that the people might understand that he had no animosity, and the earl subsequently visited his lordship with great courtesy until his recovery. Of this Lord Welles nothing further in known than the period of his decease, anno 1421; although for eight years afterwards summonses appear to have been regularly issued to his lordship. But there are other instances upon record of summonses having been directed to barons after their deaths, probably from ignorance that the decease occurred. Lord Welles m. Margaret, or Eleanor, dau. of John, Lord Mowbray, and had two daus., Margaret, and Anne. He was s. by (the son of his deceased eldest son, Eudo, by his wife, Maude, dau. of Ralph, Lord Greystock) his grandson, Sir Leo, or Lionel de Welles.
~1387 - <1421
Eudo
de
Welles
34
34
1305 - 1344
Robert
de
Clifford
38
38
1274 - 1314
Robert
de
Clifford
40
40
1333 - 1389
Roger
de
Clifford
56
56
1406 - 1461
Sir
Lionel de
Welles
55
55
Sir Leo, or Lionel de Welles, as 6th baron, summoned to parliament from 25 February, 1432, to 30 July, 1460. This nobleman received the honour of knighthood in the 4th Henry VI[1426] from the Duke of Bedford at Leicester, with the young king himself and divers other persons of rank. His lordship for several years after served with great honour in France and was made lieutenant of Ireland for seven years in the 16th of thesame reign. When the fatal feud between the houses of York and Lancaster broke out, Lord Welles arrayed himself under the banner of the latter, and adhering to his colours with unbending fidelity, fell at the battle of Towton field on Palm Sunday,1461. His remains were deposited in Waterton Chapel, at Methley, co. York. His lordship m. 1st, Joan, or by some accounts,Cecilia, only dau. of Sir Robert Waterton, of Waterton andMethley, co. York, and sister and heir of Sir Robert Waterton,also of Waterton, Knt., and had issue, Richard, Alianore,Cecily, Margaret, and Catherine. Lord Welles m. 2ndly, Margaret,sister and heir of Sir John Beauchamp, of Bletshoe, and widow of John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset (by whom she was mother ofMargaret, Countess of Richmond, mother of King Henry VII) andhad another son, John, created Viscount Welles. An attainder followed his lordship's decease, under which the Barony of Welles became forfeited. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,England, 1883, p. 572, Welles, Barons Welles] The rolls of parliament show that, in the first year of HenryVII [1485], a statute passed finally reversing all acts of attainder or forfeiture which had ever been enacted aginst the Barony of Welles.
~1368
Philippa
De
Clifford
1389 - 1436
Sir John
De
Greystoke
47
47
~1160
William
de
Warenne
~1130
Adelia
de
Mowbray
~1055
Lord of
Skipwith
Hugh
~1025
Thane of
the Saxons
Baldric
~1220 - 1276
Joane
De
Stuteville
56
56
This Joane de Wake used a seal the impression of which was a woman on horseback, riding sidewise, and holding a bridle in her right hand. Wherefrom it seems she most probably first began that custom now common (This book was published in 1807.--E. E. W.), which, if so, the historians are in error who make Anne, Queen of Richard II (1377-1399), to have first introduced that fashion. Joane died in 4th of Edward I, 1276, seized of the Barony of Liddel, in County Cumberland, having outlived her husband, Hugh de Wake. (She lived approximately 100 years before Richard II, so riding sidewise was in use about 1250.)
~1210
Hugh
de
Wake
Hugh Wake, who at the death of his uncle William de Bruere, sine prole, in the 17th of Henry III, 1233, succeeded to his property. This Hugh died August 21, 1246, and is buried at Jerusalem in the Church of the Sepulchre. He married Joane, daughter and eventual heiress of Nicholas D'Estoteville or Stuteville, Lord of Liddell, who survived him and married 2nd Hugh Bigod.
1222
Margaret
De
Stuteville
~1241 - 1263
Baldwin
de
Wake
22
22
Baldwin, Lord Wake, died 1263, and his heart was buried at Deeping. This feudal lord, who took up arms with the barons in the reign of Henry III, and was made prisoner at the storming of the Castle of Northampton, in the 48th of that monarch's reign, but afterwards participated in the success of his party at Lewes. He was again taken prisoner with young Simon de Montfort, at Kenilworth, but by some means or other effected his escape, and was with Robert Ferrers, Earl of Derby, under whom he fought at the Battle of Chesterfield, but had the good fortune to escape with his life. He subsequently submitted to the king, and received a pardon with restitution of his lands. He married Hawise de Quincey, daughter and co-heir of Robert de Quincey and Helen (daughter of Llewellyn, Prince of Wales); son of Saire de Quincey and Margaret de Bellomont; daughter of Robert de Bellomont and Parnel or Petronella (daughter and co-heir of Hugh de Grentesmenil); son of Robert de Bellomont and Itta; daughter of Ralph de Gaudiar, Earl of the East Angles, and his wife Emma, who was descended from Ralph de Iveri, one of the followers of the Conqueror.
~1240 - 1320
Lord
Wake
John
80
80
John, Lord Wake, who was summoned to Parliament as a Baron Oct. 1, 1295, and from that period until Dec. 29, 1299. This nobleman was engaged in the Scottish wars of Edward I, and in the 27th of that monarch his lordship was one of the commissioners assigned to see to the fortifications of the Castles of Scotland, and guarding of the Marshes. They had two sons, John, eldest and heir, who lived not long, so that Thomas, his 2nd son, became heir to the honour and the estates, but he too died sine prole on May 31, 1350, in 23rd of Edward III, leaving his sister Margaret the sole surviving heir. John Wake married Joane
~1267
Robert
de
Fiennes
1328 - 1385
Joane
Plantagenet
56
56
Known as "The Fair Maid of Kent"
1321
Joan
Plantagenet
Edmund
Plantagenet
John
Plantagenet
Margaret
Plantagenet
27 JAN 1364/65 - 1372
Edward
Plantagenet
6 JAN 1366/67 - 6 JAN 1399/00
Richard
II
Plantagenet
Richard II, born in 1367, was the son of Edward, the Black Prince and Joan, the Fair Maid of Kent. Edward was but ten years old when he succeeded his grandfather, Edward III ; England was ruled by a council under the leadership of John of Gaunt , and Richard was tutored by Sir Simon Burley. He married the much-beloved Anne of Bohemia in 1382, who died childless in 1394. Edward remarried in 1396, wedding the seven year old Isabella of Valois, daughter of Charles VI of France, to end a further struggle with France. Richard asserted royal authority during an era of royal restrictions. Economic hardship followed the Black Death, as wages and prices rapidly increased. Parliament exacerbated the problem by passing legislation limiting wages but failing to also regulate prices. In 1381, Wat Tyler led the Peasants' Revolt against the oppressive government policies of John of Gaunt. Richard's unwise generosity to his favorites - Michael de la Pole, Robert de Vere and others - led Thomas, Duke of Gloucester and four other magnates to form the Lords Appellant. The five Lords Appellant tried and convicted five of Richard's closest advisors for treason. In 1397, Richard arrested three of the five Lords, coerced Parliament to sentence them to death and banished the other two. One of the exiles was Henry Bolingbroke, the future Henry IV . Richard travelled to Ireland in 1399 to quell warring chieftains, allowing Bolingboke to return to England and be elected king by Parliament. Richard lacked support and was quickly captured by Henry IV. Deposed in 1399, Richard was murdered while in prison, the first casualty of the Wars of the Roses between the Houses of Lancaster and York.
~1349
Edmund
Holland
~1360 - 9 JAN 1398/99
Sir
John
Holand
Earl of Huntington
~1352
Alianore
Holland
~1354
Margaret
Holland
~1356
Joane
Holland
~1357
Eleanor
Holland
~1358
Elizabeth
Holland
~1359
Bridget
Holland
1334 - 22 MAR 1368/69
Peter
"The
Cruel"
~1305 - 1369
Richard
de
Stafford
64
64
Richard Stafford, Baron Stafford, of Clifton, m. Matilda de Cornville, wife of William de Vernon, of Staffordshire. He was prominent among the leaders at Bergerne and commanded the garrison at Sibern. He accompanied his brother in many of his expeditions. He was with Ralph at the surrender of Arguilon in 1346 and at the battle of Crecy. He was created Baron in 1362, and d. in 1369.
~1353 - 24 MAR 1393/94
Constance
of Leon
and Castile
~1400
Eleanor
Holland
~1360
Thomas
Chaucer
~1390
Alice
Chaucer
Sir
John
Nevil
~1422
Margaret
Tuchet
~1199
Margaret
de
Wake
Rose
de
Clare
~1314 - 1353
John
De
Segrave
39
39
~1322 - 24 MAR 1398/99
Margaret
Plantagenet
1418
Elizabeth
de
Ferrers
~1390
Henry
de
Ferrers
~1392
Margaret
de
Ferrers
1716 - 1756
Elizabeth
Lightfoot
40
40
~1368
Anne
de
Standish
~1286
John
De
Standish
~1292
Margery
~1256 - 1322
William
de
Standish
66
66
~1264
Margaret
de
Euxton
~1238
John
de
Euxton
~1234
Jordan
de
Standish
~1244
Alianora
Eleanor
~1208 - 1288
Radulphus
de
Standish
80
80
~1185 - 1246
Alexander
Richard de
Standish
61
61
~1178
Margaret
~1160 - >1219
Radulphus
de
Standish
59
59
~1164
Juliana
~1135
Leising
de
Standish
~1140
daughter
de
Spileman
~1110
Richard
de
Spileman
~1110
daughter
de
Bussel
~1080 - >1186
Warin
de
Bussel
106
106
~1050
Warin
de
Bussel
~1302 - ~1327
Alice
de
Hayles
25
25
1275
Roger
de
Hayles
~1284 - 1325
Stephen
De
Segrave
41
41
~1289 - 1325
Alice
FitzAlan
36
36
3 FEB 1266/67 - 9 MAR 1301/02
Richard
FitzAlan
~1271 - 1292
Alasia
de
Saluzza
21
21
1290 - 1326
Sir
Edmund
FitzAlan
36
36
~1292
Margaret
FitzAlan
~1234 - 1296
I
Thomas
62
62
~1240 - 1291
Leugia
de
Ceva
51
51
~1210 - ~1268
Giorgio
de
Ceva
58
58
~1210
Menzia
Elisa
de Este
~1190
Alberto
de
Este
~1180 - 1219
Guglieimo
II de
Ceva
39
39
~1185
Adelheid
di
Saluzzo
~1155 - 1215
II
Manfredo
60
60
~1160 - 1202
Alice
Adelheid de
Montferrat
42
42
~1186 - 1212
Marquis di
Saluzzo
Bonifacio
26
26
~1110 - 1191
Guillaume
81
81
~1115 - 1168
Jutte
von
Brandenburg
53
53
~1152
Beatrix
de
Montferrat
~1040 - ~1101
Marquis de
Montferrat
William
61
61
~1040
Otta
de
Aglie
~1010
Tibalde
de
Aglie
~1020 - 1100
Marquis de
Montferrat
Bonifacio
80
80
~0998 - 1031
Marquis de
Montferrat
William
33
33
~0982 - 0991
Otto
9
9
~0965 - 0961
Gerberge
de
Montferrat
4
4
~1115 - 1175
I
Manfredo
60
60
~1041
Ermengarde
De
Melgueil
~1126
Eleanor
Arborea
~1090
Gonaria
of
Arborea
~1095
Eleanora
of
Arborea
~1065 - 1116
Comito
I of
Arborea
51
51
~1065 - 1130
Bonifacio
I di
Saluzzo
65
65
~1070
Alicia
de
Maurienne
~1040 - 1078
Pietro
de
Maurienne
38
38
~1020 - 1084
Tetone
di
Saluzzo
64
64
~1000
Conrad
II de
Ventimiglia
~1005
Adela
~0965
Conrad
I de
Ventimiglia
~0975
Rochilde
~1000
Guiditta
~0951 - >1014
I
Anselmo
63
63
~0968
Gisele
di
Tuscany
~0942
Helena
di
Verona
Alice
~0915 - >0967
Count of
Torresana
Guglielmus
52
52
~0995
Countess
of Estes
Berthe
~1038
Azo
~0940
Aleramo
~0910 - ~0990
Wirprand
di
Como
80
80
~0880
Olderado
di
Como
~0890
Railinda
di
Verticilio
~0872
Comte di
Verticilio
Auprando
~0885
Aliverto
de
Montferrat
~1145 - 1197
Guglielmo
I de
Ceva
52
52
~1111
Anslemo
de
Ceva
~1060 - 1130
Bonifacio
I de
Ceva
70
70
1025 - <1064
Teto
39
39
~1030
Berta
di
Manfrido
~1054
Manfredo
di
Saluzzo
0990 - 1035
Odelerico
di
Manfrido
45
45
~0960 - ~1000
Manfred
I Di
Ramagnano
40
40
~1015
Irmgard
di
Manfrido
~1034
Adelaide
of
Montferrat
~0965
Prangilda
of
Modena
~0991
Guido
di
Susa
~0935 - 13 FEB 987/88
II Otto
~0940
Hildegarde
~0905
Siegfried of
Lucca and
Lombardy
~0910 - 0972
Arduin
III Di
Ramagnano
62
62
~0940 - 1026
Arduin
86
86
~0890
Roger
Auriate
~0850
Count of
Neustria
Odo
~0810
Count of
Neustria
Hardouin
~1000 - <1065
Oberto
65
65
~0998 - >1065
Beatrice
Di
Ramagnano
67
67
~0980
Odelrico
Ulrich Di
Ramagnano
~0960
Guido
Di
Ramagnano
~0984 - ~1034
Oberto
50
50
1222 - 23 FEB 1291/92
Beatrice
de
Savoy
~1210 - 1244
III
Manfred
34
34
1191 - 1228
Beatrix
de
Albon
37
37
~1140 - 1192
Guigues
VII de
Albon
52
52
~1100 - 1142
VI
Guigo
42
42
~1001 - 1063
III
Guigues
62
62
~1154 - 1216
Comita
III de
Torres
62
62
~1158
Spella
di
Arborea
JAN 999/00 - >1034
Adelaide
Alix of
Beaujeu
~1120 - 1186
Barisone
II de
Torres
66
66
~0981 - 1031
I
Guichard
50
50
~0982
Adelaide
1112
Marian
II de
Torres
~1110
Susanna
de
Gunale
~1082
Judge of
Gallura
Andrea
~1052
Barisone
III of
Gallura
1023
II
Barisone
~0993 - >0960
Judge of
Cagliari
Orlando
33
33
~0963
1st Judge
of Cagliari
Ugo
1246 - 18 MAR 1270/71
John
FitzAlan
~1271
Eleanor
FitzAlan
1223 - 1267
John
FitzAlan
44
44
~1155
Philip
de
Prendergast
1200 - 1230
Theobald
II le
Boteler
30
30
1200 - 10 FEB 1244/45
Roesia
de
Verdun
~1218 - 1274
John le
Boteler de
Verdun
56
56
Joan
de
Marveis
~1223 - 1285
Theobald
III le
Boteler
62
62
~1174 - 1232
Nicholas
de
Verdun
58
58
~1178
Joan
Fitz-
Piers
~1202
Aline
de
Verdun
1160 - 1235
Piers
fitz
Herbert
75
75
Note: Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honorof which he obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees,part of the lands of William de Braose, and he was made Governorof Pickering Castle in Yorkshire, and Sheriff of that county bythe same monarch. This Peter was one of the barons named inMagna Carta and, by his signature, fourth in rank amongst thebarons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, a greatbaron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, andsister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering,Lord of Callaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son andheir, Reginald Fitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. andcoheir of William de Braose, and widow of David Llewellin,Prince of Wales, and by the alliance acquired the lordships andcastle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in the county of Brecknock,with other possessions in Wales. He fortified his castle ofBlenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, ReginaldFitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of theCommoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley,London, 1834, p. 728, Jones, of Llanarth] ---------- Peter Fitz-Herbert, who, being very obsequious to King John, wasreputed one of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he wasconstituted governor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriffof the shire; but afterwards falling off in his allegiance, hislands at Alcester were seized by the crown, and given to Williamde Camvill. Returning, however, to his duty upon the accessionof Henry III, those lands were restored to him. He m. 1st,Alice, dau. of Roger Fitz-Roger, a great baron inNorthumberland, but by her had no issue; and 2ndly, the 3rd dau.and co-heir of William de Braose, Baron of Brecknock, and d.1235, leaving a son, Herbert Fitz-Peter. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 206, Fitz-Herbert, BaronFitz-Herbert]
~1191 - <1225
Alice
FitzRobert
De Lacy
34
34
~1149
Roesia
de
Verdun
~1106
Cecily
le
Bigod
~1208
Reynald
Fitz
Piers
~1118 - ~1193
Lasceline
de
Clinton
75
75
~1110
Alicia
De
Verdun
~1146
Hugh
de
Verdun
~1095 - ~1125
Geoffrey
de
Clinton
30
30
1098
Agnes
de
Newburgh
~1087 - ~1140
Renebault
de
Tancarville
53
53
~1078
Agnes
Stigand
~1185
Elisant
~1048
Odon
Stigand
1070
William
de
Tancarville
1083
Maud
D'Arques
1085 - 1117
Richard
De
Redviers
32
32
1040
Viscount
D'Arques
Guillame
~1026
Beatrice
de
Bolebec
~1075
Emma
D'Arques
~1020
Beatrice
de
Arques
~0990
Josselyn
Gozelin
1005
Viscount
D'Arques
Godfroi
~1010
Viscountess
D'Arques
Beatrice
~0980
Viscount of
Rouen and
Arques Josselyn
~0985
Emmeline
~1040
Raoul
de
Tancarville
~1304 - >1343
Margery
Corbet
39
39
~1010
Eudes
Stigand
1018
Gerold
de
Tancarville
~1020
Helesinde
~1042
Almaric
D'Arbitot
~0978
Ralph
Fitz-Herlewin
de Tancarville
1092
Bertram
de
Verdun
~0964
Urraca
of
Ivrea
1160 - 1206
Theobald
le
Boteler
46
46
1096
Maud
de
Ferrers
~1225 - 1283
Maud
le
Boteler
58
58
~1130 - 1149
Hervey
II de
Clare
19
19
1138
Matilda
de
Valoines
~1351
Joan
de St.
Loe
~1215 - 1264
Fulk IV
Fitz-
Warren
49
49
~1212
Hawise
Fitz-
Warren
~1176 - <1250
Maud
De
Vavasour
74
74
1170
Julianne
de
Ross
~1206
John
De
Vavasour
1130
Gilbert
de
Ross
~1142
Julian
~1297
Henry
Haddon
~1323
Amicia
Haddon
~1349
John
Chidioc
~1090
Hervey
De
Clare
~1105 - ~1165
Theobald
de
Valoines
60
60
~1025 - 1052
Enguerrand
27
27
~1435
Anne
Beaufort
1226
Margery
de
Burgh
1252 - 1285
Theobald
IV le
Boteler
33
33
~1242 - 1303
Joan
de
Mandeville
61
61
~1215 - 1258
Sir
John de
Mandeville
43
43
~1222 - >1259
Isabel
Bigod
37
37
~1240
Aveline
de
Mandeville
~1244
Isabella
de
Mandeville
1237 - 1301
Maud
de
Mandeville
64
64
~1162 - 1213
Geoffrey
fitz
Piers
51
51
1281 - 1320
Joan
de
Windsor
39
39
~1256
Blancede
la
Roche
Thomas
de
Windsor
~1480
Sir
Edward
Boleyn
1304 - 1363
Eleanor
De
Bohun
58
58
~1479
Sir
William
Boleyn
~1478
Sir
James
Boleyn
~1206
David
de la
Roche
~1176
Ralph
de la
Roche
~1229 - 1271
Thomas
de
Windsor
42
42
~1233
Rohesia
de St.
Michael
~1203
Richard
de St.
Michael
1190 - 1257
Maurice
de
Windsor
67
67
~1210
Juliana
de
Cogan
~1244 - 1282
Roger
De
Clifford
38
38
~1190 - ~1278
John
de
Cogan
88
88
<1195
Marie
de
Prendergast
<1175 - 1251
Gerald
de
Prendergast
76
76
~1175
Maud
~1156
Maud
de
Quincy
~1130
Maurice
de
Prendergast
1194 - >1238
Richard
de
Cogan
44
44
~1175
Basilie
de
Ridelsford
~1150 - ~1182
Milo
de
Cogan
32
32
1150
Christina
Paganal
~1128 - ~1205
Fulk II
Paganal
77
77
~1130
Aude
Abrincis
~1155
Gundred
Paganal
~1088 - 1165
William
Paganal
77
77
~1095
Juliana
Brampton
~1075 - ~1136
Robert
Brampton
61
61
~1045 - 1095
Walter
de
Douai
50
50
~1045
Emma
~1079 - 1154
Nest
ferch
Rhys
75
75
1066 - <1136
Geraldus
de
Windsor
70
70
~1070
Ralph
Paganal
~1120
John
de
Cogan
~1155
Thomas
de
Windsor
~1010
Lesceline
~1110
William
de
Windsor
~1040
Beatrice
Gladys ferch
Rhiwalon
~1361
Isabel
Verch
Glyndwr
~1000
Catrin
ferch
Iestyn
~1045
Hywel
ap
Rhys
~1037 - ~1103
Walter "Keeper
of Forest" de
Windsor
66
66
~1068
Robert
de
Windsor
~1025 - 1070
Rhywallen
ap
Cynfyn
45
45
~1042
Sionet
ap
Rhiwalon
~1000
Gherardo
Gherardini
~0970
Cosmus
di
Florence
~0977
Tewdwr
"the Great"
ap Cadell
~0979
Gwenllian
ferch
Gwyn
~1022
Ellinor
ferch
Tewdwr
~0949
Gwyn
~0990
Eleanor
ferch
Gwerystan
~1160 - <1226
Eve
De
Bermingham
66
66
~1124
Robert
de
Bermingham
~1100 - 1177
Maurice
de
Windsor
77
77
1103
Alice
De
Montgomery
~1105
Maria
de
Montgomery
~1080
Lafracoth
O'Brien
~1050 - 1119
Muirchertach
II
O'Brien
69
69
~1010 - 1086
Toirrdelbach
O'Brien
76
76
~1021
Dearbforgail
of
Ossory
Gormlaith
O'Fogurty
~1040
Dearbforgail
of
Ossory
~1005 - ~1037
Tadhg
of
Ossory
32
32
~0989 - 1033
Giollapatraic
of
Ossory
44
44
~0963 - 1002
Donnchadh
I of
Ossory
39
39
Saebalda
~0941 - 1039
Ceallach
of
Ossory
98
98
~0967 - 1028
Dubgilla
of
Dublin
61
61
~0936
Mael
Febhal
~0906
Mael
Sechnaill
Mor
~0921
King of
Ossory
Caerbhal
~0976 - 0943
Mael
Mor
33
33
~0936 - 0997
Donnchad
Midi
61
61
~0904 - 0953
Domnall
Midi
49
49
~0874 - 0915
Murchad
Midi
41
41
~0834 - 0889
Diarmait
Midi
55
55
~0897
King of
Ossory
Carroll
~0980 - ~1023
Teige
Terence
O'Brien
43
43
~0985
More
O'Mulloy
~0965
Bridget
Giolla
~1288 - 1318
John
de
Argenteyn
30
30
~1290
Joan
Bryan
~1290
Agnes
de
Bereford
1318
John
de
Argenteyn
1265 - 1308
Roger
Bryan
43
43
<1242 - 3 MAR 1307/08
Reginald
de
Argenteyn
~1245 - 1292
Laura
de
Vere
47
47
>1161 - 1221
Robert
III de
Vere
60
60
~1164
Isabel
de
Bolebec
~1130 - <1187
Walter
de
Bolebec
57
57
~1142
Sibil
de
Vesey
~1166
Hugh
de
Bolebec
~1136
Lucia
de
Essex
~1115
Helawise
~1016
Henry
de
Essex
~1118
Cecely
de
Essex
1096
Robert
de
Essex
~1066
Suain
de
Essex
~1210
Gyles
de
Argenteyn
~1215
Margery
Aquillon
~1226 - 15 FEB 1284/85
Robert
De
Aquillon
~1195
Agathe
de
Beaufoe
~1212
Joan
Aquillon
1170 - 1244
William
De
Aquillon
74
74
~1160
Fulk
de
Beaufoe
1182
Joan
Fitz-
Henry
1162
Peter
Fitz-
Henry
~1165 - <1203
Isabel
de
Chesney
38
38
~1140
Bartholomew
De
Chesney
~1135
Henry
Fitz-
Ailwin
~1110 - ~1165
Ailwin
Leofstansson
55
55
~1090
Leofstan
Ordgarsson
~1066 - <1113
Ordgar
Leofstansson
47
47
~1046 - >1066
Leofstan
Ailwinsson
20
20
~1026
Ailwin
Horne
~1002
Wigot
~1008
Erminhild
of
Mercia
~0970
Wulgeat
~0950
Earl of
Warwick
Ulfa
0924
Weyth
"the
Humed"
0900
Earl of
Warwick
Reynbourne
0905
Princess of
the Saxons
Edithe
0870 - 0927
Guy
of
Wallingford
57
57
0880
Felicia
of
Warwick
0850
Saxon Earl
of Warwick
Rohand
0843
Siward
of
Wallingford
~1130
William
De
Aquillon
1182 - 1246
Richard
de
Argenteyn
64
64
1190
Cassandra
de
Insula
1164
Robert
de
Insula
~1174
Galiena
Le
Blount
~1188
Robert
de
Insula
~1051
Gilbert
le
Blount
~1056
Alicia
de
Colekirk
1037
Robert "the
Admiral" le
Blount
Lord of Ashfield, Baron of Ixworth
~1034
Gundred
de
Ferrers
Raphe
Foleschamp
Geoffrey
Foleschamp
0990
Henri
De
Ferrieres
~0990
Bertha
0967
Engenulf
De
Ferrieres
1017 - 1037
Count de
Guisnes
Raoul
20
20
~1020
Rosetta de
St. Pol de
Dammartin
~1039
Eustace
de
Guisnes
~1007 - 1067
Roger de
St. Pol de
Dammartin
60
60
~1005
Hedwig
~1025
Manasses
de
Dammartin
~0977
Count de
Guisnes
Ardolph
~0991
Odele
de Bois
Ferrand
~1009
Engelbert
I de
Brienne
0960
Thibaud
de Bois
Ferrand
~0965
Sconehilde
~0956
Eudes
de
Dammartin
~0996
Mahaut
de
Talvas
1123 - 1198
John
de
Argenteyn
75
75
1144
Reginald de
Halesworth
de Argenteyn
1126
Ellen
Fitz-
Tecon
1097
Gui
Fitz-
Tecon
1115
Julianna
De
Plumpton
~0900 - ~0965
Guillaume
De
Ponthieu
65
65
~0918
William
De
Talvas
~0936
Warin de
Montagne
de Talvas
1090
Nigel
De
Plumpton
~0922
Hersende
De
Montreuil
~0900
Mathilda
De
Ganelon
~0880 - 0957
Count of
Montreuil and
Amiens Rotgaire
77
77
~0860 - 0945
II
Herlouin
85
85
~0840 - 0926
II
Heligaud
86
86
~0820 - 0878
I
Herlouin
58
58
~0800 - 0866
I
Heligaud
66
66
~0780 - 0883
Nithard
"the
Chronicler"
103
103
~0775 - 0814
Governor
of Ponthieu
Angilbert
39
39
~0975 - ~1066
Raoul
de
Beauffoe
91
91
0767
Arsinde
De
Ponthieu
~0990
Adeline
de
Beaumont
~0930
Juliane
Murdac
1085
Roger
de
Argenteyn
Dionyas
Mallet
1060
David
de
Argenteyn
~1270 - 1330
William
le
Boteler
60
60
~1265 - >1337
Elizabeth
de
Havering
72
72
~1306
Joan
le
Boteler
~1235
Nicholas
de
Havering
~1250 - 1297
Henry
le
Boteler
47
47
~1255 - >1328
Isabella
le
Boteler
73
73
~1225
Richard
le
Boteler
~1231
William
le
Boteler
~1225
Dionysia
de
Lostock
~1262
Ellen
le
Boteler
~1200
Henry
de
Lostock
~1205
Joanna
~1195 - 1235
Almaric
le
Boteler
40
40
~1200
Alina
Garnet
~1175
William
Garnet
~1122
Paganus
de Payne
Villiers
~1096
Arnold
de
Villiers
~1070
Aymer
de
Villiers
1158
William
Pincerna
~1193
Edith
Pincerna
1117 - 1176
Richard
Pincerna
59
59
1124 - 1158
Beatrix
de
Villiers
34
34
1084 - 1124
Matthew
de
Villiers
40
40
1046 - 1084
Pagen
de
Villiers
38
38
~1080
Richard
de
Villiers
1078 - 1118
Robert
Pincerna
40
40
~1080
Ivetta
Helgot
1100 - ~1160
Lord of
Helgot
William
60
60
1040 - 1098
Richard
Pincerna
58
58
~1304
John
le
Boteler
~1166
William
la
Zouche
~0925 - 0992
II
Hugues
67
67
1094
Constance
of
Brittany
~1240
Laderina
De
Brus
1056 - 1094
Josceline
I De
Porhoët
38
38
1030
Guithenoc
De
Porhoët
~1240 - 1301
John
De
Belleau
61
61
~1150
Brian
Fitz
Alan
~1262 - 1314
Sir Miles
II De
Stapleton
52
52
1300 - 1328
Catherine
FitzAlan
28
28
~1340
John
De
Grey
1322
Joan
De
Grey
~1313 - 1362
Joan
De
Marmion
49
49
~1180
Gerard
Furnival
~1184
William
Furnival
~1130
Girard
De
Furnival
Girard de Furnival came into England from Normandy, and accompanying the King to the Holy Land, assisted at the siege of Acon.
1128
Maud
De
Lucy
1154
Robert
Fitzwalter
1158
Alice
FitzWalter
1085 - 1179
Richard
De
Lucy
94
94
1089
Rohese
FitzRichard
De Clare
1133
Aveline
de
Lucy
1125 - <1179
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
54
54
1129
Alice
De
Lucy
1098
Isabel Fitz
Richard
de Clare
~1085
Aldhelm de
Burgo de
Mortaigne
~1114
Beatrice
de
Mortain
1050
Adrian
De
Lucy
1054
Avelina
La
Goth
~1078
Emma
De
Lucy
~1082
Lucy
De
Lucy
~1090
Robert
De
Lucy
1111 - 1134
Robert
FitzRichard
De Clare
23
23
Robert FitzRichard, 5th son of Richard FitzGilbert, Earl of Clare, who was stewart to Henry I, and obtained from that monarch the barony of Dunmow in Essex, as also the honour of Baynard's Castle in the City of London, both of which came into the possession of the crown by the forfeiture of William Baynard. This Robert, who died 1134, married 1112 Maud de St. Liz, Lady of Branham, daughter of Simon St. Liz, 1st Earl of Huntingdon, and by her (who died in 1140 and married 2nd Saire de Quincey) had two sons, Walter, his successor, and Simon, to whom he gave Daventry in Northamptonshire.
1114 - >1148
Adeliza
De
Clare
34
34
1133 - 1191
Robert
De
Mauduit
58
58
1136
Johanna
De
Clare
~1240 - 1315
Hugh
De
Wake
75
75
1133
William
De
Stuteville
William was a man of great account in the time of Richard I, the Lionhearted, and King John. He married Berta, niece of Ranulph de Glanville, the Chief Justice.
1146
Berta
De
Glanville
1164
Nicholas
De
Stuteville
1170
Gunnora
~1191
Nicholas
De
Stuteville
Nicholas de Stuteville, succeeded his father, and who died in 17th of Henry III, 1233, leaving two daughters his heirs, viz.: Joane de Stuteville, married Hugh Wake; and Margaret married William Mastoc and died without issue, leaving her sister Joane Stuteville Wake the sole heir.
~1110
Nicholas
De
Stuteville
William
Mastoc
1160 - 1224
Agnes
Du
Hommet
64
64
1134 - 1209
William
Du
Hommet
75
75
1144
Lucy
De La
Haye
~1226
John II
Deincourt
1196
Lucia
Basset
~1162 - ~1201
Oliver
I
Deincourt
39
39
1195 - 1246
Oliver
II
Deincourt
51
51
1105 - 1174
William De
Vernon De
Redviers
69
69
~1110 - 1165
Lucy
de
Tancarville
55
55
1148
William De
Vernon De
Redvers
1080 - 1156
Adelise
Peverell
76
76
~1022
Ralph
Auberee
1297
Richard
Donne
1090
Muriel
le
Seneshal
1083
Maud
Peverell
1039 - 1090
Baldwin
FitzGilbert
51
51
Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert, of Brionis or Moels, 2nd son, a follower of the Conqueror, called Vicecomes, and Baldwin of Exetor. He was Seigneur de Meules and du Sap, in Normandy. After the death of his father, who was murdered by the son of Giroie, he and his brother Richard, who was ancestor of the de Clares, took refuge at the court of the Duke of Flanders. Duke William afterwards restored to Baldwin his estates of Meules and Sap, and to Richard FitzGilbert his estates of Bienfaite and Orbec, portions of their father's lands. Baldwin received from the Conqueror some 150 lordships in Devonshire, Hemington and Parlock and Apley in Somerset, and Iwerne in Dorset. Okehampton was the capital seat of his barony. He was Sheriff of Dorset 1080-1086 probably until his death. (After the Conquest the sheriffs were still the King's representatives in the county. As the King was nearly absolute, the sheriff was very powerful. The sheriff had important duties: 1. Finance. He farmed the shire at a fixed sum a year. 2. Justice. He was the King's representative in the shire court, and he sat there as president, or as a royal judge. 3. War. It was the duty of the sheriff to summon the forces of the county. The great lords led their own retainers, but the sheriff led all the rest of the troops.--Montague's Elements of English Constitutional History. E. E. W. Very different from modern sheriffs. This was from a textbook at Washington University.) In Domesday Book he is called Baldwin of Exeter, or Baldwin, the Sheriff. He married Emma or Albreda, niece of the Conqueror. He died 1090. They had Robert, Richard and William. Baldwin FitzGilbert , Lord of Le Sap & Meulles Baldwin de Brionis, who, for the distinguished part he had in the Conquest, obtained from King William the Barony of Okehampton, the custody of the co. of Devon, and the government of the castle of Exeter in fee. He m. Albreda, dau. of Richard, surnamed Gos, Count of Avranche, and had, with other issue, I. Richard, surnamed de Redvers. II. Robert, governor of Brione. I. Emma, m. 1st to William Avenal, and 2ndly, to William de Abrincis. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 140, Courtenay, Barons Courtenay, Earls of Devon]
1079
Robert
De
Redviers
1089
William
De
Redviers
1050
Eudes
le
Seneshal
1052
Adeliza
Auberee
Anchitel
De
Grey
1110 - 1181
Richard
Du
Hommet
71
71
1026
Richard
Thurstin
Haldup
1087
Robert
De
Conteville
1136
Jordan
Du
Hommet
1101 - 1144
Hugh
De
Wake
43
43
1114 - 1168
Emma
FitzBaldwin
De Clare
54
54
1060 - 1130
Richard
De
Rollos
70
70
1092
Adeline
De
Rollos
1064
Godiva
De
Evermer
1035
Hugh
De
Evermer
1041
Thufrida
of
Mercia
1004
Herwaldus
'Le
Wake'
Harold de Wake or Herwaldus or Hewaldus, as it is observed by Dr. Patrick, was the first who gave rise to the name of Wake, and was surnamed de Wake or le Wake. He was one of the bravest heroes of his age and country, whose actions are celebrated by Ingulphus; and was the last who submitted to William, the Conqueror. Sources for Wake and Stuteville Descendents: Burke's Dormant and Extinct Peerages, pp. 563, 433, 372, 278, 447, 598. Burke's Royal Families of England, Scotland and Waies, pp. xxxiv-v-vi, Part 2, p. vi. Lipscomb's History and Atiquities of Buckinghamshire, Vol. 4, pp. 125/6. Metcalf's Visitation of Northamptonshire, pp. 52/3. Bank's Dormant and Extinct Baronage, Vol. 3, pp. 174/5, 440/1. Clutterbuck's History of Hertfordshire, Vol. 3, pp. 287/8.
1065
Geoffrey
De
Wac
1186
Robert
IV de
Marmion
1192
Juliane
De
Vassy
1162
Robert
III de
Marmion
1166
Elizabeth
De
Réthel
1120
Robert
De
Réthel
1139
Millicent
De
Réthel
1134
Robert
II de
Marmion
1106
Robert
de
Marmion
1111
Adeliza
D'Abitot
~1090
Amary
D'Abitot
1342 - 1369
Lora
Saint
Quintin
27
27
Lora St. Quintin, whose descendants were the Herberts, Earls of Pembroke, who as late as 1551 styled themselves Lords of St. Quintin. She was the only heir of this line; the Barons of St. Quintin came from the descendants of Alexander, brother of William. She married Robert Grey de Marmion, son of John, Lord Grey, Original Knight of the Garter, and his 2nd wife, Avice Marmion, whose brother made a contract with John Grey that the descendants of his sister should take the name of Marmion. (See the Grey-Marmion lines.) Lora St. Quintin married four times: (1) Thomas, son of William Poole; (2) Sir John Clinton; (3) Robert Grey de Marmion, son of John, Lord Grey, K. G.; (4) Sir John St. Quintin of Harpham, a descendant of Alexander St. Quintin, brother of William, Gen. No. 6. Her 3rd husband, Robert Grey de Marmion, died before 30 Nov., 1359, sine prole male, when the manor of Wilcote, in Oxford, reverted by settlement to his half-brother, Sir John Grey. (John Grey, Orig. K. G., had two sons named John, one by his 1st wife.) Her daughter by her 3rd husband was Elizabeth De Grey.
1312 - 1347
Herbert
St.
Quintin
35
35
1316
Margery
De
Lisle
1365
Elizabeth
De
Grey
1358 - 11 JAN 1423/24
Sir
Henry
FitzHugh
Knight of the Garter
1402 - 1457
Eleanor
FitzHugh
55
55
1391 - 1467
Matilda
FitzHugh
76
76
1393 - 1452
Lord
William
FitzHugh
59
59
1410
Elizabeth
FitzHugh
1390 - 1418
Sir
Philip
D'Arcy
28
28
~1419
Joan
Darcy
~1380
James
Strangeways
~1419
John
Darcy
~1338 - 1386
Sir
Hugh
FitzHenry
48
48
1406 - 1487
Ralph
De
Greystoke
80
80
1429
Thomas
De
Greystoke
1430
Henry
De
Greystoke
1432
Ralph
De
Greystoke
1436 - 1483
Sir Robert
De
Greystoke
47
47
~1468
Anne
De
Fiennes
1418 - 1472
Henry
FitzHugh
54
54
1424
Elizabeth
FitzHugh
1430
Margery
Fitz-
Hugh
1434
Joan
FitzHugh
1438
Lucy
FitzHugh
1442
Maud
FitzHugh
1426
Lora
FitzHugh
1422 - 1503
Alice
De
Neville
81
81
1439
Elizabeth
FitzHugh
~1399 - 1452
Margaret
Willoughby
53
53
1406 - FEB 1461/62
Alice
De
Montacute
ALICE MONTAGUE dau. of General Thomas above mentioned, became at his death Countess of Salisbury. She m. Sir Richard Nevil, who in her right became Earl of Salisbury. He was the eldest son of Ralph, first Earl of Westmoreland He followed the York party, was taken prisoner in a battle at Wakefield and beheaded. At his death, their eldest son, Richard Nevil, succeeded to the title of Earl of Salisbury, and, in right of his father, Earl of Warwick. He was that Earl of Warwick, to whom the House of York owe their ascent to the throne. He also bore the titles of lord Monthermer, great chamberlain and High Admiral of England, lord Warden of the north marches toward Scotland and High Steward of the Duchy of Lancaster, and among his many titles, was also known as "the: King maker." He was a man of invincible courage and took delight in dangers, engaged his country in a fresh civil war in which he lost his life. He was slain at the battle of garnet, 14th April, 1471, though some authors affirm that he was murdered by his own party. John Nevil, the younger of the two sons of Richard and Alice (Montague) Nevil, Earl of Salisbury, was 1st of Edward IV. created Baron Nevil of Montague, and 10th of the same reign, Marquis of Montague. He was slain at the battle of garnet, (some say murdered) 147r, while endeavoring to succor his brother Richard, Earl of Warwick. They were both laid in state at Westminster, London, and afterward were carried to Bisham Abbey and buried among their ancestors. Richard Nevil, Earl of Salisbury and Warwick, had two daughters namely, Isabel, married to George, Duke of Clarence, and Anne, married first to Edward, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VI.; second to King Richard III. George, Duke of Clarence, was murdered in a hogshead of wine,. leaving his wife Isabel with an only son Edward who was beheaded on Tower hill at the age of fifteen by order of Henry VII., and an only daughter Margaret who became Countess of Salisbury in right of her mother. She was the last Countess of Salisbury and with her death the title became extinct until revived in the person of Cecil, in the year 1605 by King James. The title of Countess of Salisbury had been restored to Margaret by Henry VIII. in full parliament about the fifth year of his reign. Both George, Duke of Clarence, (who was a brother of both King Richard III. and Edward IV.) and his unfortunate son, the young Edward, were taken to Bisham Abbey and buried among their ancestors. Margaret the last Countess of Salisbury, married Sir Richard Pole (also often spelled Poole), and had four sons and one daughter. Ursula, married Henry Stafford, son of the Duke of Buckingham. She was beheaded 27th of May, z3d of Henry VIII. The sons were, Henry Pole, created Baron Montague, Sir Arthur, Sir Jeffray, and Reginald Pole who was Dean of Winburne, then made a Cardinal by Pope Paul III., and afterward Archbishop of Canterbury. He was, for his religion, banished from England by King Henry VIII. He went to Rome and became eminent with Pope Paul III., at whose death he was unanimously chosen Pope, as. his successor. This he refused to accept. " Thereupon, one night the Cardinals came unto him, being in bed, and sent him word they came to adore him (which is one special kinde of electing the Pope) but he being awakened and made acquainted with it was firm in his refusal."-(Baker's Chronicles). The Cardinals remained with him all night. Her son, Henry Pole, was made Baron Montague in 1504 by King Henry VII. He married Jane, dau. of Sir George Nevil, lord of Abergeveney. Being connected with a plot to re-instate his brother, Reginald, Cardinal Pole, he was beheaded upon Tower hill in 1538, together with his co-plotters and relatives, Henry Courtney, Marquis of Exeter, and Sir Edward Nevil. Sir Jeffry Pole was concerned in the same plot but gained his pardon by becoming informer. Sir Reginald the Cardinal was chosen to become the husband of Queen Mary (Bloody Mary) to whom he was much attached. He died the 18th November, 1558, on the next day after the death of Queen Mary. The mother, Margaret pole, Countess of Salisbury, now at the age of seventy years, was beheaded by Henry VIII. in the year 1541. Anne, the other daughter of Richard Nevil, Earl of Salisbury, and Warwick, married as before stated King Richard III. '['hey had one only son Edward whom his uncle, King Edward IV., in the 17th year of his reign created Earl of Salisbury, and Richard his father, usurping the Kingdom, made Prince of Wales. He died young and his mother soon after died, not without suspicion of poison. While King Richard himself perished upon the field of Bosworth. Thus in darkness and blood, and in a violent manner, upon the scaffold, perished the descendants of Alice Montague the gentle and only daughter of General Thomas Montague, fourth and last Earl of Salisbury of the name of Montague, and this branch so prolific in great men, who bathed all England in blood during the dissensions of the Houses of York and Lancaster, became extinct. Their lineage has thus been traced to its final ending, not because it is supposed the American family were lineally descended from any of these personages who are so well known in history, but because they all lived previous to the year 1550, at which date the will of William Montague, from whom it is known that the American family are descended, was proved, and therefore it would not be out of place to mention their history as descendants of the Earls of Salisbury.
1428 - 1471
Richard
XVI
Neville
42
42
The Kingmaker
1424
Cecille
De
Neville
1426 - 1462
Joan
De
Neville
36
36
1430
Eleanor
De
Neville
1431
John
Neville
1438
Margaret
Neville
1442
Catherine
Neville
1380 - 1428
Thomas
IV De
Montagu
48
48
SIR THOMAS MONTAGUE, Fourth Earl of Salisbury and eldest son of the 3d Earl, was only twelve years of age at his father's death. Though the great estate, of which the last earl had been possessed, was now forfeited, yet a considerable part of it was recovered before his son became of age and at last, in the reign of Henry V., he retained a reversion of his father's attainder and was restored in blood. This noble Earl was concerned in so many military exploits, that to give an account of them all, would be to write the history of the reign of Henry V. Suffice to say, that as he lived so he died in the service of his Country, for, having been mortally wounded by a stone, shot from a cannon at the siege of Orleans, he was carried to Meun on the Loire where he departed this life in November, I428. He was twice married. First to Eleanor, dau. of Thomas Holland, sister of Edmond, Earl of Kent. Second to Alice, dau. of Thomas Chaucer. He had but one child, a daughter Alice. His body was brought to England and interred by the side of his ancestors in the Abbey at Bisham.
~1130 - <1130
Ingelrica
Maud
Peverell
Matilda
1006
Ingelric
of
England
~1042 - <1103
Walter
I
Deincourt
61
61
Camden, in his "Britannia" (vol. 1, p. 559), after referring to this family as having flourished in a continued succession from the coming in of the Normans to the time of Henry VI and then to have failed for want of an heir male of William, 13th Lord d'Eyncourt, adds, "I was the more willing to take notice of this family that I might in some measure answer the desire of Edmund, Baron d'Eyncourt, who was so very earnest to preserve the memory of his name that, having no issue male, he petitioned King Edward II for liberty to make over his manors and arms to whomsoever he pleased; for he imagined that both his name and arms would go to the grave with him and was very solicitous to have them survive and be remembered. Yet this surname, for aught I can find, is now quite extinct and would have been forgotten for ever if the memory of it had not been preserved in books." Camden does not quite correctly state the license. It is extant and may be found, printed at length, in Ryley's "Plac. Parl." (p. 547). It is dated 23 February 7th Edward II [1314], and enabled Edmund, Baron d'Eyncourt, as will be seen hereafter, to settle his lands upon his grandson William, 2nd son of his eldest son, John d'Eyncourt, in exclusion of Isabel, the female heir, she being the only child of Edmund, eldest son (then deceased) of the said John d'Eyncourt, which Isabel afterwards d. s. p.; and this leads us to trace the family of d'Eyncourt, who were formerly barons by tenure until summoned to parliament by writ, 22nd Edward I [1294]. Walter de Ayncourt, de Eyncourt, or d'Eyncourt, a noble Norman, one of the distinguished companions in arms of the Conqueror, was cousin to Remigius, bishop of Lincoln, who built the cathedral there, and obtained as his share of the spoil, sixty-seven lordships in several counties, of which many were in Lincolnshire, where Blankney was his chief seat, and the head of his feudal barony. By his wife, Matilda, he had two sons, William and Ralph. William, probably the eldest, while receiving his education in the Court of King William Rufus, d. there, as appears by an inscription on a plate of lead, found in the churchyard near the west door of Lincoln Cathedral, before Dugdale published his baronage, which contains an engraving of the plate, still preserved in the library of that church. From this inscription it seems he was descended from the royal family, probably through his mother. The inscription runs as follows: -- "Hic jacet Wilhelmus filius Walteri Aiencuriensis, consanguinei Remigii Episcopi Lincolnensis, qui hanc ecclesiam fecit -- Prœfatus Wilhelmus, regid stirpe progenitus, dum in curia Wilhelmi filii magni Regis Wilhelmi qui Angliam conquisivit aleretur III. Kalend. Novemb. obiit." [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 170, d'Eyncourt, Barons d'Eyncourt]
~1069
Emma
Peverel
~1067
Hamon
Peverell
~1060
Pagan
Peverell
~1072 - <1158
Ralph
Deincourt
86
86
Ralph d'Eyncourt, 2nd baron, son of Walter, s. him. He founded Thurgarton Priory, co. Notts, and was s. by his son, Walter. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 170, d'Eyncourt, Barons d'Eyncourt]
~1067
William
Deincourt
~1072
Basilie
~1100 - 1168
Walter
Deincourt
68
68
Walter d'Eyncourt, 3rd baron, who, with his son Oliver, fought on the side of King Stephen in the battle of Lincoln, 1141, and he appears, on his son's death subsequently, to have given lands to Walter, a priest, who had saved his son from captivity and death in that battle, to pray for his soul. Walter was s. by his other son, John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 170, d'Eyncourt, Barons d'Eyncourt]
~1102
Ralph
Deincourt
~1105 - 1162
William
Deincourt
57
57
~1132
Ann
(Alice)
Murdac
~1111
Ralph
Murdac
~1115
Beatrice
De
Chesney
~1071
Roger
de
Chesney
~1073
Alice
de
Langetot
~1110
Hugh
de
Chesney
~1128
Hawise
De
Chesney
~1060
Ralph
de
Langetot
1044 - 1086
Sire de
Quesnay
Ralph
42
42
Fought in the Battle of Hastings
1048
Maud
de
Wateville
~1069
Ralph
de
Chesney
~1070
William
de
Chesney
~1105
Reynold
de
Caisneto
1022
William
de
Wateville
~1120
Adelicia
Deincourt
~1205
Nicola
De
Camville
~1165
Annabella
~1065 - ~1114
Henry
fitz
Herbert
49
49
~1035
Herbert
~1070
William
fitz
Herbert
~1069
Muriel
de
Valoines
~1000 - 1052
II
Hughes
52
52
~1046 - 1119
Adeliza
De
Ponthieu
73
73
~1009
Rainald de
Château-
Porcien
~1010
Adela
de
Rethel
~0890 - >0949
Doon
Neffe de
Réthel
59
59
~1090
Flandrine
de
Namur
~1220
John
de
Segrave
~1263 - 1331
Christiane
du
Plessis
68
68
~1301 - 1343
Henry
de
Ferrers
42
42
~1236 - 1292
Sir
Hugh du
Plessis
56
56
Hugh de Plessets, who, doing his homage in April, 1263, had livery of the manors of Oxenardton, Kedelinton, and Stuttesdon, co. Oxford, which were his mother's inheritance; the two former being holden of the king by barony, for which manors in the 48th Henry III [1264] he paid £100 for his relief. This feudal lord m. Isabel, dau. of John de Riparius, and dying in 1291, was s. by his son, Hugh de Plessets. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 439, Plessets, or Plessetis, Earl of Warwick, Baron Plessets]
~1237
Joan
de
Hoyville
~1206 - 25 FEB 1261/62
Sir
John du
Plessis
The first of this family mentioned is John de Plessets, an eminent Norman who came to England in the beginning of the reign of Henry III. He became a domestic servant in the court of King Henry III, and, having served in the Welsh wars, was constituted governor of the castle of Devizes, in Wiltshire, and warden of the forest of Chippenham, in the same shire. In the 24th King Henry's reign [1240] he was sheriff of Oxfordshire, and in two years afterwards he had a grant of the wardship and marriage of John Bisset, and likewise of the heirs of Nicholas Malesmaines. Certain it is that he enjoyed in a high degree the favour of his royal master for, upon the death of John Mareschal, who had m. Margery, the sister and heir of Thomas de Newburgh, Earl of Warwick, the king sent his mandate to the archbishop of York, the bishop of Carlisle, and William de Cantilupe, requiring them that they should earnestly persuade this opulent widow to take John de Plessets for her 2nd husband. Nay, so much did he desire the union that, upon Christmas day in the same year, being then at Bordeaux, he granted to John Plessets, by patent, the marriage of this Margery in case he could procure her consent; and if not, that then he should have the fine which the lady would incur by marrying with the king's license. This course of the king's however, prevailed, and his favourite obtained the hand of Margery de Newburgh, Countess of Warwick, and widow of John Mareschal, styled Earl of Warwick. De Plessets was subsequently constituted constable of the Tower of London, but not by the title of Earl of Warwick, not did he assume that dignity for some time afterwards. He did, however, eventually assume it, under a clause in a fine levied in the 31st Henry III [1247], whereby William Mauduit, and Alice, his wife, did, as much as in them lay, confer the earldom upon him for life, so that, if he outlived the countess, his wife, he should not be forced to lay it aside. In the August ensuing, the King, granting to him license to fell oaks in the forest of Dene, styles him Earl of Warwick, and thenceforward he bore that dignity. His lordship was appointed in four years afterwards one of the justices itinerant to sit at the Tower for hearing and determining such pleas as concerned the city of London; and at the breaking out of the contest between Henry and the barons, he was constituted sheriff of the cos. Warwick and Leicester; but he lived not to see the issue of those troubles, for, falling sick in the beginning of the month of February, 1263, he d. before its expiration. His lordship left issue by his first wife but none by the Countess of Warwick. Lady Warwick survived her husband but a short time when the Earldom of Warwick and the great inheritance of the Newburghs reverted to her cousin, Waleran de Newburgh, son of her aunt, Lady Alice Mauduit. By his first wife, Christian, dau. and heir of Hugh de Sandford, he had issue, a son and heir, Hugh de Plessets. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 439, Plessets, or Plessetis, Earl of Warwick, Baron Plessets, and p. 399-400, Newburgh, Earls of Warwick]
~1211 - 1242
Christina
de
Sanford
31
31
~1181 - 1234
Hugh
de
Sanford
53
53
~1186
Joan
de
Noers
~1156
Hugh
de
Noers
~1126
Hugh
de
Noers
~1096
William
de
Missenden
~1282
Ellen
de
Segrave
~1286
John
de
Segrave
~1288
Christian
Segrave
~1290
Alice
de
Segrave
~1240
Isabel
de
Riparius
~1222
Stephen
de
Segrave
~1224
Eleanor
de
Segrave
~1086
Hugh
de
Segrave
~1207
Hugh
de
Hoyville
~1265
Dionisia
du
Plessis
~1268
Hugh
de
Plessets
~1210
John
de
Riparius
~1200 - 1242
John
Mareschal
42
42
~1190
Thomas
de
Newburgh
~1210 - 1263
Margaret
de
Newburgh
53
53
~1165
Margery
d'Oilly
~1155
Waleran
de
Newburgh
~1162
Gundred
de
Newburgh
~1175
Richard
Siward
1178
Thomas
Basset
1184
Jane
Basset
1878 - 1957
Harry
A.
Boelkes
78
78
1881 - 1941
Albert
B.
Boelkes
59
59
1888 - 1957
Fred
Boelkes
69
69
~1872
Hannes
Jr.
Boelkes
~1890 - 1902
Chris
Boelkes
12
12
1873 - 1905
Nannie
Boelkes
32
32
1885 - 1966
Helen
Boelkes
81
81
1894
Clara
Berdena
Boelkes
1524
Miss
Clements
~0224
Cein
A Christianized Roman who came to Ayr, Scotland
~0195
Doli
~0284
Iago
Ap
Genedawc
~0450
Igraine
Verch
Amlawdd
~0390
Gorbanian
ap
Coel
John
Lovering
Samuel
Lovering
Joseph
Lovering
Ebenezer
Lovering
Mary
Lovering
Esther
Lovering
Hannah
Lovering
Daniel
Lovering
Benjamin
Lovering
4 MAR 1706/07 - 1785
William
Lovering
~1635 - 1668
John
Lovering
33
33
Love
Parsons
~1640
Esther
~0290
Caradoc
Gerontius
ap Einnyd
~0325
Cynan
ap
Eudaf
~0340
Dareca
of
Ireland
St.
Patrick of
Ireland
Gradlon
ap
Cynan
~0485
King of Cornubia
and Lyonesse
Merion
Dywel
ab
Erbin
~0542
Iestyn
(St.
Justin)
~0544
Selyfan
(Solomanus \
St. Selevan)
~0546
St.
Breage
~0260
Caradoc
(Caratacus)
Trusted advisor of Eudaf Hen of Gwent.
Alan ap
Bran
Fendigaid
Sadwr
ap Bran
Fendigaid
Coilus
1843 - 1907
Sophia Wilhelmina
Dorothea Herica
Becker
63
63
She lived near Clayton, Wisconsin and is buried at Silver Creek Cemetery.
1846
Heinrich Johann
Joachim
Christopher Becker
1817 - 1898
Heinrich
Johann
Becker
80
80
!DATA FROM:Shirley Baxton sent information on this family. !MICROFICHE:Germany files at History Center. This last name is also spelled: Baecker. Henry & Maria were married in Moisall Parish. They came to America with John & Marie(Becker) Pichelman, their daughter, stopping for a short time in Chicago, then coming to Minnesota. Henry is buried at Silver Creek Cemetery, but there is no marker
~1820
Maria Margareta
Dorothea
Bielow Buckow
1848 - 1928
Marie Louisa
Sophia Christiana
Becker
79
79
Marie came to America in 1873 with her husband and children. She never learned to speak English. Her granddaughter, Edna Cornwall said she had a large flower and vegetable garden neatly laid out with paths between sections. She is buried in Silver Creek Cemetery. !OBITUARY:I have copy of her obituary from the Barron, Wisconsin, "News Shield" newspaper. !CENSUS:The census shows that Marie didn't speak English.
1850
Johann
Joachim
Heinrich Becker
1853
Friedrich
Johann
Joachim Becker
1856
Louisa Maria
Augusta
Becker
1859 - 1929
Carl Heinrich
Johann
Ludwig Becker
70
70
Carl came to America in 1881 and his sister Marie, who arrived in 1873, didn't recognize him. Carl lived near Clayton, Wisconsin. Additional information came from Minnesota Microfiche #0740, the name also given as Charles.
1866 - 1908
Wilhelmina
Anna Friedrica
"Minnie" Becker
42
42
~1790
Johann
Joachim
Buckow
1794
Joachim
Heinrich
Becker
1773
Catharina
Ilabe
Krohn
~1745
Hans
Heinrich
Krohn
~1750
Anna
Maria
Buelow
~1775
Joachim
Heinrich
Krohn
1777
Johann
Joachim
Heinrich Krohn
1780
Joachim
Christoph
Krohn
1783
Maria
Sophia
Krohn
~1786
Johann
Heinrich
Joachim Krohn
~1790
Carl Fritz
Detlof
Krohn
1792
Anna
Dorothea
Krohn
~1765
Johann
Heinrich
Becker
~1770
Trien
Liese
Sashen
~1788
Trien
Marie
Becker
~1790
Trien Liese
Dorthie
Becker
~1792
Ann
Marie
Becker
1844 - 1907
Johann
Jochim
Schmidt
62
62
1874
Mary
Schmidt
1881
John
Henry
Schmidt
1882
Sophia
Schmidt
~1884
Minnie
Schmidt
1885
Louis
Schmidt
1887
Fred
Schmidt
Dorothy
Rogge
LaVerne
Rogge
Merlyne
Rogge
Living
Rogge
Living
Rogge
Living
Rogge
Living
Rogge
1864 - 1947
Ernest
"Henry"
Rogge
82
82
1874 - 1953
Wilhelmina
[Minnie]
Neumann
78
78
1893
Ernest
George
Rogge
1894
Frank
Joseph
Rogge
1896
Leonard
Henry
Rogge
Ernest
Henry
Rogge
Minnie
Eva
Rogge
Charlotte
Elizabeth
Rogge
Charles
William
Rogge
Evelyn
Marian
Rogge
Louisa
Anna
Rogge
Frances
Irene
Rogge
1835 - 1922
John Christian
Theodore
Pichelmann
86
86
John and his family came to America in 1873 from Klein Sien, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Germany which is in East Germany. He arrived in Chicago, Illinois in 1873 and stayed there for nine months, then went to New Prague, Minnesota for about 23 years. In 1897 they moved to Arland Township, Barron County, Wisconsin and he ran a sawmill with his sons Henry & Fred and farmed. He had 320 acres of land and built a big house and other farm buildings. In 1993 part part of house is still standing; we have pictures of it. John didn't learn to speak English. At retirement he gave each of three sons 80 acres of his land and he and Marie and their daughter, Annie lived with their son, Otto until thier deaths. Their granddaughter, Edna Cornwell said the preachers and teachers often lived with the family as the house was very large. John is buried in Silver Creek Cemetery. !BOOK:"History of Barron County, Wisconsin" at Barron, Wisconsin library has a paragraph on John and two of his sons, Fred & Otto. !OBITUARY:Barron,WI "News Shield" newspaper. He died of a stroke. Funeral Service was held at Silver Creek (German Lutheran) Church, Barron Cty, Wisconsin. Birthdate is 1835 in obituary and on gravestone, but birth records of two of the children gives date as 1844, but German Microfiche shows birth and baptism dates as 1835. NOTE: There were several families from Mecklenburg-Schwerin who settled in northern Le Suerur and southern Scott Counties in Minnesota including: Krohn, Eggert, Becker, Bohnsack and Walm and several of them later moved to Barron County Wisconsin. Through marriage many of these are related.
1870
Heinrich Ludwig
Theodore
Pichelmann
1872
Frieda
Pichelmann
1873
John
Henry
Pichelmann
1875
Mary
Sophia
Pichelmann
1877
Sophia
Dorothy Edna
Pichelmann
1878
Margaret
"Minnie"
Pichelmann
1879
Herman
Pichelmann
1879
Infant
Pichelmann
1881
Charles
Pichelmann
1882
Fredrika"Ricka"
Sophia Dorothea
Pichelmann
1884
Otto
Henry
Pichelmann
1885
Mathilda
Margaret "Tillie"
Pichelmann
1887
Frederich
Louis
Pichelmann
1889
Augusta
Wilhemmenia
"Gusta" Pichelmann
~1890
Carl
Pichelmann
1892
Anna
Pichelmann
1893
Arthur
Walter
Pichelmann
1888
William
Fred John
Pichelmann
1863 - 1946
Margaretha
"Maggie"
Entner
82
82
1883
Karlena
"Caroline"
Becker
1884
Wilhelm
Johann
Becker
1885
Carl
Gottlieb
Becker
1888
Leonard John
Gottfried
Becker
1890
Anna
"Annie"
Becker
1892
Arthur
Frederick
Mickael Becker
1894
Martin
F.
Becker
1897
Albert
Carl
Becker
1899
Elsa D.
"Elsie"
Becker
1904
Frederick
Anton
Becker
1858 - 1916
Henry
Gosewisch
58
58
1892
Fred
Gosewisch
1893
Paul William
August
Gosewisch
1896
Henry
Charles
Gosewisch
1897
George
Gosewisch
~1901
Living
Gosewisch
1904
Erman
William Fred
Gosewisch
Living
Ludwig
Living
Ludwig
Living
Ludwig
Living
Ludwig
Darrell
Magnusson
Living
Neuman
D. 2003
James
Neuman
~1780
Sophia Louise
Catharina
Schmidt
1364
John
De
Stourton
1378
Jane
Basset
~1258 - 1323
John
De
Grey
65
65
~1279 - 6 MAR 1351/52
Roger
De
Grey
~1264
Anne
de
Ferrers
~1283 - 1353
Joan
De
Grey
70
70
~1285
Maud
De
Grey
14 MAR 1299/00 - 25 FEB 1342/43
Sir
Ralph
Basset
~1335
Ralph
Basset
~1393
William
de
Stourton
1373
Elizabeth
Moyne
~1422
Miss
Warsted
~1429 - >1473
Thomas
Spencer
44
44
~1474
Christian
Etheldreia
Baker
1502
John
Spencer
~1636
John
Cook
1640
Sarah
Cook
16 MAR 1640/41
Elizabeth
Cook
1643
Mary
Freelove
Cook
~1594 - ~1666
Ralph
Roote
72
72
Ralph Roote came in the Abigail in 1635, aged 50 (Hotten's Lists), along with his daughter, Mary, age 15; his 1st wife Ann was a member of the First Church of Boston in 1639; his 2nd wife Mary d. 15 Nov. 1655 Boston*, as Mary the wife of Ralph Roote; after careful elimination he is the only Roote of the proper age and unmarried state, who could be the husband of Mary the widow of Thomas Ruggles after 1662. (Suff. I: 461) The nuncupative will of Ralph Roote mentions, as he had love and care of sonne and dau. Bolston with whom he lived, they to have all excepting ten shillings to his dau. Jeane Buttell (or Battell), and five shillings to his dau. at Lin. Proved 29 Mar. 1666. (Suff. IV: 265) The inventory of the estate of Ralph Roote was taken 27 Mar. 1666 by Jacob Elliott and Theophilus ffrarye, and was presented by James Balston his son in law; it was less than œ22. This verbal will does not mention his widow Mary, it was unnecessary to provide for her, as she was well taken care of by the estate of her first husband Thomas Ruggles.
1589 - 1655
Mary
Curtis
66
66
96. THOMAS RUGGLES, son of Thomas Ruggles (96A) of Sudbury, Suffolk Co., England; b. about 1584 Sudbury, England; d. 15 Nov. 1644 Roxbury, Mass.(+), by Rev. John Eliot; 4 Nov. 1644 John Grave, a godly brothr of the church he took a deep cold, wh sweld his head wth rhume & ovcame his heart. 15 Nov. 1644, Thomas Ruggles a godly brothr, he dyed of a Consumption. These two brake the knot first of the Nazing Christians. I mean that they first dyed of all those Christians yt came fro yt towne in England; bur. 16 Nov. 1644 Roxbury*, as Thomas Ruggles, Householder; m. MARYE CURTES (97) 1 Nov. 1620 Nazing (Par. Reg.), Essex Co., England; dau. of Thomas Curtis (97A & 102A) and 1st wife Mary Camp; bapt.-- Mar. 1589 Nazing (Par. Reg.), as Mary Curtis; d. 14 Feb. 1674 Roxbury(+), as Old Mothr Roote who was Tho. Ruggles widdow afore. She lived not only till past use, but till more tedious yn. a child. She was in her 89 yeare. His widow Mary Ruggles m. 2nd (???) Roote after 8 Apr. 1662, as on that date she signed her mark as Mary Ruggles (Suff. Deed VI: 59), and was then 73 years of age. (Ruggles Genealogy, by Henry Stoddard Ruggles). (Ruggles family, by Franklin Ladd Bailey). A Report of the Record Commissioners of Boston, Massachusetts 1630 - 1699 1655. Mary wife of Ralph Roote died 15th -- 9th mo.
1568 - 1619
Edmund
Cook
51
51
1573
Elizabeth
Nicholls
1615
Henry
Cook
1616
Elizabeth
Cook
~1612
George
Cook
~1606
Joseph
Cook
~1610
Thomas
Cook
1547
John
Nicholls
1542
Henry
Cooke
1544
Anne
Goodere
~1570
Mary
Cook
~1514
Henry
Goodere
~1519
Jane
Greene
~1484
John
Goodere
~1489
Alice
Frowick
~1454
John
Goodere
~1459
Alice
Brent
~1424
Thomas
Goodere
~1429
Jane
Lewknor
~1399
Sir
Thomas
Lewknor
~1404
Philippa
Dalyngridge
~1425
Sir
Roger
Lewknor
~1427
Nicholas
Lewknor
~1431
Beatrix
Lewknor
~1368
Sir
Roger
Lewknor
~1370
Elizabeth
Carew
~1394
Eleanor
Lewknor
~1330
Nicholas
Carew
~1340
Lucy
Willoughby
~1290
Sir
Nicholas
Carew
~1290
Avice
Martain
~1250
Nicholas
Martain
~1250
Isabel
fitz
William
~1210
ftz
William
~1175
Ralph
fitz
William
~1176
Yolande
de
Mohun
~1136
William
de
Mohun
~1140
Godehold
~1096 - ~1155
William
de
Mohun
59
59
~1156 - 1193
William
de
Mohun
37
37
~1066 - >1190
Sir
William de
Mohun
124
124
~1066
Adeliz
~1036 - ~1086
William
de
Moyn
50
50
~1153
Lucy
1183 - 1213
Sir
Reynold
de Mohun
30
30
~1206
Sir
Reynold II
de Mohun
~1222
Alice
de
Mohun
~1226
Lucy
de
Mohun
~1254
Isabel
de
Mohun
~1256
Sir
Edmund
Deincourt
~1278
John
Deincourt
~1280
Margaret
Deincourt
1342 - 1401
Philip
Le
Despenser
58
58
1297 - 1326
Eudo
la
Zouche
29
29
~1310
Milicent
la
Zouche
~1280 - 1346
Maud
Lovel
66
66
1252 - 1310
Sir
John
Lovel
58
58
~1255 - <1288
Isabel
de
Bois
33
33
~1260 - 1348
Joan
de
Ros
88
88
1288
John
Lovel
~1120
William
Meschines
d'Albini
~1232
Robert
de
Thwenge
Basilia
~1264
Mary
de
Ros
~1080 - 1155
William
d'Albini
75
75
>1146 - 1236
William
d'Aubigny
90
90
~1150
Margery
d'Umfraville
~1180
Robert
d'Albini
~1185
Nicholas
d'Albini
~1190
Odonel
d'Albini
~1196 - 1242
William
d'Aubigny
46
46
~1150
Agatha
Trussebut
1213
Isabel
Albreda
Biseth
~1315
Joan
Alice
1356 - 1423
Maud
Holand
67
67
~1350 - 1408
Sir
John
Lovel
58
58
6th Lord
Lovel
John
1314 - 1347
Sir
John
Lovel
33
33
Isabel
1290
Maud
Burnell
1222 - 1287
John
Lovel
65
65
~1225
Maud
de
Sydenham
~1255
Maud
de
Lovel
~1195
Sir
William de
Sydenham
~1192 - 1252
John
Lovel
60
60
~1195
Katherine
Basset
~1167
Isabel
~1102 - 1166
William
de
Lovel
64
64
~1076
Ascelin
de
Goel
~1076
Isabel
de
Breteuil
~0965
Osbert
FitzRobert
~1026
Robert
d'Ivry
~1046 - 1115
Hildeburg
de
Gallardon
69
69
~1016
Herve
de
Gallardon
~1016
Beatrix
~0990
Robert
d'Ivry
~0986
Aubree
de
Bayeux
~0926
Bishop of
Bayeux
Hugh
1322
William
la
Zouche
~0875
Aubree
1299
Joan
Inge
~1325
Elizabeth
de
Ros
~1342
William
la
Zouche
Agnes
Green
Edmund
la
Zouche
Thomas
la
Zouche
~1373
Sir
William la
Zouche
1364 - 1391
John
FitzAlan
26
26
~1315 - 1337
Anne
de
Ferrers
22
22
~1285
Margaret
de
Segrave
~1340
Margaret
de
Segrave
~1310
Thomas
de
Ferrers
24 MAR 1334/35 - 1385
Sir
Edward
Despencer
1342 - 1409
Elizabeth
de
Burghersh
67
67
1373
Thomas
Despencer
~1375 - 1408
Elizabeth
Despencer
33
33
~1366 - 1415
Margaret
Despencer
49
49
~1368 - 1426
Anne
Despencer
58
58
~1397
Sir
Thomas
Arundel
1450
Thomas
fitz
Alan
1476 - 23 JAN 1542/43
William
fitz
Alan
~1454
Margaret
Wydeville
1512
Henry
fitz
Alan
~1435 - 1473
Henry
Holand
38
38
Ann
Holand
18 MAR 1393/94 - 1446
John
Holand
~1410
Anne
de
Stafford
~1384
Ann
de
Montagu
~1424
Anne
Holand
1408
Sir
John de
Neville
1394
Elizabeth
Holand
~1410
Thomas
de
Nevill
1456
Ralph
Neville
1383 - 1438
Anne
Plantagenet
55
55
~1402 - 1460
Humphrey
de
Stafford
58
58
Humphrey Stafford, first Duke of Buckingham, b. in 1402 and d. in 1460, was son of Edmund, fifth Earl of Stafford. His mother was the dau. of Thomas, Duke of Gloucester, and dau. of Edward III and Eleanor Bohun, dau. of the Earl of Hereford, Northampton and Essex. He was created Earl of Stafford at the death of his father who was killed at the battle of Shrewsbury, July 21, 1403. At the age of 22 he took a prominent position in the Council of Henry IV. In 1430 he was made Constable of France and Governor of Paris, and was Licutenant-General of Normandy until 1432. After the death of his mother he became Duke of Buckingham. This title was borne, during the war of the roses, by the noble family of Stafford. It descended to Humphrey through his mother who was daughter of the Duke of Gloucester, who was the youngest son of Edward the III. He inherited a number of large estates and became the owner of real estate in all sections of the country. He was ambitious in elevating his position as Duke and was jealous of any interference. He was prompt in securing recognition and full recompense for his services. He was killed at the battle of Northampton, July 10, 1460. In the battle of St. Albans, 1455, in which was shed the first blood in that domestic quarrel of thirty years' continuance, which required twelve pitched battles before it was brought to a close, cost the lives of eighty princes and almost annihilated the ancient nobility of England, was slain Humphrey, Earl of Stafford, eldest son of Humphrey, Duke of Buckingham. He was for a time estranged from Queen Margaret for the dismissal of his step brothers from their offices. But on the whole, his sympathies were with the royal parties. He had ideas of holding the balance of power between Margaret and the Duke of York. Humphrey was perhaps the greatest landholder in England. His estates lay all over central England from Holderness to Breeknoe, and from Stafford to Tunbridge.
~1362 - 1399
Alianore
de
Bohun
37
37
1368 - 1394
Mary
De
Bohun
26
26
1382
Humphrey
Plantagenet
1384
Joan
Plantagenet
12 MAR 1385/86
Isabel
Plantagenet
~1389
Emma
Plantagenet
~1424 - 1455
Humphrey
de
Stafford
31
31
~1426 - 1481
Henry
de
Stafford
55
55
~1437
Margaret
Beaufort
~1408 - 1455
Edmund
Beaufort
47
47
~1410 - 6 MAR 1466/67
Eleanor
de
Beauchamp
1406 - 1431
Thomas
De
Ros
24
24
1427 - 1464
Thomas
de
Ros
36
36
9th Lord Ros. He was an ardent Lancastrian and had a grant of various manors belonging to Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury. He was regularly summoned to Parliament from January 2, 1448/49. In July, 1453, he was captain of the army to be set forth to sea. He fought in the first battle of St. Albans, May 22, 1455. He fought at Wakefield, December 30, 1460, and at the second battle of St. Albans on February 17, 1460/61. He was present at the Lancastrian rout of Towton on March 29, 1461, and afterwards fled with the King Henry VI to Scotland. He was subsequently attainted in Parliament on November 4, 1461. He fled abroad, but returned secretly to England in May, 1464, and made for the North. In 1464, he was one of a force of Lancastrians, Henry VI seemingly with them, which was defeated at Hedgley Moor. He was captured in a wood near Hexham on May 15, 1464, and beheaded at the Sandhille, Newcastle, on May 17, 1464. He was buried at Hexham, in either the Church of the Franciscans or of the Austin Canons.
28 JAN 1380/81 - 1439
Richard
de
Beauchamp
Richard de Beauchamp, 5th Earl of Warwick, was born Jan. 28, 1381. This nobleman was made a Knight of the Bath at the coronation of the Queen, the following year. In 4th of Henry IV, 1399-1414, he was preeminently distinguished against Owen Glendower, whose banner he captured and put the rebel to flight, and about the same time he won fresh laurels in the memorable Battle of Shrewsbury against the Percys, after which he was made K. G. In the 9th of Henry IV he made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and en route the King of France, in reverence of that Holy Feast, made him sit at his table, and at his departure sent an herald to conduct him safely through the realm. When he came to Jerusalem, he had much respect showed him, and having performed his offering at the sepulchre of our Savior he set up his arms on the north side of the temple. At the coronation of Henry V the earl was constituted High Steward of England. In the 3rd year of that king he was at Calais, and the next year he was at Caen, and upon the surrender of that place was appointed Governor of the Castle. His lordship continued actively engaged in military and diplomatic services during the reign of Henry V, by whose will he was appointed governor to his infant son and successor Henry VI, which charge having been fulfilled with great wisdom and fidelity, his lordship was appointed, upon the death of John Plantagenet, Duke of Bedford (King Henry V's brother), Regent of France, Lt. General of the whole realm of France and Duchy of Normandy. The Earl, who had been created Earl of Albermarle for life, in 1417, died in his Castle of Roan in his French Government on April 30, 1439. He married 1st Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Thomas, Lord Berkeley, Viscount Lisle, by whom he had three daughters, Margaret, Eleanor and Elizabeth. He married 2nd Isabel, daughter of Thomas le Despenser, and had a son Henry, his successor, who died 1445, aged 22, and the male line of Beauchamp, Earls of Warwick expired, and a daughter Anne (this Henry left an only daughter, Anne Beauchamp, who died sine prole 1449 and the honours of the illustrious house of Beauchamp, reverted to her Aunt Anne (only daughter of this Richard Beauchamp, by his 2nd wife, Isabel Despenser), wife of Richard Nevill, Earl of Salisbury, the celebrated King Maker, who was subsequently made Earl of Warwick.
~1386 - 1422
Elizabeth
de
Berkeley
36
36
~1477
Elizabeth
de
Neville
1360 - 20 MAR 1390/91
Margaret
Lisle
~1330
Warin
de
Lisle
~1335
Margaret
Pipard
~1305
Sir
William
Pipard
~1345 - 22 JAN 1405/06
Margaret
de
Ferrers
28 FEB 1331/32 - 8 JAN 1369/70
Sir
William de
Ferrers
William Ferrers was summoned to Parliament from 15 March, 1354, to 6 April, 1369. In the expedition made into France in 29 of Edward III his lordship was in the retinue of his father-in-law, Robert de Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, and again in 33/4 of same reign his lands in Ireland being seized for the defense of the realm, the king directed his Precept to the Justice, Chancellor, and Treasurer there to discharge them, in consequence of his lordship being then in the wars in France, with divers men-at-arms and archers, at a very considerable expense. He died 1372 and left issue Henry, his successor, Elizabeth and Margaret.
~1330
Margaret
de
Ufford
21 MAR 1316/17 - 1349
Isabel
de
Verdon
~1334
Ralph
de
Ferrers
~1336
Philippa
de
Ferrers
~1338
Elizabeth
de
Ferrers
1280 - 1316
Sir
Theobald
de Verdon
35
35
~1290 - 1313
John
de
Burgh
23
23
1312
William
de
Burgh
~1304 - 13 MAR 1320/21
Roger
d'Amorie
1318
Elizabeth
D'Amory
~1320
Alianore
Amory
~1303
Joan
de
Verdon
1306 - 1377
Elizabeth
de
Verdon
71
71
1310
Margaret
de
Verdon
~1256 - 1309
Theobald
de
Verdon
53
53
~1325
John
Bradshaw
~1276
John
de
Verdon
~1439
Eleanor
Beaufort
1436
Henry
de
Beaufort
Henry de Beaufort, 1st son, Earl of Mortain, in the life of his father, succeeded his father as 3rd Duke of Somerset 1455 and Knight of the Garter. He gained great honour in the French wars. Among other services he is remembered for his desperate assault on the Castle of St. Agnes in Mayenne, in France, in the 27th of Henry VI, in which he put to the sword 300 Scots and hanged all the French found therein. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Hexham, County Northumberland, and beheaded April 3, 1463.
~1251
William
de
Verdun
~1252
John
de
Verdun
~1253
Agnes
de
Verdun
~1254
Thomas
de
Verdun
1455 - 1483
Henry
de
Stafford
28
28
~1458 - 1525
Katherine
Woodville
67
67
3 FEB 1476/77 - 1521
Edward
de
Stafford
~1484
Anne
de
Stafford
1504
Elizabeth
de
Stafford
~1506
Mary
de
Stafford
1469 - 1535
Sir
George
de Neville
66
66
~1444 - 1485
Margaret
Fenne
41
41
1415 - 1447
Elizabeth
de
Beauchamp
31
31
~1440 - 1492
Sir
George
de Neville
52
52
~1414
Sir
Hugh
Fenne
Katherine
de
Neville
Sir
Edward
de Neville
~1438
Richard
de
Neville
~1410
Catherine
Howard
~1435
Catherine
de
Neville
~1437
Anne
de
Neville
~1439
Margaret
de
Neville
~1435 - 1492
Elizabeth
Woodville
57
57
11 FEB 1464/65
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
28 JAN 1456/57 - 1509
Henry VII
King of
England
Henry, son of Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond, and Margaret Beaufort, was born nearly three months after his father's death. His father was the son of Owen Tudor, a Welsh squire, and Catherine of France, the widow of King Henry V. His mother was the great-granddaughter of John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, whose children by Catherine Swynford were born before he married her. Henry IV had confirmed Richard II's legitimation ( 1397) of the children of this union but had specifically excluded the Beauforts from any claim to the throne (1407). Henry Tudor's claim to the throne was, th erefore, weak and of no importance until the deaths in 1471 of Henry VI's only son, Edward, of his own two remaining kinsmen of the Beaufort line, and of Henr y VI himself, which suddenly made Henry Tudor the sole surviving male with any ancestral claim to the House of Lancaster. As his mother was only 14 when he w as born and soon married again, Henry was brought up by his uncle Jasper Tudor, earl of Pembroke. When the Lancastrian cause crashed to disaster at the Battle of Tewkesbury (May 1471), Jasper took the boy out of the country and sought re fuge in the duchy of Brittany. The House of York then appeared so firmly establ ished that Henry seemed likely to remain in exile for the rest of his life. The usurpation of Richard III (1483), however, split the Yorkist party and gave He nry his opportunity. His first chance came in 1483 when his aid was sought to r ally Lancastrians in support of the rebellion of Henry Stafford, duke of Buckin gham, but that revolt was defeated before Henry could land in England. To unite the opponents of Richard III, Henry had promised to marry Elizabeth of York, e ldest daughter of Edward IV; and the coalition of Yorkists and Lancastrians con tinued, helped by French support, since Richard III talked of invading France. In 1485 Henry landed at Milford Haven in Wales and advanced toward London. Than ks largely to the desertion of his stepfather, Lord Stanley, to him, he defeate d and slew Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth on Aug. 22, 1485. Claiming the throne by just title of inheritance and by the judgment of God in battle, he w as crowned on October 30 and secured parliamentary recognition of his title ear ly in November. Having established his claim to be king in his own right, he ma rried Elizabeth of York on Jan. 18, 1486. Character. The whole of Henry's youth had been spent in conditions of adversity, often in danger of betrayal an d death, and usually in a state of poverty. These experiences, together with th e uncertainties of his reign, taught him to be secretive and wary, to subordina te his passions and affections to calculation and policy, to be always patient and vigilant. There is evidence that he was interested in scholarship, that he could be affable and gracious, and that he disliked bloodshed and severity; but all these emotions had to give way to the needs of survival. The extant portra its and descriptions suggest a tired and anxious-looking man, with small blue e yes, bad teeth, and thin white hair. His experiences and needs had also made hi m acquisitive, a trait that increased with age and success, and one that was op portune for both the crown and the realm. OBJE: C:\My Documents\Royalty\HenryV II.jpg
1491 - 28 JAN 1546/47
VIII
Henry
King of England (1509-47), who presided over the beginning of the English Renaissance and the English Reformation. His six wives were, successively, Catherine of Aragon (the mother of the future queen Mary I), Anne Boleyn (the mother of the future queen Elizabeth I), Jane Seymour (the mother of Henry's successor, Edward VI), Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard, and Catherine Parr. Accession to the throne. Henry was the second son of Henry VII, first of the Tudor line, and Elizabeth, daughter of Edward IV, first king of the short-lived line of York. When his elder brother, Arthur, died in 1502, Henry became the heir to the throne; of all the Tudor monarchs, he alone spent his childhood in calm expectation of the crown, which helped give an assurance of majesty and righteousness to his willful, ebullient character. He excelled in book learning as well as in the physical exercises of an aristocratic society, and, whe n in 1509 he ascended the throne, great things were expected of him. Six feet tall, powerfully built, and a tireless athlete, huntsman, and dancer, he promised England the joys of spring after the long winter of Henry VII's reign. Henry and his ministers exploited the dislike inspired by his father's energetic pursuit of royal rights by sacrificing, without a thought, some of the unpopular institutions and some of the men that had served his predecessor. Yet the unpopular means for governing the realm soon reappeared because they were necessary. Soon after his accession, Henry married Catherine of Aragon, Arthur's widow, and the attendant lavish entertainments ate into the modest royal reserves. More serious was Henry's determination to engage in military adventure. Europe was being kept on the boil by rivalries between the French and Spanish kingdoms, mostly over Italian claims; and, against the advice of his older councillors, Henry in 1512 joined his father-in-law, Ferdinand II of Aragon, against France and ostensibly in support of a threatened pope, to whom the devout king for a long time paid almost slavish respect. Henry himself displayed no military talent, but a real victory was won by the Earl of Surrey at Flodden (1513) against a Scottish invasion. Despite the obvious pointlessness of the fighting, the appear ance of success was popular. Moreover, in Thomas Wolsey, who organized his first campaign in France, Henry discovered his first outstanding minister. By 1515 Wolsey was archbishop of York, lord chancellor of England, and a cardinal of the church; more important, he was the King's good friend, to whom was gladly left the active conduct of affairs. Henry never altogether abandoned the positive tasks of kingship and often interfered in business; though the world might think that England was ruled by the Cardinal, the King himself knew that he possessed perfect control any time he cared to assert it, and Wolsey only rarely mistook the world's opinion for the right one. Nevertheless, the years from 1515 to 1527 were marked by Wolsey's ascendancy, and his initiatives set the scene. The Cardinal had some occasional ambition for the papal tiara, and this Henry supported; Wolsey at Rome would have been a powerful card in English hands. In fact, there was never any chance of this happening, any more than there was of Henry's election to the imperial crown, briefly mooted in 1519 when the emperor Maximilian I died, to be succeeded by his grandson Charles V. That event altered the European situation. In Charles, the crowns of Spain, Burgundy (with the Netherlands), and Austria were united in an overwhelming complex of power that reduced all the dynasties of Europe, with the exception of France, to an inferior position. From 1521, Henry became an outpost of Charles V's imperial power.
1489 - 1541
Margaret
Tudor
51
51
18 MAR 1493/94
Mary
Tudor
1486
Prince of
Wales
Arthur
1430 - 1456
Edmund
Tudor
26
26
1441 - 1509
Margaret
Beaufort
68
68
1404 - 1444
John
de
Beaufort
40
40
Knight of the Garter.
~1410 - 1482
Margaret
de
Beauchamp
72
72
~1428
John
de
Stafford
~1385 - 1412
John
De
Beauchamp
27
27
~1390
Margaret
Holand
~1400
Sir
Oliver
St. John
~1430
Edith
St.
John
~1435
Sir John
de St.
John
~1280 - 1361
Sir
Giles de
Beauchamp
81
81
Giles de Beauchamp, who had already inherited, by settlement of his eldest brother, the Lordship of Alcester. This manorhouse, called Beauchamp's Court, was fortified, by license in the 14th of Edward III, 1340, with a wall of stone and lime and to embattle it, and obtained similar permission regarding his house at Freshwater, in the Isle of Wight, in the 16th year of that monarch, 1342/3
~1335 - 3 JAN 1378/79
Roger
de
Beauchamp
Roger de Beauchamp, a younger son, was one of the eminent warriors in the reign of Edward III, being called younger son of Giles and grandson of Walter de Beauchamp of Alcester. He was by writ to Parliament, dated 1 June, 1363, as Roger de Bello Campo, Baron Beauchamp of Bletshoe, or Bletso, from 1 June, 1363, to 20 Oct., 1379, proof of which is in the Rolls of Parliament, whereby he became Lord Beauchamp. He also had Lydiard Tregoze in Wiltshire, which was confirmed to him and his wife Sibbel, which was granted to them by Peter de Grandison, which Sibbel was the eldest of four sisters and co-heirs of Sir William Patteshull, knight, and granddaughter, maternally of Mabel, eldest sister of Ottho de Grandison, and in her issue co-heir of William de Grandison, Lord of Tregoze Manor. He is described as King's yeoman in 1337, Keeper of Devizes Castle, which was granted to him by Queen Philippa as "her Bachelor," 26 Oct., 1340. As early as 1346 he served in French wars and was made Captain of Calais in 1372. He was sent with his King in 1359 on the expedition into Gascoigne and in the next year he obtained in right of his wife the Manor of Bletnesho in County Bedford, which he made chief place of his residence. In 47th of Edward III, 1373, being still Captain of Calais, his lordship had license to transport his household goods and other necessaries thither without the payment of any custom upon the same, and in the next year he had a special commission to take care that the peace then made between King Edward and the Earl of Flanders should be preserved within the marches of Calais. In the 50th of Edward III, 1376, Lord Beauchamp had a pension for life of 100 marks per annum in consideration of his eminent services out of the Castle and Town of Devizes in Wiltshire. Sybil de Patteshull, his wife, was living 26 Oct., 1351, and was buried at the Black Friars in London. He married 2nd Margaret ..... He died 3 Jan., 1379/80, 3rd of Richard II. His will was dated 19 Dec., 1379, registered at Lincoln, directing his burial to be at the Black Friars.
~1328 - 1351
Sibyl
de
Patteshull
23
23
~1345 - ~1411
Elizabeth
de St.
John
66
66
1363 - 1406
Sir
Roger de
Beauchamp
43
43
Roger de Beauchamp, grandson and heir of Roger de Beauchamp, the first Baron. He was aged 17 in 1380 and second Baron Beauchamp of Bletsho, but this nobleman was never summoned to Parliament. His lordship, proving his age in the 7th of Richard II, had livery of all his lands. In 1394/5 this nobleman attended the King into Ireland. He married Johanna Clopton and had a son John and a daughter Margaret.
~1363
Johanna
Clopton
~1265
Guy III
De
Chatillion
1370 - 1435
Isabella
of
Bavaria
65
65
1401 - 3 JAN 1436/37
Catherine
de
Valois
1387 - 1422
V
Henry
35
35
~1421
VI
Henry
1402 - 2 FEB 1460/61
Sir
Owen
Tudor
1429 - 1495
Jasper
Tudor
66
66
~1405
Louis
Capet
1398
John
Capet
22 FEB 1402/03 - 1461
Charles
VII
Capet
1391
Joanna
Capet
~1410
Mary
D'Anjou
~1300
Charles
IV
Capet
21 JAN 1336/37 - 1380
Charles V
"The Wise"
Capet
3 FEB 1337/38 - 6 FEB 1377/78
Jeanne
de
Bourbon
13 MAR 1370/71 - 1407
Duke
D'Orléans
Louis
1319 - 1364
Jean II
"Le Bon"
Capet
44
44
1344 - 1404
Marie
Capet
60
60
~1293 - 1350
Philip VI
"De Valois"
Capet
57
57
1293 - 1338
Jeanne
De
Bourgogne
45
45
1273 - 1299
Princess
of Naples
Margaret
26
26
~1275
Catherine
de
Courtenay
~1301
Catherine
de
Valois
1339 - 1384
Louis I
Capet
45
45
1340 - 15 MAR 1415/16
Jean I "le
Magnifique"
Capet
1336
Blanche
Capet
1343
Jeanne
Capet
1348
Isabelle
Capet
Richard
Plantagenet
1390 - 23 FEB 1445/46
Humphrey
Plantagenet
1430
Marguerite
D'Anjou
1455
Prince of
Wales
Edouard
~1400
King of
Naples
Rene'
~1405
Isabella
of
Lorraine
1485 - 7 JAN 1534/35
Catherine
of
Aragon
18 FEB 1514/15
Mary
Tudor
Anne
Boleyn
1533
I
Elizabeth
1509
Jane
Seymour
1537
VI
Edward
Anne
of
Cleves
Katherine
Howard
Katherine
Parr
Elizabeth
Lucy
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
~1420
Anne
de
Beauchamp
~1455
Isabel
de
Neville
1458 - 16 MAR 1484/85
Anne
de
Neville
1473
Margaret
Plantagenet
D. 1505
Sir
Richard
Pole
1488 - 1538
Sir
Henry
Pole
50
50
~1481
Jane
de
Neville
~1522
Jane
de
Neville
1511
Catherine
Pole
~1582 - 1644
Sir
Thomas
Barrington
62
62
~1515
Ursula
Pole
~1637
Sarah
Roote
Genealogical History of the Town of Reading, Massachusetts - 1649 Ralph Roote was authorized by the court to confirm the sale of a house and land in Reading, belonging to his daughter Sarah, a minor, to Thomas Taylor, of Watertown.
1560
Thomas
Curtis
1560
Mary
Camp
~1584 - 1644
Thomas
Ruggles
60
60
JAN 1623/24
John
Ruggles
1629
Samuel
Ruggles
FEB 1626/27
Sarah
Ruggles
~1622
Thomas
Ruggles
~1597 - <1635
Mary
Jones
38
38
1587
Martha
Curtis
~1588
Thomas
Curtis
~1590
John
Curtis
14 MAR 1590/91
Elizabeth
Curtis
1591
Philip
Curtis
1592
William
Curtis
Ann
<1629
James
Balston
1662 - 1709
Abigail
Balston
47
47
1660
James
Balston
1657
James
Balston
1654
John
Balston
1653
Sarah
Balston
~1671 - 2 JAN 1689/90
Mary
Balston
1688
James
Balston
21 MAR 1667/68
Jonathon
Balston
1665
Jonathon
Balston
1645 - 21 JAN 1729/30
John
Fuller
~0355
Anwn
Dynod ap
Macsen
~0340
Wihtgils
~0364
St.
Peblig ap
Macsen
~0370 - 0459
Vortigern
Gwrtheneu
89
89
Vortigern, born Vitalinis, was a Roman Britain who used his influence to have Constantius, the son of Maxentius (Macsen Weidleg) assassinated. He then assumed the throne of Britain by right of his marriage. He was unpopular among the Britons, so as a means of protecting his throne, Vortigern invited two bands of Saxon warriors under the leadership of Hengist and Horsa to serve as his elite guard. The Saxons were considered enemies by the Britons and the general unease caused Vortigern to invite even more Saxons to Britain. He then became infatuated with the daughter of Hengist and abandoned his wife, Severa, along with their children to marry the Saxon princess. As a gift to the family of his new bride, Vortigern gave the eastern coast of Britain to the Saxons for their home, beginning the Anglo-Saxon invasion. War quickly erupted as outraged Britons rose up to reclaim their homeland. The sons of Vortigern had fled to Gaul for safety, where they raised an army and returned to assist the Britons in overthrowing their father and his Saxon merceneries. VORTIGERN THE MOST hated man in Britain, as he later became known, was Vortigern Vorteneu. The Welsh form of this is Gwrtheyrn Gwrtheneu (the Thin). Despite the name being synonymous with the man, Vortigern has long been accepted as only a title, with Pictish, or perhaps Northern British overtones. It means "Over-King", and there are some indications that, like his semi-legendary forebears, his real name was Vitalis (Gwidol in Welsh) or Vitalinus (Gwidolin), though his origins are obscure. His name would almost certainly have been Roman in influence, although he was probably aware of its Celtic version. The north and west of Britannia was only ever under Roman military rule, so Celtic traditions were still very strong there. The other possibility, equally strong, put forward by Charles Thomas, is that Bede knew of Vortigern as Vertigernus or Uuertigernus, representing a British name Wortigernos (see the introduction on Gildas for a fuller explanation). His power-base was always the area along the Welsh border, and while he was High King, his eldest son Vortimer set up a thriving kingdom in Gwent. Vortigern himself appears to have spent more of his time, and exercised more direct control in Caer Gloui (Gloucester) in his early years. His great grandfather is said to have been Gloyw Gwallthir (Long-Hair), one of the city's supposed founders (Gloyw = Glou-, and Latin castrum (fort) = British caer or Saxon cester). This name is still linked to the place itself in its nickname of "Gloucester Long-Wall", but the appendage to Gloyw's name indicates he was a long-haired Pict. This is also born out to an extent in the name Vortigern itself. "gern" was a Pictish (or pre-Pict) word for leader. Despite this Pictish link, the "Life of St Cadog" gives Vortigern an alternative and very typically Celtic ancestry descending from the Celtic gods, Beli Mawr, Lludd Llaw Ereint & Afallach. Pictish descent was always measured through the female side, so perhaps this explains the apparent conflict. Vortigern could have possessed a Pictish female in his ancestry, a possible wife of Gloyw's, not unlikely if she was from the Southern Picts around Manau Goutoddin or the Clyde. The St Cadog ancestry shows too few generations to be complete, but it is replicated in the King List for Vortigern's Powys, as similar ancestries are for other kings, such as Gwent, Dyfed, and Gwynedd. The ancestry of Celtic kings was very important to their prestige and their clan name, so even minor kings (who were usually descended from greater royal houses anyway) would find an ancestry that linked them to their royal title. Vortigern became High King of Britain in around 425, after years of building up his power and position. Its entirely possible that, given the fact that the Romano-Britons at this time were still very much following standard Roman policies on defence and their way of life, that he adjusted the title to become Emperor of Britain. The precedence would have been his own father in law, Magnus Maximus, and the more recent claimant to Rome, Constantine III, who left Britain in 407. There was no possibility of following these two overseas to claim a now much reduced Rome, even if the manpower was available, which it was not. The title of emperor would bear much more meaning to the Romanised Britons who were in command of Britannia, before the mid-century Celtic resurgence took hold. Between AD 380 - 400 Vortigern married Severa ferch Macsen (daughter of Magnus Maximus, the Roman general proclaimed emperor in Britain in 383, and responsible for large scale changes in the way Britain defended itself before he left to pursue his claim to the purple). Later, he married again. Vortigern & Vortimer British Chronology SOURCE: http://www.britannia.com/history/biographies/vortig.html Estimates of when Vortigern came to power in Britain vary dramatically: possibly around 425, perhaps about 440-5. He may have been a "high-king." It is thought by some that Vortigern is not a name at all, but a title, meaning "over king." Even his origins are disputed. According to the available sources, Vortigern was a weak man of little character, possessing few redeeming personal qualities. If these sources are correct, it is hard to imagine that his ascent to power was by the acclaimation of the members of Britain's ruling council, and is much easier to believe that he gained his throne by treachery and murder. Some support for this view is lent by Geoffrey of Monmouth, in his 12th century "History of the Kings of Britain." In it, Geoffrey tells us of a King Constantine, who had three sons, Constans, Aurelius Ambrosius (the Ambrosius Aurelianus of actual history) and Uther Pendragon (the legendary future father of Arthur). Geoffrey says that Constantine was killed by a Pictish assassin, leaving the eldest son, Constans, as king. Vortigern appears to have climbed his way high up the greasy pole by securing an inspired marriage to Severa, the daughter of the Constantine's predecessor and national hero, Magnus Maximus. As Constans was still quite young, Vortigern was able to have himself installed as the king's advisor, and before long, conspired to have the young king killed. With the king out of the way, Vortigern seized the crown for himself, realizing that Aurelius Ambrosius and Uther Pendragon were mere babes and weren't in a position, at that time, to frustrate his designs. Luckily for the young brothers, they were bundled up and escaped to the court of their cousin, Budic I, in Brittany. According to the "Historia Brittonum," a ninth century compilation of writings by a Welsh monk called Nennius, Vortigern came to power threatened with three dangers on his mind: "Vortigern ruled in Britain and during his rule in Britain he was under pressure, from fear of the Picts and the Irish (Scots), and of a Roman invasion, and, not least, from dread of Ambrosius." The fear of the Picts and Scots was completely natural since the British northern defenses were ineffective and in severe disarray. The fear of a Roman invasion suggests either great paranoia on Vortigern's part (the Romans had had no presence in Britain for years) or that there was very good reason (of which we are ignorant, today) to be concerned about a reappearance of Roman soldiers on the shores of Britain. The final fear, of Ambrosius, was to have fatal consequences. Vortigern dreaded retribution, for the murder of his father and older brother, but Ambrosius was still young and the High-King could afford to defer any action for some years. [5th Century Caer-Guricon (Wroxeter in Shropshire)] It was during Vortigern's reign that St. Germanus appears at the Royal Court. Traditional this is said to have been St. Germanus of Auxerre, who is known to have visited Britain at this time to stamp out the Palagian heresy that had become so popular. His first journey took him from Caer-Rebuti (Richborough) to Caer-Lundein (London) and Caer-Mincip (St.Albans), all in South-East England. However, stories of his leading an army against invading Saxon pirates, probably in Cheshire, may refer to a different man. The saint who spent some time in Vortigern's presence - probably at Caer-Guricon (Wroxeter, Shropshire) where excavation has revealed the residence of a powerful 5th century noble - may have been the Breton St. Garmon who was active across Wales. This saint accused Vortigern of fathering a child by his own daughter. Though disgusted by the British High-King, Garmon - or Germanus - favoured the man's sons, at least two of whom he appears to have blessed. Even with the support of his brothers-in-law, who were now powerful rulers in Wales, Vortigern's grip on the country was still shaky; but when Severa died the situation worsened. To aid the Britons in their defense against the increasingly brutal raids from the northern tribes, Vortigern therefore authorized the use of Saxon and Jutish mercenaries, led by Princes Hengist & Horsa. In line with the standard Roman practice of employing one barbarian tribe to defend against another, the Saxons received land to be used for settlement in exchange for their services. Geoffrey of Monmouth claims that the two brothers asked for all the land they could cover with a single ox-hide. Vortigern eagerly agreed, but found that Hengist cut the hide into a lengthy thong that was able to encompass the whole city of Caer-Correi (Caistor, Lincs)! Vortigern must, however, have found reassurance in the words of the Jutish chief, as recorded in the "Kentish Chronicle": "Hengest said to Vortigern. . .'Take my advice, and you will never fear conquest by any man or any people, for my people are strong. I will invite my son and his cousin to fight against the Irish, for they are fine warriors.'" The anti-Pict/Irish strategy that Vortigern chose to employ proved to be successful, since these tribes were never a problem, again, and the arrangement between the Saxons under their leader, Hengest, and Vortigern was agreeable to both parties for some time. Later, however, they tricked the High-King again: this time into handing over to them the Sub-Kingdom of Ceint (Kent). Getting drunk at a celebratory feast, the foolish Vortigern fell deeply in love with Hengist's daughter, Rowena. He promised Hengist anything he wanted, if only he could marry her. Ceint was the Saxon's price. Sickened by the betrayal of his countrymen, Vortigern's eldest son, Vortimer, declared himself a rival British leader, raised an army and, for a short time, managed to stem the Saxon advance. Wounded in battle, however, he was poisoned by his step-mother. From their secure power-base, the Saxons then demanded more food and clothing to supply their increased numbers and Vortigern refused them, saying, "we cannot give you more food and clothing for your numbers are grown." The Saxons, however, would not accept this answer. Nennius tells us, "So they took counsel with their elders to break the peace." They tore through the land, leaving devastation wherever they went. Many were killed during the ensuing battles, amongst them, Horsa & Vortigern's son, Catigern. Hengist eventually called for a peace conference on Salisbury Plain. The British arrived and were promptly cut down where they stood. This decision on the part of the Saxons would result in several generations of war with the Britons. [Fighting Dragons at Dinas Emrys] Vortigern escaped to set up a stronghold in the west. He chose to build a castle on the southern slopes of Yr Aran, above Beddgelert (Gwynedd). Construction began. However, every morning the previous day's work was found demolished. Vortigern's magicians told him to seek a boy with no father, born of the fairies. He would be able to solve the High-King's problem. Vortigern's men searched far and wide and discovered such a boy at what was soon to become Caer-Fyrddin (Carmarthen). His name was Myrddin Emrys, or "Merlin" for short. Merlin revealed that at night the mountain shook so that all buildings collapsed, because beneath it were buried two fighting dragons. One white representing the Saxons and one red representing the British, and the white one was winning! Afraid of such an omen, Vortigern fled. Disillusioned, the British finally rebelled against their High-King. Ambrosius Aurelianus (Emrys Wledig), of whom Vortigern had previously had no fear, had by now grown into a burly young man and took his place in the events of the time to lead their struggle. Merlin handed over to him the mountain site where Vortigern had failed to build, and it became his fort of Dinas Emrys. Vortigern took refuge in the refortified hillfort of Tre'r Ceiri in Yr Eifl (the Rivals) in Lleyn, but Ambrosius pursued him and drove him south, via Nant Gwetheyrn and the sea to Ergyng and a wooden castle on the old hillfort of Caer-Guorthigirn (Little Doward) above Ganarew. Here, the castle was miraculously struck by lightning and Vortigern burnt to death! He was later buried in a small chapel in Nant Gwrtheyrn (Lleyn). Thus, it was left to Ambrosius Aurelianus to halt the Saxon advance.
~0358
Owain
Finddu
(Black Lips)
~0402
Vortimer
Fendigaid
Vortimer (Gwerthefyr) Fendigaid (the Blessed)
~0375
Saxon
King in
Kent Horsa
~0430
Uthyr
Pendragon
~0361 - ~0425
Flavius
Claudius
Constantine
64
64
Custennin Fawr (the Great), in Welch
~0405
Ronnwen
(Rowena)
~0425
(Unknown)
verch
Gwrtheneu
~0370
Saxon King
in Kent
Hengist
~0480
Arthur
Pendragon
SOURCE: http://www.britannia.com/history/arthur/kaking.html Arthur, King of the Britons Arthur, it seems, is claimed as the King of nearly every Celtic Kingdom known. The 6th century certainly saw many men named Arthur born into the Celtic Royal families of Britain but, despite attempts to identify the great man himself amongst them, there can be little doubt that most of these people were only named in his honour. Princes with other names are also sometimes identified with "Arthwyr" which is thought by some to be a title similar to Vortigern. Breton King Geoffrey of Monmouth recorded Arthur as a High-King of Britain. He was the son of his predecessor, Uther Pendragon and nephew of King Ambrosius. As a descendant of High-King Eudaf Hen's nephew, Conan Meriadoc, Arthur's grandfather, had crossed the Channel from Brittany and established the dynasty at the beginning of the 5th century. The Breton King Aldrien had been asked to rescue Britain from the turmoil in which it found itself after the Roman administration had departed. He sent his brother, Constantine, to help. Constantine appears to have been the historical self-proclaimed British Emperor who took the last Roman troops from Britain in a vain attempt to assert his claims on the Continent in 407. Chronologically speaking, it is just possible he was King Arthur's grandfather. Arthur's Breton Ancestry was recorded by Gallet. Riothamus the King Geoffrey Ashe argues that King Arthur was an historical King in Brittany known to history as Riothamus, a title meaning "Greatest-King". His army is recorded as having crossed the channel to fight the Visigoths in the Loire Valley in 468. Betrayed by the Prefect of Gaul, he later disappeared from history. Ashe does not discuss Riothamus' ancestry. He, in fact, appears quite prominently in the pedigree of the Kings of DomnonŽe, dispite attempts to equate him with a Prince of Cornouaille named Iaun Reith. Riothamus was probably exiled to Britain during one of the many civil wars that plagued Brittany. He later returned in triumph to reclaim his inheritance, but was later killed in an attempt to expel Germanic invaders. The main trouble with this Arthurian identification is that it pushes King Arthur back fifty years from his traditional period at the beginning of the sixth century (See Ashe 1985). Dumnonian King Welsh tradition also sees Arthur as High-King of Britain but tends to follow the genealogies laid down in the Mostyn MS117 and the Bonedd yr Arwr. These show Arthur as grandson of Constantine but, this time, he is Constantine Corneu, the King of Dumnonia. Traditional Arthurian legend records three Kings of Dumnonia during Arthur's reign: Constantine's son, Erbin; grandson, Gereint and great grandson, Cado. Nowhere is there any indication that these three were closely related to Arthur, nor that he had any claim on the Dumnonian Kingdom. Nor is their any explanation as to why a Dumnonian prince would have been raised to the High-Kingship of Britain. Arthur's connection with this area of Britain is purely due to his supposedly being conceived at Tintagel, the residence of his mother's first husband, and buried at Glastonbury, the most ancient Christian site in the country. Cumbrian King The Clan Campbell trace their tribal pedigree back to one Arthur ic Uibar: the Arthur son of Uther of tradition. Norma Lorre Goodrich uses this fact to argue that Arthur was a "Man of the North". This idea was first proposed by the Victorian Antiquary, W.F.Skene, and there is some evidence to recommend it, especially the possible northern location of Nennius' twelve battles. Goodrich places Arthur's Court at Carlisle. As the capital of the Northern British Kingdom of Rheged, this seems an unlikely home for Arthur, who was not of this dynasty. Prof. Goodrich relies heavily on late medieval literary sources and draws imaginative conclusions. (See Goodrich 1986 & Skene 1868). Pennine King There was a Northern British King named Arthwys who lived in the previous generation to the traditional Arthur. He was of the line of Coel Hen (the Old) and probably ruled over a large Kingdom in the Pennines. Many of Nennius' Arthurian Battles are often said to have taken place in the Northern Britain. These and other northern stories associated with the King Arthur may, in reality, have been relating the achievements of this near contemporary monarch. Elmet King Another Northern British Arthwys was the son of Masgwid Gloff, probably a King of the Elmet region of modern West Yorkshire. Nothing is known of this Prince who was exactly contemporary with the real King's traditional period. Though it is unlikely that he held his own kingdom, his exploits may have contributed to King Arthur's story. Scottish King The Scots, though fresh from Ireland, also used the name Arthur for a Royal Prince. Artur, the son of King Aidan of Dalriada, was probably born in the 550s. David F. Carroll has recently argued that this man was the real Arthur, ruling Manau Gododdin from Camelon (alias Camelot) in Stirlingshire. Details can be found on the author's web site. (Carroll 1996) Powysian King Graham Phillips and Martin Keatman identify Arthur as Owain Ddantwyn (White-Tooth), a late 5th century Prince of the House of Cunedda (more specifically of Gwynedd). Their arguments, however, are wholly unconvincing, and contain many unresolved discrepancies. Owain's son, Cuneglasus (known from Welsh pedigrees as Cynlas) was among the five Celtic Kings condemned in the writings of Gildas. Through a misinterpretation of this account, Keatman & Phillips imply that Cuneglasus was the son of one Arth, ie. Arthur. They further claim that he, and therefore his father, Owain, before him, must have ruled Powys, as this is the only Kingdom un-reconciled with Gildas' Kings. However, Cynlas lived at Din Arth in Rhos. He was not the son of Arth. In traditional Welsh manner the Kingdom of Gwynedd had been divided between his father, Owain, who received Eastern Gwynedd (ie. Rhos) and his uncle, Cadwallon Lawhir (Long-Hand) who took the major Western portion. During this period, Cyngen Glodrydd (the Renowned) was ruling Powys. He was probably the Aurelius Caninus mentioned by Gildas. (See Phillips & Keatman 1992). Rhos King A much simpler and thoroughly more convincing thesis from Mark Devere Davies suggests that Arthur may have been Cuneglasus himself. I can do no better than recommend you to the author's website. Dyfed King A King Arthwyr ruled in Dyfed in the late 6th century. He was the son of King Pedr ap Cyngar, but little else is known of him. Though he was probably merely named after the great man, it is possible that some of his accomplishments may have become attached to the traditional legend. Glamorgan King Baram Blackett & Alan Wilson have theorised that the legendary King Arthur was an amalgam of two historical characters: Anwn (alias Arthun), the British King who conquered Greece and Athrwys (alias Arthwys) the King of Glywyssing and Gwent. Arthun was a son of the British Emperor Magnus Maximus, who lived in the late 4th century. He is better known as Anwn (alias Dynod) and his title of King of Greece is generally thought to be a misreading of his Latin name, Antonius Gregorius. He actually ruled much of South Wales. Arthwys of Glwyssing & Gwent is widely accepted as a seventh century King who lived in South-East Wales. His home in the traditional Arthurian region around Caerleon is part of this man's attraction. Blackett & Wilson argue, not unconvincingly, that he really lived in the early 6th century and that his father, King Meurig was called "Uther Pendragon", a title meaning Wonderful Commander. They also make the important assertion that Arthur lived, not in Cerniw (ie. Cornwall), but in Cernyw (ie. Glywyssing). (See Blackett & Wilson 1980). St. Arthmael the King Like Blackett & Wilson, Chris Barber & David Pykitt identify the King Arthur with King Athrwys of Glywyssing & Gwent. However, here the similarity stops, for there are important differences in the identification of people, places and events. Their major addition is the supposition that after Camlann, Arthur/Athrwys abdicated and retired to Brittany where he became an important evangeliser. He was known as St. Armel (or Arthmael) and his shrine can still be seen at St.Armel-des-Boschaux. Their ideas have much to commend them and make compelling reading. (See Barber & Pykitt 1993). Roman King It has been suggested, many times over the years, that King Arthur may have been a descendant of one Lucius Artorius Castus: a theme most recently taken up by P.J.F. Turner. Castus was an historical 2nd century Dalmatian general stationed in Britain who commanded the Roman auxiliary troops, known as Sarmations, on an expedition to crush an uprising in Armorica. It is highly unlikely that the two had any connection with each other. (See Turner 1993).
~0400
(Unknown)
verch
Vortigern
~0416
St. Madrun
verch
Vortigern
~0404
Caderyn
Fendigaid
~0460
Pasgen
(Paschant)
Ap Vortigern
~0408
Brydw
Ap
Vortigern
~0410
St.
Edeyrn ap
Vortigern
~0427
Faustus
ap
Gwrtheneu
Ynyr
Gwent
~0385
Ambrosius
Aurelianus
AMBROSIUS AURELIANUS was, according to the later legends, the High King of the Britons after Vortigern. Although the reality of his role is clouded by much uncertainty, his impact on this period in Britain's history was significant. He is mentioned in four early texts, the first and oldest of which is De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, a 6th century diatribe against the lazy and apathetic British people and five corrupt British kings, called "contemptible principalities". It was written by the British monk, Gildas, who says that Ambrosius, alone, is worthy of praise among his countrymen for his leadership of the British counteroffensive against the invading Anglo-Saxons. He is credited with standing against the tide of invasion and heartening his countrymen by his own courage, and he seems to have done much to prevent the early break-up of Celtic Britain in the face of an overwhelming Teutonic onslaught. Gildas refers to him as a "Roman", which clearly implies his continuation of Roman methods of organisation and operation. It also reflects on his family and background, as he seems to have been brought up in a very typically upper class Romanised British environment. Gildas goes on to say that the Saxon advance was halted by a stunning British victory at Mons Badonicus (Mount Badon), which is believed to have been fought around the year 496. This victory so stunned the Teutons (probably under the overall leadership of Aelle of the South Saxons at this time), that an entire generation of peace was bought for the British. This is borne out in archaeological evidence which finds a sudden cessation of Saxon advances in the south until the mid-sixth century. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle also goes very goes at this stage. Gildas stops short of naming the commander of the home forces at Badon, but subsequent centuries have given that credit to Arthur. This is entirely possible, as Ambrosius was at the height of his powers in the third quarter of the fifth century, and by 496, a replacement commander is more than likely, with Arthur fitting the bill as the then battle leader of the Britons, and perhaps High King. Our second reference to Ambrosius comes from The Venerable Bede, an eighth century monk of the monastery of Jarrow, in the well written A History of the English Church and People. In a statement which seems to support Gildas, Bede calls him "Ambrosius Aurelius, a modest man of Roman origin, who was the sole survivor of the catastrophe in which his royal parents had perished." That refers to the Saxon foederati revolt which occurred in the early 440s, and spread terror throughout southern Britain, persuading much of the aristocracy to emigrate to the more stable Armorican kingdoms. Bede tells us that "under his leadership the Britons took up arms, challenged their conquerors to battle, and with God's help inflicted a defeat upon them." Nennius, a monk living in Bangor, was the early 9th century supposed compiler of an eclectic mass of material called the Historia Brittonum. This is a fascinating document of uncertain historical reliability, and was the first serious attempt after Bede to put down the history of the Britons onto paper. Nennius seems to write about two different Ambrosius'. In the first case, he refers to a clearly legendary Ambrosius as being a fatherless child who displayed prophetic powers before Vortigern (he could well have got his references confused here as this refers to the life of Myrvin, the later Merlin of Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain). Nennius also says that Ambrosius was a rival whom Vortigern dreaded, and, in a later passage, calls him "the great king of all the kings of the British nation," essentially confirming his status as High King. What can also be strongly inferred, both from archaeological and textual evidence, is that Ambrosius came to control the West County area around Gloucester. Nennius has Vortigern making a gift of the land, perhaps to try and placate a potential political enemy, but whether Ambrosius gained the land (called Guenet) as a gift, or after the death of Vortigern, he apparently did use the region as a base. If this is true, then in all liklihood he passed it onto his son as a single kingdom which only later split up into the Caer Baddan, Caer Ceri and Caer Gloui that fell to the West Saxons in 577. Geoffrey of Monmouth calls him Aurelius Ambrosius, and says that when King Constans was murdered by the usurper, Vortigern, Ambrosius and his brother, Uther, were smuggled to Brittany (Armorica) to gain strength to return to campaign against Vortigern. In time, Ambrosius defeated Vortigern, warred successfully against the Saxons and had their leader, Hengist King of the Cantware in Kent, killed (in AD 488, an act which must be falsely attributed to him, as it occured about eight years after his probable date of death). According to Geoffrey, Vortigern's son, Paschent, King of Builth, eventually had Ambrosius poisoned (which fits in much more acceptable with Ambrosius' death earlier in the century, in or around 480, which means Arthur was much more likely to be responsible for Hengist's death and Mount Badon). British Chronology Whether Ambrosius was a king of the Britons, a war leader against the Saxons, a Briton, a Roman, all of the above or none of the above, isn't known for sure outside the legends and tales about him. Some have thought that Ambrosius and Arthur are really one and the same, others that he was Arthur's uncle. The truth is probably that Ambrosius Aurelianus was a genuine, heroic, 5th century, Romano-British war leader, some of whose own exploits have been applied to the legend of Arthur. Given the confusion by some over their respective periods of rule, this isn't surprising, but in all likelihood, Ambrosius Aurelianus was at his most active during the civil war against Vortigern, and from the date of the latter's death, circa 455 to somewhere around 480, by which time, it seems likely that Arthur led the battle from around 480 - 511. SOURCE: http://www.britannia.com/history/biographies/ambros.html Ambrosius Aurelianus, the second son of the Emperor Constantine, was known to the Welsh as Emrys Wledig (the Imperator) or Emrys Benaur (the Golden-Headed). Geoffrey of Monmouth tells us how he was still a young child when his teenage brother, Constans' short-lived reign came to an abrupt end. With his father executed and his brother murdered, little Ambrosius, along with his brother, Uther, was bundled up and taken across the Channel to the safety of the court of his cousin, Budic I of Brittany. Here he grew up, while the evil Vortigern reigned in Britain, but always Ambrosius planned to return and claim his rightful inheritance. His chance arrived some years later. Ambrosius returned to Britain, landed at Totnes (Devon) and it may be at this point in history that he clashed with Vitalinus (probably Vortigern or a supporter) at the Battle of Guoloph (Nether Wallop in Hampshire) as recorded by Nennius. This may have resulted in Victory for Ambrosius who was, at some point in history, "given all the kingdoms of the western side of Britain" by Vortigern. Ambrosius was, however, unsatisfied with such a compromise and the struggle between the two continued for most of his life. Vortigern's pro-Saxon policies eventually led to his downfall though and, (probably) in the late 450s, the British people finally rallied behind Ambrosius. Vortigern was hounded into taking refuge in his mountain strongholds. While under siege at Caer-Guorthigirn (Little Doward, Herefordshire), the fortress was miraculously struck by lightning. Vortigern and his entire garrison were burnt to death. After Vortigern's death, Ambrosius was conciliatory towards his sons and let them keep their lands in Buellt, Gwerthrynion, Gwent and Powys. Despite this magnanimity, King Pasgen of Buellt & Gwerthrynion later rebelled against Ambrosius and twice attempted to overrun Britain with help from the Saxons and the Irish. The main Anglo-Saxon forces had retired North of the Humber and Ambrosius met Hengist in Battle at Maesbeli and then Conisburgh (Caer-Conan). Later he besieged Octa and Osla at York (Caer-Ebrauc). All were defeated, but Ambroius let them settle their people in Bryneich (Bernicia). Ambrosius is credited, by Geoffrey, with the building of a monumental stone circle, the "Giant's Ring" (possibly Stonehenge or Avebury) on Mount Ambrius as a memorial to those massacred by the Saxons at the "Night of the Long Knifes" during King Vortigern's reign. He was buried there himself after being poisoned by a Saxon at Winchester (Caer-Guinntguic). Ambrosius was certainly an historical figure as recorded by his near contemporary commentator, St. Gildas. In his "Ruin of Britain," the monk describes how the Saxons rampaged through the country before they "returned home". Then: "The remnants (of the British)...take up arms, and challenge their victors to battle under Ambrosius Aurelianus. He was a man of unassuming character, who, alone of the Roman race, chanced to survive the storm in which his parents, people undoubtedly clad in the purple, had been killed. Their offspring in our days have greatly degenerated from their ancestral nobleness. From that time the citizens were sometimes victorious, sometimes the enemy...up to the year of the Siege of Mons Badonicus." Added to this are the comments of the 9th century chronicler, Nennius, who, in-line with Geoffrey, recorded Ambrosius as one of the chief dreads of King Vortigern. Nennius also describes Ambrosius as a young boy without a father, called to help Vortigern out during the building of his fortress at Dinas Emrys (see Vortigern), a role later taken on by Merlin. He ties the period down by implying that Vortigern's reign had begun by at least 425, and that Ambrosius fought at Guoloph twelve years later. This is most interesting for it poses a bit of a problem. Many people take Gildas' reference to Mons Badonicus to imply that it was Ambrosius, rather than the usually attributed King Arthur, who was the commander at the famous battle of Mount Badon, the decisive British victory over the Saxons around 495-500. In the year 495, Ambrosius would have been at least 74 years old, and it would, indeed, be difficult to imagine a man of this period living to such an age, let alone wielding a heavy sword and leading a mounted charge against the Saxon positions. So what is the solution? There isn't a definitive one, but some have solved the problem by postulating two men named Ambrosius; the elder, whom Vortigern dreaded, and the younger, the hero of the British resistance of the mid-to-late fifth century and the victor of Mount Badon. This is certainly possible. . .as there seem to have been a number of people with the same name in those days (ie. Maximus, Constantine, etc.). Why not two Ambrosii? The more likely possibility, though, is that there was just one Ambrosius. Arthur may indeed have been the real commander of the victory at Mount Badon; or perhaps as "the great king among all the kings of the British nation," Ambrosius Aurelianus could have been the aging overall supreme commander of the engagement, with the function of front line battle leader going to a younger man, perhaps Arthur. Sources .............. Geoffrey Ashe (1980) A Guidebook to Arthurian Britain. Gildas Badonicus (c.540) The Ruin of Britain. Peter C. Bartrum (1993) A Welsh Classical Dictionary. E.K. Chambers (1964) Arthur of Britain. Ronan Coghlan (1991) The Encyclopaedia of Arthurian Legends. Jack Lindsay (1958) Arthur and his Times. Geoffrey of Monmouth (1136) The History of the Kings of Britain. John Morris (1973) The Age of Arthur. Nennius (c.829) The History of the Britons. John Rhys (1901) Celtic Folklore. Hugh Williams (1901) Gildas.
~0390
Uther
Pendragon
~0290
Witta
~0390
King of
Kent
Octa
~0410
Ebusa
~0340
Teudor
~0310
Pascent
~0290
Guoidcant
~0260
Moriud
~0230
Eltat
~0200
Eldoc
~0170
Paul
~0150
Meuprit
~0130
Braciat
~0110
Pascent
Guorthegirn
Guortheneu
Guitaul
Guitolion
~0415
King of
Kent
Ossa
Bonus
Paul
Mauron
Gloui
Ap
Afallach
Bonus, Paul, Mauron, Guotelin, were four brothers, who built Gloiuda, a great city upon the banks of the river Severn, and in Birtish is called Cair Gloui, in Saxon, Gloucester.
~0435
King of
Kent
Eormenric
~0475
King of
Kent
Eadbald
~0455
I
Æthelbert
~0495
King of
Kent
Ercombert
~0515
King of
Kent
Egbert
~0380
King of
Britain
Constans
1473
Richard
Plantagenet
1470
Edward
V
Plantagenet
1187 - 1263
Walter
III De
Clifford
76
76
1315
Alice
De
Audley
~1337
Isabel
Basset
~1339
Maud
Basset
1289 - 1316
Nicholas
De
Audley
27
27
1291 - ~1322
Joan
De
Dampmartin
31
31
1258 - 1299
Nicholas
De
Audley
41
41
1268
Catherine
Gifford
1287
Hugh
De
Audley
~1222 - 1276
Henry
James De
Aldithley
54
54
~1228 - <1299
Ela De
Longespée
71
71
~1150
Gruffydd
ap
Madoc
~1197 - >1249
Bertred
de
Mainwaring
52
52
~1149 - ~1208
Adam
de
Aldithley
59
59
1153
Emma
FitzRadulphus
~1216
Adam
De
Aldithley
~1218
Ralph
De
Aldithley
~1340
Katherine
de
Arderne
~1224
Alice
De
Aldithley
~1220 - 1265
Peter
de
Montfort
45
45
~1134 - ~1180
Thurston
de
Montfort
46
46
~1138
Julian
Murdac
~1160 - 1199
Henry
de
Montfort
39
39
~1158
Robert
de
Montfort
1169
Emma
Corbuceo
~1190
Thurston
II de
Montfort
~1240 - 1287
Peter II
De
Montfort
47
47
19 JAN 1231/32 - 1299
John
Gifford
~1239 - >1282
Maud
De
Clifford
43
43
1274
Maud
Gifford
1271 - 23 JAN 1322/23
Eleanor
Gifford
~1224 - ~1257
William
De
Longespée
33
33
~1255
Margaret
De
Longespee
1140 - 1222
Walter
II De
Clifford
82
82
~1150
Agnes
De
Cundi
~1170 - 1231
Roger
De
Clifford
61
61
~1166
Walter
De
Clifford
1120 - 1190
Walter
FitzRichard
70
70
~1136 - ~1176
Rosamond
De
Clifford
40
40
1195
Alicia
Maltrevors
1397
Anna
Stapleton
8 JAN 1311/12 - 1386
Sir James
De
Audley
1317
Thomas
De
Audley
1257
William
De
Dampmartin
~1267
Eleanor
FitzPiers
1235 - 1286
Reginald
FitzPiers
51
51
* Note: Reginald FitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, with his members de laMere and Talgarth. This feudal chief, who appears to have been aperson of great rank in the time of Henry III, was especiallysummoned in the 41st of that monarch to aid Humphrey de Bohun,Earl of Hereford, in defence of the Marches, and in the nextyear had another summons to march against Llewellin. He m. Joande Vivonia, dau. and coheir of William de Vivonia, surnamed "deFortibus," from his valour in the field, Lord of Chewton in thecounty of Somerset, by Matilda de Kyme, dau. and coheir of William, Earl of Ferrers (by his first wife). With this lady Reginald acquired the Manor of Chuyton or Chewton, which he recevied the day of his marriage. They had issue, JohnFitz-Reginald, Reginald Fitz-Reginald, and Peter Fitz-Reginald.[John Burke, History of the Commoners of Great Britain andIreland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley, London, 1834, p. 729, Jones, ofLlanarth] ---------- Reginald Fitz-Herbert. This feudal lord had summons to marchagainst the Welsh in the 42nd Henry III [1258], and in two yearsafterwards received orders, as one of the barons marchers, toreside in those parts. In the 45th of the same reign [1261], hewas made sheriff of Hampshire, and governor of the Castle ofWinchester; and in the 48th [1264], he was one of those baronswho undertook for the king's performance of what the king ofFrance should determine regarding the ordinances of Oxford. Hem. Joane, dau. of William de Fortibus, Lord of Chewton, co.Somerset, and dying in 1285, was s. by his son, JohnFitz-Reginald. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited,and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.206, Fitz-Herbert, Baron Fitz-Herbert]
~1251 - 1314
Joan
De
Vivonia
63
63
~1268
Reginald
FitzPiers
~1234 - 1305
Alice
Fitz-
Piers
71
71
~1270
John
FitzPiers
~1275
Peter
Herbert
FitzPiers
~1225 - 12 MAR 1296/97
William
De
Vivonia
~1260 - 1320
Cicely
De
Vivonia
60
60
~1253
Sibyl
De
Vivonia
~1255
Mabel
De
Vivonia
~1195
Hugh
De
Vivonia
~1185
Sibyl
De
Dinham
~1213
Joan
De
Fortibus
~1238
Peter
Fitz
Reynald
1314
Joane
de
Mortimer
~1333
Nicholas
De
Audley
~1299
Thomas
Tuchet
~1337
Margaret
De
Audley
~1394
Elizabeth
Edith de
Stourton
~1396
John
de
Stourton
1268 - 1339
Marie
De
Bretagne
71
71
~1412
John
De
Beauchamp
1277 - 1331
Jean
de
Fiennes
54
54
~1365 - 1425
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
60
60
~1387 - 1437
Constance
Holand
50
50
~1392
Alice
Holand
1446
Anne
De
Grey
1448 - 1472
Elizabeth
De
Grey
24
24
1450
George
De
Grey
1418
Thomas
De
Grey
1387 - 1439
Sir John
De
Grey
52
52
1362 - 1440
Reginald
II De
Grey
78
78
1361 - >1443
Margaret
de
Ros
82
82
13 JAN 1334/35 - 1384
Thomas
de
Ros
1388
Isabella
De
Grey
1389
Edmund
De
Grey
1391
Thomas
De
Grey
1393
Catherine
De
Grey
1397 - 1426
Margaret
De
Grey
29
29
~1323 - 1388
Reginald
De
Grey
65
65
~1328 - 1396
Alianore
Le
Strange
68
68
1361
Alianore
De
Grey
1364
John
De
Grey
1368 - 1426
Edith
De
Grey
58
58
Robert
de
Poynings
~1379
Elizabeth
De
Grey
1364
John
De
Ros
1367 - 1424
Elizabeth
De
Ros
57
57
1368 - 1414
William
De
Ros
46
46
~1359
Lewis
De
Clifford
~1360
Philippe
De
Clifford
~1361
Isabella
De
Clifford
~1363 - 1393
Thomas
De
Clifford
30
30
~1365
Mary
De
Clifford
~1367
Margaret
De
Clifford
~1373
Maud
De
Clifford
~1375
William
De
Clifford
1388 - 13 MAR 1420/21
John
De
Clifford
~1393
Maud
De
Clifford
1395 - 1437
Elizabeth
de
Percy
42
42
~1412
Mary
De
Clifford
~1416
Henry
De
Clifford
1430 - 8 MAR 1484/85
Joan
D'acre
1387 - 5 JAN 1457/58
Thomas
De
Dacre
~1448
Joan
De
Clifford
~1450
Matilda
De
Clifford
1424 - 1483
Richard
De
Fiennes
59
59
~1449 - 1483
Sir John
De
Fiennes
34
34
~1452
Thomas
De
Fiennes
1345
Eleanor
Maltravors
~1400
Katherine
Dynham
~1362 - 1409
William
Willoughby
47
47
~1370 - 1438
Margaret
FitzAlan
68
68
~1372
Joan
FitzAlan
~1398 - >1423
Margaret
de
Roos
25
25
1404
Elizabeth
De
Ros
1496
Thomas
De
Southworth
1526
John
De
Southworth
~1460 - ~1539
Margaret
Boteler
79
79
1426 - 1515
Sir
Thomas
Boteler
89
89
1431 - 1485
Anne
Hankford
54
54
1392 - 1452
James
IV
Boteler
60
60
1401 - 1430
Joan
De
Beauchamp
29
29
~1375 - 1435
Joan
FitzAlan
60
60
1477
Thomas
Boleyn
1397 - 8 FEB 1430/31
Sir
Richard
Hankford
Sources: 1. Title: Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists Author: David Faris Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1996 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: 1st ed, p 125 "Hankford"
~1392
Anne
De
Montague
John
De
Neville
1420
James
V
Boteler
1361
James
III
Boteler
1331 - 1382
James
II
Boteler
51
51
~1395
Sir
Richard
Boteler
~1365 - >1396
Anne
De
Welles
31
31
Katherine
FitzGerald
Edmund
Boteler
Johanna
Bourke
<1385
Thomas
Bacach 'The
Lame' Boteler
~1330 - 1361
John
de
Welle
31
31
John de Welles, 4th baron, summoned to parliament 15 December,1357 to 20 November, 1360. The wardship of this nobleman, who was a minor at his father's decease, was granted to Margaret,widow of William, Lord Ros, of Hamlake. In the 22nd Edward III,although still in minority, he caused his father's executors to purchase a rent of ten pounds per annum from the monks of Bardney, for the behoof of the abbess and nuns of Grenefield,which monastery was founded by his ancestors; in consideration whereof they obliged themselves and their successors to find two fitting priests to celebrate masses, matins, placebo, dirge, and commendation every day in the chapel of our lady, with that their monastery of Grenefield, for the health of the souls of his lordship's predecessors. Lord Welles had livery of his lands in the 29th Edward III, and in for years afterwards, he was in the wars of Gascony. He m. Maud, dau. of the aforesaid Margaret,Lady Ros, d. in 1361, and was s. by his son, John de Welles.
~1330 - 1399
Maud
de
Ros
69
69
12 MAR 1310/11 - 23 JAN 1358/59
John
De
Vere
* John de Vere, 7th Earl of Oxford; successfully claimed hereditary post of Master Chamberlain of England; campaigned against Scots and French, notably at victories of Crecy 1340 and Poitiers 1356; married by 27 March 1336 Maud, widow of Robert FitzPayn and daughter of Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Lord (Baron) Badlesmere, and died 23/24 Jan 1359/60 at Siege of Rheims. [Burke's Peerage] The 7th Earl played an important part in the early stages of the Hundred Years War, being a joint commander of the 1st division at both Crecy (1346) and Poitiers (1356). At the latter it was his adroit management of the archers that helped secure victory. [Burke's Peerage, Earldom of Oxford, p. 2178]
~1341
Elizabeth
De
Vere
<1292 - <1374
Isabel
Fitzpayn
82
82
1304 - 24 FEB 1344/45
Adam
De
Welles
13 JAN 1312/13 - 28 FEB 1344/45
Margaret
Eleanor
Bardolf
~1336
Margaret
De
Welles
1199 - 7 FEB 1258/59
Thomas
II de
Savoie
~1215 - 1283
Beatrice
di
Fieschi
68
68
~1235 - ~1302
Louis
de
Savoie
67
67
~1250
Jeanne
De
Montfort
1267 - 1323
Blanche
de
Savoie
56
56
~1263 - 1335
Sir William
De
Grandison
72
72
William de Grandison was a servant to Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, and obtained from that prince, in consideration of his faithful services and the services of his ancestors a grant of the Manors of Radley and Mebstruworth, County Gloucester. In 1294 he was in the expedition into Gascony, where he continued for some time, and while he was so engaged was summoned to Parliament as a Baron. He was afterwards in the Scottish wars. His lordship married Sibella, youngest daughter and coheiress of Sir John Tregoze, and upon partition of that estate acquired the Manors of Burnham, County Somerset and Eton, County Hereford. He had by his wife Peter, John and Otho and three daughters, including Mabella de Grandison.
~1289 - 1357
Agnes
De
Grandison
68
68
1282 - 1328
Thomas
Bardolf
46
46
13 JAN 1309/10 - 1363
John
Bardolf
~1324
Cecily
Bardolf
1259 - 1304
Hugh
Bardolf
45
45
~1254 - 1292
Isabel
De
Aquillon
38
38
~1284
Isolda
Bardolf
~1231 - 1294
Luke
De
Poynings
63
63
~1270 - 1314
Michael
De
Poynings
44
44
Margaret
De
L'Isle
~1229 - 1289
William
Bardolf
60
60
~1231 - 1295
Juliane
De
Gournay
64
64
~1195 - 1238
Hugh
VII De
Gournay
43
43
Matilda
1148
Hugh
VI De
Gournay
~1130 - ~1155
Hugh
V De
Gournay
25
25
~1191
Millicent
De
Gournay
1125
Melesinde
de
Coucy
~1040
Dreux
II De
Mouchy
~1199 - 1275
William
Bardolf
76
76
~1204
Nichola
~1173
Doun
Bardolf
~1070 - 1214
Beatrice
de
Warenne
144
144
~1130
Alice
De
Wormegay
~1158 - 1209
William
de
Warenne
51
51
~1162
Béatrice
De
Wormegay
~1105 - ~1168
William
De
Wormegay
63
63
~1110
Béatrice
De
Pierrepont
~1129
Hughes
De
Pierrepont
~1042
Clémence
De
Vitré
~1140
Manasses
De
Vitré
~1110 - 1171
Gonthier
De
Réthel
61
61
Chatellain de Vitry
~1075 - ~1158
Eudes
De
Réthel
83
83
~1080 - <1130
Richard
De
Wormegay
50
50
~1055 - ~1101
Hermerus
De
Wormegay
46
46
~1141
Thomas
Bardolf
~1146
Rohais
'Rose'
Hanselyn
~1109 - >1174
William
Bardolf
65
65
~1116
Ralph
Hanselyn
~1155
Isobel
Aquillion
~1274 - 1315
Lady
Joan De
Engaine
41
41
1275
Walter
Fitz
Robert
~1234 - 5 JAN 1296/97
John
De
Engaine
~1240 - 1305
Joan
De
Greinville
65
65
~1270 - 1322
Nicholas
De
Engaine
52
52
~1258 - 1312
Joyce
De
Engaine
54
54
~1220
Sir Gilbert
De
Greinville
~1225
Joyouse
~1214 - 1248
Veil II
De
Engaine
34
34
~1219
Rohese
~1167 - 1209
Richard
III De
Engaine
42
42
~1137
Richard
II De
Engaine
~1135 - 1196
Margery
Fitz
Urse
61
61
~1085 - >1141
Richard
Fitz
Urse
56
56
~1105
Maud
D'Aubigny
~1140
Mabel
Fitz
Urse
~1075
Baldwin
D'Aubigny
~1075
Sibyl
de
Falaise
1045 - 1085
Richard
De
L'Aigle
40
40
~1078
Laigle
"Maud"
De Aquila
1010 - 1066
Engenulph
De
L'Aigle
56
56
1221
Alix
De
Dreux
Richeveride
~0980
Fulbert
De
Beine
~1102 - >1140
Veil
De
Engaine
38
38
1060
Richard
De
Engaine
~1085
Aubrey
de
Lisoures
~1244 - 1265
Robert
De
Welles
21
21
~1278
Philip
De
Welles
~1282
William
De
Welles
~1310
Cecily
de
Welles
~1250 - 5 JAN 1313/14
Isabel
De
Periton
~1228
William
De
Vescy
~1210
Adam
De
Periton
~1224
Sarah
~1175 - 1227
Thomas
De
Periton
52
52
~1175
Miss
De
Sandford
~1145 - 1217
Thomas
De
Sandford
72
72
~1115 - 1174
Jordan
De
Sandford
59
59
~1085 - 1159
Robert
De
Sandford
74
74
~1145
Robert
De
Periton
~1145 - <1219
Emma
De
Dumart
74
74
~1115 - 1211
Emma
De
Dumart
96
96
~1085
Bernard
De
Dumart
~1085
Miss
De
Baliol
~1177 - 1242
William
De
Welle
65
65
~1179
Emma
De
Grainsby
~1147 - 1226
William
De
Grainsby
79
79
~1117 - >1150
Ralph
De
Grainsby
33
33
~1087 - <1166
Eudes
De
Grainsby
79
79
~1057 - 1120
Wimund "A
Breaton" De
Grainsby
63
63
~1147 - <1206
Robert
De
Welle
59
59
Maud
~1117 - 1198
William
De
Welle
81
81
~1101
Isabel
de
Gaunt
~1105
Robert
de
Gaunt
Gunnora
~1131
Gilbert
de
Gaunt
~1100
Robert Fitz
Hugh de
Tateshall
~1130
Philip
de
Tateshall
~1115
Maud
de
Gaunt
~1087 - >1118
Walter Fitz
Ragemer
De Welle
31
31
~1057 - <1115
Ragemer
De
Welle
58
58
~1332 - 24 MAR 1388/89
Elizabeth
Darcy
~1350
Felice
Boteler
~1355 - 1398
Thomas
Boteler
43
43
~1360
Eleanor
Boteler
~1362
Joan
Boteler
~1290 - 1347
John "Le
Neveu"
Darcy
57
57
~1300 - 1359
Joan
De
Burgh
59
59
1291
Emmaline
Heron
1317
John "de
Knayth"
Darcy
1320
Henry
Darcy
14 JAN 1264/65 - 1326
Richard
'The Red'
De Burgh
~1263 - ~1303
Margaret
De
Burgh
40
40
~1290
Thomas
Fitz
Gerald
Maurice
Fitz
Thomas
~1284
Elizabeth
Aylher
De Burgh
~1282
Eleanor
De
Burgh
~1286
John
De
Burgh
~1290
Katherine
De
Burgh
~1295
Edmond na
Feisoge
De Burgh
~1233 - 3 MAR 1278/79
Sir John
De
Burgh
~1238 - <1273
Cecily
De
Balliol
35
35
~1256 - 1284
Devorguilla
De
Burgh
28
28
~1258
Emmeline
De
Burgh
~1216 - 1268
John
De
Balliol
52
52
~1218 - 28 JAN 1288/89
Devorgilla
MacDonal
~1249 - 1313
John
De
Balliol
64
64
~1246
Alianora
Mary De
Balliol
~1248
Euphemia
De
Balliol
~1174 - 1234
Alan
MacDougal
MacDonal
60
60
~1156 - 1200
Roland
MacDonal
44
44
Ragnhild
~1176
Devorgilla
MacDonal
~1084 - >1126
Sigrid
of
Allerdale
42
42
~1135 - 1189
Richard
De
Morville
54
54
~1138 - 1239
Matilda
De
Morville
101
101
~1141
Ada
De
Morville
~1146
Joan
De
Morville
~1105 - 1162
Hugh
De
Morville
57
57
~1137
Ranulph
De
Vaux
~1065
Eustacie
~1135
William
De
Vipont
~1051
Ebria
De
Trivors
~1027
Ralph
De
Trivors
~1064
Hugh
De
Morville
~0940
Ailrich
~1124
Berthoc
of
Galloway
~1126
Earl of
Galloway
Gilbert
~1130
Margaret
of
Galloway
~1170
Cicely
de
Fontains
~1184 - 1217
William
III De
Lanvaley
33
33
Magna Carta Surety
~1235
Margaret
Maud De
Burgh
~1191
Hawise
Basset
~1159 - 1233
Hawise
De
Boclande
74
74
~1130 - >1176
Hugh
de
Boclande
46
46
~1160
William
De
Boclande
~1129
Gunnora
De St.
Clare
~1079
Henri
St.
Clare
~1047
Neil IV
de St.
Sauveur
~1050
Dorothy
of
Dunbar
~1020
Gospatric
ap
Dunbar
~1099
Hubert
De St.
Clare
~1169 - 1243
Hubert
De
Burgh
74
74
~1138
Alice
~1301
John
IV
Comyn
1306 - 17 FEB 1336/37
James
I
Boteler
~1107 - ~1198
William fitz
Aldhelm
De Burgh
91
91
~1113
Juliana
D'Aisnel
~1083
Robert
D'Aisnel
~1230 - 1271
Walter
De
Burgh
41
41
~1071
Agnes
Capet
Cecelia
Dunbar
~1267
Agatha
De
Burgh
~1195 - ~1242
Richard
'The Great'
De Burgh
47
47
~1226
Margery
De
Burgh
~1160 - 1205
William
De
Burgh
45
45
1207
Richard 'The
Younger' De
Burgh
~1165
Mor
O'Brien
~1137 - ~1194
Donnell
Mor
O'Brien
57
57
~1142
Urlachan
Mac
Murough
1110 - 1171
Dermod na
Gall Mac
Murough
61
61
King Of Leinster 1134-1171
1114 - 1164
Mor ingen
Muirchertaig
O'Toole
50
50
~1140
Aoife
Eva Mac
Murough
1080 - 1164
Murcertac
O'Toole
84
84
1082 - 1149
Cacht ingen
Loigsig
O'Morda
67
67
~1055 - 1149
Loigsech
O'Morda
94
94
~1060
Gormflaith
ingen Finn
O'Caellaide
~1035
Finn
O'Caellaide
~1005
Dunlaing Ua
Chaelluide
O'Caellaide
~1008 - 1098
Dirborgaill
Ingen
Taidg
90
90
~0982 - >1027
Tadg
MacGilla-
Pátraic
45
45
~0935 - 0996
Gilla-
Pátraic
MacDonnchada
61
61
~0935
Echaraid
of Ui Aeda
Obda
~0984
Aife
MacGilla-
Pátraic
~0986
Caillaide
MacGilla-
Pátraic
~0935
Cinead
O'Morda
Amargen
Ua Morda
O'Moore
~0905
Carlus
Mac
Ailella
~0875
Ailill
~0905 - 0976
Donnchad
Mac
Cellaig
71
71
~0910
Aife
Ingen
Faelan
~0880 - 0966
King Of
Deisi Muman
Faelan
86
86
~0912
Art
Corp
~0914
Domnal
of Deisi
Muman
~0850 - 0920
King Of
Deisi Muman
Cormac
70
70
~0820
Mothla
Mac
Ruaidri
~0780
Ruaidri
Mac
Cormac
~0740
Cormac
Mac
Domnall
~0700
Domnall
Mac
Dunchad
~0660
Dunchad
Mac
Bregdold
~0625
Bregdold
Mac
Cummascach
~0600 - 0632
Cummascach
Mac
Cobthach
32
32
~0570
Cobthach
Mac
Aed
~0540
Aed
Mac
Fintan
~0520
Fintan
Maclaisre
~0490
MacLaisre
Mac
Cainnech
~0460
Cainnech
Mac
Ernbran
~0430 - 0484
Ernbran
Mac
Nia
54
54
~0462
Mell
Mac
Ernbran
~0390
Nia
Mac
Brion
~0350
Nia Mac
Eogan
Brecc
~0310
Eogan
Brecc Mac
Mes Corp
~0270
Mes Corp
Mac Mes
Gegra
~0230
Mes
Gegra
Mac Corp
~0190
Corp Mac
Caipre
Rigronn
~0150
Caipre
Rigronn
~0110
Fiachu
Suidge
<0100 - 0119
Fedhlimidh
Rachtmar
19
19
<0100
Ughna
of
Denmark
~0100 - ~0157
Conn
Cetchathach
57
57
~0115
Eochaid
Finn
Fothart
D. 0106
Tuathal "the
Desired"
Techtmar
Clothra
Fedelm
Derg
Sgaile
Balbh
Fiachu "White
Oxen" Findfolaid
Fionn Ola
104th Monarch Of Ireland
Eithine
Nar
Lughaidh
Sriabh
Dearg
98th King of Ireland
Princess of
Denmark
Dervorgill
Fer
Rath
Crimthan
Naidnar
Breas-Nar-
Lothar
Fineamhnas
Fer
Cetharrad
Medb
Eochadh
Uchticathan
Eochaid
Feidlech
~1190 - <1240
Sir David
De
Lindsay
50
50
Ulcheataigh
"the
Blacksmith"
Fionn
Benla
Crimthann
Fionnlogh
Finn
Roignen
"The Red"
Ruadh
Easamhuin
Eambria
Blathachta
Labraid
Lorc
Enna
Aignech
Aengus
Tuirmeach
Fiachu
Fer
Mara
~1250
Sir
Alexander
De Lindsay
~1220 - 1268
Sir David
De
Lindsay
48
48
~1230
Margaret
Fer
Almach
Laebchor
Eochaidh
Aintheathan
Oiliall
Cas-
Fiaclach
Connla
Caemh
Irero
Gleofathach
Melghe
Molbthach
Cobhthach
Cael
Breagh
Ugaine Mor
"The Great"
Hugonus
66th Monarch Of Ireland
Lorc
Laegaire
Caesair
Crutha
Eochaid
Buaddach
Missing about 2 generations
Caesair
Cruthach
Cassander
Ilium
Dui
Duach
Ladhrach
Fiachu
Fiachadh
Tolgrach
Missing about 2 generations
Muiredach
Bolgach
Simon
Brecc
Breac
Aedan
Aodh
Glas
Nuadu
Nuadhas
Finn-Fail
39th Monarch Of Ireland
Giallchadh
Pict
Ailill
Olioll
Oalchlaen
Siorna Sirna
Saogalach
Sirsaeglach
34th Monarch Of Ireland
Dian
Drin
Denius
Deman
Missing about 7 generations
Rothechtaid
Rigdberg
Maen
Auaine
Aongus
Olmuccaid
Olmuach
20th Monarch Of Ireland
Fiocha
Finachu
Labhrainn
Daughter
of
Morolach
Mugaeth
Morolach
Smiringhall
Smirigoll
Enboath
Pict
Tigernmas
Pict
Follach
Pict
Eithrial
Pict
Iarel
Faidh
Heberian
Eochaidh
I
Heremon
Tamer
Tea
Tephi
Mattaniah
Zedekiah
Josias
Josiah
Hammutal
Zubadah
Jehoiakim
Eliakim
Johannan
Jeremiah
Ben
Hilkiah
Hilkaiah
Ben
Azariah
Jedidah
Adaiah
King Of
Judah
Manasseh
King Of
Judah
Hezekiah
Hephzibah
Meshuellemeth
King Of
Judah
Ahaz
Abijah
Zachariah
King Of
Judah
Jotham
Azariah
King Of
Judah
Uzziah
Jerusha
Zadok
Amaziah
Azariah
Jecoliah
Johoash
Jehoaddan
Ahaziah
Ozias
Zibiah
King Of
Judah
Jehoram
Athalia
King Of
Judah
Jehoshaphat
Asa
Asaph
ben Abijah
Abijah
ben
Rehoboam
Rehoboam
ben
Solomon
Naamah
bint
Zelek
Bathsheba
Ammiel
Zelek
ben
Shobi
Shobi
ben
Nahash
Nahash
ben
Hanun
Hanun
ben
Nahash
Nahash
ben
Ammon
Ammon
ben
Lot
Lot
ben
Haran
Mariah
Milesius
Milespane
'Gallamh'
Prince of Galicia
Scota
Tephi
Nectaebus
D. 1997
Sharon
Neuman
Living
Church
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Wiand
Living
Neuman
Living
Neuman
Living
Georgia
Living
Neuman
Louis
Johnson
Mollie
Sederson
Louisa
Reetz
Edwin
Henry
Pichelmann
Diane
Carol
Pichelmann
Living
Stiles
Augusta
Pichelmann
August
Walm
Shirley
Walm
Heber
Fionne
Ir
Nectonibus
Apries
Bile
Breg
Bun
King of
Spain
Briogan
Ith
King Of
Galicia
Brath
King Of
Gothia
Deadha
King Of
Gothia
Arcadh
Alldoit
Albadh
King of
Gothia
Nuadu
King of
Gothia
Noenal
Febric
Glas
Angan
Fionn
Eimher
Gunfionn
MacLamhfionn
Lamh
Fionn
MacAgnon
told by fortuneteller to head for Europe's westernmost island
Aghenoin
MacTait
Killed a rival king and fled Scythia
Tait
MacOgamain
King of
Scythia
Oghaman
King of
Scythia
Boamhain
Heber
Glas
Scot
Sruth
MacEsru
Asruth
of
Crete
Gaedal
Glas
Gathelua
Gaodhal (Gaedel Gael) Glas of EGYPT cured by Moses; namesake of Gaelic language
Glunfhind
MacLamfind
Scota
of
Egypt
Miriam
Zipporah
Nefertiti
Vizier of
the
Pharoah Ay
Tutankhamun
Nebkhepurure
Merytaten
Yeh
Yuya
King of
the Mitanni
Tushratta
Anen
III
Neb.ma(at)
re'Amenhotep
Pharaoh Egypt 1386-1349
Sitamun
Hatshepsut
Merytr
Nefrure
Ahmes
King
Mitanni
Shaushshatar
King
Mitanni
Parsatatar
~0910
Lord of
Gwent
Ynyr
~1175
Adda
ap
Iorwerth
Bubkhoa
Nubkhas
Moses
Ben
Amram
* Moses went to Pharaoh with his brother Aaron, but in spite of the miracles he worked, such as changing the water of the Nile to blood and bringing plagues upon the Egyptians, Pharaoh would not release the Hebrew people. At last, he consented,and Moses led the Hebrews out of Egypt toward Canaan. As they neared the Red Sea, a hostile Egyptian army, dispatched by Pharaoh, came upon them from the rear. Moses stretched out his arm, whereupon the Red Sea rose up in two walls, leaving dry land between them. The Hebrews crossed on the land, but when the Egyptians tried to pursue them, the walls of water broke upon them, and they drowned. When the Hebrews reached Sinai, on the Sinai Peninsula, Moses ascended the mountain to speak with Yahweh. He spent 40 days and nights with Yahweh, from whom he received two tablets of stone on which were inscribed the Ten Commandments, which thereafter constituted the fundamental laws of the Hebrews. After 40 years of wandering in the wilderness and desert under Moses's leadership and the endurance of many hardships, such as earthquakes, plagues, fires, thirst, and wars with the native people of Palestine, the Hebrews at last came to Canaan. Moses was permitted by Yahweh to see Canaan, the Promised land, from the top of Mount Pisgah (now in Jordan), and then he died. Before he died, however, he turned the leadership of the people over to Joshua. Although the dates of Moses's birth and death are hard to establish,many contemporary authorities believe that the exodus took place in the 13th century BC. * Note: The Pentateuch * Note: Besides being one of the most famous national leaders and lawgivers in history, Moses was reputedly the author of the first five books of the Old Testament, known collectively as the Pentateuch, and also of other parts of the Old Testament,including possibly the Book of Job. Scholars agree almost unanimously, however, that these books are the interwoven work of many authors.
Adinah
Kohath
Ben
Levi
Pharoah
of Egypt
Yeh
Smenkhkare
Zadok
Mutnogjme
Kohath
Amram
Ben
Kohath
~1476
Anne
Boleyn
~1482
Amata
Boleyn
~1379
Margaret
Boteler
~1377 - >1415
John
Boteler
38
38
~1382
Elizabeth
Boteler
Comfort
Smith
Benjamin
Lovering
~1590 - ~1625
Emma
35
35
Mary
Smith
~1588 - 6 JAN 1623/24
Edward
Beauchamp
This is Edward, son of Thomas b. 1550 d. 1613 EDWARDE BEACHAMP DE COSGRAYE. DEFUNCT 6th JANUARY A.D. 1624 my body to be buried in the churchyard of Cosgrave among the burials of my ancestors. In primis: I will that my son, John Beachamp shall enter upon half of my ancient inheritance at 21 years of age and upon all my purchased lands to pay the within named legacies imposed upon him by this my will. Also my will is that my Second son, William Beachamp shall have one hundred pounds portion paid to him by my eldest son John Beachamp so son as the said William shall come to 21 years in his age. Likewise I bequeath to my eldest daughter Elizabeth Beachamp one hundred pounds portion to be paid unto her by my son and heir John Beachamp when he shall attain to the age of 21 years. And I bequeath to my second daughter. Nightingale Beachamp the full and entire sum of one hundred pounds to be paid unto her by my said heir, John Beachamp whensoever she shall come to her like age of 21 years. Furthermore, I bequeath to my youngest son, Edward Beachamp, the entire sum of one hundred pounds to be paid unto him by my executrix so soon as he shall come to the age of 21 years. For the payment of these legacies by my eldest son, John, I do leave divers lands and tenements which 1 myself purchased or redeemed always provided that if it shall happen that my said son John Beachamp should die before any or all these my legacies be paid that then my next son shall make pay of the said legacies, or if he also should depart out of this life before the performance of this my will that then my youngest son Edward shall pay them, and so my will for any other heirs shall succeed in my inheritance. And for the payment of the fourth legacy and divet~s debts which I owe to divers persons I leave unto my wife, Emma Beachamp, all my moveable goods, whom I do ordain to be my sole executrix for this my last will, desiring her, according to my will, to give twelve pence to the church of Cosgrave and to see my body buried with comely funeral expenses and to take as a token of my love all the residue of my moveable goods. And to witness to this my last will 7 have hereto set my hand. Also I require my brother Whaley (? This looks like a surname and could either refer to a brother-in-law or a priest) and my kinsman John Beachamp to be supervisors for this my will Witness: William Mortimer, the mark of Samuell Catherine.
~1608
John
Beauchamp
~1530 - >1615
John
Beauchamp
85
85
~1539
Edward
Clarke
~1612
Elizabeth
Beauchamp
~1577 - ~1619
Dorothy
Clarke
42
42
~1610
William
Beauchamp
~1593 - 1653
John
Beauchamp
60
60
Ref.: "The Mayflower and Her Log from the Library of Congress"."John was a London merchant and member of the Plymouth Company. Was one of the financial adventurers who financed the Mayflower which came to America in 1620. This stock company was formed to supply the plantation in Plymouth, Mass. There were about 70 stockholders. Some time ago in a book entitled "The Complete Book of Emigrants1661-1669" by Peter Coldh a m I (Ann Van Dyke) found an entry dated 15October, 1641 which said "Abraham Helsey of London , gent,age 56 and John Bewchampe, citizen and salter of London, aged 49, deposes that Thomas Weston of London became bound to Bewchampe for money on 29 March 1623..." This is an excerpt from a deposition on file at the Corporation of the City of London. The actual deposition (very hard to read) says "...John Bewchampe...aged 49 or thereabouts..." Will of JOHN BEAUCHAMP of Reigate, Surrey: (Public Record Office: PROB.11/245; folio 19) To the poor people of the parish of Cousgrave, Northamptonshire"where I was borne" four pounds to be distributed "by my twoe Cozen Beauchamps there living". To the poor people of the Parish of Reigate - five pounds Notes for JOHN BEAUCHAMP:From WFT Vol 1 Tree #337Reference: The Mayflower and her Log Library of Congress.John was a London merchant and member of the Plymouth Company. He was one if the financial adventurers who financed the Mayflower which came to america in 1620. This stock company was formed to supply the plantation on Plymouth, MA. There were 70 stockholders. John was apparently a wealthy gentleman. Sons Edward Beauchampe and Richard Beauchampe; youngest son George Beauchampe - all aged under 26 (charged and desired not to marry without their mother's consent and approbation). Son-in-law John Doggett and his wife Allice, the testator's daughter. Son-in-law Walter Wolsley and his wife Mary. Daughter Elizabeth Beauchampe, aged under 22 (charged and desired not to marry without her mother's consent and approbation). Deceased son Thomas Beauchampe; his widow Sarah Beauchampe; hisdaughter Allice Beauchampe, aged under 21. Sister Walshome and her son Beauchampe Walshome. Wife's sister Elizabeth, wife of John Cuddington. Cousin Ellen Roache, wife of cousin John Roache. Cousins William Beauchampe and Edward Beauchampe. Brother Richard Beauchampe. He was claiming a debt due to him from the testator but the will asserts that "in truth and conscience I conceave noe such debt due to him". Lands etc. held of the Manor of Reigate. Executrix: Wife Allice Beauchampe Overseers: John Doggett and Walter Wolsley Dated 6th June, 1653 PROVED (at London) in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury on the 23rd May 1655 by Allice Beauchampe, Relict and Executrix. See general notes. Will was written on 6 Jun 1653 and proven 23 May 1655 by Alice Freeman Beauchamp.
~1590
Thomas
Beauchamp
~1592
Margaret
Beauchamp
~1614
Nightengale
Beauchamp
~1550 - ~1619
Thomas
Beauchamp
69
69
THOMAS BEACHAM OF COSGRAVE 15th DECEMBER 1613 my body to be buried in the parish church of churchyard of Cosgrave aforesaid. Item: I give and bequeath to my son, Edward, all my lands and close called by the name of Burks Bryones (?) within the fields and parishes of Cosgrave, North and East part, which I purchased of John Goodman, Ellis Emerson and John Whittweale to him and his heirs forever, giving and paying to my son Richard one hundren pounds of good and lawful money of England within five years after my decease. Item: I give and bequeath to my son Thomas my house and copyhold land in Downbam in the Isle of Ely in the county of Cambridge. Item: I give and bequeath unto my daughter Margarett my house in Wolverton in the county of Buckingham which I purchased of my brother, Robert Beacham; and three score and ten pounds whereof forty pounds at the day of her marriage or within ten days after, and the other thirty pounds at the age of twenty and one years. Item: I give and bequeath to my son John Beacham my estate, right title and interest in my house in Sisaw(?) with the pertenance or else four score pounds of good and lawful money of England. Item: I give and bequeath unto Anony Mylgate of Wolverton and to Richard Windmill of the same 6s.8d betwixt them, that is either of them 3s.4d. Item: I give to my son Edward three garners with all hovill (sic) post and timber belonging to them, with all the tables and settles in the house, with all boards and timber for building, with all pallis (pales?) and hedge mounds. Item: I give to each of my godchildren 12d and to Marie Bird 12d. Item: I give to the repair of the parish church of Cosgrave 3s . 4d . Item: I ordain that If any of my four younger children depart this natural life before the above said potions and legacies to them by me bequeathed to be due and payable to remain to the proper use and behofe (behalf?) of the other that remain living. Item: 1 give to my son Edward my worser cart and plough and harrow and my brown gelding which was bought of William Emerson, and one red Hereford. Item: I appoint my son Edward my one half of lands and housing which was my father's part at the next fallow, paying the rent due to my father at St Thomas' Day come twelve month and till then my wife to pay it. My legacies as performed, my debts paid, my funeral expenses discharged, all my other goods moveab1e and unmoveable unbequeathed I give to Dorothie my wife whom I make and appoint my sole executrix of this my last will and testament. I ordain and appoint William Ellis of Thropp and my brother Christopher overseers of this my will, and for their pains I give either of them 2s. In witness hereof I have set to my hand and seal this day and year first above written. Thomas Beacham Signed and sealed in the presence of Arthur Emerson. Christopher Beacham, John Maywood, Robert Bagnell Quoting from the research work of DeBrett of Northampton "Our research into the Beauchamp family of Cosgrove has covered a wide range of sources, the most revealing of which has been a series of Northamptonshire wills in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The will of Edward Beauchamp, the eldest son of Thomas Beauchamp and Dorothy, formerly Clarke, was dated 6 Jan 1624 at Cosgrove, and it was his wish "to be buried in the churchyard of Cosgrove among the burials of my ancestors". He mentioned his wife, Emma, and three sons and two daughters. His father, Thomas Beauchamps's will was dated 15 Dec 1613 and he mentioned four sons, Edward (whose will of 1624 we have just mentioned), Thomas, who was given lands in Downham, Cambridgeshire, and John, the merchant ancestor who married Alice Freeman. Thomas also named a daughter Margaret, who received land at Wolverton, Buckinghamshire. We also learn he had brothers Christopher and Robert. Thomas's brother, Christopher Beauchamp, left a will in 1622 in which he mentioned his brother Henry. The eldest brother, John Beauchamp, left an interesting will 23 Feb 1615, which was proved in Prerogative Court of Canterbury, the superior probate jurisdiction of England and Wales. Like his nephew and namesake John, son of Thomas Beauchamp, the elder John was a successful merchant. He lived in Amsterdam and although he had a wife, he mentioned no children. He did leave bequest to his nephews, John and Richard, the sons of his late brother, Thomas Beauchamp. The testator also mentioned his brothers, Henry, Christopher, Richard and Robert Beauchamp, and a sister named Ellis. The most important point in the will is that there is a reference to John Beauchamp's father, also called John Beauchamp, who was believed to be living in Buckinghamshire in 1615. Unfortunately, we know almost nothing about this elder John Beauchamp of Buckinghamshire. However, from the evidence contained in earlier Northamptonshire wills, we believe he can be identified as the son of Thomas and Agnes Beauchamp of Cosgrove. Thomas made his will on 10 Mar 1545, and apart from his son John, he named a daughter Agnes, and his wife, who was also called Agnes. He had a sister called Elizabeth Conqueste. Thomas' widow, Agnes Beauchamp of Cosgrave, made her will on 16 Aug 1545. Most of her property was left to the church, or for charitable purposes, but she did make a bequest to Thomas Conq(u)est, who was her brother, or brother-in-law. Finally, the earliest will we have identified relates to John Beauchamp of Cosgrove, and was dated 16 February 1536. He mentioned his brother, Thomas, who was his executor, his son William and daughter Emma. Thus we can trace the Beauchamp family of Cosgrove back with a good degree of certainty to 1536 from probate sources. We consulted many other sources, such as Inquisitions Post Mortems, marriage licenses and legal records in the Court Of Requests, but these produced no evidence of earlier generations. One source which may have identified the father of Thomas Beauchamp, the earliest known ancestor, is Lay Subsidy Rolls, which are records of taxations levied by Parliament. In 1543/4, Thomas Beauchamp of Cosgrove was assessed for taxation. In 1524/5, we find Richard, John and Thomas Beauchamp at Cosgrove. We know that Thomas and John were brothers, and we may speculate that Richard Beauchamp was their father. However, extensive searches in deeds, muster rolls, pipe rolls, close rolls and other Beauchamp families and individuals flourishing in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, have failed to produce firm evidence of the genealogy before 1536". No documentation as yet, just several very well researched leads by impressive persons including Stith Thompson. From William Dugdale's "History of Warwickshire" : "I did intensive research on Bch.families, On his death in 1293, Ralph de Bch. left his son/heir, Roger, honors of Eaton. Roger was 21 next year, 1294, did homage and had livery of his lands. Dugdale concludes his unconnected account of this family with this Roger, by reason, he says, they were not of the degree of Barons." Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith, Page 935 -"Hereford. He had by his wife Peter, John and Otho and three daughters, Mabella de Grandison, who married Sir John de Patteshull, Katherine and Agnes. He died before 1335. 5. Mabella de Grandison married Sir John Patteshull and their daughter Sibella married Roger de Beauchamp. No. 10, Beauchamp. Roger de Beauchamp and Sibella Patteshull had a son, 11. Roger de Beauchamp, who died in the lifetime of his father, leaving a son, 12. Roger de Beauchamp, grandson and heir of Roger de Beauchamp, the first Baron. He was aged 17 in 1380 and second Baron Beauchamp of Bletso, but this nobleman was never summoned to Parliament. His lordship, proving his age in the 7th of Richard II, had livery of all his lands. In 1394/5 this nobleman attending the King into Ireland. He married Johanna Clopton and had a son John and a daughter."(this heritage also contains the names Littleton, Dorothey Edmund which are similar names in the latter linage.)There was a paternal record of the family in the possession of George A. Beauchamp, a descendant of Sir Thomas Beauchamp. This record told of the family leaving their native France for England, and of the emmigration in the latter part of the Seventeenth Century to America. The Beauchamp Family Bible had been burned. The Bible. The information of the Bible came from "Backtracking in Barbour County - A Narrative of the last Alabama Frontier" by Ann Kendrick Walker. "About the turn of the century, Dr. Owen learned that the only portrait extant of the pioneer (Green Beauchamp) was in the possession of Miss Emily Kennon, a sister of Mrs. Beauchamp, and at this time, Miss Kennon had reached the age of ninety-six. Dr. Owen's efforts to locate the portrait resulted in bringing forth some biographical material--- slight but authentic ---from the late George A. Beauchamp, a great nephew of Green. The Beauchamp Family Bible had been burned, but there was a record of the family on the paternal side, of leaving their native France for England, and of the emigration in the latter part of the Seventeenth Century of the founder of the American Branch, and of settlement in Maryland." Edmund Beauchamp, in making his will (dated April 10, 1691; probated 12th 9ber 1691), describes himself as "Edmund Beauchamp, Mercer, of London, and at the writing hereof County Clerke of Somerset in the Province of Maryland."4 This item furnished the clue to Beauchamp's ancestry. Research in English record publications shows Edmund Beauchamp to have been a son of John Beauchamp, of London, Merchant, and his wife, Alicia, daughter of Edmund Freeman, of Pulberry, Sussex; and grandson of Thomas Beauchamp, of Cosgrave, Northamptonshire, and his wife, Dorothy, daughter of Edward Clarke, of Rode, Northamptonshire.
~1556
Dorothy
Clarke
~1553
John
Beauchamp
Robert
Beauchamp
Christopher
Beauchamp
Henry
Beauchamp
Richard
Beauchamp
<1506 - 10 MAR 1544/45
Thomas
Beauchamp
Agnes
~1532
Agnes
Beauchamp
~1485
Richard
Beauchamp
Notes for Mr (Richard?) Beauchamp: In 1983 DeBrett's of London was commisioned by a descent of Rhoda Beauchamp Walker, to determine her Beauchamp ancestry. This was done and a copy was placed it the British equal to our Library Of Congress.A Beauchamp cousin uncovered this copy and wrote DeBrett's to inquire about the availibility of other copies. After obtaining her copy I wasmade aware of the book whic h I now have in my possession.The following is an exerpt from the book. This along with the copies of wills makes it obvious that Thomas's father was not a Roger Beauchamp but instead he was John Beauchamp. As time permits I will make more ofthe documentation available. (GCH 15 April 2000) Quoting from the research work of DeBrett's of London "Our research into the Beauchamp family of Cosgrove has covered a wide range of sources, the most revealing of which has been a seriesof Northamptonshire wills in the sixteenth and sevent eenth centuries.The will of Edward Beauchamp, the eldest son of Thomas Beauchamp and Dorothy , formerly Clarke, was dated 6 Jan 1624 at Cosgrove, and it was his wish "to be buried in the churchyard of Cosgrove among the burials of my ancestors". He mentioned his wife, Emma, an d three sons and two daughters. His father, Thomas Beauchamps's will was dated 15 Dec., 1613 and he mentioned four sons, Edward (whose will of 1624 we have just mentioned), Thomas, who wa s given lands in Downham,Cambridgeshire,and John, the merchant ancestor who married Alice Freeman. Thomas also named a daughter Margaret, who received land at Wolverton, Buckinghamshire. We also learn he had brothers Christopher and Robert. Thomas's brother, Christopher Beauchamp , left a will in 1622 in which he mentioned his brother Henry. The eldest brother, John Beauchamp, left an interesting will 23 Feb 1615, which was proved in Prerogative Courtof Canterbury ,the superior probate jurisdiction of England and Wales. Like his nephew and namesake John, son of Thomas Beauchamp, the elder John was a successful merchant. He lived in Amsterdam and although he had a wife,he mentioned no children. He did leave bequest to his nephews,John and Richard, the sons of his late brother, Thomas Beauchamp. The testator also mentioned his brothers, Henry , Christopher, Richardand Robert Beauchamp, and a sister named Ellis. The most important point in the will is that there is a reference to John Beauchamp's father,also called John Beauchamp, who was believed to be living in Buckinghamshire in 1613. Unfortunately, we know almost nothing about this elder John Beauchamp of Buckinghamshire. However, from the evidence contained in earlier Northamptonshire wills, we believe he can be identified as the son of Thomas and Agnes Beauchamp of Cosgrove. Thomas made his will on 10 Mar1545 , and apart from his son John, he named a daughter Agnes, and his wife, who was also called Agnes. He had a sister called Elizabeth Conqueste. Thomas' widow, Agnes Beauchamp of Cosgrave, made her will on 16 Aug 1545. Most of her property was left to the church,or for charitable purposes, but she did make a bequest to Thomas Conquest, who was her brother, or brother-in-law . Finally, theearliest will we have identified relates to John Beauchamp of Cosgrove, and was dated 16 February 1536. He mentioned his brother, Thomas, who was his executor, his son William and daughter Emma. Thus we can trace the Beauchamp family of Cosgrove back with a good degree of certainty to 1536 from probate sources. We consulted many other sources, such as Inquistions Post Mortems, marriage licenses and legal records in the Court Of Requests, but these produced no evidence of earlier generations. One source which may have identified the father of Thomas Beauchamp, the earliest known ancestor, is Lay Subsidy Rolls, which are records of taxations levied by Parliament. In1543/4, Thomas Beauchamp of Cosgrove was assessed for taxation. In1524/5, we find Richard, John and Thomas Beauchamp at Cosgrove. We know that Thomas and John were brothers, and we may speculate that Richard Beauchamp was their father. However, extensive searches in deeds, muster rolls, pipe rolls, close rolls and other Beauchamp families and individuals flourishing in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, have failed to produce firm evidence of the genealogy before 1536".
1601
Alice
Freeman
1625
Edmund
Beauchamp
1617
Alice
Beauchamp
1615 - 1615
John
Beauchamp
1616
Thomas
Beauchamp
1619
Mary
Beauchamp
1632
Richard
Beauchamp
16 FEB 1634/35
Elizabeth
Beauchamp
1629
George
Beauchamp
~1529
Roger
Beauchamp
Elias
Beauchamp
Edmund
Freeman
Alice
Cole
Bennett
Freeman
~1637
Elen
Beauchamp
~1640
Sara
Beauchamp
Rufus
Pudens
(Rufus Pudens and St. Paul are shown to be half-brothers, with the same mother but different fathers. "His mother and mine." She thus appears to have been the mother of an elder son, Paul, by a Hebrew husband, and a younger son, Rufus, by a second marriage with a Roman Christian.) Pudens, the Roman Senator and former aide-de-camp to Aulus Plautius, commander of the Roman forces in Britain, completed his army service at about this time and returned to Rome. It seems that Pudens and Claudia had met in Britain, as Claudia's aunt Pomponia had married Pudens' commanding officer Plautius. They, Pudens and Claudia, married in about A.D. 53. The Roman poet Martial, a friend of the couple, wrote some poetry on the occasion of the wedding. He also makes it evident that Pudens had served in Britain prior to his marriage. He speaks of Pudens suffering from the cold of "the Scythian (North) pole." A clear indication of his army service in Britain. The poetry also strongly suggests that the couple were both converted Christians at the time of their marriage. Martial describes Pudens as the "sainted husband" of Claudia whom he writes of as having "sprung from the painted Britons."33 Elsewhere he asks, "Since Claudia wife of Rufus (Pudens) comes from the blue-set Britons, how is it that she has won the hearts of the Latin people." The bright blue eyes of the Britons is also noted by Seneca. "The British lady, Claudia, to whom Martial addressed two or three of his epigrams, and others to Linus and Pudens, is supposed to be the very Claudia mentioned with Pudens and Linus, in Paul's second Epistle to Timothy. She is believed by Cambrian writers to be of the family of Caractacus, and, perhaps the first British Christian."34 Llin, described in Welsh records as a son of Caractacus, is thought by some to be the Linus mentioned by Martial and Paul, the brother of Claudia. Roman writers mention the fact that Linus was ordained by Paul as the first bishop of Rome in A.D. 68. The significance of this event will be discussed in a later chapter. "And he (Martial) addresses two or three of his epigrams to Linus, proving the connection of the three."35 The connection between the Pudens, Linus and Claudia mentioned by Martial, with their links with Britain, and a group of three related individuals having the same names described by Paul (II Tim. 4:21) has been noted by several authorities on the subject of church history. "That there was a Pudens and Claudia living at Rome, both Christians we have it from... St. Paul himself. That this Claudia mentioned by St. Paul, then living at Rome, was the same Claudia, a Briton born, mentioned by Martial is the opinion and probable conjecture of many modern writers."36 We learn from Monocaxius: "That Claudia, mentioned by St. Paul, was Caractacus's daughter, and turned Christian, and after married to Pudens, a Roman Senator; whose marriage is celebrated by Martial in his noted epigrams to that purpose."37 There are several indications in the epigrams of Martial that the lifestyles of Pudens and Claudia were Christian rather than pagan. The poet, who seems to have been a family friend of the couple, does not mention their religion directly, and with good reason; during the later part of Nero's reign a Christian could be arrested and executed as an enemy of the state. Roman poets often used the occasion of a wedding as an excuse for coarse jesting but Martial's poems relating to this couple are lacking in this type of humour. `Claudia, the fair one from a foreign shore, Is with my Pudens joined in wedlock's band.'38 O Concord, bless their couch for evermore, Be with them in thy snow-white purity. Let Venus grant, from her choicest store, All gifts that suit their married unity, When he is old may she be fond and true, And she in age the charms of youth renew.'39 A little later, when children had been born to Claudia, he wrote: Grant, O ye gods, that she may ever prove The bliss of mother over girl and boy, Still gladdened by her pious husband's love, And in her children find perpetual joy.40 Martial, although perhaps having several friends amongst the Christians of Rome, was not himself of this faith, as is clearly demonstrated by his use of pagan terminology in his writings. "But without insisting strongly on this argument, we may be able to infer, that the Claudia of Martial was connected with a circle at Rome, the members of which were imbued with Christian, rather than Roman principles."41 The epithet "Sanctus" or sainted applied by Martial to Pudens is much more likely to have been used in relation to a Christian than a non-Christian. The Apostle Paul uses similar terminology in his epistle to the Romans, written only a short time before Martial's epigrams, when he speaks of Christians at Rome "called to be saints" (Rom. 1:7). Some have objected that because the epigrams were published during the reign of Domitian, who became emperor in A.D. 83, they could not have been related to individuals who were prominent during Nero's time some twenty to thirty years earlier. "There is however reason to believe, as was remarked by Ussher, Collier and others, that many of the epigrams were written long before they were published, and consequently that the publication of the book was no test, of the age of the epigrams."42 Martial took up residence in Rome in A.D. 49 and left the city for Spain in A.D. 86. He would have been about thirty-eight years old when Paul wrote his second epistle to Timothy. There is nothing in the chronology of the period to indicate that the Claudia, Pudens and Linus of Martial were not the same individuals mentioned by Paul in his epistle. Both writers were writing at about the same time, of individuals living in the same city. It is hardly likely that more than one group of three individuals having a close relationship with each other and having these names would have been living in the same city at the same time. J. Williams in his comprehensive thesis on this subject remarks that: "It is therefore possible that the first Epigram to which I have alluded might have been written by Martial in the year 67, eighteen years after his arrival in Rome; being the same year in which the Apostle is generally supposed to have written the second Epistle to Timothy. And a broad margin of two or three years, on either side, may be allowed without interfering with the argument.43 Bale, and later Camden, identify Pudens and Claudia of II Timothy with the writings of Martial. The writings of the poet reveal that he had an intimate knowledge of events that took place in Nero`s reign. Williams also makes the point that: "If the Pudens of St. Paul was the Pudens of Martial, and since the Pudens of Martial had married a British maiden, also called Claudia, it seems to me something more than probable that the Pudens of the inscription (Chichester Stone) was also the same identical person."44 "...there is no doubt that Pudens the husband of Claudia is mentioned in the Scriptures, for both are there, together with Linus, the brother of Claudia, in one sentence in II Timothy 4:21. The odds against the three being mentioned together, if they were not the members of the exiled family of Caractacus, must be very great."45 The residence of the couple at Rome, known as the Palatium Britannicum, seems to have been a regular meeting place for Christians. The high political and social status of Pudens and Claudia seems to have given them, for a time at least, a measure of freedom from persecution. A series of Christian churches later occupied this site. The first was known as Titulus, the next Hospitium Aposolorum and finally St. Pudentiana, so named in honour of the martyred daughter of Claudia. According to Cardinal Baronius: "It is delivered to us by the firm tradition of our forefathers that the house of Pudens was the first that entertained St. Peter at Rome, and that the Christians assembling formed the Church, and that of all our churches the oldest is that which is called after the name Pudens"46 The Jesuit Robert Parsons in The Three Conversions of England mentions that "Claudia was the first hostess or harbourer both of St. Peter and St. Paul at the time of their coming to Rome." Roman tradition also relates that Pudens and Claudia retrieved the body of the apostle Paul following his martyrdom in about A.D. 68 and buried it in what was perhaps a family cemetery in the Via Ostiensis. In later years the lives of this couple and their four children were clouded by sorrow. Claudia seems to have been the only member of the family to have died a natural death, in A.D. 97. Pudens and all of the children died as martyrs at various times during the closing years of the first century or the first half of the second. A manuscript entitled "The Acts of Pastor and Timotheus," probably dating to the second century, describes some of the sad details: "Pudens went to his Saviour leaving his daughters strengthened with chastity and learned in all the divine law. These sold their goods and distributed the produce to the poor and persevered strictly in the love of Christ... They desired to have a baptistry in their house. Many pagans came thither to find the faith and receive baptism." The record mentions that their house "night and day resounded with hymns of praise." When one of the young women was martyred, probably along with several other Christians, the manuscript relates: "Then Pudentiana went to God. Her sister and I wrapped her in perfumes, and kept her concealed in the oratory. Then after 28 days we carried her to the Cemetery of Priscilla and laid her near her father Pudens." Some sources give the date of her death as A.D. 107. Several years later, a further wave of persecution claimed many more lives. The manuscript mentions that "That blessed Prassedis collected their bodies by night and buried them in the Cemetery of Priscilla... then the virgin of the Saviour, worn out with sorrow, only asked for death. Her tears and her prayers reached to heaven, and fifty-four days after her brethren had suffered she passed to God. And I, Pastor, the priest have buried her body near that of her father Pudens." The two sons of Pudens and Claudia also died as martyrs during the first half of the second century. Timotheus is said to have been named after the evangelist Timothy, to whom Paul wrote two of his epistles.
~0920
Rhodri
ap
Hywel
~1255
Cobran
MacDuff
Genilles
verch
Hoedlyw
~1142
Owain
ap
Owain
~1060 - 1137
Gruffyd
II ap
Gruffydd
77
77
~1116 - 1165
Lord
Simon
Corbet
49
49
~1114
Walter
Corbet
~1110
Roger
Corbet
~1112
Sir
William
Corbet
~1020 - ~1286
Hugo "Le
Corbeau"
Le Corbet
266
266
This family history begins with Hugo le Corbet or le Corbeau. With two of his sons, Roger and Robert, Sir Hugo joined in the battle of Hastings with William the Conqueror in 1066. Hugo helped counsel the Conqueror in regards to the Welsh border lands which were rebellious. For their service as knights to the Conqueror, Robert and Roger were given Baronies. Roger received twenty-five manors. Robert received a grant of fifteen manors in Shropshire which became the barony of Longden. These Manors were townships under the Saxon rule. Roger called both his castle and barony "Caus" after his home in Normandy. The Corbets served under the Earl Roger de Montgomery. They were in service to help control the borders of Wales. -----Corbet Genealogy Ring Roger Corbett's Shropshire Land Holdings in Domesday 1086 Corbet and FitzCorbet, a Norman family from Pays de Caux claims ancient Viking origin from the original settlers in Normandy under Rollo, the first Duke of Normandy. The father, called Le Normand, or simply Norman, had four sons, Hugue(Hugh/Hugo), Roger, Reynaud and Robert. Hugh and Reynaud stayed in Normandy in the senior family domains. The family adopted the surname Moreton in Normandy. The father, and sons Roger and Robert, were at the Battle of Hastings. Between them, they were granted 38 lordships in Shropshire where they assisted Earl Roger in the administration of his domains in that county. Roger Corbet built a border fortress at his Castle at Alfreton which he named Caux Castle after his home domain in Normandy. It was later spelt Cause. The holdings in Derbyshire of the father, called Norman, Roger the second eldest son and Robert the youngest son, both sons sometimes listed as FitzCorbet, are listed together as family domains. They were under-tenants of Earl Roger in Shropshire. Edderton Forden Hem Hopton Hyssington Leighton Mellington Thornbury Weston Roger & Robert FitzCorbet's Shropshire Land Holdings in Domesday 1086: Acton Burnell Alberbury Brompton Cardestone Cause Choulton Eyton Farley Great Hanwood Longden Loton Marrington Middleton(Chirbury) Oakes Pontesbury Preist Weston Ratlinghope Stapleton Wattlesborough Welbatch Wentnor Westbury Whitton Winsley Wollaston Wormerton Woodcote Woolstaston Worthen Yockleton -source: http://www.infokey.com/domesday/shropshire.htm
~1146
Sir
Hugh
Corbet
~1046
Hugh
Corbet
~1194
Henry
FitzRoy
~1175 - 1196
Clemence
D'Arcy
21
21
Although Clemence D'Arcy was a fictional character created by Sharon Kay Penman for her novel "The Reckoning", I have included her and the actual genealogy that would have been hers according to the book. I have left her in this work as a tribute to this excellent story about the historical figures portrayed by Ms. Penman.
1191 - 2 FEB 1235/36
Joanna
Plantagenet
~1176
Roger
D'Arcy
~1212
Lauretta
De
Chilham
~1168
Concubine
~1192
Eudo
FitzRoy
~1194
Ivo
FitzRoy
~1168
Isabel
De
Mortain
~1171 - 1201
Constance
De
Bretagne
30
30
Concubine
John
FitzJohn
De Courcy
Concubine
Matilda
FitzRoy
Philip
Plantagenet
1152 - 1156
William
Plantagenet
3
3
~1184
Eleanor
Plantagenet
~1185
Matilda
Plantagenet
1186 - 1203
Arthur
Plantagenet
17
17
Joan De
Saint
Pol
Margaret
of
France
1170
Richenza
(Maud)
William
VI
Raymond
~1135
Amice
de
Montfort
~1139
Amicia
De
Clifford
~1120
Lucia
De
Clifford
~1143 - 1213
Richard
De
Clifford
70
70
~1153
Robert
De
Clifford
~1153
Roger
De
Clifford
~1155
Simon
De
Clifford
~1156
Hugh
De
Clifford
~1157
William
De
Clifford
~1125 - 1180
Thomas
D'Arcy
55
55
~1160 - 1206
Thomas
D'Arcy
46
46
~1140 - 1183
Alice
D'Eincourt
43
43
~1120
Ralph
D'Eincourt
~1164
George
D'Arcy
~1166
Robert
D'Arcy
~1168
William
D'Arcy
~1090
Thomas
D'Arcy
~1070
Lord
D'Arcy
Robert
~1050
Norman
D'Arecy
1564 - 1645
Ellen
Makernes
81
81
D. 1616
William
Makernes
~1520
Johana
Holden
~1196 - 1 MAR 1243/44
Gruffydd
ap
Llewelyn
1201
Gwenllian
ferch
Llewelyn
1205
Tegwared
ap
Llewelyn
~1220
Angharad
verch
Llwelyn
Cristyn
1834 - 1868
Anna
Sophia
Frerichs
34
34
1853 - 1900
Mareka
'Mary' H.
Willemssen
46
46
Hinderk
Ulfert
Willemssen
Kobas
Ulfert
Willemssen
Trina
Willemssen
Ettje
H.
Willemssen
1853 - 1944
Johann
Koerd "John
K" Rippentrop
90
90
Coort
J.
Rippentrop
Anna
J.
Rippentrop
Ulfert
(Olvert) J.
Rippentrop
Gertje
"Grace"
Rippentrop
Mareka
J.
Rippentrop
Johanna
J.
Rippentrop
George
J.
Rippentrop
Ettje
"Etta" J.
Rippentrop
Grietje
"Gertrude"
Rippentrop
Hindrika
Rippentrop
~1110
Llywarch
Ap
Bran
~1130
Meilir
Eutun
Ap Elidyr
~1073 - 1124
Goronwy
ap
Owain
51
51
~1044 - 1103
Owain
ap
Edwyn
59
59
~1048
Morfydd
verch
Goronwy
Rhael
Verch
Goronwy
~1016
Goronwy
ap
Ednowain
~0986
Ednowain
ap
Cynan
Gwerfyl
verch
Llydocca
~1014
Edwyn
ap
Goronwy
~1019
Gwerydd
verch
Cyswyn
~1087
Bran
ap
Dyfnwal
~1365
Tudor
Ap
Glyndwr
~1110
Gwladys
Verch
Llywarche
~1144
Dafydd
ap
Owain
Gurganny
ap
Gwerystan
~1060
Dyddgu
verch
Idnerth
~1020
Idnerth
ap
Cadwgan
~1026
Gwenllion
verch
Aaron
Aaron
ap
Paen
~0975
Cadwgan
Ap Elystand
Glody
~0979
Efa
Verch
Gwrgant
~0949
Gwrgant
ap
Ithel
~0954
Eva
verch
Gwyn
~0950
Elystan Glodyr
Glodrydd Ap
Cuhelyn
~0961
Gwenllian
Verch
Einion
~0926
Einion
(Edwin)
ap Hywel
~0972
Gwyn
Verch
Gwaithfoed
~1014
Caradawg
ap
Gwyn
~1218
Lucy
de
Quincey
~1410
Sir
Edward de
Beaufort
<1367 - >1402
Maredudd
ap
Tudor
35
35
1427
Eleanor
Stuart
~1403
Margaret
de
Beaufort
~1401
Henry
de
Beaufort
1432
Mary
Tudor
1388
Duke of
Clarence
Thomas
~1374
Princess
of France
Catherine
1428
Joanna
Stuart
1426
Isabella
Stuart
1430
Alexander
Stuart
1424
Margaret
Stuart
Louis
XI
~1380
Margaret
verch
David
~1330 - 1367
Tudor
ap
Goronwy
37
37
<1352
Margred
verch
Thomas
<1309
Thomas
ap
Llywelyn
~1320
Eleanor
Goch
Verch Philip
<1275 - 1309
Llywelyn
ap
Owain
34
34
1135 - 1161
Petronille
(Elizabeth)
de Chacenay
26
26
~1255 - 1275
Owain
ap
Maredudd
20
20
~1230 - 1265
Maredudd
ap
Owain
35
35
~1235
Eleanor
verch
Marlgwn
~1215 - 1257
Maelgwn
Fychan ap
Llywellyn
42
42
~1133
Gruffyd
Hir Ap
Gruffydd
~1257
Angharad
verch
Maredydd
~1300 - 1331
Goronwy
ap
Tudor
31
31
~1312
Gwervyl
~1265 - 1311
Tudor
ap
Gronwy
46
46
~1275
Angharad
Fychan
~1225 - 1268
Gronwy ap
Ednyfed
Fychan
43
43
~1240
Morfydd
~1190
Ednyfed
Fychan ap
Kendrig
~1200
Gwenllian
~1227
Gwladws
Brynffenigl
verch Ednyfed
~1229
Gwenhwyfar
verch
Ednyfed
~1231
Gryffydd
ap Ednyfed
Fychan
Tangwystyl
Goch
Rhys ap
Ednyfed
Fychan
Iorwerth
ap Ednyfed
Fychan
Howel ap
Ednyfed
Fychan
Llewelyn
ap Ednyfed
Fychan
Tudor ap
Ednyfed
Fychan
Kendrig ap
Ednyfed
Fychan
~1150
Kendrig
ap
Iorwerth
~1165
Angharad
Einion
Ddu ap
Kendrig
Grono
Voel ap
Kendrig
~1110
Iorwerth
ap
Gwgan
~1115
Gwenllian
Verch
Rhirid
~1135
Gewnllian
Brynffnigl
~1070
Gwgan
ap
Idnerth
Rhys
ap
Gwgan
Kendrig
ap
Gwgan
~1030
Idnerth
ap
Edryd
Bredwin
ap
Idnerth
~0990
Edryd
ap
Nathan
Bleddyn
ap
Edryd
Rhys
ap
Edryd
~0950
Nathan
ap
Jafeth
Edwin
ap
Nathan
~0910
Jafeth
ap
Karwedh
~0870
Karwedh
ap
Marchudd
~0840
Marchudd
ap
Cynan
Arseth
ap
Marchudd
Owain
ap
Marchudd
~0800
Cynan
ap
Elevan
~0760
Elevan
ap
Mor
~0720
Mor
ap
Mynan
~0680
Mynan
ap
Yspwys
~0640
Yspwys
ap
Cadrod
~0600
Cadrod
ap
Calchfynydd
~0555
Cynwyd
Cynwydion
~0510
Cynfelin
ap
Arthwys
~0475
Arthwys
ap
Mar
~0420
Mar
ap
Ceneu
2 FEB 1501/02
Catherine
Tudor
~1500
Edward
Tudor
1451 - 1504
Isabella
I De
Castile
53
53
1 JAN 1509/10
Henry
Tudor
1513
Henry
Tudor
1534
Henry
Tudor
18 MAR 1471/72 - 1513
James
IV
Stuart
James IV (b. March 17, 1473--d. Sept. 9, 1513, near Branxton, Northumberland, Eng.), king of Scotland from 1488 to 1513. An energetic and popular ruler, he unified Scotland under royal control, strengthened royal finances, and improved Scotland's position in European politics. James succeeded to the throne after his father, James III, was killed in a battle against rebels on June 11, 1488. The 15-year-old monarch immediately began to take an active part in government. He extended his authority to the sparsely populated areas of western and northern Scotland and by 1493 had humbled the last lord of the Isles. Although his reign was internally peaceful, it was disturbed by wars with England. Breaking a truce with England in 1495, James prepared an invasion in support of Perkin Warbeck, a pretender to the English throne. The war was confined to a few border forays, and a seven-year peace was negotiated in December 1497, though border raids continued. Relations between England and Scotland were further stabilized in 1503, when James married Margaret Tudor, the eldest daughter of the English king Henry VII; this match resulted, a century later, in the accession of James's great-grandson, the Stuart monarch James VI of Scotland, to the English throne as King James I. James IV's growing prestige enabled him to negotiate as an equal with the rulers of conti nental Europe, but his position was weakened as he came into conflict with King Henry VIII of England (ruled 1509-47). In 1512 James allied with France against England and the major continental powers. When Henry invaded France in 1513, James decided, against the counsel of his advisers, to aid his ally by advancin g into England. He captured four castles in northern England in August 1513, bu t his army was disastrously defeated at the Battle of Flodden, near Branxton, o n Sept. 9, 1513. The King was killed while fighting on foot, and most of his no bles perished. James left one legitimate child, his successor, James V (ruled 1 513-42); in addition, he had many illegitimate children, several of whom became prominent figures in Scotland. True to the ideal of the Renaissance prince, James strove to make his court a centre of refinement and learning. He patronized literature, licensed Scotland's first printers, and improved education. His career is recounted in R.L. Mackie's King James IV of Scotland (1958). [Britan nica CD '97] James IV (1488-1513) James IV, born on 17 March 1473, was 15 when his father's enemies forced him to ride with them to the Battle of Sauchieburn, and for the rest of his life he wore an iron belt as a penance. For the first time in a century, Scotland had a king who was able to start ruling for himself at once for, as Erasmus once commented, 'He had wonderful powers of mind, an astonishing knowledge of everything, an unconquerable magnanimity and the most abundant generosity.' He spoke Latin (at that time the international language ), French, German, Flemish, Italian, Spanish and some Gaelic, and took an active interest in literature, science and the law, even trying his hand at dentistry and minor surgery. Under James' vigorous rule, he extended royal administration to the west and north - by 1493, he had overcome the last independent lord of the Isles. With his patronage the printing press came to Scotland, and the Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh, St Leonard's College, St Andrews an d King's College, Aberdeen were founded. He commissioned building work at the r oyal residences of Linlithgow Palace, Edinburgh Castle and Stirling Castle, and developed a strong navy led by his flagship, the Great Michael, said to be the largest vessel of the time. To begin with, relations with England were difficult: in 1495, James supported the pretender Perkin Warbeck in his claim to the English throne. Even so, he was anxious to maintain peace with England and concluded a peace treaty in 1502.
1508
Margaret
Stuart
1509
Arthur
Stuart
1512
James
V
Stuart
James V (1513-42) When James IV was kil led at Flodden, yet another royal minority ensued, for his son James V was only one year old. The Scots were reluctant to accept his English mother Margaret Tudor as Regent, and after her remarriage in 1514 they replaced her with James I V's half-French cousin, the Duke of Albany. Queen Margaret's tempestuous private life complicated her son's childhood, and after she divorced her second husband, Archibald Douglas 6th Earl of Angus, the Earl kidnapped young James. For two years he held him captive, showering him with gifts and introducing him to a round of unsuitable pleasures. James loathed his former stepfather, and finally managed to escape in 1528, to rule by himself. James' personal rule began by savagely pursuing his opponents and he hounded the Earl of Angus out of Scot land. James combined suspicion of nobles with a popular touch, travelling anony mously among Scottish people as the 'Gudeman o'Ballengeich'. John Knox describe d him thus: 'he was called of some, a good poor man's king; of others he was termed a murderer of the nobility, and one that had decreed their whole destruction'. In 1536 he decided to marry. A highly strung, intelligent man who alte rnated between black depression and bouts of feverish energy, he had already fa thered at least nine illegitimate children by a series of mistresses. He now chose as his wife Princess Madeleine of France, for he was eager to strengthen 'the Auld Alliance' against England. The Princess was tubercular, and she died in his arms on 7 July 1537, seven weeks after her arrival in Edinburgh. In 1538 he married another French lady, the widowed Mary of Guise, tall, well-built and already the mother of two sons. She had two more sons by James but they both died in infancy within hours of each other in 1541. James V's uncle, Henry VIII, who had by now broken with the Roman Catholic Church and dissolved the monasteries, was urging him to do the same. He refused to listen to his uncle's persuasions and in 1542 failed to go to an arranged meeting with Henry at York. Furious, Henry launched an invasion of Scotland. Already ill, James marched south with his army, to defeat at the Battle of Solway Moss on the Scottish/English Border, on 24 November 1542. Although he himself had not been present at the battle, James suffered a complete nervous collapse. Retiring to Falkland Palace in Fife he took to his bed with a high fever and, when a messenger came to tell him that his pregnant queen had given birth to a daughter instead of the hoped-for son, he believed that the Stewart dynasty was at an end. 'It cam wi' a lass and it will gang wi' a lass', he said, remembering how the crown had come to his family through Marjorie Bruce and fearing that no woman could ever rule his troubled nation. Six days later, he was dead. OBJE: C:\My Documents\Royalt y\JamesV_MarieDeGuise.jpg
1514
Alexander
Stuart
1489 - 22 JAN 1555/56
Archibald
Douglas
1515 - 9 MAR 1574/75
Margaret
Douglas
~1490
Henry
Stewart
~1528
Dorothea
Stewart
1451 - 1488
James
III
Stuart
36
36
1456 - 1486
Margaret
Oldenburg
30
30
1515
Marie
De
Guise
1540
James
Stuart
1541
Arthur
Stuart
1542 - 7 FEB 1585/86
Mary
Stuart
On December 7th, 1542 at Linlithgow Palace, Marie of Guise, wife of James V of Scotland, gave birth to Mary Stuart. On Dece mber the 13th her father, James died, making the 6 day-old Mary the Queen of Sc otland. From very early on in her life, Mary was the subject of plots by both t he pro-English and pro-French forces in Scotland who wanted to gain control of the throne through her. Later, when her mother became Queen Regent of France, M ary was sent to France to live as part of the French Royalty. While in France M ary eventually married, in April of 1558, Dauphin Francis. She later became the Queen of France, as well as Scotland, when Francis succeeded his father to bec ome King Francis II in July 1559. In addition, Mary was also recognized as the true Queen of England by many Roman Catholics who believed her claim to the thr one was stronger than that of the Protestant (and cousin of Mary) Elizabeth I. Mary was forced to return to Scotland however when her husband Francis II died after only a 17-month reign. Mary's ship landed in Leith on 19th August 156 1 and she almost immediately followed the suggestions of her advisors by recogn izing the Reformed Presbyterian church. This act did not sit very well with the Catholics who thought she should be more zealous in the support of their cause , and the Protestants were naturally suspicious of her motives because of her C atholicism. She spent several years trying to placate the Protestants, but all this became undone when, on 29th July 1565, she married her first cousin Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley This marriage caused great outrage among the Protesta nts, some of whom staged a rebellion, which was quickly crushed by Mary. Things started to go downhill for her from this point; the rebellion caused her to wi thdraw some of her support from the Reformed Church and her marriage to Lord Da rnley began to sour. The culmination however came on 9th March 1566 when a grou p of Protestants, under the instruction of Darnley, forced Mary to watch as the y murdered her Italian Secretary David Rizzio. Many of the Protestant lords bel ieved that Rizzio had too much influence over Mary, and also suspected him of b eing a papal spy. The murder, which occurred while Mary was 6 months pregna nt, left her alienated from Darnley and her supporters, and also caused her to befriend James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell. In Edinburgh Castle on 19th June 1566 , she gave birth to a son, James, and soon afterwards began looking for ways to end her marriage with Darnley in favour of Bothwell. Darnley was murdered on t he10th February, 1567 at Kirk o' Field under mysterious circumstances that are still unexplained to this day. Bothwell was believed to have committed, or at l east instigated, the killing, but was acquitted because there was no proof. Bothwell, shortly after obtaining a divorce from his wife, was wed with Mary a ccording to the Protestant rite (there is some belief among historians that Bot hwell kidnapped Mary and then married her against her will). This estranged Mar y from even some of her most loyal supporters, causing them and many of the nob les to confront Mary and her new husband at Carberry. Bothwell fled while she w as forced to surrender and was imprisoned at Lochleven Castle. Then, on 24th Ju ly 1567, she was forced to abdicate, making her son James the King, but she lat er escaped with the aid of a few of her remaining allies. After her escape, Mary quickly raised an army, but was soundly beaten in battle at Langside on 1 3th May 1568 by Protestant forces. Her army and support gone, Mary was forced t o flee to England to beg for aid from Elizabeth, the Queen and her cousin. Rath er than helping her however, Elizabeth had Mary imprisoned, where she spent the remainder of her life. During her incarceration, many Roman Catholic plots to remove the Protestant Queen from power revolved around Mary, but were thwarted by English agents.
Margaret
Erskine
1531
James
Stuart
1533
Robert
Stuart
Elizabeth
(Katherine)
Carmichael
~1532
John
Stuart
1545 - 1567
Henry
Stuart
22
22
1566 - 1625
James
I
Stuart
58
58
Event 1 1567 King of Scotland, James VI at Sterling Event 2 24 MAR 1602/03 Ascended English throne king of Scotland (as James VI) f rom 1567 to 1625 and first Stuart king of England from 1603 to 1625, who styled himself "king of Great Britain." James was a strong advocate of royal absolutism, and his conflicts with an increasingly self-assertive Parliament set the stage for the rebellion against his successor, Charles I. James was the only son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and her second husband, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley. Eight months after James's birth his father died when his house was destroyed b y an explosion. After her third marriage, to James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, M ary was defeated by rebel Scottish lords and abdicated the throne. James, one y ear old, became king of Scotland on July 24, 1567; Mary left the kingdom on May 16, 1568, and never saw her son again. During his minority James was surrounded by a small band of the great Scottish lords, from whom emerged the four successive regents, the earls of Moray, Lennox, Mar, and Morton. There did not exist in Scotland the great gulf between rulers and ruled that separated the Tudors and their subjects in England. For nine generations the Stuarts had in fact bee n merely the ruling family among many equals, and James all his life retained a feeling for those of the great Scottish lords who gained his confidence. The young king was kept fairly isolated but was given a good education until the ag e of 14. He studied Greek, French, and Latin and made good use of a library of classical and religious writings that his tutors, George Buchanan and Peter You ng, assembled for him. James's education aroused in him literary ambitions rare ly found in princes but which also tended to make him a pedant. Before James was 12 he had taken the government nominally into his own hands when the Earl o f Morton was driven from the regency in 1578. For several years more, however, James remained the puppet of contending intriguers and faction leaders. After f alling under the influence of the Duke of Lennox, a Roman Catholic who schemed to win back Scotland for the imprisoned Queen Mary, James was kidnapped by Will iam Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie, in 1582 and was forced to denounce Lennox. The following year James escaped from his Protestant captors and began to pursue his own policies as king. His chief purposes were to escape from subservience to Scottish factions and to establish his claim to succeed the childless Elizabet h I upon the throne of England. Realizing that more was to be gained by cultiva ting Elizabeth's goodwill than by allying himself with her enemies, James in 15 85-86 concluded an alliance with England. Thenceforward, in his own unsteady fa shion, he remained true to this policy, and even Elizabeth's execution of his mother in 1587 drew from him only formal protests. In 1589 James was married to Anne, the daughter of Frederick II of Denmark, who, in 1594, gave birth to their first son, Prince Henry. James's rule of Scotland was basically successful. He was able to play off Protestant and Roman Catholic factions of Scottish nobles against each other, and through a group of commissioners known as the Octavians (1596-97), he was able to rule Scotland almost as absolutely as Elizabeth r uled England. The king was a convinced Presbyterian, but in 1584 he secured a series of acts that made him the head of the Presbyterian church in Scotland, wi th the power to appoint the church's bishops. When James at length succeeded to the English throne on the death of Elizabeth I (March 24, 1603), he was already, as he told the English Parliament, "an old and experienced king" and one with a clearly defined theory of royal government. Unfortunately, neither his experience nor his theory equipped him to solve the new problems facing him;
1516 - 1571
Matthew
Stuart
54
54
~1548
Charles
Stuart
1473
Thomas
Howard
JAN 1536/37
Robert
Howard
Margaret
Hepburn
Margaret
Maxwell
James
Douglas
~1469 - 1513
George
Douglas
44
44
~1470 - 1514
Elizabeth
Drummond
44
44
Margaret
Douglas
Elizabeth
Douglas
1495
Janet
Douglas
1513
George
Douglas
~1448 - 1519
John
Drummond
71
71
~1385
Marjory
Ogilvy
~1472
Margaret
Drummond
~1474
Annabella
Drummond
~1476
William
Drummond
~1478
Eupheme
Drummond
~1410 - 1438
Alexander
Lindsay
28
28
~1415 - ~1496
Margaret
Dunbar
81
81
~1435
Walter
Lindsay
1448 - 1503
Archibald
Douglas
55
55
1449 - <1498
Elizabeth
Boyd
49
49
~1470
Marion
Douglas
William
Douglas
1426 - 12 MAR 1461/62
George
Douglas
~1429
Isobel
Sibbald
1452
Jane
Douglas
1456
Margaret
Douglas
~1492 - 1526
John
Stuart
34
34
~1494 - >1533
Elizabeth
Stewart
39
39
~1518
John
Stuart
~1520
Helen
Stuart
~1522
Robert
Stuart
~1469 - 1513
Matthew
Stuart
44
44
1473 - 1531
Elizabeth
Hamilton
58
58
~1497
Margaret
Stuart
~1499
Mungo
Stuart
~1501
Agnes
Stuart
~1505
Elizabeth
Stuart
~1510
Matthew
Stuart
~1423 - 1479
James
Hamilton
56
56
1452 - 1488
Mary
Stuart
36
36
1473
Mary
Hamilton
1477
James
Hamilton
Patrick
Hamilton
Robert
Hamilton
1430 - 1460
James
II
Stuart
29
29
Ruled from 1437 thru 1460. Duke of Rothesay. Crowned at Scone in Mar 1437 at the age of 6. He was killed at the seige of Roxburgh Castle from a splinter of a canon that exploded.
1446
Thomas
Boyd
~1432 - 1463
Mary
De
Guelders
31
31
~1454
Alexander
Stuart
~1456
David
Stuart
~1457
John
Stuart
~1459
Margaret
Stuart
1479
John
Stuart
1425 - 1481
I
Christian
56
56
1430
Dorethea
Von
Brandenburg
1449 - 1533
I
Frederick
84
84
1450
Olaf
Oldenburg
1451
Canute
Oldenburg
2 FEB 1453/54
John
Oldenburg
1406 - 1464
John
Von
Brandenburg
58
58
1405 - 1465
Barbara
Von
Saxony
60
60
1367
Rudolf
III Von
Saxony
1372 - 1436
Barbara
Von
Liegnitz
64
64
1371 - 1440
Frederick
I Von
Brandenburg
69
69
1383 - 1442
Elizabeth
De
Bavaria
59
59
1414 - 11 MAR 1484/85
III
Albert
~1390 - 22 JAN 1438/39
Dietrich
Von
Oldenburg
~1400 - 1436
Hedwig
Von
Holstein
36
36
Gerhard
Von
Oldenburg
~1370 - 1404
Gerhard
VI Von
Holstein
34
34
~1375
Elizabeth
Von
Brunswick
~1340 - 1399
Christian
59
59
1340 - 1404
Agnes
Von
Honstieb
64
64
~1435
Margaret
Ogilvy
1400
Arnulf
De
Gueldres
Catherine
Adolf
Van
Egmond
1394 - 20 FEB 1435/36
James
I
Stuart
Ruled from 1406 til 1437. He had been imprisoned in the tower of London 19 year crowned on May 21,1423 "Stewart." He was assasinated by Sir Robert Graham his uncle. James & Joanna had 2 sons and 6 daughters. He was taken prisoner while on voyage from Scotland to france in 1405. One source says he married Joanna in 1438 at St. Andrews, Fifshire.
1406 - 1445
Joan
De
Beaufort
39
39
~1429
Mary
Stuart
Joan
Stuart
1337 - 1406
Robert
(John)
III Stuart
69
69
Ruled from 1390 thru 1406. Duke of Albany, Earl of Monteith. "Stewart." Duke of Albany, Earl of Menteith in 1361 & Carrick. Crowned at Scone in Aug 1390. He had been disabled earlier in his life and ruled as a nominal ruler with the real power provide by his brother, the Earl of Fife and Duke of Albany. Robert & Annabella had 2 sons and 4 daughters. Changed his name from John. He may have been born in 1337.
~1350 - 1401
Annabella
Drummond
51
51
~1362
Lady
Margaret
Stuart
~1220 - 1258
Ferchar
MacAntagart
38
38
1368
John
Stuart
1370
Margaret
Stuart
1378
David
Stuart
1380
Mary
Stuart
1383
Robert
Stuart
1387
Elizabeth
Stuart
1390
Egifia
Stuart
Muriella
Keith
~1436
Margaret
Montgomery
~1320 - 1355
Elizabeth
Mure
35
35
1340
John III
Stuart
1343 - 1394
Alexander
"The Wolf"
Stuart
51
51
~1340
Isabel
Stuart
~1346
Katherine
Jean Elizabeth
Stuart
~1352
Margaret
Stuart
~1354
Jean
Stuart
~1320
Euphemia
MacAntagart
1355
John
Stuart
1356 - 1389
Sir
David
Stuart
33
33
~1358
Egidia
Stuart
~1360
Walter
Stuart
~1280 - 1357
Christina
De
Bruce
77
77
1297 - 2 MAR 1314/15
Marjorie
De
Bruce
~1298
Isabel
de
Graham
Alice
Erskine
Jean
Stuart
1274 - 1329
Robert
De
Bruce
54
54
13 FEB 1687/88
Mary
Stewart
~1280 - 1327
Elizabeth
de
Burgh
47
47
~1315
Marjory
De
Bruce
~1318
John
De
Bruce
~1321
Matilda
De
Bruce
5 MAR 1322/23
David
II De
Bruce
~1277
Lady
Mary De
Bruce
~1147 - 1262
Thomas
of
Moray
115
115
~1276
Edward
De
Bruce
~1281
Thomas
De
Bruce
~1285
Alexander
De
Bruce
~1287
Matilda
De
Bruce
Adam
de
Kilconquhar
~1295
Murcach
Stewart
~1206
Margaret
Stuart
~1180 - 1246
Walter
FitzAlan
Stuart
66
66
~1184 - >1243
Beatrix
Ogilvie
59
59
~1208
Euphemia
Stuart
~1210
Elizabeth
Stuart
~1126 - 1204
Alan
FitzWalter
Stuart
78
78
1218 - 1292
Walter
Stewart
74
74
~1100
Swein
Thorson
1152 - ~1213
Marjory
Canmore de
Huntington
61
61
<1295
Christina
De
Bruce
~1247
Sir
Bernard
De Bruce
~1253
Edward
De
Bruce
Isabel
Erevine
MacDonal
Bernard
De
Bruce
Christian
De
Bruce
~1167
Amicia
de
Meschines
1172
Ranulph
de
Meschines
~1192
David
Huntingdon
~1115
Juliana
of
Dunbar
~1263
Egidia
De
Burgh
~1197
Marjory
Huntingdon
~1190
Earl of
Angus
Dufugan
~1175
Mary
Ogilvie
~1040
Leofwine
Janet
Stuart
~1460
Elizabeth
Stuart
Robert
Stuart
William
Stuart
John
Stuart
Alexander
Stuart
Allen
Stuart
Marion
Stuart
Margaret
Stuart
1407 - 1438
Sir
Alan
Stuart
31
31
1410 - 1468
Catherine
Seton
58
58
~1377 - 12 FEB 1428/29
John
d"Aubigney
Stuart
~1372 - 1429
Elizabeth
Stuart
57
57
~1409
Alexander
Stuart
~1411
John
Stuart
1574 - 4 MAR 1618/19
Anne
Oldenburg
19 FEB 1592/93 - 1612
Henry
Frederick
Stuart
1596 - 13 FEB 1661/62
Elizabeth
Stuart
1598
Margaret
Stuart
1600 - 30 JAN 1647/48
Charles
I
Stuart
Charles I Edward Louis Philip Casimir Stuart was the second surviving son of James VI of Scotland and Anne of Denmark. He was a sickly child, and, when his father became king of England in March 1603, he was temporarily left behind in Scotland because of the risks of the journey. Devoted to his elder brother, Henry, and to his sister, Elizabeth, he became lonely when Henry died (1612) and his sister left England in 1613 to marry Frederick V, elector of the Rhine Palatinate (see James I). All his life Charles had a Scots accent and a slight stammer. Small in stature, he was less dignified than his portraits by the Flemish painter Sir Anthony Van Dyck suggest. He was always shy and struck observers as being silent and reserved. His excellent temper, courteous manners, and lack of vices impressed all those who met him, but he lacked the common touch, travelled about little, and never mixed with ordinary people. A patron of the arts (notably of painting a nd tapestry; he brought both Van Dyck and another famous Flemish painter, Peter Paul Rubens, to England), he was, like all the Stuarts, also a lover of horses and hunting. He was sincerely religious, and the character of the court became less coarse as soon as he became king. From his father he acquired a stubborn belief that kings are intended by God to rule, and his earliest surviving letters reveal a distrust of the unruly House of Commons with which he proved incapable of coming to terms. Lacking flexibility or imagination, he was unable to understand that those political deceits that he always practiced in increasingly vain attempts to uphold his authority eventually impugned his honour and damaged his credit. In 1623, before succeeding to the throne, Charles, accompanied by the Duke of Buckingham, King James I's favourite, made an incognito visit to Spain in order to conclude a marriage treaty with the daughter of King Philip III. When the mission failed, largely because of Buckingham's arrogance and the Spanish court's insistence that Charles become a Roman Catholic, he joined Buckingham in pressing his father for war against Spain. In the meantime a marriage treaty was arranged on his behalf with Henrietta Maria, sister of the French king, Louis XIII. OBJE: C:\My Documents\Royalty\CharlesI.jpg
18 JAN 1600/01
Robert
Bruce
Stuart
1605
Mary
Stuart
1606
Sophia
Stuart
1609 - 1669
Henrietta
Maria De
Bourbon
59
59
1534 - 1588
II
Frederick
53
53
1557 - 1631
Sophia
Von
Mecklenburg
74
74
1577
Christian
IV
Oldenburg
1528 - 14 MAR 1600/01
Urick
III Von
Mecklinburg
1524
Elizabeth
1509 - 1559
King of
Denmark
Christian
50
50
1511 - 1575
Dorothea
Saxe
Lauenburg
64
64
1532
Anna
of
Denmark
1545
John
Sonderburg
De Holstein
1546
Princess of
Denmark
Dorothea
1455 - 9 JAN 1497/98
John
Cicero Von
Brandenburg
1487
Anne
Von
Brandenburg
1449
Margaret
Von
Saxony
7 MAR 1435/36 - 1512
Anna
Von
Saxony
1484
Joachim
I Von
Brandenburg
1425 - 1482
William
III Von
Saxony
57
57
~1430
Anne
Von
Austria
1397 - 1439
Albert
II De
Romania
42
42
1409 - 1442
Elizabeth
De
Bohemia
33
33
1442 - 1501
Elizabeth
Von
Austria
59
59
1368 - 1437
Emperor of
Bohemia
Sigismund
69
69
1370
Marie
Mary De
Hungary
1450
Frederick
V Von
Brandenburg
1504
Princess of
Denmark
Dorothea
1498
Sophia
De
Pomerania
1524
Princess of
Denmark
Elizabeth
25 JAN 1525/26
Prince of
Denmark
Adolph
1630
Charles
II
Stuart
1631
Mary
Stuart
1633
James
II
Stuart
1635
Elizabeth
Stuart
1640 - 1660
Henry
Stuart
20
20
1644
Henrietta
Anne
Stuart
1503 - 1555
Henri II
D'Albret
52
52
1573 - 1642
Marie
De
Medici
69
69
1602
Isabel
De
Bourbon
1601 - 1643
Louis
XIII
Bourbon
41
41
10 FEB 1605/06
Christine
De
Bourbon
25 FEB 1607/08
Jean Baptiste
Gaston De
Bourbon
1553
Margaret
De
Valois
1541 - 1587
Francesco
De
Medici
46
46
~1550 - 1578
Joanna
Von
Hapsburg
28
28
10 MAR 1501/02 - 1564
Ferdinand
I Von
Hapsburg
1505 - 1547
Anne
Jagiello De
Hungary
42
42
Maximillian
II Von
Hapsburg
Archduke of
Tyrol-Voralberg
Ferdinand
Charles
Von
Hapsburg
1528
Anna
Von
Hapsburg
1455 - 1516
Ladislas
II De
Hungary
61
61
1484 - 1506
Anne
De
Foix
22
22
1506
II
Louis
~1439
Alain
D'Albret
1443 - 1486
Princess
of France
Madeleine
43
43
1430 - 1492
Casimir
IV De
Hungary
62
62
1351 - 1434
II
Wladislaw
83
83
Sophie
De
Poland
Sigismund
De
Hungary
Alexander
De
Poland
~1390 - 1461
Sophia
De
Kiev
71
71
~1360 - 1418
Holczanski
Andrei
Ivanovich
58
58
~1401
Vaslissa
De
Hungary
1478
I Philip
1479
Joanna
De
Aragon
Catherine
De
Castile
1498
Eleaonor
De
Castile
24 FEB 1498/99
Charles
V Von
Hapsburg
1501
Isabella
Elizabeth Von
Hapsburg
1505
Marie
Von
Hapsburg
10 MAR 1450/51 - 23 JAN 1514/15
II
Ferdinand
Isabella
De
Aragon
1475
John
De
Aragon
1482
Maria
De
Aragon
1490
Germanine
De
Foix
Juana
De
Aragon
~1420
John II
De
Castile
1428
Isabella
De
Beja
1053
Inez
Berenguer
~1330
Inez
De
Castro
1391
Blanch
De
Navarra
1421
Carlos
De
Aragon
1423
Juana
De
Aragon
1424
Blanch
De
Aragon
2 FEB 1424/25
Leonora
De
Aragon
~1325 - 1387
Peter
IV "the
Ceremonius"
62
62
1381 - 1435
Leonor
Urraca De
Castilla
54
54
~1404
Marie
De
Aragón
1377 - 1427
Ernst I
"Ironside"
50
50
~1408
Enrique
De
Aragón
~1396
Miguel
De
Aragón
1394
Alfonso
V De
Aragón
1406
Pietro
De
Aragón
1410
Sancho
De
Aragón
22 MAR 1458/59 - 12 JAN 1518/19
I
Maximillian
13 FEB 1456/57 - 1482
Marie
De
Bourgogne
1415 - 1493
Frederick
III Von
Hapsburg
77
77
~1350 - 1426
IV
Ziemowit
76
76
1455
Christopher
Von
Hapsburg
1460
Helena
Von
Hapsburg
1465
Cunegunde
Von
Hapsburg
1466
John
Von
Hapsburg
~1411 - 1470
Alexander
Montgomery
59
59
~1416
Margaret
Boyd
~1439
Elizabeth
Montgomery
~1400 - 1439
Thomas
Boyd
39
39
~1400
Isabel
~1385 - 1432
Thomas
Boyd
47
47
~1390
Johanna
Jane
Montgomery
~1362
John
Montgomery
~1375
Margaret
Maxwell
~1357 - 1421
Herbert
Robert
Maxwell
64
64
~1363
Catherine
Stuart
~1390
Herbert
Maxwell
~1406
Catherine
Maxwell
~1315 - 1380
John
Stuart
65
65
~1290 - 1340
Walter
Stuart
50
50
~1250 - 1298
Sir
John
Stuart
48
48
~1260
Margaret
of that Ilk
Bonkyl
~1280 - 1333
Alan
Stuart
53
53
~1285 - 1351
Isobel
Stuart
66
66
~1297 - 1333
Sir
James
Stuart
36
36
~1235
Alexander
Bonkyl
1214 - 1283
Alexander
Stuart
69
69
1218
Jean
Macrory
1243 - 1309
Sir
James
Stuart
66
66
~1255
Elizabeth
Stuart
~1190
James
Macrory
<1156
Alesta
of Mar
~1179
Avelina
FitzWalter
Stuart
~1115 - 1182
3rd Earl
of Mar
Morgund
67
67
~1120
Countess
of Mar
Agnes
~1153 - 7 FEB 1242/43
4th Earl
of Mar
Duncan
~1082
2nd Earl
of Mar
Gillocher
~1105 - 1177
Walter
FitzAlan
72
72
~1125
Eschyna
de
Londoniis
~1100
Thomas
de
Londoniis
~1078 - 1114
Alan
FitzFlaald
36
36
~1059
Ameline
de
Hesdin
~1110 - 1160
William
FitzAlan
50
50
~1035 - 1091
Ernulf
De
Hesding
56
56
~1046
Fledaldus
(Flaald)
~1020
Senescal
De Dol
Alan
~1346 - <1410
Robert
Maxwell
64
64
~1346
Janet
Forrester
~1320
John
Forrester
Margaret
~1295
Adam
Forrester
Margaret
~1321
Herbert
Maxwell
~1326
Margaret
Craigie
~1296
Herbert
Maxwell
~1338
John
Alexander
Montgomery
~1340
Elizabeth
Eglinton
~1323 - ~1374
Hugh
Eglinton
51
51
~1325
Egidia
Stuart
<1297
Radulphus
Eglinton
~1350
James
Douglas
<1272
Nicholas
De
Graham
<1274
Maria
<1316
Alexander
Montgomery
<1285 - 1316
John
Montgomery
31
31
<1234 - 1285
John
Montgomery
51
51
<1220 - 1234
Allan
Montgomery
14
14
<1177
John
Montgomery
~1150 - >1177
Robert
Montgomery
27
27
~1084
Philip
de
Montgomery
~1360
Thomas
Boyd
~1350
Alice
Gifford
1306 - 11 MAR 1408/09
Lord
Hugh
Gifford
~1314
Joanna
Douglas
~1281
John
Gifford
~1286
Euphemia
Morham
~1320 - 1365
Thomas
Boyd
45
45
~1275 - ~1333
Robert
Boyd
58
58
<1249 - ~1330
Robert
Boyd
81
81
* They supported Bruce in the struggle for Independence and following Bannockburn in 1314 Sir Robert Boyd was granted the lands around Kilmarnock lately forfeited by Balliol.
~1394 - 1424
William
Seton
30
30
~1394
Janet
Dunbar
~1336 - 1423
George
Dunbar
87
87
~1340 - >1402
Christian
Seton
62
62
~1315
Alan
De
Wyntoun
~1325
Lady
Margaret
Seton
~1349 - BEF MAR 1409/10
William
Seton
1306
Alexander
Seton
1310
Margaret
Murray
~1249
Sir
William
Murray
~1281
Alexander
Seton
Christian
1285 - 1368
Patrick
Dunbar
83
83
* Swore fealty to Edward II, however he later signed the Declaration of Arbroath in 1320 for Scottish independance.
~1305 - >1350
Isobel "Black
Agnes"
Randolph
45
45
* It was she who successfully defended the Castle of Dunbar in 1338 against the English troops.
~1360
John
Dunbar
~1350
Agnes
Dunbar
<1278 - 1332
Thomas
Randolph
54
54
<1263 - >1296
Thomas
Randolph
33
33
~1272 - 1358
Isabella
De
Bruce
86
86
1268 - 1299
III Eric
31
31
<1224
Juliana
~1120 - >1165
Ranulph
of
Moray
45
45
~1124
Bethoc
~1145
Fonia
of
Moray
~1090
Dunegal
of
Moray
~1263
Alexander
Dunbar
1242
Patrick
"Blackbeard"
Dunbar
* Patrick, the 8th Earl of Dunbar was also called Earl of March. He was one of the competitors for the crown of Scotland but withdrew his claim and swore allegiance to Edward I.
~1240
Marjory
Bridget
Comyn
~1215 - 1290
Alexander
Comyn
75
75
1213 - 1289
Patrick
Dunbar
76
76
~1218
Cecelia
Fraser
~1185 - >1248
Patrick
Dunbar
63
63
~1193
Eupheme
FitzAlan
1152 - 1232
Patrick
De
Dunbar
80
80
~1125 - 1182
Waltheof
De
Dunbar
57
57
~1164
Ada
de
Huntingdon
~1129
Aelina
~1369
John
Seton
~1194
Derdere
Gunnilda
of
Northumberland
~1374
Katherine
St.
Clair
1350
John
St.
Clair
~1356
Elizabeth
Polwarth
~1326
Patrick
Polwarth
1322
John
St.
Clair
~1330
Margaret
Sinclair
~1325
Thomas
Stuart
~1350
Margaret
Stuart
~1305
William
Sinclair
~1297
William
St.
Clair
1351
Janet
Fleming
~1382
Alexander
Seton
~1335 - 14 FEB 1404/05
David
Fleming
~1340
Isabel
Strathechin
<1321
Donald
Strathechin
<1325
Annabel
~1312 - ~1342
Malcolm
Fleming
30
30
~1316
Christan
~1286
Patrick
Fleming
<1290
Miss
Fraser
~1261 - >1306
Robert
Fleming
45
45
* This name derives mainly from persons of Flanders origin who settled throughout Britain and thus Scottish ancestry should not be claimed unless there is a familiy tradition of such descent. They first appear in Scotland in the time of David I (1124-53)
~1269 - 1333
Simon
Fraser
64
64
~1320
Alexander
Fraser
~1263
Margaret
of
Caithness
<1237
Earl of
Orkney
John
<1239
Countess
Sinclair-
Grahame
~1209
Lord
David
Grahame
~1255 - ~1308
Andrew
Fraser
53
53
~1270
Alexander
John
Fraser
~1255
Beatrix
Le
Cheyne
~1225
Reginald
Le
Cheyne
~1260
Laird
Reginald
Le Cheyne
~1200
Bernard
Le
Cheyne
~1237 - >1307
Richard
Fraser
70
70
~1212
John
Fraser
~1217
Alicaia
De
Conigburg
~1195
Gilbert
Fraser
~1164 - >1258
Bernard
Fraser
94
94
~1131
Udard
Fraser
~1135
Miss
Kylvert
~1098 - >1109
Gilbert
Fraser
11
11
~1340 - 1425
Duncan
Stuart
85
85
~1335
Helen
Campbell
~1310 - ~1372
Sir Gillespie
Archibald
More Campbell
62
62
~1344
Colin
"Iongantach"
Campbell
~1318
Isabella
Mary
Lamont
David
Campbell
Duncan
Campbell
~1290 - 1353
John
Lamont
63
63
1280 - 1340
Sir Colin
Oig
Campbell
60
60
* Sir Colin, the eldest son, obtained a charter from his uncle, King Robert Bruce, of the lands of Lochow and Artornish, dated at Arbroath, 10th February 1316, in which he is designated Colinus filius Cambel, militis. As a reward for assisting the Steward of Scotland in 1334 in the recovery of the castle of Dunoon, in Cowal, Sir Colin was made hereditary governor of the castle, and has the grant of certain lands for the support of his dignity. Sir Colin died about 1340. By his wife, a daughter of the house of Lennox, he had three sons and a daughter.
1285
Hellena
Mor
~1260
John
Mor
1258 - 1315
Sir Neil
"MacCailen
More" Campbell
57
57
~1260
Mariota
Cameron
1230 - 1294
Sir Colin
Mohn
Campbell
64
64
* Sir Colin Campbell of Lochow, the real founder of the family, sixth in descent from the first Gillespie, distinguished himself by his warlike actions, and was knighted by King Alexander the Third in 1280. He added largely to his estates, and on account of his great prowess he obtained the surname of Mohr or More ("great"); from him the chief of the Argyll family is in Gaelic styled Mac Chaillan More. Sir Colin Campbell had a quarrel with a powerful neighbour of his, the Lord of Lorn, and after he had defeated him, pursuing the victory too eagerly, was slain (in 1294) at a place called the string of Cowal, where a great obelisk was erected over his grave.
Sir
Beil
Campbell
Donald
Campbell
<1232
Miss
Sinclair
1199 - 1280
Archibald
Campbell
81
81
<1201
Errick
Carrick
<1182 - 1204
Archibald
Dugald
Campbell
22
22
1180
Finlay
MacGillivrail
<1154
Naughton
MacGillivrail
1158
Duncan
Campbell
1090 - >1161
Archibald
Gillespic
Campbell
71
71
1136
Finetta
Fraser
<1096 - 1110
Cailen
Maol Maith
Campbell
14
14
<1098
Miss
Alexander
~1070 - 1097
Duncan
MacDurine
Campbell
27
27
<1072
Dorothy
Dervail
Crauchan
~1041
Archibald
Gillespic
Campbell
~1050
Eva
Na
MacDuibhn
~1020 - 1066
Paul
MacDuibhn
46
46
~1035
Marion
Godfrey
~1004
Arthur
Armberg
MacDuibhn
<0982
Diarmid
MacDuibhn
~1006
Duian
MacDuibhn
<0984
Grain
O'Neil
~1020 - 1066
Malcolm
MacDuibhn
46
46
1025
Cambus
Bellus De
Beauchamp
~1320
7th Countess
of Lennox
Margaret
~1295
6th Earl of
Lennox
Donald
~1264 - 1333
5th Earl of
Lennox
Malcolm
69
69
~1274
Margaret
Stuart
of Mar
~1243 - 1297
Donald
Stuart
54
54
~1270 - 1326
Marjory
Stuart
56
56
1278 - 1320
Isabella
Matilda
Stuart
42
42
1222 - 1281
5th Earl
of Mar
William
59
59
~1223 - 1267
Elizabeth
Comyn
44
44
~1163 - 1233
William
Comyn
70
70
<1185 - 1244
Margaret
Colhan
59
59
<1170 - <1199
Fergus
Colhan
29
29
~1140 - >1179
Roger
Colhan
39
39
~1120
Earl of
Buchan
Colban
~1110
Eva
Mormaer
~1080
Gartnach
Mormaer
~1080
Ete
~1145
Richard
Comyn
~1142
Hextilda
FitzUchtred
~1116
Uchtred
FitzWaldeve
~1120
Bethoc
Bane
~1125
Maude
Basset
1084
William
Comyn
~1053
John
Comyn
~1022 - 28 JAN 1068/69
Robert
Comyn
~0991
John
Comyn
~1239
4th Earl of
Lennox
Malcolm
~1330 - ~1404
Alexander
Stuart
74
74
~1340
Miss
Turnbull
~1299 - <1320
Alexander
Stuart
21
21
~1356
Margaret
Mariot
Atheyn
~1375
Alexander
Stuart
~1376 - >1391
Duncan
Stuart
15
15
~1378
Sir Andrew
Stuart of
Sandbauch
~1380
Walter
Stuart
~1382
James
Stuart
~1373
Martha
Stuart
~1384
Robert
Stuart
of Atholl
~1356
Euphemia
Ross
~1650
Alexander
Stuart
~1630 - 1731
Alexander
Stuart
101
101
Alesander Stuart (or Stewart), shipwright, on record Charlestown, Mass., 1675, removed Marlboro, 1688 Early New England Settlers, 1600's - 1800's Ancestral Heads of New England Families, Surnames. by Frank R. Holmes, pg. 228
1652 - 1720
Deborah
Rediat
67
67
15 JAN 1694/95
Alexander
Stewart
Miss
Jennet
1730 - ~1785
William
Stewart
55
55
Charity
~1755
Daniel
Stewart
~1600
Duncan
Stuart
Posted by csohm@@mediaone.com
~1605
Helen
Margaret
Campbell
Campbell Pedrigee posted by Hamish Maclaren, maclaren@@earthlink.net
~1560 - ~1600
Donald
Stuart
40
40
~1530
Alexander
Stuart
~1535
Margaret
MacDonald
~1497 - 1562
Sir
Allen
Stuart
65
65
~1440 - 1497
Dugald
Stuart
57
57
"Natural Son of John" "Legitimized in 1463" Endeavored after his father's death to recover the Lordship of the Lorn by force of arms until a compromise was affected 1469, between him and his uncle, Walter Stewart, by which it was agreed that Dugald should retain the Appin estates in Upper Lorn, and forego his claims to Lordship of Lorn. --------------------------------- From the book "The Stewart's of Appin": Pages 75 & 76: "Dugald Stewart ... he resided at Ardveich till 1463, when his father sent him a message directing him to come to Dunstaffnage with his mother. They set out as a bridal party, with pipes and banners, accompanied by a party of Dugald's kinsmen from the Lorn, and some of his mother's friends, the Maclarens. ... They clearly show that the party had set out for the purpose of the marriage, and Dugald's consequent legitimation. ... The tradition of the Stewart's is that the murder was committed when Sir John was on his way from the Castle to the chapel, which is close at hand, where the marriage was to be performed. The murderers fled instantly after Sir John was stabbed; and Dugald would at once have pursued them had he not be restrained by the priest, who pointed out that no time was to be lost in having the marriage completed, as Lord Lorn was to all appearance mortally wounded. The rite was accordingly performed, the priest assisting the dying man to place the ring on the Bride's finger, and the ceremony being so public that no doubt of its due completion was entertained in Argyllshire. Meantime, however, Alan M'Coule and his accomplices had time to effect their escape."
~1420
John
Mourach
Stuart
~1360 - >1439
Robert
Stuart
79
79
~1280 - 1334
Hugh
MacAntagart
54
54
~1252
Christina
MacAntagart
~1340
Margaret
Murdock
Graham
~1365
Walter
Stuart
~1340
Margaret
le
Baird
~1345
Isabel
MacDougall
~1315
Ewan
MacDougall
~1320 - 1387
Sir
Robert
Stuart
67
67
~1610 - 1687
John
Rediat
77
77
Daniel
Farrabas
Hannah
James
Stuart
Hannah
Stuart
Samuel
Stuart
Margaret
Stuart
John
Stuart
6 FEB 1689/90
Daniel
Stewart
~1505
Daughter
Of Cameron
Of Locheil
~1532 - <1547
Sir
Duncan
Stuart
15
15
~1540
Janet
Gordon
1570
Sir
John
Stuart
~1575
Katherine
Campbell
~1599
Sir
Duncan
Stuart
Daughter Of
MacDonald
Of Muidart
~1590
John
Stuart
~1600
Daughter
Of Cameron
Of Lochnell
~1630
Sir
Duncan
Stuart
~1460
Daughter Of
MacDougall Of
Nether Lorn
~1430
MacDougall
Of Nether
Lorn
Walter
Stuart
Allan
Stuart
David
Stuart
Robert
Stuart
Alexander
Stuart
~1363
Archibald
Stuart
~1365
Alexander
Stuart
~1370
William
Stuart
~1373
Christian
Stuart
~1330 - 1390
Walter
Murray
60
60
~1380
Jean
Stuart
1383
James
Stuart
~1386
Margaret
Stuart
Marjory
Stuart
~1375 - 1457
Isabel
Stuart
82
82
~1050 - 1083
1st Earl
of Mar
Morgund
33
33
~1363 - 1425
Murdock
Stuart
62
62
When Robert Stewart Duke of Albany died at the age of about eighty-one, his son Murdock Stewart succeeded him as Governor of Scotland. His attempt at governing foundered after four years of futile misrule. In 1424 King James I, his cousin, returned to Scotland after eighteen years of imprisonment in England. Since James I's kingship had been at risk while imprisoned in England, he did not intend for it to be threatened upon his return to Scotland. In 1425 he ordered Murdock & his two sons beheaded at Sterling.
~1365
Janet
Stuart
~1366
Maria
Stuart
~1250 - 1323
William
MacAntagart
73
73
John
Stuart
Andrew
Stuart
Robert
Stuart
Marjory
Stuart
1421
Robert
Stuart
~1392 - 1425
Sir
Walter
Stuart
33
33
~1394
Sir
Alexander
Stuart
~1396 - ~1451
James
Mohr
Stuart
55
55
James reacted to his father's execution by leading an attack on Dumbarton, burning it and killing the governor of the castle, John Stewart. He fled to Ireland where he later died. He was ancestor to the Stewarts of Ardvorlich. James and Lady MacDonald were not married.
~1400
Isabella
Stuart
Catherine
Barnes
Sister of the Bishop of Durham.
Andrew
Stuart
Murdoch
Stuart
Arthur
Stuart
~1304
Richard
de
Bold
Robert
Stuart
Matilda
Stuart
Alexander
Stuart
Walter
Stuart
~1365 - 1453
Duncan
Campbell
88
88
~1395
Sir
Colin
Campbell
~1400
Margaret
Sterling
~1430
Mariota
Helen
Campbell
~1435
William
Stuart
His full name was William of Baldorran, Balquhidder, Perthshire. William received the office of hereditary Royal Baillie of Balquhidder. It was this William and his son Walter, who held the townships listed in the Exchequer Rolls of 1488. In th e portioning of Balquhidder which took place during the sixteenth century, the descendants of Sir William Stewart of Baldorran gained hereditary tacks of land.
Walter
Stuart
John
Stuart
Andrew
Stuart
~1272 - >1305
Gratney
Stuart
33
33
~1274
Duncan
Stuart
~1276
Alexander
Stuart
~1280
Mary
Stuart
~1265
Lafayette
Myers
~1290
Amanda
Myers
~1620
Ann
Dolt
1644
John
Rediat
1645
Mehitabel
Rediat
1648
Hannah
Rediat
1653
Samuel
Rediat
1657
Elizabeth
Rediat
1698
Persis
Witt
Mary
Chamberlin
~1442 - MAR 1507/08
Thomas
Maisters
~1447
Agnes
~1470
Richard
Maisters
~1473
Alice
Maisters
~1476
Thomas
Maisters
~1480
Agnes
Maisters
~1488
Peter
Maisters
~1490
William
Maisters
~1492
Richard
Maisters
~1496
Thomas
Maisters
~1498
Alice
Maisters
1532
Amy
Samwell
~1550
Elizabeth
Cavendish
~1570
Arabella
Stuart
~1175 - 1246
Countess
D'Eu
Alice
71
71
~1210
Marie
de
Lusignan
~1145 - 11 MAR 1181/82
Henry
II D'Eu
~1115 - 1188
Alice
D'Aubigny
73
73
~1080 - 1140
I
Henry
60
60
~1085 - 1145
Margaret
de
Champagne
60
60
~1050 - 1095
William
II D'Eu
45
45
~1060
Beatrice
De
Builly
1105 - 1169
VIII
Hugh
64
64
Orengarde
de
Lusignan
~1065 - 2 FEB 1150/51
Hugh
VII de
Lusignan
1067
Sarazine
of
Armenia
~1110
Aenor
de
Lusignan
~1039 - 1102
Hugh
VI "le
Diable"
63
63
~1041
Countess
of Thouars
Ildegarde
~0985 - >1030
Hugh
IV de
Lusignan
45
45
~0990
Adelrade
de
Thouars
~0961 - 1010
Hugh III "the
White" de
Lusignan
49
49
, Seigneur de la Marche
Arsendis
0935
Hugh II
de
Lusignan
~0965
Joscelin
de
Lusignan
~0945
Agnes
de
Razes
~0900
Hugh
de
Lusignan
~0910
Agnes
~0929
Sigebert
VII de
Razes
~0913 - 0982
Sigebert
VI de
Razes
69
69
~0897 - 0975
Bera
VI de
Razes
78
78
~0880 - 0952
Arnaud
de
Razes
72
72
~0864 - 0936
William
III de
Razes
72
72
~0848
William
II de
Razes
Idoine
~0870
Germege
de
Razes
~0840 - 0884
Sigebert
de
Razes
44
44
~0871 - 0928
Rothilde
Carolingian
57
57
1929 - 1997
Dean
Allen
Goodale
68
68
Currently living in Missouri
Living
Jr.
1693
Edward
Stuart
1695
Abigail
Stuart
1698
Solomon
Stuart
3 MAR 1699/00 - 20 MAR 1701/02
Benjamin
Stuart
9 JAN 1701/02 - 10 JAN 1705/06
David
Stuart
Choked to death by a copper coin
1712
Moses
Stuart
1671 - 1726
Elizabeth
Dresser
54
54
1689
Elizabeth
Stuart
Elizabeth
1699
Mary
Stuart
1712
Sarah
Stuart
D. 1726
Mary
D. <1749
Sarah
Clark
D. 1722
Nathaniel
Bailey
1749
Margaret
Gage
~1774 - >1850
Peter
Krum
76
76
1781 - >1850
Sarah
Trowbridge
69
69
~1800 - >1886
Jane
M.
Krum
86
86
1817 - 1862
Sarah
Krum
45
45
1802 - ~1886
Hendrik
Krum
83
83
1804
Anna
Eliza
Krum
1805 - ~1881
Abel
Krum
76
76
1808 - 1882
Fanny
Krum
73
73
1810 - 1883
John
Marshall
Krum
73
73
According to Walker Dix, in his "Ancestors of Zoe Townsend & Walker Dix", another webpage on Rootsweb/Ancestry World Connect Project, John Marshall Krum was the first mayor of Alton, Illinois, in 1837, and was elected the second mayor of St. Lopuis, Missouri, in 1848.
1821 - 1886
Catherine
Krum
65
65
1824 - 1908
Hiram
F.
Krum
83
83
1824 - 1877
Mary
Colby
52
52
>1850 - 1901
Howard
Krum
51
51
Hiram
Howard
Krum
Beach
Byron
Krum
~1890
Rose
Krum
1890 - 1965
Fred?
Goetsche
75
75
Vine
Krum
?
Henderson
1848 - ~1933
Thalia
Lydia
Krum
85
85
1843 - >1910
John
J.
Owen
67
67
1869
Mattie
E.
Owen
Andrew
W.
Conway
1872 - 1967
Nettie
P.
Owen
94
94
Francis
T.
Gage
D. 1898
Lewis
K.
Owen
1880 - 1889
Louis
H.
Owen
9
9
~1863 - ~1870
Emma
Krum
7
7
1846 - 1921
Thatcher
M.
Krum
75
75
1853 - 1929
Louis
Kossuth
Krum
76
76
1858 - 1925
Henry
Able
Krum
67
67
1859 - 1922
Clara Matilda
Evaline
Carrico
62
62
1884 - 1889
Roy
Krum
5
5
1885 - 1889
Rossie
Krum
4
4
1887 - 1971
Lloyd
Dennis
Krum
84
84
1889 - 1956
John
Henry
Krum
66
66
1891 - 1936
Charles
Dudley
Krum
45
45
1893 - 1999
Maude
Irene
Krum
106
106
1894 - 1990
Merle
Bernadine
Krum
95
95
1896 - 1899
Rosa
Krum
3
3
1898 - 1898
Harry
Krum
1902 - 1988
Arthur
Leroy
Krum
86
86
1905 - 1994
Mary
89
89
Phyliss
Krum
Living
Krum
D. ~1933
George
Mansfield
Madge
Mansfield
Clare
Mansfield
Agnes
Mansfield
Mary
Ellen
Mansfield
Inez
Mansfield
1890 - 1957
John
Starr
Laughlin
66
66
1913 - 1981
John
Starr
Laughlin
68
68
1916
Lois
Irene
Laughlin
1920
Eloise
Laughlin
1922
Nancy
Evaline
Laughlin
Neva
M.
Cotter
Zella
Krum
~1175
William
De
Lacy
1919
Thalia
Elvira
Krum
1920
Mildred
Ruth
Krum
1926 - 1968
Dorothy
Mae
Krum
41
41
1923
James
Carey
Dobbs
1928
Merle
Jean
Krum
1915 - 1981
Jesse
Eugene
Stice
65
65
~1821
Jonathan
Warner
1818 - 1892
Mary
Ophelia
Harding
73
73
1807 - 1861
Jonathon
Thatcher
Miner
54
54
1925
Howard
Lindekugel
Elmer
Carrico
Edwin
Carrico
1832 - 1915
? Ellis
83
83
1882
Carrie Matilda
(Pearl) Owen
<1758
Peter
Krum
1874
Mary
Katherine
Krum
1875 - 1994
Eva
May
Krum
119
119
1877 - 1961
Clara
Jane
Krum
84
84
1879
Nancy
Belle
Krum
~1904
Rachel
A.
Foster
1870 - 1946
Martha
A.
Sampson
76
76
Vivian
Krum
1816 - 1888
Converse
G.
Colby
72
72
D. <1930
Willard
Lewis
Colby
D. <1930
Calista
Colby
?
Ferry
Pearl
Colby
1888 - 1968
Clyde
Colby
79
79
Blaine
Colby
1819 - 1822
Columbus
Colby
2
2
1822
Orrin
Colby
D. 1917
Laura
Lydia
Colby
Naomi
Annie
Colby
Olive
Colby
?
Bihler
~1874 - 1952
Charles
Henry
Foster
78
78
?
Moody
1888 - 1979
Lester
Babcock
91
91
1827
Lewis
Colby
Branch
H.
Colby
J.
Rose
Colby
1830 - 1832
Naomi
Ann
Colby
1
1
David
Colby
Naomi
Johnson
1805 - 1878
Cyrus
Colby
73
73
1807 - 1893
David
Colby
86
86
Orilla
Lee
D. ~1862
Annie
Colby
Albion
Colby
Wayne
Colby
D. 1928
S. Lee
Colby
1809 - 1894
Rowel
Colby
85
85
1835
Edwin
Livingston
Colby
1864
Emory
Colby
1856
Abigail
Colby
1842
Albert
Colby
1846
Leonard
Colby
1850 - 1906
David
Colby
55
55
D. 1918
Vine
Colby
?
Todd
1891 - 1984
Blanche
Colby
92
92
?
Allgeier
1906 - 1982
Myrtle
Colby
75
75
?
Sears
1889 - 1962
Leonard
Colby
72
72
1900 - 1980
David
Colby
80
80
1893 - 1963
Robert
Colby
69
69
1811 - ~1860
Lydia
Colby
49
49
?
Farnham
John
Owen
Matilda
Jordan
?
Owen
?
Owen
<1843 - 1849
Charles
Owen
6
6
>1849
W.H.
Owen
~1864
Elmore
A.
McKenna
1894 - 1974
Vera
M.
Krum
80
80
1873 - 1953
Paul
Krum
80
80
1875 - 1943
Clara
68
68
1896 - 1958
Harlan
E.
Krum
62
62
1908 - 1998
Madeleine
90
90
1894 - 1986
Raymond
McKenna
92
92
1897
Douglas
E.
McKenna
1683
Hendrickus
Krom
1653 - 1724
Gysbert
Krom
71
71
Geertje
Ariense
Van Vliet
1622 - 1656
Willem
Gijsbertz
Crom
34
34
1629 - 1682
Maycken
Hendricks Van
Der Oever
53
53
1647
Hendrick
Krom
1650 - 1681
Elisabet
Krom
31
31
1656
Geertje
Krom
Jan Joosten
Van
Metersen
1675
Willem
Krom
1677
Mayken
Krom
1679
Gysbert
Krom
1681
Dirck
Krom
1683 - 1750
Aagje
Krom
67
67
1688
Zacharia
Krom
1688
Lysbet
Krom
Catherine
Krom
Eva
De La
Montagne
1709
Willem
Krom
1710 - <1724
Gysbert
Krom
14
14
1712
Cornelius
Krom
1713
Geerjen
Krom
1715
Johannes
Krom
1716
Elehonora
Krom
1718
Henderik
Krom
1721
Abraham
Krom
1723
Elisabeth
Krom
1724
Gysbert
Krom
1727
Lidia
Krom
1730
Zolomon
Krom
Anna
Kock
1744
Bregjen
Krom
1747
Liedia
Krom
1749
Jan
Krom
1751
Sara
Krom
1754
Ann
Krom
D. 1685
Joost
Adriaenszen
Molenaer
1840 - 1923
Chester
Harding
Krum
83
83
D. 1921
Sarah
O.
Green
1816
William
O.
Green
~1846
Peter
Krum
Henry
Krum
Sarah
Smith
1804
Jacob
Krum
Martin
Krum
Elizabeth
Smith
1804
Eliza
Krum
?
Medill
1751 - 1815
Abel
Trowbridge
64
64
1753 - 1832
Anne
Mosier
78
78
1729 - 1798
Seth
Trowbridge
68
68
26 FEB 1734/35 - 15 MAR 1750/51
Mary
Hayt
1783
Anna
Trowbridge
1794
Daniel
Trowbridge
1777 - 1855
Mehetable
Trowbridge
77
77
1790
Phebe
Trowbridge
1779 - 1861
Polly
Trowbridge
81
81
1785
Salmon
Trowbridge
1798
William
Trowbridge
1778
Lucy
Trowbridge
Walter
Munson
Silvanna
Hatch
Mabel
Barnum
1771
Abel
Blackmar
1759 - 1800
Oliver
Trowbridge
41
41
1761 - 1835
Anna
Noble
74
74
1783 - 1848
Lyman
Trowbridge
65
65
1782 - 1825
Asenath
Blair
43
43
1807 - 1888
Amasa
Trowbridge
81
81
1811 - 1852
Mandana
Blanding
41
41
1837 - 1897
Theodore
B.
Trowbridge
60
60
1839
Emily
Wilcox
A.C.
Green
W.M.
Green
J.J.
Green
1840
Algernon
B.
Kingsley
1848
Julia
Louise
Miner
1850
Ann
Eliza
Miner
1852
Harriet
Virginia
Miner
1855 - 1856
William
Thatcher
Miner
7m
7m
~1804 - >1880
Matilda
Ransom
76
76
~1831
Charlotte
M.
Krum
~1841
Fanny
Ann
Krum
~1844
Sarah
A.
Krum
~1845
Hortense
V.
Krum
~1846 - 1916
John
Peter
Krum
70
70
Perry
Tuttle
~1835
Adrian
H.
Linsley
~1863
Arthur
Linsley
~1869
Agnes
Linsley
~1807
Mary
Brower
1832 - 1899
Flora
A.
Krum
66
66
~1830
Edwin
Ruthven
Regal
He was a high school teacher in Hopedale, Harrison Co., OH, in 1860. I have been unable to locate the family in the 1870 Federal Census. He was president of the Ohio State Normal School, in Hopedale, OH, 1872. He was a book merchant in Oberlin, Lorain Co., OH, in 1880. Descendants of Abel KRUM & his wife, Mary N. BROWER Charlie Cabiac 3/23/03
Herbert
V.
Root
1851
Margaret
Harding
Krum
1844
Edwin
Allis
DeWolf
1881 - 1888
Ophelia
DeWolf
6
6
1883 - 1903
Herbert
DeWolf
19
19
Elisha
DeWolf
Sabra
Sherman
>1848 - 1914
Catherine
Warner
66
66
~1852
Cornelia
Warner
>1848 - BET 1913 AND 1918
Jonathan
Warner
Francis
Falsenbee or
Fabereger
1843 - 1930
Angline
Catherine
Baird
87
87
1906
Belle
Foster
~1908
Arzella
Foster
1909
Thomas
Leroy
Foster
Living
Stice
Living
Stice
Living
Stice
Norman
Cutter
1872 - 1936
Howard
Krum
Regal
63
63
He was a star sprinter, high jumper, baseball, & football player @@ Oberlin College. He was managing editor of The Springfield Republican and one of the best-known newspaper figures in New England.
1846
Mary
Matilda
Miner
Jonathan
Warner
1815 - 1903
Phebe
Warner
88
88
George
Alderman
Elizabeth
Harrington
Cutter
Clara
R
Krum
Flora
Krum
Elizabeth
H.
Krum
Mabel
Krum
Mary
Francis
Krum
1869
John
Marshall
Krum
Frances
A.
Harrington
Josiah
M.
Lasell
1910 - 1982
Floyd
Harold
Kane
72
72
Living
Kane
Living
Kane
Living
Kane
Living
Dobbs
1946 - 2002
Douglas
Dobbs
56
56
Living
Dobbs
1951 - 1972
Steven
Craig
Dobbs
20
20
Living
Wood
Living
Lindekugel
Living
Lindekugel
Living
Lindekugel
Living
Lindekugel
1949 - 1996
Louis
A.
Lopez
46
46
1219
Owain
ap
Gruffydd
1228 - 1282
Llewelyn
ap
Gruffydd
54
54
* Llywelyn ap Gruffudd (Y Lliw Olaf: Llywelyn the Last 1246-1282). Welsh custom meant that Llewelyn's kingdom would be divided among all four male heirs. Though Llywelyn the Great had tried desperately to ensure that his kingdoms would pass in entirety to his son Dafydd, it was not to be. Within one month of his accession, Dafydd was forced to surrender much of his father's gains to the new English King, Henry III. His premature death left Gwynedd to be divided between the sons of his brother Gruffudd, including Owain and Llywelyn. The infamous Treat of Woodstock had restricted their lands to Gwynedd, west of the River Conwy held as vassals of King Henry, but Llywelyn was not satisfied. He attempted to regain the lost territories and prestige of his uncle, Llywelyn the Great. Starting by depriving this brothers of authority, he began his campaign by attacking English castles and overrunning many. Recognized by other Welsh rulers, Llywelyn assumed the title of Prince of Wales in 1258, a date commemorated by all in Wales who detest the idea of the first born son of the English monarch assuming that role as a gift (in 1301, an odious and thoroughly bogus title was bestowed by Edward I to his eleventh child, son of Elinor and born at Caernarfon Castle, Gwynedd in 1284). Troubles with Henry III's barons led him to accede to many of Llywelyn's demands and in 1267, at the Treat of Montgomery, the Welshman (and his heirs) was confirmed as Prince of Wales. The accession of Edward I however, as king of a united England, meant the end of the ambitions of Llywelyn. Yet again, an English invasion of Wales meant that its rulers were stripped of most of their possessions and The Treaty of Aberconwy restricted Llywelyn from all his territories east of the Conwy. At Climeri, near Builth in mid-Wales in December, 1282, Llywelyn was killed by English soldiers in a skirmish with the English 11 Dec. 1282 during the last Welsh rebellion. The head of the last native-born Welsh princes was sent to London to be mounted as that of a traitor. Yet another ballad by Dafydd Iwan poignantly expresses sorrow at the death of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd. The royal house of Gwynedd was no more, and with its decease came the virtual end of the ruling families of the Kingdom of Wales. Source: http://www.britannia.com/wales/fam1.html.
1221
Gwladys
verch
Gruffydd
~1223
Guy
De
Lusignan
~1228
Aymer
De
Lusignan
~1232
Agatha
De
Lusignan
~1230
Marguerite
De
Lusignan
~1249 - 1270
Richard
de
Montfort
21
21
~1256
Rose
Brandeston
~1150 - 1218
Simon
IV de
Montfort
68
68
~1176 - 22 FEB 1220/21
Alice
De
Montmorency
~1129 - 1189
Bouchard
de
Montmorency
60
60
~1208 - 1265
Simon
V de
Montfort
57
57
MATTHEW of WESTMINSTER Simon de Montfort's Rebellion, 1265 This account, ascribed to a monk Matthew, living in Westminster Abbey, describes the rebellion of Simon de Montfort and his short-lived success, during the reign of Henry III, in 1265. The chronicler is by no means sympathetic to the rebellion. The prominence of these events is because the parliament summoned by Simon was seen, with some exaggeration, by 19th century historians, as the first modern parliament. The chronicler is less impressed. Simon de Montfort, the illustrious earl of Leicester , and the barons, having assembled their forces from all quarters, and collected troops, both of the Londoners, whose army had increased to fifteen thousand men, and of men from other parts in countless numbers, marched thither with great impetuosity and courage. Accordingly, they encamped at Flexinge, in Sussex, which is about six miles from Lewes, and three days before the battle, they addressed a message of the following tenor to their lord the king-- "To the most excellent lord Henry, by the grace Of God, king of England, &c. The barons and others, his faithful subjects, wishing to observe their oaths and the fidelity due to God and to him, wish health, and tender their lawful service with all respect and honor. As it is plain from much experience that those who are present with you have suggested to your highness many falsehoods respecting us, intending all the mischief that they can do, not only to you but also to us, and to your whole kingdom, we wish your excellency to know that we wish to preserve the safety and security of your person with all our might, as the fidelity which we owe to you demands, proposing to overthrow, to the utmost of our power, all those who are not our enemies but yours too, and the foes of the whole of your kingdom; and if any other statement is made to you respecting these matters, do not believe it; for we shall always be found your faithful subjects. And we, Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester, and Gilbert de Clare, at the request of the rest, have, for us and for them too who are here present, affixed our seals. Given at," etc. But the king, despising this letter from his barons, was eager for war with all his heart, and sent them back the following letter of defiance:- "Henry, by the grace of God, king of England, &c., to Simon de Montfort and Gilbert de Clare, and their partisans. Since, from the war and general confusion existing in our kingdom, which has all been caused by you, and by the conflagrations and other lawless mischiefs, it is distinctly visible that you do not preserve the fidelity which you owe to us, and that you have in no respect any regard for the safety of our person, since you have wickedly attacked our nobles and others our faithful subjects, who have constantly preserved their fidelity to us, and since you still design to injure them as far as in your power, as you have signified to us by your letters, we consider their grievances as our own, and look upon their enemies as ours; especially since those our faithful subjects before mentioned are manfully standing by us and maintaining their fidelity in opposition to your disloyal conduct, and we do not care for your safety or for your affection, but defy you, as the enemies of us and them. Witness my hand, at Lewes, on the twelfth day of May, in the forty-eighth year of our reign." "Richard, by the grace of God, king of the Romans, always Augustus, and Edward, the illustrious eldest son of the king of England, and all the other barons and nobles who constantly with the labors of sincere good faith and devotedness have adhered to the aforesaid king of England, to Simon de Montfort, Gilbert de Clare, and each and all the others who are accomplices in their treason. By your letters which you have sent to the illustrious king of England, our dearest lord, we understand that we are defied by you, although a verbal defiance of this kind was long ago sufficiently proved to us by actual reality, through your hostile pursuit of us, your burning of our properties, and general devastation of our possessions; we, therefore, wish you to know that you are all defied by each and all of us, as public enemies, and that we are your enemies; and that we will labor with all our might to the damage of your persons and property, whenever any opportunity of injuring either is offered . to us. But as to what- you falsely charge us with, that we give neither faithful nor salutary counsel to the king your master, you do not at all say the truth; and if you, Simon de Montfort or Gilbert de Clare, choose to assert this same thing in the court of our lord the king, we are prepared to procure a safe conduct and to come to the said court, and to prove the truth of our innocence in this particular, and your falsehood as perfidious traitors, by another who is your equal in nobleness and blood. And we are all content with the seals of the lords above mentioned, namely, of the king of the Romans and the lord Edward. Given as above." As, therefore, God did by no means admit of their coming to agreement, a most terrible battle took place between them, at Lewes, on the fourteenth of May, such as had never been heard of in past ages. The barons (among whom there was in all things and in every danger but one faith and one will, since they were so unanimous in their fraternal affection that they feared not even to die for their cause,) came the first thing in the morning in front of Lewes, and placed their tents and baggage on a hill, the chariot of the earl of Leicester, with his standard, being carefully placed below under the brow. And so the army and line of battle were arranged, and a speech of great persuasiveness was made to the soldiers by their general, Simon de Montfort, by which all were encouraged, and prepared to fight for their country with every feeling of security. Moreover, all of them having made a confession beforehand, crossed themselves on their shoulders and breasts. Therefore, the king and the other nobles, being informed of their sudden advance, wakened up all through the camp, and speedily assembled in arms, and marshaled their army for battle, arraying a vast multitude of men armed with breastplates; but the greater number of them being false and factious, and destitute of all proper principle, marched forward on that day without any order, and with precipitation, and fought unskillfully, and showed no steady perseverance. And in the actual battle the noblest of the knights and esquires, to the number of about three hundred, lost all courage, and turning their backs, fled to the castle of Peneneselli. Among them, were John, earl of Warrenne, William de Valence, Guy de Lizunac, both the two last being brothers of the king, Hugh Bigod, and many others. But the king's army, which was adorned with the royal standard, which they call the dragon, and which marshaled the way to a fierce contest to the death, advanced forward, and the battle began. For the royal troops rapidly opened their close battalions, and boldly urged their horses against the enemy, and attacked them on the flank. And thus the two armies encountered one another, with fierce blows and horrid noises. Therefore, in this way, the line of battle of the barons was pierced and broken; and John de Giffard, a gallant knight, who had been ambitious to gain the honor of striking the first blow, was taken prisoner, and led, away to the castle. But Edward got among the forces of the Londoners, and pursued them when flying, and letting the nobles escape, he followed them, as it is said, for a distance of about four miles, inflicting on them a most lamentable slaughter. For he thirsted for their blood as a punishment for the insult they had offered to his mother, for, as has been already recorded, they had heaped a great deal of abuse on his mother. But a part of the king's army, in the meantime, thirsting for the spoils, and booty, and plunder of the baggage which was on the hills, slew some of the citizens of London, who, for security's sake, had been introduced into the earl's chariot, hoping that they had found the earl himself there. But that earl, and Gilbert de Clare, and the other barons, acting with more sagacity, put forth all their strength to effect the capture of the king of England, and the king of Germany, and the rest of the chiefs. And there the fiery valor of the barons was visibly displayed, who fought eagerly for their country, and at last gained the victory. For the king of England was taken prisoner, after a very fine horse had been killed under him; and Richard, king of the Romans, was taken prisoner, and many others were taken also, namely, John de Balliol, Robert de Bruce, John Comyn, and other barons of Scotland , and nearly all the men-at-arms whom they had brought with them from Scotland were slain, to a very great number. There was but little mention made for a year of the deliverance of Edward, the king's eldest son, until he himself, as the price of his release, gave his palatine county of Chester to the aforesaid earl of Leicester, and thus he purchased his liberation from the imprisonment and custody of the knights, his enemies. No one can adequately relate the condition of the nobles of the Marches, and the persecutions which they endured for a year and more. But when the earl of Leicester endeavored to banish these lords marchers into Ireland, they, entering the camp of the king's eldest son, on the extreme borders of Wales, plundered the Welsh castles of their enemies before mentioned, and thus furnished themselves with the necessary supplies, until the aforesaid earl of Leicester, having taken prisoner earl Ferrars, who secretly inclined to the party adverse to the capture of the earl of Gloucester, who has been often mentioned, and whom they suspected of similar sentiments, came having united with the to Gloucester. For then the lords marchers earl of Gloucester to meet their common danger, when the earl of Warrenne and William de Valence came with a large company of cross-bowmen and knights and landed in South Wales, they were inspired with greater boldness to resist the attacks of their persecutors; and to march to encounter the earl of Leicester and his friends, who were leading the king of England and his son to Hereford as prisoners; who marched on, being accompanied by his own army, and that of the prince of North Wales, while Simon, his second son, as the general and commander of the royal army, which had been levied throughout the kingdom, advanced from the other side, so that the two hemmed in the earls of Gloucester and Warrenne, and the lords marchers, and slew them all. But by the overruling providence of God, who is the doorkeeper of prisons, the release of the prisoners was effected, and on the Thursday in Whitsun week, the eldest son of the king went out into the fields about Hereford with his comrades and guards to take exercise, and then, when they had all mounted their destrier horses, and fatigued them with galloping, he, after that, mounted a horse of his own which was not tired, and requesting leave of his companions (though he did not obtain it), he went with all speed to the lord Roger de Mortimer, at Wigemor. And the next day, the earls of Gloucester and Warrenne, with their followers, met Edward at Ludlow, and forgetting all their mutual injuries and quarrels, and renewing their friendship, they proceeded with courage and alacrity to break down the bridges and sink the ferry-boats over the Severn. Afterwards, as their force was increased by the friends of the aforesaid Edward, whom the power of the adverse party had long compelled to lie hid, and when they had taken Gloucester, and treated the prisoners with most extravagant cruelty, the earl of Leicester and his army, being hemmed in the district about Hereford, were compelled to lead their nominal king about as a prisoner, and to subject him, against his will, to all the hardships of captivity. And when Simon, the son of the aforesaid earl of Leicester, had, with many barons and knights, traversed and plundered all Kent, and the country about Winchester and the other southern districts of England, and then proceeded, to his own misfortune, with great speed to Kenilworth to meet his father, the aforesaid Edward and Gilbert and their armies, being, by the favor of God, forewarned of his approach, attacked his army at dawn on the day of Saint Peter ad Vincula, and took them all prisoners, except Simon and a few with him who escaped into the castle, and put them in chains, and stripped those robbers and plunderers of all their booty, and so celebrated a day of feasting at the New Chains. The earl of Leicester and his companions, being ignorant of this event, and marching on with all speed, reached the river Severn that very same day, and having examined the proper fords, crossed the river at twilight with the design of meeting and finding the aforesaid Simon and his army, who were coming from England, and having stopped the two next days on the borders of Worcestershire, on the third day they entered the town of Evesham, and while they were occupying themselves there with refreshing their souls, which had been long fainting under hunger and thirst, with a little food, their scouts brought them word that the lord Edward and his army were not above two miles off. So the earl of Leicester and the barons marching out with their lord the king (whom they took with them by force) to the rising ground of a gentle hill, beheld Edward and his army on the top of a hill, not above a stone's throw from them, and hastening to them. And a wonderful conflict took place, there being slain on the part of the lord Edward only one knight of moderate prowess, and two esquires. On the other side there fell on the field of battle Simon, earl of Leicester, whose head, and hands, and feet were cut off, and Henry, his son, Hugh Despenser, justiciary of England, Peter de Montfort, William de Mandeville, Radulph Basset, Roger St. John, Walter de Despigny, William of York, and Robert Tregos, all very powerful knights and barons, and besides all the guards and warlike cavalry fell in the battle, with the exception of ten or twelve nobles, who were taken prisoners. And the names of the nobles who were wounded and taken prisoners were as follows: Guy de Montfort, son of the earl of Leicester John Fitz-John, Henry de Hastings, Humphrey de Peter de Montfort the younger, Bohun the younger, John de Vescy, and Nicholas de Segrave. . . . Therefore, the battle of Evesham having been thus gallantly fought, the king and the nobles of the kingdom assembled at Winchester, and ordered that the richer citizens of the city of London should be thrust into prison, that the citizens should be deprived of their ancient liberties, and that the palisades and chains with which the city-was fortified should be removed, because the citizens had boldly adhered to Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester, in contempt of the king and also to the injury of the kingdom; all which was done, for the more powerful citizens were thrown into prison at the castle of Windsor, and were afterwards punished with a pecuniary fine of no inconsiderable amount. All liberty was forbidden to the citizens, and the Tower of London was made stronger by the palisades and chains which had belonged to the city. After this, a sentence of confiscation was pronounced at Westminster, on the feast of the translation of the blessed Edward, against the king's enemies, whose lands the king bestowed without delay on his own faithful followers. But some of those against whom this sentence was pronounced redeemed their possessions by payment of a sum of money, others uniting in a body lay hid in the Woods, living miserably on plunder and rapine; the most powerful and mischievous of whom was Robert, earl Ferrars, who was restored to the full possession of his property, on condition that his loyalty to the king, he should lose his if ever he departed from earldom. . .
~1230
Hugh
Brandeston
Sibell
~1200
Hugh
Brandeston
~1175
Radus
Brandeston
1255
John
Holt
~1170
Tanghurst
de
Meschines
~1155
Ralph
de
Mainwaring
* Title: Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet & Cecily de Neville Author: Ernst-Friedrich Kraentzler Publication: published by author 1978 Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: chart 1059 Text: Ralph de Meisneil-Manwaring, Seneschal of Chester *
14 FEB 1347/48 - 1402
Sir
William VII
Brereton
Baron of half of Malpas, lord of Egerton and Brereton Governor of Caen. Born 14th February 1348/9 at Egerton baptised at Malpas, Died of "honourable wounds" at Harfleur in 1402. | Married at Audley, 1386. Sir William Brereton, of Brereton, married his cousin, Angella (Annilla or Anylla), daughter of Hugh Venables, Baron of Kinderton, who died 41st of Edward III, and his wife Agatha, daughter of Sir Ralph Vernon, Baron of Shipbrooke. This marriage was confirmed by dispensation, which indulgence states that it was granted in consequence of the services of his father in the crusade against Henry of Castile, under Edward, the Black Prince. This William served with great distinction in the French Wars of Henry V. Chandler, in his Life of Bishop Wainfleet, speaks of Sir William Brereton, who through his daughter Margery was grandfather of the founder of Magdalen College. Chandler states Sir William to have afterwards been Governor of Caen, and to have routed a numerous army of French near Mont St. Michel, and to have returned home "with glory and increase of fortune." Sir William died in 4th of Henry VI, 1425, probably of honourable wounds received at the Battle of Pontoisan. By his first wife Anylla he had William, Hugh and Matthew and two daughters, Elizabeth, of whom further, and Margery, wife of Richard Patten alias Wainfleet. By his 2nd wife, Elena, daughter of Sir William Massey, he had a son Thomas, rector of Brereton 1433. William succeeded not only to the Brereton estate, but also in right of his mother to a share of the Barony of Malpas, which Elena's sister Isabella Delves had succeeded in wresting from David Malpas, the Bastard. William's 1st wife was related to him in the 4th degree on each side, in consequence of their mutual descent from Sir Ralph Vernon. This marriage took place at Audlem in 1386. He held in demesne as of fee one-fourth and a moiety of a fourth of half the Manor of Malpas, a third of Pickton, and lands in Wordhull, Crouton, Charleton and Northwick.
~1366
Angella
de
Venables
~1387
William
VIII
Brereton
~1336 - 1379
Sir
Hugh de
Venables
43
43
1335 - >1398
Margery
Cotton
63
63
~1369 - 1459
Margery
De
Venables
90
90
~1362
Richard
de
Venables
~1285
Alan
De
Coton
~1350
Joan
de
Venables
~1321
Isabel
de
Heyton
~1288 - 30 JAN 1351/52
Thomas
de
Heyton
Agnes
~1257
Thomas
de
Heyton
~1290
Margaret de
Acton-
Hellesby
1270
Roger
de
Hellesby
1268
Maude
de
Acton
~1242
William
de
Acton
~1244
Agnes
Toft
~1200
William
Toft
~1204
Joan
de
Lobstock
~1170
Roger
Toft
~1170 - ~1228
William
De
Venables
58
58
~1140
Gilbert
III de
Venables
~1145
Margary
Croxton
de Hatton
~1115
Waithew
de
Hatton
~1110 - 1160
William
de
Venables
50
50
~1075
Gilbert
de
Venables
~1117
Amabilia
de
Venables
1112
Hamon
de
Venables
~1080
Margary
de
Hatton
~1049
Sir
Walter de
Hatton
~1099 - 1130
Gilbert
de
Venables
31
31
~1069
Eudo
de
Venables
~1120
Gilbert
de
Venables
~1150
Gilbert
de
Venables
~1020
Sir
William
Ramsay
~1034
Paula
du
Maine
1076
Agnes
Paynel
~1279
Lucia
de
Thwenge
~1262
Robert
de
Thwenge
~1214
Hawise
de
Lancaster
~1235
Margaret
De
Bruce
1230 - 1314
Nicholas
De
Stapleton
84
84
~1215
Piers
de
Fauconberg
~1150
Richard
le
Grammaire
~1121
Rohais
de
Romara
~1162 - ~1239
Gilbert
De
Lancaster
77
77
~1170
Emma
Darell
~1225
Cecilia
De
Thwenge
~1140
Lord
Duncan
Darell
~1135 - ~1190
Robert
De
Thweng
55
55
~1140
Emma
De
Lund
~1110
Duncan
De
Lund
~1109
Robert
De
Thweng
~1080
Pagan
Fitz-Walter
de Thweng
~1085
Fossard
~1215 - >1260
William
Constable
45
45
~1261
Katherine
de
Mauley
~1054 - ~1115
Osberne
de
Arches
61
61
~1095
Agnes
de
Arches
~1132
Herbert
St.
Quintin
~1099 - 1143
Adam
de
Bruce
44
44
~1000
Emmeline
~1103 - 1130
Agnes
D'Aumale
27
27
~1010
Adele
1026 - 1096
Eudes
D'Aumale
70
70
1029 - <1090
Adbelahide
De
Normandie
61
61
~1020
Lulelph
de
Lumley
~1110
Orme
de
Toft
~1080
Arnold
de
Toft
Ivo
~0972 - 1030
Seigneur de
Montmorency
Herve
58
58
~0980
Agnes
1025
Bouchard
III de
Montmorency
~1072
Adelaide
de
Montmorency
~1099
Alice
~0906
Seigneur
de Gournay
Hugh
~0936
Renaud
de
Gournay
~1094
Geoffrey
de
Saye
~1099
Hawise
de
Clare
~1125
William
de
Saye
~1030 - 1098
Robert
de
Saye
68
68
~1077
Henry
de
Saye
~1000
Robert
de
Saye
~0970 - 1030
Picot
de
Saye
60
60
1220
Robert
de
Acton
~1222
Hawise
1250
Alan
de
Hellesby
1258
Beatrice
de
Hatton
~1268
William
de
Hellesby
~1270
Alice
Hawise
Tursell
~1345 - 1382
Jean
(Joan)
Fitton
37
37
1376
William
Venables
~1389 - 1458
Alice
Corbet
69
69
~1250
Alice
de
Orreby
~1215 - >1261
Fulke
de
Orreby
46
46
~1218
Philippe
Le
Strange
Alice
de
Baumville
1298 - <1347
John
Corbet
49
49
1324
John
Corbet
1355
John
Corbet
Joan
1414 - 1456
William
IX
Brereton
42
42
~1416
Philippa
de
Hulse
~1448
Andrew
Brereton
~1456
Agnes
De
Leigh
~1376
Joan
Massey
Mainwairing
~1206
Alice
Ciceley
Whitney
~1242
Hamon
VI de
Massey
~1245
Alice
de
Beauchamp
~1140
Alice
De
Beauchamp
~1272
William
de
Massey
~1280
Isabella
De
Massey
~1262
Cecily
de
Massey
~1277
Margery
de
Leigh
~1310 - ~1371
Hugh
Massey
61
61
~1320
Anabel
de
Wrenbury
~1340
John
Massey
~1345
Alice
de
Worsley
~1491
Elizabeth
Boteler
~1398
Alice
Venables
~1320 - ~1375
Hamon
Fitton
55
55
~1325
Elizabeth
de
Thornton
~1290
Sir Peter
De
Thornton
~1294
Lucia
De
Hellesby
~1316 - <1355
Eleanor
de
Thornton
39
39
~1335
Matilda
de
Thornton
~1323
Margaret
de
Thornton
~1455 - 1525
Margaret
Savage
70
70
1343 - 1386
Sir
John
Savage
43
43
1347 - 1428
Margaret
Danyers
81
81
~1325
Thomas
Danyers
~1325
Isabel
Baggileigh
~1295
Sir
William
Baggileigh
~1308
Cleamence
de
Dutton
~1268
Roger
de
Dutton
Maud
~1227 - 1296
Geoffrey
de
Dutton
69
69
Margaret
~1209
Agnes
de
Dutton
~1190 - >1236
Geoffrey
de
Dutton
46
46
~1180
Agnes
de
Massey
~1276
Peter
de
Dutton
~1200
William
de
Hatton
1229 - >1260
Adam
de
Hatton
31
31
1236
Matilda
of
Bretargh
1206
Baron of
Bretargh
Hugh
1170 - >1189
Sir
Hugh de
Hatton
19
19
1180
Nichola
Boydell
~1150 - >1200
William
Boydell
50
50
~1120
Helton
Boydell
1142
Ralph
de
Hatton
~1147
Nichola
de
Lindsay
~1117
Simon
de
Lindsay
~1112
Roger
de
Hatton
~1120
Elizabeth
Normanville
1129 - ~1216
Hamon
III de
Massey
87
87
~1204 - >1261
Hugh
de
Fitton
57
57
~1155
Thomas
de
Fitton
~1160
Cecilia
de
Massey
1234 - 1298
Edmund
de
Fitton
64
64
~1175 - ~1237
Richard
de
Fitton
62
62
~1180
Ellen
~1148
Richard
de
Fitton
~1300
Joan
de
Leigh
~1298 - >1372
Sir
Richard
Fitton
74
74
~1265
Ralph
Robert
Baggileigh
~1285 - 1374
Thomas
Danyers
89
89
~1300
Margaret
de
Tabley
~1250
Robert
Adam de
Tabley
~1260
Beatrix
~1250 - ~1306
William
Danyers
56
56
~1280
Agnes de
Lymm-
Leigh
~1260
Cicely
de
Leigh
~1328
Thomas
De
Massey
~1225
Richard
de
Lymm
~1236
Agnes
de
Leigh
~1202
Richard
de
Leigh
~1185
Richard
de
Leigh
~1160
Richard
de
Leigh
~1130
William
de
Leigh
~1205
Hugh
de
Lymm
~1205
Emma
~1200 - ~1250
Gilbert
de
Lymm
50
50
~1230 - ~1285
Thomas
Danyers
55
55
~1205 - ~1260
Robert
Danyers
55
55
~1180 - ~1240
Robert
Danyers
60
60
1194 - 1250
Frederick
II von
Hohenstaufen
55
55
King of Sicily Note: Frederick II (Holy Roman Empire) (1194-1250), Holy Roman emperor (1215-50) and as Frederick I, king of Sicily (1198-1212). Born in Lesi, Italy, on December 26, 1194, Frederick was the son of Henry VI and grandson of Frederick I, Holy Roman emperor. He wasmade German king in 1196 and on the death of his father twoyears later became king of Sicily. When his mother, Constance ofSicily (1146-98), acting as regent, died several months later,the four-year-old prince was placed under the guardianship ofPope Innocent III, the new regent of Sicily. Emperor Otto IV was deposed in 1211, and the German princes selected Frederick to replace him. A contest for the imperial throne ensued, because Otto was unwilling to relinquish the crown. Supported by the papacy, to which he promised many concessions, and aided by the French, Frederick was eventually secure in his title. He was crowned king of Germany at Aix-la-Chapelle (now Aachen, Germany in 1215 and Holy Roman emperor at Rome in 1220. On hiscoronation Frederick made a number of elaborate promises to thechurch, including a vow that he would go on a Crusade. Hepostponed the Crusade, however, because of an outbreak of anarchy in Sicily and because of the resistance of the Lombard cities, which in 1226 renewed the Lombard League, originally formed against his grandfather, Frederick I. The following year Frederick annulled the Treaty of Constance and put the Lombard cities under the ban of the empire. Threatened several times with excommunication if he did not fulfill his coronation pledge, Frederick determined to sail for Jerusalem in 1227. An epidemic forced him to return three days after his departure,whereupon Pope Gregory IX declared him excommunicated. In 1228 Frederick led the Fifth Crusade to the Holy Land, where he took Jerusalem and concluded a 10-year truce with the sultan of Egypt. Having married Yolande (1212-28?), the young daughter of the titular king of Jerusalem, John of Brienne, and having assumed his title upon her death, Frederick was crowned king ofJerusalem in that city in 1229. He returned to Europe and spent many of his remaining years attempting to bring the Lombards under subjection. During intermittent struggles with the papacy he was excommunicated twice again, by Pope Gregory IX in 1239 and in 1245 by Pope Innocent IV. His participation in costly wars in Italy caused him to neglect the welfare of his German subjects. Frederick managed to establish peace, prosperity, and order in Sicily, however, promulgating there in 1231 a comprehensive code of laws, described as the best issued by any Western ruler since the reign of Charlemagne. Frederick also made worthy contributions to learning in Italy. Because he was a man of culture, he gathered scholars and men of letters at his Sicilian court, which Dante called the birthplace of Italian poetry. The University of Naples was founded by Frederick in1224. For about a century after his death, on December 13, 1250,the belief persisted that Frederick was still alive. According to one famous legend, Frederick resides in a cave in the Kyffhäuser Mountains, in the region of Thuringia, awaiting the summons of the German people to return and restore peace in the empire. The legend was later interpreted to refer to Frederick I.
~1237 - 1265
Henry
de
Montfort
28
28
1238 - 1271
Simon
IV de
Montfort
32
32
18 JAN 1237/38
Henry
von
Hohenstaufen
1154 - 1198
Constance
of
Sicily
44
44
1095
Roger
II
Guiscard
Note: Roger II (1095-1154), first king of Sicily (1130-54), who created a state in which Arabs, Greeks, Italians, and Jews lived together in peace and in which the arts and letters flourished.The second son of Roger I, the Norman conqueror of Sicily, Roger succeeded his brother Simon (died 1105) as count of Sicily in1103. When his cousin Duke William of Apulia died in 1127, Roger laid claim to that duchy; by 1129 he had compelled the Norman barons on the Italian mainland to acknowledge him as theirruler. In 1130 he adopted the title of king of Sicily, with sovereignty also over the southern Italian regions of Apulia, Calabria, Capua, and Naples, establishing a monarchy that survived for more than seven centuries. He was recognized asking by Pope Innocent II (r. 1130-43) in 1139. Roger made his court at Palermo one of Europe's foremost cultural centers, and he erected throughout Sicily numerous buildings that were a striking blend of Norman, Arabic and Byzantine architectural styles.
~1100
Beatrice
De
Réthel
~1025 - 1101
Roger
I
Guiscard
76
76
Adelaide
Di
Sicilia
1181
Mary
de
Montferrat
~1020
Frasenda
of
Normandy
~1215 - 8 FEB 1287/88
Heinrich
"Der
Erlauchte"
~1020
Guillaume
Guiscard
~1025
Fredisendis
Guiscard
~1212 - 1228
Yolande
De
Brienne
16
16
1222 - 1266
Manfred
von
Hohenstaufen
44
44
1250
Constance von
Hohenstaufen
di Sicilia
1175 - 1219
Maria
De
Montpellier
44
44
1219 - 1251
Yolande
Violante
32
32
2 FEB 1207/08 - 1276
Jaime I
Pedrez "The
Conqueror"
Like his grandfather, ascended to the crown at the age of five. It was run by a regency until he came of age; and his uncle Sanc, Count of Provence, managed the finances and paid off his father's debts. He later became known for leading military campaigns that captured Majorca and the other Balearic islands, as well as Valencia, from the Moors.
1239 - 1285
Pedro
III "the
Great"
46
46
King of Sicily 1282-1285. King of Aragon 1276-1285.
~1232
Perronelle
De
Montfort
~1240 - 1283
Constança
of
Aragón
43
43
1267 - 1327
Jaime
II "the
Just"
60
60
~1266
Alfonso
III "the
Liberal"
1349 - 19 FEB 1373/74
Sancho
De
Castile
1357 - 1381
Brites
de
Portugal
24
24
>1260 - 1321
Maria
Alfonsa
de Molina
61
61
~1270
Alfonso
de la
Cerda
1282 - 1348
Juan Manuel
"el Scritor"
de Castilla
66
66
~1335
Juan
de la
Cerda
~1332
Isabel
de la
Cerda
~1311 - 1347
Blanca
de la
Cerda
36
36
1313 - 18 JAN 1356/57
Maria
Affansez
De Portugal
1320 - 18 JAN 1366/67
Pedro
I "the
Justicer"
Fernando
de la
Cerda
Luis
de la
Cerda
1318 - 1351
Leonora
de
Guzman
33
33
JAN 1366/67
Infanta
De Castile
Juana
1335
Fabrique
Alfansez
1329 - 1381
Juana
Manuel
De Castile
52
52
~1354
John I "the
Hunter" of
Aragón
1328 - 1348
Leonor
of
Portugal
20
20
1349
Juana
Palomilla
1370
Alonzo
Fabriquez
1380
Juana
Perez De
Mendoza
1403 - 1473
Fedrique
Alonzez
70
70
1400
Mariana
Fernandez
De Cordova
1425 - 13 FEB 1467/68
Juana
Fedriquez
1398 - 19 JAN 1477/78
Juan II
De
Aragón
1151 - 1188
Urraca
De
Portugal
37
37
Teresa
Fernandez
De Traba
Urraca
Lopez
De Haro
1110 - 1185
Alfanso I
Enriques
De Portugal
75
75
1133 - 1157
Matilda
De
Maurienne
24
24
1154
Sancho
Martino
Adelaide
1068 - 1130
Teresa
Alfanso
De Castile
62
62
~0887
Richard
De
Milhaud
Bertha
De
Burgundy
Norma
De
Granol
~0947
Berenger
I De
Milhaud
1138 - 1177
Sancha
De
Navarre
39
39
1116 - 3 FEB 1147/48
Berenguela
Raimundo of
Barcelona
1126 - 1189
Urraca
Alfansa
De Castile
63
63
~1110
Gontrada
Perez
1154 - 1208
Sancha
Alfansez
54
54
1133 - 1156
Blanch
Garces
23
23
1096 - 1150
Garcia
VI
Ramirez
54
54
1100 - 1141
Marguerite
D'Laigle
41
41
1130 - 1194
Sancho
Garces
64
64
1070
Gilbert
De
L'Aigle
~1070
Julienne
De
Perche
1220
Arthur
De
Dreux
1195
Agnés
De
Dreux
Agnes
De
Beaujeu
~1210
Nicole
~1190
Guigone
De
Forez
~1150 - 12 JAN 1215/16
Gui II
De
Dampierre
1165 - 1228
Mahaut
De
Bourbon
63
63
~1130
Ermengarde
De
Mouchy
~1182 - 1241
Guillaume
II De
Dampierre
59
59
~1135 - 1164
Archambaud
VII De
Bourbon
29
29
~1140 - 1192
Adelaide
De
Burgundy
52
52
1118 - 1162
Eudes
44
44
1066 - 1099
Ulrich
Von
Cham
33
33
~1170 - 23 MAR 1233/34
William
II des
Barres
1131
Mathilda
De
Burgundy
1130
William
VII De
Montpellier
1158
VIII
William
1097
Eudoxia
Comnenus
~0995
Alexios
Charon
Dalassenos
Ekaterina
De
Bulgaria
1085
Maria
Comnena
Constantine
Laskaris
1091
Theodorus
Kastamonitissa
1152
Eirene
Comnenus
1118 - 1185
Andronicus
I
Comnenus
67
67
~1125
Philippa
De
Antioch
1103
Raymond
I De
Poitiers
Nicolas
II De
Rumigny
Beatrix
De
Rumigny
~1178
King of
Hungary
Imre
1099
Guillaume
VIII De
Aquitaine
1011 - 1079
Raymond
I De
Melgueil
68
68
Agnes
of
Aquitaine
~0970
Arduin
II Di
Ramagnano
~0930
Arduin
Di
Ramagnano
1063
William
V De
Montpellier
Marquis
de Vaste
Marcis
~1070
Ermesende
De
Melgueil
1035
William
IV De
Montpellier
0986
Bernard
III De
Melgueil
~0990
Countess of
Substantion
Adele
0964
Berenger
II De
Melgueil
0942
Bernard
II De
Melgueil
Senegunde
0918
Berenger
De
Melgueil
~0885
Bernard
De
Melgueil
0864
Robert
II De
Melgueil
~0840
Robert
De
Melgueil
~0810
Amic
De
Navaronne
~0780
Aigulf
De
Navaronne
1008 - 1063
William
III De
Montpellier
55
55
~0975
William
II De
Montpellier
1004
Judith
De
Montpellier
~0950
William
I De
Montpellier
~1148 - 1192
Hughes
44
44
1192 - 1242
Ann
De
Bourgogne
50
50
1066 - 24 FEB 1111/12
Adelaide
Von
Frantenhausen
1007 - 1031
Welfin
Von
Altdorf
24
24
1033
Kuno
Von
Frantenhausen
1040
Mathilda
Von
Achalm
~1010
Rudolph
Von
Achalm
~1020
Adelheid
Von
Wolfingen
~0975
Kuno I
Von
Altdorf
~0960
IV
Garcia
~1010
Jimina
De
Lâeon
~1000
Fernando
Gundemarez
1051 - 1115
Jimene
De
Oviedo
64
64
~0810
Rudolf
Von
Austgau
~1082
Dreux
III De
Mouchy
~1099
Dreux
IV De
Mouchy
~0990
Urraca
Garces
~0825
Asura
~0518
Galswinthe
0493 - 0531
Amalaric
II De
Visigoths
38
38
~0507 - 0531
Clotilde
of the
Franks
24
24
~0820
Argilo
0311 - 15 NOV 375
Valentinia
~0316
Justina
~0350
Aelia
Flavia
Flacilla
~0333
Justa
Valentinia
~0290
Licinianus
0267 - 0324
Valerius
Licinianus
57
57
0270
Constantia
Aristobulbus
Bernice
Herod
Judea
HEROD THE GREAT, KING OF JUDEA Herod (73-4 BCE) was the pro-Roman king of the small Jewish state in the last decades before the common era. He started his career as a general, but the Roman statesman Mark Antony recognized him as the Jewish national leader. During a war against the Parthians, Herod was removed from the scene, but the Roman Senate made him king and gave him soldiers to seize the the throne. As 'friend and ally of the Romans' he was not a truly independent king; however, Rome allowed him a domestic policy of his own. Although Herod tried to respect the pious feeling of his subjects, many of them were not content with his rule, which ended in terror. He was succeeded by his sons. Herod was born 73 BCE as the son of a man from Idumea named Antipater and a woman named Cyprus, the daughter of an Arabian sheik. Antipater was an adherent of Hyrcanus, one of two princes who struggling to become king of Judaea. In this conflict, the Roman general Pompey intervened in Hyrcanus' favor. Having favored the winning side in the conflict, Antipater's star rose, especially since he cooperated with the Romans as much as possible. In the civil war between Pompey and Julius Caesar, Hyrcanus and Antipater sided with the latter, for which especially the courtier was rewarded: in 47, he was appointed epitropos ('regent') and received the Roman citizenship. It was obvious that Antipater was the real power behind Hyrcanus' throne. He managed to secure the appointment of his young son Herod to the important task of governor of Galilee. The boy, who was only sixteen years old, launched a small crusade against bandits, which made him very popular with the populace and impopular with the Sanhedrin. On March 15, 44 BCE, Caesar was murdered. The new leaders in Rome were Caesar's nephew Octavian and Caesar's powerful second-in-command Mark Antony. They announced that they would punish Caesar's murderers, Brutus and Cassius, who fled to the East. Cassius ordered all provinces and principalities to pay money for their struggle against Octavian and Mark Antony, and Judaea had to pay some 15,000 kg of silver. Antipater and his sons had to take harsh measures to get the money, and in the ensuing troubles, Antipater was killed. With Roman help, Herod killed his father's murderer. In 43, Hyrcanus' nephew Antigonus tried to obtain the throne. Herod defeated him, and secured the continuity of the line of Hyrcanus by marrying his daughter Mariamme. Of course, the young man was not blind to the fact that this marriage greatly enhanced his own claim to the throne. Meanwhile, Octavian and Mark Antony had defeated Brutus and Cassius (at Philippi, in 42). Herod managed to convince Mark Antony, who made a tour through the eastern provinces that had supported Caesar's murderers, that his father had been forced to support their side. The Roman leader was convinced, and awarded Herod with the title of tetrarch of Galilee, a title that was commonly used for the leaders of parts of vassal kingdoms. (Herod's brother Phasael was to be tetrarch of Jerusalem; Hyrcanus remained the Jewish national leader in name only.) This appointment caused a lot of resentment among the Jews. After all, Herod was not a Jew. He was the son of a man from Idumea; and although Antipater had been a pious man who had worshipped the Jewish God sincerely, the Jews had always looked down upon the Idumeans as racially impure. Worse, Herod had an Arabian mother, and it was commonly held that one could only be a Jew when one was born from a Jewish mother. When war broke out between the Romans and the Parthians (in modern Iran and Iraq), the Jewish populace joined the latter. In 40, Hyrcanus was taken prisoner and brought to the Parthian capital Babylon; Antigonus became king in his place; Phasael committed suicide. Herod managed to escape and went to Rome, where he persuaded Octavian and the Senate to order Mark Antony to restore him. And so it happened. After Mark Antony and his lieutenants had driven away the Parthians, Herod was brought back to Jerusalem by two legions, VI Ferrata (whose men had already fought in Gaul and the civil wars) and another legion (37 BCE). Antigonus was defeated and after he had besieged and captured Jerusalem and defeated the last opposition (click here), Herod could start his reign as sole ruler of Judaea. He assumed the title of basileus, the highest possible title. Herod's reign Herod's monarchy was based on foreign weapons; the start of his reign had been marked by bloodshed. His first aim was to establish his rule on a more solid base. Almost immediately, he sent envoys to the Parthian king to get Hyrcanus back from Babylon. The Parthian king was happy to let the old man go, because he was becoming dangerously popular among the Jews living in Babylonia. Although Hyrcanus was unfit to become high priest again, Herod kept his father-in-law in high esteem. The support of the old monarch gave an appearance of legality to his own rule. The new king started an extensive building program: Jews could take pride in the new walls of Jerusalem and the citadel which guarded its Temple. (This fortress was called Antonia, in order to please Herod's patron Mark Antony.) Coins were minted in his own name and showed an incense burner on a tripod, intended to signify Herod's care for the orthodox Jewish cult practices. These coins had a Greek legend -HÈRÔDOU BASILEÔS- which indicates that Herod considered his standing abroad. And the new king continued to please the Romans, to make sure that they would continue their support. He sent lavish presents to their representative in the East, Mark Antony, and to his mistress, the Egyptian queen Cleopatra. These gifts almost were Herod's undoing. The relations between on the one hand Mark Antony and Cleopatra in the East and on the other hand Octavian and the Senate in the West became strained, and civil war broke out in 31. It did not last very long: in August, the western leader defeated the eastern leader, who fled to Alexandria. For the first time in his life, Herod had aligned himself with a looser. He managed to solve this problem, however. First, he had Hyrcanus executed, making sure that no one else could claim his throne. Then, he sailed to the island of Rhodes, where he met Octavian. In a brilliant speech, Herod boasted of his loyalty to Mark Antony, and promised the same to the new master of the Roman Empire. Octavian was impressed by the man's audacity, confirmed Herod's monarchy, and even added the coast of Judaea and Samaria to his realm. Actually, Octavian did not have much choice: his opponents were still alive, and if he were to pursue them to Egypt, Herod could be a useful ally. As it turned out, Mark Antony and Cleopatra preferred death to surrender, and Octavian became the only ruler in the Roman world. Under the name Augustus, he became the first emperor. He rewarded his ally with new possessions: a.o. Jericho and Gaza, which had been independent. Herod's position was still insecure. He continued his building policy to win the hearts of his subjects. (A severe earthquake in 31 BCE had destroyed many houses, killing thousands of people.) In Jerusalem, the king built a new market, an amphitheater, a theater, a new building where the Sanhedrin could convene, a new royal palace, and last but not least, in 20 BCE he started to rebuild the Temple. And there were other cities where he ordered new buildings to be placed: Jericho and Samaria are examples. New fortresses served the security of both the Jews and their king: Herodion was one of them, Masada another. [Coin of king Herod the Great.] But Herod's crowning achievement was a splendid new port, called Caesarea in honor of the emperor (the harbor was called Sebastos, the Greek translation of 'Augustus'). This magnificent and opulent city, which was dedicated in 9 BCE, was build to rival Alexandria in the land trade to Arabia, from where spices, perfume and incense were imported. It was not an oriental town like Jerusalem; it was laid out on a Greek grid plan, with a market, an aqueduct, government offices, baths, villas, a circus, and pagan temples. (The most important of these was the temple where the emperor was worshipped; it commanded the port.) The port was a masterpiece of engineering: its piers were made from hydraulic concrete (which hardens underwater) and protected by unique wave-breaking structures. Although Herod was a dependent client-king, he had a foreign policy of his own. He had already defeated the Arabs from Petra in 31, and repeated this in 9 BCE. The Romans did not like this independent behavior, but on the whole, they seem to have been very content with their king of Judaea. After all, he sent auxiliaries when they decided to send an army to the mysterious incense country (modern Yemen; 25 BCE). In 23, Iturea and the Golan heights were added to Herod's realms, and in 20 several other districts. With building projects, the expansion of his territories, the establishment of a sound bureaucracy, and the development of economic resources, he did much for his country, at least on a material level. The standing of his country -foreign and at home- was certainly enhanced. However, many of his projects won him the bitter hatred of the orthodox Jews, who disliked Herod's Greek taste - a taste he showed not only in his building projects, but also in several transgressions of the Mosaic Law. The orthodox were not to only ones who came to hate the new king. The Sadducees hated him because he had terminated the rule of the old royal house to which many of them were related; their own influence in the Sanhedrin was curtailed. The Pharisees despised any ruler who despised the Law. And probably all his subjects resented his excessive taxation. According to Flavius Josephus, there were two taxes in kind at annual rates equivalent to 10.7% and 8.6%, which is extremely high in any preindustrial society (Jewish Antiquities 14.202-206). It comes as no surprise that Herod sometimes had to revert to violence, employing mercenaries and a secret police to enforce order. On moments like that, it was clear to anyone that Herod was not a Jewish but a Roman king. He had become the ruler of the Jews with Roman help and he boasted to be philokaisar ('the emperor's friend'). On top of the gate of the new Temple, a golden eagle was erected, a symbol of Roman power in the heart of the holy city resented by all pious believers. Worse, Augustus ordered and paid the priests of the Temple to sacrifice twice a day on behalf of himself, the Roman senate and people. The Jewish populace started to believe rumors that their pagan ruler had violated Jewish tombs, stealing golden objects from the tomb of David and Salomo. [Coin of king Herod the Great.] Herod concluded ten marriages, all for political purposes. They were probably all unhappy. His wives were: 1. Doris, from an unknown family in Jerusalem: married c.47, sent away 37; recalled 14, sent away 7/6. She was the mother of Antipater, who was executed in 4. 2. The Hasmonaean princess Mariamme I: married 37, executed in 29/28. According to Flavius Josephus, Herod was passionately devoted to this woman, but she hated him just as passionately. Nonetheless, she bore him five children: Alexander, Aristobulus, a nameless son, Salampsio and Cyprus. 3. An unknown niece: married 37. No children. 4. An unknown cousin: married c.34/33. No children. 5. The daughter of a Jerusalem priest named Simon, Mariamme II: married 29/28, divorced 7/6. They had a son named Herod. 6. A Samarian woman named Malthace: married 28, died 5/4. Their children were Antipas, Archelaus and Olympias. 7. A Jerusalem woman named Cleopatra: married 28. They had two sons named, Herod and Philip. 8. Pallas: married 16. They had a son named Phasael. 9. Phaedra: married 16. They had a daughter named Roxane. 10. Elpis: married 16. They had a daughter named Salome. Herod's reign ended in terror. The monastery at Qumran, the home of the Essenes, suffered a violent and deliberate destruction by fire in 8 BCE, for which Herod may have been responsible. When the king fell ill, two popular teachers, Judas and Matthias, incited their pupils to remove the golden eagle from the entrance of the Temple: after all, according to the Ten Commandments, it was a sin to make idols. The teachers and the pupils were burned alive. Some Jewish scholars had discovered that seventy-six generations had passed since the Creation, and there was a well-known prophecy that the Messiah was to deliver Israel from its foreign rulers in the seventy-seventh generation. The story about the slaughter of infants of Bethlehem in the second chapter of the Gospel of Matthew is not known from other sources, but it would have been totally in character for the later Herod to commit such a terrible act. A horrible disease (probably a cancer-like affection called Fournier's gangrene) made acute the problem of Herod's succession, and the result was factional strife in his family. Shortly before his death, Herod decided against his sons Aristobulus and Antipater, who were executed in 7 and 4 BCE, causing the emperor Augustus to joke that it was preferable to be Herod's pig (hus) than his son (huios) - a very insulting remark to any Jew. However, the emperor confirmed Herod's last will. After his death in 4 BCE, the kingdom was divided among his sons. Herod Antipas was to rule Galilee and the east bank of the Jordan as a tetrarch; Philip was to be tetrarch of the Golan heights in the north-east; and Archelaus became the ethnarch ('national leader') of Samaria and Judaea. Herod was buried in one of the fortresses he had build, Herodion. Few will have wept.
Antipater
Idumaea
I
Marianne
Phasael
Alexander
Salampsio
Cyprus
Mariamme
Herod
Malthace
of
Samaria
Antipas
Archelaus
Olympias
Cleopatra
Herod
Philip
Pallas
Phasael
Phaedra
Roxane
Elpis
Salome
Priest in
Jerusalem
Simon
Cyprus
Prince of
Hasmonae
Hyrcanus
Justus
Calpernius
Eunice
Marcella
Corelia
~0265
Emperor
of Rome
Maxentius
~0280
Gratianius
Severa
Nastila
~0350 - 0378
Clodius
28
28
~0370 - 0389
Duke of the
West Franks
Dagobert
19
19
~0352
Duke of the
East Franks
Genebald
~0354 - 0389
Duke of the
East Franks
Dagobert
35
35
first Duke under the Romans who changed the title from King to Duke
Matilda
~0325 - 0386
Thermantia
61
61
~0970 - 1011
Gondemaro
De
Asturias
41
41
~0940
Piniola
Jimenez
~0945
Aldonza
Munez
Jimeno
Jimenez
Aragonata
~0990
Diego
Rodriguez
De Oviedo
~0960
Rodrigo
Alvarez
~1025 - 1058
Diego
Lainez Diaz
De Vivar
33
33
~1038
Teresa
Rodriguez
~1010
Rodrigo
Alvarez
~1024
Theresa
Nunez De
Amaya
~0980
Gutierre
De
Castro
~1010
Gontrode
De
Castro
~1028
Jimena
Nunez De
Castro
0933
Fernando
Lainez
Lain
Fernandez
~0972
Nuno
Lainez
~0985
Eilone
Fernandez
~1000 - 1066
Lain
Nunez
66
66
~0967
Fernan
Ruiz
~0950
Rodrigo
Bermudez
0930
Bermido
Lainez
0908
Lain
De
Castile
0915
Teresa
Elvira
Munez
~0885
Muno
Nunez
~0860
Nuno
Nunez
Muniadomna
Nunez
0929 - 0985
Gonzalo
Mendez
Garces
56
56
~0860
Nuno
Nunez
Amaya
~0860
Sulla
Asura
~0845
Gutina
De
Castile
~0970
Totadonma
~0980 - 1025
Urraca
Salvadorez
45
45
~0964
Salvador
Perez
~0945
Pedro
Fernandez
~0912 - 0970
Fernando
Gonsalez
58
58
~0935
Urraca
Garces De
Navarre
0915
Sancha
Sanchez
De Navarre
~1025
Estefana
De
Foix
~1020
Velasquita
~0840
Aurea
~0860
I
Muhammad
~0910
Andregoto
Galindez
0941 - 0994
Sancho
Abraca II
Garces
53
53
~0880
Abd
Allah
~1066 - ~1092
Richard
De
Montfort
26
26
~0808
Uracca
Mayor
0809 - 0864
Sancho
Lopez
55
55
~0765
Garcia
Jimenez
0772 - 0816
Lope
Sancho
Lopez
44
44
Leogundis
De
Asturias
0790 - ~0852
Inigo
Iniguez
Arista
62
62
1225 - 1261
Sancha
Bâerenger
36
36
Countess of Cornwall; Queen of the Romans
~0935
Aragonta
Pelaez
~0770
Diego
Mendez
~0780
Munia
Palayez
De Valdez
~0789
Roland
The
Palatine
~0750
Milo I
De
Ver
~0790
Avelina
De
Nauntes
~0780
Milo II
De
Vere
~0830
Agathe
De
Champagne
~0970
Manasses
De
Vere
~0980
Petronila
De
Boleine
~0940
Guillaume
De
Vere
~0950
Gerbrudis
De
Clermont
~0900
Amelius
De
Vere
~0915
Helena
De
Blois
~0860
Otbo
De
Vere
~0870
Constance
De
Chartres
~0820
Nicasius
De
Vere
1126
Beatrice
~0935
Count
of Metz
Richard
~0920
Manfried
De
Metz
~0954
Eva
Of
Luxembourg
~0865
Lantsind
~0860 - 0930
Manfried
De
Metzgau
70
70
~1213
Joan
De
Valletort
~1360
John
De
Hastings
1176 - 1216
John
Plantagenet
40
40
1246 - 1246
Richard
Plantagenet
1m
1m
1250 - 1300
Edward
Plantagenet
49
49
1252 - 1296
Richard
Plantagenet
44
44
~1280
Edward
Plantagenet
1235
Henry
Plantagenet
1233
Isabel
Plantagenet
2 FEB 1230/31
John
Plantagenet
17 JAN 1238/39
Nicholas
Plantagenet
~1335
John
Plantagenet
~1337
Alix
De
Vendôme
~1286
Joan
Plantagenet
~1288
William
Plantagenet
1295 - 1345
Margaret
De
Mortimer
50
50
1271 - 1304
Hugh
De
Mortimer
33
33
~1273 - 6 FEB 1306/07
Matilda
de
Hereford
1291 - 12 JAN 1340/41
Joan
de
Mortimer
~1246 - 1287
Robert
De
Mortimer
41
41
~1250
Joyce
La
Zouche
~1269 - 28 FEB 1335/36
Sir William
De
Mortimer
~1275
Isabel
De
Mortimer
~1209
Maud
De
Mortimer
1219 - 1274
Hugh
De
Mortimer
55
55
1197 - 1219
Robert
De
Mortimer
22
22
~1188
Margaret
De
Saye
~1160 - 1197
Hugh
De
Saye
37
37
~1180
Mabel
de
Marmion
~1120
Hugh
De
Saye
~1090
Eustache
De
Saye
~1309
Joan
Plantagenet
1311 - 1343
Richard
Plantagenet
32
32
~1313
Geoffrey
Plantagenet
~1315
John
Plantagenet
~1380
Thomas
Corbet
~1315 - 1349
Sibella
Bodrugan
34
34
~1336
Geoffrey
Plantagenet
~1337
Cecila
Seymour
1355
Bryan
Plantagenet
1360 - 10 JAN 1441/42
Richard
Plantagenet
~1362
Geoffrey
Plantagenet
~1364
Ellen
Plantagenet
~1364
Cecila
Alice
Marbury
~1382
Edmund
Plantagenet
~1384
Eleanor
Plantagenet
~1386
William
Plantagenet
~1388
Matilda
Plantagenet
~1390
Joanne
Plantagenet
~1395
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
1400
John
Plantagenet
1238 - 1283
Dafydd
ap
Gruffydd
45
45
* Sources: Dictionary of National Biography; Pargeter; The Reckoning by Sharon Kay Penman. Pargeter calls him David and says David and Elizabeth had seven daughters besides their two sons. Penman: Davydd, born 1238. Died in October 1283 when he was hanged, drawn and quartered as a traitor after being captured by the English forces of King Edward I, ending "Davydd's War." There were a few documented cases of men being hanged, drawn and quartered before Davydd's death. "The true significance of the charges brought against Davydd--and the savage punishment inflicted--lies in the fact that here we find the origins of the state trial. It is not widely known that waging war against the king was not a crime in medieval England, not until Edward I chose to make it one, to classify it as high treason...By the end of Edward's reign, at least twenty political rivals had been executed for treason..." Among them was the Scots patriot, William Wallace.
~1250 - 1282
Ellen
De
Montfort
32
32
1239
Rhodri
ap
Gruffydd
1282 - 1337
Gwenllian
Wenceliana
Verch Llewelyn
54
54
* Sent in 1283 by King Edward I to the Sempringham Priory in the Lincolnshire Fens, where she lived out her days as a nun. Died in June 1337.
~1260
Angharad
Verch
Owain
~1258
Elizabeth
de
Ferrers
~1279
Llewelyn
ap
Dafydd
~1281
Owain
ap
Dafydd
MAR 1282/83
Gwladys
Verch
Dafydd
~1264
Alianore
De
Ferrers
~1229 - JAN 1272/73
Hugh
De
Mortimer
1222
Henry
De
Lusignan
~1233
John
De
Mortimer
~1235
Peter
De
Mortimer
1232 - 1306
Agatha
De
Ferrers
74
74
~1175
Henry
De
Ferrers
~1177
Hugh
De
Ferrers
~1230 - 1292
Richard
De
Braose
62
62
~1236 - 1261
Richard
DeLongespée
25
25
~1266 - 1335
Margaret
de
Braose
69
69
~1251 - 1288
Roger
Coleville
37
37
~1298
Thomas
Wake
~1360 - 27 JAN 1442/43
Sir
John
Tiptoft
* Lord /Tiptoft/, John Tiptoft * Note: Lord Tiptoft and Powys. He was summoned to Parliament from January 7, 1425/26, to December 3, 1441, as "Johanni Tiptoft chivaler," whereby he is held to have become lord Tiptoft. He was in the service of Henry, earl of Derby, from 1396 to 1397, by whom, as King, he was made Knight of the Bath on October 11, 1399, on the eve of his coronation at Henry IV. He was member of Parliament for Huntingdonshire in 1404 and 1406, and for Somerset in 1414. He was speaker of the House of Commons from March 2 to December 22, 1406. He was a commissioner of arry in Huntingdonshire, with order to join the King at Shrewsbury against Owen Glendower on August 7, 1402. In 1413 he succeeded to Worcesters in Enfield, Middlesex, Nether Wallop Buckland in Nether Wallop, Hampshire, and other estates as heir to his first cousin, Elizabeth Wroth, wife of William Palton, Knt. He held many offices both foreign and domestic.
~1386 - 22 MAR 1419/20
Sir John
De
Grey
~1354 - 1400
Thomas
De
Grey
46
46
~1419 - 13 JAN 1448/49
Henry
De
Grey
~1333 - 1374
John III
de
Cherleton
41
41
"John de Cherleton (the third of the name) was summoned to parliament from the 14th August, 36 Edward III (1362), to 4th October, 47 Edward III (1373) as 'Johanni de Cherleton de Powys,' being the first of his family who had the adjunct of 'de Powys' in their summonses to parliament. He granted a charter to the monks of Stret Marcell, the foundation of his ancestors, giving them certain manorial privileges. "He was also a benefactor to the Grey Friars' College in Shrewsbury, to which his grandmother, Hawyse, was so warmly attached. In 45 Edward III (1371), he obtained from John Perle, of Shrewsbury, and Eleanor, his wife, the grant of a certain plat (placeam) of their land near Thomas Colle's 'standelf', for the purpose of making in that plat a certain staindelf for the behoof of the friars of the order of minors of Salop, to have and to hold the said plat to the said Sir John, his heirs and assigns, to the behoof of the said friars and their successors as long as they could break, cut, and convert any stone to their use in the said plat (dum ipsi fratres et successores sui aliquam petram in predicta placea, frangere, scindere, et quovismodo ad eorum usum lucrare poterint). And there is a clause, that when there is no stone left, the land should revert to the grantor and his heirs. Sealed with the lion rampant, and circumscribed 'Sigillum Iohis de Cherleton Dom. Powisie'. "In accordance with the before mentioned contract made by his grandfather, John de Cherleton, with Ralphe, Lord Stafford, this John de Cherleton married Joane, the daughter of Lord Stafford. "He departed this life upon Thursday next after the Feast of the Translation of St. Thomas the Martyr in 48 Edward III (13 July 1374), being then seized of the manors of Lydam and Pontesbury, in Shropshire; the castle and manor of Pole, the manors of Botynton, Thalgarthe, Mathrawall, and Wallwerne; of the comot of South Stratter Marghell; the lands of Southlanver-ghudell and Kerenignon; the comots of Kevelliock and Dendour; the cantred of Arwystley; the comots of Meghein Iscoyd, the Meghenant, and the hamlets of Trewerne and Teirtrefe, parcel of the manor of Botynton, leaving John, his son and heir, fourteen years of age, and Joane, his wife, him surviving. "She (Joane) was deceased in 21 Richard II (1397), and by inquest was found to have died seized (inter alia) of Mathravl; the comots of Wystley Iscoed, South Stradmarghell, Botintoun; the hamlets of Trewern and Teirtreff; and the comots of Dendour, Mechan Ughcoit, Meghein Iscoyd, and Moghenant." [Source 2, pages 22-23] SOURCES: 1. Burke, Sir Bernard, C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms. _A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire_. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1978. 2. Jones, Morris Charles. _The Feudal Barons of Powys_. London: J. Russell Smith, Soho Square, 1868.
~1307 - 1360
John II
de
Cherleton
53
53
"John de Cherleton (the second of the name) had livery of his father's lands. In 33 Edward III, being lord chamberlain to the king, he was in the wars of Gascony, in attendance upon the Black Prince. He was summoned to parliament from 15th March, 28 Edward III (1354) to 20th November, 34 Edward III (1360) as "Johanni de Cherleton". He married Maud, the daughter of Roger Montgomery (all other occurrences in the same source say Roger Mortimer), first Earl of March. John de Cherleton, like his father, had not the designation of 'Powys' in his summonses to parliament; but in several State documents to which he was one of the witnesses in 28 and 29 Edward III (1354-5) he is termed "Johannis de Cherleton Dominus de Powys" -- for instance, in the two charters dated at Roxburgh on 20th January, 1355, whereby Edward (Balliol), King of the Scots, resigned his crown and realm of Scotland, and the dominion of Galloway to the King of England. He was deceased on August 30, 1360. An inquest held at Welshpool on 7th September following, found him to have held the lands and tenements of Pontesbury and Charleton, the castle and manor of La Pole, the manors of Botiton, Talgarth, Watrawell, and Walwerne, the lands, etc., of South Tradmarchel, South Lanverhudel, Kereynon, Keveylloke, Megkeine, Iscoite, Megheine Uscoite, Trewerne, Teyrtrefe, and Meghnante, the cantref of Arwistly, and the manor of Penpree. John, his son and heir, was twenty-six years of age at Easter (April 5), 1360." [Source 2, pp. 20-21] SOURCES: 1. Burke, Sir Bernard, C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms. _A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire_. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1978. 2. Jones, Morris Charles. _The Feudal Barons of Powys_. London: J. Russell Smith, Soho Square, 1868.
~1335
Jane
de
Cherleton
~1285 - 1353
John I
de
Cherleton
68
68
Sir John de Cherleton, feudal Baron of Powys, Baron de la Pole, Justice of Ireland (so constituted 11th Edw III). "Owen de la Pole died before October 1293, leaving an infant son, Griffin de la Pole, who died in June 1309, under age, and before he could succeed to his father's barony. Owen left also a daughter, Hawyse (known as Hawyse Gadarn, or the hardy), who was born in July 1291, and was found to be eighteen at the time of her brother's death, when she became heiress of Powys. The king gave her in marriage shortly afterwards to an illustrious soldier, John de Cherleton, who had livery of the barony of La Pole, on the 26th August, 1309. John de Cherleton was undoubtedly a man of great eminence during the reign of Edward II, and was highly esteemed by that monarch." His genealogy, given in tabular form by Eyton in his _Antiquaries of Shropshire_, ix, 319, shows him to be the son of Robert de Charlton (occurs 1283-1300) and his first wife; Robert de Charlton was son of Robert de Charlton of Charlton (occurs 1220-1265), who was either base son or descendant (indicated by dashed line) of William de Charlton of Charlton. [Source 2, pp. 8-20] SOURCES: 1. Burke, Sir Bernard, C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms. _A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire_. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1978. 2. Jones, Morris Charles. _The Feudal Barons of Powys_. London: J. Russell Smith, Soho Square, 1868.
~1290
Haawise
Gadard
Verch Owain
"Owen de la Pole died before October 1293, leaving an infant son, Griffin de la Pole, who died in June 1309, under age, and before he could succeed to his father's barony. Owen left also a daughter, Hawyse (known as Hawyse Gadarn, or the hardy), who was born in July 1291, and was found to be eighteen at the time of her brother's death, when she became heiress of Powys. The king gave her in marriage shortly afterwards to an illustrious soldier, John de Cherleton, who had livery of the barony of La Pole, on the 26th August, 1309. SOURCES: 1. Burke, Sir Bernard, C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms. _A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire_. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1978. 2. Jones, Morris Charles. _The Feudal Barons of Powys_. London: J. Russell Smith, Soho Square, 1868.
~1191
Isabel
de
Valletort
~1250
Sir
Robert
Corbet
~1291
Gruffydd
Ap
Owain
~1180
Amicia
~1230
Gruffydd
Ap
Gwenwynwyn
~1242 - 1310
Hawise
le
Strange
68
68
~1093 - 1128
Gruffydd
ap
Maredydd
35
35
~1095
Gwerful
Verch
Grgeneu
~1070
Gwrgeneu
Ap
Hywel
~1040
Hywel
Ap
Ieuaf
~1075
Margred
Verch
Rhys
~1010
Ieuaf
Ap
Cadwgon
~0932
Gronwy
ap Tudor
Trevor
~1012
Iorwerth
Ap
Cadwgon
~0932
Tangwystl
Verch
Dyfnwal
~0948
Gwen
Verch
Gronwy
~0900
Iarddur
Ap
Seferws
~0900
Isabel
Verch
Tryffin
~0880
Seferws
Ap
Cadwr
~0884
Lleucu Verch
Morgan
Mawr
Cecily
Verch
Seferws
~0866 - 0974
Morgan
Hen Mawr
Ap Owain
108
108
Lleucu
Verch
Enfleu
Cadell Ap
Morgan
Mawr
Owain Ap
Morgan
Mawr
Idwallon
Ap Morgan
Mawr
Cynfyn Ap
Morgan
Mawr
~0845
Owain
Ap
Hywel
~0825 - ~0886
Hywel
Ap
Rhys
61
61
~0825
Lleucu
~0800
Rhys
Ap
Arthfael
~0780
Arthfael
Ap
Gwriad
~0780
Brawstudd
Verch
Gloud
~0740
Gloud Ap
Pasgen
Buellt
~0720
Pasgen
Buellt Ap
Gwyddaint
~0742
Tewdwr
Ap Pasgen
Buellt
~0680
Gwyddaint
Ap
Morudd
~0640
Morudd
Ap
Eldad
~0610
Eldad
Ap
Eldog
~0580
Eldog
Ap
Pawl
~0540
Pawl
Ap
Mepurit
~0500
Mepurit
Ap
Briacat
~0460
Briacat
Ap
Pasgen
~0720
Gwriad
Ap
Brochwel
~0762
Ceingar
Verch
Maredudd
~0756
Rhain
ap
Maredudd
~0690
Brochwel
Ap
Rhys
~0660
Rhys
Ap
Ithel
~0692
Arthfael
Ap
Rhys
~0630
Ithel
Ap
Morgan
~0600
Morgan
Ap
Athrwys
~0610
Rhiceneth
~0570
Athrwys
Ap
Meurig
~0575
Cenedlen
Verch
Briafael Frydi
~0602
Ithel
Ap
Athrwys
~0550
Briafael
Frydig Ap
Llywarch
~0520
LLywarch
Ap
Tewdwr
~0490
Tewdwr
Ap Peibio
Glafro
~0460
Peibio
Glafrog
Ap Erb
~0470
Custennin
~0510
Tewdrig
Ap
Llywarch
~0494
Guidci
Ap Peibio
Glafro
~0496
Cinust
Ap Peibio
Glafro
~0498
Efrddyl
Ap Peibio
Glafro
~0430
Erb
~0462
Nynnio
Ap
Erb
~0540
Meurig
Ap
Tewdrig
~0550
Onbrawst
Verch
Gwrgan Fawr
Idnerth
Ap
Meurig
Ffriog
Ap
Meurig
~0520
Gwrgan Fawr
(Gwrcantus
Magnus) Ap Cynfyn
~0492
Cynfyn
Ap Peibio
Glafro
~0520
Enynny
Verch
Cynfarch
~0485
LLywarch
(Teithfall)
Ap Nynnio
~0850
Cadwr Ap
Cadwr
Wenwyn
~0820
Cadwr
Wenwyn
Ap Idnerth
~0790
Idnerth Ap
Iorwerth
Hirf
~0760
Iorwerth
Hirflawdd
Ap Tegonwy
~0770
Arianwen
Verch Brychan
Bryche
~0795
Cynog
Mawr Ap
Iorwerth Hirf
~0740
Brychan
Brycheiniog
Gwenllion
Verch Brychan
Bryche
Lleian Verch
Brychan
Bryche
Gabran
MacDomangart
Llyr Marini
Ap Meirchion
Gul
~0205
Gloyw
Wallt Hir Ap
Rhyddrech
~0680
Teon
Ap
Gwinau
~0640
Gwinau
Deufrewddwyd
Ap Bywyr Law
~0600
Bywyr
Law Ap
Bywdeg
~0560
Bywdeg
Ap Rhun
Rhudd
~0520
Rhun Rhudd
Bwladr Ap
Llary
~0480
Llary Ap
Casnar
Wledig
~0420
Casnar
Wledig
~0955
Edwin
ap
Einion
~0959
Tewdwr
ap
Einion
~0961
Idwallon
ap
Einion
~0900
Gwenston
Dyddgu
verch
Iowerth
~1098
Robert
ap
Llywarche
~1100
Elen
Verch
Llywarche
~1102
Iowerth
Ap
Llywarche
~1104
Maredudd
Ap
Llywarche
~1106
Madog
Ap
Llywarche
~0940
Morfydd
verch
Ynyr
1247
Ralph
De
Mortimer
1253
Roger
De
Mortimer
1255
Godfrey
De
Mortimer
1259
William
De
Mortimer
~1275
Maud
FitzAlan
~1303 - 1365
Idonea
de
Clifford
62
62
6 FEB 1299/00 - 26 FEB 1350/51
Henry
De
Percy
~1307
Margaret
de
Clifford
~1280
Thomas
De
Clare
~1282
Richard
De
Clare
~1241
Isabel
Fitz
John
~1249 - >1291
Julian
fitz
Maurice
42
42
~1260 - 1282
Isabel
de
Vespont
22
22
~1205 - 1285
Roger
De
Clifford
80
80
* Roger de Clifford; joined the barons under Simon de Montfort in 1263 but changed sides and took Simon de Montfort, the younger, prisoner; taken prisoner at Lewes, was released and declared an exile; fought at Evesham 1265; joined the crusade under Prince Edward 1270; Justiciar of Wales 1279; wounded at Hawarden Castle 1282. Died about 1285.
~1214
Robert
de
Vespont
~1223
Francis
De
Bohun
~1220
Hawise
Botterell
~1190
John
Botterell
~1178 - 1236
Sybil
de
Ewyas
58
58
~1168 - 1215
Robert
I de
Tregoz
47
47
~1200 - 1265
Robert
De
Tregoz
65
65
~1230 - 1294
Lucy
De
Tregoz
64
64
~1214
John
De
Tregoz
~1206
William
De
Tregoz
~1208
Richard
De
Tregoz
~1210
Alice
De
Tregoz
~1131 - 1191
William
de
Vavasour
60
60
~1198 - 1269
John III
le
Strange
71
71
1224 - 26 FEB 1275/76
John
Le
Strange
~1228 - ~1276
Robert
le
Strange
48
48
~1125 - 1198
Robert
II de
Ewyas
73
73
~1234
Hamon
le
Strange
~1238
Sir
Roger le
Strange
~1140 - 1204
Petronilla
De
Scudamore
64
64
~1088 - >1147
Robert
I de
Ewyas
59
59
~1101
Sybil
~1052 - >1115
Harold
de
Ewyas
63
63
~1176
Giles
De
Clifford
~1090
John
de
Sudley
~1079
Sibylla
di
Conversano
1101
Guillaume
Clito of
Normandy
1102
Henri
of
Normandy
1061
Princess
of England
Constance
~1066
Princess
of England
Anna
1070
Princess
of England
Adelaide
~1024
Gytha
~1327 - 1368
Isabel
De
Percy
41
41
1335 - <1379
Maud
De
Percy
44
44
~1320
Sir
William III
de Aton
~1367
Catherine
de
Aton
<1288 - 1350
Gilbert
de
Aton
62
62
Member of Parliament 1317-1320.
~1296 - 1355
Bartholomew
De
Burghersh
59
59
~1296 - 1337
Sir
William
Blount
41
41
~1289
Alianore
De
Mortimer
~1291
Hugh
De
Mortimer
~1293
Joan
De
Mortimer
~1295
Walter
De
Mortimer
~1297
Edmund
De
Mortimer
~1300
John
De
Mortimer
~1302
Elizabeth
De
Mortimer
1279
William
Kyme
~1097
Alswn
Verch
Grgeneu
~1125 - 1197
Owain
Cyfeiliog Ap
Gruffydd
72
72
~0880
Gwynano
Barbsuch Ap Lles
Llawuedawc
~1127
Margred
Verch
Gruffydd
~1129
Rhirid
Foel Ap
Gruffydd
~1167 - 1216
Gwenwynwyn
Ap Owain
Cyffeiliog
49
49
~1159
Gwerful
Verch Owain
Cyffeiliog
~1161
Gwenllian
Verch Owain
Cyffeiliog
~1163
Annes Verch
Owain
Cyffeiliog
~1165
Constance
Verch Owain
Cyffeiliog
~1150
Cadfan
Ap
Cadwaladr
~1150
Hywel
Caerllion
~0850
Lles Llawuedawc
(Llawddeog) Ap
Ceidau
~1140
Gwenllian
Verch
Ednywain
~1168
Dyddgu
Verch Owain
Cyfeiliog
~1170
Cadwallon
Ap Owain
Cyfeiliog
~1172
Eliwys Ap
Owain
Cyfeiliog
~1174
Hywel Groch
Ap Owain
Cyfeiliog
~1176
Daniel Ap
Owain
Cyfeiliog
~1178
Meddifus
Verch
Cyfeiliog
1286 - <1338
John
De
Sutton
52
52
1132 - 1197
Rhys
Ap
Gruffydd
65
65
~1140
Gwenillian
Verch
Madog
~1167
Maredudd
Ap
Rhys
~1170
Hywel
Ap
Rhys
~1173 - 1201
Gruffydd
Ap
Rhys
28
28
~1162
Rhys
Grig Ap
Rhys
~1175
Cynwrig
Ap
Rhys
~1177
Gwenllian
Verch
Rhys
~1200 - 1236
Owain
Ap
Gryffudd
36
36
~1198
Rhy
Ieuanc Ap
Gruffydd
~1200
Lleucu
Verch
Gruffydd
~1340
Elen
Verch
Thomas
~1328
Gruffydd
Fychan Ap
Gruffydd
1359 - ~1416
Owain (Owen
Glendower)
Glyndwr
57
57
Margred
Hanmer
~1380
Catrin
Glyndwr
Gruffydd
Glyndwr
Madog
Glyndwr
Maredudd
Glyndwr
Thomas
Glyndwr
John
Glyndwr
Dafydd
Glyndwr
Elizabeth
Glyndwr
Joan
Glyndwr
Jonet
Glyndwr
Ann
Glyndwr
Ieuan
Glyndwr
Myfanwy
Glyndwr
Gwenllian
Glyndwr
Philip
Ap
Rhys
Owain
Fychan
Ap Rhys
~1275
Lord
Philip
Ap Ivor
1279
Catherine
Verch
Llewelyn
~1270
Iorwerth
Vychan Ap
Iorwerth Gam
~1300
Iorwerth Foel
Ap Iorwerth
Vychan
~1230
Owain
Ap
Maredudd
1130
Maredudd
Ap
Gruffydd
1090 - 1157
Gruffydd
Ap
Rhys
67
67
1160
Gwenllian
verch
Dafydd
~1150
Owain
Fychan
Ap Madog
~1155
Elise
Verch
Madog
~1134
Morgan
Ap
Gruffydd
~1135
Maelgwyn
Ap
Gruffydd
~1136
Cadell
Ap
Gruffydd
~1138
Anarawd
Ap
Gruffydd
~1139
Owain
Ap
Gruffydd
~1140
Rhys
Fychan Ap
Gruffydd
~1142
Nest
Verch
Gruffydd
~1143
Gwladys
Verch
Gruffydd
~1367
Morfudd
Verch
Glyndwr
1298
Gruffydd Llwyd
o'r Rhuddallt Ap
Madog
1298
Elizabeth
Le
Strange
Isabel
Verch
Gruffydd
~1253 - 1309
John
V Le
Strange
56
56
~1263 - 1325
Maud
de
Wauton
62
62
~1285
Eubulo
Le
Strange
~1260 - <1285
Alianor
De
Somery
25
25
1282 - 6 FEB 1310/11
John
Le
Strange
~1240 - ~1277
John
De
Wauton
37
37
Isabel
~1210 - 1265
Simon
De
Wauton
55
55
~1255
Hawise
Le
Strange
~1228 - 1282
Joan
de
Somery
54
54
~1178
Roger
De
Somery
~1262 - 1324
John
De
Botetourt
62
62
1255 - 1291
Roger
De
Somery
36
36
1290 - 1384
Margaret
De
Somery
94
94
~1277 - >1311
Isolda
de
Walton
34
34
~1296
John
Le
Strange
1301 - 1349
Roger
Le
Strange
47
47
~1250
John
de
Walton
~1327 - 1382
Roger
Le
Strange
55
55
~1251 - ~1325
Maud
de
Montibus
74
74
~1275
Madog
Fychan
Ap Madog
~1280
Gwenllian
Verch Ithel
Fychan
~1250
Ithel
Fychan
~1255
Madog
Crupl Ap
Gruffydd
~1255
Margred
Verch Rhys
Ieuanc
~1220
Rhys
Ieuanc
~1245
Llywelyn
Fychan ap
Gruffydd
~1230
Margred
Verch
Griffri
~1190
Griffri
Ap
Cadwgon
~1180
Janet
(Jannette)
Fitz Warin
~1150 - ~1219
Fulk II
Fitz
Warin
69
69
~1160 - >1226
Hawise
de
Dinan
66
66
~1165
Fulk III
Fitz-
Warren
~1120 - <1156
Warine
II Fitz
Warin
36
36
~1130
Sir
Josce de
Dinham
~1130
Miletta
(Melette)
de Peverell
<1085 - 1171
Sir Fulk
I Fitz
Warin
86
86
~1122
William
Fitz
Warin
~1060 - 1085
Warine
(Guarine)
"the Bald"
25
25
* Guarine or Warine de Metz, surnamed "the Bald", of the House of Lorraine. Ordericus described Warine as "a man of small stature but great courage, who bravely encountered the Earl's enemies and maintained tranquillity throughout the district entrusted to his government." Roger de Montgomery selected him from among his barons as his chief counsellor and named him Viscount or Sheriff of Shropshire (then a hereditary office), attaching to his sheriff's fief seventy manors in that and other counties, and giving him his niece Amiera in marriage. This Warine "stood the second man in Shropshire" and maintained a state and magnificence unusual even in those hospitable times. Such was his passion for entertaining his guests, that he caused the King's highway to be turned through the hall of his manor at Alleston, in order that no traveller might have an excuse for passing without stopping to receive some food and drink. He died the year before the compilation of Domesday, leaving his son a minor.
~1065
Aimeria
De
Montgomery
~1160
Cadwgon
Ap Meilir
Eutun
~1170
Myfanwy
Verch
Einudd
~1140
Einudd
Ap
Llywarch
~1111
Rymel
verch
Goronwy
~1165
Gruffydd
Ap Meilir
Eutun
~1110 - >1081
Elidyr
Ap Rhys
Sais
29
29
~1115
Nest
Verch
Lles
~1085
Lles
Ap
Idnert
Sandde
Ap
Elidyr
~1080
Rhys
Sais Ap
Ednyfed
~1090
Efa Verch
Gruffydd
Hir
~1112
Tewder
Ap Rhys
Sais
~1115
Angharad
Verch
Rhys Sais
~1060
Gruffydd
Hir Ap
Gruffydd
~1274
Thomasse
De
Montfort
1242
Gentilus
II Des
Ursins
~1170
Caradog
~1199
Einion
ap
Caradog
~1068
Simon
II De
Montfort
~1073 - 1101
Guillaume
De
Montfort
28
28
~1075
Adeliza
De
Montfort
~1056
Amaury
"The Strong"
de Montfort
~0966
Guillaume
De
Gometz
~1250
Isabel
"la
Blanche"
~1267 - ~1267
Richard
de
Montfort
~1250
Lord
Cadivor
Ap Iscoed
~1350
Adda ap
Iowerth
Ddu
1328
Richard
Puleston
Maud
~1072
Hugo
De
Montfort
1217 - 1286
Jean I "Le
Roux" De
Dreux
69
69
~1214 - 1282
Robert
IV
Capet
68
68
~1225 - ~1280
Simon
De
Clermont
55
55
~1226 - 1283
Blanche
De
Champagne
57
57
~1265 - >1315
V
Jean
50
50
1266
John
of
Brittany
~1270
Count
of Leon
Piers
~1272 - 19 MAR 1326/27
Blanche
De
Bretagne
1275
Eleanor
De
Bretagne
~1265
Prince of
France
Lewis
~1269
Prince of
France
Robert
~1244
II
Jaime
~1245
Prince de
Aragón
Fernando
~1246
Prince de
Aragón
Sancho
~1248
Princess
de Aragón
Maria
~1251
Princess
de Aragón
Leonor
~1237
Princess
de Aragón
Yolanda
~1221
Princess
of Hungary
Elizabeth
~1180 - ~1214
Gertrude
Von
Meran
34
34
1206 - ~1275
IV
Bela
69
69
~1295
Marguerite
De
Valois
~1297
II
Charles
~1245 - 1309
Charles
II "The
Lame"
64
64
~1255 - MAR 1322/23
Princess
of Hungary
Maria
~1225 - 1272
Istvan
(Stephen)
47
47
~1230 - >1290
Princess of
the Kumans
Erzsebet
60
60
~1200
Kuthen
Khan
~1206
Marie
Lascaris
~1237
Princess
of Hungary
Konstancia
~1176 - 1222
Theodore
I
Lascaris
46
46
~1150
VI
Berthold
~1160 - MAR 1194/95
Agnes Von
Wettin-
Rochlitz
~1185
Agnes
Von
Meran
~1183
Prince of
Hungary
Salamon
~1184
Prince of
Hungary
Istvan
~1080 - 1125
Countess of
Berg-Schelklingen
Richsa
45
45
~1152
Prince of
Hungary
Geza
~1154
Prince of
Hungary
Arpad
~1156
Princess
of Hungary
Odola
~1158 - 1199
Princess
of Hungary
Ilona
41
41
~1160
Princess
of Hungary
Margit
~1134
Prince of
Hungary
Almos
~1137
Princess
of Hungary
Zsofia
~1140
Princess
of Hungary
Gertrud
~1105
Princess
of Hungary
Adelaida
~1108
Princess
of Hungary
Hedvig
~1118 - 1155
Princess
of Hungary
Erzsebet
37
37
~1058
Svyatoslav
Izyaslavich
1077
Izyaslav
Vladimirovich
1080
Svyatoslav
Vladimirovich
1087
Marina
Vadimirovna
~1047
Godwin
Haroldsson
~1049
Edmund
Haroldsson
~1051
Magnus
Haroldsson
~1055
Gunhild
Haroldsdatter
~1310
Margaret
De
Mountford
~1125
Radulphus
Fitz
Orme
~1120 - ~1180
Thurston
de
Montfort
60
60
1093
Orme
Le
Gulden
~1127
Robert
Fitz
Orme
~1129
Edward
Fitz
Orme
~1250
Matilda
De La
Warre
~1220 - 1277
John
De La
Warre
57
57
~1230
Olympia
De
Folkington
~1200
Hugh
De
Folkington
Margaret
~1170 - 1214
Hugh
De
Folkington
44
44
Egeline
~1190 - 1231
Jordan
De La
Warre
41
41
~1160 - 1213
John
De La
Warre
53
53
Emma
~1263 - 1318
John
De
Montfort
55
55
~1282 - 1345
Elizabeth
De
Montfort
63
63
~1370
Richard
Hankford
~1365
Maude
Francis
~1340
Sir
Adam
Francis
Maud
~1327
John
De
Montague
Sir John Montacute, the brother of this Earl, married Margaret, dau. and heir of Sir 'I Thomas Monthermer son of Joan of Acres, dau. Of King Edward I., in whose right he had summons to Parliament from the 31St of Edward to the 13th year of Richard II., when he died. He had three sons, John his heir (who became 3d Earl of Salisbury), Thomas Montague, Dean of Salisbury, and Richard .Montague, of whose issue there is no trace. This Richard lived about the year 1400. None of the English genealogies make any further mention of him except to state his name. It is claimed that there was also a fourth son, whose name was Simon Montague, and from /'in the nobility of England of this name claim descent. Collins' Peerage, however, states that there is no evidence that this Simon ever lived, and is inclined to the belief that the nobility are descended from James Montague, a natural son of General Thomas Montacute, 4th Earl of Salisbury. This James Montague had large possessions in (County Kent, where he was a man of distinction, and is buried in the (Church of Ludsdown in Kent. Sir John Montacute had also three daughters, Sybil, Catherine and Margaret.
~1350
Margaret
De
Monthermer
1301 - 1340
Thomas
De
Monthermer
38
38
1307 - 1349
Margaret
Tiptoft
42
42
~1275 - 1325
Ralph
De
Monthermer
50
50
1301 - 30 JAN 1342/43
William
De
Montague
King Of The Isle Of Man WILLIAM MONTACUTE, eldest surviving son of William lord Montague (No. IX.), was made a banneret in the end of the reign of Edward II. In the first of Edward III. (1327) he was present at the expedition then made into Scotland, and in the 3rd of same reign attended the King when he was summoned to do homage to the King of France for his duchy of Aquitaine. In the 4th year of same reign he again attended the King to France, and had also the honor to wait on his holiness the Pope with Bartholomew de Burgherth, as Edward's ambassador, to thank him for confirming a bull of his predecessor Honorius, in favor of the Monks of Westminster. But the best service, perhaps, which this brave man ever performed for his master, was his bringing the famous Mortimer Earl of March the Queen's gallant, to punishment *. A parliament being held the same year it was enacted that William lord Montacute and all others with him, at the apprehension of the Earl of March and others, since what they did was authorized by the King's command, should be---"wholly acquitted thereof and of all murders and felonies they have done." This act of indemnity was not only passed in his behalf, but many manors and lands forfeited, by the attainder of the Earl of March and others, were bestowed upon him. * The lord Montacute, having laid before the young King the infamy which the course of the life of the Queen, his mother, had brought upon his family, and the dangers which Mortimer's greatness threatened to the Crown, met with a favorable hearing from his Majesty, who ordered him to associate himself with such of the nobility as be could trust, and then apply to Sir William Eland, Constable of the Castle of Nottingham, in which the Queen and Mortimer had shut themselves up for defence. As the Keys of the Castle were brought every night to the Queen and nobody permitted to come in or go out without her knowledge, Sir William Eland directed Montacute and his associates to a private passage, by which they entered the Castle and marched directly to Mortimer's apartment, where the lord Montacute before he could seize his prisoner, was forced to kill Sir Hugh Turplington, steward of the household, and Sir John Monmouth. Mortimer was then made prisoner and carried before the King, and a short time after he was with his chief friends and abettors put to death. In the same year (1330) he was also appointed governor of Sherbourne Castle in the County of Dorset, and of the Castle of Corffe with the Chace of Purbeck. In the 5th of Edward III. he had a charter of free warren in all his lordships of Cookham in County of Berkshire, Swyneston in County of Southampton, Fulmere in County of Bucks and of Catsound and Lewisham in Kent. Likewise wreck, waif, stray goods of felons and fugitives, with fines and forfeitures of his tenants in his manors of Christ-church, Twyneham, Ringwood, and Swyneston, in the Isle of Wight and County of Southampton. Next year he obtained for John, his son-in-law, a grant of the Castle of Werk, on condition of his fortifying it and keeping it in repair; and for himself a release of all his Majesty's claim, right and title, in the isle of Man, and its appurtenances for him and his heirs forever. In 1335 he was constituted governor of the Isles Guernsey, Jersey, Sark, Alderney, and Seul. In 1336 he was made Constable of the Tower of London, and in consideration of his great expenses in divers services obtained a grant of the forest of Selkirk and Ellerick, with the town and County of Selkirk in Scotland to hold in farm to him and his heirs. In the same year he also obtained a grant in fee of several manors, lands, and hundreds lying in the Counties Somerset, Dorset, Wilts, and Buckingham. In 1337 he was constituted Admiral of the King's fleet, from the mouth of the Thames westward, and the following year in consideration of his faithful services in the Scottish wars, and otherwise, he was advanced to the title and dignity of Earl of Salisbury, with a grant of the annual rent of £20 out of the profits of that County. The same year he was one of the Commissioners that were sent to the duke of Bavaria to engage him on behalf of Edward against Philip, King of France. Upon his return he was immediately joined with Richard, Earl of Arundel, in the command of a body of troops designed for Scotland, in consequence of which he was present at the memorable siege of the Castle of Dunbar. The same year he attended the King to Brabant and obtained several more grants of lands, castles, fairs and advowsons in the Counties of Oxford, Wilts, Dorset, Somerset, Chester, Norfolk, Suffolk and Lincoln. In 1339 he obtained the King's precept to the lord treasurer and barons of the exchequer for an allowance of five marks each day while he was abroad on his service, and for the reimbursement of all the expenses he was put to thereby. The same year, in consideration of his services both in the field and cabinet, he obtained a grant of the office of Earl Marshal of England. In 1340 he had the command of the army jointly with the Earl of Suffolk. These two commanders having laid siege to Lisle, then in possession of the French, were both unfortunately made prisoners by the besieged, who sallied out and drew them after them into the town. During their captivity they suffered great indignities; and upon their arrival at Paris would certainly have been put to death, had not the King of Bohemia (possibly a relative of his wife) interposed in their behalf. Upon a conclusion of a truce with France they were exchanged for the Earl of Murray and £3000 in addition. The Earl of Salisbury, immediately after his release, went with many other English Knights into Spain and joined the army of Alphonsus against the Saracens. In 1341 he was again in Flanders, and in 1342 in France. In 1343 he served upon the borders of Scotland with the Earl of Ulster. And about this time he conquered the isle of Man, when King Edward (having before given him the inheritance thereof ) crowned him King of Man. In conjunction with Robert of Artois, he had the command of the forces sent to France in aid of the Countess of Mountfort, by sea and land; where, after defeating the French fleet, they took Vannes, but a truce having been concluded for three years the Earl returned to England, where he exercised himself so immoderately, in jousts and tournaments, that he fell into a fever of which he died in the forty-third year of his age, January 30, 1344, and was buried at the White Friars in London * (Vol. I, p. 51, Edmondson's Heraldry). He was possessed at his death of a vast estate and bore the titles of Earl of Salisbury, King of Man, and lord of Denbigh. * Some authors state, that this great man was buried at Bisham priory which he had founded. This error probably was caused by the fact that his son built a magnificent monument to his memory, in that Abbey, which was however demolished by Henry VIII. at the dissolution. Not only Edmondson's Heraldry but Glover's Ordinary of Arms, and also the very high authority of Dugdale, assert that he was buried at White Friars, London. Edmondson's Heraldry, Vol. I, p. 51, states that he became 21 years old in the 19th of Edward II., which would place his birth A. D. 1304; the same authority also states, that he owned the Manor of Cookham in Berkshire. Lipscombe's Bucks states that the hamlet of Boveney anciently belonged to Cookham in Berkshire, and the inference is that this Earl of Salisbury may have been possessed of Boveney also. Vol. I, P. 51, Glover's ordinary of Arms, Edmondson's Heraldry, says, this earl owned Fulmere in Buckinghamshire. Lipscombe's History of Bucks says, he sold it, in or before 1335. This was a hamlet and Chapelry of Datchet in Stoke Hund. Bucks, near Stoke Poges and not far from Boveney. This great man, who died so young and who also accomplished so much in his busy career, also found time to establish at Bisham in Berkshire, on the banks of the Thames 4 miles from Maidenhead, a Monastery, and he also founded a priory (in 1338) for Canons of the order of St. Augustine, in the words of his charter, "dedicated to Our Lord and the Virgin." This priory was re-founded by Henry VIII. for an abbot and 13 Benedictine Monks. Here Henry VIII. confined one of his wives; afterward, it was a favorite resort of Queen Elizabeth; here was buried the wife of the founder, Katherine de Grandison, the Countess of Salisbury, and the inscription upon her tomb stated, that her father was "descended out of Burgundy, cousin german to the Emperor of Constantinople, the King of Hungary and Duke of Bavaria." Here William Montacute, the 2nd Earl of Salisbury (son of the founder), was interred. By his will he directed that a monument should there be erected to the memory of his father, which was done upon a magnificent scale 1. His wife Catherine was daughter of William (and sister and heir to Otho) lord Grandison by Sibylla, daughter and heir of John de Tregoz, a great Baron. She was a brave woman, worthy of such a brave and noble man as was her husband the Earl of Salisbury. She 2 nobly defended and aided with heroic valor the defence of the castle of Werk, with her husband's brother, Sir Edward Montacute, who was its Governor, and also bravely defended her own Castle of Salisbury from King David of Scotland, with the aid of William Montacute, her husbands cousin, while her husband was a prisoner of war in France as before mentioned in the history of Sir Simon No. VIII. 1 "The bones of John Montacute, 3rd Earl of Salisbury, who was beheaded, were brought from Cirencester, (by order of his widow) and re-interred at Bisham Priory." Crosse's Antiquities. Here also were laid the "mortal parts" of the 4th and last Earl of Salisbury, General Thomas Montacute, killed at the siege of Orleans (1428). Here, also rest the remains of John, Marquis of Montacute, killed at the battle of Barnet in 1470, and also his brother Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, called the "king maker." Here also sleeps that unfortunate youth Edward Plantaganet, son of the Duke of Clarence, beheaded in 1499 for attempting an escape from confinement. 2 It was this countess of Salisbury who, while dancing with King Edward, lost her garter, which gave rise to the founding of the order of the garter, (and not Joan Plantaganet, the Fair Maid of Kent, as was stated in the " Montagues at Hadley.") See History of the Orders of British Knighthood by Sir N. Nicholas. Rambles about Eton and Harrow, by Alfred Rimmer, London, 1882, et al. They had seven children, three sons and four daughters. Of the sons, William, the eldest, succeeded his father and became the second Earl of Salisbury, but was killed in a tilting match at Windsor. Sir John Montacute, the second son, married Margaret Monthermer, grand-daughter of Ralph and Joan of Acres, daughter of King Edward I, and his son became 3rd Earl of Salisbury. Of Robert Montacute, the third and youngest son, the records give no history.
~1286 - 1349
Katherine
De
Grandison
63
63
1260 - 1334
Sibyle
De
Tregoz
74
74
~1228 - 1297
Matilda
Fitz-
Warren
69
69
~1228 - 1300
John
De
Tregoz
72
72
~1230
Lucy
De
Tregoz
~1248
Hawise
Fitz-
Warren
~1190
Maud
De
Vavasour
~1210
Juliana
de
Cantelupe
~1166 - 1240
Robert
De
Vavasour
74
74
~1140
Nichola
Wallis
~1165
Elizabeth
De
Vavasour
Robert
Strelly
~1120
Stephen
Wallis
~1120
John
De
Vavasour
~1120
Alice
Cockfield
~1090
Robert
Cockfield
~1095
Robert
De
Vavasour
~1100
Juliana
De
Ros
~1125
Maud
De
Vavasour
~1070
Gilbert
De
Ros
~1075
William
De
Vavasour
~1080
Matilda
Perry
~1055
Sir
Mauger le
Vavasour
~1036
Sir
Mauger le
Vavasour
1251 - 1315
Fulk V
Fitz-
Warren
64
64
~1280 - 1336
Fulk VI
Fitz-
Warren
56
56
~1285
Hawise
Fitz-
Warren
~1280
Robert
Hoo
~1260
Fulk
Corbet
~1255
Margaret
de la
Pole
~1290
Alianorna
De
Beauchamp
~1220 - 1281
Robert
V De
Beauchamp
61
61
1249 - 1288
John
De
Beauchamp
39
39
1230
John
de
Mohun
1273 - 1336
John II
De
Beauchamp
63
63
~1279 - 1327
Joan
Chenduit
48
48
~1228
Isabel
de
Mohun
~1285
John
De
Mohun
~1331
Payne
Tibotot
~1330
Agnes
Wrothe
Beatrix
de St.
Maur
~1313
John
Wrothe
~1315 - <1355
Margaret
de
Bokeland
40
40
~1270
John
Wrothe
~1280
Margaret
Enfielde
~1315
Margaret
De
Mohun
~1316
Thomas
De
Mohun
~1318
Lawrence
De
Mohun
~1320
Patrick
De
Mohun
~1322
Robert
De
Mohun
~1324
Eleanor
De
Mohun
~1326
Reginald
De
Mohun
~1328
Henry
De
Mohun
~1330
Paine
De
Mohun
~1332
John
De
Mohun
~1320
John
Carew
~1380
Elizabeth
Fitz
William
~1360
John
De
Mohun
~1334
Bartholomew
De
Burghersh
~1346
Joan
De
Burghersh
~1266
Bartholomew
De
Burghersh
~1378
Maud
De
Mohun
~1379
Elizabeth
De
Mohun
~1380
Philippa
De
Mohun
Walter
Fitz
Walter
John
Golleston
~1370
John
Le
Strange
~1191 - 1252
Robert
IV De
Beauchamp
61
61
~1195
Juliana
Brett
~1160
Simon
De
Valletort
~1170
Hawise
De
Beauchamp
~1140 - ~1196
Robert
III De
Beauchamp
56
56
~1110
Robert
II De
Beauchamp
23 FEB 1421/22 - 1453
Thomasine
Hankford
~1322 - 1361
William
Fitz-
Warren
39
39
~1321
Joan
De
Beaumont
1288 - 10 MAR 1338/39
Henry
De
Beaumont
1291 - 1349
Alice
Comyn
58
58
~1395
Eleanor
Holand
~1320 - 24 MAR 1356/57
Isabel
De
Beaumont
~1397
Anne
Holand
Thomas
Montagu
~1376 - 1392
Sir John
De
Montague
16
16
SIR JOHN MONTACUTE, third Earl of Salisbury (and eldest son of Sir John), was thirty-nine years of age at his father's decease, and forty when his uncle died. He was early engaged in a military life and had been in most of the memorable battles during the reign of Edward III. In the 15th year of Richard II. he obtained leave to serve in Prussia and from the 16 h year until he became Earl of Salisbury, was summoned to parliament as a baron, after which he not only had livery of all the lands of which his Uncle died possessed (as he had before of those of his mother, dau. and heir of Thomas lord Monthermer), but also obtained a grant to himself and his heirs, of several Manors in the Counties of Worcester and Norfolk. This Earl of Salisbury was the only temporal Nobleman, who remained firm to King Richard's interest after the invasion of the duke of Lancaster, and even when Richard was deposed, and the duke had mounted the throne, he joined in a plan for the murder of -the latter, which being discovered, he and the earl of Kent were pursued to a village near Cirencester where the rabble struck off their heads and sent them to London. His body was buried at Bisham Abbey (which his ancestor the first Earl had founded) by the side of the second Earl of Salisbury, having been removed thither by order of his widow. He married Maude, dau. of Sir Adam Francis, Knight (she was the widow, first of John Aubrey, second of Sir Allan Boxhull, Knight of the Garter). Their children were, Thomas, the eldest son, who was afterward 4th Earl of Salisbury, Richard, who died without issue, and three daughters, Anne, (3 times married) Margaret, and Elizabeth.
~1493 - 1563
William
D'Arcy
70
70
1471 - 1516
Elizabeth
Greystoke
45
45
1467 - 1525
Thomas
D'Arcy
57
57
~1500
Anne
D'Arcy
~1495 - 1538
Sir
Christopher
Conyers
43
43
~1535 - 1548
Jane
Conyers
13
13
1533 - 1 FEB 1573/74
Sir
Marmaduke
IV Constable
Constable of Everingham
~1531
Elizabeth
Conyers
1524
John
Conyers
1529
Leonard
Conyers
~1526
Joan
Conyers
~1260 - <1308
Alexander
Comyn
48
48
~1270 - 1342
Joan
Latimer
72
72
~1293
Margaret
Comyn
~1242
John
Comyn
~1244
Roger
Comyn
~1248
William
Comyn
~1251
Emme
Comyn
~1420 - 1452
Dionisea
Tempest
32
32
~1257
Elena
Comyn
~1290
Peter
De
Montfort
~1320
Richard
de
Montfort
~1217
William
Comyn
~1219
Fergus
Comyn
~1221
Idonea
Comyn
~1250
Agnes
De
Beaumont
~1225
Agnes
Comyn
~1300
Lora
De
Astley
~1200
Richard
De
Astley
~1245
William
De La
Plaunche
~1275
Alice
De La
Plaunche
~1297
Elizabeth
De
Montfort
~1293 - 1326
Maud
de
Montfort
33
33
John
Catesby
1302
Simon
De
Holt
1303
Albreda
De
Birmingham
1275
John
De
Holt
1279
Alice
De
Costello
1245
John
De
Holt
1249
Joan
~1290
Beatrice
William
Tracy
Henry
Tracy
~1270
Innes
De
Mountford
~1312
Helen
De
Mountford
~1381
Alice
De La
Spine
~1383
Thomas
De La
Spine
~1387
Edmund
De La
Spine
~1135 - >1184
Ralph
De
Kingwarton
49
49
~1139 - >1199
Christian
60
60
~1107 - >1149
William
De
Cocton
42
42
~1137
Simon
De
Wrottesley
~1082
William
De
Cocton
~1109
Robert
De
Cocton
~1048
Randolph
De
Cocton
~1023
William
De
Cocton
~1162
Joan
De
Kingwarton
~1156
William
De
Spineto
~1161
Alexander
De
Kingwarton
~1163
Simon
De
Kingwarton
~1165
Philip
De
Kingwarton
~1167
Maurice
De
Kingwarton
~1188
Roger
De
Spineto
~1212
William
De
Spineto
~1214
Joan
De
Cocton
~1255
William
De
Spineto
~1246
Roger
De
Spineto
~1248
Walter
De
Spineto
~1251
Henry
De
Spineto
~1252
Joan
De
Spineto
~1254
Alice
De
Spineto
~1272
John
De La
Spine
~1274
John
De La
Spine
~1276
Henry
De La
Spine
~1278
Agnes
De La
Spine
~1180
Randolph
De
Cocton
~1195
Christian
~1213
Simon
De
Bruley
1272
John
De
Bruley
1274
Thomas
De
Bruley
1276
Henry
De
Bruley
1278
Agnes
De
Bruley
~1210
Agnes
~1185 - >1225
Richard
Foliot
40
40
~1168 - >1252
Bartholomew
II Foliot
84
84
~1148 - ~1175
Bartholomew
I Foliot
27
27
~1123 - >1148
Ralph
Robert
De Foliot
25
25
~1146
Robert
Foliot
1093
William
De
Chesney
~1094
Isabel
De
Chesney
~1097
Roger
De
Chesney
~1098
Ralph
De
Chesney
~1100
Robert
De
Chesney
~1075
Philip
de
Caisneto
1076
Alexander
de
Chesney
1083
Sybil
de
Chesney
~1140
Bartholomew
de
Chesney
~1212
Margery
De
Aquillon
~1182
Margery
de
Beaufoe
1190
Ralph
FitzBernard
~1159
Robert
De
Scales
1391
Joan
Boteler
1366 - 8 FEB 1442/43
Alice
De
Beauchamp
~1340
John
de
Beauchamp
1274 - 1349
Sir
John de
Patteshull
75
75
Sir John de Patteshull had summons to Parliament as a baron 25 Feb., 1342. He died in 1349, but was not summoned to Parliament but once. He married Mabel de Grandison, heiress of Lydiard Tregoze.
~1282
Mabilia
De
Grandison
~1300
Catherine
Patteshull
~1315 - 1398
Alice
Patteshull
83
83
~1310
Maud
de
Patteshull
~1320
William
de
Patteshull
~1278
Piers
De
Grandison
~1284
John
De
Grandison
~1250
Henry
De
Tregoz
~1252
Clarice
De
Tregoz
~1120
William
De
Tregoz
~1143
Agnes
~1167
John
de
Tregoz
~1084
Lesire
De
Tregoz
~1231 - 1276
Alianore
De
Blanchminster
45
45
~1267 - 23 JAN 1323/24
Fulk le
Strange
~1257
William
le
Strange
~1287
Elizabeth
le
Strange
~1288 - 1349
John
VIII le
Strange
61
61
~1205
William
De
Blanchminster
~1174 - 20 JAN 1232/33
John II
le
Strange
~1276 - 1375
Sir
Robert
Corbet
99
99
~1132
Thomas
Corbet
~1161 - >1222
Sir
Richard
Corbet
61
61
~1190 - <1235
Sir
Richard
Corbet
45
45
~1195 - <1239
Joanna
Toret
44
44
~1169
Bartholomew
Toret
~1135
Peter
Fitz
Toret
~1137
Lucia
Haget
~1100
Thoredi
Toret
~1100
Bertram
Haget
~1215 - 1255
Sir
Richard
Corbet
40
40
~1216 - 1272
Petronilla
De
Booley
56
56
~1235 - 1306
Sir
Robert
Corbet
71
71
~1237 - 1309
Matilda
De
Arundel
72
72
~1258 - ~1310
Thomas
Corbet
52
52
~1260
Amice
Hussey
1274
Joan
Corbet
~1264
Robert
De
Harley
~1330 - 1394
John
De
Ipstones
64
64
~1320
Amice
~1339
Elizabeth
Corbet
~1262
John
Corbet
~1239
Catherine
le
Strange
~1255
Thomas
Corbet
~1237
Richard
Corbet
~1239
Petronilla
Corbet
~1192
Roger
Corbet
~1163
Roger
Corbet
~1167
Emma
Corbet
~1156
Alice
Corbet
~1090
Akaris
Fitz
Bardolf
~1180
Rose
Bardolf
~1129
Hervey
Fitz
Akaris
~1052
Bardolf
of
Brittany
~1141 - 1222
Robert
Corbet
81
81
~1133
William
Corbet
~1137
Walter
Corbet
~1149
Richard
Corbet
~1151
Hugh
Corbet
~1159 - 1231
Roger
Corbet
72
72
~1162 - 1227
Emma
Pantulf
65
65
~1189
Margaret
Corbet
~1234
Maud
Pantulf
~1175
Hugh
Corbet
~1177
Alan
Corbet
~1179
Alicia
Hawise
Corbet
~1181
Ffelis
Corbet
~1183
William
Corbet
~1185
Thomas
Corbet
1190
Robert
Corbet
~1205
David
De
Malpas
~1220
Constance
Verch
Gwenwynwyn
~1225
Madog
Ap
Gwenwynwyn
~1165
Margred
Verch
Rhys
1266 - >1346
Sir
Richard
de Sutton
80
80
~1129 - 1224
Hugh
Pantulf
95
95
~1156
Ivo
Pantulf
~1151
William
Pantulph
~1131
Christianna
FitzAlan
~1184 - MAR 1239/40
John
FitzAlan
~1120
Isabel
De
Saye
~1136
William
FitzAlan
~1143 - 1212
William
FitzAlan
69
69
~1115
Helen
Peverel
~1193 - <1240
Isabella
D'Aubigny
47
47
~1146
Alice
De
Porhoet
~1170
Matilda
of
England
~1172
Duke of
LIncoln
Hugh
~1174
Richard
of
England
~1137
Nesta
Bloet
~1161
Duke of
Beverly
Morgan
~1129
Annabel
De
Balliol
~1174
Peter
De
Longespée
~1108
Jordan
FitzAlan
~1170
Rosamond
FitzHenry
~1103
Simon
FitzAlan
~1050
Filia
Rex
Scotiae
~1040
Emmaline
De
Normandy
~1093 - <1155
Patrick
de
Chaworth
62
62
~1183
Payne
de
Chaworth
~1190
Gundred
De La
Ferte
~1145
Henry
De
Tracy
~1148
Guyde
Bryan
~1126
Henry
De
Tracy
~1100
William
De
Tracy
~1110
Hawise
De
Born
~1080
Turgis
De
Tracy
~1060
Grace
De
Traci
~1043
Henri
De
Traci
~1000 - ~1044
Turgis
De
Traci
44
44
~1040 - >1110
William
De
Tracy
70
70
<1009 - 1066
Turgis
De
Tracy
57
57
~1155
Patrick
de
Chaworth
~1123
Payne
de
Chaworth
~1098 - 1155
Wilbuiga
57
57
~1100
Ivo
Pantulf
~1148
Alicia
de
Verdun
1072
Robert
Pantulf
~1050
William
Normannus
Pantulf
~1050
Leceline
~1074
Philip
Pantulf
~1076
Ivo
Pantulf
~1078
Arnulph
Pantulf
~1315
Thomas
De
Beaumont
~1318 - 1342
John
De
Beaumont
24
24
~1316
Catherine
De
Beaumont
~1328
Elizabeth
De
Beaumont
~1345
Maud
Plantagenet
~1340 - 1369
Henry
De
Beaumont
29
29
~1342 - 1467
Maud
De
Beaumont
125
125
~1332 - 22 FEB 1392/93
John
D'Evereaux
~1370
William
D'Evereaux
~1360
Eleanor
De
Beaumont
1414 - 1471
Hugh
De
Courtenay
57
57
1 FEB 1308/09
David
De
Strathbogie
1288
Isabel
De
Beaumont
~1210 - 1265
Raoul
De
Beaumont
55
55
Agnes
~1170
Richard
De
Beaumont
~1163
Lucie
De
L'Aigle
Constance
De
Beaumont
Ermengarde
De
Beaumont
Philip
De
Beaumont
~1130
Rocelin
De
Beaumont
Mistress
~1094 - 1145
Rocelin
De
Beaumont
51
51
~1045
Raoul
De
Beaumont
~1050
Agatha
De
Vendome
1020
Fouques
L'oison De
Vendome
~1023
Petronill
De
Chateaurenaud
~1047
Barthelemy
De
Vendome
~1049
Euphrosyne
De
Vendome
1045
Geoffrey
De
Preuilly
0993 - 1017
Bodo
De
Vendome
24
24
Landeric
Laundry
De Maers
Matilda
De
Macon
~1220
III
Alexander
Aveline
de
Fortibus
Earl of
Albemarle
William
1250 - 1251
Mary
Plantagenet
1
1
D. 1291
III
Alfonso
~1250 - 1302
III
Henry
52
52
1275 - 1312
II Jean
37
37
Jean II, "The Peaceable" Duke of Brabant, Duke of Lorraine and Limburg
Count of
Holland
John
Thomas
De
Stafford
1374 - 1420
William
Bourchier
46
46
~1405
Sir
William
Bourchier
Margery
Berners
1799 - 1830
Antje
Weerds
31
31
~1861
Jacob
S.
Ulfers
~1863
Anna
Ulfers
~1865
Ira
Ulfers
~1859
Martin
Ulfers
Abbot of
St. Maurice
Herbert
0850 - 28 AUG 886
Dux
Austrasiorum
Heinrich
~1170
Adele
De
Ponthieu
~1145 - 1191
I Jean
46
46
~1129 - ~1191
Bernald
IV De St.
Valery
62
62
Bernard de St. Walery, granted to King Henry II, the site of Godstow-Nunnery. Founder of Studley-Priory, Oxfordshire. Died 1190 at the siege of Acre. Married Maud and Annora/Avoris, daughter of John de St. John.
1160 - 1224
Enguerrand
De
Picquigny
64
64
~1180
Marguerite
De
Ponthieu
~1220
Marie
De
Bourbon
~1150
Guy II
De St.
Valery
Eleanor
de
Dommart
~1101 - 1166
Reginald
II De St.
Valery
65
65
~1120
Walter
De St.
Valery
~1133
Laurette
De St.
Valery
Aleaume
Fontaine
1186 - 1248
Aeléonore
De
Dreux
62
62
~1096
Guy
De St.
Valery
~1075
Ermengarde
De
Courtenay
~1070
Renaud
II De
Joigny
~1077
Ranulph
De St.
Valery
~1008
Dommart
~1032
Gilbert 'Le
Jeune' De
Hugleville
~0919
Reginald
De St.
Valery
~1188 - 1242
Isabelle
De
Dreux
54
54
~1189 - 1258
Alix
De
Traves
69
69
~1190 - 1250
Pierre I
Mauclerc
de Dreux
60
60
~1190 - 1239
II
Henry
49
49
~1220
Mathilde
De
Bar
~1160 - 13 FEB 1213/14
I
Theobald
1287
Roger
De
Mortimer
~1322
Beatrice
De
Mortimer
~1316
Blanche
De
Mortimer
~1321
John
De
Mortimer
~1310
Geoffrey
De
Mortimer
~1308
Roger
De
Mortimer
~1330
John
De
Mortimer
~1329 - 1369
Joane
De
Berkeley
40
40
~1295 - 1361
Reginald
de
Cobham
66
66
1311
Laurence
De
Hastings
~1256
Audra
Hastings
~1258
Lora
De
Hastings
~1260
Jean
De
Hastings
~1264
Edmund
Hastings
1262 - 9 MAR 1311/12
John
Hastings
~1266
Robert
De
Hastings
~1237
De
Meisnilhermer
1301
Mary
De
Monthermer
1279 - 1314
Payne
De
Tibetot
34
34
Pain de Tibetot, who, serving in the Scottish wars, during the latter part of the reign of Edward I, was summoned to Parliament as a Baron. Upon the accession of Edward II, in 1307, served from March 10, 1308, to Nov. 25, 1313. He was subsequently Justice of the Forests beyond Trent, and Governor of the Castle of Northampton. His lordship, who made several campaigns into Scotland, fell eventually at the Battle of Strivelin, anno 1314. He married Agnes, daughter of William Ros.
~1289 - 1328
Agnes
de
Ros
39
39
<1241 - 1298
Robert
De
Tibetot
57
57
Robert de Tibetot, who in the 50th of Henry III, 1266, was made Governor of the Castle of Porchester, and having attended Prince Edward to the Holy Land, was in high favour after he had ascended the throne as Edward I, being then constituted Governor of Nottingham Castle, Justice of South Wales, and Governor of the castles of Carmarthen and Cardigan. In the 13th of the same reign, 1285, he had a grant from the son of Gerard de Rodes to himself, his wife and his son, in fee of the manors of Langar and Berneston, in Nottinghamshire. In the 20th of Edward I, being the King's Lieutenant for Wales, he fought and defeated Rees ap Meredith, in a great battle wherein 4000 Welshmen were slain and Rees himself, having been made a prisoner, was conveyed to York and there executed. Robert de Tibetot was subsequently in the wars of Gascony and Scotland.
~1280 - ~1344
Hawise
De
Tibetot
64
64
~1281
Eve
De
Tibetot
~1283
Auda
De
Tibetot
~1256
John
de
Mohun
1190
Walter
De
Tibetot
1313 - 1367
John
De
Tibetot
53
53
1335
John
de
Vere
~1336
Thomas
De
Vere
~1342
Robert
De
Vere
~1346
Maud
De
Vere
1341
Robert
De
Tibetot
1306 - 1322
Robert
Fitzpayn
16
16
~1306
Thomas
Arundel
1302
John
Avenel
~1335
John
De
Tibetot
~1353
Margaret
Deincourt
~1327 - 1364
Sir
William
Deincourt
37
37
~1351
Walter
Tailboys
~1389
John II
Tailboys
~1391
Walter
II
Tailboys
>1371 - 1478
Elizabeth
De
Tibetot
107
107
~1373
Margaret
De
Tibetot
~1375
Millicent
De
Tibetot
1364 - 1424
Philip
Le
Despenser
60
60
~1254 - 1314
Philip
le
Despencer
60
60
1294 - 1349
Margaret
De
Gousille
55
55
~1236
Richard
Foliot
~1295
Ellen
de
Vere
1179 - >1232
Margaret
De
Beaumont
53
53
~1150
Henry
Biset
~1120
Manasser
Biset
~1130
Alice
de
Cany
~1090
William
Biset
~1100
Hawise
~1210
Sir William
De
Harcourt
~1200
Richard
De
Harcourt
~1160 - 1235
Alice
Noel
75
75
~1140 - ~1219
Margaret
le
Strange
79
79
~1179
Jeane
Noel
~1120 - ~1179
Guy le
Strange
59
59
~1096 - 1158
Roland
le
Strange
62
62
~1100
Matilde le
Brun de
Hunstanton
~1136 - 1178
John I
le
Strange
42
42
~1050
Ralph "le
Brun" de
Hunstanton
~1054 - >1120
Helwisa
de
Plaiz
66
66
~1026 - <1120
Hugh
de
Plaiz
94
94
1008
Reynald
de
Grey
~1020
Fredefeudis
~1010
Richard
Turstain
~1060
John
De
Conteville
~0960
William
de
Humez
~1090
daughter
Du
Hommet
1074
Emma
De
Redviers
1319
John II
de
Dinham
~1160
Simon
D'Avranches
1090
Rualon
Robert
D'Avranches
~1007
Guitmon
d'Avranches
~1065
Alice
~1115
Maud
D'Avranches
1090 - 1162
William
de
Courcy
72
72
Lord of Okehampton, Governor of Exeter Castle
~1143 - 1209
Hawise
de
Courcy
66
66
~1183 - 1242
Robert
de
Courtenay
59
59
Feudal Baron of Okehampton, Sheriff of Devon
~1196
Mary
de
Redviers
~1218 - 1274
John
de
Courtenay
56
56
~1228
Isabelle
De
Vere
~1220
John
de
Gatesden
1155 - 1217
William
de
Redviers
62
62
~1170 - 1204
Mabel
de
Beaumont
34
34
~1128
Matilda
de
Dunstanville
1113 - 1155
Baldwin
de
Redviers
42
42
Baldwin de Redvers, Earl of Devonshire, who received some 150 lordships in Devonshire, Somerset and Dorset. In Domesday Book he is called Baldwin of Exeter and Sheriff of Devon. He married Emma, cousin or niece of William I. Baldwin de Redvers was founder of Bremer Abbey, County Wilts, and Quarr Abbey, County Hants. In April, 1136, there were rumors of the death of King Stephen, and on hearing this he was one of the first to break out in revolt. Seizing the royal castle of Exeter, he sustained a long siege by the King, and was ultimately allowed to withdraw his forces on giving up the castle. The King then proceeded to the Isle of Wight, took possession of the island, and drove him, with his wife and children, into exile. Baldwin then took refuge at the court of the Count of Anjou, and soon afterwards conducted a successful raid into Normandy. About Lent, 1138, he was taken prisoner in Normandy by Enguerrard de Say, a partisan of King Stephen. He returned to England in the autumn of 1139, shortly before the arrival of the Empress Maud, and landing at Warham, seized the castle of Corfe. This he defended successfully against the King, forcing him to eventually raise the siege. By the Empress Maud. (daughter of Henry I and mother of Henry II) he was created Earl of Devonshire in the year 1141. He married 1st Adeliza, 2nd Lucia. His daughter Eve married Anchitel Grey.
1120
Lucia
Adeliza
de Balun
1090
Hamelin
de
Balun
~1170
John
d'Oyly
~1194
John
d'Oyly
~1160
Hawise
de
Grey
~1185 - 1245
Robert
de
Grey
60
60
~1115
Ellen
de
Bohun
~1137
Eleanor
de
Clare
~1110
Henry
de
Grey
1115
Rohese
De
Clare
~1116
Roger
FitzBaldwin
De Clare
~1115 - 1190
William
II de
Busli
75
75
~1030
Richard
De
Rollos
~1133 - 1211
John
de
Grey
78
78
1161
Henry
de
Grey
~1198
Beatrice
de
Sculcotes
~1217
Eva
de
Grey
~1210
Walter
de
Beke
~1235 - 1303
John
de
Beke
68
68
~1237
Sarah
Furnival
~1255
Alice
de
Beke
~1256
Margaret
de
Beke
~1250
William
Willoughby
~1256
Richard
De
Harcourt
~1276
John
de
Harcourt
~1300 - 1349
Sir
William de
Harcourt
49
49
1302 - 1369
Jane
(Joan)
De Grey
67
67
~1246
Lucy
de
Mohun
~1240
John
de
Grey
~1275
Henry
De
Grey
1281 - 10 MAR 1334/35
Richard
De
Grey
~1201
Richard
De
Grey
~1204
Lucia
Du
Hommet
~1175
Jordan
Du
Hommet
~1254 - 1315
Robert
Fitz-
Payne
61
61
~1155
Hathewise
~1238 - >1303
Isabella
de
Clifford
65
65
~1206
John
de
Clifford
~1210
Margery
Hereward
~1145
Letitia
de
Berkeley
~1188
Hugh
de
Clifford
~1190
Margery
~1325 - 1372
Richard
de
Harcourt
47
47
~1325
Joan
Jane
Shareshull
~1263
William
Shareshull
~1268
Dionisia
Cokesey
~1347
Elizabeth
de
Harcourt
~1343 - >1399
Sir
Thomas
de Astley
56
56
~1305 - ~1385
Sir
Thomas
de Astley
80
80
~1347
Alice
de
Astley
~1340
Richard
Champernon
~1366 - 1441
Alexander
Champernon
75
75
~1366 - 1448
Joan
De
Astley
82
82
1415
Sir
Edward
De Grey
~1361
William
de
Ferrers
1355 - 3 FEB 1386/87
Henry
de
Ferrers
1358
Joan
de
Hoo
1298 - 1369
Robert
de
Ufford
71
71
Robert de Ufford, second Baron, was Knight of the Garter, and was summoned to Parliament 27 Jan., 1332, to 14 Jan., 1337. This nobleman was in the wars of Gascony in the reign of Edward II, in requittal of his eminent services, a grant for life of the Town of Orford, County Suffolk, and soon afterward further considerable possessions, also by grant from the crown in consideration of the personal danger he had incurred in arresting, by the king's command, Mortimer and some of his adherents in the Castle of Nottingham. (This Mortimer was the favorite of Isabel, Queen of Edward II. She was the daughter of the King of France and through her Edward III claimed the French throne. E. E. W.) His lordship was solemnly advanced in the Parliament to the dignity of Earl of Suffolk, 16 March, 1336, "habendum sibi et haere bibus suis," whereupon he was associated with William de Bohun, Earl of Northampton, and John Darcy, Stewart of the King's household, to treat with David Bruce of Scotland, touching a league of peace and amity, and the same year going beyond the sea on the King's service had an assignment of 300 œ out of the Exchequer towards his expenses in that employment, which was in the wars of France for it appears that he then accompanied the Earl of Derby (this was William Ferrers, 7th Earl of Derby, whose 2nd son, William Ferrers, of Groby, married Margaret, daughter this Robert Ufford. E. E. W.), being with him at the Battle of Cagant, after which time he was seldom out of some distinguished action. In the 12th of Edward III, 1338, being in the expedition into Flanders, he was the next year one of the marshals when King Edward beseiged Cambrai, and his lordship, within a few years, subsequently was actively engaged in the wars in Brittany. In the 17th of this reign the Earl of Suffolk (Robert de Ufford) was deputed to the Court of Rome, there to treat in the presence of his holiness, touching an amicable peace and accord between the English monarch and Philip of Valois of France. He marched the same year with Henry of Lancaster, Earl of Derby, the relief of Loughmaben Castle, then beseiged by the Scots. Soon after this he was made admiral of the king's whole fleet northward. For several years subsequently his lordship was with King Edward in France and he was one of the persons presented by that monarch with harness and other accoutrements for the tournament at Canterbury in 22nd of that reign. In seven years afterwards we find the Earl again in France with the Black Prince, and at the celebrated Battle of Poictiers fought and so gloriously won in the following year his lordship achieved the highest military renown by his skill as a leader and his personal courage at the head of his troops. He was later elected a Knight of the Garter. He married Margaret, sister of Sir John Norwich (there is a line in some of the books that runs from the Norwich family to the Magna Carta Baron de Huntingfield, but it is disproved in Browning's Magna Carta Barons and Their Descendants), and had issue Robert, dvpsp, William, Cecilie, Catherine and Margaret. The Earl's last testament bears date 1368 and he died the following year. Amongst other bequests he leaves to his son William "the sword wherein the king girt him when he created him an earl, and also his bed, with the eagle entire, and his summer vestment, powdered with leopards. He was succeeded by his son William, 2nd Earl of Suffolk, Knight of the Garter, who died sine prole, and the barony fell into abeyance between his sisters
~1305 - 1375
Margaret
de
Norwich
70
70
~1295 - 1346
Sir
Robert
De Beke
51
51
1314
Mary
Mariota
~1272 - 4 MAR 1329/30
Sir Robert
de Draycote
Beke
Elizabeth
Matilda De
Hertwalle
~1245 - 1322
Sir
Richard de
Draycote
77
77
~1250 - <1292
Lettice
De
Beke
42
42
~1220 - 1294
Sir
Philip de
Draycote
74
74
Alice
~1331
Elizabeth
De
Beke
~1325 - 1364
John
De
Ipstones
39
39
~1215
Robert
De
Beke
~1198 - 1261
Sir Richard
De
Draycote
63
63
* This Draycott is indeed well documented and one of the most famous of the family. He was Justice of Chester and in 1244-50 he was a Knight. He also acquired land in Calton, (Derbs.), and Tillington. He died between 1260-8. Sir Richard certainly married twice and maybe three times. His first wife was Aliva or Alina de Legh of Leigh near Uttoxter. Although there is no reference too her, W. Fowler Carter reckons that Sir Richard had a second wife, and his third wife, who survived him was Orabilis or Orabella, (modern day "Arabella"), who was sister of Sarra de Thene (Tean). She was previously married to a Robert de Bek, and obviously was not married to Richard long, for in 1272 we hear of her as wife of William Wyther, who was a Knight and described as a "distinguished man-at-arms". Sir Richard had issue Philip, Roger and Richard, (who was probably by his second wife). The oldest tomb in the Draycott Chapel is thought to be that of Sir Richard de Draycote.
~1175
Richard
De
Draycote
~1150
Philip
De
Draycote
~1120
Hugh
De
Draycote
~1090
Nicholas
De
Draycote
~1060
William
De
Draycote
~1373
John
De
Cherleton
~1307 - 1356
Sir
Richard VI
de Talbot
49
49
~1428 - 30 JAN 1485/86
Philippe
De
Tiptoft
1449 - 1487
Eleanor
de
Ros
38
38
1447 - 1495
Sir
Robert
Manners
48
48
~1468
Elizabeth
Manners
1467 - 1513
Sir
George
Manners
46
46
D. 1372
Elizabeth
Aspall
~1222 - <1261
Sibilla
Longchamps
39
39
~1200
Alina
De
Leigh
~1222
Roger
de
Draycote
~1210
Orabella
De
Thene
Richard
De
Draycote
~1170
Sir
Robert
De Leigh
~1140 - ~1212
Henry
De
Leigh
72
72
~1135 - >1189
Robert
De
Swynnerton
54
54
~1147
Margery
De
Aldithley
~1125 - >1132
Liulf
de
Aldithley
7
7
~1146
Roger
De
Aldithley
~1150
Liulf
Aldithley
~1117
Mabella
De
Stanley
~1083
Liulf
De
Aldithley
~1116
Ralph
De
Aldithley
1057
Adam
De
Aldithley
~1177
William
De
Aldithley
~1179
James
De
Aldithley
~1180
Lucas
De
Aldithley
~1184
Isabella
De
Aldithley
1063
Richardus
Forestaius
~1403 - 1445
John
De
Dutton
42
42
~1305 - 1339
Sir Robert
Roger Le
Savage
34
34
Margery
1280 - 1311
John
Le
Savage
31
31
~1285
Alice
Walkington
1257 - 1299
Roger
Le
Savage
42
42
~1230 - 1275
John
Le
Savage
45
45
Hawise
~1407 - 1488
Richard
Cholmondeley
81
81
~1421 - 1503
Anne
Tuchet
82
82
~1367 - 1433
Sir Peter
De
Dutton
66
66
~1340
Edmund
De
Dutton
1276 - 1326
Hugh
De
Dutton
50
50
~1282 - >1347
Joan
De
Holand
65
65
~1456 - 1492
John
V
Savage
36
36
1314 - 1381
Thomas
De
Dutton
67
67
~1460
Dorothy
Vernon
~1430
Ralph
Vernon
~1440
Ellen
Norris
~1476
Sir
John VI
Savage
~1478 - <1527
Anne
Bostock
49
49
~1493 - 1528
Sir
John VII
Savage
35
35
5 MAR 1459/60 - 1491
William
Herbert
~1524 - 1597
John
VIII
Savage
73
73
~1530 - 1570
Elizabeth
Manners
40
40
~1557
Eleanor
Savage
~1492
Sir
Thomas
Manners
~1510 - 1551
Eleanor
Paston
41
41
1476 - 1526
Anne
Seint
Leger
50
50
~1435 - 1483
Sir Thomas
Seint
Leger
48
48
~1479
Sir
William
Paston
~1485
Bridget
Heydon
1556
Henry
Bagenal
Anne
Bagenal
~1460 - 1526
Sir
Charles
Somerset
66
66
1476 - 1513
Elizabeth
Herbert
37
37
~1450
Ralph
Bostock
1425 - ~1489
Maude
De
Dutton
64
64
~1458
Elizabeth
De
Dutton
~1418 - 1477
Sir
William
Booth
59
59
~1366
Dorothy
Savage
~1360
Robert
Needham
~1526
Catherine
Savage
~1520
Thomas
Legh
~1200 - 1276
Robert
Le
Savage
76
76
~1210 - >1276
Aldeluya
Fitz
William
66
66
~1310
John
Le
Savage
~1172 - ~1220
Hamon
De
Venbables
48
48
~1175
Gilbert
De
Venbables
~1178
Amabil
De
Venbables
~1180
Hugh
De
Venbables
~1182
Maud
De
Venbables
1565
William
Chase
1566
Mary
Chase
1572
Thomas
Chase
1574
Dina
Chase
6 JAN 1575/76
Matthew
Chase
15 FEB 1577/78
Ralph
Chase
~1587
Mary
Chase
1581
Samuel
Chase
2 FEB 1583/84
Elyzabeth
Chase
6 MAR 1584/85
John
Chase
1580
Stephen
Chase
1579
Daniel
Chase
1591
Martha
Chase
1582
Anne
Chase
1526
Richard
Harding
1489 - 1546
John
Wheeler
57
57
Mary
Anne
1465 - 1546
Sir
Thomas
Wheeler
81
81
~1804
John
Wheeler
1491 - 1555
Thomas
Wheeler
64
64
1492
Edward
Wheeler
1743 - 1819
Joseph
Hosford
76
76
1767 - 1849
Eunice
Hosford
81
81
1503 - 1556
Henry
Wheeler
53
53
1504
Richard
Wheeler
1506
Obadiah
Wheeler
~1508
Isabel
Allen
1526
Thomas
Wheeler
~1528
William
Wheeler
~1530
Anne
Wheeler
1533
John
Wheeler
1534
Joan
Wheeler
1539
Agnes
Wheeler
Ellen
1416 - ~1470
Henry
Wheler
54
54
1438
Mary
Elizabeth
Cole
1466 - 1500
John
Wheler
34
34
1467
Richard
Wheler
~1416
Joan
Robyn
~1437
Henry
Wheler
1808 - 1898
Marcus
Hartwell
Wheeler
89
89
~1486
Anne
Wheeler
~1488
Cecily
Wheeler
~1490
Joan
Wheeler
~1492
Jelian
Wheeler
1399
Richard
Welere
~1400
Mary
Elizabeth
~1418
Benjamin
Wheler
1375
John
Thomas
Welere
1377
Elizabeth
Mary
Phillips
1348
Sir
John
Welere
1346
Patty
Sue
Milk
1300
Sir
Richard
Welert
1302
Jane
Anne
Londonderry
1279
Lord
Richard
Welert
1279
Eliza
Ellen
Evens
1254
Lord
Thomas
Wielher
1255
Terry
Lynn
Wells
1225
Lord
Richard
Wielher
~1230
Rachel
Lynn
Wilks
1198
Charles
Thomas
Wielher
1199
Ruth
Anne
Williams
1167
Charles
Thomas
Wielher
1169
Cara
Terry
Hains
1139
Sir Edward
Thomas
Wielher
1144
Elizabeth
Toriey
1113
Edward
Thomas
Wielher
1115
Susanna
Hanna
1084
Lord
Thomas
Wielher
1084
Rebecca
Lynn
Wheel
1056
Sir
Thomas
Wielher
1057
Elizabeth
Runner
1027
John
Thomas
Wielher
1028
Jean
Jones
0995
John
Hinge
Wielher
0997
Jane
Ellen
Binge
0969
George
Hinge
Wielher
0971
Ellen
Engel
0936
Thomas
Hinge
Wielher
0937
Virginia
Walles
0903
Thomas
Wielher
0906
Elizabeth
Bells
0873
Hinge
Wielher
0875
Elizabeth
Small
0848
Bounty
Thomas
Wielher
0849
Mary
Tillie
0819
Thomas
B.
Wielher
Sources: 1. Type: Book Title: Verification of the early Wheeler linkage from 819 to the late 1400's Place: Florida Contact: BettyLou Boysen <blboysen@@jps.net>
0821
Mary
Anne
~1539
William
Jellye
Sources: 1. Abbrev: Dutton Master File Title: Dick Dutton's Master File RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project web site http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dickdutton&id=I 32235 Author: Richard A. Dutton 2. Abbrev: Weymouth Genealogy Center Online Title: Weymouth Genealogy Center http://www.tiac.net/users/weymouth/ Author: Don Weymouth 119 Winthrop Lane, Holden, MA01520 U. S. A.
~1539
Eyed
Atkins
1274
William
Le
Savage
~1365
Richard
Peshall
~1380
Sir
Randall
Brereton
~1309 - 1379
Sir
John de
Swynnerton
70
70
~1286 - 1340
Sir John
De
Swynnerton
54
54
~1285
Anne
de
Montgomery
~1260
Philip
de
Montgomery
~1265
Felicia
de
Welton
~1235
Nicholas
de
Welton
~1315
Sir Roger
De
Swynnerton
ROGER (Sir), knt. who, in the 34 EDWARD I. had a charter for freewarren in all his demesne lands in his manor of Swinnerton, as also for keeping a market there on Wednesday (*) Erdeswick, in his Survey of Staffordshire, says that 20 Conquerour, Comes Alanus held Swinnerton of Robert de Stafford, and that this Alain is ancestor of the Swinnertons. Holinshed, in his Chronicle, states that whilst the Conqueror held siege before York, he advanced at the request of his Queen Maud, his nephew Alane, Earl of Britain, with the gift of all those lands that some time belonged to Earl Edwine, and calls him a man of stout stomach, and one that would defend what was given him. In Tailleur's Chronicle of Normandie in the catalogue of the noblemen that came into England with the Conqueror, this Alain is called Alain Fergant, Earl of Britaine. A day every week, and a fair yearly upon the festival of our Lady's assumption; and in the 4 EDWARD II. He was in the wars in Scotland. In 11EDWARD II. He was governor of the town of Stafford, and in three years after of the strong castle of Hardelagh, in Wales. In the 15th of the same reign he had the custody of Eccleshall Castle (during the vacancy of the bishoprick of Lichfield and Coventry, whereunto it belonged), and was in some years after constituted constable of the Tower of London. In the 2 EDWARD III. being then a banneret, he had an assignation out of the Exchequer of œ145. 13s. 8d. as well for his wages of war in that expedition made into Scotland as for his services in attending Queen ISABEL. In the 9 EDWARD III. he was again in the Scottish wars, and in two years subsequently had summons to parliament among the barons of the realm. He m. Johanna, daughter of Sir Robert de Hastange, and dying in 1338, left two sons, ROGER, his heir, and Robert, aged fifteen at the death of his father.
Matilda
Christina
~1284
Sir Roger
De
Swynnerton
~1225
Elenor
de
Peshall
~1250
Alice
de
Swynnerton
~1250 - 1346
Adam
I de
Peshall
96
96
~1200
Stephen
de
Peshall
~1398
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1400
Joan
Brereton
~1395
Sir
Robert
Aston
John
Maxfield
~1398
Randle
le
Mainwaring
~1465
Sibyl
Bould
~1452
Sir
Alexander
Standish
~1466
Maud
Bould
~1460
Thomas
Gerard
~1458
Sir
Christopher
Savage
~1459
Katherine
Savage
~1461
Eleanor
Savage
~1463
Elizabeth
Savage
~1465
Anne
Stanley
~1447 - 1508
Sir
John
Stanley
61
61
1452
Thomas
De
Leigh
~1420 - 21 JAN 1478/79
Robert
De
Leigh
~1420
Ellen
Booth
1497
George
De
Leigh
~1352
Hugh
Calveley
~1475 - 1529
Katherine
Hanford
54
54
~1394 - 1480
John
Mainwaring
86
86
~1495 - 1577
Sir
Randall
Mainwaring
82
82
~1497
Katherine
Mainwaring
~1505 - 1545
Elizabeth
Brereton
40
40
~1480
James
Leigh
~1484
John
Leigh
~1455
John
Leeke
Muriel
Leeke
~1460
Joan
Le
Strange
~1455
George
Stanley
~1450
Elizabeth
Weever
~1428 - 1459
Sir
Richard
Molyneux
31
31
Sir Richard stood in such high favor with Henry VI that he was exempted from the act of resumption, as one of the ushers of the king's privy chambers in the Constableship of the king's Castle of Liverpool. He fell fighting under Lancasteral banner at Bloore Heath (23rd September, 1459). He also had by letters patent stewardship conferred upon him and sons and heirs of West Deryshire, the forrestship of our forest of Symonds Wood, and our parks of Croxteth, &c. He was afterwards knighted, and was slain at the battle of Bloore Heath, war of Roses, with Lord Audley, September 23, 1459-60.
~1449
Margaret
Molyneux
1396 - 1460
Sir
Richard
Molyneux
64
64
Sir Richard Molyneux, ancestor of the noble House of Sefton, and Sir Thomas Molyneux, Knt., banneret progenitor of the Molyneux of Teversall, a family which maintained for a lengthened series of years the first rank among the landed proprietors of Nottinghamshire and allied with the most distinguished houses in England. Sir Richard signalized himself in the French wars of King Henry V at Agincourt (Aguencourt) where he was knighted and, in consideration of which services King Henry VI granted to him and son Richard by patent dated at Brandon July 26th, 1446, the chief forestship of Royal Forest and parks in the Wapentake by West Derbyshire, with offices of sergeant and steward of that and the Wapentake of Salford, and also the office of constable of Liverpool.
~1405 - 17 JAN 1448/49
Joan
Hagdon
Haydock
~1451
Eleanor
Molyneux
~1360
Anne
Heton
~1420
Constance
Tuchet
~1428
John
Tuchet
Anne
Echingham
~1392
Robert
De
Ros
~1394
William
De
Ros
~1396
Richard
De
Ros
~1410
Sir
Robert
Whitney
Sir
Roger
Vaughan
1371 - 1408
Sir
John
Tuchet
37
37
~1411 - 23 FEB 1446/47
Antigone
Plantagenet
~1395
Eleanor
Cobham
Countess
of Holland
Jacqueline
~1365
Reginald
De
Cobham
~1370
Anne
Bardolph
~1388
Thomas
Cobham
~1390
Anne
Cobham
~1392
Elizabeth
Cobham
~1394
Margaret
Cobham
~1370
Eleanor
Culpepper
~1385
Reginald
de
Cobham
~1340
Lord
Bardolph
Thomas
1348 - 1403
Reginald
de
Cobham
55
55
~1314 - 22 JAN 1348/49
Sir
John
Maltravors
~1324 - <1375
Gwenllian
51
51
1290 - 16 FEB 1364/65
Sir
John
Maltravors
~1260
Sir
John
Maltravors
~1270
Eleanor
de
Gorges
~1425
Sir
John
Arundel
~1427
Eleanor
Arundel
~1430
Elizabeth
Arundel
1333 - 1367
Sir
John de
Ferrers
33
33
1357 - 13 MAR 1411/12
Sir
Robert de
Ferrers
<1387 - 1435
Sir
Edmund
de Ferrers
48
48
Philippe
de
Ferrers
1477 - 1513
Sir
Robert
Corbet
36
36
~1320 - 1375
Joan
de la
Mote
55
55
~1350
Sir Robert
De
Ferrers
<1345
Elizabeth
le
Botiller
<1321 - 1369
Sir
William le
Botiller
48
48
Elizabeth
1296 - 1361
William
le
Botiller
65
65
~1270
William
le
Botiller
Eleanor
FitzAlan
~1319
Jane
Fitz
Alan
1343 - 1396
Robert
Willoughby
53
53
~1360
Elizabeth
Le
Strange
1362
John
Le
Strange
1262
Sir
John
Hastings
~1308 - 1347
Sir
Hugh
Hastings
39
39
~1315 - 1349
Margery
Foliot
34
34
1283
Sir
Richard
Foliot
~1295 - 1324
Joan
De
Braose
29
29
~1228
John
De
Braose
~1205 - 1240
Hubert
II de
Vaux
35
35
~1210
Aline
~1184 - ~1235
Robert
(Iva) de
Vaux
51
51
~1184
Maud
~1165 - 1199
Ranulph
de
Vaux
34
34
~1165
Alice
~1145 - 1165
Hubert
I de
Vaux
20
20
~1144
Grecia
~1123 - >1086
Robert
II de
Vaux
37
37
~1125
de
Munchensey
~1100
Hubert
de
Munchensey
~1025
Ebria
Fitz
Adam
~1085
Ada
de
Engayne
~1068 - 1130
William
de
Engayne
62
62
~0970
Swayn
fitz
Ailrich
~1046
Ralph
De
Engayne
~1160 - 1239
Idonea
De
Builly
79
79
~1205 - 24 MAR 1286/87
Alice
De
Lucy
~1202
Alan
De
Multon
~1210
Gervase
Lowther
~1280 - 1331
Alvia Alice
Aline
Braose
51
51
~1282
Joan
De
Braose
Sir
Richard de
Peshale
Elizabeth
de
Sulley
~1335 - 1369
Sir
Hugh
Hastings
34
34
~1326 - 1375
Margaret
Everingham
49
49
~1354 - 1386
Sir
Hugh
Hastings
32
32
~1356 - ~1378
Margaret
Hastings
22
22
~1345
Sir
John
Wingfield
~1388
Hugh
Hastings
~1313
Margaret
Foliot
~1310
John
de
Camoys
~1341
Thomas
de
Camoys
~1254
Agnes
de
Moles
~1285
William
De
Braose
~1315
Eleanor
de
Bavant
~1335 - ~1377
Sir Peter
De
Braose
42
42
~1340 - >1378
Joan
de
Percy
38
38
~1310
Nicholas
De
Percy
~1320
Joan
Foliot
~1290
Walter
Foliot
~1300
Melbury
Tuberville
~1375 - 1440
Beatrix
De
Braose
65
65
~1360
Sir
Hugh
Shirley
~1395
Sir
Ralph
Shirley
~1400
Isabel
Shirley
~1249 - 1299
Jordan
Foliot
50
50
~1252 - 1330
Margery
de
Newmarch
78
78
<1226 - 1283
Adam
de Novo
Mercado
57
57
~1226
Joan
~1242
Adam
de
Newmarch
~1196 - >1243
John de
Novo
Foro
47
47
~1196
Pernel
~1165
Adam
de Novo
Foro
~1225 - MAR 1298/99
Richard
Foliot
~1229
Margery
d'Estuteville
~1199
Sir
William
d'Estuteville
~1325
Joan
de
Sudeley
>1354 - 1398
Thomas
le
Boteler
44
44
~1308 - 1361
Eleanor
Isabelle
de Scales
53
53
~1365
Alice
de
Beauchamp
1374 - 1418
Robert
Thornton
44
44
~1414
Joan
De
Greystoke
~1378 - 1455
Sir
John Le
Scrope
77
77
Sir John Scrope, 4th Lord Scrope of Masham, had his Barony restored in 1426. He bought back The Scrope lands confiscated following his predecessor's execution. He was Ambassador to The King of Spain and then to The King of The Romans. He served in The Wars in France after 1429. He became Treasurer in 1432.
~1416
Eleanor
de
Greystoke
~1502
Mary
D'Arcy
1502
Elizabeth
Talbot
1500
Francis
Talbot
1528
Sir
George
Talbot
~1480
Elizabeth
Talbot
~1484 - 1542
Sir
Gilbert
Talbot
58
58
Fulk le
Strange
~1350
Joan
De
Cobham
~1350
Henry
de
Grey
~1370
Richard
de
Grey
~1270
John
De
Cobham
~1275
Joane
De
Neville
~1245
Hugh
De
Neville
~1390
Richard
Le
Strange
~1420
John
Le
Strange
~1440
Elizabeth
De
Grey
~1432
Richard
De
Grey
~1357
Ella de
Ufford
~1350 - 1372
John
Tuchet
22
22
1327 - 10 JAN 1360/61
Sir
John
Tuchet
1332
Joan
De
Audley
~1300
Joan
1445
Sir
Thomas
Molyneux
Sir Thomas fought under Edward IV, was under the Duke of Gloucester for the recovery of the town of Berwick from the Scots, and was there made a banneret (knighted) by Gloucester, at the siege of berwick, 24th July, 1483. He was one of the pall bearers at the funeral of Edward IV. He also built a church and Fair Fouse at Hawton.
~1447
James
Molyneux
~1451
Isabel
De
Dutton
1443
Sir
Christopher de
Southworth
1478
Sir
John de
Southworth
1548 - 1580
Katherine
Constable
32
32
1643 - 1714
Thomas
Chase
71
71
1645 - 1718
Joseph
Chase
73
73
Rachel
Partridge
1649 - 1705
James
Chase
56
56
Elizabeth
Green
1651 - 1676
Abraham
Chase
25
25
1647 - 1727
Lieutenant
Isaac
Chase
80
80
ISAAC CHASE, (Thomas1), the first of the name to settle on Martha's Vineyard, was descended from the Chase family of the parish of Chesham, Buckinghamshire, through Aquila, (a) his grandfather, bapt. 14 Aug. 1580. Richard,(b) his great grand-father, bapt. 23 Aug. 1542 (who m. Joan Bishop 16 May 1564) and Thomas (c). Isaac2 was b. abt. 1 Apr. 1650, or 1647 (according to his gravestone), and came first to Tisbury in 1674 bringing with him the trade of a blacksmith as well as his predilections for the Quaker religion. [See also Annals of Tisbury: Sketches of the Early Settlers.]
1658 - ~1674
Mary
Perkins
16
16
1697
James
Sanborn
1658 - 1746
Mary
Tilton
88
88
1677 - 1721
Thomas
Chase
44
44
THOMAS CHASE, (Isaac,2 Thomas1), b. 9 Nov. 1677; res. Homes Hole, master-mariner. He m. JANE SMITH (350) 21 Feb. 1704, who was b. abt. 1685. He d. 22 Dec. 1721 at Virginia during a coasting voyage in his sloop "Vineyard". His est. was divided 15 Oct. 1725. [His gravestone can be found at Crossways Cemetery.] The wid. m. (2) THOMAS CATHCART (10) 15 May 1724.
~1685
Jane
Mayhew
Smith
1679
Rachel
Chase
9 JAN 1682/83
Abraham
Chase
15 JAN 1684/85
James
Chase
14 JAN 1686/87
Mary
Chase
16 FEB 1688/89 - 1749
Joseph
Chase
1691
Jonathon
Chase
1693
Hannah
Chase
1695
Sarah
Chase
1697
Priscilla
Chase
1703 - 1719
Elizabeth
Chase
16
16
~1635
Henry
Kimball
Mary
Wyatt
~1605
Richard
Kimball
Ursula
Josiah
Heath
1684
Martha
Chase
David
Lawrence
1686
Sarah
Chase
Francis
Danforth
24 JAN 1688/89
Dorothea
Chase
1691 - 1786
Issac
Chase
95
95
(III) Isaac, son of Daniel Chase, was born at Newbury, June 19, 1691, died 1786. He was a soldier in the Indian wars. According to tradition he bought six hundred acres of land from the Indians for forty shillings and a gallon of rum, about 1727-28, in Sutton, Massachusetts, lying on the Blackstone river. His wife was admitted to the Newbury church before 1728. He married (first), October 29, 1710, Hannah Barry; (second) November 3, 1772, Hannah Tenny, of Upton. He removed with others of the Chase family to Sutton. Children, born at Sutton: Ambrose, born at Sutton, December 2, 1713,; Daniel, born March 5, 1716, married Margaret Lawson; Timothy, born January 12, 1719, married Leah Robbins, of Grafton, Massachusetts, born April 25, 1718; Henry, born March 2, 1722, married Abigail Robbins; Abigail, born March 6, 1725, died at age of one hundred and two years, married Daniel Owen; Elisha; Hannah, born in Sutton, now Grafton, Massachusetts, 1728, married Joshua Knapp.
~1695
Hannah
Berry
1713 - 1799
Ambrose
Chase
85
85
(IV) Ambrose, son of Isaac Chase, was born at Sutton, December 2, 1713, died there August 4, 1799. He deeded his home farm to his grandson, Ambrose Chase, July 4, 1798, and lived with him until his death, August 4, 1799, and was buried in the cemetery on the farm. He married, July 25, 1734, Thankful Robbins, born April 1, 1714, daughter of Thomas Robbins, of Grafton, Massachusetts. They lived at Grafton, Worcester county, Massachusetts, but about 1745 returned to Sutton. Children, born in Sutton, now Grafton: Mary, born June 3, 1735, married Nathan Rawson, of Uxbridge, Massachusetts, grandson of Secretary Rawson; Thankful, born May 8, 1737; Isaac, baptized September 9, 1739, married October 1, 1772, Betty Yates; Lydia, born May 14, 1741, married Jonathan Goldthwait, of Sutton, Massachusetts; Solomon, born November 30, 1744; Hannah, born June 13, 1748, married her cousin, Simon, son of Daniel Chase; Abel, mentioned below; Edith, born August 27, 1753, married Holt (???).
1714
Thankful
Robbins
2 MAR 1721/22
Henry
Chase
5 MAR 1715/16
Daniel
Chase
Margaret
Lawson
12 JAN 1718/19
Timothy
Chase
1718
Leah
Robbins
6 MAR 1724/25 - 1827
Abigail
Chase
6 MAR 1724/25
Abilgail
Robbins
Thomas
Robbins
Daniel
Owen
~1726
Elisha
Chase
1728
Hannah
Chase
Joshua
Knapp
Hannah
Tenny
1693
Lydia
Chase
William
Evins
1695
Mehitabel
Chase
~1690
Timothy
Osgood
14 FEB 1696/97
Judith
Chase
John
Tuttle
1699
Abner
Chase
Elizabeth
Whittier
1702
Daniel
Chase
Mary
Carpenter
Eliza
Collins
~1704
Enoch
Chase
Judith
Colby
1707 - 1800
Samuel
Chase
92
92
~1716 - 1789
Mary
Dudley
73
73
Mary
Esterbrooke
20 JAN 1686/87
Moses
Chase
Sarah
March
George
March
Samuel
Chase
1732 - 1800
General
Jonathon
Chase
67
67
Dudley
Chase
Sarah
Chase
Elizabeth
Chase
Solomon
Chase
Anne
Chase
Mary
Chase
~1735 - 1768
Thankful
Sherman
33
33
Sarah
Halk
Rev.
David
Halk
1583 - 1667
Thomas
Philbrick
84
84
Thomas Philbrick was a mariner. Left Lincilnshire, England and arrived in New England 1630 (or 1635) on ship Arbella. He was a shipbuilder and first settled in Watertown, Massachusetts. Moved to Hampton, New Hampshire abt 1646 to join his sons.. Will of Thomas Philbrick of Hampton 1663/4 Return to probate index The Last will and testament of Thomas Philbrick SunR I Thomas Philbrick being very Aged and weak in body Butt sound in understanding senc & memory Doe settle my Estate according to this my last will here under written Impri I Give and Bequeth unto my son James Philbrick and to my Grand Child John Philbrick my fresh medow lying near to the Beach being by Estimation six acres more or less as itt is the which to bee Equally Devided betwen them att such time as shal be . after mentioned: Ittem I Give unto my son James Phil-brick . . Dwelling House and my House lott with the orch-yard and all . . . priveledges and appertinances thear unto belonging to him . . His Heiers for Ever: Ittem I Give & bquith unto my son . . and to my Grand Child John Philbrick my . . . . of Thomas Sleeper lying towards the Clam-bancks in that . . of marsh Comonly Called the Little ox Comon to bee Devided . . them att such time as is hereafter mentioned Ittem I Give unto my sonn Thomas Philbrick the some of . . pounds to bee payd by My Exequetor after my disease ittem I Give unto my. sonn Thomas Philbrick the land which was sometimes Daniell Hendrakes Called the Hop Ground to bee wholly att His Disposall at this prsent time: Ittem I Give unto my sonn James one bed with all the furnituer thearunto belongeing and a payer, of Cob Irons and a payer of tongues: Ittem I Give unto my Grand Child John Philbrick thatt Bed which hee useth to ly upon with the Bedding Belonging to It. and my Beetle and [fower] wedges and one of my Hakes: and a weanable Cow Calfe within a yeer after my Diseace to bee payd by my Exequetor and like wise I Give to my Grand Daughter Hanna Philbrick one weanable Cow Calfe the next yeer to bee payd by my Exequetor Ittem I Give unto my son James Philbrick my mare and hee is to pay or deliver unto my sonn Thomas Philbrick the first Colt which she shall bring when itt is weanable Ittem I Give my fower Cowes to my fower Daughters to my Daughter Elizabeth one to my Daughter Hanna one to my Daughter mary [one] and to my Daughter martha one to bee Delivered by my Executor after my Deseace and the moveables in the House which [are] not Expressed above are to bee Equally Devided between [my four] Daughters after my Desease. and I Doe appoint my sonn [James] Philbrick to bee my lawfull Exequetor to this my Last [will] and Testament and I Doe Declare itt to bee my Intent thatt [when] my Grand Child John Philbrick shall Come to the age of twenty one yeeres thatt then hee shall Enter upon & posses whatt I have Given him by this last will: and thatt att the Deseace of my Daughter Elizabeth Garland her son James Chase shall have one Cow in lew of the Cow which I have Given my daughter Elizabeth & thatt the Cow Given to my Daughter Cass shalbee for the use and Pfitt of her daughter martha: & for the Confermation Hereof I have sett to my hand & Seale the twelft of march 166 :64: Thomas [Seal] Philbrick X his mark Signed & Sealed in ye prsents of Samuell Dalton Mehetabel Dalton [Proved Oct. 8, 1667.] [Essex County, Mass., Probate Files, and Norfolk County, Mass., Deeds, vol. 2, p. 99.] [Inventory, taken by Thomas Marston and John Redman; amount, £124; sworn to by James Philbrick.] [Essex County, Mass., Probate Files.] [Words in brackets are supplied from the recorded copy.]
John
Garland
Judge
Henry
Roby
Abilgail
Barnard
Mercy
Nickerson
Samuel
Knight
Jean
Smith
21 FEB 1680/81 - 1716
Isaac
Chase
~1680
Mary
Pease
Rachel
Brown
Benjamin
Beniah
Weeks
D. 1749
Lydia
Coffin
1719 - 1808
Abel
Chase
88
88
23 FEB 1724/25 - 1808
Mercy
Mayhew
9 FEB 1720/21
Mary
Chase
~1720
David
Dunham
~1722
Priscilla
Chase
Henry
Smith
1724
Demaris
Chase
Peter
Ripley
~1726
Lydia
Chase
~1722
Shuball
Dunham
~1728
Rachel
Chase
Thomas
Gwin
~1730
Joseph
Chase
~1732
Thomas
Chase
Anna
Fields
Elizabeth
Collins
1735
Sarah
Chase
Seth
Pease
1737
Benjamin
Chase
William
Bingley
1686 - 1759
John
Emery
72
72
1 FEB 1679/80 - 1732
Hannah
Morse
1656 - 1723
Jonathon
Emery
67
67
~1660
Mary
Woodman
1653 - 1686
Joshua
Morse
32
32
27 JAN 1659/60 - 1690
Joanna
Hannah
Kimball
1621 - 27 FEB 1683/84
William
Chase
1624
Mary
Chase
1637
Mary
Chase
1639
Benjamin
Chase
~1594
Edward
Wheeler
~1596
Adam
Wheeler
~1597
Ann
Wheeler
~1599
David
Wheeler
~1600
William
Wheeler
~1602
Mercy
Wheeler
~1603
Roger
Wheeler
~1605
George
Wheeler
~1607
Henry
Wheeler
1229 - 1330
Amadeus
De
Grandison
101
101
~1231
Banoile De
La Tour De
Gerenstein
1190 - 1259
Pierre
De
Grandison
69
69
1194
Agnes
De
Neuchatel
~1150
Ulric III
de
Neuchatel
~1170
Yolande
de Urach
Arberg
~1140
V
Egino
~1150
Agnes
Von
Zahringen
1154 - 26 JAN 1233/34
Ebal
IV De
Grandison
~1155 - 1235
Beatrix
De
Geneva
80
80
~1110
IV
Egino
~0975
Adalbert
I De
Grandison
1133 - 1177
Ebal III
De
Grandison
44
44
1134
Jordanne
1110 - 1158
Barthelemy
De
Grandison
48
48
1087 - 1135
Ebal I
De
Grandison
48
48
1091
Adelheid
~1050 - 1114
Falko
Conon De
Grandison
64
64
~1030 - 1086
Adalbert
III De
Grandison
56
56
1004
Adalbert
II De
Grandison
~1006
Dietberga
~1112
Ebal II
De
Grandison
~1275 - 1319
William
De
Montague
44
44
WILLIAM, lord of Montacute, eldest son of Sir Simon de Montacute (No. VIII.), served in several expeditions into Scotland, both before and after his father's death, in the reigns of Edward I. and II. In the former he also received the honor of Knighthood, along with Edward prince of Wales; and in the second year of the latter, he obtained the royal charter for free warren at his manor of Aston Clinton in Buckinghamshire, as he did afterward for those of Saxlingham, in the County of Norfolk, Knolle in the County of Somerset, and Woneford in the County of Devon. In the same reign he was governor of Berhamstead Castle and steward of the King's household; and had a grant of the bodies and ransoms of Rene ap Grenon, Madock ap Vaughan and Audoen ap Madock, Welsh barons who had rebelled and been taken prisoners. Moreover, he obtained from the King a special license to make a Castle of his house at Kersington in the County of Oxford, and was appointed Seneschal of the duchy of Aquitain and at last in 1318 of Gascony. In the 11th and 12th of that reign he had summons to parliament and died in 1320 in Gascony, but was interred at St. Frideswide, now Christ Church Oxon *. * William de Montagu, who held the Manor of Aston Clinton, in the County of Buckingham, held it of our Lord the King, by grant of Sergeanty, viz.---by the service of finding for our lord the King a lardiner at his own proper costs." Harl, MSS, British Mus.6126.---"The lord William Montacute holds the Castle of Denbigh, with the honour from the lord the King in Capite." Denbigh and its lordships, "William de Montacute held Wynford by the gift of Hugh de Courtenay by Sergeanty, viz. by the service of finding a bedell to serve in the hundred of Wynford in the office of bedell for all service."---Tenures of land---Blount. "Alexander III., King of Scots, had invaded Man also, and entirely subdued it, and set a King over the isle. However, Mary, the daughter of Reginald King of Man, addressed her self to the King of England for justice in her case. Answer was made that the King of Scots was then possessed of the Island and she ought to apply herself to him. Her grandchild, John Waldebeof, notwithstanding this, sued again for his right in Parliament, held 33rd of Edward I., urging it there before the King of England as Lord Paramount of Scotland, yet all the answer he could have was that he might prosecute his title before the justices of the King's Bench; let it be heard there and let justice be done. But what he could not effect by law his kinsman Sir William Montacute (for he was of the royal family of Man) soon did by force of arms. For having raised a body of English, he drove the Scots out of the Isle with these raw soldiers. But, having plunged himself into debt by the great expense of this war, and become insolvent, he was forced to mortgage the Island to Anthony Bec, Bishop of Durham, and Patriarch of Jerusalem; and make over all the profits thereof to him for seven years, and quickly after, the King gave the Island to the said Anthony for term of life. Afterward King Edward II. gave it to his great favorite Peter de Gaveston. Soon after this the Scots recovered it again under the Conduct of Robert Brus. Afterward, about the year 1340, William Montacute, the younger (Earl of Salisbury), rescued it by force of Arms from the Scots and in the year of our Lord 1393 sold Man, and the Crown thereof, to William Scrope) for a great sum of money."-Camden's Britannia. By Elizabeth, daughter of Peter lord Montfort of Beaudefert in the County of Warwick, he had issue four sons and seven daughters. Of his four sons the eldest died in the life time of his father, the second succeeded him, Simon the 3rd son in the 8th of Edward III. was made Bishop of Worcester and in 1336 was translated to Ely. He was a great benefactor to the University of Cambridge and laid out a large sum on the fine Lady Chapel, on the north side of the Cathedral of Ely, though he did not live to finish it. Sir Edward Montacute, the 4th son, was governor of the Castle of Werk. He served afterward in the French wars with great reputation. In the 23rd of Edward III. (1330), he had livery of all those lands which descended to his wife Alice, daughter and co-heir of Thomas Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, fifth son of Edward I., and Marshal of England. He died in 1342.
~1120
Ulric II
de
Neuchatel
~1130
Bertha
~1090
Rudolph
I De
Neuchatel
~1100
Emma
De
Glane
~1160
Ulric I
De
Neuchatel
Miss
Von
Domene
~1110
Kunigunde
Von
Wasserburg
~1120
Berthold
IV Von
Zahringen
~1135
Edith
Von
Frohburg
~1085 - 1123
Count Von
Frohburg
Hermann
38
38
~1100 - 8 JAN 1151/52
Duke of
Zahringen
Conrad
~1180
Graf Von
Attel
Englebert
Graf Von Attel, Lindburg, Wassenburg, and Hallgraf
~1185
Hedwig
Von
Formbach
~1085 - 1185
III
Egino
100
100
~1090
Edith
~1055
II
Egino
~1025
I Egino
~1249 - 1316
Sir Simon
De
Montague
67
67
SIR SIMON DE MONTACUTE, (son of William No. VII.) was in several expeditions into Wales, particularly in that of 10th of Edward 1. (j286) when Llewellen lost his territory and life. He obtained from Edward I. confirmation of the manor of Shipton Montague in Somersetshire with the woods thereunto belonging in the forest of Selwood and a grant of several other manors in the same county and in those of Dorset, Devon, and Oxford. The same lord Montacute made several campaigns with reputation both in France and Scotland, in the reign of Edward I., in which he was also Governor of Corffe Castle in Devonshire. In the Reign of Edward II. he again served in Scotland and was governor of the Castle of Beaumaris in the isle of Anglesey, and Admiral of the King's fleet. In that reign he also obtained a grant for a weekly market on Tuesday at his Manor of Yardlington, County of Somerset, and a fair on the eve day and morrow after the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin. The 7th of Edwd II. (1314) he obtained a license of the King to fortify his Manor house at Yardlington This Manor was very beautifully situated in a picturesque locality upon a very fine lawn, and remained in, this family through many descents until, through the last Countess of Salisbury (who was beheaded at the age of 70 years by Henry VIII), it passed to the Poles and thence to Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham. Sir Simon Montacute also owned the Manor of Goat-hill, granted to him by Edwd I., and it descended to Gen. Thomas Montacute 4th Earl of Salisbury, thence to Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, and to John Neville, Marquis of Montacute. He also owned the Manor of Laymore in Somerset. This Sir Simon Montacute bore as his Coat of Arms the original shield of his ancestor Drogo First, (Azure---a Gryphon Segreant, or, [gold] as also did his father and each of his ancestors. However, this Sir Simon changed the Arms to "Argent (white) three fusils * in fess gules (red)." See plate. * A lozenge is of a diamond shape, and a fusil is an elongated lozenge, and these Arms were a white shield with three red fusils joined in line. It is however recorded that Sir Simon. used both Coats of Arms, the one which he had made and the other which he received by inheritance. Fortunately we are not left in doubt as to what Arms he really bore, for the Pope had at that time made unwarranted pretentions with regard to Scotland and had issued an insolent bull, to which all the barons of England had made reply in a letter which was signed by all the Barons, who affixed to their names, as their seals, their Coat of Arms. This letter to Pope Boniface VIII. was written A. D. 1301, and was signed by Sir Simon de Montacute, with the other barons. A duplicate of this letter is preserved in the British Museum, and the plate of the Coat of Arms of Sir Simon Montague, appended to this work, is copied from his Seal to that letter. These Arms, with some modification for differences in families, have been the arms of all the succeeding English families of Montague. Sir Simon married Aufricia, daughter of Fergusius, King of the isle of Man, descended from Orry, King of Denmark. The Historian records that Aufricia, daughter of Fergus, King of Man, having fled to King Edward, when dispossessed by Alexander III. King of Scots, Edward bestowed her in marriage upon Simon lord Montague, baron of Shipton Montague, who by the King's assistance recovered the Island and enjoyed it in her right many years. (Camden says it was Simon's son William who recovered the Island.) He had been summoned to parliament from the 28th of Edward I. to the 8th of Edward II. (1315), soon after which he died. Their issue was William and Simon de Montacute, the former succeeded his father and continued the line, the latter was married to Hawise, daughter of Almeric lord St. Amand. Almeric de St. Amand was a great baron of that age whose chief seat was at Grendon Underwood, a parish in the hundred of Ashendon in Buckinghamshire ten miles west N. W. from Aylesbury. The male line became extinct and the property passed (through daughters) to other families. It would seem that Simon Montacute and Hawise de St. Amand, his wife, probably had a son whose name was William Montacute from the following passage taken from a very rare and ancient work *. "From thence he (the King) passeth on to the Castle of Salisbury which Castle belonged to William Montacute Earl of Salisbury in right of his wife but himself being then prisoner in France, onely his Countesse, and one William Montacute, a cousin of his was in the Castle." This William Montacute, who is called a cousin of the first Earl of Salisbury, was therefore a son of Simon and Hawise (Amand) Montacute, as it is recorded that the Earl's father had only two sons. As this Simon Montacute was the younger son, his subsequent history (and that of his son William) is unrecorded. * The work referred to is, "A Chronicle of the Kings of England by Sir Richard Baker, Knight." London, 1660.
~1287
Hawise
De Saint
Armand
~1216 - 1270
William
De
Montague
54
54
WILLIAM DE MONTACUTE (son of William No. VI.), had summons to attend the King into Gascony, against Alphonse 10th, King of Castile, who had usurped the province. The 4'st of Henry III. (I 2 5 7) he was summoned to be with the King at Chester on the feast day of St. Peter, ad 7iincula-well furnished with horse and arms, thence to march against Llewellin ap Griffith prince of Wales. 42d of Henry 111. he had a similar citation. By Berta his wife he left issue his son and heir, Simon.
~1220
Berta
~1176 - 1216
Sir Drue "Drogo
Juvenis" De
Montague
40
40
DRUE DE MONTEACUTO, upon the assessment of the aid for marrying the King's daughter, 12th Henry II. (ii67) certified his Knight's fees to be in number-nine, a half and a third part of the old feosment and one of the new 1 (64o acres made a Knight's fee). He married Aliva, daughter. of Alan Basset, baron of Wiccomb in County of Buckingham. After his death she married second, Richard SOD of Gilbert Talbot, ancestor to the Earls of Shrewsbury. His eldest son, also named Drue, died during his father's lifetime, he married, however, and left two sons,-John and William de Montacute. The younger, William, had no male issue, and but two daughters, namely, Margaret, married to William de Echingham; and Isabel, married to Thomas de Audham 2. The elder son, John 3, was seated at Marsh, in County Buckingham, a manor situated northwest from Alesbury and near the Oxford County line - he married Lucy *____ * and had a daughter Katherine, who married Warine Bassett. 1 The fees were thus held William Malherbe, 3 fees, Robert Fitz John 1 fee, Jordon Geulhame 1 fee, Robert Fitz William 1-2 fee, Helias de Arden 1-2 fee, Hamo 1-2 fee, Thomas de Toire 1-2 fee, Richard Fitz Bernard 1-3 fee, and of the new feosment Will de Montacute 1 fee, Besides 1 fee in Dishcove whereof he was unwarrantably dispossessed by Henry Lovel. For all which fees, '4th Henry II.-(ii68) he paid 10 marks. 2 Stone, in- Aylesbury Hundred was held by John D. St. Clair, who m. Jane, daughter. of Thomas de Audham by Isabel, daughter. of William Montacute (sister of Margaret Montacute) which William was a younger brother of John de Montacute of Marsh, County Ducks, temp. Henry Ill. 3 The Coat Arms of John de Montacute of Marsh in Buckinghamshire were-" Five fusils in fess gules.11 Drue de Monteacuto and his wife Aliva (Basset) had an only daughter who became a nun at Shaftsbury, and a second son,-
1256
Almeric
De Saint
Armand
~1124 - ~1217
William
De
Montague
93
93
WILLIAM DE MONTACUTE, who succeeded to the barony, and in the sixth year of Richard I. (1196) paid £6-1s-6d for his estates in the County of Somerset as scutage for the King's ransom, He was sheriff of Dorsetshire and Somersetshire in the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth years of King John (I 2 05-I 2 09) ; which fully proves his importance at that time, when none but persons of the greatest rank and property were admitted to that office. For the first of these years he had under him Osbert, the clerk, his deputy. Being one of the great barons of that reign who stood up for the liberties of their country, and being found ('7th John) in arms with the rebellious barons against the King, he was stripped of all his lands in Counties of Somerset and Dorset, which were seized by the King and given to Ralph de Ralegh. He died 18th of King John (1218). He married Isabel, daughter. of *____* and left an only son and heir who succeeded to the estate.
~1130
Isabel
~1096 - ~1166
Richard
De Monte
Acuto
70
70
It is recorded of him, that in the second year of Henry II. (1156) he paid £20 into the King's exchequer for the ancient pleas; and 7th of Henry II. (1161) upon the collection of the scutage then levied, he paid 20 marks for the Knight's fees (a yard land Of 40 acres paid two shillings and sixpence tax) which he at that time held, soon after which he died, leaving issue his son Drue, who was called "Drogo Juvenis" -or Young Drue.
~1105
Alice
~1040
Drogo De
Monte
Acuto
In the old Chronicles of France, mention is made of forty-seven different incursions by various Scandinavian bands called Northmen. The most important of these, under the command of Rollo the Dane, resulted in the permanent occupation of a large province which was subsequently called Normandy. "It was thus the settlement of these northern pirates," says Freeman, "which finally made Gaul French in the modern sense. It was at the same time the alliance with Romanic France which brought the Northmen fully under the influence of French language, law and custom, which made them Normans, the foremost Apostles alike of French chivalry and Latin Christianity." In this province and of this people was born on the 14th of October 1024, William, Duke of Normandy, the bold leader in the Norman conquest of England "the great turning point in the history of the English nation." In this province also flourished, one thousand years ago, the Norman family of Montagu. They were seated probably at Montagules-Bois in the district of Coutances of which place it was said "Its ancient lords were famous in the middle ages." The name and family of Montagu was probably prominent and distinguished at that time, for we find mountains, castles, fortresses and towns bearing their name. History has at least recorded the name of one of the family who held at that time an important position of trust and honor. DROGO DE MONTE-ACUTO was born about the year 1040. He became the trusted companion, follower, and intimate friend of Robert, Earl of Moriton (or Mortain), the favorite brother of William, Duke of Normandy. Drogo and the Earl of Moriton were of the same age and both entered heartily into the plans of William in his proposed expedition against England. This expedition was in active preparation in the summer of 1066 and was composed of sixty thousand men and over three hundred ships. Drogo de Monte-acuto accompanied the expedition in the immediate retinue of Robert, Earl of Mortain. They landed at Pevensey upon the coast of Sussex, late in September, 1066, and immediately burned and scuttled their ships, that their only hope might lie in their courage and resolution, their only safety in victory. This marked the advent of the first Montague upon the shores of England, and as he marches on toward the plain near Hastings (where, upon the 14th of October, the battle of Hastings was fought and won), we note that he bears the kite-shaped shield of the Norman invador, it's color is cerulean blue, and upon it is the full length figure of a Griffin, segreant (rampant with wings spread), and painted a bright golden hue. This was the original Coat of Arms of the Montagues in England *. * A gryphon (or griffin) was an imaginary animal devised by the ancients and consisted of the body and tail of a lion with the head and claws (or talons) of an eagle, thus denoting great strength united with great swiftness. William having conquered England and ascended the throne his followers were rewarded with large grants of land. Both his favorite brother the Earl of Moriton and his trusty follower Drogo de Monte-acuto received large possessions. Drogo obtained the grant of several Manors, particularly in the county of Somerset. The original castle or seat of Drogo was at Montacute, an eminence and parish in Tintinhull Hundred, Somersetshire, four miles south from Ilchester. Its ancient name appears to have been Logoresburg and was also called Bishopston. Here the Earl of Mortain built a castle and named it after his friend Drogo de Monte-acuto. (Cappers Topog. Dict.). Camden says of this place that "the Castle has been quite destroyed these many years and the stones carried off to build the Religious houses and other things, afterward on the very top of the hill was a Chapel made and consecrated to St. Michael, the arch and roof curiously built of hard stone and the ascent to it is around the, mountain up stone stairs for near half a mile." A later writer has this graphic description of this spot. "Adjacent to the churchyard rises that noble mount called Montacute, the base of which contains near twenty acres. Its form is conical and its ascent very steep, the top terminating in a flat of half an acre whereon stands a round tower sixty feet in height and crowned with an open ballustrade. On this tower is a flag-staff fifty feet high, on which a flag is occasionally displayed floating fifty-six yards in the air and exhibiting a grand and picturesque appearance. The summit of this tower, being so highly elevated above the level of the central part of the country, affords a rich and extensive prospect extending westward to the hills below Minehead and Blackdown in Devonshire and north eastward over Taunton, Quantock Hills, Bridgewater bay, the Channel, and coast of Wales. To the north, Brent-Knoll, the whole range of Mendip, the city of Wells and Glastonbury-Torr. Eastward, Creeche. Southward over the Dorsetshire Hills to Lamberts Castle near Lyme, the whole a circle of above 300 miles in which on a clear day 80 churches are distinguished. This hill is planted from bottom to top with oaks, elms, firs and sycamores the intermingled foliage of which (especially in the autumnal season) forms a rich and beautifully tinted scenery." While this was the original home of the Montagues, the seat of their barony was at Shepton Montacute a villa at no great distance from Montacute. This parish contains the hamlets of upper and lower Shepton *, Knolle, and Stoney Stoke, and was held by Drogo de Monte-acuto and his direct descendants until the time of King Henry VIII. when Sir Thomas Montacute leaving no male issue, this estate was divided between three sisters. * In Drogo's time, in demesne are two carucates, 8 servants, 8 Villanes (farmers), 5 cottagers, 3 ploughs, 2 mills, one not rated, the other pays seven shillings and sixpence. There are 30 acres of meadow, and wood ten furlongs long and four furlongs broad. Drogo de Monte-acute also held of Robert Earl of Moriton, the following Manors. The manor of Yarlinton. (For description see at Sir Simon Montacute, 8th generation). Sutton Montacute, a small parish six miles east from Ivelchester, lying in a fruitful woody vale under the south west brow of Cadbury castle, with other high hills toward the east. It contains thirty houses which compose a long street in the turnpike road from Ivelchester to Castle Cary. Thulbeer, (ancient name Torlaberie). Drogo held this manor from the Earl of Moriton and it descended through a long line of ancestry together with the manor of Chidzoy, to the unfortunate Edward, son of George Duke of Clarence. Drogo also held of the said Earl one hide * of land in Montagud in this county. Reverend John Collinson says, "it is altogether probable that the Earl of Mortain if he had any other reason than that of a Latin definition---imposed on his demesnes at Bishopton (Logoresburg) the appelation of Montagud in compliment to this Drogo, his favorite and confidential friend." * A hide of land was supposed to consist of 160 acres and was made up of the following parts, viz.-ten acres make a ferundel, or fardingdeal, four ferundels make a yard land, and four yard lands make a hide, so four hides it is said, or 640 acres, make a Knight's fee. But waving this matter, we find the said Drogo-de-Monte-acuto in possession of these estates until his death, which took place about the latter end of the reign of King Henry I. (about 1125) A curious fact may be here recorded, that upon the spot where the battle of Hastings, was fought, William the Conqueror founded an Abbey which was called Battle Abbey, and in the words of his charter, "Instituted a market to be kept there on the Lord's day free from all toll-" and that Anthony Viscount Mountague, a lineal descendant of Drogo, about the year 1575 or 1600, built a fine house there and obtained authority of Parliament to have the market changed to another day.
~1325 - 1359
Elizabeth
De
Montague
34
34
1328 - 1397
William
III De
Montague
68
68
WILLIAM MONTACUTE, second Earl of Salisbury, eldest son of William the first Earl, was born in June, 1328. -Before he was of age he was Knighted when Edward landed at La Hague. He afterward served at the siege of Can, and at the glorious battle of Crecy. When the Order of the Garter was instituted he was the seventh of its original knights, and when the Black Prince obtained Aquitaine he attended him to France and served under him in all his excursions and expeditions. At the battle of Poitiers he commanded the rear of the English army, and was highly instrumental in gaining that famous victory. In short, almost his whole life was a perpetual campaign under Edward III. and his son, the Black Prince. In the succeeding reign, he was continued in all his posts and preferments, and also made governor of Calais, whence he harrassed the French with continual excursions. In the fifth of that reign he convoyed to England the King's intended Consort, daughter of Charles, King of the Romans, and in the seventh and eighth he served against the Scots. In the ninth, a grant was made to him during life, of the custody of the Isle of Wight and Castle of Carisbrook. In the twentieth, the year ,397, he departed this life, having ordered by his will, that every day until his corpse should be interred at Bisham, distribution should be made of one pound five shillings to three hundred poor people; likewise that twenty poor men should bear torches on the day of his funeral, each torch eight pounds weight, and each of them wearing a gown of black cloth with a red hood; also, that there should be nine wax lights about his corpse, and upon every pillar of the church there should be fixed banners of his arms; moreover that £3° should be given to the religious, to sing "rentals and pray for his soul. He first married Joan, who by way of distinction was called Fair Maid of Kent, daughter to Edmund Plantagenet, Earl of Kent, but having been separated from her upon a petition from Sir Thomas Holland to the Pope, in which he alleged that she had been pre-contracted to him, his lordship married second, Elizabeth, dau. and co-heir of John lord Mohun, one of the original Knights of the Garter by whom he had a son who died without issue, having been accidentally killed by his father in a tilting at Windsor in the year 1383. This son was named Sir William Montague and married Elizabeth, dau. of Richard Fitz Alan, Earl of Arundel. His widow married in 1388 Thomas lord Mowbray, Earl Marshal of England. Sir John Montacute, the brother of this Earl, married Margaret, dau. and heir of Sir 'I Thomas Monthermer son of Joan of Acres, dau. Of King Edward I., in whose right he had summons to Parliament from the 31St of Edward to the 13th year of Richard II., when he died. He had three sons, John his heir (who became 3d Earl of Salisbury), Thomas Montague, Dean of Salisbury, and Richard .Montague, of whose issue there is no trace. This Richard lived about the year 1400. None of the English genealogies make any further mention of him except to state his name. It is claimed that there was also a fourth son, whose name was Simon Montague, and from /'in the nobility of England of this name claim descent. Collins' Peerage, however, states that there is no evidence that this Simon ever lived, and is inclined to the belief that the nobility are descended from James Montague, a natural son of General Thomas Montacute, 4th Earl of Salisbury. This James Montague had large possessions in (County Kent, where he was a man of distinction, and is buried in the (Church of Ludsdown in Kent. Sir John Montacute had also three daughters, Sybil, Catherine and Margaret.
~1330
Anne
De
Montague
~1334 - 1374
Sibyl
De
Montague
40
40
1314 - 1338
Giles
De
Badlesmere
23
23
~1318 - 1390
Sir Guy
De
Bryan
72
72
John
De
Grey
~1327 - >1377
Sir
Edmund
Fitz Alan
50
50
~1180 - 1231
Richard
De
Talbot
51
51
~1150 - 13 FEB 1230/31
Gilbert
DeTalbot
~1210
Drue
De
Montague
~1235
John
De
Montague
~1240
William
De
Montague
Lucy
~1265
Katherine
De
Montague
~1260
Warine
Basset
~1265
Margaret
De
Montague
~1260
William
de
Echingham
~1267
Isabel
De
Montague
~1260
Thomas
de
Audham
~1214
Aline
De
Montague
~1235
William
De
Montague
WILLIAM MONTACUTE This son recovered all of the lands which his father had lost. But in the '7th of Henry III. (1233) he also had his lands, distrained by Virtue of the King's precept for omitting to repair to Court at the feast of Whitsuntide, there to receive the dignity of Knighthood, as was required by law. But the next year on doing his homage be was by the Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset reinstated in his possessions,. He died 31st of Henry III. ('1247) leaving issue William his son and heir.
~1255
William
De
Montague
WILLIAM DE MONTACUTE (son of William No. VI.), had summons to attend the King into Gascony, against Alphonse 10th, King of Castile, who had usurped the province. The 4'st of Henry III. (I 2 5 7) he was summoned to be with the King at Chester on the feast day of St. Peter, ad 7iincula-well furnished with horse and arms, thence to march against Llewellin ap Griffith prince of Wales. 42d of Henry 111. he had a similar citation. By Berta his wife he left issue his son and heir, Simon.
~1275
Sir Simon
De
Montague
~1305
Simon
De
Montague
~1310
Sir
Edmund
Montecute
~1336
Robert
De
Montague
~1222 - 1274
Gilbert
II De
Talbot
52
52
~1324
Alice
Plantagenet
~1221
Richard
De
Talbot
1250 - 1306
Richard
De
Talbot
56
56
~1219
Gwenthlian
Verch Rhys
Mechyll
~1170 - 1224
Rhys
Mechyll
54
54
~1040
William
"Le Sire"
De Talbot
Came to England in 1066 with William the Conqueror
~1042
Roger
De
Talbot
~1060
Richard
De
Talbot
~1250
Aufrica
~1230
King of the
Isle of Man
Fergusius
~1277
Simon
De
Montague
John
De
Mohun
~1366
Thomas
De
Montague
~1368
Richrd
De
Montague
~1370
Simon
De
Montague
John
Aubrey
Sir
Allan
Boxhull
~1384
Richard
De
Montagu
~1388
Margaret
De
Montagu
~1390
Elizabeth
De
Montagu
~1178
William
De
Montague
WILLIAM MONTACUTE This son recovered all of the lands which his father had lost. But in the '7th of Henry III. (1233) he also had his lands, distrained by Virtue of the King's precept for omitting to repair to Court at the feast of Whitsuntide, there to receive the dignity of Knighthood, as was required by law. But the next year on doing his homage be was by the Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset reinstated in his possessions,. He died 31st of Henry III. ('1247) leaving issue William his son and heir.
Elizabeth
1737 - 1806
Sarah
Goodale
68
68
~1730
William
Brewer
14 MAR 1738/39
Ebenezer
Goodale
1741
Mary
Goodale
1743
Ezekiel
Goodale
Elinor
Gill
1746 - 1837
Enos
Goodale
91
91
~1750 - 1809
Hannah
Dinsmore
59
59
3 MAR 1747/48
Miriam
Goodale
1750
Persis
Goodale
1753
Elijah
Goodale
Lydia
Lee
~1370
Maud
De
Burgersh
~1375
Thomasine
De
Stapleton
~1341
Sir Richard
De
Stapleton
~1340
William
Hankford
1403 - 1425
Elizabeth
Fitz-
Warren
22
22
~1389 - 1407
Fulk X
Fitz-
Warren
18
18
Anne
Botreaux
~1361
Fulk IX
Fitz-
Warren
Elizabeth
Cogan
William
Cogan
Isabel
Lorine
2 MAR 1339/40 - 12 FEB 1372/73
Fulk VIII
Fitz-
Warren
~1320 - 1349
Fulk VII
Fitz-
Warren
29
29
~1412
William
Bouchier
~1325 - >1366
Isabel
Le
Strange
41
41
1318 - 1394
Sir Brian
De
Stapleton
76
76
Sir Brian Stapylton, knt. of Carleton, living 49th Edward III [1376] was one of the knights of the Garter, temp. Richard II [reigned 1377-1399], the seventy-seventh in numerical order, who bore an annulet of gold on the shoulder of his lion, as an armorial difference. This Sir Brian killed a Saracen in open battle before the Kings of England, France, and Scotland, and therefrom assumed the Saracen's head for crest. He inherited a great estate in his mother's right. He espoused Agnes, daughter and heir of Sir John Philibert, knt. and had two sons, Brian (Sir), ancestor of the Stapyltons of Carleton, and Sir Miles Stapylton. [John Burke, The Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, R. Bentley, London, 1834-1838, p. 208, STAPYLTON OF MYTON] also [John Burke and John Bernard Burke, Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Scott, Webster, and Geary, London, 1841, p. 504, STAPYLTON OF MYTON] On the top left of the large coat of arms scroll done in 1400s now in Florida. Mistakenly typed over about five or six words at the start of what follows: Bart, was a child when his father died. In 1346-47 he took part in the siege of Calais, and was probably at the battle of Cressy in the earlier year. He was one of the founders of the Order of the Knights of the Garter, which took place during a series of jousts held in 1347 and 1348. He was concerned in the treaty of the peace of Bretigny on 8 May 1360. He was still involved in continental fighting when he died in December 1364 at the age of 44, possibly from injuries received in battle. [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 3, Ed. 1, Tree #6402]
~1338 - 1391
Brian
De
Stapleton
53
53
~1340 - 6 FEB 1398/99
Sir Miles
De
Stapleton
1332 - 1417
Elizabeth
De
Aldborough
85
85
~1365
Johanna
Ufflete
~1320 - <1383
Alice
De St.
Philibert
63
63
~1290
Sir John
De St.
Philibert
~1288 - <1331
Gilbert
De
Stapleton
43
43
~1298 - <1348
Agnes
Fitz
Alan
50
50
~1270 - 1306
Sir Brian
Fitz
Alan
36
36
~1270
Maud
~1240 - ~1277
Alan
Fitz
Brian
37
37
~1240
Agnes
Fitz
Henry
~1210
Randolph
FitzHenry
~1210 - >1242
Brian
Fitz
Alan
32
32
~1185
Alice
De
Hansford
~1155
Gilbert
De
Hansford
~1189
Alan
Fitz
Brian
~1190
Agnes
Haget
~1150
Bertram
Haget
~1270
Sybil
De
Belleau
~1120 - 1163
Bertha
of
Brittany
43
43
~1208 - 1314
Miles I
de
Stapleton
106
106
~1190
John
De
Stapleton
~1210
Barbara
Darell
~1180
Sir
John
Darell
~1190
Catherine
Hansard
~1160
Sir
Miles
Hansard
~1170
Sir Brian
De
Stapleton
The oldest names which arose from one's geographic origin...like Stapleton, there was an English village called Stapleton. A "staple" was originally a boulder or large rock, later on it was a post (as you pointed out). These were important because they were readily identifiable landmarks where farmers, bakers, hunters and tradesmen of various kinds came to gather and trade their wares. These meetings at the early "Staples" were essentially for commerce in necessary goods; hence, the word "staples" is used as a collective term, usually for foodstuffs that fulfill basic needs (sugar, wheat, coffee, bread, milk, etc.). So, the Stapletons were, in effect, primitive markets in England, and when a merchant named James was identified, it was usually with his name and place of origin."James Stapleton." Early Stapletons in England were often in law enforcement and soldiering. Robert de Stapleton was Sheriff of Waterford in the year 1287, another Stapleton was the Sheriff of Nottingham (and well beloved, unlikely the Sheriff in the Robin Hood tales), and an early Stapleton, Sir Brian Stapleton, was a knight for King Richard the Lion Hearted during the Crusades. King Richard and Sir Brian were both Normans (from northern France), and indeed, it is reputed that King Richard spent less than two years total of his life in England. At any rate, King Richard brought Sir Brian Stapleton as his personal bodyguard to the battles. During one fierce battle, the Kings of England, Scotland and France had massed with their armies at the edge of the battlefield. As the armies went into battle, a Saracen (the Muslim opponent during the Crusades) broke through the lines and charged up on his horse, sword held high. Sir Brian leaped out in front of King Richard, drawing his sword and neatly beheaded the Saracen. The next day, the English painted the face of the beheaded Saracen onto Sir Brian's shield. Hence, the crest of the Stapleton family is one of just two in England which has the face/head of a human being on it. Upon return to England, Sir Brian added his weight to the pressure on Prince John to sign the Magna Carta. The motto of the family, as it states in Burke's book of Peerage is "Pro Magna Carta." Incidentally, the English claim that they were the world's first true democracy and point to the Magna Charta ("Great Charter") as evidence of their democracy. When the English describe it, they refer to it as the first document that limited the divine right of kings, but it is much more..actually, it's a pretty horrific document. Jim Stapleton recommends that we should try to get time to read it. Incidentally, the last Baronet Stapleton died a few years back. The Stapletons suffered through various harsh economic times, and they ended up splitting their crest into four quadrants. This is outlined in Burke's Book of Baronetage and Peerage. Source: The Stapleton Homepage http://www.users.bigpond.com/lyndar/stap.htm
~1170
Miss
FitzHenry
~1140
Sir Henry
Fitz
Henry
~1150
Allan
De
Stapleton
~1150
Anne
De
Neville
~1122
Robert
de
Neville
~1125
Sir Miles
De
Stapleton
~1130
Princess
of Cyprus
Penrodas
~1100
King
of
Cyprus
~1105
Sir John
De
Stapleton
~1107
Joan
Mallory
~1075
Sir
Mallory
~1090
Allan
De
Stapleton
~1095
Miss
de
Tanfield
~1065
John
De
Tanfield
~1070
Lord of
Stapylton
Herman
~1367
Margaret
De
Astley
~1369
Elizabeth
De
Astley
~1371 - >1438
Thomas
De
Astley
67
67
~1373
John
De
Astley
~1375
William
De
Astley
~1377
Richard
De
Astley
~1379
Henry
De
Astley
1397
John
De
Grey
1401
Reynold
De
Grey
1403
Robert
De
Grey
1407 - 1437
Elizabeth
De
Grey
30
30
~1413
Alianore
De
Grey
30 JAN 1407/08
Sir
William
Calthorpe
Robert
Greystoke
~1361
Thomas
Appleby
~1360
Thomas
Raleigh
~1345
William
de
Astley
~1347
Giles
de
Astley
~1279 - <1316
Sir Giles
De
Astley
37
37
~1283 - 1345
Alice
de
Wolvey
62
62
~1307
Elizibeth
Sibella de
Astley
~1309
Alice
de
Astley
~1257
Thomas
de
Wolvey
~1246 - 18 JAN 1300/01
Andrew
De
Astley
~1250
Sibyl
~1215 - 1265
Thomas
De
Astley
50
50
~1223
Joan
De
Bois
~1277
Nicholas
De
Astley
~1281
Sybil
De
Astley
~1190
Ernald
III De
Bois
~1221 - 1277
Ernald
IV De
Bois
56
56
~1192
Joan
de
Beauchamp
~1160
Andrew
de
Beauchamp
~1164 - ~1242
Eva
de
Grey
78
78
~1159 - 1206
Ernald
II De
Bois
47
47
~1161
Emma
de
Hedenton
~1194
William
De
Bois
~1192
John
De
Bois
~1129
Ernald
I De
Bois
~1131
Emma
le
Chamberlayne
~1105
Paganus
le
Chamberlayne
~1103
Robert
De
Bois
~1184 - >1235
Walter
De
Astley
51
51
~1188
Isabell
~1217
Philip
De
Astley
~1153 - 9 MAR 1220/21
Thomas
de
Astley
~1157
Maud
de
Camville
~1122 - >1165
Philip
de
Astley
43
43
~1095
Thomas
de
Astley
~1637 - 1668
Deborah
Grant
31
31
1662 - 4 FEB 1749/50
Thomas
Knowlton
1670 - 1730
Thomas
Knowlton
60
60
Hannah
Greene
Mercy
1658 - 1726
Nathaniel
Knowlton
68
68
1664 - 1743
Deborah
Jewett
78
78
1439
Isabella
Inglethorpe
1435
Thomas
Neville
1316 - 1378
IV
Charles
62
62
Count of Luxembourg, King of Bohemia
1461
Anne
of
France
1366 - <1394
Anne
of
Bohemia
28
28
1433
George
Neville
Bishop of Exeter
1387 - 1409
Isabella
Capet
21
21
~1418 - 1445
Margaret
of
Scotland
27
27
1423 - 1483
Louis
XI
60
60
~1445 - 1483
Charlotte
of
Savoy
38
38
~1240
Susanna
verch
Dafydd
~1242
Ellen
verch
Dafydd
~1240
Earl of
Fife
Malcolm
~1210
Gwenllian
ferch Ednyfed
ap Cynwrig
~1228 - 1266
Malcolm
MacDuff
38
38
~1200
Philip
ap
Ivor
William
Caentwn
Bran ap
Bran
Fendigaid
Erbin
ap
Cynan
~0170
Gwynnar
ap
Cadrain
~0130
Cadrain
ap
Cynon
~0250
Cynvar
ap
Clydog
~0290
Ffiwch
Lawdrwm
ap Cynvar
~0330
Bard of the
College of Saint
Cadocus Henwg
~0370
Chief of the
Bards of the
West Taliesin
Taliesin, literally, the "Radiant Brow," was a Welsh Bard of the sixth century. His name, regarded by his countrymen with the reverence due to the "Prince of Song," is known to the Saxon chiefly through the brief but spirited invocation of Gray. The text records the fiction of which Taliesin is the hero. Of his real history little is known, excepting what may be gleaned from his works, and from the following notices given in the volume of lob MSS. recently published by the Welsh MSS. Society. The first of these latter is taken from Anthony Powel of Llwydarth’s MS. "Taliesin, Chief of the Bards, the son of Saint Henwg of Caerlleon upon Usk, was invited to the court of Urien Rheged, at Aberllychwr. He, with Elfin, the son of Urien, being once fishing at sea in a skin coracle, an Irish pirate ship seized him and his coracle, and bore him away towards Ireland; but while the pirates were at the height of their drunken mirth, Taliesin pushed his coracle to the sea, and got into it himself, with a shield in his hand which he found in the ship, and with which he rowed the coracle until it verged the land; but, the waves breaking then in wild foam, he lost his hold on the shield, so that he had no alternative but to be driven at the mercy of the sea, in which state he continued for a short time, when the coracle stuck to the point of a pole in the weir of Gwyddno, Lord of Ceredigion, in Aberdyvi; and in that position he was found, at the ebb, by Gwyddno’s fishermen, by whom he was interrogated; and when it was ascertained that he was a bard, and the tutor of Elffin, the son of Urien Rheged, the son of Cynvarch :— ‘ I, too, have a son named Elffin,’ said Gwyddno, ‘be thou a bard and teacher to him, also, and I will give thee lands in free tenure.’ The terms were accepted, and for several successive years he spent his time between the courts of tjrien Rheged and Gwyddno, called Gwyddno Garanhir, Lord of the Lowland Cantred; but after the territory of Gwyddno had become overwhelmed by the sea, Taliesin was invited by the Emperor Arthur to his court at Caerlleon upon Usk, where he became highly celebrated for poetic genius and useful, meritorious sciences. After Arthur’s death he retired to the estate given to him by Gwyddno, taking Elfin, the son of that prince, under his protection, It was from this account that Thomas, the son of Einion Offeiriad, descended from Gruffydd Gwyr, formed his romance of Taliesin, the son of Cariadwen — Elfin, the son of Goddnou—Rhun, the son of Maelgwn Gwynedd, and the operations of the Cauldron of Ceridwen." Next follows the Pedigree of Taliesin, Chief of the Bards, from Thomas Hopkin of Coychurch’s MS. "Taliesin, Chief of the Bards of the West, the son of Saint Henwg, of Caerlleon upon Usk, the son of Fflwch, the son of Cynin, the son of Cynvarch, the son of Saint Clydawc, of Ewyas, the son of Gwynnar, the son of Caid, the son of Cadren, the son of Cynan, the son of Cyllin, the son of Caradog, the son of Bran, the son of Llyr Llediaith, King Paramount of all the Kings of Britain, and King, in lineal descent, of the country between the rivers Wye and Towy. Taliesin became Chief Bard of the West, from having been appointed to preside over the chair of the Round Table, at Caerlleon upon Usk." A manuscript once in the Havod Uchtryd collection gives the following particulars "Taliesin, Chief of the Bards of the West, the son of Henwg the Bard, of the College of Saint Cadocus, the son of Ffiwch Lawdrwm, of Caerlleon upon Usk, in Glainorgan, the son of Cynvar, the son of Saint Clydog, the son of Gwynnar, the son of Cadrain, the son of Cynan, the son of Caradog, the son of Bran the Blessed, the son of Llyr Llediaith. "Taliesin, Chief of the Bards, erected the church of Llanhenwg, at Caerlleon upon Usk, which he dedicated to the memory of his father, called Saint Henwg, who went to Rome on a mission to Constantine the Blessed, requesting that he would send Saints Germanus and Lupus to Britain, to strengthen the faith and renew baptism there. "Taliesin, the son of Henwg, was taken by the wild Irish, who unjustly occupied Gower; but while on board ship, on his way to Ireland, he saw a skin coracle, quite empty, on the surface of the sea, and it came closely to the side of the ship; whereupon Taliesin, taking a skin-covered spar in his hand, leaped into it, and rowed towards band, until he stuck on a pole in the weir of Gwyddno Garanhir; when a young chieftain, named Elphin, seeing him so entangled, delivered him from his peril. This Elphin was taken for the son of Gwyddno, although in reality he was the son of Elivri, his daughter, but by whom was then quite unknown; it was, however, afterwards discovered that Urien Rheged, King of Gower and Aberllychwr, was his father, who introduced him to the court of Arthur, at Caerlleon upon Usk, where his feats, learning, and endowments were found to be so superior that he was created a golden-tongued Knight of the Round Table. After the death of Arthur, Taliesin became Chief Bard to Urien Rheged, at Aberllychwr in Rheged." Another extract, given in the above volume, is from a manuscript by Llywelyn Sion, of Llangewydd "Talhaiarn, the father of Tangwn, presided in the chair of Urien Rheged, at Caer-Gwyroswydd, after the expulsion of the Irish from Gower, Carnwyllion, Cantrev-Bychan, and the Cantred of Iscennen. The said chair was established at Caer-Gwyroswydd, or Ystum Llwynarth, where Urien Rheged was accustomed to hold his national and royal court, "After the death of Talhaiarn, Taliesin, Chief of the Bards, presided in three chairs, namely: the chair of Caerlieon upon lJsk, the chair of Rheged, at Bangor Teivy, under the patronage of Cedig ab Ceredig, ab Cuneddav Wledig; but he afterwards was invited to the territory of Gwyddnyw, the son of Gwydion, in Arllechwedd, Arvon, where he had lands conferred on him, and where he resided until the time of Maelgwn Gwynedd, when he was dispossessed of that property, for which he pronounced his curse on Maelgwn, and all his possessions; whereupon the Van Velen came to Rhos, and whoever witnessed it became doomed to certain death. Maelgwn saw the Vad Velen through the keyhole, in Rhos church, and died in consequence. Taliesin, in his old age, returned to Caer-Gwyroswydd, to Riwallon, the son of Urien; after which he visited Cedig, the son of Ceredig, the son of Cunnedav Wledig, where he died, and was buried with high honours, such as should always be shown to a man who ranked among the principal wise men of the Cymric nation; and Taliesin, Chief of the Bards, was the highest of the most exalted class, either in literature, wisdom, the science of vocal song, or any other attainment, whether sacred or profane. Thus terminates the information respecting the chief bards of the chair of Caerlleon upon Usk, called now the chair of Glamorgan." It is probable that Taliesin was educated, or completed his education, at the school of the celebrated Cattwg, at Llariveithin, in Glamorgan. In after life he became the bard of Urien Rheged, to whom, and to his own son Owain, his principal poems are addressed. In the opinion of the most judicious critics these poems are undoubtedly genuine. They certainly contain passages of exquisite beauty, and~ are far superior to many of the other compositions attributed to him, of which some rest on very questionable authority, and some are evidently Middle Age productions. Indeed, the last of the poems translated in the text bears in some MSS. the name of lonas Athraw o Fynyw. The name of Taliesin is thus commemorated in the Triads - "The three Baptismal Bards of the Isle of Britain :— Merddin, Emrys, Taliesin, Chief of Bards, and Merddin, son of Madoc Morvryn." —Tr. 125. This Triad is more fully explained in an extract from MS. Triads of the Round Table, given in the lola MSS., p. 468. "The Nine Impulsive Stocks of the Baptismal Bards of Britain. — The three primitive baptismal bards of the Cambro-Britons: Madog, the son of Morvryn, of Caerlleon upon Usk; Taliesin, the son of Saint Henwg, of Caerlleon upon Usk; and Merddin Emrys, of Maesabeg, in Glywysyg; after whom came Saint Talhaiarn, the father of Tangwyn, Merddin, the son of Madog Morvryn, and Meugant Hen, of Caerlleon upon Usk; who were succeeded by Balchnoe, the bard of Teibo, at Llandaff; Saint Cattwg; and Cynddylan, the bard. These nine were called the Impulsive Stocks of the baptismal bards of Britain; Taliesin being their chair-president; for which reason he was designated Taliesin, Chief Bard of the West. They are likewise called the nine superinstitutionists of the baptismal chair; and no institution is deemed permanent unless renewed triennially, till the end of thrice three, or nine years. The institution was also called the Chair of the Round Table, under the superior privileges of which Gildas, the prophet, and Saint Cattwg the Wise, of Lancarvan, were bards; and also Llywarch Hen, the son of Elidr Lydanwyn, Ystudvach, the bard, and Ystyphan, the bard of Teilo." There are evidently in the foregoing notices some authentic historical facts, as well as legendary traditions of the age of chivalry, which it would require an able critic to separate from each other. Tradition has handed down a Cairn near Aberystwyth as the grave of Taliesin, the locality of which agrees with the foregoing account. At one of the meetings of the Cambrian Archeological Association this Cairn was visited, It contains a Cistvaen, eight feet long by two feet six wide, and about three feet deep, composed of rude slabs of stone. One of the top stones, which lies near it, measures five feet nine by three feet nine. The Cairn was opened some fifty or sixty years ago, and the Cistvaen then contained some earth of a different colour to that of the adjoining soil. The various poems recited in the Tale of Taliesin appear to have been composed at different periods, and it is not improbable that the above-mentioned Thomas ab Einion Offeiriad collected the poems attributed to Taliesin, which were in existence before his time, and added others to form the Mabinogi, which from expressions in page 265, and the very numerous transformations stated in the poetry, but not given in the prose, must have been much more complete than in its present state. That the story of Taliesin was current in the Middle Ages is well known. If proof were wanting the lines of Llywarch Prydydd Moch, in allusion to the liberation of Elphin, might be adduced. They occur in an ode to Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, composed probably not later than 1220. "I will address my Lord with the greatly greeting muse, with the dowry of Keridwen, the Ruler of Bardism, in the manner of Taliesin, when he liberated Elphin, when he overshaded the Bardic mystery with the banners of the Bards. "—Davies’s Myth. of the Druids. From several poems being addressed to Hopkin ap Thomas ab Einiawn, by Davydd y Coed, Iorwerth Llwyd, and others who flourished about the years 1300 to 1350, it may be inferred that Hopkin’s father, the above Thomas ab Einiawn, was contemporary with Llywarch Prydydd y Moch, and therefore not the author but merely the compiler of the already well-known story of Caridwen, Taliesin, and Elphin. No perfect copy of the Mabinogi of Taliesin being accessible, it has been necessary to print it in the present series from two fragments. The former of the two is contained in a MS. in the Library of the Welsh School, in London. It is written in a modern round hand, and bears the title "Y Prif-feirdd Cymreig, sef Canau &c. a gasglwyd ganwyf fi, William Morris o Gaergybi ym Mon. 1758." The MS. is of quarto size. The second fragment is from a MS. in the library of the late lob Morganwg, and was kindly communicated by his son, the late Mr. Taliesin Williams (Ab Iola). It should be mentioned that the Mabinogi of Taliesin has already been published, although not in so complete a form as the present version, with a translation, by the late Dr. Owen Pughe, in the fifth volume of the Cambrian Quarterly; and, with two exceptions (the poems beginning "Discover thou what is," and "I adore the Supreme, Lord of all animation," ), the translations of the poems now published are extracted from that work, the necessary alterations being made where the text differed materially. The first portion of it is also to be found (untranslated) in the Myvyrian Archaiology, vol. I. page 17, and part of it is inserted in Jones’s Welsh Bards. The Transmigrations of Taliesin will remind the general reader of the adventures of the second Royal Calander in the Arabian Nights.
~0425
Gwrgwst Lledlwm
"the Ragged" ap
Cenue
~0340
Guotepauc
Ap
Tegfan
Emerita
Ferch
Coel
Emerita
Ferch
Coel
~0365
Dyfynwal
Ap
Guotepauc
Ruled the areas of Dumbarton and Clyde
~0367 - ~0440
Amlauit
Wledic
73
73
Ruled the areas of East Cumbria, North Lancashire and most of Yorkshire
Gwen
Verch
Cunedda
~0370
Seithenin
Ap
Guotepauc
Ruled the areas of Setantii and lower Lancashire
~0425
March
Coel
~0427
Llyr
Merini
~0429
Eliffer
~0431
Gwenddoleu
~0450
Meirchion
Gul ap
Gwrst
~0480
Elidir
ap
Meirchion
~0510
Llywarch
Hen ap
Elidir
~0540
Dwywg
ap
Llywarch
~0570
Gwair
ap
Dwywg
~0600
Tegid
ap
Gwair
~0630
Alcwn
ap
Tegid
~0660
Sandde
ap
Alcwn
~0700
Elidir
ap
Sandde
~0890
Clydog
ap
Cadell
~0730 - 0825
Hywel
Ap
Rhodri
95
95
~0910
Ieuaf
(Levan) ap
Idwal Foel
~0912 - 0986
Meurig
ap Idwal
Foel
74
74
~0914
Rhodri
ap Idwal
Foel
~0940 - 0996
Idwal
ap
Meruig
56
56
~0970
Iago
ap
Idwal
Iago ap Idwal was at first excluded from the throne of Gwynedd by Llywelyn ap Seisyll (also Llewellyn ap Sitsyllt) from 1018 to 1023. Iago ap Idwal was Prince of Gwynedd from 1023 to 1039 when he was murdered by Llywelyn ap Seisyll's son Gruffydd ap Llewelyn who was the only Welsh king to actually rule over the whole of Wales from 1057 until his death in 1063. Died in 1039, murdered by Gruffydd ap Llewelyn
~1102
Cadwallader
Ap
Gruffydd
~1104
Gwladys
Verch
Gruffydd
~0933
Gwaithfoad
Vawr Ap
Gwynnan
~1080 - 1128
Llywarche
ap
Trahaern
48
48
~0944
Idwallen
Ap
Owain
~1146 - >1174
Maelgwn
ap
Owain
28
28
~1148
Rhodri
ap
Owain
~1100
Christin
Verch
Goronwy
1136 - 1204
Dafydd
Ap
Owain
68
68
* FA1: Acceded: 1170. 3 * _FA2: Yielded sovereignity to his nephew Llywelyn ap Iorworth in 1194. 3 * _FA3: Llywelyn ap Iorworth defeated him at the mouth of the River Conwy. * _FA4: Banished by Llywelyn to England. Sources: 1. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc Repository: Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@@tardis.ed.ac.uk Call Number: Media: Electronic 2. Title: Royal Genealogies DB Author: Denis R. Reid Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258 Note: 216/237-5364 Note: OK Repository: Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@@cleveland.freenet.edu Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Shows him as s of Owain Gwynedd with no mother listed for either him or his 1/2 brother Iorwerth 3. Title: Royal Genealogies DB Author: Denis R. Reid Publication: 149 Kimrose Lane, Broadview Heights, OH 44147-1258 Note: 216/237-5364 Note: OK Repository: Note: http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html ah189@@cleveland.freenet.edu Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Reigned 1170-1194. 4. Title: soc.genealogy.medieval Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: Luke Stevens
~1132
Margaret
Verch
Owain
~1134
Ievan
Ap
Owain
~1136
Gwenllian
Verch
Owain
~1138
Angharad
verch Owain
Gwynedd
~1122
Madoc
Ap
Owain
Riryd
Ap
Owain
~0920
Joyce
Baladon
~0910
Gwynnan
Ap
Gwynano
~0827
Ceidau
Ap
Coryf
~0785
Coryf
Eorf Ap
Caenawg
~0765
Caenawg
Gawr Ap
Tegonwy
~0720
Tegonwy
Ap
Teon
~0235
Gwidolin
ap
Gloyw
~0450
Therew
Verch
Brydw
~0265
Gwidol
Ap
Gwidolin
Flech
Ap
Lludd
Mathonwy
Bran
Nasciens"The
Blessed"
Berwgn
Ap
Morgan
Morgan
Ap
Blacdyn
Blacdyn
Ap
Rhun
Rhun
Ap
Idwal
Idwal
Ap
Llywarch
Llywarch
Ap
Calchynydd
Calchynydd
Ap Enir
Fardd
Enir
Fardd
Ap Ithel
Ithel
Ap
Llarian
Llarian
Ap
Teuged
Teuged
Ap
Llyfeinydd
Llyfeinydd
Ap
Perdur
Perdur
Ap
Gwryrydd
Gwryrydd
Ap
Ithon
Ithon
Ap
Camber
Camber
Ap
Brutus
King of Cambria
and Cornwall
Gorbonian
the
Nymph
Venila
Phorcus
the
Titan
Oceanus
the
Titan
Tethys
the
Titan
Gaia
Jasius
II of
Latium
Uranus
Vulcan
of
Latium
Amnus
Faunigena
of Latium
I
Faunus
I Picus
Caribanthus
of
Latium
Jasius
of
Latium
Cambo
Blascon of
the Janigenae
Belait
of
Latium
Phoenusa
Farsaid
MacGlunfhind
Studied at the Tower of Babel
Nel
Niul
Nemnach
Nel Niul Nemnach, King of Scythia, favorite of Pharoah (Cinqueris or Ankhkheperure)
Lamfind
MacFetheoir
Fetheoir
MacAgnomain
Agnoman
MacThoe
Thoe
MacBainb
Bainb
MacSeim
Seim
MacMair
Mar
MacEthecht
Ethecht
MacAurthacht
Aurthaccht
MacAbuith
Abuith
MacAoy
Aoy
MacAra
Ara
MacIara
Iara
MacSru
Sru
MacEsru
Esru
MacRiphath
Riphath
Scot ben
Gomer
Gomer
Cwmry ben
Japheth
Progenitor or Cimmerians and Celts
Daughter
of
Eleazar
Enygeus bint
Matthat of
Arimathea
Magog
ben
Japheth
Madai
ben
Japheth
Eliakim
Adataneses
Heli Jacob
ben
Matthat
Joachim
ben
Matthat
Eleazar
Gwyn
ap
Caid
~0115
Stradwawl
Verch
Cyllin
~0360
Ystradwel
verch Cadfan
Gadeon
~0355
Gwrfawr
Verch Cadfan
Gadeon
St.
Priscilla
Praxedes
D. 0107
St.
Pudentiana
St.
Timotheus
Cartismandua
~0120
Linus
ap
Salog
King of
Siluria
Guiderius
~0178
Keribur ap
Lleuver
Mawr
Penardum
verch Bran
Fendigaid
~0175
Eurgen verch
Lleuver
Mawr
~0180
Cadwalladr
Ap Lleuver
Mawr
Darerca
Dareara
Calpurnius
Calphurnius
Calpinn Alpin
Potitus
Odissus
Odais
Connudh
Cornuithe
Leobut
Luibuirne
Meurig
Oda
(Otta)
Orc
Meurig
Oiric
Orc
Leo
~0260
Theodoria
Aurilia
~0270
Valeria
~0240
Emperor
of Rome
Galerius
~0245
Valeria
~0220
Emperor
of Rome
Diocletian
Constantine
Julian
the
Apostate
~0420
Muredach
~0390
Eoghanr
Owen
~0360
Niall
Mor
Niall Mor, known as Niall of the Nine Hostages, 126th Monarch of Ireland.
~0330
Eochaidh
Muigh
Meadhoin
~0300
Muredach
Tireach
~0270 - 0322
120th
Monarch of
Ireland Aioffe
52
52
~0275
Fiacha
Trabhteine
Child
of
Athildis
~0345 - 0421
Constantius
76
76
Placida
~0375 - 0455
Valentinian
80
80
~0410
Eudoxia
~0400 - 0480
King of the
Vandals
Hunneric
80
80
~0440
King of the
Vandals
Hilderic
Mary
bint
Heli
~0170
Aminadab
ben
Joshua
~0480
Hilda
Lord of
Salisbury
Salog
St.
Novatus
Arthfael
ap
Einnyd
Adeon Ap
Caradoc
Gerontius
~1127
Milicent
De
Stanton
~1152
Isabel
De
Camville
~1150 - 1202
Robert
De
Harcourt
52
52
~1250
Arabella
De
Harcourt
~1237
Eleanor
Hillaria de
Hastings
~1100
Duke of
Stanton
Geoffrey
~1440
Elizabeth
Harbottle
1426
Bertrum
Harbottle
~1443
Lucy
Harbottle
~1444
Agnes
Harbottle
~1446
Joan
Harbottle
~1455
Anthony
Harbottle
~1457
Robert
Harbottle
~1465
Ralph
Harbottle
~1430 - 1492
Joan
Lumley
62
62
1404
Thomas
Lumley
~1401 - 1443
Robert
Harbottle
42
42
~1401
Margaret
Ogle
1369 - 1435
Sir
Robert
Ogle
66
66
~1382
Maud
De
Grey
~1400
Anne
Ogle
~1402
Constance
Ogle
~1406
Robert
Ogle
~1408
John
Ogle
~1410
Agnes
Ogle
~1412
William
Ogle
~1412
Jennet
Ogle
~1414
Elizabeth
Anne
Ogle
~1416
Margaret
Ogle
~1395 - 1438
John
Manners
43
43
1384
Sir
Thomas
De Grey
~1388
William
De
Grey
~1390
Henry
De
Grey
~1363 - >1402
Joan
De
Mowbray
39
39
~1368
Margaret
De
Mowbray
1365
John
De
Mowbray
~1360
Gennet
De
Mowbray
~1328 - 1369
Thomas
De
Grey
41
41
~1332
Margaret
De
Pressene
~1303 - ~1336
William
De
Pressene
33
33
1297 - 12 MAR 1342/43
Thomas
De
Grey
~1301
Agnes
De
Beyle
~1330
David
De
Grey
~1266 - 1310
Thomas
De
Grey
44
44
~1295
Robert
De
Grey
~1225
John
De
Grey
~1249
Hugh
De
Grey
~1251
Henry
De
Grey
~1253
Andrew
De
Grey
~1213
Joan
De
Grey
1351 - 1409
Sir
Robert
Ogle
57
57
~1357 - 1416
Joan
De
Heton
59
59
~1374
Joan
Ogle
~1375
Margery
Ogle
~1305 - 21 MAR 1385/86
Sir Alan
De
Heton
~1320
Constance
Lilburn
~1339
William
De
Heton
~1340
Mary
De
Heton
~1350
Edgar
De
Heton
~1351
Elizabeth
De
Heton
~1353
Mariona
De
Heton
1294
Sir
John
Lilburn
1298
Constance
~1288 - 30 JAN 1352/53
Thomas
De
Heton
1292
Agnes
~1314
John
De
Heton
~1318
Isabel
De
Heton
~1325
Thomas
De
Heton
Margery
~1257
Thomas
De
Heton
~1328 - 1355
Sir
Robert
Ogle
27
27
~1337 - 1403
Helen
Bertram
66
66
1307 - 1363
Robert
Bertram
56
56
~1310 - 1341
Margaret
Felton
31
31
~1257
William
Felton
~1258 - 1328
Constance
De
Pontop
70
70
~1235
Thomas
De
Pontop
~1225
Robert
Le
Strange
~1230
Alianor
De
Blancminster
1287 - 1314
Sir
Robert
Bertram
27
27
~1287
Agnes
~1265 - ~1300
Roger
Bertram
35
35
~1269
Alice
Gubium
1243 - 10 FEB 1301/02
Robert
Bertram
~1267
Margery
Bertram
1224 - ~1262
Roger
Bertram
38
38
Laderma
~1187 - ~1239
Richard
Bertram
52
52
~1197
Sarah
~1221
Robert
Bertram
~1223
Richard
Bertram
~1225
Faulk
Bertram
~1214 - 1281
Isabel
Bertram
67
67
~1226
Agnes
Bertram
~1227
Ida
Bertram
~1230
Christian
Bertram
~1160 - ~1214
Robert
Bertram
54
54
~1134 - ~1177
Richard
Bertram
43
43
~1194
John
Bertram
~1196
Aelina
Bertram
~1138
Menebell
Gisulph
~1154
Aline
Bertram
~1162
Roger
Bertram
1112
Simon
Gisulph
1066
Reginald
Gisulph
1099
William
Bertram
~1103
Hawise
Balliol
~1126
Roger
Bertram
~1130
Guy
Bertram
~1132
William
Bertram
~1077
Guy
Balliol
~1079
Dionysia
~1101
Bernard
Balliol
~1104
Joceline
Balliol
~1076
Richard
Bertram
~1080
Sigel
Mitford
~1104
Alexander
Bertram
1054
John
Mitford
1028
John
Mitford
~1050
William
Bertram
~1054
Miss
De
Bostenburgh
~1028
Thurstan
De
Bostenburgh
~1315 - 1362
Robert
Ogle
47
47
~1310
Joan
Hepple
~1352
Thomas
Ogle
~1354
Joan
Ogle
~1284
Robert
Hepple
~1288
Cicily
Chartney
~1262
Gilbert
Chartney
~1258
Robert
Hepple
~1262
Margaret
Chartney
~1295 - 1350
Robert
Ogle
55
55
~1295
Margaret
Gubium
~1317
Alexander
Ogle
~1269
Hugh
Gubium
~1273
Joan
Morell
~1244
Nigel
Morell
~1264 - 1323
John
Ogle
59
59
~1274 - >1320
Annabella
Selby
46
46
~1287
John
Ogle
~1312
Richard
Ogle
~1316
Henry
Ogle
~1318
Isabel
Ogle
~1250
Walter
Selby
~1220 - 1270
Thomas
Ogle
50
50
~1256
Alexander
Ogle
~1219
Miss
Tyson
~1188 - 1252
Richard
Ogle
64
64
~1223
Roger
Ogle
~1239
Gilbert
Ogle
~1130 - 1182
Gilbert
De
Ogle
52
52
~1144
Agnes
~1163
Robert
Ogle
~1165
William
Ogle
~1169
Gilbert
Ogle
~1177
John
Ogle
~1085 - <1167
Humphrey
De
Ogle
82
82
~1089
Isabella
~1055 - ~1125
Humphrey
De
Ogle
70
70
~1132
Robert
De
Ogle
~1370 - 1419
Robert
Harbottle
49
49
~1359 - 1424
Isabel
De
Monboucher
65
65
~1403
Thomas
Harbottle
~1330 - ~1385
Bertram
De
Monboucher
55
55
~1334
Christiana
De
Widdrington
~1299 - 1372
Roger
De
Widdrington
73
73
1319 - <1369
Elizabeth
De
Acton
50
50
~1335
Alianore
De
Widdrington
~1336
John
De
Widdrington
~1338
Barbara
De
Widdrington
~1345
Edmund
De
Widdrington
~1297 - 1342
Richard
De
Acton
45
45
~1301
Matilda
D'Emeldon
~1277 - 1333
Richard
D'Emeldon
56
56
Alice
~1279
Christian
Swinburne
~0130
Joshua
ben
Joseph
<0100
The
Rama-Theo
Joseph
Joseph
ben
Jacob
Yehoshusa ben
Joseph (Jesus
the Christ)
Damaris
(Tamar)
Jesus
Justus
Mary
Magdelene
~0220
Catheloys
(Castellors)
ap Aminadab
~0270
Manael
ben
Catheloys
~0310
Titurel
ap
Manael
~0340
Boaz
Anfortas
ap Titurel
~0370
Frotmund
ap Boaz
Titurel
Galains Alain
ben Jesus
Justus
~0320
Lambar
ap
Manael
~0360
Pelles
Brons
~0400
Pellinor
~0430
Tegau
Eufron
~0430
Caradoc
Freichfras
Ap Llyr
~0470
Gwygon
Gleddyfrudd
~0510
Glannog Ap
Gwygon
Gleddyfrudd
~0550
Helig
Foel Ap
Glannog
~0590
Rhychwin
Farfog Ap
Helig Foel
~0592
Gwrydr
Goch Ap
Helig Foel
~0630
Cynwas
Ap
Rhychwin
~0920
Einion
Ap
Gwrydr
~0670
Garannog
Glewddigar
~0710
Geraint
ap
Grannog
~0750
Gwyddno
Ap
Geraint
~0790
Sandde
Ap
Gwyddno
~0830
Pyll
Ap
Sandde
~0870
Einnyd
Bac
Ap Pyll
~0960
Cynan
Ap
Einion
~1000
Pyll
Ap
Cynan
~1100
Iorwerth
Ap
Cynan
~1070
Cynan Ap
Llywarch
Holwbrwch
~1030
Llywarch
Holwbrwch
Ap Pyll
~0368
Isaac
ap Boaz
Titurel
~0400
Bjorni
Isaacson
Marta
~0700
Margaret
MacDuptory
~0670
King of
Ireland
Duptory
Eugein
Ap
Afallach
Prydein
Ap
Eugein
Dyfyn
Ap
Prydein
~0105
Eifydd
Ap
Dyfyn
~0135
Arnwerydd
Ap
Eifydd
~0165
Gordwuyn
Ap
Arnwerydd
~0254
Genedawc
Ap
Cein
~0725
Matilda
~1050
Cadwygn
Ap
Bleddyn
Cadwgan the Renowned, the last Prince of Powys, Lord of Nanau in Merioneth. He was treacherously slain at Welsh Pool in 1109. His second wife was a daughter of Lord Picot de Say, a Companion of William the Conqueror.
~0420
Amlawdd
Wledig
~0400
Cynan
Ap
Ffrwdwr
~0490
Guinevere
Variously portrayed in literature, she is called the daughter of King Leodegrance (Lleudd-Ogrfan) of Cameliard by Malory, the daughter of King Ogrfan Gawr (the Giant) of Castell y Cnwclas (Knucklas Castle) by Welsh Tradition, the daughter of King Garlin of Galore by Germanic tradition, the daughter of a Roman noble by Geoffrey of Monmouth and wife of King Arthur by everyone. Her name is spelled differently depending on where you look. It can be either the traditional Guinevere, or Guenevere, or Guenievre, or Guenhumare or Ginevra. In Welsh, she is Gwenhwyfar; in Cornish, Jenefer. In all cases, she is surpassingly beautiful and desirable, if morally lax from the time of the Vulgate Cycle (13th century) onward. She is either forced into or conceives and engineers an extra-marital relationship with Lancelot and is either condemned, according to law, or forgiven outright for her sins. She either was a willing accomplice to Mordred's treachery against Arthur, as suggested in Wace and Layamon, or was forced into it against her will as stated in John Hardyng's "Chronicle" (1457). Early mentions of Guinevere, in the Triads of the Island of Britain, give tantalising glimpses of her original relationship with Mordred: he is shown forcing his way into Arthur's Court, dragging the Queen from her throne and striking her, but the reasons why are unknown. The incident may have been related to quarrels between Guinevere and her sister, Mordred's wife, Gwenhwyfach, which are said to have been the eventual cause of the Battle of Camlann. Guinevere is frequently abducted in Romance, sometimes by King Melwas of Somerset, sometimes by Mordred and sometimes by the marauding tribes from the north. She meets her end sometimes in a convent at Amesbury or Caerleon and sometimes she dies at the vengeful hand of Lancelot. Scottish stories, recorded by Boece, indicate she died as a prisoner of Mordred's followers at Barry Hill in Strathmore. She was buried at Meigle where her memorial can still be seen. Despite this, her bones either were or were not found by the monks of Glastonbury when they discovered the grave of Arthur in 1191, depending upon which version of the burial cross inscription you read. Giraldus Cambrensis says the cross claimed Guinevere as Arthur's "second wife". This appears to echo the story of the False Guinevere of French Romance: an identical half-sister of the Queen fathered on the same night who persuaded Arthur that she was his true wife. For two and a half years, the King was separated from the real Guinevere until the deception was uncovered. There is also an ancient Triad of the Island of Britain which records Arthur's "Three Chief Queens": Gwenhwyfar daughter of Cywryd, Gwenhwyfar daughter of Gwythyr ap Greidiol and Gwenhwyfar daughter of Ogrfan Gawr. This may further indicate the confusion over the lady's parentage as already alluded to. Alternatively, the three Guineveres could show a common Triple-Goddess motif at the root of many later Celtic characters. Whatever Guinevere was or was not, she has been a useful tool in the hands of the romancers throughout the centuries and has greatly enhanced the legends of King Arthur.
Gwellian
~0484
Madog
Ap
Uther
~0486
Gwyar
Ap
Uther
~0490
Elen
Anaumide
Verch Uther
~0452
Tywynwedd
Verch
Amlawdd
~0439
Menestry
Tyvrydog
ap Arwystli
Gloff
Caradawc
Vreichvras
Nudd
Gwyn
Ap
Nudd
Lleenawg
Gwallawc
Ap
Lleenawg
Melcha
Miriam
Bint
Amram
Zipporah
Gersam
Ben
Moses
Eliezer
Ben
Moses
Jethro
Raguel
1335 - 1365
Maria
De
Padilla
30
30
1354 - 1369
Beatriz of
Leon and
Castile
15
15
JAN 1354/55
Juan
De
Castile
1359
Alfonso
De
Castile
~1280 - 1355
Juan
Garciez
De Padilla
75
75
~1280
Meria
de
Henestrona
~1240
Fernan
Gonsales
~1240
Aldonza
Ramirez
~1190
Señor de
Cifontes
Ramiro
~1200
Aldonza
Gonzales
Giron
~1160 - 1234
Gonsalo
Ruis II
Giron
74
74
~1165
Sancha
Rodriquez
de Lara
~1205
Maria
Gonzales
Giron
~1123
Rodrigo
Rodriguez
de Lara
~1130
Garcia
de
Azagra
~1095
Rodrigo
'El Franco'
Gonzalez
~1060
Gonsalo
Nuñez
de Lara
~0980
Gonsalo
Nuñnez
~1020
Nuño
Gonsalez
~0940
Nuño
Gonsalez
~0900
Gonsalo
Gustaves
~0915
Mawiyah
1339 - 1361
Blanche
De
Bourbon
22
22
1311 - 1356
Pierre
I de
Bourbon
45
45
1318 - 1342
Yolande
Palaeologus
Di Montferrat
24
24
1337 - 1410
Louis
II "Le
Bon"
73
73
FEB 1376/77
Princess
of France
Isabel
~1303 - 1363
Jeanne
de
Valois
60
60
~1280 - 1358
Matilda
de
Châtillon
78
78
1279 - 22 JAN 1341/42
Louis I
"Le
Boiteaux"
1320
Jeanne
De
Chatillon
1256 - 7 FEB 1316/17
Robert
de
Clermont
1257 - 1310
Beatrix
de
Bourgogne
53
53
1237 - 1288
Agnes
de
Dampierre
51
51
MAR 1379/80 - 5 FEB 1433/34
Jean I
de
Bourbon
1401 - 1456
Charles
I de
Bourbon
55
55
Duke of Auvergne, Count de Clermont.
1467
Duke of
Guelders
Karel
1426
Jean II
de
Bourbon
Count of Clermont & Ferez
~1432
Charles
II de
Bourbon
1436
Louis
de
Bourbon
Admiral de France
1596 - 1632
V
Friedrich
36
36
1480
II
Filiberto
1445
Jacques
de
Bourbon
1467
Philippa
De
Guelders
1630 - 1714
Countess
Palatine of
Simmern Sofie
83
83
Juana
de
Castro
6 MAR 1404/05
Juan II
of
Castile
1401
Maria
of
Castile
1403
Catalina
de
Villena
1358 - 1390
Juan I
De
Castile
32
32
20 FEB 1357/58
Eleanor
of
Aragón
1380 - 1416
Ferdinand
I "De
Antequera"
35
35
~1356
Martin
"the
Humane"
~1360
Constanza
of
Aragón
8 FEB 1290/91 - 1357
Afonso
IV 'O
Osado'
1293 - 1359
Infanta
of Castile
Beatrix
66
66
12 JAN 1314/15
Alfonso
of
Portugal
12 JAN 1316/17
Diniz
of
Portugal
Maria
de la
Cerda
1326
Joao
of
Portugal
Alfonso
de la
Cerda
1324
Isabel
of
Portugal
1258 - 1295
Sancho
IV "the
Fierce"
36
36
1283
Isabel
de
Limoges
1285 - 1312
Fernando
IV "the
Summoned"
27
27
1286
Alfonso
of
Castile
1288
Enrique
of
Castile
1290
Pedro
de
Castile
1292
Felipe
of
Castile
1204 - 6 JAN 1271/72
Alfonse
de
Castilla
1261 - 7 JAN 1324/25
Denis
"the
Farmer"
4 JAN 1270/71 - 1336
Isabel (St.
Elizabeth)
de Aragón
After her husband died she was able to live as a nun in the nunnery at Coimbra which she founded. She died seeking a peace between her son Alfonso VI and his son-in-law the King of Castile. Her feast day is 4th July.
3 JAN 1289/90
Costanza
of
Portugal
~1293
Affonso
Sanchez
Maria
Affonsa
de Portugal
Marina
Gomez
~1273
Frederick
II of
Sicily
~1210
Leonor
of
Castile
~1228
Alfonso
of
Aragon
Isabella
(Elizabeth)
1236
Jordan
Hohenstaufens
1237
Margaret
Hohenstaufens
1237
Agnes
Hohenstaufens
1211
Henry
von
Hohenstaufen
Emeric
of
Hungary
Ladislas
III of
Hungary
1215 - 16 FEB 1278/79
Alfonso
IIl
1242 - 1303
Beatriz
Alfonsez
of Castile
61
61
1260
Fernando
de
Portugal
8 FEB 1262/63
Affonso
de
Portugal
1268
Vicente
de
Portugal
25 FEB 1258/59
Branca
de
Lorvano
2 FEB 1263/64
Sancha
de
Portugal
1264
Maria
de
Portugal
~1265
Constanza
de
Portugal
~1210
Matilda
de
Dammartin
1239
Roberto
Alfonsez
Marina
de
Enxara
Affonso
de
Portugal
Maddalena
Gil
Martim
Affonso
de Portugal
Alfonso
Fernández
~1225 - 1262
Mayor
Guillén de
Guzman
37
37
Urraca
Alfonsez
de Castile
Martin
Alfonsez
de Castile
~1185
Guillen
Prez de
Guzman
~1295 - 1336
Alfonso
IV "the
Benign"
41
41
1307 - 1359
Leonor
of
Castile
52
52
Blanche
~1300
Maria
of
Aragón
~1302
Constanza
of
Aragón
1291
Isabel
de
Limoges
Jaime
of
Aragón
~1308
Constanza
of
Castile
1311 - 1350
Alfonso
XI of
Castile
38
38
1332
Fernando
of
Castile
Costanza
Manuel
de Castile
>1363
Infanta
De Castile
Leonor
1330
Pedro
Alfonsez
1331
Sancho
Alfonsez
~1333 - 1379
Enrique
II
Alfonsez
46
46
Count of Trastámara.
~1334
Fabrique
Alfonsez
1337
Telo
Alfonsez
1336
Fernando
Alfonsez
1341
Juan
Alfonsez
Luis
de la
Cerda
1345
Pedro
Alfonsez
1347
Juana
Alfonsez
Elvira
Iniguez de
la Vega
Constanza
Enriquez
Juana
Enriquez
~1327
Beatriz
Manuel
De Castile
Blanca
de la
Cerda
1272 - 1322
Fernando
II de la
Cerda
50
50
1285 - 1351
Juana
Nuñez
de Lara
66
66
~1314
Juan
Nenez
de Lara
1312
Margarita
de la
Cerda
>1315
Maria
de la
Cerda
Pierre
de
Chalon
~1236 - 1283
Manuel
of
Castile
47
47
1283
Sancho
Manuel
1438
Joan
Plantagenet
~1264
Alfonso
Manuel
de Castile
~1265
Violante
de
Castilla
1447
William
Plantagenet
1448
John
Plantagenet
1450
Thomas
Plantagenet
1455
Ursula
Plantagenet
1467
Mary
Plantagenet
20 MAR 1468/69
Cecily
Plantagenet
1472
Margaret
Plantagenet
1475
Anne
Plantagenet
MAR 1476/77
George
Plantagenet
1479
Catherine
Plantagenet
1480
Bridget
Plantagenet
Elizabeth
Wayte
1461
Arthur
Plantagenet
1464
Elizabeth
Plantagenet
1465
Grace
Plantagenet
Eleanor
Butler
Sir
John
Grey
~1461
Thomas
Grey
~1463
Sir
Richard
Grey
~1330 - >1384
Joan
de
Bridport
54
54
~1302
William
De
Beauchamp
~1385 - 1442
Richard
Wydeville
57
57
~1385 - 1448
Joan
Bedlisgate
63
63
~1448
Anne
Woodville
~1444
Margaret
Woodville
~1436
Anthony
Woodville
~1456 - <1481
Mary
Woodville
25
25
~1450
Jacquetta
Woodville
~1440
Sir
John
Woodville
~1446
Lionel
Woodville
~1455
Edward
Woodville
~1453
Richard
Woodville
~1452
Thomas
Woodville
~1442
John
Woodville
~1438
Lewis
Woodville
~1443
Martha
Woodville
~1452
Eleanor
Joan
Woodville
~1344 - 1388
Thomas
Bedlisgate
44
44
1390 - 1433
Pierre
de
Luxemburg
43
43
1394 - 1469
Marguerite
De
Baux
75
75
1389 - 1435
John
Plantagenet
46
46
Earl of Kendal. Constable of England. Regent of France. Burnt Joan of Arc. Earl of Richmond.
Mary
Plantagenet
Anne
of
Burgundy
1699 - 1759
Humphrey
Goodell
59
59
Sources: Sources: A Genealogy of the Descendants of Robert Goodale / Goodell of Salem Mass by Williams, Geo E. - 1984; Vital Records of Pomfret CT; Folklore and Firesides in Pomfret, Hampton and Vicinity by Griggs, Susan J. - 1950; Genealogy of Captain John Johnson of Roxbury MA by Johnson, Paul Franklin - 1948; Genealogical Register of Litchfield CT - 1845 <http://members.aol.com/janau/navdiv.gif>
1699
Mehetible
Johnson
1701 - 1783
Capt.
Zechariah
Goodale
82
82
Hannah
Cheney
1703 - 1772
Ebenezer
Goodale
68
68
Experience
Lyon
1705 - 1752
Thomas
Goodale
46
46
Mehitable
Clough
Lois
Pond
28 FEB 1707/08
Jacob
Goodale
Peggy
Atwell
Jacob
Goodale
Martha
Baker
1734
Mehitable
Goodell
1711
Sarah
Goodale
Solomon
Sharp
1713 - 1793
Beauchamp
Goodale
79
79
Jerusha
Farrington
1715 - 1784
Edward
Goodale
69
69
Served as a Corporal in the American Revolution
Lydia
Eaton
Chandler
16 MAR 1716/17
Mehetible
Goodale
Ebenezer
Dana
8 JAN 1718/19 - 1799
Jabez
Goodale
Abigail
Lyon
12 MAR 1720/21 - 1784
David
Goodale
Anna
Gally
Margaret
Bowman
1727 - 1812
Mary
Goodell
84
84
Zachariah
Keyes
Thomas
Coe
1729
Eleanor
Goodell
Joel
Taylor
16 MAR 1730/31
Eunice
Goodell
1736
Lydia
Goodell
Joseph
Davidson
1736
Keziah
Goodell
Timothy
Robinson
16 MAR 1738/39 - 1741
Lucy
Goodell
1670 - 1747
Ebenezer
Batchelder
77
77
Ebenezer served as town constable for Wenham and is noted in 1714 "warning" the widow Margaret Poland to leave Wenham and Samuel Patch, "that he do not entertain her". Land records identify him as a "yeoman": "Ebenezer Batcheller, yeoman, with wife Sarah, convey to David Batcheller, of Wenham, cooper, all that his dwelling house and one acre of land situate in South Wenham, which Mark Batcheller, late of said Wenham, lived upon, which said land was reserved to belong to said dwelling house and given to said Ebenezer by the last will and testament of his father John Batcheller, of Wenham, and adjoins the land of said David Batcheller by the last will and testament of his father John Batcheller." Sources: History of the Town of Amherst NH - 1883; PAF for TARBOX; Tarbox, Blyney and Allied Families, compied by George E. Tarbox, Jr. Denver, Colorado 1965; Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy by Pierce, Frederick Clifton - 1898
1674
Sarah
Tarbox
1710 - 1781
Ebenezer
Batchelder
71
71
Ebenezer was a brick layer (mason) and purchased property from his father - in - law in Gloucester MA in May 1747. I have found no evidence of this Ebenezer's roll in the American Revolution, though I expect he was active in some way, as many of his relatives were also involved in the "Patriotic Cause". His will, dated 1779 is interesting for many reasons, not the least of which is his identification of his home as being "in the state of Mass. Bay in New England"; that the war had not yet been decided bears evidence to Ebenezer's political leanings. Also, I again find it so interesting that this will provides such a detailed bequest to the widow; it makes me wonder what would happen if she wandered into a room other than "the west Lower room" or if she needed more than four cord of wood per year! In addition, note the mention of the Amherst NH land which he had settled on his eldest two sons. Last Will and Testament of Ebenezer Bacheller In the name of God, Amen This twenty third day of November A.D. 1779. I Ebenezer Batchellor of Wenham in the Co. of Essex and State of Mass. Bay in New England, bricklayer, being in good bodily health, and of sound, disposing, mind and memory and bearing in mind my own frailty and mortality, do make this my last will and Testament. Primarily and first of all I give and recommend my soul into the hand of God who gave it and my body I recommend to the earth to be buried in decent Christian Manner by my Exectr. Hereafter named believing that at the general Resurrection I shall receive the same again by the Almighty power of God. and as to what worldly Estate it hath pleafed God to bless me with in this world I give, devise, dispose of the same in the following manner and form. Impri. I give and bequeath unto my well beloved wife Jerusha Batchellor for her annual support six Bushels of Indien Corn, one Bushel of Rye, and one Bushel of Barley, one Barrel of Cyder, two Bushels of winter Apples, three Bushels of Potatoes, one third part of my Garden to be well digged and dunged for her by my Exectr. Hereafter to be named and a good Cow to be ell kept winter and summer for her, and one hundred and fifty Pounds of Pork, fifty pounds of good Beef, one Peck of good white Beans, fifteen pounds of good Flax, from the swingle, and five Pounds of good sheeps wool, and the use of a horse and proper tackling or furniture as she shall have occasion for at any time and the west Lower room in my Dwelling House for her to live in and the use of the back Leanto Chamber to put her Corn &c. and all the Household furniture which she brought with her to my House at our marriage with four pairs of sheets belonging to the house and two good Coverlets for her own dispoasal as she shall think proper and also four cord of good wood annually cut at her door and provided by my Exectr. Item. I give and bequeath to my oldest Son Ebenezer Batchellor forty shillings lawful money to be paid to him in one year after my decease and my great Bible which together with what I gave him in the sale of the Farme on which he now lives in Amherst is his full portion out of my Estate. Item. I give unto my Son John Batchellor the sum of twenty shillings lawful money to be paid to him in one year after my decease, also my Gun or fire-arms which together with what I gave him in a lot of Land at Amherst is his full portion or share out of my estate. Item. I give and bequeath to my Son Samuel Batchellor the whole of all my real Estate, viz, my homestead Farm, containing about twenty acres with all the buildings thereon standing and a Lot of Land Laying north from the Meeting House in Wenham containing about sixteen acres consisting of meadow and upland adjoining on land of the widow Anna Brown and Tyler Porte, also another lot of Land lying in Wenham aforesd. Adjoining on land of Capt. John Gardner & John Perkins containing about six acres together with all my lots in Wenham swamp (so called) and one lot in the Bound of Ipswich and also a Piece of Salt Marsh adjoining on David Tiltons Marsh in Ipswich containing about three Acres. I also give and bequeath unto my sd. Son Samuel all my stock of Cattle and sheep and all other of my live-stock of any kind and all the remainder of my personal Estate which is not above disposed of which I shall leave at my decease, he paying out of all such Legacies as shall be hereafter mentioned. Item. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Anna Wiles the sum of six pound lawfull money to be paid to her in two years after my decease, besides what I have already given her. Item. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Lydia Averill the sum of twenty shillings to be paid to her in two years after my Decease besides what I have already given her. Item. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Jerusha Batchellor the sum of fifty Pounds lawfull money to be paid to her in two years after my decease, besides what I have already given her. Item. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Mehitable Gage the sum of five Pounds lawfull money to be paid unto her in two years after my decease, besides what I have already given her. Item. I give and bequeath unto my Grand Children Israel Porter, Betty Porter all the household furniture and goods which belonged to their mother and my daughter Elizabeth Porter Dec. I also give unto each of my sd. Grand children twenty shillings lawfull money to be paid and delivered unto them when they arrive at the age of twenty one years or at the time of their marriage if that should happen before they arrive at the age aforesaid and if either of my sd. Grand children should die before they arrive to full age or marriage the survivor shall receive the whole of the which I have given to both. I constitute and appoint Cornelius Baker of Wenham aforesaid Gent. and my sd. Son Samuel Batchellor Exectr. Of this my last Will and Testament. In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and Seal the day and date first above mentioned. Ebenezer Batchellor Seal. Signed, Sealed, published, pronounced, declared by Ebenezer Batchellor to be his last will and Testament in presence of us the subscribers. James Friend, William Putnam, Amos Putnam" Sources: History of the Town of Amherst NH - 1883; PAF for KIMBALL; Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy by Pierce, Frederick Clifton - 1898; History of the Kimball Family in America 1634 - 1897 by Morrison, Leonard Allison - 1897
1722
Jerusha
Kimball
1750 - 1849
Ebenezer
Batchelder
98
98
1756
Elizabeth
Thompson
Sherwin
1779 - 1818
Betsy
Batchelder
38
38
1776 - 1818
David
P.
Wiley
41
41
"David became a leading citizen of Landgrove. He was elected a selectman in 1804 and several times thereafter; served as town treasurer and in other town offices; and for a number of years was the town's representative to the State legislature. His farm prospered, and to accommodate his large family he built a substantial house, long since disappeared, that stood near where the Laundons' new home has been built. David Wiley's eldest daughter, Mahala, married William Utley, son of Peabody and Seraphina Utley. If we include all the later Wiley marriages, and those in the Batchelder and Parker families, David Wiley, who died in Landgrove in 1864, at the age of 87, must have been hard put to list all of the individuals in Landgrove and the surrounding towns with whom he had family ties."
1798
Mahala
Wiley
1802
Perkins
Nichols
Wiley
1807
David
Franklin
Wiley
~1809
Relief
Wiley
1820
Derny
Wiley
1827
Dorcas
Wiley
Mary
Dennis
1662
Joseph
Batchelder
13 JAN 1665/66
Capt.
John
Batchelder
Hannah
Tarbox
~1672
Anne
Batchelder
~1674
Sarah
Batchelder
1668 - 1668
Mark
Batchelder
1675
Elizabeth
Batchelder
1673 - 1766
David
Batchelder
93
93
Susan
Whipple
~1677
Hannah
Batchelder
~1679
Mary
Batchelder
1701
Rebecca
Batchelder
3 MAR 1702/03 - 1724
Samuel
Batchelder
2 MAR 1705/06
Mark
Batchelder
Sarah
Friend
Dorcas
Priscilla
Bartlett
31 JAN 1707/08
Josiah
Batchelder
Hannah
Kimball
1713 - 1793
Elizabeth
Batchelder
80
80
Jonothan
Porter
1717
Sarah
Batchelder
John
Kimball
Charity
Dodge
1740 - <1781
Anna
Batchelder
41
41
1743
Mary
Batchelder
1745
Lydia
Batchelder
1747 - 1827
Jerusha
Batchelder
80
80
Bartholamew
Dodge
1753
Elizabeth
Batchelder
1755 - 1848
Capt.
John
Batchelder
93
93
Betsy
Batchelder
1761
Mehetible
Batchelder
William
Gage
1763 - 1836
Samuel
Batchelder
73
73
1781
Joseph
Batchelder
Anna
Cochran
1783 - 1815
Ebenezer
Batchelder
31
31
Rachel
Jones
1785 - 1840
Fanny
Batchelder
54
54
Robert
Parker
1786
Lydia
Batchelder
Benjamin
Welkins
1788
Mehetible
Batchelder
Isaac
Weston
1790 - 1867
Reuben
Kimball
Batchelder
77
77
Alice
Kendall
1792 - 1875
Ezra
Batchelder
83
83
Lydia
Batchelder
1794 - 1835
Atness
Batchelder
41
41
William
II
Coggin
1797 - 1856
Levi
Batchelder
59
59
Mary
Peabody
John
Witt
Elizabeth
Baker
Hannah
Gary
1918
Victor
Kath
Living
Kath
Living
Hermann
Living
Hermann
Living
Kath
Living
Hermann
Living
Flansburg
Living
Flansburg
~0990 - 1031
Thibaud
"Grand
Forester"
41
41
~1000
Lady
Of
Chevreuse
~0960
Ansaud
II "Le
Riche
~0965
Reitrude
~1065 - 1137
Roger
de
Joinville
72
72
~1070
Alderde
de
Vignory
~1035
Geoffroi
I de
Joinville
~1040
Blanche
de
Reynel
~1010
Arnoul
de
Reynel
~1005 - 1057
Ettiene
de
Joinville
52
52
~1015
Adelaide
de
Brienne
~1200 - 1250
Jean
de
Touci
50
50
~1175
Elisabeth
~1140
Itier IV
de
Touci
~1170 - 1218
Itier V
de
Touci
48
48
1197 - 1264
Emme
de
Laval
67
67
~1165
Guy
VI de
Laval
~1170
Havoise de
Nevers-
Craon
~1230 - ~1317
Jeanne
de
Touci
87
87
~1222 - ~1297
II
Theobald
75
75
~1284
Eleanor
De
Bar
~1100 - 1165
Count of
Bar-sur-
Seine Gui
65
65
~1160 - 1211
Ermensinde
de
Bar-sur-Seine
51
51
~1087 - 1137
II
Anseric
50
50
~1090
Humbeline
de
Troyes
~1065
Tescelin
Sorus
~1069
Aleth
de
Montbard
~1030 - 1075
Bernard
de
Montbard
45
45
~1055
Sire de
Chacenay
Milon
~1060
Adelaide
~1025 - 1104
I
Anseric
79
79
~1030 - 1075
Gersinde
de
Chacenay
45
45
~1115 - 1170
II
Renaud
55
55
~1070
Matilda
~1102
Cecilia de
Bar-sur-
Seine
~1138 - 1207
Agnes
de
Blois
69
69
1420
Alice
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1415
Peter
Corbett
~1450
Robert
Corbett
1521 - ~1591
Margaret
Mainwaring
70
70
1528 - ~1601
Elizabeth
Mainwaring
73
73
1530 - 1573
Philip
Mainwaring
43
43
~1485 - 1530
Sir
Randall
Brereton
45
45
Knight of the body to King Henry VII 1. Title: Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists Author: David Faris Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1996 Note: good to very good Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: 1st ed pp 208-209 "Over Peover"
~1484 - >1522
Eleanor
Dutton
38
38
~1507
Sir
Randall
Brereton
~1503
Anne
Brereton
~1510
Jane
Brereton
~1512
Margred
Brereton
~1276
William
de
Mainwaring
~1260
Maud
Matilda de
Mainwaring
~1430
John
Carrington
~1276
Agnes
de
Arderne
~1430
Katherine
Bulkeley
~1400
William
Bulkeley
~1320 - ~1381
Sir
William VI
Brereton
61
61
Sir William Brereton, of Brereton, was living 49th of Edward III, 1375. He married 1st Ellen, daughter of Philip Egerton, and sister and heiress of David Egerton of Egerton, representative of the Norman Barons of Malpas, and by her had a son Sir William, his successor. He married 2nd Margaret, daughter of Henry Done, and had a son and two daughters. From this marriage with Ellen Egerton the Breretons derived large possessions and splendid descent; but at the time of the marriage, David de Egerton being then living, the marriage portion of the lady was only œ100, for which William Brereton gave his receipt at Egerton, 27th of Edward III, 1353. Ellen's son,
~1340
Margaret
Donne
~1320
Henry
Donne
~1515
Thomas
Davenport
~1545
Richard
Davenport
~1425
Joan
Mainwaring
~1423
Elizabeth
Mainwaring
~1427
Cecily
Mainwaring
~1429
Ellen
Mainwaring
~1431
Agnes
Mainwaring
~1433
Margaret
Mainwaring
~1435
Margery
Mainwaring
~1437 - 1508
Thomas
Mainwaring
71
71
~1452
Anne
Mainwaring
~1454
Humphrey
Mainwaring
~1365
John
Warren
~1369
Matilda
Cheney
~1340
John
Cheney
~1340
Griffith
Warren
~1345
Margaret
Corbet
~1315
Peter
Corbet
~1320
Griffith
Warren
~1440 - 1522
Richard
Charlton
82
82
~1475
William
Charlton
~1410
Robert
Charlton
~1415
Mary
Corbet
1383 - 1438
Sir
Robert
Corbet
55
55
~1385
Margaret
Mallory
~1310
Giles
De
Erdington
~1333 - 1394
Roger
Corbet
61
61
~1340
Margaret
De
Erdington
~1480
Randall
Grosvenor
~1515
Elizabeth
Grosvenor
~1515 - 1591
Thomas
Bulkeley
76
76
REFN: 334:2 [Dayton.FTW] !Sources: Stiles."History...",1987. Weis."Ancestral...",1990. "TAG". Rector at Odell in the Hundred of Wiley ,Bedfordshire,England
~1540 - 5 JAN 1618/19
Rev.
Edward
Bulkeley
REFN: 334:2 [Dayton.FTW] !Sources: Stiles."History...",1987. Weis."Ancestral...",1990. "TAG". Rector at Odell in the Hundred of Wiley ,Bedfordshire,England
~1485 - 4 MAR 1569/70
William
Bulkeley
~1490
Beatrice
Hill
~1460
William
Hill
~1465
Alice
Bunbury
~1455
Humphrey
Bulkeley
~1460
Cecily
Molton
~1425
Hugh
Bulkeley
~1430
Helen
Wilbraham
~1400
Thomas
Wilbraham
~1395 - ~1450
John
Bulkeley
55
55
~1400
Audrey
Titley
~1370
John
Titley
~1365 - >1400
Peter
Bulkeley
35
35
~1370
Nicola
Bird
~1340
Thomas
Bird
~1335
Robert
Bulkeley
~1340
Agnes
~1306
William
Bulkeley
~1318
Maud
Davenport
~1252 - ~1370
Sir
John
Davenport
118
118
~1375
Robert
Bulkeley
~1380
Jane
Butler
~1350
Sir
William
Butler
~1333
William
Bulkeley
~1300
Robert
Bulkeley
1547 - 10 MAR 1612/13
Olive
Irby
~1517 - 1553
John
Irby
36
36
~1520 - 1579
Rose
Overton
59
59
<1478 - 1536
Guthlac
Overton
58
58
~1485
Olyve
Browne
~1455
Robert
Browne
~1460
Isabel
Sharpe
~1430
Christopher
Sharpe
~1450 - 1486
William
Overton
36
36
~1455 - <1522
Rose
Pulter
67
67
~1425
Thomas
Pulter
~1430
Anne
~1395
John
Pulter
~1400
Margaret
~1420
Thomas
Overton
~1425
Cicely
Temer
~1390
John
Overton
~1395
Joan
~1360
William
Overton
~1490 - 1552
Anthony
Irby
62
62
~1495 - 1557
Alice
Bountayne
62
62
~1465
John
Bountayne
31 JAN 1581/82 - 9 MAR 1657/58
Rev.
Peter
Bulkeley
REFN: 21:28 [Dayton.FTW] !Sources: (C1). (WE1). (J2). St. John's College, Cambridge, 1604/5. Rector at Odell suceeding his father. He leaned toward Puritanism & was silenced for non-conformity. Came on the ship,"Susan & Ellen", May 1635. Settled in Concord, 1636-1659.
~1585 - 1626
Jane
Allen
41
41
1617 - 1658
Thomas
Bulkeley
41
41
~1620 - 1683
Sarah
Jones
63
63
1593
Rev.
John
Jones
1601
Sarah
~1633
Rebecca
Jones
1640 - 1723
Sarah
Jones
Bulkeley
83
83
1642
Eleazer
Brown
1663
Eleazer
Brown
1665
Gershom
Brown
1668
Daniel
Brown
1670
Elizabeth
Brown
1684
Rebecca
Brown
Sarah
Brown
Hannah
Brown
1653
Michael
Todd
12 FEB 1688/89
Elizabeth
Todd
1667
Samuel
Street
1621 - 1696
Rev.
Thomas
James
75
75
FIRST MINISTER OF EAST HAMPTON, LONG ISLAND
~1580
Rev.
Anthony
Ingoldsby
1602
Olive
Ingoldsby
1595 - ~1682
Rev.
Thomas
James
87
87
~1580
Dorcas
Bulkeley
~1628
Ruth
Jones
~1650
Ruth
James
Katherine
Blux
~1648
Sarah
James
1640 - 1701
Peregrine
Stanborough
61
61
Thomas
Harris
1693
Nathaniel
Hopewell
Harris
1665 - 1725
John
M.
Stanborough
60
60
Martha
1685 - 1738
Josiah
Stanborough
53
53
1724 - 1806
Sarah
Stanborough
82
82
1725 - 1808
Job
Loree
83
83
1759 - 1843
Job
Loree
84
84
1763 - 1812
Elizabeth
Hull
49
49
1800 - 1892
George
Loree
92
92
Elizabeth
Shaver
1833 - 1894
Mary
E.
Loree
61
61
~1830
John
Hendry
1856 - 1919
Ellen
Hendry
63
63
1856 - 1932
John
McMillan
76
76
1889 - 1980
John
M.
McMillan
91
91
1891 - 1950
Pearl
McKnight
59
59
1924 - 1974
Evelyn
I.
McMillan
50
50
1911 - 1988
John
Arthur
McEwen
77
77
Living
McEwen
Living
Scott
~1455 - 1502
Peter
Dutton
47
47
outlawed for felony 1481; dvp. Sources: 1. Ormerod's Cheshire (1882) II, 795-6
~1454
Elizabeth
Fouleshurst
1642 - 1685
Hannah
Smith
43
43
~1520 - 1590
Sir
Arthur
Mainwaring
70
70
* FA1: Knighted 1547, Member of Parliament for Shropshire. 1 * _FA2: Commissioner of Peace 1561/62. 1 * _FA3: Sheriff 1563 & 1577. 1
1541 - 1578
Mary
Mainwaring
37
37
~1499 - 1558
Sir
Richard
Mainwaring
59
59
* FA1: Knighted by Sep 1536, Commissioner of Peace May 1538. 1 * _FA2: 3 JAN 1539/40 One of the Knights who welcomed Queen Anne of Cleves to England. 1 * _FA3: Sheriff of Shroshire 1544 & at other times. 1
~1500
Dorothy
Corbet
~1425
Margaret
Swinfen
~1480 - 1563
Elizabeth
Vernon
83
83
1445 - 1515
Sir
Henry
Vernon
70
70
* FA1: Sheriff, Governor of Arthur, Prince of Wales. 1 * _FA2: Built Haddon Hall, Derbyshire. 1
~1450 - 1494
Anne
Talbot
44
44
1413 - 1460
John
Talbot
46
46
* _FA1: 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury. K.G. Acceded: 1453. 10 4 11 12 * _FA2: Lord Treasurer of England. 3 * _FA3: Slain at Battle of Northampton w/ his bro. Christophe on the Lancastrian side. 3 * _FA4: Buried at Worksop Priory, Nottinghamshire. 3
1422 - 1473
Elizabeth
Butler
51
51
~1454
Elizabeth
Talbot
~1456
Eleanor
Butler
Talbot
~1458
James
Talbot
~1460
Christopher
Talbot
1448 - 1478
John
Talbot
30
30
1452 - 1517
Sir
Gilbert
VI Talbot
65
65
~1513
Sir
John IV
Talbot
1485 - 1549
Sir
John
Talbot
64
64
1384 - 1453
Sir
John de
Talbot
69
69
* _FA2: Lord Strange of Blackmere, Earl of Salop, Earl of Waterford. * _FA3: 1st Earl of Shrewsbury. K.G. 5 4 * _FA4: Summoned to Parliament as Lord Furnival from 26 Oct 1409. * _FA5: 1421 Acceded to baronies of Strange & of Talbot upon death of niece Ankaret Talbot. 5 * _FA6: Fought in the French wars from 1424. 5 * _FA7: 20 MAY 1442 Created Earl of Shrewsbury for his services in the war. 5 * _FA8: App't King's Lieutenant of Ireland (being Lord of the honour of Wexford). 5 * _FA9: Created Earl of Waterford 17 Jul 1446. 5 * _FA10: Slain, age 70, in an attack on the French at Castillon on the Dordogne. 5 * _FA11: Buried, with monumental inscription, at St. Alkmund's, Whitchurch, Salop. 5
1392 - <1421
Maud
De
Neville
29
29
~1415
Sir
Christopher
Talbot
~1417
Joan
Talbot
~1365
Joane
de
Furnival
~1421
Humphrey
de
Talbot
~1423
Lewis
de
Talbot
~1425
John
de
Talbot
1404 - 1467
Margaret
de
Beauchamp
63
63
1361 - 1413
Ankaret
le
Strange
52
52
1332 - 1361
John
IX le
Strange
29
29
~1361
Sir
Richard VII
de Talbot
~1335 - 1363
Mary
Isabel
Fitz Alan
28
28
1359
John
X le
Strange
~1297
Ankaret
le
Boteler
~1336
Elizabeth
le
Strange
~1330
Robert
Corbet
~1275 - 1334
William
II le
Boteler
59
59
~1280
Ela de
Herdeburgh
~1298
Alice
Le
Boteler
~1294
Anne
le
Boteler
1296
William
III le
Boteler
~1302
Edward
le
Boteler
~1307
Ada le
Boteler
~1309
Edmund
le
Boteler
~1312
Dionyse
le
Boteler
~1255 - 1283
William
I le
Boteler
28
28
See "Boteler" article in "The Complete Peerage" [CP]. Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerages, 1883 (1996 reprint) shows (p. 63) that William le Boteler's wife was the "niece of James de Aldithley," *Complete Peerage* II:231. William Boteler of Wem (d. shortly before 11 Dec 1283) married after 2 Oct 1261 Angharad (still living 22 Jun 1308), dau. of Griffith ap Madoc ap Griffith Maelor, lord of Bromfield, Dinas Bran and Yale, by Emma dau. of Henry Audley of Heleigh.
~1250 - 1308
Ankaret verch
Gruffydd de
Aldithley
58
58
~1277 - 1286
John
le
Boteler
9
9
~1280 - 1289
Gawaine
le
Boteler
9
9
~1210 - 1269
Gruffydd
ap
Madoc
59
59
~1222 - >1286
Emma
de
Aldithly
64
64
~1235
Gruffydd
Farwn Gwyn
Ap Gruffydd
* FA1: 1st Lord of Glyndwrdwy. * _FA2: Lord of Ial in North Powys. 4 1. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript Text: no title 2. Title: Wallop Family & Their Ancestry Author: Vernon James Watney Publication: Oxford: John Johnson, 1928, LDS Film#1696491 items 6-9. Repository: Call Number: Media: Microfilm Page: p 365 Text: no title 3. Title: OFHS Newsletter Repository: Call Number: Media: Magazine Page: Sept 1995 p 58 Text: no title 4. Title: The Reckoning Author: Sharon Kay Penman Publication: Ballantine Books, New York, 1991 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book
~1265
Marared
verch
Gruffydd
~1220
Henry
Tuchet
~1225
James
de
Audley
~1200
Petronella
de
Gresley
Alice
de
Aldithly
~1252
Henry
De
Audley
~1254
William
De
Audley
~1256
James
De
Audley
~1110
William
De
Mainwaring
~1195
Roger
de
Mainwaring
~1133
Ellen
~1170
Ingenulfus
de
Gresley
~1175
Alina
de
Beauchamp
~1202
Avisa
de
Gresley
~1190
Henry
de
Verdon
~1140
Robert
de
Beauchamp
~1177
Ralph
de
Beauchamp
~1116
Edward
De
Beauchamp
Emeline
le
Despenser
~1118
Thomas
De
Beauchamp
~1120
Alurred
De
Beauchamp
~1131
Thomas
Fitz
Orme
~1133
Aluredd
Fitz
Orme
~1070
daughter
of
Bardulf
~1040
Bishop of
Whitern
Bardulf
Sources: 1. Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" Publication: P.O. Box 577, Bayview, ID 83803 Note: Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous other reference works" Note: very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's Repository: Note: Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore. Call Number: Media: Letter
~1270 - 1308
Sir John
De
Arderne
38
38
~1363 - 16 FEB 1420/21
John
De
Pilkington
~1180 - 1235
Madoc ap
Gruffydd
Maelor
55
55
* _FA1: Acceded: 1200, Rhiwabon, Denbigh. * _FA2: Built Cistercian Abbey of Llanegwest de Valle Crucis in the vale of Llangollen. * _FA3: Prince of Upper Powys. 3 * _FA4: Staunchly allied with Llywelyn Fawr. 4 * _FA5: AFT. MAY 1211 Allied with John against Llywelyn Fawr aft John's victory was inevitable. 5 * _FA6: 1212 Only major Welsh Prince to refuse Llywelyn Fawr's alliance vs. John. 6 Sources: 1. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript Text: no parents, no title 2. Sharon Kay Penman "Falls the Shawdow" 3. Sharon Kay Penman "Here be Dragons", p. 265 4. Sharon Kay Penman "Here be Dragons" 5. Sharon Kay Penman "Here be Dragons" p. 330 6. Sharon Kay Penman "Falls the Shadow" p. 365 7. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript
~1190
Gwyladys
verch
Ithel
~1212
Madog
Fychan
ap Madoc
Ithel
ap
Rhys
~1145 - 1191
Gruffydd
Maelor Ap
Madog
46
46
* Interred: Meifod. * _FA2: Could not contain rebellion of his cousin Owain Cyfieliog. * _FA3: Loss of Cyfieliog & adjacent areas resulted in breakup of kingdom of Powys. * _FA4: Resulted in Powys' loss of status as equal w/ kingdoms of Gwynedd & Deheubarth. * _FA5: Backed nephew Llywelyn Fawr when the latter began warring for Crown of Gwynedd. 2
1138
Emma
Plantagenet
Sources: 1. Title: The Royal Bastards of Medieval England Author: Chris Given-Wilson & Alice Curteis Publication: 1984, republished by Barnes & Noble in 1995 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Text: Emma Plantagenet, possible base born daughter of Henry I, no mother 2. Title: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell Author: Marlyn Lewis Publication: 08 Oct 1997 Repository: Call Number: Media: Manuscript Text: Emma Plantagenet, d of Geoffrey Plantagent & Matilda the Empress Queen of England 3. Title: soc.genealogy.medieval Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: Luke Stevens Text: no parents, Emma of Anjou 4. Title: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Author: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science Publication: copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 Note: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc Repository: Note: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@@tardis.ed.ac.uk Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: The two Emmas could have married different Guy's of Laval. 5. Title: soc.genealogy.medieval Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: Luke Stevens
1162 - 1204
Owain
ap
Dafydd
42
42
Guy
de
Laval
~1112
Adelaide
de
Angers
~1132
Adewis
Plantagenet
~1130
Raoul
le
Jeune
~1134
Marie
Plantagenet
Gruffydd ap
Cadwgan
Nannau
~1150
Cynan
ap
Owain
Denied birthright by bros. Rhodri & Dafydd aft his father died. 3 Sources: 1. Title: Falls the Shadow Author: Sharon Kay Penman Publication: Ballantine Books, New York, 1988 Repository: Note: Library of J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Text: Doesn't say who his mother was, but Univ of Hull mentions Gwladys & Owain had another four unnnamed sons; I'm assuming Cynan is one of them 2. Sharon Kay Penman "Falls the Shadow", p. 28 3. Title: Falls the Shadow Author: Sharon Kay Penman Publication: Ballantine Books, New York, 1988 Repository: Note: Library of J.H. Garner Call Number: Media: Book Page: p 28
~1175
Gruffydd
ap
Cynan
~1180
Maredydd
ap
Cynan
~1225 - 10 JAN 1276/77
Ralph
III le
Boteler
~1235
Robert
de
Bulkeley
1210
William
de
Bulkeley
~1185
Maurice
le
Boteler
~1155
Ralph
II le
Boteler
~1135
Walter
de
Somerville
~1095
Ralph
le
Boteler
Butler to Robert, Earl of Mellent.
1276
Gilbert
III de
Talbot
~1320
Philippa
de
Talbot
~1275
Joan
De
Valence
1299 - 1372
Elizabeth
Comyn
73
73
~1240 - ~1303
Sir John II
Comyn
'the Black"
63
63
~1270 - 1306
John III
Comyn
"the Red"
36
36
~1272
Dornagilla
Comyn
~1301
Christian
MacDougall
~1299
Duncan
MacDougall
~1210
Richard
Comyn
~1217
Margaret
Comyn
~1165 - >1204
Sarah
FitzHugh
39
39
~1135 - 1201
Robert
FitzHugh
66
66
~1085
Waldeve
of
Tynedale
Hadria
of
Tynedale
Earl of
Atholl
Malcolm
~0500
daughter
of
Baderic
~0480
the
Thuringian
Baderic
~0460
King of the
Thuringians
Bisin
Menia
~0440
Basinus
De
Thuringia
~1465
Lawrence
Savage
~1467
Robert
Savage
~1469
James
Savage
~1471
Alice
Savage
~1473
Thomas
Savage
~1475
Humphrey
Savage
~1477
Richard
Savage
~1479
William
Savage
~1481
George
Savage
~1629 - 1693
John
Emery
64
64
~1635 - 1694
Mary
Webster
59
59
1597 - <1650
John
Webster
53
53
~1605
Mary
Shatswell
1633 - 1676
Thomas
Kimball
43
43
1637 - 1688
Mary
Smith
51
51
1595 - 1675
Richard
Kimball
80
80
1620
Richard
Dutch
1735 - 1810
Anthony
Chase
74
74
1730
David
Chase
~1731
Mehitable
Chase
~1732
Hannah
Chase
1733
Joshua
Chase
23 JAN 1736/37
Tristam
Chase
1739
Sarah
Chase
1741
Lydia
Chase
1741
Hannah
Chase
1742
Elizabeth
Chase
1745
Simeon
Chase
1747
Emery
Chase
~1750
Nicholas
Chase
~1754
Joshua
Chase
9 FEB 1736/37 - 1780
Abigail
Woodman
1704 - 1725
John
Woodman
21
21
1707
Anna
Adams
1767 - 1817
Stephen
Chase
49
49
1771
Abigail
Chase
1763
Abilgail
Gilman
1803 - 1856
John
Langdon
Chase
52
52
1805 - 1850
Miranda
D.
Halstead
44
44
1829
Abilgail
Chase
1831
Alpheus
Chase
1833
John
Chase
1835
Elizabeth
Chase
1836
Orilla
Chase
1841
Emma
Chase
1843
Harriet
Chase
1844
Stephen
A.
Chase
In 1870 Stephen was living with his sister and brother-in-law Abigail and Daniel Clark. In 1880 he is living as a boarder with the William Cowan family in Lowell Cherokee Kansas.
1849
Mary
A.
Chase
1698 - 1753
Sarah
Hale
55
55
1723 - 1755
Thomasine
Chase
31
31
~1635
Jacob
Perkins
~1628
William
Tilton
~1645
Samuel
Tilton
Jane
1663
Hannah
Tilton
1668
William
Tilton
1670
John
Tilton
1677
Mary
Tilton
1680
Josiah
Tilton
1685
Rachel
Tilton
Jonathan
Lambert
Nathaniel
Wing
Samuel
Munkley
Nathan
Pease
Samuel
Cobb
Nathan
Folger
1713
Thomas
Chase
1717
Sarah
Chase
Samuel
Daggett
Ebenezer
Allan
~1624
Elizabeth
Holder
1645 - 1696
William
Chase
51
51
1647 - 1734
Jacob
Chase
87
87
1649 - 27 FEB 1683/84
John
Chase
~1650
Elizabeth
Chase
1653 - 1738
Abraham
Chase
85
85
1654 - 1731
Benjamin
Chase
77
77
1654 - 1755
Samuel
Chase
101
101
1656
Elizabeth
Chase
~1652 - 1724
Joseph
Chase
72
72
11 FEB 1646/47 - 1717
Hannah
Sherman
~1646 - 1734
Mary
Hall
88
88
1648 - 1706
Elizabeth
Baker
58
58
1652
John
Round
1677
Sarah
Sherman
1651
Elizabeth
Annie
Borden
1682
Sarah
Sherman
~1654
Daniel
Baker
22 JAN 1699/00 - 1755
Phebe
Chase
24 FEB 1701/02
Martha
Chase
1704
Susanna
Chase
Stephen
Chase
20 JAN 1709/10
Samuel
Chase
1711 - 1763
Eleazar
Chase
52
52
1715 - 1798
Philip
Chase
82
82
1720 - 1786
John
Chase
65
65
12 MAR 1721/22
Sarah
Chase
1726 - 1805
Lyndia
Luther
78
78
1746 - 1824
Jonathon
Chase
77
77
1749 - 1788
Peace
Chase
39
39
1751 - 1810
John
Chase
58
58
1754
Martha
Chase
1758 - 1803
James
Chase
45
45
1761
Sarah
Chase
1764 - 1765
Phebe
Chase
1
1
1766 - 1810
Stephen
Chase
43
43
~1755 - 1796
Elizabeth
Baker
41
41
1775 - 1796
David
Chase
21
21
1776 - 1796
Jemima
Chase
19
19
1778
John
Chase
1779 - 1806
Reuben
Chase
27
27
1781 - 1811
Edward
Chase
30
30
1782
Phebe
Chase
1784
Elizabeth
Chase
1787 - 1855
Stephen
Chase
68
68
1788 - 1836
Luther
Chase
47
47
1791
Noah
Chase
1794 - 1813
Joseph
Chase
19
19
1798 - >1831
Apthiah
Baker
33
33
1815
Phebe
Chase
1817
John
B.
Chase
1819
Mary
Chase
1830
Abby
Lawrence
Chase
Frederic
P.
Sprowl
George
E.
Barnard
Walmsley
Ebenezer
Baker
Susanna
Bethany
Gibbs
William
Gibbs
Chase
Hepsibah
Gibbs
Phebe
Chase
1771 - >1806
Abner
Chase
35
35
Paul
Chase
Mary
Kelley
Phebe
Chase
Joseph
Brown
Sarah
Davis
Elizabeth
Brown
Chase
Luther
Chase
Sarah
Bowers
Chase
Benjamin
Davis
Chase
Edward
Chase
Eunice
Davis
Chase
Phebe
Luther
Hepsibah
Luther
Ann
D. L.
Chase
John
W. L.
Chase
Mary
Maria
Chase
Joseph
B.
Chase
Rebecca
Bowers
~1780
Louisa
B.
Chase
Clothier
Pierce
Samuel
Baker
Jemima
James
Luther
Martha
Slade
Martha
Slade
Philip
Chase
Jonathon
Chase
Levi
B.
Chase
Mary
Chase
Sybil
Chase
David
Chase
Israel
Chase
Sarah
Chase
Martha
Chase
Daniel
Chase
Jeremiah
Chase
Reuben
Chase
Ezra
Chase
1751
Reuben
Chase
1706 - 1764
Elisha
Chase
58
58
Sarah
Tucker
Elizabeth
Chase
Benjamin
Chase
Amy
Chase
Noah
Chase
Hannah
Chase
Patience
Chase
Elizabeth
Wheaton
Phebe
Chase
Martha
Chase
Elisha
Chase
Charity
Chase
Sarah
Chase
Susanna
Chase
Sibyl
Chase
John
Chase
Rachel
Bowers
Sarah
Davis
Mary
Chase
Stephen
Brayton
Chase
Martha
Chase
Sarah
Chase
John
Chase
Benjamin
Chase
Anne
Chase
James
Chase
Charles
Chase
Thomas
J.
Chase
Elisha
Buffinton
Rachel
Bowers
Bowers
Chase
John
Chase
Stephen
Chase
1642 - 1718
Samuel
Sherman
76
76
1651 - 1716
Martha
Tripp
65
65
Edward
Slade
Samuel
Slade
Edward
Slade
Joseph
Slade
Philip
Slade
Ezekiel
Fowler
Samuel
Brown
William
Buffinton
Abigail
Buffum
Samuel
Chase
Abigail
Chase
Ruth
Perry
Elizabeth
Chase
Hannah
Buffum
Phebe
Chase
Caleb
Chase
Abner
Chase
Philip
Chase
Amasa
Chase
Henry
Chase
Benjamin
Chase
Simeon
Chase
Thorndike
Chase
Samuel
Chase
Buffum
Chase
Martha
Chase
Daniel
Baker
1719
Bradford
Chase
1721
Mina
Chase
23 FEB 1724/25
Henry
Chase
1728
Stephen
Chase
13 MAR 1730/31
Sarah
Chase
1733
Bradford
Chase
2 FEB 1734/35
Enoch
Chase
1738
Moses
Chase
1740
Joshua
Chase
1743
Samuel
Chase
1666
Henry
Hale
1670
Sarah
Kelley
1702
Nathan
Chase
1705
Cornelius
Chase
1708
Stephen
Chase
1712
Isaac
Chase
1713
Joseph
Chase
1716
Levi
Chase
15 MAR 1626/27
James
Pease
~1635
Elizabeth
Norton
1593 - 1663
Elizabeth
Knapp
70
70
1616 - 1657
John
Philbrick
40
40
John PHILBRICK was drowned with Ann his wife and daughter Sarah and 5 others while taking a little sloop on a shopping trip to Boston. * 1) 1636: A proprietor in Watertown. (1) 1639: Settled in Hampton. Received a grant of land. Sources: 1. Author: Threlfall, John Brooks Title: Twenty-Six Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins Abbrev: Twenty-Six Great Migration Colonists Publication: John Brooks Threlfall, Madison, Wisconsin 1993 2. Author: Tingley, Raymon Meyers Title: Some Ancestral Lines, Being a Record of Some of the Ancestors of Guilford Solon Tingley and his wife Martha Pamelia Meye Abbrev: Ancestors of Guilford Solon Tingley Publication: The Tuttle Publishing Co. 1935 3. Author: Anderson, Robert Charles Title: The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England 1620-1633. 3 Vols. Abbrev: The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England 1620-1633. Publication: New England Historic Genealogical Society Page: p. 1145
~1618
Hannah
Philbrick
7 MAR 1622/23 - 1700
Sargeant
Thomas
Philbrick
~1625
Martha
Philbrick
1628
Margaret
Philbrick
1627 - 1702
Mary
Philbrick
75
75
1629 - 1674
James
Philbrick
45
45
James PHILBRICK (1) was born in 1619 in Bures St. Mary, Suffolk, England. He died on Nov 16 1674 in Drowned in Hampton River.. Was a mariner. Lived in Hampton, NH. Sources: 1. Title: Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire Author: Libby/Noyes/Davis Publication: Orig. Pub. 1928 in Portland, Me Repository: Note: THURSTON LIBRARY Call Number: # 169 Media: Family Archive CD Page: Page 489/490
1633
Anna
Roberts
~1590 - FEB 1673/74
Thomas
Roberts
~1602 - ~1670
Rebecca
Hilton
68
68
1651
Mary
Philbrick
1622 - 1667
Elizabeth
Knapp
45
45
1 JAN 1579/80 - 1627
Deacon
William
Knapp
* Immigration: 1630 Watertown, Massachusetts * Occupation: Carpenter * Note: October 6, 1633, William Knopp was bound in 10 pounds to appear at the next Court, and to abide the censure of the Court for swearing. (The Great Migration Begins)
2 MAR 1650/51
Judith
Knapp
~1620
John
Cass
1501
Thomas
Bould
1503 - 1588
Francis
Bould
85
85
1504 - 1559
Richard
Bould
55
55
A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Vol III Author: John Burke Call Number: R929.725 B95 An account of the lineages of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank, approximately 12th through 19th century. Bibliographic Information: Burke, John. A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Vol. 3. London: Henry Colburn, n.d.
1499
Jane
Molyneux
~1222
Henry
de
Bold
~1445
Ann
Hanford
~1415
Robert
Hanford
~1463
Margery
Stanley
William
Staunton
~1467 - 1470
John
Stanley
3
3
~1470
Maude
Stanley
Sir
John
Ferrers
1423 - 1474
Sir
John
Stanley
51
51
* Sir John Stanley, 1423-74, succeeded his father in 1463. He was MP in 1446 and Sheriff of Staffordshire in 1460. He was created a Knight Banneret at the Battle of Tewkesbury in 1471. At the age of 5 in 1428 he was married by special dispensation to Cecily Arderne, a relative of his mother.
~1425
Cecily
De
Arderne
~1412
Ralph
De
Arderne
1378 - 1408
Sir
John
Arderne
30
30
~1445 - 1466
Joan
Beaumont
21
21
~1437 - 1498
Elizabeth
Hopton
61
61
1388
Sir
Thomas
Hopton
1472 - 1498
William
Stanley
26
26
~1475 - 1511
Joan
Massey
36
36
~1445
Sir
Geoffrey
Massey
Sir
Edward
Pickering
Sir
John
Brereton
1493 - 1570
Joan
Stanley
77
77
~1520
Richard
Brereton
~1490
Sir
Richard
Brereton
~1522
Geoffrey
Brereton
~1525
Alice
Leycester
~1495
Piers
Leycester
~1550 - 1598
Richard
Brereton
48
48
~1555
Dorothy
Egerton
~1525
Sir
Richard
Egerton
1474 - ~1525
Jane
Stanley
51
51
1476
Catherine
Stanley
~1459 - 1524
Sir
John
Warburton
65
65
~1425 - >1475
Piers
Warburton
50
50
~1470
Thomas
Cocat
1391 - 1465
Charles
de
Orléans
74
74
1473 - 1484
Edward
Plantagenet
11
11
1478 - 1499
Edward
Plantagenet
21
21
Edward Plantagenet EARL OF WARWICK (1478 - 1499) After the battle of Bosworth, and towards the end of the War of the Roses, the Earl of Warwick, the son of the Duke of Clarence, was imprisoned in the Tower of London. Perkin Warbeck, representing himself as Richard, Duke of York the son of King Henry IV had been a thorn in the side of King Henry VII for seven years. Warbeck was captured while trying to escape to the coast and was brought to the Tower. A plan was conjured by Warbeck to escape and had involved the Earl in the escape, but the plan was discovered and Perkins and several other conspirators were executed. The Earl of Warwick was executed on Tower Hill and the male line of the Plantagenets which had flourished from the reign of Henry II had ended as there was no other descendent the Castle and Earldom was crown property for nearly half a century.
Bonne
d'Armagnac
~1466
Anne
de
Orléans
~1464
Marie
de
Orléans
1462
Louis
XII
1410
Anne
Marie de
Cleves
1409
Jeanne
de
Orléans
~1411
Michelle
Capet
~1409
Prioress
of Poissy
Mary
1407
Philip
Capet
~1337
Stephen
III "the
Magnificent"
Thaddia
Visconti
~1397
Richard
Maudelyn
~1335 - 14 FEB 1392/93
Elzbieta
of
Slupsk
26 FEB 1360/61
Wenceslas
IV "the
Drunkard"
14 FEB 1367/68
King of Hungary
and Bohemia
Sigismund
1554 - 1615
John
Savage
61
61
~1548 - 1636
Mary
Alington
88
88
~1586 - 1635
Thomas
Savage
49
49
~1590 - 9 MAR 1649/50
Elizabeth
Darcy
~1565 - 21 FEB 1638/39
Thomas
Darcy
Mary
Kytson
1532 - 1580
John
Darcy
48
48
Frances
Rich
1506 - 1558
Thomas
Darcy
52
52
Elizabeth
De
Vere
Nathaniel
Stockwell
3 JAN 1701/02
Mehitable
March
Capt.
Hugh
March
1732
John
Follansbee
1773
Hannah
Carriel
1688
Aquila
Chase
13 JAN 1681/82
Jonathon
Chase
1680
Thomas
Chase
15 JAN 1693/94
Mary
Chase
1695
Josiah
Chase
1700
Rebecca
Chase
~1702
Nathan
Chase
~1705
Judith
Chase
Sarah
Stevens
1668
Thomas
Moody
1670
Judith
Hale
1720
Judith
Follansbee
1722
Anne
Follansbee
1721 - 1784
Capt.
Thomas
Noyes
63
63
1724
Francis
Follansbee
28 FEB 1725/26
Abigail
Follansbee
1729
Moody
Follansbee
~1731
Hannah
Follansbee
~1733
John
Follansbee
~1735
Sarah
Follansbee
Johathan
Mooers
~1645
William
Woodhead
Mary
Elizabeth
Preston
Thomas
Jacobs
Sarah
Brown
Stephen
Moulton
~1723
Ruth
Moulton
1633 - 6 FEB 1672/73
John
Colby
~1636 - 2 JAN 1719/20
Frances
Hoyt
~1605 - 11 FEB 1660/61
Anthony
Colby
Anthony Colby was born at England. He immigrated in 1630 to New England; with the Winthrop fleet.1 Anthony married Susanna (?).2,3 Anthony Colby was living in 1632 at Cambridge, Massachusetts.1,4 He became a freeman on 14 May 1634 at Cambridge, Massachusetts.1 He moved circa 1637 to Ipswich, Massachusetts.1 He was granted land in 1639 at Salisbury, Massachusetts.1 On 19 March 1654, he was made a commoner of Newtown, now Amesbury.1 He died on Friday, 11 February 1661 at Salisbury, Massachusetts, his death was recorded as 11 (12) 1660 and he died intestate.2,1,4 Anthony's estate was inventoried on 9 March 1660/61.
~1610 - 1689
Susanna
79
79
6 MAR 1634/35
Sarah
Colby
1638
Samuel
Colby
1640
Isaac
Colby
11 MAR 1642/43
Rebecca
Colby
8 MAR 1649/50
Thomas
Colby
1669
Mary
Colby
1697
Philip
Challis
1700 - 1742
Ann
Challis
41
41
1704
Judith
Challis
20 JAN 1706/07
Mary
Challis
1709
Thomas
Challis
1656 - 1719
Sgt.
John
Colby
62
62
1658 - 14 MAR 1710/11
Sarah
Colby
1662 - 1731
Frances
Colby
69
69
1665 - 1674
Anthony
Colby
9
9
1665 - 1674
Susanna
Colby
9
9
1667
Deacon
Thomas
Colby
1674
Hannah
Colby
1669
William
Sargent
1672
Philip
Sargent
31 JAN 1673/74
Charles
Sargent
~1676
Elizabeth
Sargent
1687
Jacob
Sargent
6 FEB 1687/88
Joseph
Dow
1689
John
Dow
1693
James
Dow
1695
Philip
Dow
1697
Mary
Dow
1694
Dorothy
Weed
1700
Sarah
Weed
24 FEB 1665/66 - 1762
Ephraim
Weed
1660
Elizabeth
Colby
1689
Elisha
Weed
1692
Elizabeth
Weed
1661 - 1731
George
Weed
70
70
1674
Margerite
Worthen
Lydia
Hoyt
Mary
Hoyt
Daniel
Hoyt
Mary
Blaisdell
Elizabeth
Blaisdell
Ralph
Blaisdell
Philip
Blaisdell
Jacob
Blaisdell
1261 - 1316
Sir
William de
Trussell
55
55
~1325 - >1379
Ellen
De
Egerton
54
54
Baroness of a moiety of the Palatinate Barony of Malpas.
~1295
Philip "le
Large" de
Egerton
~1300
Ellen
St.
Pierre
~1270 - >1344
John
de St.
Pierre
74
74
~1275
Isabella
de
Trussell
~1240
Sir
Uraine de
St. Pierre
~1250
Idoena
De
Malpas
~1175
Sir William
De
Malpas
~1180
Beatrix
Monhalt
~1145
Sir David
"le Clerc"
De Malpas
Sheriff of Chester
~1150
Catherine
Vaughn
~1177 - >1272
Philip
Belward
De Malpas
95
95
~1180
Catherine
Hutton
~1208
David
De
Malpas
~1213
Ciceley
De
Thornton
~1240
Philip
De
Egerton
~1482
Susan
Egerton
~1277
David
Malpas De
Egerton
~1278
Isabell
Fulleshurst
~1175
Sir Randle
De
Thornton
~1180
Ciceley
De
Kingsley
~1147
Peter "le
Clerc" De
Malpas
~1115
William II Le
Belward
De Malpas
~1462
Elizabeth
Done
~1090
II Hugh
Great-great grandson of Henry Beauclerc, King of England
~1085
William Le
Belward
De Malpas
~1090
Mabel
De
Malpas
~1055
John
Le
Belward
~1060
Robert
FitzHugh
~1030
Hugh
Lupus
~1287
Sir
William V
Brereton
William Brereton, eldest son, died in his father's lifetime. He married Margery, daughter of Sir Ralph Bosley, and had Sir William, who succeeded his grandfather, John, Ralph, Robert, Hugh, Margaret and Jane
~1295
Margaret
Bosley
~1265
Richard
de
Bosley
~1267
Sir
William IV
Brereton
Sir William Brereton, of Brereton, married Roesia, daughter of Ralph Vernon, of the ancient family of Barons of Shipbrooke, and his wife Mary Dacre, daughter of the Lord of Dacre. She was living 15th of Edward II, 1322, in which year she joins her husband in constituting their son, Richard Brereton, their attorney to receive seizin of lands in Brereton. In 1301 the same Sir William gives 100 marks to Thomas, son of Roger Davenport, for the marriage of his son John to William's daughter Margery, which marriage was dissolved in 1305. William and Roesia had issue: William, John, Peter, Richard, Nicholas, Margery and Matilda.
~1269 - >1322
Roesia
De
Vernon
53
53
~1223
Sir
Ralph III
Brereton
Sir Ralph Brereton of Brereton, Knight, said in some pedigrees to marry Ada, daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon, and his wife Maud or Matilda, daughter of Hugh de Keveliock, Earl of Chester. This gives the Breretons Royal Descent because she was great-granddaughter of David, King of Scotland, and maternally the Earls of Chester were Royal Earls, who possessed jura regalis in the Palatinate of Chester. They also laid claim to royal descent from the Venables, who was a relation of Stephen of Blois and William, the Conqueror. At first the descent of the Breretons from the royal blood of Scotland was mentioned as a mere claim, which was found in Collins' Peerage and in Dugdale's British Peers, but a copy of the patent or grant of creation to Sir William Brereton, of the Barony of Brereton, has since been procured and in that instrument such royal descent in Scotland is expressly recited and recognized in the following terms: "We, considering with mature deliberation the free and true services of Sir William Brereton, and that he is sprung from an ancient, noble and most renowned family, inasmuch as he is descended, through many illustrious ancestors, from Ada, sister of John, surnamed le Scot, 7th Earl of Chester, and daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon, Lord of Galloway, within our kingdom of Scotland." (This quotation is found in Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity, Vol. 33, p. 59.)
~1250
Mary
De
Dacre
~1145
William
De
Brereton
The first reference to Brereton is in the Doomsday Book which refers to the 'Manor of Bretune'. The authentic family tree begins in 1175 with William de Brereton of Brereton. It is said that he was named William after William the Conqueror and it became a recurring name within the family. The history of the house spans a 414 year period. The twin towers were originally adorned by copper cupolas, but these were removed, presumably because of their weight. The last Lord Brereton, Francis, died in 1722 a batchelor thus ending a six hundred year lineage. Since then the estate has had several private owners. A 60 page booklet :- 'The Story of Brereton Hall, Cheshire' by Arthur L.Moir, provides a comprehensive account of Brereton family history. <http://www.alsager1.com/tour/area/int1.jpe> Ralph de Brereton, joins with Orme de Davenport in witnessing a deed of Gilbert Venables in the time of William II, called Rufus, the Red.
~1175
Sir
Ralph II
Brereton
~1265 - 1298
Thomas
de
Multon
33
33
~1245 - 1292
Thomas
de
Multon
47
47
~1285
Sir
Thomas
de Multon
~1285
Nicole
De
Mauley
~1270
Piers De
Mauley
Le Tierce
1300
Margaret
de
Multon
~1290 - 20 MAR 1338/39
Sir
Randolph
De Dacre
12 MAR 1264/65 - 1318
Sir
William
De Dacre
Served against Scots 1304 and 1311; granted a charter of freewarren in all his demesne lands at Dacre and Halton, Lancashire, and licence 1307 to crenellate his mansion at Dunwalloght, Cumberland.
~1270 - 1324
Joan
Garnet
54
54
~1235 - 1286
Ranulph
De
Dacre
51
51
Ranulph de Dacre, in the lifetime of his father, had been a stanch adherent of King Henry III in the conflicts between that monarch and the barons, and upon succeeding to his inheritance, was appointed sheriff of Cumberland. In the 7th Edward I [1279], he was constituted sheriff of Yorkshire, and continued in that trust until the end of the 3rd quarter of the 8th succeeding year. This Ranulph m. Joane de Luci, and dying in the 14th Edward I, was s. by his son, William de Dacre. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 152, Dacre, Barons Dacre, of Gillesland, or the North]
~1236
Joan
de
Multon
~1240
Benedict
Garnet
~1210 - 1252
Roger
Garnet
42
42
~1180
Benet
Garnet
~1185
Mabel
FitzUrse
~1155
Richard
FitzUrse
~1160
Maud
Boulers
~1125
Reginald
FitzUrse
Reginald Fitzurse, (fl. 1170, one of the murderers of St. Thomas of Canterbury, was the eldest son of Richard Fitzurse, on whose death about 1168 he inherited the manor of Williton, Somersetshire (COLLINSON, iii. 487); he also held the manor of Barham, Kent (HASTED, iii. 536), and lands in Northamptonshire (Liber Niger, p. 216). He is sometimes called a baron, for he held of the king in chief. He was one of the four knights who were stirred up by the hasty words of Henry II to plot the archbishop's death. They left Bures, near Bayeux, where the king then was, and proceeded, it is said, by different routes to England, all meeting at Saltwood, then held by Ranulf de Broc, on 28 Dec. 1170. The next day they set out with a few men, and having gathered reinforcements, especially from the abbot of St. Augustine's, at whose house they halted, they entered the archbishop's hall after dinner, probably about 3 P.M., and demanded to see him. Reginald told him that he bore a message from the king, and took the most prominent and offensive part in the interview which ensued (FITZSTEPHEN, Becket, iii. 123, Vita anon., ib. iv. 71). He had been one of Thomas's tenants or men while he was chancellor; the archbishop reminded him of this; the reminder increased his anger, and he called on all who were on the king's side to hinder the archbishop from escaping. When the knights went out to arm and post their guards, Reginald compelled one of the archbishop's men to fasten his armour, and snatched an axe from a carpenter who was engaged on some repairs. While Thomas was being forced by his monks to enter the church, the knights entered the cloister, and Reginald was foremost in bursting into the church, shouting "King's men!". He met the archbishop, and after some words tried to drag him out of the church. Thomas called him pander, and said that he ought not to touch him, for he owed him fealty. After the murder had been done the knights rode to Saltwood, glorying, it is said, in their deed (Becket, iv. 158), though William de Tracy afterwards declared that they were overwhelmed with a sense of their guilt. On the 31st they proceeded to South Malling, near Lewes, one of the archiepiscopal manors, and there it is said a table cast their armour from off it (ib. ii. 285). They were excommunicated by the pope, and the king advised them to flee into Scotland. There, however, the king and people were for hanging them, so they were forced to return into England (ib. iv. 162). They took shelter in Knaresborough, which belonged to Hugh Morville, and remained there a year (BENEDICT, i. 13). All shunned them and even dogs refused to eat morsels of their meat (ib. p. 14). At last they were forced by hunger and misery to give themselves up to the king. He did not know what to do with them, for as murderers of a priest they were not amenable to lay jurisdiction (NEWBURGH, ii. 157; JOHN OF SALISBURY, Epp. ii. 273); so he sent them to the pope, who could inflict no heavier penalty than fasting and banishment to the Holy Land. Before he left Reginald Fitzurse gave half his manor of Williton to his brother and half to the knights of St. John. He and his companions are said to have performed their penance in the Black Mountain (various explanations of this name have been given; none are satisfactory; it was evidently intended to indicate some place, probably a religious house, near Jerusalem), to have died there, and to have been buried at Jerusalem before the door of the Templars' church (HOVEDEN, ii. 17). It was believed that all died within three years of the date of their crime. There are some legends about their fate (STANLEY). Reginald Fitzurse is said to have gone to Ireland and to have there founded the family of McMahon (Fate of Sacrilege, p. 183).
~1130
Baldwin
de
Boulers
~1100 - 1168
Richard
FitzUrse
68
68
unknown
mistress
~1130
Sibyl
Falaise
~1326
Mary
De
Dacre
~1300
Sir
John
Stafford
~1240
William
Stafford
~1303
Margaret
de
Stafford
~1180
William
de
Stafford
~1220
Auda
De
Vernon
~1260
William
Stafford
~1270
Isabella
~1195
Warine
De
Vernon
~1200
Mary
De
Audeville
~1175
Warine
De
Vernon
~1178
Auda
Malbrank
~1203 - 1270
Ralph
De
Vernon
67
67
Rector of Kegworth and Lord of Hanwell, having recovered a moiety of the barony from his nieces. Married 2ndly, Eustacia, legitimate daughter and heiress, ancestress of the Whitmores of Thurstanston. Rector of Hanwell, wrested barony from his nieces, becoming de jure Baron of Shipbrook (magnate, not member of peerage).
~1221
Maude
Grosvenor
~1245
Sir
William III
Brereton
Sir William Brereton of Brereton, ward of Sir Richard Sonbach (Sandbach), who had grant of the wardship of said William from William de Venables, Baron of Kinderton, to marry him or his younger brother, Gilbert Brereton, if William died under age, to one of the legitimate daughters of Richard Sandbach. Such were the precious servitudes of our ancestors; and great must have been the docility and tractability of the adults (and it is a remarkable trait in feudal manners) in submitting their inclinations in the serious article of marriage to the inscrutable wisdom of their seniors. Accordingly we find the heir of Brereton, William, was (nolens volens) married to the daughter of Richard Sandbach. The manor of Sandbach is given in Domesday among the possessions of the Bigot-Bigod family, whose manors subsequently formed the fee of Aldford, of which Sandbach was a dependency. A family was certainly settled here in the reign of King John, who held Sandbach from Aldford fee, and had assumed the local name. Near the manor house of Sandbach is the market place containing the Crosses of Sandbach, which may indisputably be ranked among the finest monuments of antiquity, of the kind, now existing in the kingdom. They are supposed to have been erected shortly after the introduction of Christianity on the places where it was first preached. The present height of the Greater Cross is 16 ft. 8 in.
~1331 - 1383
Hugh
De
Dacre
52
52
1376 - >1456
Joan
De
Dacre
80
80
~1361
Joan
Douglas
~1370 - 3 JAN 1446/47
Sir Thomas
De
Musgrave
~1336 - 1388
James
Douglas
52
52
~1313 - 1384
William
Douglas
71
71
~1318 - 18 MAR 1389/90
Margaret
of Mar
~1302 - 1332
Earl of
Mar
Donald
30
30
~1265 - >1308
Alexander
Lindsay
43
43
~1278 - 1319
Alexander
Stuart
41
41
~1302
Isabel
Stuart
~1247 - >1274
Margaret
Lindsay
27
27
~1235 - 1268
David
Lindsay
33
33
1297 - 1333
Archibald
Douglas
36
36
~1300 - <1352
Beatrice
Lindsay
52
52
~1198 - ~1247
William
Lindsay
49
49
~1211
Alice
Lancaster
~1203 - >1248
David
Lindsay
45
45
~1170 - 1283
William
Lindsay
113
113
~1255 - 1298
William
"Le Hardi"
Douglas
43
43
~1205 - 1274
William
"Longleg"
Douglas
69
69
~1255 - >1305
Eleanor
Louvain
50
50
~1175 - ~1239
Sir
Archibald
Douglas
64
64
~1220 - >1274
Constance
Batail
54
54
~1220
Matthew
Louvain
~1150 - 1248
John
Crawford
98
98
~1180
Margaret
Crawford
~1120
Galfredus
Crawford
~1145 - <1214
William
Douglas
69
69
~1115
Theobald
Fleming
~1335 - 1 JAN 1368/69
Elizabeth
Maxwell
~1305
Alexander
Maxwell
~1445
Sir Richard
De
Musgrave
~1470
Sir Edward
De
Musgrave
~1400 - 1464
Sir Richard
De
Musgrave
64
64
~1405
Margaret
Betham
~1420
Thomas
De
Musgrave
~1425
Joan
Stapleton
~1400
Sir
William de
Stapleton
~1414
Thomas
De
Dacre
1420 - 1485
Humphrey
De
Dacre
65
65
~1425
Isabel
De
Dacre
1435 - 1461
John
De
Clifford
25
25
~1454
Margaret
De
Clifford
~1455
Elizabeth
De
Clifford
Sir
John
Harrington
~1425
Sir
Edmund
Sutton
Thomas
Sutton
Dorothy
Sutton
~1458 - >1503
Richard
De
Clifford
45
45
~1458 - 1523
Henry
De
Clifford
65
65
~1461
Elizabeth
De
Clifford
Robert
Carre
Anne
Carre
~1450
Sir
William
Plumpton
Elizabeth
Plumpton
~1415
Elizabeth
Bowet
~1433
Joan
De
Dacre
~1461
Elizabeth
De
Fiennes
~1385
Sir Roger
De
Fiennes
~1390
Elizabeth
Holand
~1375
Sir
William
Bowet
~1375
Joan
Amy de
Ufford
~1300
Eve
de
Clavering
1286 - 1314
Sir
Thomas
de Ufford
28
28
1213
Sibyl
Mareschal
1257
Mary
de
Saye
~1314 - ~1375
Sir
Edmund
de Ufford
61
61
~1320
Sybil
De
Pierrepont
~1285
Sarah
Heriz
~1340 - <1393
Robert
de
Ufford
53
53
~1350
Eleanor
de
Felton
~1372
Ella De
Ufford
~1441
Mabel
Parr
~1477
Anne
Paston
1434 - 1496
Sir
William
Paston
62
62
~1435 - 1444
John
Paston
9
9
~1500
John
Littleton
~1222 - ~1280
Sir
William
De Dacre
58
58
~1282
Thomas
De
Dacre
~1284
Robert
De
Dacre
~1286
Elizabeth
De
Dacre
~1288
Hugh
De
Dacre
~1292
Ralph
De
Dacre
~1294
Joan
De
Dacre
~1324
Randolph
De
Dacre
~1333
William
De
Dacre
~1292
Nicholda
De
Vernon
~1274
Hugh
De
Vernon
~1278 - ~1435
Ralph
De
Vernon
157
157
~1286 - 1346
Richard
De
Vernon
60
60
~1290
Thomas
De
Vernon
~1115
Ralph
De
Brereton
Ralph de Brereton, joins with Orme de Davenport in witnessing a deed of Gilbert Venables in the time of William II, called Rufus, the Red.
1473 - 4 FEB 1539/40
William
X
Brereton
~1483 - 1567
Eleanor
Brereton
84
84
1524
Mary
Brereton
1520 - 1572
John
Warburton
52
52
~1545
Elizabeth
Warburton
1452
Sir
Randall
Brereton
Sir Randle Brereton of Ipstones, Shocklach, and Malpas, Kt., was chamberlain of Chester 1506 to 1532, Knight banneret and knight of the body of Henry VII. This is the Sir Randle depicted on the tomb at Malpas. He left nine sons and three daughters. His second son Sir Richard and his ninth son Sir Urian were the founders of the Breretons of Tatton and Handforth respectively.
~1457
Emma
Carrington
~1426
Randall
Brereton
~1250 - ~1292
Peter
de
Arderne
42
42
~1250
Margaret
de
Elleford
~1220 - ~1265
Wakelin
de
Arderne
45
45
~1185 - ~1238
John
de
Arderne
53
53
~1195
Margaret
Aldford
~1175
Richard
Aldford
~1125 - ~1180
Robert
Aldford
55
55
~1165 - <1213
Eustace
de
Arderne
48
48
~1170 - >1213
Hawysia
43
43
~1140
Eustace
de
Arderne
1115
Alexander
de
Arderne
1080
Agnes
de
Arden
~1240
Roger
de
Mainwaring
1226 - >1287
William
de
Trussell
61
61
1228 - 1294
Roesia
Pantolph
66
66
1196 - 1223
William
Pantolph
27
27
~1115 - >1150
Norman
de
Verdun
35
35
~1155
Joan
de
Goldington
~1125
Piers
de
Goldington
Maud
1256 - 1295
John
de
Verdun
38
38
~1285 - 1346
Thomas
de
Verdun
61
61
1218
John
de
Verdun
1228
Isabel
Fitz-
Simon
~1179 - 1233
William
Pantulf
54
54
~1247
Jane
le
Boteler
1190
Robert
de
Bulkeley
~1265 - 1316
William
de
Bulkeley
51
51
~1260
Matilda
Davenport
~1242
Sir John
De
Davenport
~1238
Margery
Brereton
~1250 - ~1320
Thomas
De
Davenport
70
70
~1248
Peter
De
Davenport
~1230
Thomas
De
Macclesfield
~1216 - 1291
Roger
de
Davenport
75
75
~1228 - ~1300
Mary
Salemon
72
72
~1256
Henry
De
Davenport
~1200
Robert
Salemon
~1160
Vivian
de
Davenport
~1188
Beatrix
de
Hulme
~1165
Bertrand
de
Hulme
1125
Richard
de
Davenport
~1104
Ormus
de
Davenport
1288
Roger
de
Bulkeley
1290
Robert
Bulkeley
~1300
Felice
Robin
~1320
Robert
Bulkeley
~1290
Ellen
~1327
Isabel
de
Egerton
~1310
David
Bulkeley
de Norbury
~1328
Sibyl
de
Norbury
~1316
William
de
Hulse
~1342
Hugh
de
Hulse
~1345
Ellen
Bruen
~1375 - 1415
Hugh
de
Hulse
40
40
~1376
Margery
de
Domville
~1332
Sir
John de
Domville
~1333
Cecily
Mobberley
~1284
William
Mobberley
~1294
Maud
~1321
Mary
Mobberley
~1317 - ~1349
Nicholas
Leycester
32
32
~1318 - 1364
Elizabeth
Leycester
46
46
1395
Elizabeth
Mainwaring
1347 - 1456
Randle
Mainwaring
109
109
Randle Mainwaring succeeded to the family estates after the death of his brother John, entered the service of King Henry IV, and, as a result of an attachment to the court of the Earl of Chester, was in 1405 granted for life the office of Equitator of the Forest of Mara and Mondrem, which then included much of the Hundred of Nantwich and all of Edisbury. Then, when the Earl succeeded as King Henry V, Randle was granted two parts of the serjeanty of Macclesfield during the minority of John Davenport, whose family held the hereditary serjeanty.
1390
Clemence
Mainwaring
1408
Elizabeth
Handfold
~1388
William
Beeston
~1410
Thomas
Beeston
~1430
John
Beeston
~1441
Elizabeth
De
Bold
~1450
Elizabeth
Beeston
~1318
Emma
Mobberley
~1294
John
de
Domville
~1298
Matilda
Brereton
~1300 - ~1350
Margery
Brereton
50
50
~1220
Sir
Richard de
Sandbach
~1190
Roger
de
Sandbach
~1195
Clemence
~1160
Joan
de
Sylvester
~1240
Gilbert
Brereton
~1155
Richard
de
Kingsley
~1206
Randoph
De
Thornton
~1182
Amicia
De
Kingsley
~1184
Joan
De
Kingsley
~1130
Alexander
de
Sylvester
~1130
Ranulph
de
Kingsley
~1135
Leuca
~1111
Ranulph
de
Kingsley
~1267
Roger
de
Domville
~1239
Roger
de
Domville
~1166
Robert
de
Stokeport
~1170
Randulph
de
Oxton
~1214
Matthew
de
Domville
~1218
Agnes
Wettenhall
~1185
Hugh
de
Domville
~1147
Gilbert
De
Brereton
~1150
Isolda
De
Brereton
Gilbert
De
Stoke
~1150
Margery
Bandle
~1175
Margery
Brereton
Thurston
de
Smethwick
~1180
Ada
Earl
1205
Gilbert
Brereton
~1275
Hamo
Brereton
~1290
Richard
Brereton
Agnes
~1292
Peter
Brereton
~1294
John
Brereton
~1296
Nicholas
Brereton
~1297
Thomas
Davenport
~1325
John
Brereton
~1327
William
Brereton
~1322
Margaret
Brereton
~1320
Henry
Delves
~1324
John
Brereton
~1326
Ralph
Brereton
~1328
Robert
Brereton
~1330
Hugh
Brereton
~1332
Jane
Brereton
~1325
Adam
de
Bostock
~1360
Joan
Brereton
~1362
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1364
Alice
Brereton
~1360
William
de
Cholmondeley
~1389
Nicholas
Brereton
~1391
Hugh
Brereton
~1393
Matthew
Brereton
~1395
John
Brereton
~1399
Margery
Brereton
Ric
Patten
~1420
Thomas
Brereton
~1397
Henry
Brereton
~1425
Roger
Brereton
~1416
Ralph
Brereton
~1418
Randall
Brereton
~1422
Joan
Brereton
~1420
John
Aston
~1438
William
Brereton
~1442
John
Brereton
~1444
Hugh
Brereton
~1446 - 1497
Elizabeth
Brereton
51
51
~1453 - 1497
John
Radcliffe
44
44
~1453 - 1517
Jane
Brereton
64
64
~1434
John
Cotton
~1450
Eleanor
Brereton
~1445
Thomas
Bulkeley
~1452
Matilda
Brereton
~1445
Thomas
Needham
Matilda
Dutton
~1445
Katherine
Byron
~1465
Robert
Brereton
~1467
Roger
Brereton
~1469
Henry
Brereton
~1471
Matthew
Brereton
~1445
Katherine
Berkeley
~1465
Werburga
Brereton
~1450
Anna
Donne
~1470
Henry
Brereton
~1472
Roger
Brereton
~1474
John
Brereton
~1476
Thomas
Brereton
~1478
William
Brereton
~1480
Helen
Brereton
~1475
Maynwarine
de
Crocket
~1482
Jane
Brereton
~1475
Roger
Rawsonne
~1484
Isabelle
Brereton
~1480
William
Cowfur
~1475
John
Brereton
~1477
Andreas
Brereton
~1479
Matthew
Brereton
~1481
Johanna
Brereton
~1483 - 1541
Helen
Brereton
58
58
~1485
Alice
Brereton
~1480
William
Moreton
~1470
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1460
Philip
De
Legh
~1489
Catherine
Brereton
~1485
Thomas
Smith
~1490
Matilda
Brereton
~1485
John
Davenport
~1480 - 19 FEB 1523/24
John
Fitton
~1505 - 17 FEB 1547/48
Edward
Fitton
~1480
Jane
Massy
~1460
William
Compton
~1490
Peter
Compton
~1460
Francis
Cheney
~1518
Richard
Brereton
~1525
Thomasine
Ashley
~1496
Sir
William XI
Brereton
~1498
Margaretta
Brereton
~1495
William
Goodman
~1500
Henry
Brereton
~1502
Katherine
Brereton
~1495
Edward
Fulleshurst
~1504
Elinor
Brereton
~1506
Helen
Brereton
~1500
Robert
Dokenfield
~1508
Anna
Brereton
1504 - 1550
Peter
Warburton
46
46
~1525 - 1559
William
XII
Brereton
34
34
~1527
John
Brereton
~1529
Robert
Brereton
~1531
Arthur
Brereton
~1533
Edward
Brereton
~1535
Ellen
Brereton
~1530
John
Carinton
~1537
Jane
Brereton
~1530
Richard
Clyve
~1539
Margaret
Brereton
~1541
Andrew
Brereton
~1530
Jane
Warburton
~1522
Peter
Warburton
~1550 - 1630
Sir William
XIII
Brereton
80
80
~1549
Jane
Brereton
~1540
John
Leigh
1551
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1550 - 1606
Thomas
Venables
56
56
~1552
Mary
Brereton
~1554
Susanna
Brereton
~1556
Anne
Brereton
~1550
Thomas
Smith
~1535
Edith
Byiche
~1505
William
Byiche
~1555
Edward
Brereton
~1557
Henry
Brereton
~1559
Francis
Brereton
~1562
Andrew
Brereton
~1564
William
Brereton
~1566
Roger
Brereton
~1568
Robert
Brereton
~1570
Louis
Brereton
~1545
Catherine
Fitzsimon
~1515
James
Fitzsimon
~1570
John
Brereton
~1572
William
Brereton
~1572
Helen
Brereton
~1574
Jane
Brereton
~1576
Cicely
Brereton
~1570
Nicholas
Whithall
~1578
Alice
Brereton
~1575
John
Carfa
~1530
Alice
Trafford
1604 - 1661
Sir
William
Brereton
57
57
William Brereton was born and baptised in 1604 in Manchester. He was the eldest son of William Brereton of Handford and Margaret Holland. He matriculated in Brasenose College in 1621.[1] In 1627, he inherited the lands and money of his father. The same year, he was elected for Parliament and negotiated with King Charles I for a title [2] and became a baronet. [3] Morrill describes Brereton as ‘ a substantial but not leading landowner’ [4] Brereton had a 500 year lineage going back to the first lords of Brereton, Cheshire. A marriage was arranged with with Susanna, daughter of Sir George Booth, an influential nobleman of Cheshire. Brereton was an energetic man of government. He was a member of Parliament, a magistrate, and a financial adventurer, and was a primary contributor to the plantation of the Massachusetts Bay. In 1634-1635 he made travels to the Netherlands and Ireland which he describes in ‘Travels in Holland, …’ [5] By 1640 England faced an internal division : revolt in Scotland and later in Ireland, combined with the royal enforcement of Catholic practice in local churches caused a confrontation of King with Parliament. Brereton had a seat in both the Short and Long Parliaments [6], which turned against the King in 1642. This was the beginning of the Civil War.[7] Sir William Brereton, meanwhile, had remarried after the death of his first wife, this time to a woman of strong Puritan religious faith named Cicely.[8] He chose to fight for Parliament and received control of Roundhead (Parliamentarian) troops in Cheshire. Sir William defeated Royalist armies at Nantwich, Stafford, Liverpool, Shrewsbury, Denbigh and Chester, and held executive power in Cheshire county during the conflict. His military victories were crucial to Parliamentary control of Britain. After the war, his career ended with a defeat in a contested election in 1656, and he retired from public life. Brereton supposedly played a juridical role in the death-sentence upon King Charles [9] and he received money and land for his services to the English Commonwealth, including Macclesfield Forest and the Croydon Episcopal Palace. It is there he died in 1661. The site of his burial is unknown.[10] Sir William Brereton 1604 - 1661 Author: Harold Forster MBE, of Nantwich Orders of the day, Volume 33, Issue 6, 2001/2002 The first mention of this member of the Brereton family appears in the Register of Christenings at Manchester Collegiate Church for 1604: "William, Son to William Brereton, Esq., of Hamford (Handforth)”. When only six years of age William was to lose his father but he developed into a worthy descendant of many illustrious ancestors, receiving his education at Brasenose College, Oxford. In 1627, when only 23, he was created a baron by Charles I, the King he was later to so vigorously oppose in battle. In 1628 he was elected as a Member of Parliament for Cheshire but he relinquished his seat in order to travel, his 'Grand Tour’ taking him to Scotland, Ireland and Holland. While travelling in Holland Sir William took great interest in military matters, and in particular he was intrigued with the art of siege warfare, an interest that was to serve him well in later days. In 1639 he was re-elected to Parliament and immediately came under the notice of several prominent politicians as 'a born leader'. Sir William married twice. His first wife, Susannah died in 1637, leaving one son, Thomas. His second wife was Cicely, the daughter of Sir William Skeffington of Leicestershire and the widow of Edward Mytton of Weston in Staffordshire. They had two daughters. Sir William had strong views on the so called ‘Divine Right of Kings' and also objected to the imposition of certain tax demands, and in particular ‘Ship Money’. He was also in dispute with the Mayor and Corporation of the City of Chester for refusing to pay ‘Murage’ a tax levied on townspeople for the repair and maintenance of the city walls. He owned a town house in Chester, and when in 1642 King Charles raised his Standard at Nottingham, Sir William was in Chester trying to drum up recruits for the Parliamentary Army. The citizens of Royalist Chester chased him out of the city, an action which they were to regret later. As the Civil War spread over the country, Sir William Brereton quickly became an important member of the Parliamentary Army. He was at first given command of all the Roundhead forces being mustered in Cheshire and later was promoted Major General of Cheshire, Shropshire, Lancashire and Staffordshire. His strong point was not so much as a leader in the field but in the plans he initiated to obtain information about enemy movements and, of course, in siege warfare, gained from the knowledge he obtained form his visit to Holland. It was said that Brereton “had spies under every hedge and friends in every village”. His greatest triumph was his siege and capture of the City of Chester, a project that took over 12 months. It was in 1643 that Sir William Brereton came to Nantwich. arriving just ahead of Sir Thomas Aston. Both the Royalists and Parliamentarians realised its strategic importance as a road centre. Making Nantwich their headquarters, the Parliamentarian Army surrounded the town with earthworks and trenches sufficient to keep out any assaults. Nantwich was under siege from December 1643 to January 1644, but in the Battle of Nantwich on 25th January 1644, the Royalist Army, under Lord Byron, was soundly defeated. After the war Sir William Brereton was well rewarded for his efforts. Amongst other ‘gifts' he received the Chief Forestership of the Forest of Macclesfield and the Seneschalship of the Hundred of Macclesfield, both of which would provide him with considerable monetary benefits. In 1652 he was given the tenancy of Croydon Palace, the former home of the Archbishop of Canterbury. He spent the last nine years of his life commuting between his newly-acquired London home and his ancestral home at Handforth, Cheshire. He died at Croydon in 1661 and a story is told that when on the way from Croydon to Cheadle for burial, his body was washed away in a river. It is generally assumed however that it did reach Cheadle and was buried in the family vault in the church of that Cheshire town.
~1610 - 1637
Susanna
Booths
27
27
~1580
Sir
George
Booths
~1615
Cicely
Skeffington
~1630 - 1673
Thomas
Brereton
43
43
~1585
Sir
William
Skeffington
~1605
Edward
Mytton
~1430
Joan
Holford
~1400
William
Holford
~1505
Sir
Urian
Brereton
~1510
Eleanor
Egerton
~1480
Sir
Philip
Egerton
~1530
Anne
Brereton
~1525
Randal
Dod
~1515
Isabel
Butler
~1485
Thomas
Butler
~1532
Sir
Randle
Brereton
~1535
Mary
Griffiths
~1515
Sir
William
Griffiths
~1555
Sir
Randle
Brereton
~1560
Frances
Throgmorton
~1530
Sir
Robert
Throgmorton
1576
Mary
Brereton
~1570
Sir
Richard
Egerton
~1558 - ~1585
Richard
Brereton
27
27
~1560
Sir
Thomas
Brereton
~1455 - 1511
Thomas
Brereton
56
56
* Rector of the higher moiety in Malpas, died 1511.
~1514
Thomas
Brereton
~1516
Fr.
Peter
Brereton
~1506
Sir
Roger
Brereton
~1508 - 1542
John
Brereton
34
34
* Rector of both moieties of Malpas and of Astbury, Bebington and St. Mary's Chester, died in 1542.
~1530
James
Starkey
~1534
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1504 - 1556
Richard
Brereton
52
52
~1510
Jane
Massey
~1480
Geoffrey
Massey
~1518 - 1536
Sir
William
Brereton
18
18
* Chamberlain of Chester, and groom of the chamber to Henry VIII. He married Elizabeth the daughter of Charles, Earl of Worcester and was beheaded 17 May 1536. One April day in the year 1536 a Tournament of knightly sports was in progress was in progress at the Tilting-Ground at Greenwich. King Henry VIII was there with his queen, Anne Boleyn. The Queen accidentally dropped her handkerchief, and a chivalrous knight picked it up on the point of his lance and handed it to the Queen. King Henry saw this act; he left the royal stand, where he and Anne Boleyn were sitting, and his furious temper was plain to see. He ordered that the knight, Sir William Brereton, and four companions should be arrested immediately, and carried off to the Tower of London, to be charged with High Treason as lovers of the Queen. Anne Boleyn was arrested a few hours later and never saw the king again. A jury of Henry's choosing was impanelled and the five prisoners were hastily tried. Though they pleaded "Not Guilty" they were sentenced to death and beheaded on Tower Hill on May 17th 1536. They were:- Lord Rochford (Anne Boleyn's brother), Sir William Brereton; Sir Henry Norris; Sir Francis Weston and Mark Smeaton, a mere boy. The hapless Queen was beheaded two days later at a scaffold within the Tower. The following day the King was betrothed to Jane Seymour, and the marriage took place ten days later at York Place. There is some confusion about the identity of this Sir William Brereton. Apparently he was Sir William Brereton of Aldford, the 7th son of Sir Randle of Malpas Hall. He had presented Anne Boleyn with a greyhound named 'Urian'. Also the details about the tournament may be an embellishment of the deeds of Norris and not Brereton. Sir William had previously accompanied the King and Queen on a visit to check on the inventory of Cardinal Wolsey's goods and chattels shortly before the latter's death. This may have inclined Cavendish, Wolsey's secretary, to testify against him. (these stories were adapted from the booklet by Arthur L. Moir) <http://www.alsager1.com/tour/area/play.jpe>
~1520
Elizabeth
~1490
Earl of
Worcester
Charles
~1520
Robert
Brereton
~1522 - 1577
Sir
Urian
Brereton
55
55
* Sir Urian Brereton of Honford (Handforth) Kt., 9th son, Knighted at Leith on 11 May 1544 and one of the grooms of the King's chamber in 1541, died about 1577.
~1525
Margaret
Honford
~1495
William
Honford
~1545
Randle
Brereton
~1547 - 1601
William
Brereton
54
54
~1550
Katherine
Hurlestone
~1530
Roger
Hurlestone
~1570 - 1610
William
Brereton
40
40
~1575
Margaret
Holland
~1545
Richard
Holland
~1500
Sir
Edmund
Trafford
~1550
Urian
Brereton
~1552
Jane
Brereton
~1554
Mary
Brereton
~1556
Dorothy
Brereton
~1456
Ralph
Brereton
~1458
Bartholomew
Brereton
~1428
William
Brereton
~1430
Edward
Brereton
~1430
Katherine
Weild
~1400
Thomas
Weild
~1435
Dorothy
Hanmer
~1405
Sir
Richard
Hanmer
~1430
Elizabeth
Roden
~1400
John
Roden
~1454 - 1512
Sir
Edmund
Trafford
58
58
~1490
Margaret
Trafford
~1488
Sir
Thomas
Gerard
~1518
William
Gerard
~1460
Peter
Gerard
~1460 - 1492
Margaret
Stanley
32
32
~1362 - FEB 1426/27
William
Stanley
Mary
Savage
~1436
Mary
Savage
~1380
Sir
William
Stanley
~1420
Sir
Thomas
Stanley
~1290
Philippa
~1310
Sir
Richard de
Hoghton
~1312
Joanna
Radcliff
~1285
Sir
Richard de
Radcliff
~1330
Sir
William de
Hoghton
Alicia
~1350
Sir
Richard de
Hoghton
Margaret
~1390
Alicia
de
Hoghton
~1425
Margaret
Bromley
~1395
Sir
John
Bromley
1428 - 1479
Robert
De
Leigh
51
51
~1409
Isabel
Stanley
~1362
Jane
Stanley
1330
Gwilym
ap
Gruffydd
~1364
Margery de
Hooton-
Dutton
~1386 - >1425
William
Stanley
39
39
1350
Matilda
De
Arderne
~1350
Katherine
Margery
Leftwich
~1346 - 1396
William
de
Dutton
50
50
~1317 - 1379
Sir
John de
Arderne
62
62
~1327
Cecily
Bredbury
~1300
Adam
Bredbury
~1304
Alice
~1290 - 1350
Sir John
De
Arderne
60
60
~1389
Ellen
De
Leigh
~1304
Elizabeth
Venables
~1310
Rose
Venables
~1150
William
Malbrank
~1155
Alda
De
Beauchamp
Isabella
~1120
Hugh
De
Beauchamp
~1130
Philippa
de
Trailli
~1100
Geoffrey
III de
Trailli
Mary
~0980
Geoffrey
II de
Trailli
~0980
Albrade
D'Espec
~0950
Walter
D'Espec
~1074
Walter
D'Espec
~1093
Albrade
D'Espec
~1050
William
D'Espec
~0950
Geoffrey
de
Trailli
~1120
Hugh
Malbrank
Pentralo
~1090
William
Malbrank
Adelicia
~1155
Richard
de
Vernon
~1160
Alice
Avice de
Avenell
~1130
William
de
Avenell
~1138
Warin
de
Vernon
~1120
Hugh
de
Vernon
~1122
Miss
de
Knightley
~1099
Reginald
de
Knightley
1323
Richard
Donne
~1297
Ellen
De
Swynnerton
~1342
John
Donne
~1180
Henry
Donne
~1205
Richard
II
Donne
1245
Henry
Donne
1272
Richard
Donne
~1160
Richard
Donne
1304
William
de
Trussell
1332
Maud
de
Trussell
1330
John
de
Hastings
>1275 - 20 JAN 1323/24
John
de
Hastings
1266 - 1305
Isabel
de
Valence
39
39
~1294 - 1367
Juliana
de
Leyburne
73
73
~1275 - 1307
Thomas
de
Leyburne
32
32
8 JAN 1281/82 - 1 JAN 1323/24
Alice
De
Toeni
~1200
Juliana
1220 - <1255
Henry
De
Sandwich
35
35
Constable Dover Castle
~1225 - 1280
Joan
D'Auberville
55
55
~1195
William
D'Auberville
Isabel
2 FEB 1357/58
Maud
de
Hastings
~1222 - <1307
Joan
de
Munchensy
85
85
~1192 - 1255
Warin
de
Munchensy
63
63
1384 - 20 FEB 1418/19
Humphrey
de
Stafford
~1354 - 1 MAR 1409/10
Ralph
de
Stafford
Ralph, was a great favorite with the King and Queen whose companion he had been from boyhood. In 1385 he marched, with his father, northward with the King's army. While the army was near York, he was slain by Sir John Holland.
~1437 - 1469
Sir
Henry de
Neville
32
32
~1442 - 1470
Joan
Bourchier
28
28
~1415 - 1474
John
Bourchier
59
59
~1420 - 1475
Margery
(Margaret)
Berners
55
55
~1468 - 1530
Richard
de
Neville
62
62
He was one of the commanders of the King's Forces at the Battle of Stokes, near Newark-upon-Trent, a very eminent and distinguished commander
1472 - 1500
Anne
Stafford
28
28
1501
Susan
de
Neville
1427 - 1486
Humphrey
Stafford
59
59
~1437 - 1482
Katherine
Fray
45
45
~1419 - ~1480
John
Fray
61
61
~1421
Agnes
Danvers
~1382 - 1448
John
Danvers
66
66
~1386
Alice
Verney
~1375
Elizabeth
Burdet
1400 - >1467
Humphrey
Stafford
67
67
~1404
Eleanor
Aylesbury
~1369 - 1418
Thomas
Aylesbury
49
49
~1410
Philip
Le
Boteler
~1335 - 1399
Lawrence
Pabenham
64
64
~1280
Robert
Peverel
~1275 - >1323
Anice
de
Fauconberge
48
48
1302 - 16 FEB 1356/57
John II
De
Engaine
~1310 - >1358
Joan
Peverel
48
48
~1344
Elizabeth
de
Engaine
~1284
Alice
~1245 - 1304
Walter
Fauconberge
59
59
~1241 - 1280
Agnes
de
Brus
39
39
~1225
Margaret
de
Montfichet
1194
Richard
de
Montfichet
~1205
Millicent
~1175
Gilbert
de
Montfichet
~1135
Gilbert
de
Montfichet
~1176
Richard
de
Montfichet
1087
William
de
Montfichet
~1055
William
de
Montfichet
~1060
Rohais
~1025
Robert
de
Gernon
~1180 - ~1216
Walter
de
Fauconberg
36
36
~1199
Agnes
Fitz-
Simon
~1170
Simon
Fitz-
Simon
~1180
Isabel
de
Cukeney
~1140
Piers
de
Fauconberg
Beatrice
~1100 - <1129
Robert
de
Fauconberg
29
29
~1150
Alice
St.
Quintin
~1152
Sir
Amatellus
St. Quintin
~1070
Franco
de
Fauconberg
~1060
Thomas
de
Cukeney
~1060
Emma
de
Etwall
~1042
Hugh
de
Etwall
~1010
Saswallo
de
Etwall
~1040
Richard
de
Cukeney
~1044
Hawise
1012
Josceus
le
Fleming
~1366 - 1429
John
Delves
63
63
~1326
Ellen
De
Wasteneys
~1335 - 1396
Henry
Delves
61
61
~1152
Angarad
verch
Owain
1175 - 1246
Sir Henry
De
Aldithley
71
71
Madoc
ap
Gruffydd
~1315 - >1348
Richard
Delves
33
33
Amicia
~1285
John
Delves
~1375
Margaret
Calveley
~1325 - >1374
David
Calveley
49
49
~1327 - <1408
Agnes
Mottrum
81
81
~1305 - <1362
David
Calveley
57
57
~1308
Joan
~1285 - ~1355
Kenric
De
Calveley
70
70
~1305
Thomas
Mottrum
~1280 - <1316
Roger
Mottrum
36
36
~1282
Agnes
~1255 - >1304
John
Mottrum
49
49
~1235 - >1275
Richard
Mottrum
40
40
~1215 - >1280
Richard
Mottrum
65
65
~1390 - 1429
John
Delves
39
39
1491 - 1531
Sir
George
Booth
40
40
~1390 - 1420
Phillipa
Mainwaring
30
30
1515
George
Booth
1541 - 1579
William
Booth
38
38
~1515
Elizabeth
Trafford
1570 - 1628
Richard
Booth
58
58
~1487 - 1533
Sir
Edmund
Trafford
46
46
~1487
Elizabeth
Longford
~1474
John
Hanford
~1431
Elizabeth
Ashton
~1398 - ~1417
Thomas "the
Alchemist"
Ashton
19
19
~1410
Elizabeth
Byron
~1430
Edmund
Trafford
1352 - 1457
Edmund
Trafford
105
105
Geva
~1220
Anne
Derwentwater
~1200
Miss
Kendall
~1455
Euphemia
Langton
~1165
Johanna
Marley
1180 - 1240
Thomas
de
Multon
60
60
Sheriff of Lincoln & Cumberland. 1st Lord Egremont, Justice of the Common Pleas.
~1617
Nicholas
Poore
~1619 - 1680
Alice
Poore
61
61
~1621 - 1683
Samuel
Poore
62
62
~1623 - 1689
Daniel
Poore
66
66
1628 - 3 FEB 1712/13
Mary
Farnham
1662 - 1700
Elizabeth
Poore
38
38
1658 - 1727
Jacob
Marston
69
69
21 MAR 1650/51 - 1716
Mary
Poore
20 JAN 1644/45 - 1678
John
Noyes
1654 - 1723
Martha
Poore
69
69
John
Granger
1654
Matthew
Poore
1655 - 1735
Sarah
Poore
80
80
Samuel
Pettengill
1656 - 1735
Daniel
Poore
78
78
Mehitabel
Osgood
1658 - 1690
John
Poore
32
32
Rebecca
Kent
1660 - 17 FEB 1743/44
Hannah
Poore
Francis
Dean
1664 - 1724
Deborah
Poore
60
60
~1660
Timothy
Osgood
16 FEB 1664/65 - 19 FEB 1737/38
Ruth
Poore
John
Stevens
1667
Priscilla
Poore
Abraham
Moore
1670 - 1759
Lucy
Poore
88
88
Samuel
Asten
1632 - 1706
John
French
74
74
18 MAR 1659/60 - 1676
Ruth
Chase
1601 - 1655
Nathaniel
Merrill
54
54
~1610
Susanna
Walterton
1631
Nathaniel
Merrill
1635
John
Merrill
1637
Abraham
Merrill
1640
Susanna
Merrill
1642 - 1717
Sgt.
Daniel
Merrill
74
74
28 JAN 1645/46 - 18 MAR 1705/06
Sarah
Clough
1674
John
Merrill
1677
Sarah
Merrill
7 FEB 1680/81
Ruth
Merrill
1683
Moses
Merrill
1685
Martha
Merrill
1688
Stephen
Merrill
15 MAR 1670/71 - 1725
Daniel
Merrill
RFN1160
1715
Elizabeth
Chase
23 MAR 1686/87 - <1739
Martha
Rolfe
1709
James
Chase
1711
Nathaniel
Chase
14 FEB 1711/12
Rebecca
Chase
14 FEB 1713/14
Aquila
Chase
1715
Aquila
Chase
1717
Mary
Chase
1720
Ezra
Chase
1721
Ebenezer
Chase
1684
Lydia
Johnson
1707
John
Chase
~1566 - 1598
Godfrey
Yeoman
32
32
1648
Elizabeth
Dustin
1649
Mary
Dustin
1652
Thomas
Dustin
~1632
Lydia
Sargent
1633 - 1716
Mary
Sargent
83
83
RFN120
~1534
Donald
Stuart
1651
Sarah
Rowell
Barnes
7 FEB 1652/53 - 7 FEB 1713/14
Sarah
Osgood
1643
Deborah
Hillier
1609 - 1700
William
Osgood
91
91
~1615
Elizabeth
Clear
~1644
Joanna
Osgood
~1646
Elizabeth
Osgood
1648
William
Osgood
1648
John
Osgood
3 MAR 1649/50
Mary
Osgood
18 MAR 1650/51
Joseph
Osgood
1656
John
Colby
1670
John
Colby
1675
Sarah
Jane
Colby
~1667
Elizabeth
Sargent
24 FEB 1667/68
Thomas
Sargent
1672
John
Sargent
1674
Mary
Sargent
1675
Hannah
Sargent
1676
Thomas
Sargent
1677
Rachel
Sargent
1678 - 1754
Jacob
Sargent
75
75
1680
William
Sargent
1687
Joseph
Sargent
1687
Judith
Sargent
1689
Judith
Sargent
1692
John
Sargent
~1690
Lydia
Sargent
27 FEB 1682/83
Sarah
Bagley
21 JAN 1684/85
John
Bagley
1687
Jacob
Bagley
1687
Orlando
Bagley
1690
Judith
Bagley
~1668
Dorothy
Colby
1670
Elizabeth
Colby
9 MAR 1670/71
Samuel
Colby
1678
Philip
Colby
1603
Edward
Winn
1626
Ann
Winn
1628
Elizabeth
Winn
~1633
Joseph
Winn
1641
Increase
Winn
~1390
William
Nanseglos
~1260
Joan
~1225 - >1297
John
Holt
72
72
~1230
Emma
de
Hatton
~1195
Richard
Holt
~1165
Simon
Holt
~1135
Richard
Holt de
Curson
~1288
Nicholas
De
Thornton
~1255
Miss
Parnell
~1270
John
Greig
~1325 - >1375
Peter
De
Salford
50
50
~1330
Joan
~1285 - <1343
John
De
Salford
58
58
~1300
Joan
1234
Nigel
De
Salford
1207
Hugh
De
Salford
~1320
Thomas
Drakelowe
~1325
Alice
De
Wileby
~1295
Robert
De
Wileby
~1300
Emma
~1270
John
De
Wileby
~1245
William
De
Wileby
~1220
William
De
Wileby
~1225
Margery
~1320
Joan
~1276
William
Thirning
~1280
Matilda
~1250
William
Thirning
~1252
Alice
1055 - 1099
Matilde De
Chateau
Du Loire
44
44
~1025 - 1095
Signeur de
Chateau Du
Loire Gervais
70
70
~0995
Signeur de
Chateau Du
Loire Robert
1245
Richard
De
Rothwell
~1101
Isabel
De
Gressenhall
~1119 - 1199
Roger
De
Stuteville
80
80
~1076
William
FitzRoger De
Gressenhall
~1032 - 1097
Signeur de
la Fleche
Jean
65
65
~0910
Wigerus
I De
Beaugency
~1080
Alvia
~1051
Roger
FitzWilliam De
Gressenhall
~1026
William
FitzRoger De
Gressenhall
~1030
Aelina
~0996 - ~1035
Roger
FitzWimer
39
39
~0975
Wimer
~0980 - ~0996
Gilla
16
16
~1087
Menialda
~1055
Robert
de
Merelaut
~1159 - 1185
Richard
Gobion
26
26
1155 - >1185
Beatrice
De
Lucelles
30
30
1123 - <1159
Hugh
De
Lucelles
36
36
~1087 - >1130
Richard
De
Lucelles
43
43
~1061
William
De
Lucelles
~1120 - >1165
Hugh
Gobion
45
45
~1090
Hugh
Gobion
~1218 - ~1284
John
De
Morteyn
66
66
~1220 - 1293
Constance
De
Merston
73
73
~1190
Ralph
De
Morteyn
~1160
John
De
Morteyn
~1135
Nigel
De
Morteyn
1253 - 1328
Thomas
De
Gardinis
75
75
1209
William
De
Gardiano
<1180
Roger
De
Gardiano
1209
Alexandra
De La
Haye
1179
Thomas
De La
Haye
~1180
Alexandra
De
Arsic
~1170
Robert
De
Arsic
~1140
Alexander
De
Arsic
~1150
Emma
~1120
Manasser
De
Arsic
~1120
Margaret
~1095
Robert
De
Arsic
~1070
Manasser
De
Arsic
~1040
William
De
Arsic
~1170
Alice
FitzGeoffrey
~1185
Isabel
Musard
Isabel
Gifford
Mabel
Gifford
Thomas
Le
Tabler
Richard
Dansy
1182
Thomas
Giffard
1185
Berta
Giffard
1191
Gilbert
Giffard
1233
Osbert
Gifford
1235
John
Gifford
Sara
Valeria
Heitcamp
Living
Kath
Living
Kath
1917 - 1992
Melvin
Kath
75
75
D. 1998
Blanche
Living
Kath
1449
Sir
Ewen
Cameron
~1475
Margaret
Cameron
~1460 - 1547
Alexander
MacLeod
87
87
William
MacLeod
Donald
MacLeod
Tormad
MacLeod
~1565
Janet
Stuart
~1536
John
Stuart
~1538
Dugald
Stuart
~1495
Sir
Duncan
Stuart
~1499
Robert
Stuart
~1428
Miss
MacLaren
~1430
Florence
MacDonald
~1450
Janet
Stuart
~1452
Isobel
Stuart
~1453
Margaret
Stuart
~1455
Marion
Stuart
~1400
Colin
MacDonald
~1405
Isabella
Campbell
~1318
William
MacAntagart
Living
Flansburg
~1282
Sir John
Ross
MacAntagart
~1367
Lady
Isabella
Stewart
~1370 - 1424
John
Stewart
54
54
~1285
Dorothea
MacAntagart
~1360
Alexander
Leslie
~1310
Sir
John
Graham
~1320
Mary
Stewart
~1290
Alan
Stewart
Marjorie
~1260 - 1300
Alexander
Stewart
40
40
Maud
~1262
Sir
John
Stewart
~1230
Countess
of Menteith
Mary
~1210
Earl of
Menteith
Murethach
~1180
Earl of
Menteith
Gilchrist
~1130
Eve
Sweinsdotter
~1190
Duncan
Ogilvie
~1175
Duncan
Galloway
~1202 - 1257
Neil
Galloway
55
55
~1380
Sir
Patrick
Graham
~1410
Malise
Graham
~1385
Euphemia
Stewart
~1345
John
MacDonald
~1290
Sir
Adam
Mure
1339 - 1420
Robert
Stuart
81
81
~1368
Lady
Marjory
Stuart
~1386
Thomas
Dunbar
~1388
Alexander
Dunbar
~1390
James
Dunbar
~1392
Euphemia
Dunbar
~1342
Walter
Stuart
~1320
Joan
Isaac
~1290
Thomas
Isaac
~1295
Sir John
Baccach
MacDougall
~1297
Matilda
De
Bruce
~1342
Sir
Robert
Stuart
~1317
Catherine
MacDougall
~1345
Catherine
Stuart
~1255 - 1310
Sir
Alexander
MacDougall
55
55
~1255
Marian
Comyn
~1220 - >1273
Sir John Comyn
"the First Red"
Comyn
53
53
~1297
Juliana
MacDougall
~1225 - 1265
Ewen
MacDougall
40
40
~1225
Marian
MacDonal
~1257
Duncan
MacDougall
~1249 - 1303
Mary
MacDougall
54
54
~1261
Malcolm
MacDougall
~1195 - 1248
Duncan
MacDougall
53
53
~1155
Dugall
MacSorley
~1197
Dugall
Scrag
MacDougall
~1200
Ospak
Haakon
MacDougall
~1170
Miss
Muchdanach
~1140
Muchdanach
of
Moidart
~1105 - 1164
Somhairle
Mor
MacGillebride
59
59
~1075
Gillebride
MacGilleadamnan
~1120
Ragnhilda
Olafsdottir
~1157
Ranald
MacSorley
~1159
Bethag
MacSorley
~1161 - 1210
Angus
MacSorley
49
49
~1163
Olaf
MacSorley
~1090
Olaf "The
Red"
Godredson
~1095
Ingibjorg
Haakonsdottir
~1065
Haakon "The
Imperious"
Paulson
~1070
Helga
Modansdottir
~1090
Affreca
of
Galloway
~1110
Godred
Olafsson
~1020
Harald
Hardrada
Sigurdson
~1060
Maria
Hardrada
Haraldsdottir
~1050
Godred
Crovan
Haraldson
~1062
Ingigerd
Hardrada
Haraldsdottir
~0970
Sigurd
Sow
Halfdansson
~0990
Asta
Gudbrandsdottir
~0960
Gudbrand
Kula
~0930
Halfdan
"The Gray"
Sigurdson
~1022
Halfdan
Sigurdson
~1025
Ingrid
Sigurdsdottir
~1020
Harald
"The Black"
Olafsson
~0990
Olaf
Rognvaldsson
~0960
Rognvald
Godfreyson
~0940 - 0989
Godfrey
Haraldsson
49
49
~0917 - 0940
Harald
Sigtrygsson
23
23
0890 - 0927
Sygtryg
Guthormson
37
37
~0835 - 0871
Ivar
Godfreyson
36
36
~0854
Guthorm
Ivarsson
~0865
Princess
of Norway
Ragnarsdottir
0892
Rognvald
Guthormson
~0815 - 0873
Godfrey
Rognvaldsson
58
58
~0735
Harald
Redbeard
~0837 - 0874
Olaf "The
Young"
Godfreyson
37
37
~0810
Eiric II
Eiriksson
~0794
Ragnar
Gudrodsson
~0765
Aasa
Haraldsdottir
~0792
Rolf
Gudrodsson
~0812
Sigurd
Eiriksson
~0815
Ragnhild
"The Mighty"
Eiriksdottir
Ragnhild
Haraldsdottir
Harald
Halfdansson
~0840
Aud "the
Deepminded"
Ketilsdottir
~0865
Thorstein
"The Red"
Olafsson
~0810
Ketil
Flatneb
Bjornsson
~0820
Yngvild
Ketilsdottir
~0790
Ketil
Ram
~0780
Bjorn "The
Ungartered"
Buna
~1290
Alastair
Og
MacDonald
Ranald
MacAlasdair
MacDonald
~1323
Sir
John
Stuart
Sir
Allan
Stuart
~1283
Sir
John
Stuart
~1103
Thora
MacGillebride
~1105
Bertoc
MacGillebride
~1045
GilleAdamnan
MacSolaimn
~1077
Berthoc
MacGilleadamnan
~1000
Solaimh
MacMeargaigh
~0965
Meargaigh
MacSuibhne
~0915
Suibhne
MacNiallghusa
~0865
Niallghusa
MacGodfrey
~0830
Godfrey
MacFergus
~0830
Miss
MacAlpin
~0725
Fergus
MacAedh
~0800
Lord of
the Isles
Fergus
~1100
Saoir
MacNeill
~1130
Maurice
Saoir
MacNeill
~1100
Malcolm
MacHeth
~1130
Donald
MacHeth
~1132
Gormflaeth
MacHeth
~1560
Ranald
Og
MacDonnell
~1590
Alasdair
Nan Cleas
MacDonnell
~1592
Ranald
MacDonnell
~1594
Donald
MacDonnell
~1596
Angus
MacDonnell
~1632
John
Stuart
~0164
Allan
Stuart
~1660
Sir
Duncan
Mor Stuart
~1662
Alan
Stuart
~1664
Donald
Stuart
~1665
Jean
Campbell
~1690
Margaret
Stuart
~1565
Donald
Stuart
~1595
Donald
Stuart
~1625
Dugald
Stuart
~1655
Donald
Stuart
~1685
Donald
Stuart
~1687 - 1745
Duncan
Stuart
58
58
~1715
Allan
Breck
Stuart
~1717
Grace
Stuart
~1715
Ranald
MacDonnell
~1748 - 1818
John
Dubh
MacDonnell
70
70
~1750
Capt.
Alexander
MacDonnell
~1752 - 1841
Archibald
MacDonnell
89
89
~1754
Grace
MacDonnell
1393
Archibald
Celestin
Campbell
~1395
Elizabeth
Somerville
~1420 - 1493
Sir
Colin
Campbell
73
73
~1425 - 1510
Isabel
Stewart
85
85
~1395 - 1463
Sir
John
Stewart
68
68
~1365
Sir
Robert
Stewart
~1460
Lady
Helen
Campbell
~1462
Lady
Marian
Campbell
~1464
Sir
Archibald
Campbell
~1466
Geillis
Campbell
~1372
Margaret
Johanna
Stewart
~1460
Hugh
Montgomery
~1490
Lady
Isabel
Montgomery
~1480
Sir
John
Mure
1505
William
Mure
1505
Elizabeth
Hamilton
1542
Janet
Mure
~1365
John
Somerville
~1400 - 1462
Sir
Duncan
Campbell
62
62
Anna
McCowle
~1457
Dugald
Campbell
~1415
James
Stuart
~1347
Mariota
Campbell
~1395
Sir
Patrick
Buchanan
~1420
Annabel
Buchanan
Catherine
Barnes
Lady
MacDonald
1528
Thomas
Bould
1530
Margaret
Bould
1532
Elizabeth
Bould
1520
Elizabeth
Gerard
1543 - 1602
Richard
Bould
59
59
1580 - 1612
Thomas
Bould
32
32
1584 - 1611
Eleanor
Atkinson
27
27
1611 - 1611
Lydia
Bould
Brigid
Norreys
1543 - 1579
Anne
Bould
36
36
1525
Margaret
Woodfall
1554 - 1554
Henry
Bould
1557
William
Bould
1561
Prudence
Brooke
1588 - 1635
Richard
Bould
47
47
1594
Anne
Leigh
1612 - 1612
Christina
Bold
1614 - 1614
John
Bold
1616 - ~1620
Richard
Bold
4
4
1616 - 1658
Peter
Bold
42
42
1620
Joan
Ashton
1654
Richard
Bold
1656 - 1691
Peter
Bold
35
35
1618
Dorothea
Bold
1620
Margaret
Bold
1621
Anne
Bold
1622
Mary
Bold
1624
Catherine
Bold
1625
Elizabeth
Bold
1628
Anne
Bold
1631
Frances
Bold
1632
Radcliff
Bold
1507
Elizabeth
Bould
1505
Henry
Byrom
1509
Anne
Bould
~1505
Richard
Boteler
(Butler)
Roger
Bradshaigh
1511
Dorothy
Bould
John
Holcroft
1513 - 1588
Maud
Bould
75
75
~1510
Sir
Richard
Sherburne
Called upon in 1543 to provide his quota of arms and men against the Scots. Knighted May 11, 1544
1515
John
Bould
1512
Anne
Atherton
1541
John
Bould
1543
Eleanor
Bould
1545
Anne
Bould
1467
Roger
Bould
1469
Totgerus
Bould
Agnes
1471
Matilda
Bould
1424
Gilbert
De
Bold
1432
Joanna
De
Bold
1440
Sibella
De
Bold
1382
Ellena
de
Bold
1384
John
de
Bold
1386
Katherine
de
Bold
1362
Thomas
de
Bold
1364 - 1438
Baldwin
de
Bold
74
74
1368
Margaret
de
Warwick
1395
Richard
de
Bold
1426
Katherine
de
Bold
1366
William
de
Bold
1368
Richard
de
Bold
1370
Henry
de
Bold
1372
Margaret
de
Bold
1374
Sibill
de
Bold
1376
Sir
Robert
de Bold
~1380
Margaret
Frampton
~1400
William
de
Bold
1378
Ellena
de
Bold
~1410
Margaret
Pickmere
~1430
Sir Henry
Harry
Bold
~1432
Thomas
Bold
~1435
Jane
Tempest
~1460
Grace
Bold
~1462
Jonet
Bold
~1464
Catherine
Bold
~1466
Jane
Bold
~1440
Annes
Hall
~1470
William
Bold
~1440
Elin
Verch
Dafydd
~1475
Pierce
Bold
~1435
Lowery
Verch
Meredydd
~1460
Thomas
Bold
~1462
Rowland
Bold
~1464
Jane
Bold
~1226
Roger
de
Bold
Ellinor
~1255
William
de
Bold
~1142
Simon
De
Beauchamp
~1175
Oliver
De
Beauchamp
~1173
William
De
Beauchamp
~1200
William
De
Beauchamp
~1202 - 1218
Hugh
De
Beauchamp
16
16
~1204 - 1221
Roger
De
Beauchamp
17
17
~1220 - 1287
John
De
Beauchamp
67
67
~1240 - 1294
Ralph
De
Beauchamp
54
54
~1270
Roger
De
Beauchamp
Alienated Eaton 1346
~1282
Walter
de
Beauchamp
~1284
William
de
Beauchamp
~1360
William
de
Beauchamp
~1362
Walter
de
Beauchamp
~1390
John
de
Beauchamp
~1420 - 1496
Richard
de
Beauchamp
76
76
~1450
Elizabeth
de
Beauchamp
~1452
Anne
de
Beauchamp
~1445
Sir
Fulke
Grenville
Margaret
~1508
Elizabeth
Beauchamp
~1422 - 1445
Henry
de
Beauchamp
23
23
~1275
John
De
Beauchamp
~1390
Richard
De
Beauchamp
. Richard de Beauchamp, who unless the Peerage be considered as one incident to the tenure of the Castle (which he never possessed), must be considered as Lord Bergavenny. He was born in or before 1397, being 14 years and upwards in June, 1411. He was Knight of the Bath April 8, 1413; Joint Warden of the Welsh Marches 1415. Captain of Lancers and Archers in Normany 1418. He married July 27, 1411, at Tewksbury, Isabel Despenser, daughter of Thomas le Despenser, Earl of Gloucester and his wife, Constance Plantagenet, daughter of Edmund, Duke of York, son of Edward III. In 1414 she was the sole heir to her brother, Richard le Despenser. After her husband's death Isabel married Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, first cousin to her first husband. Richard de Beauchamp was mortally wounded at the seige of Meaux in 1422 and died sine prole male, leaving an only daughter
Margaret
1415
Elizabeth
De
Beauchamp
Joan
de la
Montaigne
~1470
Edward
Berkeley
~1465
Sir
Charles de
Beaufort
Sir Charles de Beaufort, who assumed the name of Somerset, Knight of the Garter, knighted Aug. 6, 1485. He was a person of great abilities and arrived to very high advancements, as well in honor as estates. He was in the Privy Council and Constable of Helmesley Castle in 1486; Admiral of the Fleet 1487; Vice Chamberlain 1488; Captain of the Yeomen of the Guards, and made Knight Banneret July 21, 1506. He became Baron Herbert of Ragland, Chepstow and Gower, in Wales, in right of his wife July 6, 1491; Lord Chamberlain in 1508; created Earl of Worcester Feb. 5, 1513. In 6th of Henry VII he was sent as ambassador with the Order of the Garter to Emperor Maximillian I, King Henry being his near kinsman. These eminent favours were doubtless a great furtherance of his marriage with Elizabeth, sole daughter of William Herbert, Earl of Huntingdon, Lord Herbert, etc., and was made Governor of Payne Castle, and Montgomery Castle in Wales. He was summoned to Parliament in 1509-1512 among the Barons by the name of Charles Somerset de Herbert, Chevalier. He continued in great favour with Henry VIII until his lordship's death April 15, 1526, and was buried at Windsor in Beaufort Chapel with his first two wives. He had married 2nd Elizabeth West and 3rd Eleanor Sutton. By his 1st wife he had Henry, his successor, and a daughter Elizabeth, and by his 2nd wife Charles, George and Mary.
~1470
Elizabeth
Herbert
~1440
William
Herbert
~1470
Elizabeth
West
~1475
Eleanor
Sutton
~1488
Sir
Henry de
Beaufort
Sir Henry (Beaufort) Somerset, 2nd Earl of Worcester, etc., in 1526. For his signal exploits performed in France in the wars in his father's lifetime he had been knighted, by Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. (In the book, "When Knighthood Was in Flower," this Charles Brandon marries Mary, sister of Henry VIII.) Henry Somerset accompanied the Princess Mary to France when she married 1st the King of France. Shortly after the death of his father, Henry was one of the commission for concluding a peace with the French, and departed this life Nov. 26, 1549, leaving many manors and much land in various counties. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Anthony Browne. (Wurts' Magna Charta, Part III, p. 568, says she was daughter of Thomas Browne, but Edmondson and Collins both give her as the daughter of Anthony, son of Thomas Browne. Burke's Dormant and Ext. Peerage also. E. E. W.)
~1490
Elizabeth
de
Beaufort
~1495
Charles
de
Beaufort
~1497
George
de
Beaufort
~1499
Mary
de
Beaufort
~1490
Elizabeth
Browne
~1460
Sir
Anthony
Browne
~1392 - 1414
Richard
Despenser
22
22
~1270 - 1316
Sir
Robert
de Ufford
46
46
Sir Robert de Ufford, first Baron, Knight, who was summoned to Parliament as a Baron from 13 Jan., 1308, to Dec. 19, 1311. His lordship was in the expedition made into Scotland in 34 of Edward I, 1306. He married Cecily, one of the daughters and co-heirs of Sir Robert de Valoines, Knight, Lord of Walsham, and had issue Robert, John, Ralph and Edmund. He died 1316.
~1275
Cecily
de
Valoines
~1245
Sir
Robert de
Valoines
Sir Robert de Ufford, first Baron, Knight, who was summoned to Parliament as a Baron from 13 Jan., 1308, to Dec. 19, 1311. His lordship was in the expedition made into Scotland in 34 of Edward I, 1306. He married Cecily, one of the daughters and co-heirs of Sir Robert de Valoines, Knight, Lord of Walsham, and had issue Robert, John, Ralph and Edmund. He died 1316
~1300
John
de
Ufford
~1302 - 1346
Ralph
de
Ufford
44
44
~1305
Edward
de
Ufford
~1240 - 1296
Robert
de
Ufford
56
56
Robert de Peyton de Ufford, his younger son, who, assuming his surname from the lordship of that name in that shire, became Robert de Ufford. Sir William Dugdale says of this family, which afterwards arrived to such great honour, there had not been anything memorable until the 53rd year of Henry III, 1268, when Robert de Peyton de Ufford was made Justicer of Ireland by Henry III, and again in the reign of Edward I. He married Mary, widow of William de Say, and dying in 26 of Edward I, 1296
1209 - 12 FEB 1271/72
William
III de
Saye
~1240
William
de
Say
~1210
John
de
Peyton
~1238
John
de
Peyton
1395 - 8 FEB 1465/66
Isabel
de la
Pole
~1322
Robert
de
Ufford
~1324
William
de
Ufford
~1326
Cecily
de
Ufford
~1320
Catherine
De
Ufford
~1348
Elizabeth
de
Ferrers
~1383
Katherine
de
Beauchamp
~1385
Margaret
de
Beauchamp
~1387
Elizabeth
de
Beauchamp
~1395
Isabel
Despenser
~1425 - 1449
Anne
de
Beauchamp
24
24
~1250
Alice
de
Toeni
~1442
Anne
de
Beauchamp
~1502 - 1585
Richard
Norton
83
83
~1305
Margaret
de
Stopford
~1300
William
de
Vernon
~1323
Richard
de
Stafford
1344 - 1419
Edmund
de
Stafford
75
75
Edmund, Bishop of Exeter, b. in 1344 and d. in 1419. He was Dean of York in 1385. Four years after he was keeper of the privy seal, and at the age of fifty, he was made Bishop of Exeter. On Oct. 23, 1396, he was appointed Chancelor and held the office until the abdication of Richard II in 1399. He remained a member of the privy council under Henry IV. His visitations as bishop were through Devonshire and Cornwall and afterwards to London as Lord Chancelor. He was a learned man and took great interest in education.
~1330
Henry
Bourchier
~1332
Ralph
de
Stafford
~1345
Humphrey
de
Stafford
Humphrey, the Silver Hand, sheriff of Dorset, and Somerset counties, m. Elizabeth Dunham, of Hook, near Beaminster, Dorsetshire, wife of Sir John Maltravers
~1371
Thomas
Holand
~1379
Joan
de
Stafford
~1340
Sir
John
Maltravors
~1350
Elizabeth
Dunham
1361 - 1415
Michael
de la
Pole
54
54
~1372
John
de
Stafford
~1374
Richard
de
Stafford
~1370
Isabel
de
Vernon
~1275
Robert
de
Stopford
~1396
Walter
Blount
~1407
Henry
Bourchier
Archbishop Bourchier, Queen Margaret, in 1456, deposed him from his position.
~1430 - 1472
Anne
de
Stafford
42
42
~1420 - 1462
Aubrey
De
Vere
42
42
~1420
Sir
Thomas
Cobham
~1432
Joanna
de
Stafford
~1425
William
Bedumont
~1430
Sir
William
Knyvet
~1434
Elizabeth
de
Stafford
1435
Margaret
de
Stafford
~1430
Robert
Dunham
~1438 - 1476
Catherine
de
Stafford
38
38
~1380 - 1429
William
de
Stafford
49
49
~1390
Katherine
Chadwick
~1340
Sir
John
Chadwick
1439 - 1469
Humphrey
de
Stafford
30
30
On the death of his father, he being ten years of age, succeeded to his estate and to that of his cousin Humphrey, son of Sir John. He early adopted the Yorkish course and fought at the battle of Towton, March 29, 1461, being Knighted by Edward IV, on the field. Other honors soon followed. April 24, 1464, he was created Baron. He was appointed to bear the great seal to George Neville, Archbishop of York, in 1465. He was executed by order of Edward IV for quarreling with Pembrake and causing him to be defeated. He was executed Aug. 17, 1469, by the sheriff of Devonshire and Somerset. He left no issue by his wife Isabel. She m. Thomas Bourchier, son of Henry first, Earl of Essex.
~1445
Isabel
Barre
~1415
Sir
John
Barre
~1440
Thomas
Bourchier
~1325
Lord
Dacre
~1330
Reginald
de
Lucy
~1330
Walter
de
Herlavton
~1330 - 1354
Robert
de
Clifford
24
24
~1330
Elizabeth
Latimer
~1330
William
Latimer
~1355 - 1381
William
Deincourt
26
26
~1365
William
le
Serope
~1360 - 1400
Ralph
Lamley
40
40
~1360
Robert
Willoughby
~1364
Thomas
Willoughby
~1395
John
Mowbray
~1385 - 1414
Lord
Peter
Manly
29
29
~1380
Sir
Gilbert
Lancaster
~1394
Elizabeth
de
Neville
~1396
Anna
de
Neville
~1390
Sir
Humphry
Unfreville
~1385 - 1420
Richard
le
Scrope
35
35
~1385 - 1463
William
Cressener
78
78
~1416
Joan
De
Neville
~1395 - 27 JAN 1441/42
Thomas
Strangeways
~1395
John
Wydeville
1445 - MAR 1482/83
Sir
George
Boothe
~1450 - 1483
Catherine
de
Mountfort
33
33
~1473 - 1519
Sir
William
Booth
46
46
~1475
Ellen
Montgomery
~1500
Jane
Booth
~1500
Hugh
Dutton
~1335
Sir John
De
Stafford
~1330
John
le
Strange
~1360
Elizabeth
le
Strange
~1350
Gruffydd
ap Madoc
Vychan
~1445
Margaret
de
Mainwaring
~1584
Sarah
Bulkeley
~1440
Randall
Grosvenor
~1580
Oliver
St.
John
Humphrey
de
Peshale
~1334 - 1429
Sir
Thomas de
Swynnerton
95
95
~1335
Joanna
de la
Pipe
~1353
Roger
Swynnerton
~1285
Robert
De
Swynnerton
~1330 - 1410
Robert
de
Swynnerton
80
80
~1332
John
de
Swynnerton
~1310
Thomas
de la
Pipe
~1350 - 1450
Humphrey
de
Swynnerton
100
100
~1350
Matilda
Appleby
~1320
Henry
Appleby
~1370
John
de
Swynnerton
Juliana
~1390
John
de
Swynnerton
~1390
Clementia
Mallorie
~1360
John
Mallorie
~1410 - 1431
John
de
Swynnerton
21
21
~1412 - 1449
Thomas
de
Swynnerton
37
37
~1480
Thomas
Perkins
~1485
Dorothy
More
1649
Elizabeth
Perkins
1702 - 1759
Otho
Stevens
57
57
Abigail
Kent
~1520
Anne
Laughton
~1490
Sir
Thomas
Laughton
~1545
Henry
Bould
~1575
Elizabeth
Bould
~1485
Richard
Atherton
~1570
Anne
Bould
~1565
Sir
Alexander
Holland
~1490
Sir
Thomas
Gerard
~1540
Francis
Tunstall
~1495
William
Woodfall
~1530
William
Brooke
~1565 - 1636
Sir
Peter
Leigh
71
71
~1675 - 1704
Richard
Bold
29
29
~1680
Elizabeth
Norton
~1660
Thomas
Norton
~1703 - 1762
Peter
Bold
59
59
PETER BOLD, esq. of Bold Hall, M.P. for Lancashire in 1736, 1750, and 1754
~1705
Anna-
Maria
Wentworth
~1675
Godfrey
Wentworth
~1732 - 1813
Anna
Maria
Bold
81
81
ANNA-MARIA BOLD, of Bold, at whose decease, unmarried, 25th November, 1813, aged eighty-one, the estates of the Bold family passed to her nephew, PETER PATTEN, esq.
~1733
Dorothea
Bold
~1734
Frances
Bold
~1736
Mary
Bold
~1738
Goverilda
Bold
~1740
Elenor
Bold
~1730
Thomas
Patten
~1760
Peter
Patten
~1730
Fleetwood
Hesketh
~1735
Thomas
Hunt
~1655
Elizabeth
Horton
~1630 - 2 JAN 1698/99
Thomas
Horton
~1667
Susanna
Horton
~1665
Richard
Beaumont
~1669
Anne
Horton
1517
Agnes
Bould
~1515
Henry
Blundell
~1545
James
Blundell
~1600
Catherine
Leigh
~1570
Margaret
Gerard
Sir
Gilbert
Gerard
~1586
Piers
Leigh
~1590
Anne
Savil
~1610
Peter
Leigh
~1612
Frances
Leigh
~1614
Margaret
Leigh
~1616
Elizabeth
Leigh
~1588
Francis
Leigh
~1590 - ~1590
Radcliffe
Leigh
~1592
Gilbert
Leigh
~1595
John
Leigh
~1596
Thomas
Leigh
~1600
Lettice
Calveley
Richard
Leigh
Thomas
Leigh
Peter
Leigh
Lettice
Leigh
Dorothy
Leigh
Frances
Leigh
Margaret
Leigh
Piers
Leigh
~1598
Peter
Leigh
Anne
Birkenhead
Thomas
Leigh
Frances
Leigh
~1570
Dorothy
Egerton
~1540
Sir
Richard
Egerton
~1535 - 1570
Peter
Leigh
35
35
~1540
Catherine
Venables
~1510 - 1580
Sir
Thomas
Venables
70
70
Sheriff of Shropshire, Sheriff of Cheshire
~1505 - 1570
Sir
Peter
Leigh
65
65
SIR PETER LEGH, of Lyme and Haydock, one of the Cheshire gentlemen, knighted at Leith, by the Earl of Hertford, in 1544, who succeeded his father, 4th December, 33rd of HENRY VIII. He m. Margaret, daughter of Thomas Gerard, esq. of Bryn, in the county of Lancaster
~1510
Margaret
Gerard
~1480
Thomas
Gerard
~1478
Peter
Leigh
~1480
Margaret
de
Tyldesley
~1450
Nicholas
de
Tyldesley
~1507
Thomas
Leigh
~1509
Edward
Leigh
~1511
Elizabeth
Leigh
~1485
Jane
Gerard
~1465
Peter
Gerard
~1515
Cecilia
Leigh
~1482
Cecily
Leigh
~1517
Anne
Leigh
~1460 - 1527
Sir
Peter
Leigh
67
67
~1486
Margaret
Leigh
~1480
Lawrence
Warren
~1420 - 1478
Sir
Peter
Leigh
58
58
SIR PETER LEGH, knt. of Lyme and Haydock, who enrolling himself under the banner of York, in the wars of the Roses, received the honour of knighthood, at the battle of Wakefield. He m. Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard Molyneux, of Sephton, and dying in 1478, (Inq. p. m. 18th EDWARD IV.) was s. by (the son of his only son, Peter Legh, of Haydock, by Mabell, his wife, daughter and heiress of Sir James Croft, of Dalton)
~1425
Margaret
Molyneux
~1390 - 1422
Sir
Peter
Leigh
32
32
SIR PETER LEGH, of Lyme, knt.-banneret, accompanying King HENRY to France, distinguished himself in the wars of that valiant prince, and met his death wound on the field of AZINCOURT, of which he died soon after at Paris. His remains were brought over to England, and interred with his father, of Macclesfield. Sir Peter had wedded Joan, daughter and heiress of Sir Gilbert Haydock, of Haydock, a Lancashire knt. of ancient descent and extensive possessions.
~1400 - 1439
Joan
Haydock
39
39
~1380
Sir
Gilbert
Haydock
~1370 - 1399
Sir
Piers
Legh
29
29
SIR PIERS LEGH, knt. younger son of Robert Legh, of Adlington, who d. temp. RICHARD II. and of Matilda, his wife, dau. and co-heiress of Sir John de Arderne, knt. married in November, 1388, Margaret,(*) only daughter and heiress of Sir Thomas Danyers, knt. of Bradley, and obtained by this alliance, a grant of the lands of Hanley, now Lyme, in Macclesfield. Ormerod, in his History of the Palatinate, thus speaks of this acquisition; "When the flower of Cheshire chivalry were engaged under their earl, the BLACK PRINCE, at the battle of Cressy, Sir Thomas Danyers, was preeminently distinguished above the rest of that chosen phalanx, and in the most hazardous part of the battle, most probably when King EDWARD refused his succours, and bade 'his boy win his spurs and the honour of the day for himself,' the said Sir Thomas relieved the banner of his earl, and took prisoner the chamberlain of France, Tankerville. For this service, the Black Prince, as earl of Chester, settled on him an annuity of forty marks per annum, issuing out of his manor of Frodsham, until a convenient grant of land of the value of œ20 per annum could be made. In the 21st RICHARD II. it was finally settled that this estate should be 'the lands of Hanley, in Macclesfield forest,' which that sovereign (who in this year assumed the title of PRINCE OF CHESTER) accordingly granted to the daughter of Sir Thomas Danyers, and her third husband, Piers Legh." Sir Piers Legh appears to have been knighted about the time of the grant, but lived only two years to enjoy it, for in 1399, when the insurgent forces of the duke of Lancaster advanced into Cheshire, Sir Piers was seized upon by that nobleman, and in consequence of his well known attachment to his ill-fated sovereign, beheaded at Chester, 1st August
~1372
Margaret
Danyers
~1345
Sir
Thomas
Danyers
~1391
James
De
Leigh
~1392
John
Leigh
~1395
Alice
Alcocke
~1365
John
Alcocke
~1365
John
de
Radcliffe
~1440 - 1468
Peter
Leigh
28
28
~1442 - 1475
Mabel
Croft
33
33
~1410 - 1457
Sir
James
Croft
47
47
~1364
Thomas
de
Venables
~1365
William
de
Venables
~1365
Blanche
de
Arderne
~1385
Thomas
Venables
~1242
Hugh
de
Coton
~1263
Elizabeth
De
Tittenlegh
~1230
Hamon
Tittenlegh
~1580 - 24 FEB 1643/44
Mary
Venables
~1400
Margery
Stanley
~1415 - 1495
William
Venables
80
80
~1575
Richard
Ashton
~1520
Maud
Needham
William
Venables
1491
Eleanor
Cotton
~1490 - 1556
Robert
Needham
66
66
* Robert Needham, the heir to his brother, William, was knighted on May 31st, 1533. He was Sheriff of Shropshire in 1528, 1535, and 1540, and he was Sheriff of Cheshire in 1538. Robert Needham's Will, dated May 24th, 1556, and probated July 30th, 1557, mentioned: his wife, Agnes: his daughter, Maud Venables, her husband, Sir Thomas Venables, and their daughter, Katheryn Venables: his son-in-law, Sir Andrew Corbett: his cousin and heir, Robert Needham, his brother, John, and his sisters, Jane Needham, Margery Needham, and Dorothy Needham: his son's daughter, Annes Needham, the daughter of Anne Hope: and his cousin, Edward Mainwaring of Whitmore. The executors were Sir Andrew Corbett and Edward Mainwaring. The Estate of Shavington remained in the family, indicating that the testator's "cousin and heir" was actually his grandson, Thomas Needham's oldest son. Also, the will mentioned that Sir Edward Aston owed the testator twelve score marks for the marriage of Robert Needham, the testator's cousin and heir, and it was the testator's grandson, Robert Needham, who, in fact, did marry Frances Aston, Sir Edward Aston's daughter - another indication that the heir of the testator was actually his grandson.
~1490 - 1560
Agnes
Mainwaring
70
70
Sir
Andrew
Corbett
~1440 - 1495
John
Mainwaring
55
55
~1456
Matilda
De
Leigh
1446
William
Davenport
~1472
William
Davenport
~1422
Philip
Booth
~1743
Infant
Thornton
~1475
Margaret
Ashton
~1458
Isabel
De
Leigh
~1360 - 1422
Sir
John
Booth
62
62
~1365
Joan
Trafford
~1388
Margery
Booth
~1402
Alice
Booth
~1405
Catherine
Booth
~1393
Sir
Henry
Booth
~1365
John
Byron
Robert
Clifton
~1390
Thomas
Radcliffe
~1402
Isabell
Findhern
~1334 - 1386
Henry
Trafford
52
52
~1340 - 1416
Margery
Ince
76
76
~1363 - 1394
Henry
Trafford
31
31
~1367 - 1434
Margaret
Trafford
67
67
~1369
Isabel
Trafford
1304
Robert
Ince
1242 - ~1405
Sir
John
Leygard
163
163
1357 - 1422
John
Radcliffe
65
65
Robert
Worsley
~1305 - 1370
Sir
Henry
Trafford
65
65
~1302
Agnes
Doterinde
~1264 - >1320
Sir
John de
Trafford
56
56
~1380
Henry
Radcliffe
~1236
Sir
Henry de
Trafford
~1240
Margaret
~1208 - ~1288
Sir
Henry
Trafford
80
80
~1212
Loretta
~1217
Margaret
de
Trafford
~1175
Richard
de
Trafford
~1215
Amibil
de
Trafford
~1135 - ~1221
Henry
de
Trafford
86
86
~1140
Christina
~1105
Richard
de
Trafford
~1137
James
de
Trafford
~1075
Henry
de
Trafford
~1045 - 1135
Henry
de
Trafford
90
90
~1050
Margery
Massey
~1015
Robert
de
Trafford
~0995
Randolphus
de
Trafford
~0965 - 1050
Randolphus
de
Trafford
85
85
~1166
John
de
Radclyffe
~1239 - 1326
Richard
Radclyffe
87
87
He was a gallant soldier of the Scottish wars and was given many honors by King Edward I.
~1210
Robert
de
Radclyffe
~1330
Thomas
Booth
~1335
Elena
De
Workesley
~1362
Anne
Booth
~1305
Robert
De
Workesley
~1310
Cecily
Bromhall
~1337
William
De
Workesley
~1275
Henry
De
Worsley
~1280
Margaret
Schoresworth
~1307
Joan
De
Worsley
~1245
Richard
De
Worsley
~1250
Maud
de
Wardley
~1215 - 1278
Geoffrey
De
Worsley
63
63
~1220
Agnes
de
Worsley
~1185
Richard
De
Worsley
~1190
Maud
de
Singleton
~1155
Elias
De
Worsley
Henry
Statham
~1300
John
Booth
* The family was really a branch of the family of Booth of Boothstown, Worsley, the first Booth of Barton being John del Booth, who married Loretta, who was daughter and sole heiress of Agnes de Barton. John del Booth, by marrying Loretta de Notten, became Lord of the Manor of Barton, the family becoming known as the Booths of Barton.
~1305
Loretta
de
Notten
~1275
Sir
Gilbert de
Notten
~1280
Agnes
de
Barton
* Agnes de Barton was descended from Edith de Barton, daughter of Albert Grelle, or Greslet, who was the fourth Baron of Manchester. The first Lord of the Manor of Mamecestre, or Manchester, was also Albert Greslet, who, as a favourite of Roger de Poictou, probably occupied a high position at the Courts of William I. and William II. It is thought that he received the grant of the Barony of Mamecestre about 1086, and, until the death of Thomas, the eighth Baron, in 1310, the Barony continued in the hands of the Greslets. Thomas having no male issue, he left the Barony to his sister Joan, who had married Sir John de Ia Warre, Baron of Wickwar, County Gloucester. Albert Greslet the Younger, as the fourth Baron is often called, died in 1182, and was succeeded by his son, Robert. His daughter Edith married Gilbert, son of William de Notten, of Yorkshire, in 1190. Included amongst the lands paying knights' fees in the County of Lancaster in the opening decade of the thir-teenth century were those of Gilbert de Notten, who held in the right of his wife (Edith de Barton) "fourteen oxgangs of the Lord the King in Thanage, for which he paid 26s. annually."
~1245
Gilbert
de
Notten
~1250
Edith
de
Barton
~1215
William
de
Notten
~1220
Albert
Greslet
~1270
Thomas
Booth
~1240
William
Booth
~1243
Sebilla
Brereton
~1365 - 1415
Sir
Robert
de Legh
50
50
~1210
Adam
de
Booth
~1365
Isabel
Maud
Belgrave
~1405
Thomas
Davenport
~1405
Margery
De
Leigh
~1403
Johanna
Davenport
~1401 - 1474
John
Davenport
73
73
~1310 - 1370
Robert
De
Legh
60
60
* Of Adlington prior to the Norman Conquest we know very little, except that it was held by the Saxon Earl Edwin, not as a place of residence, but as a hunting lodge in the Forest of Macclesfield. After the Conquest it passed to Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, and the nephew of William the Conqueror. As "Edulvinstane" it is mentioned in the Domesday Survey. Early in the thirteenth century it was granted to a family named "de Corona". Four generations of this family lived at Adlington, Thomas and Ellen de Corona being the children of the third generation. Thomas married, but his son predeceased him without issue. Ellen married John de Legh of Booths and in the year 1315 Thomas de Corona granted Adlington to his sister Ellen and her husband for their lives, with remainder to Robert de Legh their second son and his heirs for ever. The Legh family has lived at Adlington since this date. -------- Adlington Hall is on the site of a hunting lodge which predates the Norman Conquest. Two huge oak tree, still rooted in the ground, remain from the lodge and can be seen in the Great Hall. At the Conquest the lodge came in to the possession of Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester. In the early 13th century the hall was granted to the de Coruna family who held it for four generations before running out of male heirs. Eleanor the daughter of Sir William de Baggilegh was the heiress (see the addtions and corrections in Ormerod's History of Cheshire). She married John de Legh of Booths and their son, Robert de Legh eventually succeeded to the hall and estate. The hall has remained in the same family ever since, albeit with succession through the female line at the 18th century, in 1888 when it went through two females, in 1940, and again in 1992. --- 1. Sir William Venables, Knight, of Bradwall, 2nd son of Sir William Venables, Baron of Kinderton, alive in 1300. + Agnes, daughter and heiress of Richard de Legh of the West Hall, High Legh. (Her first husband had been Richard de Lymme and her son with him became Thomas de Legh of West Hall). William Venables and Agnes had a son John. * 2. John de Legh of "Bothes" eldest son of William Venables, purchaser of Knutsford Booths some time before 28 Edw. I. (1300). He was known to be living in 1338. + Ellena, dau. of Sir William de Baggilegh and sister and coheir of John de Baggilegh and heir of her kinsman, Thomas de Corona. She was born in 1288. * 3. Sir John de Legh of Knutsford Booths, Knight, eldest son and heir. + 1st wife of Sir John was Maude, daughter of Sir John Arderne of Aldford. + 2nd wife of Sir John was Isabel, (Note the main section on this family in Ormerod's Cheshire has Isabel as sister and co-heiress of John Baggilegh of Baggilegh but the corrections in the appendix state that her affiliation is unknown and the Baggilegh connection is placed in the previous generation where Ellena's description is changed to daughter of Sir William Baggilegh from daughter of Thomas de Corona.) * 3. Robert de Legh, ancestor of the Leghs of Adlington, Annesley, Eggington, Lyme Birch, Ridge, Rushall, Longbarrow, Adlestrop, Stoneleigh, Newnham Regis and Stockwell. Living 10 Edw. II. (1317) and 1338.
~1315
Sybil
de
Honford
Maud
de
Norley
Piers
De
Legh
~1332
Margaret
De
Legh
1316
Isabella
Plessington
~1285
Henry
de
Honford
~1290
Sybil
de
Waleton
~1255 - >1294
Henry
de
Honefort
39
39
~1225
Henry
de
Honefort
~1335
Sir John
De
Assheton
1300
Richard
Radcliffe
~1280
John
De
Legh
~1288 - <1352
Ellena
de
Corona
64
64
~1312
Peter
De
Legh
Ellen
Bechton
~1260
Thomas
de
Corona
~1230
Hugh
de
Corona
~1235
Amabilla
de
Baumville
Ellen
Dent
~1300
John
De
Legh
~1473 - 1548
Sir
William
Molyneux
75
75
Sir William was a great commander in Co. Lancaster, having led a considerable force to serve in 1513 under his cousin, Sir Richard Stanley, at Flodden Field, where he took with his own hand two Scottish banners (which are still in the family) and the Earl of Huntley's arms. For this service, he was personally thanked in a letter by Henry VIII, written from Windsor Castle and dated 27th of November. Sir William was a gallant knight in the reign of Henry III, and displayed great bravery. A monument stands yet today at his grave at Sefton Church with a eulogistic Latin inscription to his memory. He was knighted at Flodden Field in 1513 and given a tiger passant proper on a crown or, for his crest.
William
de
Hawardyn
~1475
Jane
Rugge
~1497 - 3 JAN 1568/69
Sir
Richard
Molyneux
Richard succeeded his father in 1548 and was knighted at the coronation of Queen Mary in 1553. He was subsequently made Sheriff of the Co. Lanc. in 1556. Baron of Sefton.
~1501
Anne
Molyneux
Elinor
Maghill
~1485
Elizabeth
Clifton
~1505
William
Molyneux
~1507
Thomas
Molyneux
~1509
Anne
Molyneux
~1445
Sir
Richard
Rugge
~1475
Edward
Molyneux
~1449 - 1520
Anna
de
Dutton
71
71
~1477
Elizabeth
Molyneux
~1479
Ellen
Molyneux
~1453
Joan
Molyneux
~1431 - ~1511
Sir
Thomas
Molyneux
80
80
~1400
Helen
Harrington
~1423
Anne
Molyneux
~1432
John
Molyneux
~1434
Robert
Molyneux
~1436
Henry
Molyneux
~1438
Gilbert
Molyneux
~1440
Edmund
Molyneux
~1442
William
Molyneux
~1444
Catherine
Molyneux
~1446
Genett
Molyneux
~1448
Elizabeth
Molyneux
~1449
Robert
Molyneux
~1360
Richard
Molyneux
~1370
Elinore
Urswick
~1398
Adam
Molyneux
~1400
Robert
Molyneux
~1386
Anne
Molyneux
~1404
Katherine
Molyneux
~1340
Thomas
Urswick
~1405
Margaret
Le
Strange
~1325
Sir
William
Molyneux
~1305 - 1372
Sir
William
Molyneux
67
67
Sir William succeeded his father in 1363. He distinguished himself at the battle of Navaret, in Spain, under Edward, the Black Prince, where he was made banneret in 1367, and continued to serve under that general in all his Spanish and French wars. On his return, he died at Canterbury, where he was entombed, on which is the inscription: "Miles honorificus Molyneux subject intus; Tertius Edwardus dilexit hunc ut amicus. Fortia qui gessit, Gallos, Navarrosq, repressit, Hinc cum recissit, morte ferente decessit, Anno milleno trecento septugeno, Atque bus junge duo, sic perit omnis homo."
~1362
Thomas
Molyneux
~1307
Johannah
Ellall
~1327
Thomas
Molyneux
~1329
Richard
Molyneux
~1331
Peter
Molyneux
~1333
John
Molyneux
~1335
Robert
Molyneux
~1337
Simon
Molyneux
~1305
Margaret
Hetton
~1275
Jordan
Ellall
~1307
Roger
Molyneux
~1310
Richard
Molyneux
~1312
John
Molyneux
~1315
Robert
Molyneux
~1317
Peter
Molyneux
~1320
Agatha
Molyneux
~1265
Robert
de
Molyneux
~1267
Thomas
de
Molyneux
~1269
Peter
de
Molyneux
~1271
Alice
de
Molyneux
~1212
Roger
de
Molyneux
~1187
Robert
de
Molyneux
~1165
Emma
Davis
~1190
William
Molyneux
~1192
Thomas
Molyneux
~1194
Peter
Molyneux
~1196
John
Molyneux
~1198
Agnes
Molyneux
~1200
Alice
Molyneux
~1202
Julian
Molyneux
~1161
Simon
de
Molyneux
~1163
Vincent
de
Molyneux
~1165
John
de
Molyneux
Isabella
Dugale
~1137
Gilbert
de
Molyneux
~1139
Swyrd
Henry de
Molyneux
~1109
Richard
de
Molyneux
~1179
Capt.
William de
Molyneux
William MOLYNEUAX Reference: no known issue, Occupation: Captain. IMFA 1.1.1-2; Molineaux; Molyneuax; this family came from Molineaux- sur-Seine, not far from Roen celebrated for the ruins of an ancient fortress popularly called the Castle of Robert le Diable, which was destroyed iby John Sans-Terre, but rebuilt in 1378 by descended from William de Molineaux, Lord of Sefton, County Lancashire, one of the followers of William the Conqeror-Courthopis Debrett. Captain William Molyneaux (Milins) appears to have been one of the most distinguished as well as from the Battle Abbey roll wherein his name stands 18th in order as from the old Chronicles of the duchy, wherein he is set down and placed as a most especial and chief man in nearness and singular credit with his royal master. Capt William Molyneuax and his brother Vivian were in the 1st expedition of the Army sent by William the Conqueror under the conduct of Roger de Poytiers, and the said Roger de Poytiers who was then possessed of all the tract of land in Lanchashire between the river Ribble and Mersey by gift of the crown, gave among other lands and manors of Sefton, Thorndon, Kerdon and half of land as services of half Knights fee. Whereof he, William Molyneaux, made Sefton his chief seat and was succeded by his brother Vivian de Molyneaux. IMFA 1.1.1-2
1811 - 1893
Betsy
Chase
82
82
1778 - 1846
Sally
Pike
68
68
1818 - 1908
Samuel
Pierce
90
90
Lloyd
Arthur
Goodale
Annabelle
Clarissa
Goodale
Donald
LeRoy
Goodale
Marion
Clarance
Goodale
1927
Irene
Elaine
Goodale
1931 - 1984
Alvin
Clark
Goodale
53
53
~1885
Henry
Sutton
~1890
Ella
May
Wakefield
Charles
Dolge
Robert
Starr
Williams
Living
Williams
Living
Williams
Living
Williams
Living
Williams
1926
Avenel
Lulehua
Failing
1901 - 1966
Charles
Keawe
Failing
65
65
1904 - 1969
Emma
Kamohaiulu
Kanalu
64
64
1927 - 1971
Emma
Kuulei
Failing
44
44
1928 - 1999
Charles
Keawe
Failing
70
70
Living
Failing
1931 - 1931
Samuel
Failing
Living
Failing
Living
Failing
Living
Failing
~1880
Joseph
Kamohaiulu
Kanalu
~1885
Kaaihue
Kamahunuiakea
Nakahuahale Kamahu
1922 - 1971
Llewellyn
Osborne
Akee
48
48
Living
Akee
Living
Akee
Living
Akee
Living
Akee
Living
Akee
Living
Akee
Living
Akee
~1895
William
Ahloy
Akee
~1900
Eva
Julia
Kauka
Living
Sellers
Living
Failing
Living
Failing
Living
Failing
Living
Failing
Living
Failing
Living
Hunt
1926 - 1999
Samuel Makakoa
Kahananui
Mahoe
73
73
Living
Mahoe
Living
Jr.
Living
Mahoe
Living
Mahoe
Living
Mahoe
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Kauhi
Living
Makekau
Living
Makekau
Living
Makekau
Living
Makekau
Living
Makekau
1872
John
Keawe
Failing
~1875
Hannah
Kamakanikalauena
Simeona
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Gould
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Gould
Living
Fullmer
Living
Fitzgerald
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Steinle
Edwin
David
Steinle
Lorene
Bernice
Beisel
Living
Gill
Living
Steinle
Living
Lovejoy
Living
Goodale
~1545
Baptiste
Goodell
Baptiste Goodell, supposed to be a son of that family and uncle to Robert, made his first appearance as an actor with William Shakespeare in Henry VI before Queen Elizabeth in 1589.
~1895
Sidney
Merit
Goodale
1897 - 1976
August
Henry
Goodale
79
79
1899 - 1986
Bert
Sidney
Goodale
87
87
1901 - 1972
Fred
Marcus
Goodale
71
71
1903 - 1987
Lillie
Elvira
Goodale
84
84
1914 - 1988
Harry
Goodale
73
73
1913
Virginia
Mae
Craighead
1940 - 1998
Phyllis
Goodale
58
58
Living
Babatz
Living
Babatz
Living
Babatz
Lillian
1905
Catherine
Johanna
Frerich
Florence
1899 - 1981
Harry
A.
Dahl
81
81
~1878
Frank
Sensor
~1880
Nina
Sensor
~1882
Mabel
Sensor
~1836
Adeline
Nichols
~1840
Amelia
Nichols
~1845
Harriet
Nichols
~1846
Deanne
Nichols
1864
Hiram
Jackson
Goodale
~1780
Asa
Goodale
~1781
Harvey
Goodale
1782
Enos
Goodale
1784
Hannah
Goodale
1787
Jane
Goodale
1789
Lydia
Goodale
1791
Joel
Goodale
1793
Amos
Goodale
1793 - 1877
Obadiah
Goodale
84
84
1796 - 1796
Ira
Goodale
1798
Ira
Goodale
1801
Elijah
Goodale
1803
Martha
Haskell
Farwell
1827
Joseph
Haskell
Goodale
1828
Martha
Farwell
Goodale
1830
Lucy
Ann
Goodale
1832
Solon
Dinsmore
Goodale
1835
Mary
Farwell
Goodale
1838
Roland
Whiting
Goodale
1839 - 1910
George
Washington
Goodale
71
71
1841
Addie
Bathshua
Davis
1908 - 1966
James
Milton
Lovejoy
57
57
1920
Edith
Arbell
Askins
Living
Lovejoy
Living
Lovejoy
Living
Lovejoy
Living
Lovejoy
Living
Lovejoy
Living
Swindemann
Living
Goodale
Living
Walters
Living
Walters
Living
Walters
Living
Walters
Living
Hutchison
Living
Beldon
LaVerne
Wahneta
Walgren
Theodore
Earl
Walgren
Living
Marverud
Living
Marverud
Living
Bartz
Living
Bartz
Living
Bartz
Living
Bartz
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Goodale
Living
Bendor
Living
Woody
Living
Woody
~1906
Ray
Marvin
Goodale
1715
Elizabeth
Goodell
1735
Joseph
Goodell
1736
Elizabeth
Goodell
1738
Azubah
Goodell
9 FEB 1739/40
John
Goodell
1741
Thankful
Goodell
1743
Soloman
Goodell
1745
Sarah
Goodell
13 JAN 1746/47
Mary
Goodell
1749
Timothy
Goodell
1751
Nathan
Goodell
1753
Hannah
Goodell
1755 - 1815
Deliverance
Goodell
60
60
1754
David
Forbush
1681 - 1752
John
Goodell
70
70
~1690
Elizabeth
Witt
1730
Elizabeth
Richardson
1735
Josiah
Upton
19 JAN 1727/28
Sarah
Upton
1730
Ebenezer
Upton
1732
Anna
Upton
1738
Amos
Upton
~1725
Daniel
Graves
1746
Anna
Upton
~1740
Samuel
Kjenkes
1791
Asa
Godding
Goodale
1794
Betsey
Goodale
1798
Lucy
Goodale
1800
James
Goodale
1803
Royal
Goodale
1806
Sarah
Goodale
1812
Ebenezer
Goodale
Asa
Nickols
Priscilla
Grover
Daniel
Gould
Wait
Coggeshall
D. 1690
John
Redington
D. 1697
John
Newmarch
1620
John
Wildes
9 MAR 1640/41 - 20 JAN 1708/09
Sarah
Baker
~1641 - 1668
John
Perkins
27
27
Deborah
Browning
1667
Thomas
Perkins
~1643 - 1719
Thomas
Perkins
76
76
Sarah
Wallis
1695
Martha
Perkins
1697
Robert
Perkins
1699
Samuel
Perkins
1701
Sarah
Perkins
1703
Phebe
Perkins
1705
Hannah
Perkins
~1656 - 18 FEB 1740/41
Elisha
Perkins
25 FEB 1661/62 - 1714
Catherine
Towne
11 MAR 1629/30 - 1704
Jacob
Towne
At a lawfull Towne meeting by order of athoryty on the 30'th of December 1692: Ens Jacob Towne is Chosen to serve on the Grand Jury at Salem and John Prichet and Corp'll John Curtiow are Chosen to serve on the Jury of Tryalls at the Court of assise to be houlden at Salem the 3'd day of January 1692 or 93 This is a true Coppy taken out of the Towne book P me Ephraim Dorman Recorder for Topsfield Thes men above menchened Ere chosen acording to the tener of this Warant as atested by me *Ephraim Willdes constabill of Topsfild ( Mass. Archives Vol. 135 No. 87 )
~1635
Katherine
Jane
Symonds
1681
Thomas
Perkins
Mary
Wildes
1683
Elisha
Perkins
~1646
Timothy
Perkins
~1651
Margaret
Perkins
22 MAR 1672/73
Joseph
Towne
28 JAN 1657/58
Judith
Perkins
Daniel
Redington
Mary
Redington
Martha
Redington
Phila.
Peabody
1650
John
Herrick
Zachary
Herrick
Mary
Robert
Cue
1648
John
Gould
John
Gould
Joanna
~1690
Samuel
Gould
1692
Abraham
Gould
~1694
Isaac
Gould
Phebe
Redington
Samuel
Fisk
1649
John
Newmarch
1651
Thomas
Newmarch
1653
Zachheus
Newmarch
1655
Martha
Newmarch
1657
Phebe
Newmarch
1659
Sarah
Newmarch
~1650
John
Wildes
~1652
Sarah
Wildes
~1654
Elizabeth
Wildes
~1656
Phebe
Wildes
1658 - 23 MAR 1687/88
Priscilla
Wildes
Henry
Lake
1660
Martha
Wildes
17 MAR 1661/62
Nathan
Wildes
1663
Ephram
Wildes
John
Baker
1662 - 1724
John
Gould
61
61
Phebe
French
1664 - 1723
Sarah
Gould
58
58
Joseph
Bixby
14 FEB 1665/66 - 1752
Thomas
Gould
JAN 1674/75 - 1763
Mercy
Sumner
9 MAR 1668/69
Samuel
Gould
Margaret
Stone
1672 - 1739
Zaccheus
Gould
67
67
1679 - 1740
Elizabeth
Curtice
60
60
1674 - 1715
Priscilla
Gould
40
40
1673
John
Curtice
1677 - 1753
Joseph
Gould
75
75
1689 - 1753
Priscilla
Perkins
63
63
1681 - 1689
Mary
Gould
7
7
Rose
Keyes
1685
Phebe
Gould
Thomas
Curtice
1687
John
Gould
1709
Martha
Gould
Phebe
Towne
1689
Mary
Gould
Thomas
Standley
1691
Nathaniel
Gould
Grace
Hurd
1694
Sarah
Gould
Thomas
Butler
1697
Hannah
Gould
4 FEB 1695/96
Gideon
Towne
1699 - 1766
Daniel
Gould
67
67
Lydia
Averill
Lucy
Tarbox
1701
David
Gould
Abigail
Dodge
19 MAR 1703/04 - 1762
Solomon
Gould
Elizabeth
Robinson
Rebecca
Bixby
1707
Lydia
Gould
Samuel
Standley
Sarah
Bixby
Joseph
Bixby
Jonathan
Bixby
George
Bixby
Daniel
Bixby
Benjamin
Bixby
Mary
Bixby
Abigail
Bixby
~1645
William
Sumner
~1650
Abigail
Clement
1701
Lt.
Thomas
Gould
16 JAN 1702/03
Jacob
Gould
Dorothy
Goodridge
1704 - 30 JAN 1705/06
Deborah
Gould
1707 - 1767
Deborah
Gould
60
60
Joseph
Page
8 MAR 1709/10 - 1803
Simon
Gould
Jane
Palmer
17 JAN 1711/12
Mercy
Gould
Nathaniel
Page
24 MAR 1713/14 - 1736
Yates
Gould
1716
Benjamin
Gould
Esther
Pierce
1717 - 1748
Nathaniel
Gould
31
31
25 FEB 1697/98 - 1786
Sarah
Gould
18 JAN 1700/01
Samuel
Gould
Mehitable
Stiles
1703 - 1772
Moses
Gould
69
69
Mary
Bellows
~1705
Daniel
Gould
1709
Patience
Gould
Edmund
Towne
1709
Jonathan
Gould
6 MAR 1711/12
Margaret
Gould
1715
Zaccheus
Gould
1720
Hubbard
Gould
Hannah
Bootman
Mary
Jones
Thankful
Bowles
13 JAN 1702/03
Elizabeth
Gould
Edmund
Towne
1 MAR 1704/05
Mary
Gould
Jacob
Robinson
1707 - 1744
Priscilla
Gould
37
37
They were great grandparents of Joseph Smith, the Mormon prophet.
Samuel
Smith
They were great grandparents of Joseph Smith, the Mormon prophet.
29 JAN 1709/10
John
Gould
Esther
Bixby
28 JAN 1711/12
Sarah
Gould
1715
Abigail
Gould
Jonathan
Standley
1716 - 1793
Zaccheus
Gould
76
76
Rebecca
Symonds
1720
Eliezer
Gould
Elizabeth
Smith
1716
Phebe
Gould
D. 1712
Hannah
Curtis
11 FEB 1722/23
Susanna
Gould
Robert
Smith
27 JAN 1695/96
Priscilla
Curtice
1697 - 1698
John
Curtice
1
1
16 MAR 1698/99
Nathaniel
Curtice
1701
Lydia
Curtice
22 JAN 1702/03
Mary
Curtice
Isaac
How
1705 - 1706
Sarah
Curtice
8m
8m
8 JAN 1711/12
Sarah
Curtice
Micah
Holdgate
8 JAN 1711/12 - 1712
Hannah
Curtice
~1659
Capt.
Tobijah
Perkins
~1665
Sarah
Denison
1714 - 1799
Priscilla
Gould
85
85
Samuel
Smith
1715
Joseph
Gould
7 MAR 1716/17
Amos
Gould
8 MAR 1718/19 - 1808
Ruth
Gould
Daniel
Bixby
1720
Mary
Gould
Daniel
Robinson
1722 - 1749
Anna
Gould
26
26
1724
Sarah
Gould
Joshua
Symonds
Nathan
Andrews
1726 - 1803
Joseph
Gould
76
76
Elizabeth
Emerson
Rev.
John
Emerson
1729 - 1734
Daniel
Gould
5
5
1731 - 1734
Elizabeth
Gould
2
2
John
Pritchard
4 FEB 1710/11
Mary
Gould
9 MAR 1711/12
Hannah
Gould
Samuel
Marston
9 MAR 1711/12 - 9 MAR 1711/12
John
Gould
1714 - 1714
John
Gould
1718
Kezia
Gould
Jacob
Dwinell
Dr.
Michael
Dwinell
1720
John
Gould
1722
Richard
Gould
1724
Stephen
Gould
~1725
Hannah
Perkins
1727
Ruth
Gould
6 FEB 1728/29
Jacob
Gould
Elizabeth
Towne
1732
Esther
Gould
Jonathan
Towne
1735 - 1772
Amos
Gould
37
37
Huldah
Foster
Elisha
Perkins
1468 - <1524
Sir
William
Conyers
56
56
~1470
Mary
Le
Scrope
~1492
Katherine
Conyers
~1494
Margaret
Conyers
~1433 - 1469
Sir
John
Conyers
36
36
~1437
Alice
Neville
~1405
Joan
Fauconberg
~1414 - 14 MAR 1488/89
Sir
John
Conyers
1418 - 1469
Margaret
D'Arcy
50
50
~1435
Alianore
Conyers
~1437
Margaret
Conyers
1336 - 1386
Joan
Le
Scrope
50
50
<1316 - 1352
Henry
FitzHenry
36
36
~1320
Joan
De
Ferneaux
~1336
Joan
FitzHenry
1353 - 1418
Ralph
De
Greystoke
64
64
~1356 - 1413
Catherine
De
Clifford
57
57
~1424
Robert
Willoughby
~1424
Cecilia
de
Welles
~1426
Richard
de
Welles
~1428
Alianore
de
Welles
~1430
Margaret
de
Welles
~1432
Catherine
de
Welles
John
de
Welles
1274 - 1317
Robert Fitz
Ralph De
Greystoke
43
43
~1280
Elizabeth
~1248
Lord Ralph
Fitz William
De Greystoke
~1205 - >1269
William
Fitz
Ralph
64
64
~1208
Joan
De
Greystoke
1183 - ~1240
Thomas
De
Greystoke
57
57
~1190
Christian
Vipont
1160
William
De
Greystoke
1165
Helwise
De
Stuteville
1128
Robert
VI De
Stuteville
Sir William
De
Valognes
~1138 - >1218
Sibella
De
Valognes
80
80
~1258 - 12 MAR 1303/04
Hugh
Fitz
Henry
~1162
Alice
De
Greystoke
Aubrey
~1228
Sir Henry
Fitz
Randoph
~1192
Randolf
Fitz
Henry
~1205
Alice
De
Stavele
1378
Isabelle
De
Grey
14th in descent from Stephen, King of England.
1341
Robert
Thornton
Margery
~1378
Elizabeth
Thornton
~1381
Beatrice
Thornton
1316
Thomas
Thornton
1318
Joan
Nellison
1340
William
Thornton
~1343
Thomas
Thornton
~1345
Joan
Thornton
~1288
Peter
Nellison
1288 - 1333
Lord
William
Thornton
45
45
1292 - 1336
Isabel
De
Newton
44
44
~1318
Isabel
Thornton
~1320
Agnes
Thornton
~1320
Elizabeth
Thornton
~1265
Sir John
De
Newton
~1270
Lady
Bigott
~1235
Sir Richard
De
Newton
~1240
Anne
De
Hussey
~1210
John
De
Hussey
~1205
Sir John
De
Newton
~1255
John
Thornton
~1260
Miss
Dalton
1286
John
Thornton
~1225
William
De
Thornton
~1200
Robert
De
Thornton
1400 - 1460
Lord
Robert
Thornton
60
60
~1402
John
Thornton
~1404
Richard
Thornton
~1406
Thomas
Thornton
~1408
William
Thornton
~1410
Alice
Thornton
1402
Isabelle
Mekylfeld
~1380
John
Mekylfeld
1424 - 17 MAR 1486/87
William
Thornton
1438
Agnes
Aldborough
~1415 - 1460
Sir
Richard
Aldborough
45
45
~1420
Agnes
Plumpton
1404 - 1480
Sir
William
Plumpton
76
76
1404 - 1451
Lady
Elizabeth
Stapleton
47
47
~1360 - 1417
Sir
Brian
Stapleton
57
57
~1360 - 1448
Lady
Agnes
Goddard
88
88
1406
Joan
Stapleton
1408
Isabella
Stapleton
1410
Brian
Stapleton
~1413
William
Ingleby
~1439
Ellen
Ingleby
~1450
Agnes
Ingleby
~1335
Sir John
Filius
Goddard
Piers
De
Mauley
~1286 - 1388
William
De
Aldborough
102
102
~1300 - <1379
Elizabeth
De
Harewood
79
79
~1255
Ives
De
Aldborough
Mary
~1422
Isabel
Plumpton
~1424
Elizabeth
Plumpton
8 MAR 1428/29
Robert
Plumpton
~1432
Joan
Plumpton
28 FEB 1434/35
William
Plumpton
~1438
Margaret
Plumpton
~1440
Jane
Plumpton
~1442
Alice
Plumpton
~1420
Sir
William
Beckwith
~1400
Sir
Thomas
Tunstill
~1270
Sir
Bryan
FitzAlan
Alice
Tunstill
1346 - 1411
Lord
John
D'Arcy
65
65
~1360 - 1454
Margaret
de
Grey
94
94
1403
John
D'Arcy
~1335 - 1396
Henry
De
Grey
61
61
1430
Joan
D'Arcy
1432
Richard
D'Arcy
1428 - 1461
John
Beaumont
33
33
1453
John
Beaumont
1462
Alice
Fielding
1482
Thomas
Beaumont
1494
Joan
Turton
1514
Richard
Beaumont
1520
Katherine
Gascoigne
1490 - 1557
John
Gascoigne
67
67
1506
Anne
Vavasour
~1458 - 1521
William
XIV
Gascoigne
63
63
1470
Margaret
Kighley
~1440
Richard
Kighley
~1430
William
XIII
Gascoigne
1440
Joanetta
Jane
Beckwith
~1460
Thomas
Gascoigne
~1462
Mary
Gascoigne
~1466
John
Gascoigne
~1466
Joan
Gascoigne
~1468
Isabella
Gascoigne
1442
Thomas
Beckwith
~1432 - 1495
Thomas
Beckwith
63
63
Thomas of Clint, Lord of one third part of Fily, Muston and Thorp, he died in the 10th year of Henry VII, married the daughter and heiress of William Heslerton, heiress of a one third part of the manors of Filey, Juston and Thorp, inherited from Havisia, daughter and heiress of Ralph Neville.
~1430 - ~1491
Lady
Heslerton
61
61
~1458
Thomas
Beckwith
~1460
Adam
Beckwith
~1462
Robert
Beckwith
~1464
Ellen
Beckwith
~1466
Joan
Beckwith
~1468
John
Beckwith
Elizabeth
Ingleby
~1400
William
Heslerton
~1410
Havisia
Neville
Ralph
Neville
~1405 - ~1500
William
Beckwith
95
95
~1410 - ~1500
Lady
Baskerville
90
90
~1390
Sir
John
Baskerville
~1393 - ~1480
Adam
Beckwith
87
87
~1395 - ~1479
Elizabeth
De
Malebisse
84
84
1340 - 1407
Sir Thomas
De
Malebisse
67
67
1295 - ~1355
Sir William
De
Malebisse
60
60
1298 - ~1365
Lady
Sampson
67
67
~1270
Sir
John
Sampson
1264 - ~1305
Sir John
De
Malebisse
41
41
~1269
Agnes
Willstrope
~1240
Sir
Edward
Willstrope
~1223 - ~1277
Sir Richard
De
Malebisse
54
54
~1200
William
De
Malebisse
~1175 - 1220
William
De
Malebisse
45
45
~1179 - ~1225
Matilda
De
Neville
46
46
~1150
Ralph
De
Neville
1145 - 1187
John
De
Malebisse
42
42
1110 - 1186
Lord
Richard De
Malebisse
76
76
1072
Hugo
De
Malebisse
~1079
Emma
De
Percy
1112 - 1168
William
II De
Percy
56
56
~1162
Robert
De
Percy
1030 - 1106
Hugo
De
Malebisse
76
76
~0989
Johanes
Mably De
Malebisse
1372 - ~1430
Thomas
Beckwith
58
58
~1375 - ~1417
Lady
Sawley
42
42
2 FEB 1353/54
William
Beckwith
~1356
Lady
Urfleet
~1325
Girard
Urfleet
1336
Lord
Hamon
Beckwith
~1340
Lady
Tylney
~1310
Phiip
Tylney
~1310
Nicholas
Beckwith
~1315
Lady
De
Chaworth
~1280
Sir
Hercules
Beckwith
~1290
Lady
De
Ferrers
~1260
John
De
Ferrers
~1240
Sir
Hercules
Beckwith
17 FEB 1207/08
Sir Hercules
De
Malebisse
Hercules changed his name to Beckwith on his marringe in 1226. Lord of Uglebarby, by deed shown the Lord Marshall in 1339, he married Lady Dame Beckwith Bruce, daughter of Sir Willian Bruce, derived from Robert Bruce of Skelton in Cleveland, progenitor of the Royal Bruces of Scotland.
~1208
Dame
Beckwith
De Bruce
~1180
William
De
Bruce
1130
Simon
De
Malebisse
~1150
Lady
Methby
~1112
Sir William
De
Malebisse
~1115
Hugo
De
Malebisse
~1120
Matilda
De
Malebisse
1462
William
Turton
~1492
John
Turton
~1340 - 10 JAN 1401/02
Elizabeth
Talbot
~1332 - 1387
Lord
Gilbert
Talbot
55
55
~1386
Mary
de
Talbot
~1388
Sir Richard
VIII de
Talbot
~1320 - 1365
Petronilla
Boteler
45
45
~1303
Aymer
Comyn
~1305
Joan
Comyn
1378
Agnes
D'Arcy
1322 - 1399
Philip
D'Arcy
76
76
1326 - 1412
Elizabeth
De
Grey
86
86
~1410
Elizabeth
De
Grey
1307 - 5 MAR 1353/54
John
D'Arcy
1331 - 1368
Elizabeth
De
Meinill
36
36
1303
Sir
Nicholas
Meinill
1306
Alice
De
Ros
~1325 - 1356
John
D'Arcy
31
31
~1285
Sir
John
D'Arcy
~1290
Emmeline
Heron
~1500 - 1558
Sir
Robert
Constable
58
58
Sir Robert Constable of Everingham was the son of Sir Marmaduke Constable (died 7 Sept 1545) and his wife Barbara (died 1540) daughter of Sir John Sothill of Everingham, the son of Sir Marmaduke Constable of Flamborough in Yorkshire (1443-1518) and Joyce Stafford, he was the son of Sir Robert Constable of Flamborough MP and his wife Agnes Wentworth of Nettlestead in Suffolk, daughter of Sir Roger Wentworth and his wife, the heiress Margery Despencer, Lady de Ros. The latter had a descent from King Henry II's illegitimate son William Longspee Earl of Salisbury.
~1511
Katherine
Manners
~1535
Barbara
Constable
~1400 - 1442
John
Seint
Leger
42
42
~1408
Margaret
Donet
~1437
Margaret
Seint
Leger
1380
James
Donet
1378
Arnold
Seint
Leger
~1352
Arnold
Seint
Leger
~1354
Joan
~1326
Ralph
St.
Leger
~1330
Joan
~1300
Bartholomew
St.
Leger
~1302
Anabella
~1274
Ralph
St.
Leger
~1276
Joan
~1248
Ralph
St.
Leger
~1222
John
St.
Leger
~1196
Ralph
St.
Leger
~1120
Helisende
D'Eu
~1421
Robert
Manners
~1423
Joan
Ogle
~1397
Agnes
de
Middleton
~1371
John
de
Middleton
~1373
Christina
~1354 - <1403
John
Manners
49
49
~1371
Alice
~1298 - 1355
Robert
de
Manners
57
57
~1303 - 1363
Aliva
Strother
60
60
~1277
Henry
Strother
~1272 - 1349
William
de
Manners
77
77
~1277
Ellen
Jennetta
Baxter
~1246
Robert
de
Manners
~1251
Helen
de
Heton
~1220
Alan
Adam de
Heton
~1220
Robert
de
Manners
~1225
Agnes
Coupland
~1199
David
Coupland
~1194
Eustace
de
Manners
~1199
Elizabeth
Prossia
~1173
Hugh
Prossia
~1168
Robert
de
Manners
~1173
Hawise
Muschamp
~1147
Robert
Muschamp
~1112
Robert
de
Manners
~1147
Philippa
Mont
Boucher
~1121
Bartholomew
Mont
Boucher
~1116
Giles
de
Manners
~1090
Robert
de
Manners
~1064
Giles
de
Manners
~1038
Robert
de
Manners
1474 - 1545
Sir
Marmaduke
III Constable
71
71
Constable-Maxwell family (Barons Herries), of Everingham This collection involves two large landed families - the Constables of Everingham in Yorkshire and colateral lines of the Maxwell family in Scotland. In addition there are the papers of one small landed family - the Sherburnes of Stonyhurst, Lancashire. The Constables of Flamburgh and Everingham descended from Baron Nigell, son of Ivon, who had been given the palatinate and constableship of Chester by William the Conqueror; he was also lord of Flamburgh. His descendants assumed the name de Lacy until Robert de Lacy (d.1216) took the name of his office - Constable. One of his descendants, Sir Marmaduke Constable (1443-1518), and his four sons were with the duke of Norfolk at Flodden in 1513. Three sons were knighted. The eldest son, Sir Robert Constable (1478?-1537) was later executed for his part in the Lincolnshire uprisings and his lands, 51 manors in total, were forfeited. The Flamburgh estate was restored by Queen Elizabeth I to his grandson, but two generations later it was sold and the baronetcy became extinct. However, a colateral line survived in the second son, another Sir Marmaduke Constable (1480?-1545), whose active military and political career was rewarded by Henry VIII in the 1530s with five East Riding estates. He also acquired Drax Priory. His marriage to Barbara Sothill brought the estates of Everingham in Yorkshire and West Rasen in Lincolnshire into the Constable family.
1474 - 1540
Barbara
Soothill
66
66
1450 - 1491
John
Soothill
41
41
~1390
Thomas
Ingleby
~1395
Ellen
Holm
1430 - 1494
John
Soothill
64
64
1430
Jane
Poucher
1400
John
Poucher
1400
Agnes
Ellis
1360
William
Ellis
1443 - 1518
Sir
Marmaduke
II Constable
75
75
~1418 - 1488
Sir
Robert
Constable
70
70
CONSTABLE, Sir Robert (1423-88): of Somersby, Lincs., and Flamborough, Yorks. M.P. Lincolnshire 1459; Yorkshire 1478. Born at Holme on Spalding Moor on Easter day 1423, son and heir of Sir Robert Constable of same (d.1441), by Agnes da. of Sir William Gascoigne CJ., married Agnes da. of Sir Roger Wentworth of Nettlestead, M.P. She survived him and d.1496. Elector, Yorks., 1442, 1447, 1449, 1450; elector, Lincoln city, 1450; on Yorks, comns, from 1444, including the array, Dec 1459: keeper of Fastolf's lands in Suffolk 1448-1453; J.P. East Riding, 16 June 1453 till death; summonded to the Gt Council for Yorks., Apr 1455 - as a Lancastrian; pardoned by the Yorkists as "of Flamburgh esq", 6 Oct, 1455: on Lancastrian comns, till May 1460, but knighted between 25 June 1460 and 10 May 1461 by Yorkists, and on all their comns. likewise. His brother-in-law Sir Philip Wentworth remained Lancastrian and was attainted and executed. Sheriff, Yorks., and Mayor of York**, 1461-2; sheriff, Yorks., 1478-9. J.P. Lindsey 16 May 1461 to 7 Sep 1470; steward of all lands in Yorks. and Lincs. forfeited by the Earl of Northumberland and Lord Roos, Aug 1461; had grant of Hessle and Howden for life; pardoned 18 May 1462. One of an embassy to Scotland, Apr 1464, and negotiating the truce with the Scots at Newcastle, Oct 1466. Sheriff, Lincs., 1466-7; pardoned 1468, and Feb 1469, and again 26 Nov. 1471. The Readeption government put him on comns. and Edward IV pardoned and employed him. He was part-owner of a pirate ship in 1473; elected for Yorks. in Dec. 1477, and on all Richard III's comns. The King apptd, Sir Robert one of those to keep the border, 1484; and pardoned him as of Flamborough, alias of Somerby, Lincs. Sir Robert remained on the Bench through every revolution and was pardoned by the Tudors, 16 Jan 1486. D. 23 May 1488; when Marmaduke, aged 31 and more, was his s. and h.; lands - Yorks. and Lincs. He was head of a powerful family. Sons - Sir Marmaduke***, John, Dean of Lincoln, Sir Robert and Sir William. Daughters married to Sir Thomas Metham, Sir William Eure, Sir Gervase Clifton (1483), Sir William Tyrwhitt, Sir Ralph Bigod, Sir William Scargyll and Sir Ralph Ryther. From History of Parliament - Biographies of the members of the Commons House 1439-1509, Josias C. Wedgwood and Anne D. Holt 1936. p213
~1414 - ~1466
Agnes
Wentworth
52
52
1472 - 1537
Sir
Robert
Constable
65
65
~1397 - 1452
Sir
Roger
Wentworth
55
55
1397 - 1478
Lady
Margaret Le
Despenser
81
81
~1416
Thomas
Wentworth
~1418
Elizabeth
Wentworth
~1420
Margaret
Wentworth
~1422
Sir
Philip
Wentworth
~1426
Henry
Wentworth
~1300
Sir
William
Deincourt
Elizabeth
1313 - 1349
Philip
Le
Despenser
36
36
~1320
Joan
De
Cobham
~1260
Ralph
De
Gouselle
~1290
Margaret
De
Gouselle
~1385 - >1441
Sir
Robert
Constable
56
56
~1389 - >1466
Agnes
Gascoigne
77
77
1335 - 1419
Sir
William X
Gascoigne
84
84
1342 - 1391
Elizabeth
De
Mowbray
49
49
1346
Alianore
de
Mowbray
1298 - 1380
William
Gascoigne
82
82
1305
Margaret
Agnes
Franke
1286
William
Franke
1288
Alice
De
Aldwaldley
~1260
Roger
De
Aldwaldley
~1265
Alicia
De
Newhall
~1235
William
De
Newhall
~1266
Nicholas
Franke
~1268
Katherine
Ellis
26 FEB 1263/64
William
Gascoigne
1256
Matilda
De
Gawthorpe
1237
John
De
Gawthorpe
~1210
Henry
De
Gawthorpe
1218 - 1270
William
Gascoigne
52
52
1222
Elizabeth
de
Boulton
1196
William
de
Boulton
1182 - 1222
William
Gascoigne
40
40
1151
William
Gascoigne
1120
William
Gascoigne
1089
William
Gascoigne
~1059
William
Gascoigne
~1417
Elizabeth
Constable
~1420
Marmaduke
Constable
~1422
William
Constable
~1424
Thomas
Constable
~1425
Richard
Constable
~1426
Jane
Constable
~1428
Margaret
Constable
~1340
Marmaduke
Constable
~1358
Catherine
Cumberworth
~1382
Thomas
Constable
~1415 - 1475
William
Mallory
60
60
~1387
James
Constable
~1390
William
Constable
~1392
Agnes
Constable
~1330
Robert
Cumberworth
~1335
Sibil
Erghum
~1317 - <1400
Robert
Constable
83
83
~1317
Margaret
Skipwith
~1342
Edith
Constable
~1344
Robert
Constable
~1346
Joan
Constable
~1290
William
Skipwith
~1295
William
Constable
~1295
Joan
Fitzhugh
~1315
William
Constable
~1265
William
Fitzhugh
~1265
Marmaduke
Constable
Constable-Maxwell family (Barons Herries), of Everingham This collection involves two large landed families - the Constables of Everingham in Yorkshire and colateral lines of the Maxwell family in Scotland. In addition there are the papers of one small landed family - the Sherburnes of Stonyhurst, Lancashire. The Constables of Flamburgh and Everingham descended from Baron Nigell, son of Ivon, who had been given the palatinate and constableship of Chester by William the Conqueror; he was also lord of Flamburgh. His descendants assumed the name de Lacy until Robert de Lacy (d.1216) took the name of his office - Constable.
~1275
Elizabeth
~1442
Elizabeth
Constable
~1444
Sir
William
Constable
~1446
Anne
Constable
~1445
Sir
Robert
Constable
~1448
Margaret
Constable
~1449
John
Constable
~1450
Agnes
Constable
~1452
Philip
Constable
~1453
Katherine
Constable
~1454
Richard
Constable
~1455
Roger
Constable
~1457
Dorothy
Constable
~1461
Margaret
Constable
~1461
Janet
Constable
1177 - ~1251
Sir
Robert
de Lacy
74
74
Lord of Flamburgh
~1178
Adela
D'Oyli
~1245
Nichola
de
Ghent
~1240 - 1275
Peter
III de
Mauley
35
35
~1250
Sir
Robert
Constable
~1220 - 1242
Peter II
de
Mauley
22
22
Sheriff of Northamptonshire
~1226
Joan
De
Brus
~1210
Piers
III de
Brus
~1210
Hillaric
de
Mauley
~1180 - 1222
Peter I
de
Mauley
42
42
~1190
Isabel
Turnham
1175
Robert
Turnham
1176
Joanna
Fossard
1548 - 1606
Sir
Robert
Stapleton
58
58
High sheriff for Yorkshire 23rd ELIZABETH, and met the judges with seven score men in suitable liveries. Sir Robert lived in great hospitality and esteem, and is mentioned by a contemporary writer as "a man well spoken, properly seen in languages, a comely and goodly personage, had scarce an equal, and next to Sir Philip Sydney, no superior in England Abbrev: A Genealogy and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol II Title: A Genealogy and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol II Author: John Burke Publication: LONDON: PUBLISHED FOR HENRY COLBURN, BY R. BENTLEY: BELL AND BRADFUTE, EDINBURGH; J. CUMMING, DUBLIN; AND SOLD BY ALL BOOKSELLERS.
~1572 - 1656
Jane
Stapleton
84
84
~1574
Henry
Stapleton
~1576
Philip
Stapleton
~1580
Dorothy
Stapleton
~1560
Olive
Sherington
~1584
Brian
Stapleton
~1586
Robert
Stapleton
~1588
Edward
Stapleton
~1590
Olive
Stapleton
~1592
Ursala
Stapleton
~1594
Mary
Stapleton
~1596
Grace
Stapleton
~1517 - 1557
Sir
Robert
Stapleton
40
40
~1521
Elizabeth
Mallory
1551
Elizabeth
Stapleton
1552
Bridget
Stapleton
~1493 - 1547
Sir
William
Mallory
54
54
~1495
Jane
Norton
1458 - 1520
Sir John
Conyers
Norton
62
62
~1459 - 1520
Margaret
Warde
61
61
~1475 - 16 JAN 1555/56
Sir John
Conyers
Norton
~1478
Henry
Norton
~1480
Margaret
Norton
~1492 - 1540
Anne
Norton
48
48
~1433 - 1472
Roger
Warde
39
39
~1437
Eleanor
Constable
1442
Joyce
Stafford
~1476
Eleanor
Constable
1472
Thomas
De
Berkeley
~1495
Joan
De
Berkeley
1420
Maurice
De
Berkeley
~1430
Isabel
Mead
1394 - 1463
James "The
Just" De
Berkeley
69
69
~1475
Anne
De
Berkeley
~1425
William
Mar De
Berkeley
~1354 - 1405
James
de
Berkeley
51
51
~1360
Elizabeth
Bluet
1396
Joan
Talbot
~1485
William
Constable
~1490
Nicholas
Poyntz
~1490
Maud
Hatfield
~1510
Eleanor
Constable
John
Thornholme
Roger
Sotheby
George
Dawnay
Jane
Dawnay
~1405 - 1452
Sir
Roger
Warde
47
47
1430
Johanna
Tunstall
~1455
Christopher
Warde
~1415
Jane
Markenfield
~1385
Sir
Thomas
Markenfield
~1400
Beatrice
Sothill
~1417
Isabella
Elizabeth
Markenfield
~1419
John
Markenfield
~1380
Henry
L.
Sothill
~1380
Eleanor
Moseley
~1345
Richard
Moseley
~1365
Henry
Sothill
~1365
Joan
FitzWilliam
~1345 - 1398
Sir
William
FitzWilliam
53
53
~1345 - 1398
Maud
De
Cromwell
53
53
~1382
John
FitzWilliam
~1325 - 1398
Sir Ralph
V De
Cromwell
73
73
~1328 - 1419
Maud
Bernacke
91
91
~1347 - 1394
Elizabeth
De
Cromwell
47
47
1309 - 1349
Sir
John
Bernacke
40
40
~1276
Sir
William
Bernacke
~1330
William
Bernacke
~1292 - 1341
Alice
De
Driby
49
49
~1276 - 1357
Robert
De
Driby
81
81
~1273 - 1329
Joan
De
Tattershall
56
56
~1310 - 1357
John
De
Driby
47
47
~1222 - 1273
Robert
De
Tattershall
51
51
~1226 - 1277
Nicole
51
51
1248
Robert
De
Tattershall
~1256
Emma
De
Tattershall
1187 - 1249
Robert
De
Tattershall
62
62
~1155
Walter
De
Tattershall
~1160 - ~1222
Iseult
Pantulf
62
62
~1225 - 1286
Sir
Simon
De Driby
61
61
~1230
Alice
FitzHugh
~1170
Ralph
De
Greasley
~1175
Isabel
De
Muschamp
~1130
Hugh
De
Muschamp
~1098
Thomas
De
Muschamp
~1064
Roger
De
Muschamp
~1165
Ralph
De
Levington
1312
Elizabeth
Bernacke
~1300
James
Byron
1329 - 1397
Sir
Richard
Byron
68
68
~1416 - ~1467
Helena
Byron
51
51
~1324
Joan
De
Colewick
~1420 - 1474
Sir
Walter
Blount
54
54
Treasurer of England, Knight of the Garter
~1442
William
Blount
~1378 - 1456
Thomas
Blount
78
78
~1393
Margaret
De
Gresley
~1274
Richard
Byron
~1278
Agnes
~1353
John
De
Clifton
1372
Constantine
De
Clifton
~1292 - 1364
Sir Ralph
IV De
Cromwell
72
72
Sources: 1. Repository: Name: Family History Library Salt Lake City, UT 84150 Title: Ancestral Roots Of Sixty Colonists Who Came To New England Between 1623 And 1650 Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc., 1992 Abbrev: Ancestral Roots Of Sixty Colonists Who Came To New England Between 1623 And 1650
~1290
Amice
De
Bellers
~1260 - 1326
Roger
De
Bellers
66
66
Edward II's notorious chief baron of the Exchequer
~1275 - 1292
Sir Ralph
III De
Cromwell
17
17
~1275 - 1348
Joan
De La
Mare
73
73
~1245 - 2 MAR 1297/98
Ralph
II De
Cromwell
~1226 - 1289
Sir Ralph
De
Cromwell
63
63
1317 - 1385
John
FitzWilliam
68
68
In 1372 he founded the charity of St. Edward in the Church at Howden,Yorkshire,England.
~1330
Elizabeth
De
Clinton
~1351 - 1383
Sir William
De Clinton
32
32
Constable of Dover Castle
1326 - 1398
Sir John
III De
Clinton
72
72
3rd Baron Clinton 1326-1397
~1328 - 1384
Idones
De
Saye
56
56
~1350
Margaret
De
Clinton
~1298 - 1359
Geoffrey
IV De
Saye
61
61
2nd Baron of Say; Admiral of the Fleet
1278
Matilda
Maud De
Beauchamp
~1283 - >1322
Idonea
de
Leyburne
39
39
1190
Simon
de
Sandwich
~1245 - ~1327
Julianne
de
Sandwich
82
82
1162
Henry
de
Sandwich
Lucia
1168
Hugh
D'Auberville
1136
William
D'Auberville
1147
Maud
De
Glanville
~1112 - 1190
Ranulph
De
Glanville
78
78
Chief Justiciar of England during King Henry II. Ambassador to Flanders. Sheriff of Yorkshire, Westmorland, and Lancaster Founded Abbey of Butley
1108
Hugh
D'Auberville
1076
William
D'Auberville
~1215
Roger
de
Leyburne
~1228
Idoine
de
Vipont
~1210
John
De
Cromwell
~1210 - 1264
Robert
De
Vipont
54
54
~1238
Isabella
de
Mandeville
~1145
Cicely
De
Busli
~1080 - 1115
William
I de
Busli
35
35
~1095
Hawise
D'Espec
1091 - 1162
Jordan
De
Builly
71
71
~1070
Ernold
De
Builly
~1110
William
De
Vipont
~1115
Matilda
St.
Andrew
1253 - 1295
William
De
Saye
41
41
Elizabeth
~1308
Juliana
De
Saye
~1310 - >1355
Katherine
de
Saye
45
45
~1355
Elizabeth
Deincourt
1377 - 1432
William
De
Clinton
54
54
~1383
Alice
(Anne) de
Botreaux
1328
Baldwin
de
Montfort
1375
William
de
Montfort
~1215
William
de la
Plaunche
~1295
Sir
John de
Montfort
~1300
Joan
Jane de
Clinton
~1270
John
de
Clinton
~1280
Elizabeth
de la
Planche
~1260
William
de la
Planche
~1260
Elizabeth
Hillary
~1240
James
de la
Planche
~1243
Matilda
(Maud) de
Haversham
~1225
Nicholas
de
Haversham
~1228
Joan
~1200
Nicholas
de
Haversham
~1245
John
de
Clinton
~1212
Emma
de
Bois
~1250
Margery
Corbet
Ada
~1203
Roger
Corbet
~1237
Nesta
de
Vale
~1230
William
Corbet
~1270 - 1 MAR 1320/21
Ida De
Odingsells
~1258
John
de
Clinton
~1300 - ~1335
John II
de
Clinton
35
35
~1231 - <1264
Thomas
de
Clinton
33
33
~1234 - >1276
Maud
de
Bracebridge
42
42
~1225 - 1264
William
D'Odingsells
39
39
Joan
~1165 - 1239
Hugh
D'Odinsells
74
74
~1128
Hugh
D'Odinsells
~1143
Basilia
de
Lindsay
~1090 - ~1185
Galfrid
(Gerard)
de Lindsay
95
95
1105 - >1185
Amicia
de
Bidun
80
80
~1085 - ~1185
Hanelade
de
Bidun
100
100
~1088 - ~1160
Sarah
72
72
~1058
Alan
de
Lindsay
~1026
Ralph
de
Lindsay
~1030
Hawise
~1020
Ralph
de
Lindsay
~1105
Edward
D'Odinsells
~1208
Ralph
de
Bracebridge
1206 - 12 JAN 1277/78
Thomas
de
Clinton
1210
Mazera
de
Bisey
1182
James
de
Bisey
1180
Osbert
de
Clinton
~1150
Osbert
de
Clinton
~1160
Margaret
de
Hatton
~1140
William
de
Hatton
~1110
Hugh
de
Hatton
~1110
Osbert
de
Clinton
~1050
Agnes
Stigand
~1233 - 1290
Roger
Corbet
57
57
1280 - >1351
William
Corbet
71
71
~1290
Sir
Henry
Griffith
~1290
Sir
John
Sutton
~1430
Robert
de
Mountfort
~1434
Mary
Stapleton
1395
Sir
Miles
Stapleton
1390
Catherine
de la
Pole
~1290
Sir Miles
III De
Stapleton
~1315
Elizabeth
de
Richmond
~1280
John
de
Richmond
~1299
Alicia
Pigot
~1275 - ~1347
Geoffrey
Pigot
72
72
~1284
Johanna
de
Hawkswell
~1258
Thomas
de
Hawkswell
~1249
Randolph
Pigot
~1253
Emma
de
Coltheram
~1320 - 1364
Sir Miles
De
Stapleton
44
44
1308
Joan
de
Ingham
1357 - 1419
Sir
Miles II
Stapleton
61
61
1287
Oliver
de
Ingham
~1259 - 1310
John
de
Ingham
51
51
Margery
~1238 - 1282
Oliver
de
Ingham
44
44
Elizabeth
~1202 - ~1253
Walter
de
Ingham
51
51
Alice
~1175 - <1205
John
de
Ingham
30
30
~1180
Alberada
Waleran
~1150 - 1201
Walter
Fitz-
Waleran
51
51
Isabel
~1120
Waleran
Fitz-
William
~1090 - <1131
William
Fitz-
Waleran
41
41
~1160
Waleran
"the
Huntsman"
~1145
Andrew
de
Ingham
~1115
Hugh
de
Ingham
~1085
Hundo
de
Ingham
~1055
Roger
de
Ingham
1238
Sir
Ebulo de
Montibus
1346
James
De
Audley
~1375 - 1405
Isabel
De
Audley
30
30
~1379 - 1438
Sir
Brian
Stapleton
59
59
~1155 - 1230
Geoffrey
II de
Saye
75
75
~1185 - 1235
John
Mareschal
50
50
1159
Alice
de
Cheney
~1130
John
de
Cheney
~1135 - 1214
Geoffrey
de
Saye
79
79
1134
Alice
Maminot
~1259
Eve
De
Tregoz
1120
Robert
de
Valoines
Eve
de
Clavering
~1250
Catherine
de
Hedersett
~1306 - 28 JAN 1380/81
Catherine
de
Norwich
Sir
John de
Hedersett
~1225
Geoffrey
de
Norwich
1302 - 1367
Sir William
De La
Pole
65
65
~1428
Joan
Boteler
1331 - 1389
Michael
de la
Pole
58
58
~1426
John
Stanford
1386
Margaret
de
Neville
1373 - 22 FEB 1438/39
Sir
William
Harrington
1413
Anne
Morley
~1412 - 1477
John
Hastings
65
65
1438 - 1488
Sir
Hugh
Hastings
50
50
1382 - >1438
Edward
Hastings
56
56
~1380 - >1412
Muriel
de
Dinham
32
32
~1340 - 7 JAN 1381/82
John III
de
Dinham
~1350 - 1389
Muriel
de
Courtenay
39
39
~1311 - 1356
Thomas
De
Courtenay
45
45
1322 - <1362
Muriel
de
Moels
40
40
~1279 - 1345
Agnes
de St.
John
66
66
~1360 - 1418
Sancha
de
Ayala
58
58
~1232 - >1264
Alice
de
Stanford
32
32
1190
William
de
Stanford
~1199 - ~1269
Robert
de St.
John
70
70
~1202
Agnes
De
Cantilupe
~1163
Mecelin
Marcelina
Braci
~1137
Adulph
Braci
~1105
Melette
de
Dynan
~1076
Walter
de
Cantilupe
1173 - >1213
William
de St.
John
40
40
1177
Godechilde
de
Paynell
~1130 - 1213
Adam
de
Port
83
83
~1150
Mabel
de
Orval
~1120
Reginald
de
Orval
~1130
Muriel
de St.
John
1110
Roger
de St.
John
1114
Cecily
de la
Haye
1086
John
de St.
John
1062
William
de St.
John
1068
Olivia
Fitz-
Gears
1036
Ralph
Fitz-
Gears
~1103
William
de
Orval
~1075
Reginald de
Orval-
Aureavilla
~1107
John
de
Port
Maud
1085
Henry
de
Port
~1090
Hawise
~1060 - >1086
Hugh
de
Port
26
26
~1064
Orenge
de
Basing
~1297 - 1337
John II
de
Moels
40
40
~1300
Joan
Lovel
1274 - 1351
Richard
Lovel
77
77
1282
Muriel
Douglas
1245
Hugh
Lovel
1293
James
Lovel
1259
Hawise
Stuart
~1250
Alianore
1220 - 1281
Henry
Lovel
61
61
~1225
Eve
1190
Richard
Lovel
~1195
Alice
~1165 - 1218
Henry
Lovel
53
53
~1145 - 1190
Henry
Lovel
45
45
1269 - 1310
John I
de
Moels
41
41
~1272
Maud
De
Grey
1237
William
de
Huntingfield
~1282
m
1239 - 1302
Maud
Longchamps
63
63
~1210
Henry
Longchamps
1213
Joan
~1177
Henry
Longchamps
~1180
Maud
de
Cantilupe
~1149
Hugh
Longchamps
~1149
Emma
de St.
Leger
~1115
Sir
Reginald de
St. Leger
~1140
Geoffrey
de St.
Leger
~1144
Thomas
de St.
Leger
~1061
William
de St.
Leger
~1065
Cecilia
de
Romney
~1039
Lambert
de
Romney
~1013
Alard
de
Romney
~1010
Robert
de St.
Leger
~1120
Hugh
Longchamps
~1129
Eve
de
Lacy
~1070
Roger
de
Lacy
~1104 - ~1163
Gilbert
de
Lacy
59
59
Agnes
~1237 - 1294
Roger
de
Moels
57
57
~1250
Alice
Prouse
~1230 - <1316
William
Prouse
86
86
~1232
Alice
de
Reigny
~1201 - 1246
John
de
Reigny
45
45
~1210 - <1270
William
Prouse
60
60
1215 - <1250
Alice
de
Widworthy
35
35
~1185 - >1244
William
de
Widworthy
59
59
~1183 - ~1214
William
Prouse
31
31
~1195
Alice
de
Ferrers
~1165
William
Prouse
~1165
Alice
de
Gidley
~1135
Giles
de
Gidley
~1141
Walter
Prouse
~1150
Sarah
de
Dinham
~1130 - 1221
Oliver
V de
Dinham
91
91
Elizabeth
~1110 - ~1183
Geoffrey
III de
Dinham
73
73
Sarah
~1088 - 1156
Oliver
III de
Dinham
68
68
~1120
William
Prouse
~1090
Pierre
de
Preaux
~1122
Joan
Basset
<1066 - >1156
Osbern
de
Preaux
90
90
~1070
Marie
de
Preaux
~1096
Mary
De
Redviers
~1045 - >1067
Guillaume
de
Cailly
22
22
~1045
Maude
de
Beaumont
Maude
de
Beaumont
~1040
Ingleran
de
Preaux
~1195 - ~1264
Nicholas
de
Moels
69
69
~1200
Hawise
de
Newmarche
~1170
James
de
Newmarche
~1170
Roger
de
Molis
Roesia
~1140
Juhel
(Joellus)
de Molis
~1110
Nicholas
de
Molis
1080
Roger
de
Molis
1295 - 1322
John
de
Dinham
26
26
~1300
Margaret
1253 - 1301
Josce
de
Dinham
48
48
~1272 - 1357
Margaret
Hydon
85
85
~1246
Richard
Hydon
1234 - 26 FEB 1297/98
Oliver
VIII de
Dinham
~1200 - 1258
Geoffrey
V de
Dinham
58
58
~1170
Oliver
VII de
Dinham
~1307 - 8 FEB 1386/87
Adam
de
Everingham
Adam de Everingham, 2nd baron, was summoned to parliament as"Ad‘ de Everingham de Laxton," 8 January, 1371. This nobleman,who was several years actively engaged in the French wars, shredin the glory of Cressy. His lordship m. Joan, dau. of JohnDeyville and d. 9 February, 2nd Richard II [1379], having hadissue, William and Reginald.
~1145
Geoffrey
IV de
Dinham
~1307
Joan
d'Eiville
~1332
William
de
Everingham
~1335
Thomas
Everingham
~1337
Reginald
Everingham
~1340
Joan
Everingham
~1332
Alice
de
Grey
~1306
Alice
de
Lisle
1305
John
de
Grey
~1285
Warin
de
Lisle
~1287 - 1347
Alice
de
Teyes
60
60
~1265
Henry
de
Teyes
~1266 - ~1322
Hawise
56
56
1235 - ~1282
Henry
de
Teyes
47
47
~1235 - 1283
Joan
Foliot
48
48
~1213 - >1281
Samson
Foliot
68
68
~1190 - ~1230
Henry
Foliot
40
40
~1195
Luceia
de
Muntenei
~1093
Rainald
Foliot
~1165
Jordan
Briset
1256
Gerard
de
Lisle
1260
Alice
Armenters
1225
Henry
II de
Armenters
~1230
Alice
1195 - 1256
Geoffrey
de
Armenters
61
61
1200
daughter
de
Picot
1170
Peter
de
Picot
1165 - 1216
Henry
de
Armenters
51
51
~1173
Reine
~1133 - >1166
David
de
Armenters
33
33
~1133
Sara
~1105
Henry
de
Armenters
~1115
Isabel
~1230
Robert
de
Lisle
1230 - 1270
Alice
Fitz-
Gerald
40
40
1210
Henry
Fitz-
Gerald
1216
Ermetrude
de
Ferrers
~1180
Warine
Fitz-
Gerald
1192
Matilda
de
Cheney
1147
William
de
Cheney
1107
William
de
Cheney
~1085
Walter
de
Cheney
~1090
Eve
de
Broc
~1060
Eustace
de
Broc
1154
Bryan
Fitz-
Gerald
1154
Maud
de
Selbey
1136
Thomas
de
Selbey
1119
William
de
Selbey
1128
William
Fitz-
Gerald
~1100
Gerald
de
Aldeburg
1133
Elizabeth
de
Lisle
1104
John
de
Lisle
1073
Robert
de
Lisle
1046
Robert
de
Lisle
1020
Robert
de
Lisle
1027
Rohese
de
Wahall
0996
John
de
Wahall
~1207
Robert
de
Insula
~1212
Sarah
de
Aunus
~1176
Eborard
de
Aunus
~1190
Beatrice
de
Cormeilles
~1160
Ralph
de
Cormeilles
1237 - 1281
Robert
Fitz-
Payne
43
43
Roberge
~1205
Roger
Fitz-
Payne
~1201 - >1264
Margery
de
Lincoln
63
63
~1175 - 1240
Alvred
de
Lincoln
65
65
Maud
1362 - 1422
Joan
de
Everingham
60
60
~1375
Robert
Waterton
~1400 - 1434
Joan
Cicely
Waterton
34
34
~1450 - 1498
Sir
Christopher
Willoughby
48
48
Sir Christopher Willoughby was made a knight of the Bath, 6July, 1483, at the coronation of Richard III. In the next reignhe raised forces to assist the king against the Earl of Lincoln,Lambert Simnel, and their adherents, and was afterwards at thebattle of Stoke. He m. Margaret, dau. of Sir William Jenny, ofKnotshall, in Suffolk, and had issue, William, Christopher,George, Thomas, John, Dorothy, Catherine, Elizabeth.
~1457
Margaret
Jenney
~1487
Elizabeth
Willoughby
~1477
William
Willoughby
~1479
Christopher
Willoughby
~1481
George
Willoughby
~1483
Thomas
Willoughby
~1485
John
Willoughby
~1489
Dorothy
Willoughby
~1491
Catherine
Willoughby
~1396
Thomas
Hoo
~1447
Jane
Hoo
~1429
Roger
Copley
~1477
Eleanor
Copley
1457
Thomas
West
1279 - 1341
Adam
de
Everingham
62
62
~1282 - >1326
Alice
de la
Hyde
44
44
~1252
Robert
de la
Hyde
~1253
Cicely
Walerand
~1226 - <1273
William
Walerand
47
47
~1223 - 1284
Isabel
de
Kilpek
61
61
1256 - 1287
Robert
de
Everingham
31
31
~1257
Lucia
de
Thweng
~1226 - 1280
Adam
de
Everingham
54
54
~1196 - 1246
Robert
De
Everingham
50
50
~1196 - 1252
Isabel
de
Birkin
56
56
~1166 - 1227
John
de
Birkin
61
61
~1166
Joan
de
Lenveise
~1136
Jordan
de
Lenveise
~1140
Cecily
de
Arundel
~1136 - <1185
Adam
Fitz-Peter
de Birkin
49
49
~1105
Peter
Fitz-
Asculf
~1436
Anne
Gascoigne
~1398 - <1466
William
XII
Gascoigne
68
68
~1397
Margaret
Clarell
~1366 - 1422
William
XI
Gascoigne
56
56
~1370
Joan
(Jane)
Wyman
~1344 - 1411
Henry
Wyman
67
67
~1346
Agnes
de
Barden
~1370
John
de
Barden
~1350
Alice
Thirkell
~1320
Thomas
Thirkell
~1315
Thomas
de
Barden
~1320
Elizabeth
Mauduit
1281 - 1348
John
Mauduit
67
67
~1275
Joanna
Becard
~1150
Agnes
de la
Mare
1116
Robert
de la
Mare
~1186
Robert
Mauduit
~1194
Beatrice
de
Murdoc
~1221
Robert
Mauduit
~1252 - 1288
Robert
Mauduit
36
36
~1258
Alice
~1250
John
Becard
~1250
Alicia
de
Greystoke
~1225
Thomas
de
Greystoke
<1364 - 6 FEB 1428/29
Thomas
Clarell
1370 - 17 MAR 1455/56
Matilda
Montgomery
~1356
Nicholas
Montgomery
~1355 - 1454
Margery
Foljambe
99
99
~1062
Ralph
de
Montgomery
~1080
Ralph
de
Montgomery
~1100 - >1139
Robert
de
Montgomery
39
39
~1132
Ralph
de
Montgomery
~1160
Ralph
de
Montgomery
1186
William
de
Montgomery
~1220
William
de
Montgomery
~1254
William
de
Montgomery
~1280 - 1323
William
de
Montgomery
43
43
~1320 - >1368
Walter
Montgomery
48
48
~1333 - ~1375
Godfrey
Foljambe
42
42
1331
Margaret
de
Vilers
~1305
Paganus
de
Vilers
1316 - 1375
Godfrey
Foljambe
59
59
~1317
Avena
de
Ireland
~1302
Margaret
Loudham
de Vilers
1285
Thomas
Foljambe
~1295
Alice
Darley
~1260
Thomas
Foljambe
1235 - 1297
Thomas
Foljambe
62
62
~1265
Alice
de
Furnival
~1195
Hugh
Roger De
Morville
~1240
Joan
De
Morville
~1240
Catherine
le Eyr
~1210
William
le Eyr
1204 - 17 JAN 1281/82
Thomas
Foljambe
~1206
Margaret
de
Gernon
~1175 - 1249
John
Foljambe
74
74
~1180
Margaret
Lutterell
~1158
Geoffrey
Lutterell
~1150
Henry
Foljambe
~1154
Eleanor
Fitz-
Herbert
~1132
Thomas
Fitz-
Herbert
~1112 - 1183
Geoffrey
Foleschamp
71
71
~1122
Matilda
Musard
~1096
Hasculfus
Musard
~1040
Ruard
d'Aboube
Musard
~1070
Ralph
Foleschamp
~1075
Gundred
de
Ferrers
~1046
Godfrey
Foleschamp
~1050
daughter
of
Uchtred
~1035
Uchtred
Elton
~1026
Richard
Foleschamp
~1004
Gilbert
Foleschamp
~0970
Robert
de
Foleschamp
~0935 - 0972
William
de
Foleschamp
37
37
~0890
Ragnald
Swenosson
~0845
Sweno
Eiriksson
~1468
Muriel
Hastings
~1464 - 1540
Sir
Ralph
Eure
76
76
27 FEB 1528/29 - 12 FEB 1591/92
William
Eure
William Eure was constituted one of the commissioners in the29th of Elizabeth [1587] to negotiate a league with Scotland.
1557
Muriel
Eure
18 FEB 1437/38 - 1484
William
Eure
~1412 - 1461
Ralph
Eure
49
49
~1396 - 12 FEB 1464/65
Sir
William
Eure
~1366 - 1422
Ralph
Eure
56
56
~1336
John
Eure
~1332
Joan
De La
Pole
~1336
Isabella
de
Clifford
1257
John
de
Rotenhering
~1256 - 1293
Owain
ap
Gruffydd
37
37
~1270
Joan
Corbet
1146
Hawise
of
Salop
1116 - 1164
Godfrey
de
Scudamore
48
48
1121 - 1207
Matilda
Maud
Giffard
86
86
~1350 - 1403
Agnes
de
Poynings
53
53
1349 - 29 JAN 1384/85
William
Bardolf
1299 - 1346
Agnes
de
Rokesley
47
47
1317 - 15 MAR 1367/68
Michael
de
Poynings
~1321 - 1369
Joan
de
Rokesley
48
48
~1290
Richard
de
Rokesley
~1170
Cecilia
de
Criol
~1186 - 1263
William
D'Avranches
77
77
~1150 - >1194
John
de
Criol
44
44
~1270
Joan
de
Criol
~1220
Maud
D'Avranches
~1220 - 1263
Hamon
de
Crevequer
43
43
1250 - 1301
Eleanor
de
Crevequer
51
51
1247 - 1286
Bertram
de
Criol
39
39
~1210 - 1263
John
de
Criol
53
53
~1220
Matilda
de
Estwell
1180 - >1258
Bertram
"Great Lord"
de Criol
78
78
Emma
~1152
Margery
~1269
Richard
de
Rokesley
~1240
John
de
Rokesley
~1392
Thomas
Hethe
~1331
Gerald
Ufflete
1399 - 1455
John
Stapleton
56
56
~1427 - 1489
John
Norton
62
62
1431 - 1488
Jane
Pigot
57
57
~1399 - 1466
Randolph
Pigot
67
67
~1408
Margaret
Plumpton
~1406
Geoffrey
Plumpton
1386 - 1416
Alice
Foljambe
30
30
1367 - 1388
Sir
Geoffrey
Foljambe
21
21
~1371
Isabel
Leeke
~1345
Simon
Leeke
1338 - 1407
Sir
William
Plumpton
69
69
1349
Isabella
le
Scrope
~1330
Geoffrey
Le
Scrope
1317
Joan
Agnes
~1273 - 1340
Geoffrey
le
Scrope
67
67
Geoffrey Le Scrope (born before1285 - Bolton, England), son of William Le Scrope, gained the Manor of Clifton-Upon-Ure (Yore) in South Wensleydale, and was given a license to build a castle there in 1318. He, and his brother Henry Le Scrope, were both lawyers, soldiers and diplomats and became Chief Justice to the King's Bench. Additionally gained the Castle and Manor of Skipton, located at the opposite corner of the Dales from Masham
~1290 - <1331
Ivetta
(Juetta)
de Ros
41
41
1362 - 1405
Sir
William
Plumpton
43
43
~1364 - 1424
Alice
de
Gisburn
60
60
~1336 - 1390
John
de
Gisburn
54
54
~1338 - 1407
Ellen
69
69
~1373 - 1420
Geoffrey
Pigot
47
47
~1372
Johanna
de
Ledes
~1325 - 1404
Randolph
Pigot
79
79
~1351 - 1420
Johanna
de
Swale
69
69
~1325
William
de
Swale
1388 - 1438
Richard
Norton
50
50
~1387 - 1438
Elizabeth
Tempest
51
51
~1430
Miles
Radcliffe
~1348
Isabel
De
Gras
~1554 - 1614
Sir
Christopher
Wyvill
60
60
BEDALE: Geographical and Historical information from the year 1834. "BEDALE, a small neat built market town, in the parish of its name, which is partly in the eastern division of Hang wapentake, and partly in the wapentake of Hallikeld, in the north riding, is 223 miles from London, 34 N.W. from York, 12 N. from Ripon, the like distance S. from Richmond, and 8 S.W. from Northallerton; situated on a little rivulet that discharges itself into the Swale, near Gaterby, and near to the Roman causeway, called Leeming Lane, leading from Richmond to Barnard Castle. The manufacture of linens and carpets is carried on here to a limited extent. The neighbouring country is noted for its breed of hunting and road horses; and the town derives considerable advantage, and no trifling degree of consequence, from the many seats of the nobility in the immediate neighbourhood; amongst these may be enumerated Hornby castle, the seat of His Grace the Duke of Leeds; Newton house, His Grace the Duke Cleveland; Bedale hall, Admiral Beresford; Constable Burton, Marmaduke Wyvill, Esq.; Thornton hall, Sir Edward Dodsworth, Bart.; Thorpe Perrow, Mark Millbank, Esq. &c. The places of worship are the parish church, and chapels for methodists, baptists, & Roman catholics. The church, which is dedicated to St. Gregory, is a large and venerable structure, with a square embattled tower, surmounted with pinnacles of great strength. Within the church are several interesting monuments; amongst which is one to the memory of Sir Brian Fitzalan, lord lieutenant of Scotland, in the reign of Edward 1, who occupied a castle near the church, of which no traces remain. The living of Bedale is a rectory, in the gift alternately of Miss Peirse and Miles Stapleton, Esq., and incumbency of the Hon. & Rev. Thomas Monson. A free grammar school, of ancient foundation, is here; also two national schools, in which children of both sexes are instructed. The market day is Tuesday; the fairs are Easter Tuesday, Whit-Tuesday, and July 5th and 6th, for horned cattle, horses, sheep, leather and hardware; October 10th and 11th for cattle, hogs and leather; and the last Monday but one before Christmas day for horned cattle and sheep. By the parliamentary returns for 1821 the whole parish of Bedale contained 2,631 inhabitants, and in 1831, 2,707, of which last last number 1,266 were returned for the township. Aiskew is a township and village, in that part of the parish of Bedale which is in the eastern division of Hang wapentake, about half a mile N.E. from Bedale. The township contains a chapel for Roman catholics, a free school with a small endowment, and a population of 586 inhabitants." [Transcribed from Pigot's directory (Yorkshire section) 1834]
<1565
Margaret
Le
Scrope
~1590 - 9 JAN 1616/17
Sir
Marmaduke
Wyvill
MP at Richmond (1585-) source:Dugdale London Library MP at Richmond (1597-1598) source:Dugdale London Libra Lived in Burton Constable Took part in Pilgrimage of Grace, but was pardoned Made a baronet 25 Nov 1611 Sheriff of Yorkshire (1633-) source:Dugdale London Library Educated at Admitted to Lincoln's Inn 4 June 1611 Lived in Constable Burton Royalist, fine œ1343 under the Commonwealth 2nd baronet
~1524 - ~1558
Sir
Marmaduke
Wyvill
34
34
Sheriff of Yorkshire (1633-) source:Dugdale London Library Educated at Admitted to Lincoln's Inn 4 June 1611 Lived in Constable Burton Royalist, fine œ1343 under the Commonwealth 2nd baronet
~1518
Agnes
Fitz
Randolph
~1556
William
Wyvill
~1530
Dorothy
Hastings
~1550
Sampson
Wyvill
~1552
Frances
Wyvill
~1500
Sir
Brian
Hastings
~1535
Miss
Bellingham
~1537
Magdelen
Danby
~1464 - 1518
Ralph
Fitz
Randolph
54
54
~1478
Elizabeth
Le
Scrope
~1428 - 1493
Thomas
Le
Scrope
65
65
1438 - 1490
Elizabeth
De
Greystoke
52
52
1459
Alice
Le
Scrope
~1461
Thomas
Le
Scrope
~1463
Ralph
Le
Scrope
~1467
Geoffrey
Le
Scrope
~1468
Henry
Le
Scrope
~1475
Margaret
Le
Scrope
~1390
Elizabeth
De
Chaworth
~1417
Elizabeth
Le
Scrope
~1430
Eleanor
Le
Scrope
~1345 - 25 JAN 1403/04
Stephen
Le
Scrope
~1358 - 1422
Margery
De
Welles
64
64
~1380
Sir
Henry Le
Scrope
~1382
Sir
Geoffrey
Le Scrope
1339 - 1387
Baldwin
De
Freville
48
48
~1387
Stephen
Le
Scrope
~1389
William
Le
Scrope
1312 - 1391
Henry
Le
Scrope
78
78
Henry Le Scrope was born the eldest son Geoffrey Le Scrope of Masham and Clifton-upon-Yore on 29 September, 1312, in Masham, England. Henry figured prominently in all the wars of Edward the Third, and in 1350, was summoned to parliament as Baron Scrope of Masham. Subsequently this branch of the family became known as the Scropes of Masham, Upsall, and Flaxtead. He was on an expedition to the Holy Land in 1365 when Alexandria was taken
~1347
Henry
Le
Scrope
~1348
John
Le
Scrope
~1349
William
Le
Scrope
~1350
Richard
Le
Scrope
~1307
Beatrice
Le
Scrope
~1308
Constance
Le
Scrope
1317
Thomas
Le
Scrope
1319
Geoffrey
Le
Scrope
1322
Stephen
Le
Scrope
1325
William
Le
Scrope
1326
John
Le
Scrope
1327
Ivetta
Le
Scrope
~1245 - FEB 1311/12
Sir
William Le
Scrope
Sir William Le Scrope was the son of William Le Scrope. He was born between 1245 and 1255 in Bolton or Bracewell, Wensley, Yorkshire, England. He succeeded his brother Richard Le Scrope. Sir William Le Scrope was listed as holding the manor of West Bolton in 1286. He served as Bailiff of Richmonshire in 1294. He was later knighted at the Battle of Falfirk in 1298.
~1249
Constance
De
Newsome
~1275
Henry
le
Scrope
1223
Sir Thomas
De
Newsome
~1195
Sir Gillo
De
Newsome
1214 - 1296
William
Le
Scrope
82
82
1183 - >1218
Henry
Le
Scrope
35
35
Henry gave divers lands in Flotmanby in the reign of King John, to the Priory of Bridlington, the Abbey of St. Mary of Rivaulx, and other religious communities
1187
Juliane
Brune
1161
Roger
Brune
Isabel
1162 - 1225
Simon
Le
Scrope
63
63
~1166
Imgoline
Ingoliana
1134 - >1198
Robert
Le
Scrope
64
64
1164
Philip
Le
Scrope
~1103 - >1149
Hugh
Le
Scrope
46
46
Hugh Le Scrope was listed as a landowner, owing services to Gilbert de Gant, Earl of Lincoln, in 1149, for certain lands given to the Priory of Bridlington in Yorkshire, in the district of Wensleydale during the reign of King Stephen. Hugh Le Scrope was great-grandson of Osbern Fitz Richard (or Fitz Scrope).
~1075 - >1105
Walter
Le
Scrope
30
30
~1055
Simon Fitz
Osbern le
Scrope
~1025 - 1080
Osbern Fitz
Richard le
Scrope
55
55
He appears to have been old enough to have taken part in the early wars of his father during the reign of Edward the Confessor (1042-66). Osbern was sheriff of Hereford, 1060. He assisted the castellan of Hereford in subduing the rebel Edric in 1067 while William the Conqueror and the greater part of his nobles were in Normandy.
~1057
William Fitz
Osbern le
Scrope
~1508
John
Fitz
Randolph
~1060
Turstin Fitz
Osbern le
Scrope
~0992 - >1067
Richard
le
Scrope
75
75
Richard Fitz Scrob (or Fitz Scrope, Scrope, Scrupe or Scrob) was the son of a Scrob (Le Scrob) of Normandy, France. He was a Norman knight who settled in Herefordshire and became a landowner in England when he was granted lands by King Edward the Confessor prior to the Conquest. He built Richard's Castle in about 1048-1050 (near Ludlow) in county Hereford, on the Welsh border and administered this part of the border region. He held various manors in Worcestershire, Herefordshire, and Shropshire at the time of Edward the Confessor (1042-1066), according to the Domesday book. Richard's surname is said to be derived from the nickname "Le Scrob", or "the crab", given to him by jealous Saxons of Edward the Confessor's court.
~1510
Elizabeth
Fitz
Randolph
~1512
Alice
Fitz
Randolph
~1514
Mary
Fitz
Randolph
~1516
Dorothy
Fitz
Randolph
~1420 - 5 MAR 1473/74
John
Fitz
Randolph
~1389 - 1444
Ellen
Rolleston
55
55
~1380 - >1462
Sir
Christopher
Conyers
82
82
~1420
Christopher
Conyers
~1428 - 1485
Joan
Conyers
57
57
~1360
Thomas
Rolleston
~1365
Beatrice
Haulay
~1350 - 1395
John
Conyers
45
45
~1430 - 1490
William
Conyers
60
60
~1382
Robert
Conyers
~1360 - 1394
Elizabeth
De
Aton
34
34
~1414
Mary
Eure
~1440 - 1476
Anne
Bigod
36
36
~1410 - 1462
Ralph
Bigod
52
52
~1460 - 1513
Christopher
Conyers
53
53
~1415
Anne
de
Greystoke
~1470
Anne
Markenfield
~1440
Thomas
Markenfield
~1440
Elena
Conyers
~1430
Henry
Pudsey
~1398 - JAN 1457/58
Sir Ralph
Fitz
Randolph
Elizabeth
~1374 - 1405
Sir John
Fitz
Randolph
31
31
~1345 - >1388
Sir
Randolph
Fitz John
43
43
~1325 - <1369
John
Fitz
Ranulf
44
44
~1325
Maud
De
Campania
~1300 - >1343
Ranulf
Fitz
Ralph
43
43
Isabel
~1260 - <1316
Ralph
Fitz
Ranulf
56
56
~1275
Theophania
De
Lacelles
~1305
Ralph
Fitz
Ralph
~1245
Roger
De
Lacelles
~1230 - <1294
Ranulf
Fitz
Ranulf
64
64
Bertrama
~1262
Piers
Fitz
Ranulf
~1264
Henry
Fitz
Ranulf
~1266
Adam
Fitz
Ranulf
~1190 - 1252
Ranulf
Fitz-
Robert
62
62
* Held 6 knights' fees in the honour of Richmond, Co. York, and 6 in Norfolk, the latter acquired presumably from the Bigods. 4th Lord of Middleham & Spennithorn
~1516
Margaret
Wyvill
~1522
Dorothy
Wyvill
1478
Anne
Radcliffe
~1496
Christopher
Norton
~1507
Isabel
Norton
~1506
Thomas
Norton
1528
Clare
Norton
~1498
Marmaduke
Norton
~1500
John
Norton
~1504
Margaret
Norton
~1505
William
Norton
~1490
Christopher
Wandesford
1510
Richard
Goodricke
~1455
William
Radcliffe
~1452
Miles
Radcliffe
~1470
Robert
Wyvill
Agent for Archbishop of York in diocese of Ripon source:Dugdale LondonLibrary Lived in Ripon
~1475
Joan
Pigot
~1450
John
Pigot
~1440
Christopher
Wyvill
~1450
Miss
de
Lascelles
~1410
Sir
Richard
Wyvill
~1380 - 1432
Sir
William
Wyvill
52
52
~1350
Sir
Humphrey
Wyvill
~1320
Sir
William
Wyvill
~1290
Sir
William
Wyvill
The effigy of Sir William Wyvill in All Saints Church, Slingsby, North Yorks. He was fifth in decent from Sir Richard, the first of the Wyvill's at Slingsby circa 1200. Sir William was summoned to serve against the Scots on 30th June 1314 and in 1320. He was six days late for The Battle of Bannockburn. There is a tradition about Sir William that "betwixt Malton and this towne ther was sometymes a serpent that lyved upon prey of passengers, which this Wyvill and dogg did kill, wher he received his deathe's wound".
~1375
Randolph
Pigot
~1428
Geoffrey
Pigot
~1426
Margaret
Sewarby
~1446
Agnes
Pigot
~1440
John
Copley
~1450
Thomas
Pigot
~1456
Isabella
Gascoigne
~1478
Margaret
Pigot
1473
James
Metcalfe
~1494
Margaret
Metcalfe
~1496
Anne
Metcalfe
~1498
Roger
Metcalfe
~1502
Elizabeth
Metcalfe
~1504
Edmund
Metcalfe
~1506
Oswald
Metcalfe
~1508
Humphrey
Metcalfe
~1510
Christopher
Metcalfe
~1500
Agnes
Metcalfe
~1378
Alice
Pigot
~1402
John
Pigot
~1415
Richard
Pigot
1699
Ann
Sanborn
14 FEB 1655/56 - 1739
Hannah
Perkins
26 JAN 1611/12 - 1685
Isaac
Perkins
~1617 - 1699
Susanna
Wise
82
82
1591 - 1638
Humphrey
Wise
47
47
~1592 - ~1678
Susanna
Tidd
86
86
~1570
John
Tidd
~1575 - 1651
Margaret
Greenleaf
76
76
~1562
Humphrey
Wise
~1622 - 13 JAN 1706/07
Sarah
Wise
RFN1189
1676
Hannah
Philbrick
19 FEB 1678/79
Daniel
Philbrick
1680
Jonathan
Philbrick
1682
Sarah
Philbrick
1683
Ebenezer
Philbrick
1686
Apphia
Philbrick
1688
Isaac
Philbrick
1692
Abigail
Philbrick
3 FEB 1693/94
Joseph
Philbrick
1697
Nathan
Philbrick
1701
Mary
Philbrick
1680
Joseph
Clifford
~1700
Anne
Dearborn
1705
Sarah
Nay
18 MAR 1740/41 - 1805
Samuel
Philbrick
Mary
~1550
Thomas
Felbrigge
Elizabeth
~1505 - 1571
Edward
Felbrigge
66
66
~1480 - 21 FEB 1562/63
Nicholas
Felbrigge
~1455
Roger
Felbrigge
~1425
Simon
Felbrigge
1367 - 1431
Simon
De
Felbrigg
64
64
~1367 - <1390
Katherine
Mallory
23
23
~1330 - 1393
Anketil
Mallory
63
63
~1330 - <1370
Alice
Digges
40
40
~1307 - ~1378
John
Mallory
71
71
~1277
Roger
Mallory
~1247
William
Mallory
~1217
Richard
Mallory
~1192
William
Mallory
~1167
Henry
Mallory
~1142 - 1187
Anketil
Mallory
45
45
~1117
Geoffrey
Mallory
~1092
Richard
Mallore
~1330 - >1368
Roger
Felbrigge
Bigod
38
38
~1340
Elizabeth
De
Scales
~1311 - 1369
Robert
De
Scales
58
58
~1279 - 20 MAR 1323/24
Robert
De
Scales
1249
Robert
De
Scales
1252 - 1333
Isabel
Burnell
81
81
1219 - 20 JAN 1266/67
Robert
De
Scales
~1222
Clemence
1196 - 23 JAN 1249/50
Robert
De
Scales
1199 - >1256
Alice
De
Rouchestre
57
57
1159 - 1215
Robert
De
Scales
56
56
1162
Margaret
De
Renufou
1129 - 1198
Robert
De
Scales
69
69
1132
Alice
1098 - <1198
Robert
De
Scales
100
100
1102
Muriel
De
Lisewis
1076
Geoffrey
Lisewis
~1070
Richardt
De
Scales
~1040
William
De
Scales
~1010
Stephen
De
Scales
~1280 - >1349
Simon
Bigod
69
69
~1290
Alice
De
Thorpe
~1260
George
De
Thorpe
~1245 - 1306
Roger
Bigod
61
61
~1250 - >1295
Cecelia
45
45
~1220 - >1275
Maud
De
Felbrigge
55
55
~1190
Richard
De
Felbrigge
~1160
Roger
De
Felbrigge
~1165
Miss
De
Norfolk
~1135
Gilbert
De
Norfolk
~1550 - 1605
William
Hilton
55
55
~1555
Ellen
Mainwaring
~1530
John
Mainwaring
~1535
Jane
Wright
~1500
John
Mainwaring
~1471 - 1529
Sir
John
Mainwaring
58
58
~1395
Margaret
Delves
~1435 - ~1480
John
Hanford
45
45
~1190
William
Mottrum
~1165
Edward
Mottrum
~1140
Gamyl
Mottrum
~1288 - >1330
Matilda
42
42
~1265
Hugh
De
Calveley
~1267
Alicia
~1242
Richard
De
Calveley
~1244
Leuca
Barnard
~1220
Hugh
De
Calveley
~1421
Ellen
Boteler
~1410 - 1473
John
De
Hanford
63
63
~1418
Margery
De
Warren
~1394 - 1444
Lawrence
De
Warren
50
50
~1386
Margery
De
Bulkeley
22 FEB 1367/68 - 1391
Richard
De
Bulkeley
~1350
Alice
Bostock
~1346
Richard
William De
Bulkeley
1325
Adam
Bostock
~1325
Margaret
Whetenhall
~1295
John
Whetenhall
~1302
Agnes
De
Arderne
~1360
John
De
Arderne
1357
Hugh
De
Arderne
~1295
Margaret
De
Arderne
~1295
Alice
(Ellen) de
Venables
1305
William
Bostock
~1317
Peter
De
Arderne
~1330
Margaret
De
Arderne
~1334 - 1382
Robert
De
Legh
48
48
~1362
Katherine
de
Legh
~1393
Reginald
De
Leigh
~1448
Robert
De
Leigh
Margery
De
Leigh
~1469
Matilda
Davenport
~1473
Ellen
Davenport
~1475
John
Davenport
~1478
Cicely
Davenport
~1479
Robert
Davenport
~1482
George
Davenport
~1484
Hugh
Davenport
~1486
Margaret
Davenport
~1488
Reginald
Davenport
~1490
Isabell
Davenport
~1492
Christopher
Davenport
~1494
Margery
Davenport
1430
James
De
Leigh
~1432
Peter
De
Leigh
~1434
Reginald
De
Leigh
~1438
Margaret
De
Leigh
~1440
Isabel
De
Leigh
1431
Lawrence
De
Warren
~1450
William
De
Warren
~1453
John
De
Warren
~1415
John
De
Warren
~1420
Cecily
De
Warren
~1420
Elizabeth
De
Warren
1378 - 1413
Nicholas
De
Warren
35
35
~1378 - >1417
Agnes
De
Wynnington
39
39
~1345 - >1422
Richard
De
Wynnington
77
77
~1350
Emma
Mainwaring
~1320 - ~1358
Robert
De
Wynnington
38
38
~1290 - >1347
Robert
De
Wynnington
57
57
~1263
Robert
De
Wynnington
~1263
Annore
Starkey
~1233 - >1271
Richard
Starkey
38
38
~1225 - 1295
Robert
De
Twamlow
70
70
~1230 - >1295
Margery
De
Wynnington
65
65
~1343 - 1387
John
De
Warren
44
44
~1345 - 1418
Margaret
De
Stafford
73
73
~1315
Sir John
De
Stafford
~1318
Dionesia
Lynford
~1280
Roger
De
Stafford
~1250
Richard
De
Stafford
~1250
Isabella
De
Eyam
~1315 - <1368
Edward
De
Warren
53
53
~1316
Cicely
De
Eton
~1290 - ~1326
Nicholas
De
Eton
36
36
~1290 - >1332
Joan
De
Stockport
42
42
~1260 - 1292
Richard
De
Stockport
32
32
~1265
Cicely
~1239 - ~1274
Robert
De
Stockport
35
35
~1240
Elen
De
Maubanc
1286 - 1347
John
De
Warenne
60
60
~1292 - <1347
Maud
De
Nerford
55
55
<1249 - 1302
William
De
Nerford
53
53
~1261 - 1326
Petronilla
De
Vaux
65
65
~1176
Roger
Longchamps
<1224 - 1262
Piers
De
Nerford
38
38
~1225
Agatha
~1289
Griffin
De
Warenne
~1240
Roger
Puleston
~1414
Isabel
Stanley
~1407
Isabel
Savage
~1442
William
De
Leigh
~1444
Agnes
De
Leigh
~1446
Elizabeth
De
Leigh
~1448
Dulcia
De
Leigh
~1348 - <1376
Thomas
Belgrave
28
28
~1379
Cicely
Grosvenor
~1322
Robert
De
Pulford
~1324
Jane
~1300
Sir Robert
De
Pulford
~1300
Katherine
De
Dutton
~1270
John
De
Pulford
~1241 - 1307
John
De
Pulford
66
66
~1035
Osberne
Fitz
Tezzon
~1218
Jane
~1326
Tibota
De
Pulford
~1185 - ~1230
Elizabeth
Corbet
45
45
~1316
William
De
Dutton
~1320
Robert
De
Dutton
~1322
Hancock
De
Dutton
~1254
Margaret
De
Risley
~1228
Sir Hugh
De
Risley
~1202
Rose
~1314
Henry
Minshull
~1310 - ~1360
John
Belgrave
50
50
~1290 - ~1340
Giles
Lenginour
50
50
~1260 - ~1310
Richard
Lenginour
50
50
~1260
John
FitzWarin
De Waleton
~1235
Warin
De
Waleton
~1290 - <1356
William
De
Wasteneys
66
66
~1292
Cecily
De
Arderne
~1270
John
De
Wasteneys
~1244
Geoffrey
De
Wasteneys
~1196 - 1248
Payne
De
Wasteneys
52
52
~1165 - 1207
Payne
De
Wasteneys
42
42
~1132 - 1166
Geoffrey
De
Wasteneys
34
34
~1100
Geoffrey
De
Wastneys
~1070
Geoffrey
De
Wastneys
~1073
Maud
De
Osgathorpe
~1202 - >1265
Robert
Le
Grosvenor
63
63
~1181 - <1232
Randle
Le
Grosvenor
51
51
<1159
Robert
Le
Grosvenor
~1165
Alice
~1135
Gilbert
Le
Grosvenor
~1207 - >1269
Richard
Le
Grosvenor
62
62
~1260 - 1328
Robert
Grosvenor
68
68
~1268
Margery
~1235 - <1293
Robert
Le
Grosvenor
58
58
~1240
Margery
~1278
Margaret
De St.
Pierre
~1232 - 1275
William
De
Massey
43
43
~1235 - 1300
Margery
Mainwaring
65
65
~1208
Robert
Mainwaring
~1168
Robert
Mainwaring
~1175
Ellen
~1130
Roger
De
Mainwaring
~1075 - >1119
Roger
Mesnilwarin
44
44
~1045
Ranulphus
Mesnilwarin
~1260 - 1328
Robert
De
Massey
68
68
~1233
Alice
Massey
~1230
Ralph
De
Baguley
~1290 - 1338
William
De
Massey
48
48
~1298
Hamon
VI De
Massey
~1296
Katherine
De
Vernon
~1250 - ~1317
Thomas de
Lymm-
Leigh
67
67
~1338
Richard
IV
Massey
~1304
Margaret
De
Vernon
1324
Hamon
Le
Strange
~1289
Hamon
Le
Strange
1330
Catherine
De
Camoys
~1349
John
Le
Strange
1383
Eleanor
Walkefare
~1358
Walkeline
De
Arderne
~1335
Sir Thomas
De
Arderne
1318
Nicholas
Peyvre
~1337
Helena
Bulkeley
~1300
Thomas
Bulkeley
~1354
John
De
Arderne
~1354
Catherine
de
Stafford
~1380
Sir John
De
Arderne
1384
Margaret
Pilkington
~1402
Matilda
De
Arderne
~1408
Katherine
Stanley
~1375
Blanche
De
Arderne
~1351 - 1436
Margaret
De
Verdon
85
85
1280
Margaret
Knoville
1252
Bewes
Knoville
1260
Joan
Waleran
~1232
William
Waleran
1299
John
De
Verdon
~1329
Maud
~1325 - 2 JAN 1406/07
Roger
De
Pilkington
~1291 - 1343
Roger
De
Pilkington
52
52
~1295 - ~1374
Alicia
De
Bury
79
79
~1353
Thomas
Peyvre
1305
Alice
Winnington
~1280
Richard
Winnington
~1285
Adam
Bostock
~1288
Jane
De
Brereton
1265
Edward
Bostock
1245
William
Bostock
~1205
Henry
Bostock
~1180 - ~1206
Warren
De
Bostock
26
26
1155
Ranulph
De
Bostock
~1165
Margaret
De
Vernon
~1137
Maud
De
Baliol
~1120
Reginald
de
Baliol
~1128
Warren
Warini
Bostock
~1460
Jane
Tempest
~1430
John
Tempest
~1435 - 1507
Alice
Sherborne
72
72
~1320
Sir John
De
Bayley
~1410 - 1445
Agnes
Stanley
35
35
1415
John
Townley
~1428
Isabel
Sherborne
~1400
Piers
Tempest
~1405
Grace
De
Hebden
~1375
Nicholas
De
Hebden
~1380
Katherine
De
Wyham
~1370
Sir
Richard
Tempest
~1375
Isabel
De
Clitheroe
~1360 - 1389
John
Tempest
29
29
~1435
Isabel
De
Rilston
~1405
John
De
Rilston
~1400
Wilkin
Radcliffe
~1405
Jane
Mansell
~1375
William
Mansell
~1362
William
Radcliffe
1283 - 1359
John
Tempest
76
76
~1305 - 1352
John
Sherborne
47
47
~1312 - >1368
Katherine
Sherburne
56
56
~1271
Robert
Sherburne
~1260
John
de
Schireburne
~1230
Robert
de
Schireburne
1240
Matilda
de
Catford
~1210
Adam
de
Catford
1348
Joan
Tempest
1349 - 1410
James
Radcliffe
61
61
Knighted in 1385. Rebuilt Radclyffe Tower and Radclyffe Church.
~1385 - 4 MAR 1440/41
Sir
John
Radcliffe
Commander of the armies of Henry V
1404
Katherine
Burnell
1479 - 1532
Elizabeth
de
Stafford
53
53
~1405 - 1469
Sir
Richard
Woodville
64
64
~1416 - 1472
Jacquetta
de
Luxembourg
56
56
1482 - 1542
Robert
Fitz-Walter
Radcliffe
60
60
1505
Humphrey
Radcliffe
1 JAN 1450/51 - 1496
John III
Radcliffe
~1460
Margaret
Whetehill
1435 - 1503
Richard
Whetehill
68
68
~1435
Elizabeth
Muston
~1400 - 1486
William
Muston
86
86
1410 - 1503
Adrian
Whetehill
93
93
1416 - 1505
Margaret
Worsley
89
89
~1410 - 24 MAR 1468/69
Otewell
De
Worsley
~1425
Rose
ferch
Iorwerth
1370 - 1448
Iorwerth
ap
Dafydd
78
78
1375
Angharad
Puleston
1358 - 1399
Robert
Puleston
41
41
~1358 - 1399
Lowri
ferch
Gruffyd
41
41
~1300
Madog
ap
Ieuaf
~1310
Angharad
ferch
Dafydd
~1280
Dafydd
ap
Goronwy
1298 - 1340
Roger
Puleston
42
42
~1310
Margaret
ferch
Gruffydd
~1280
Gruffydd
Llwyd ap
Llewelyn
~1250
Llewelyn
ap
Ynyr
~1220
Ynyr
ap
Hywel
~1190
Hywel
ap
Moriddig
~1200
Gwladus
verch
Tudor
~1160
Moriddig
ap Sandde
Hardd
~1170
Tangwystl
verch
Cadfan
~1130
Sandde
Hardd ap
Caradog
~1140
Angharad
verch
Hunydd
~1100
Caradog
"Hardd"
ap Gwryd
~1110
Angharad
verch
Brochwel
~1070
Gwryd
ap
Maelog
~1040
Maelog
"Dda" ap
Greddyf
~1010
Greddyf
ap
Cwnws
~0980
Cwnwys
"Dda"
ap Cillin
~0950
Cillin
"Ynfyd" ap
Peredur
~0920
Peredur
Tegerin
ap Meilir
~0890
Meilir Eyur
Gwyr ap
Tydy
~0860
Tydy
ap
Ticho
~0830
Ticho
ap
Gwilfyw
~1270
Richard
Puleston
~1283
Angharad
De
Warenne
~1250
Jane
le
Clerk
~1220
David
le
Clerk
~1210
Roger
Puleston
~1180
Roger
Puleston
~1150
Roger
Puleston
~1340
Dafydd
ap
Ednyfed
~1350
Gwen
ferch
Adda
~1320
Adda
Goch
ap Ieuaf
~1330
Gwenddolyn
verch
Dafydd
~1300
Dafydd
ap
Adda
~1270
Adda
ap
Meurig
~1290
Ieuaf
ap
Adda
~1260
Adda
ap
Awa
~1300 - >1331
Ednyfed
ap
Iorwerth
31
31
~1320
Gladys
ferch
Llewellyn
~1290
Llewellyn
ap
Madoc
~1260
Madoc
ap
Einion
~1250 - >1313
Iorwerth
Foel ap
Iorwerth
63
63
~1265
Gladys
ferch
Gruffydd
~1225
Iorwerth
ap
Gruffydd
~1185
Gruffydd
ap
Heilyn
~1150
Heilyn
ap
Ifan
~1125
Ifan
ap
Adda
1233 - >1270
Iorwerth
Fychan ap
Iorwerth
37
37
1233
Catherine
verch
Gruffyd
~1140 - 20 FEB 1170/71
Conan
IV "Le
Petit"
1380 - 1414
Richard
de
Worsley
34
34
~1385 - 1423
Katherine
Clark
38
38
~1365
John II
Clark
~1370
Sarah
de
Stokeport
~1345
Roger
de
Stokeport
~1315
William
de
Stokeport
1290
William
Geoffrey de
Stokeport
1267 - ~1293
Roger
de
Stokeport
26
26
1239 - ~1272
Robert
de
Stokeport
33
33
~1205 - 1249
Robert
de
Stokeport
44
44
~1170
Matilda
de
Banastre
~1080 - >1154
Thurston
de
Banastre
74
74
~1050 - >1128
Richard
de
Banastre
78
78
~1345 - 1402
Robert
de
Worsley
57
57
1340
Isabel
Trafford
~1325 - >1376
William
de
Worsley
51
51
~1383 - ~1483
Richard
Whetehill
100
100
Joan
~1350
Richard
Whetehill
1426 - 1461
John II
Radcliffe
35
35
1430 - 1485
Elizabeth
Fitz-
Walter
55
55
1401 - 1431
Walter
Fitz-
Walter
30
30
~1405 - 1464
Elizabeth
Chidiocke
59
59
~1375 - 1410
John
Chidioc
35
35
~1377 - 1433
Alianore
Fitz-
Warren
56
56
~1351
Ivo
Fitz-
Warren
~1353
Maud
de
Argenteyn
~1320
Margaret
Darcy
~1294
Robert
Darcy
~1265
Norman
Darcy
~1270
Elizabeth
de la
Feld
~1450 - 1488
William
D'Arcy
38
38
1192 - 1254
Norman
D'Arcy
62
62
~1193
Agnes
~1213 - 1264
Sir
Phillip
D'Arcy
51
51
~1253
Roger
D'Arcy
~1240
Norman
D'Arcy
~1246
Mabel
Fitz-
Warren
1280 - 1334
John
de
Chidioc
54
54
Lucy
~1250 - 1281
John
Gerveys
de Chidioc
31
31
~1220
John
Gerveys
de Chidioc
Christine
1368 - 1407
Walter
Fitz-
Walter
38
38
<1380 - 1409
Joan
D'Evereaux
29
29
1302 - 22 FEB 1391/92
John
d'Evereaux
~1310
Elizabeth
de la
Bern
1261 - 1320
Walter
d'Evereaux
59
59
1240 - 1315
William
III
d'Evereaux
75
75
1240 - 1308
Alice
de
Grandison
68
68
1219 - 1239
William
II
d'Evereaux
20
20
1220 - 1297
Matilda
Giffard
77
77
1194 - 1256
Hugh
Giffard
62
62
1198
Sybyl
de
Cormeilles
~1168 - 1204
Walter
de
Cormeilles
36
36
1120 - 1176
Richard
de
Cormeilles
56
56
~1090
Turstin
de
Cormeilles
~1060 - <1102
Ansfrid
de
Cormeilles
42
42
Lucy
~1175 - 1226
Walter
Giffard
51
51
1345 - 1386
Walter
Fitz-
Walter
41
41
~1350 - 1375
Alianore
de
Dagworth
25
25
~1320 - ~1350
Thomas
de
Dagworth
30
30
~1290
John
de
Dagworth
~1290
Alice
Fitz-
Warren
~1255
William
Fitz-
Warren
~1365
Mary
de
Beauchamp
~1295
John
de
Bridport
~1310
Joan
de
Mountsorrell
~1285
Thomas
de
Mountsorrell
~1314
John
Bedlisgate
1341
John
Wydeville
~1345
Isabel
1310 - 1403
Richard
Wydeville
93
93
~1324 - 1371
Elizabeth
Lyons
47
47
~1289 - >1346
John
de
Lyons
57
57
~1300
Alice
de St.
Liz
~1274
William
de St.
Liz
1329
William
Radcliffe
~1344
Susanna
De
Legh
1270
William "the
Great" de
Radclyffe
1275
Margaret
de
Culcheth
1245
Gilbert
de
Culcheth
~1124
Nicholas
FitzGilbert
De Taillebois
A knight who was given the Manor of Radeclive from his lord, and may have built Radcliffe Tower, in the village of Radcliffe in Lancashire, England. Nicholas took the name "de Radcliffe" meaning of or from Radcliffe. Eventually the last name Tailbois was dropped and Radcliffe took its place in the family lineage. Married a Saxon of the Booths. Children included Mathew, Henry, and Simon.
~1249
Margaret
le
Boteler
~1180
John
de
Radclyffe
~1144 - <1190
Henry
de
Radclyffe
46
46
ANCESTORS OF RICHARD RATCLIFF OF LANCASHIRE, ENGLAND AND TALBOT COUNTY, MARYLAND Addendum to Clarence Ratcliff's genealogy by Donald Ratcliff Dr. A. Wayne Ratcliff, M.D. (50 N. Liberty Street #1, Delaware, OH 43015) has extended the Ratcliff line backwards to the earliest known ancestor, Ivo de Tailbois. He spent eleven years, made two trips to England, and hired a professional genealogiest to secure this information. Most of this information is taken from The Book of the Ratcliffs, while generations 17-21 were taken from wills located at the courthouse in Preston, Lancashire.
<1596
Isabel
Gascoigne
~1619 - 1646
Mary
Wyvill
27
27
~1612
Grace
Wyvill
~1614
Sir
Christopher
Wyvill
~1616
Isabel
Wyvill
~1578
Barbara
Anderson
~1575
Sir
William
Gascoigne
Sources: 1. Abbrev: Dugdale's Visitation of Yorkshire Vol 2 Title: Dugdale's Visitation of Yorkshire Vol 2 Repository: Name: London Library
1532
Grace
Gascoigne
1520 - 14 FEB 1586/87
Sir
Thomas
Wentworth
1416
Jane
Redmayne
~1440 - 8 JAN 1508/09
William
Wentworth
~1450
Isabel
FitzWilliam
1478 - 1548
Thomas
"Golden"
Wentworth
70
70
1486
Beatrice
Woodrove
~1570
Mary
Wentworth
1509 - 19 JAN 1564/65
Thomas
Gascoigne
1544
Katherine
Beaumont
1512
Richard
Gascoigne
1513
John
Gascoigne
1515
Robert
Gascoigne
1517
William
Gascoigne
1519
Frances
Gascoigne
1521
Elizabeth
Gascoigne
1529
Alice
Gascoigne
1531
George
Gascoigne
1533
Agnes
Gascoigne
~1475
John
Vavasour
~1477
Cicely
Langdale
~1445
Henry
Vavasour
~1460
Joan
Gascoigne
~1439
William
Gascoigne
~1443
Jane
Neville
~1416 - 17 MAR 1480/81
John
Neville
~1420
Elizabeth
Newmarche
~1390
Robert
Newmarche
~1360
Ralph
De
Newmarche
Elizabeth
~1335
Robert
De
Newmarche
~1315
Adam
De
Newmarche
~1290 - MAR 1351/52
Roger
De
Newmarche
Matilda
~1256 - >1330
Elizabeth
de
Mowbray
74
74
1615 - 1642
Arthur
Beckwith
27
27
1584 - 19 JAN 1633/34
Roger
Beckwith
1588 - 1670
Susannah
Brakenbury
82
82
1614
Susannah
Beckwith
1616
Matthew
Beckwith
1619
Judith
Beckwith
1620
Hester
Beckwith
1623
William
Beckwith
~1567 - 1625
Marmaduke
Beckwith
58
58
~1565
Ann
Dynley
1587
Thomas
Beckwith
1589
William
Beckwith
1593
Symon
Beckwith
1595
Jane
Beckwith
1597
Alice
Beckwith
1599
Grace
Beckwith
1601
Anne
Beckwith
1603
Catherine
Beckwith
1610 - 1681
Matthew
Beckwith
71
71
Often referred to as "Matthew the immigrant." Exerpt from "HISTORY OF NEW LONDON" pp. 298 ... "His death being sudden and the result of accident, a jury was summoned, who gave their verdict, that "he came to his death by mistaking his way in a dark night, and falling from a clift of rocks." Biography: From Savage's "Diet of the First Settlers of New England" "Matthew Beckwith, New London 1652, Hartford 1658, then a Freeman, and had first lived there in 1639, removed to Vrandford, there in 1688 was one of the founders of the Church. Thence to Lyme there died 21 October 1680, aged 70, by a fall in a dark night down a ledge of rocks. See Rev. Mr. Bradstreet's journal in Genealogical Reg. IX.50 He had two daughters beside sons Matthew, John & Joseph. His widow married Samuel Buckland, and of the daughters, one married Benjamin Grant, the other Robert Gerard." There is no explanation for the disparity in the date of death, although most records agree that death occurred on December 13, 1681. Beckwith, Matthew, fined 10 shillings for using ardents, 1639. (Connecticut Puritan Settlers, 1633-1845 )
1625
Mary
Elizabeth
Lynde
~1637 - 1727
Matthew
Beckwith
90
90
~1643
Mary
Beckwith
~1645
John
Beckwith
~1647
Elizabeth
Beckwith
~1649
Sarah
Beckwith
~1653
Joseph
Beckwith
~1658
Nathaniel
Beckwith
~1640
Elizabeth
Griswold
1667
Matthew
Beckwith
4 FEB 1668/69
John
Beckwith
1671
James
Beckwith
1673
Jonah
Beckwith
1676
Prudence
Beckwith
4 FEB 1677/78
Elizabeth
Beckwith
14 MAR 1680/81
Ruth
Beckwith
1684
Sarah
Beckwith
~1575
Ellen
Style
~1540
Robert
Huntington
Beckwith
~1542
Jennet
~1565
Robert
Beckwith
~1515 - ~1590
John
Beckwith
75
75
~1490 - ~1573
Robert
Beckwith
83
83
~1470 - ~1523
Lady
Radcliffe
53
53
~1637 - 1700
Sir
Roger
Beckwith
63
63
Roger BECKWITH b: Abt. 1637 in Aldborough, England/created Baron in 1681 by Charles II Contact: richard beckwith <richbsr@@socket.net>
~1488
Thomas
Beckwith
~1633
Marmaduke
Beckwith
~1635
Mary
Beckwith
~1639
Isabel
Beckwith
~1640
Susan
Beckwith
1662 - 21 JAN 1706/07
Elizabeth
Jenings
~1626 - ~1687
Sir
Edmund
Jenings
61
61
~1630
Margaret
Barkham
1653
Mary
Jenings
1655
Jonathan
Jenings
1658
William
Jenings
1659
Edmund
Jenings
1660
Anne
Jenings
1664
Peter
Jenings
~1595 - 1667
Sir
Edward
Barkham
72
72
~1597 - 1667
Frances
Berney
70
70
~1570 - 1616
Sir
Thomas
Berney
46
46
~1575
Juliana
Gawdy
~1540 - 1584
Henry
Berney
44
44
~1545
Alice
Appleton
~1515
Roger
Appleton
~1520
Agnes
Clarke
~1485
Henry
Appleton
~1490
Margaret
Roper
~1455
Roger
Appleton
~1460
Anne
Sulyard
~1430
Sir
John
Sulyard
~1440
Anne
Andrews
~1414 - 1456
John
Andrews
42
42
~1410 - >1485
Elizabeth
Stratton
75
75
~1444
Elizabeth
Andrews
~1385 - >1439
John
Stratton
54
54
~1388 - >1439
Elizabeth
Luttrell
51
51
~1360
Sir
Hugh
Luttrell
~1365 - 1453
Catherine
De
Beaumont
88
88
~1390
Robert
Luttrell
~1394
John
Luttrell
~1335
Sir John
De
Beaumont
~1335
Sir
Andrew
Luttrell
~1333 - 1395
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
62
62
~1330
Sir
William
Harrington
~1353
Elizabeth
Harrington
1303 - 1377
Hugh
de
Courtenay
73
73
~1518 - 1557
John
Berney
39
39
~1525
Margaret
Read
~1490 - 1536
John
Berney
46
46
~1500
Margery
Wentworth
~1470 - 1539
Roger
Wentworth
69
69
~1475
Anne
Tyrrell
~1445
Humphrey
Tyrrell
~1450
Isabel
Helion
~1415
Robert
Tyrrell
~1420
Christian
Hartshorn
~1385 - 1476
Thomas
Tyrrell
91
91
~1395
Anne
De
Marney
~1370
William
De
Marney
~1378 - 1414
Elizabeth
Cergeaux
36
36
~1350
Richard
Cergeaux
~1355
Phillippe
FitzAlan
~1605
Elizabeth
J.
Parker
~1595 - 1649
Jonathan
Jenings
54
54
~1628
Jonathan
Jenings
~1575
Giles
Parker
~1565 - 1651
Peter
Jenings
86
86
~1570
Anne
Baldwin
~1597
Peter
Jenings
~1601
Edmund
Jenings
1687 - ~1780
Sir
Marmaduke
Beckwith
93
93
emigrated 1700 to Virginia
1684
Roger
Beckwith
1685
Margaret
Beckwith
1686
Elizabeth
Beckwith
Elizabeth
Clapham
~1691
Elizabeth
Brockenbrough
~1650 - 22 JAN 1698/99
William
Brockenbrough
~1705 - 1734
Mary
Dalton
29
29
1689
Newman
Brockenbrough
1685
Austin
Brockenbrough
1687
William
Brockenbrough
~1673 - 1733
John
Dalton
60
60
~1677 - 1734
Mary
Newman
57
57
~1703 - 1766
Winifred
Dalton
63
63
1725
Margaret
Elizabeth
Beckwith
1718
Tarpley
Beckwith
1720
Jonathan
Beckwith
1723
Elizabeth
Beckwith
1727
Mary
Beckwith
~1712
Marmaduke
Beckwith
~1714
Roger
Beckwith
~1716
Rebecca
Beckwith
1715 - 1759
Joseph
Morton
44
44
~1720
Francis
Colston
~1738
Frances
Morton
1667 - 1728
John
Jr.
Morton
61
61
1673
Mary
Mountjoy
1729
Francis
Morton
~1645 - 1700
Alvin
Mountjoy
55
55
~1650
Mary
Lane
~1620
William
Lane
~1675
Sebella
Mountjoy
~1677
Thomas
Mountjoy
~1679
Alvin
Jr.
Mountjoy
1754 - 1825
William
Jordan
Morton
70
70
~1743
Lucy
Butler
Morton
9 FEB 1744/45
Elizabeth
McCarty
Morton
1756
Margaret
Sydenham
Morton
~1763
Mary Molly
Beckwith
Morton
1761 - 1800
Martha
Pryor
39
39
1726 - 1777
William
Pryor
51
51
1726 - 1771
Sarah
(Sally)
Wood
45
45
~1746
Sally
Pryor
~1748
Samuel
Pryor
1750
William
Pryor
1757
Elizabeth
Pryor
1759
John
Pryor
1761
Patty
Pryor
1764
Mary
Pryor
1766
Anne
Pryor
1768
Valentine
Wood
Pryor
1769
Luke
Pryor
~1700
Henry
Wood
~1705
Martha
Cox
1693 - 1766
Samuel
Pryor
73
73
Find bio on g/g/g/grandson Justice William Samuel Pryor here: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~lpproots/Pryor/justice_w_sl_pryor.htm excerpt: The following is a very brief outline of one of many Pryor jurists. Most of the material is offered courtesy of Northern Kentucky Heritage magazine. Born on April 1, 1825, in Henry County, KY, little William Samuel Pryor was certainly no April fool. He was to become Kentucky's most famous jurist of his life-time. Will's genealogy was easy to follow. It was almost a joke in the family. Nearly every male Pryor in his line was named Samuel. First, there were Robert and Betty (Green) Pryor. Robert was the exception. Then Robert's son Samuel Pryor in VA, 1693 to !760. Next came Samuel, II (1725-?). After that came Samuel, III (1762-1811) and Samuel, IV (1804-1833). (The Roman numerals are the author's for ease of explanation.) This line of the large Virginia family had moved west to Henry County, KY, when the fourth Samuel was born. Samuel, IV, was married to Ann (Nancy) Marshall Samuel, who came from several legal families. The Country's best known U.S. Supreme Court Justice, John Marshall was one of her cousins as well as the Clark family of lawyers, generals and explorers. Her brother was a judge as well. . . . Tom Fiske, Jan. 1, 1999
1699 - 1763
Prudence
Thornton
64
64
1741
Thornton
Pryor
1740
Samuel
Pryor
1725
Robert
Pryor
1728
Francis
(Frank)
Pryor
1732
Joseph
Pryor
1730
Mary
(Mollie)
Pryor
1741
Luke
Pryor
1743
John
Pryor
1752
Nancy
Pryor
1649 - 15 FEB 1726/27
William
Jr.
Thornton
Thornton Family by W.G. Standard from Tylers Quarterly. William Thornton, Jr. Bible. He was born 27 Mar 1649 & d 15 Feb 1727 Gloucester. He was the father of 16 children by three wives. #s 13 & 14 were twins William Thornton III & Prudence Thornton both born 31 Mar 1699. Prudence m Samuel Pryor of Caroline Co Va. She died in 1763
~1743
Infant
Thornton
1689
Susan
Thornton
1692
Francis
Thornton
1694
Seth
Thornton
1699 - 1745
William
III
Thornton
46
46
THORNTON ARTICLE (as below) - Gravestone of William Thornton III, which was used as a doorstep of a man named Henry H. Hibble: Here lyeth the body of Mr William Thornton who married the youngest daughter of Mr. Jno Meaux, by whom he had 8 children, 2 lyeth on his left hand, the others are as follows Elizabeth, Anne, William, Meaux, Richard & John. He was a loving husband, a tender father & kind neighbor. He dyed May ye 3rd 1745 aged 46 years.
1701
John
Thornton
1703
Joshua
Thornton
~1653
Elizabeth
Fitzhugh
1672
Elizabeth
Thornton
1674
Margaret
Thornton
1676
Mary
Thornton
6 JAN 1676/77
Esther
Thornton
1679
Sarah
Thornton
1681
Jane
Thornton
1683
Judith
Thornton
1685
Anna
Thornton
1686
William
Thornton
1626
William
Thornton
1627
Elizabeth
Rowland
1651
Francis
Thornton
1654
Rowland
Thornton
1655
Esther
Thornton
1655
Prudence
Thornton
~1620 - ~1648
Eliza
(Elsie)
Billington
28
28
1642
Luke
Thornton
1646
Edward
Thornton
~1590
Luke
Billington
~1595
Eliza
Russell
~1595 - ~1650
William
Thornton
55
55
~1605 - 1650
Francis
Robinson
45
45
1530
William
Thornton
~1550 - 1594
Barbara
Westby
44
44
~1585
Thomas
Thornton
~1587
John
Thornton
~1589
Margery
Thornton
~1591
Margaret
Thornton
~1593
Joan
Thornton
1498 - 1566
Francis
Thornton
68
68
~1500 - ~1560
Joan
Delovier
60
60
~1470
Thomas
Delovier
1455 - 1514
Robert
Thornton
59
59
1458
Jane
Layton
1480
William
Thornton
1482
Robert
Thornton
1484
Martin
Thornton
1484
Thomas
Thornton
1488
Gregory
Thornton
1489
Richard
Thornton
1490
John
Thornton
1496
Christopher
Thornton
1500
Anne
Thornton
1501
Elizabeth
Thornton
~1435
William
Layton
~1440
Elizabeth
Stapleton
1383 - 1421
Sir
Robert
Plumpton
38
38
~1410
Robert
Plumpton
~1412
Alice
Plumpton
~1414
Elizabeth
Plumpton
~1416
Millicent
Plumpton
1385
Thomas
Plumpton
~1387
William
Plumpton
~1389
Richard
Plumpton
~1392
George
Plumpton
~1395
Bryan
Plumpton
~1397
Jane
Plumpton
~1400
Isabella
Plumpton
~1403
Katherine
Plumpton
1364
Alice
Plumpton
~1380
Joan
Plumpton
1663 - 1693
Robert
Pryor
30
30
1667 - >1710
Elizabeth
Virginia
Green
43
43
1695
John
Henry
Pryor
~1640 - <1693
Robert
Green
53
53
~1645
Mary
Prichett
~1610
Ralph
Green
~1665
Ralph
Green
~1669
Mary
Green
1635 - 1720
Robert
Pryor
85
85
1610 - 1670
William
Pryor
60
60
~1610 - >1646
Margaret
Clayton
36
36
1633
Matthew
Pryor
1640
William
Pryor
1642
John
Pryor
1790 - 1886
Joseph
Morton
96
96
1794 - 1886
Marmaduke
Beckwith
Morton
92
92
~1800
Nancy
Caldwell
~1802 - 1880
Betsy
Caldwell
78
78
~1839
Nancy
Morton
1803 - 1898
Louisa
Ann
Davidson
94
94
1827 - 1920
Harriet
Smith
Morton
93
93
1820 - 1893
Martha
Morton
72
72
1824
Marmaduke
Beckwith
Morton
1830 - 1852
Lancelot
Minor
Morton
21
21
1833
James
H.
Morton
1836
Mary
Frances
Morton
1840 - 1844
Joseph
Jordan
Morton
3
3
1844
Louisa
Virginia
Morton
1846
Johnathan
Henry
Morton
1818 - 1866
Andrew
Jackson
Caldwell
48
48
~1772 - 1824
John
Caldwell
52
52
1787 - 1855
Elizabeth
"Betsy"
Akers
67
67
Francis
Morton
1724 - 1798
Oliver
Caldwell
74
74
Emigrated from Londonderry, Ireland to America in 1785 Note: In 1754, at the age of 29, Oliver and his wife Ann Caldwell (a cousin of his) and his mother and two brothers, David and Alexander, came to America. Oliver and his wife settled in Greenbrier Virginia (now West Virginia). They had two sons there, Joseph and John. Some time after 1770, Oliver's wife died. Oliver remarried to a young woman, Isabella Cook; ( her family wasn't happy. Oliver was 50 years old at the time and she was 25.) Oliver and Isabella had 5 children. In 1797, Oliver and family packed up in Campbell County, Virginia and headed for Kentucky. They stopped for a time in Tennessee (according to oral family history). Oliver died (1798) in Tennessee and Isabella and her children continued to Logan County, Kentucky. Oliver's sons became well known in the area. they owned a tannery (Oliver was a tanner by trade), a gunpowder factory and a saddle factory in Russellville. the historical society has recently reopened the saddle shop as a visitor's center and museum. Story by Hugh Caldwell "This Oliver Caldwell, while in conversation there (Carlisle PA), showed me a copy of this document, which I was also permitted to copy. Besides this document, Mr. Oliver Caldwell showed me a richly engraved silver cup, with historic sketches engraved thereon. This cup had been handed down through fourteen generations from the first settlement in Scotland by the three ancient brothers. "First on this cup was seen a man drawing water from a well, representing the famous watering place near Toulon France, where they lived and were reared, the three brothers John, Alexander, and Oliver. "Next on the cup was seen three ships on the sea, tossed by high waves, representing the former sailor life of the three brothers while captains on the Mediterranean, and also representing the emigrant ships in which they had previously sailed from Lisbon, Spain to Scotland. "Next was engraved a fire burning on a hill signifying a beacon light and signal of danger. It was during one of the cruel persecutions in France that the Huguenots and other Protestants had to flee for their lives from the face of their cruel prosecutors and our fathers had to leave France and go to Scotland to find safety. Next was seen twenty men on horseback in armor representing the military service required by King James VI of Scotland, upon their settlement there. "On the bottom of the cup was engraved the name of the original owner, 'Alexander Cauldwell, Mt. Aud, France. Emigrated from Scotland to Ireland soon after King William's conquest of that place. From:"THE OLD FREE STATE" (A Contribution to the History of Lunenburg County and Southside VA) by Landon C. Bell Vol II The William Byrd Press, Inc. Printers, Richmond VA 1927 page 182 CALDWELL This family is a very ancient one. It is said to be descended from Albigenses and Waldenses of the Piedmont section of Italy, who were driven into France by the Roman Catholic persecutions. Some of the Caldwells, who were living at Mount Arid near Toulon, France, earned the enmity of Frances I of France; and after his escape from imprisonment under Charles V of Germany; three Caldwells; brothers; John; Alexander; and Oliver emigrated to Scotland and there with the consent of James I, purchased the estate of a Bishop named Douglas, located on 'Solney Frith E'. It was proved that "the said brothers, John; Alexander; and Oliver, late of Mount Arid, "should have their estate known as Caldwell" on condition that when the King should require they should each send a son with twenty men of sound limb, to aid in the wars of the King. (Account of Elsie Chapline Pheby Cross, in Journal of American History). There is a cup, preserved as an heirloom, which represents a Chieftan and twenty mounted men, all armed, and a man drawing water from a well, with the words underneath, "Alexander of Cauldwell". It also shows a fire burning on a hill, over the words, "Mount Arid", and also a vessel surrounded by high waves, which the latter was inherited to commemorate the fact that their ancestors were in common in the Mediterranean, in the latter part of the fourteenth Century. (ID. Cross) Oliver Cromwell's grandmother was Ann Cauldwell, and Joseph, John, Alexander, Daniel, David and Andrew of Cauldwell, went with Cromwell to Ireland and in various capacities served with interest there, after his accession to the Protectorate. Upon the restoration of Charles II, a member of the family Immigrated to America. By Michael R. Caldwell 3598 S. Centennial Rd. Magna Utah 84044 Following is a historical account of where the Caldwell name might have begun. Full credit is given to the author at the bottom of this account. I have not verified this for accuracy, nor have I connected the Caldwell's in this book to the Caldwell's mentioned below. Please direct any questions or comments to the author. It is kinda neat to read though! Before the name Caldwell came into existence, our ancestors were a part of two groups of people living in Italy who called themselves the Albigenses and Waldenses. Both of these groups were Protestant in their beliefs and are mentioned often in historical accounts. At this time (ie. early 1200's), those of Protestant belief were being subjected to heavy persecution by the Roman Catholic Church. Eventually, because of these persecutions, they were forced over the mountainous border that seperates Italy from France and settled in a small village called Toulon, near the foot of Mt. Aud (also called Mt. Arid in some accounts). It was here that three brothers, John, Alexander, and Oliver, were born. They spent all of their boyhood days in Toulon, and as they became young men, began what became known as the Cold Well Estate. The estate itself gained its name from a much frequented and well known watering place located within its boundaries. As was customary during this time, the three brothers became known as John, Alexander and Oliver of Cold Well. Later, the "of" was dropped and they were referred to as the Cold Well Brothers. But persecution began to mount here in France under the reign of Francis the First, a Catholic sympathizer. Again, they were forced to leave their homes. This time they travelled by way of Lisbon, Spain to an eventual new home in Scotland. It is from this start of the Caldwell name that all Caldwell's, both in Europe and America, appear to be descendant. This portion of their lives is dealt with in more detail later in this sketch. The above account seems to suggest that the Caldwell name had its beginning in France. However two independant research firms (Halberts, in Bath Ohio and the Historical Research Center, Inc. headquartered in Deerfield Beach Florida) indicate that the name seems to be original to Scotland. Additionally, if Cold Well had been added as a surname in France, one would reasonably expect that it would have remained in the French form (ie. using French words for cold well, not english). This same account itself, which above seems to suggest a French origin, refers later in this narrative to the beginning of the Caldwell family on an estate in Scotland, not France (see below). Finally, a close reading of the above will show that it does not require the conclusion that the estate was actually in France. I believe the three brothers grew up in France, but established their estate (and thereby gained their surname) in Scotland). Next Michael wrote about the story by Hugh Caldwell above. The three brothers were originally and apparantly aligned with the Barbarossa brothers, generally considered pirates of much note at that time. The Barbarossa's were of Algerian birth and became the dominent power in the Mediterrranean for 20 or more years after driving the Spanish from Algeria. The name "Barbarossa is a European one meaning "red beard" which the leader of these brothers (Khaii-Din by his Algerian name who died in 1546) apparantly had (The Encyclopedia Britannica). The term Barbary pirates will, no doubt, be familiar to many readers of this story. None-the-less, these pirates were themselves defeated by the Governor of Aran when he made a massive effort to end the dominance of the Barbaross's. John, Alexander, and Oliver escaped without being captured by the Aranian Governor and returned to Toulon for a short time. The three brothers, however, soon put their years of experience on the sea to good use and amassed a naval fleet of their own, one rivaling the defeated Barbarossa's in force. Now, however, Spanish Merchants hired John, Alexander and Oliver to do away with the remaining pirates on the Mediterranean. Though hired by the Spanish, King Francis I of France was so pleased with their success, that he rewarded the brothers, as well, to the tune of $20,000 a substantial sum of money in that day. They then determined from that time forward to abandon the high seas and return to their home in Mt. Aud, France. But on their return there, they found France now in a state of turmoil as a result of the persecutions suffered by the Huguenots and Piedmonts, as the Protestants in France were called. They, being protestant themselves, returned at once to Spain. From Spain, they took a merchant ship bound for the coast of Scotland. They landed at a place called Solway Firth. And finding the country in peace under the Protestant reign of King James VI (approx. 1543-1566, he then became King James I, King of England 1566-1625), they determined to settle there. After finding a large land holder, he being a welthy bishop of the place, they purchased from him a large estate and sent back to their native land for other relatives and friends and in a few years became numerous and prosperous. But, in order to acquire full title to this land, it was necessary that they should gain the consent and signature of the King to their purchase. This they did. But the King, upon signing their titles, imposed the following condition; That the three brothers should, when the King required it, each send a son with a troop of twenty men to aid in the wars of the King. And these should be men of sound mind and able bodies, fit for service. Thus we find our forefathers peacefully settled in Scotland, under the most favorable circumstances in life, both in wealth and in talent. Shortly thereafter, part of the family migrated across the Highlands of Scotland. It was nearly one hundred years to the time of Oliver Cromwell (who will be discussedd later in this report) that they went northward from Solway Firth, through Scotland, mingling with these people as they traveled. The people of Scotland were adherents of John Knox, the Scotch reformer and many of them became part of his "Presbyterian" belief. They were among the converters of Scotland and the seceders of Ireland and, through several generations in Scotland they became Scotish Highlanders. Passing over the highlands of Scotland into the north of Ireland, they became Scotch-Irish. They, however, never mingled with the native Irish of Ireland. The Irish were of the Celtic race and had inhabited the island from time immemorial and were converted to the Roman Catholic faith by St. Patrick. But in the north of Ireland were Picts and Scots who were converted Protestants and Presbyterians and the two races were ever at antipathy with each other, socially and religiously. Consequently, they were always a seperate and distinct people and have kept it so. Some of these ancestors of ours lived in the North of Ireland, near a lake called Yon. The great-grandfather of the original writer of part of this report (Thomas H. Caldwell) brought with him from that lake, a resin hone made from hickory wood which was formed into stone, by the action of the lake, which petrifies wood into stone in seven years. The lake contains a very fine emery sand which enters into the pores of the wood and petrifies it. This relic he brought to America with him and it was handed down until it came into possession of R. A. Caldwell, brother of Thomas H. Caldwell. But it was lost during the Civil War of 1861. "This Hone was greatly prized and greatly lamented when lost." From the north, they migrated to the south of Ireland, through Wales and from thence to America. Severel well known historical figures play an important role in our history. Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658), Protector of England from 1653 to 1658, was of our family through his grandmother, Ann of Cauldwell. He brought over from Scotland a large host of his kindred of the Cauldwell family and gave them positions of honor and trust during his lease of power at the head of the English nation. From the north of Ireland, one of the young men who retained the old family name from which he had descended, Alexander Caldwell, emigrated south in the days of Cromwell and joined the "Friends" under Cromwell with other Caldwell families in their schemes of ambition in attaining places of honor and trust under the government of the Cromwell's. But after Cromwell's death and the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II of England (1630-1685), they were banished, and this portion of the family also fled to America, forming colonies, one in Virginia, one in New Jersey, one in New York, and one in Philadelphia. One Family Historian writes: Joseph, John, Andrew, and David of Cauldwell, went with Oliver Cromwell to Ireland, of which he was Lord Governor, after he was promoted to the Protectorship of England. They remained in his interest in Ireland, until the restoration of the crown under Charles II, when John, David and Andrew fled to America. Joseph died in Ireland, Daniel continued there; but several of his children emigrated to America and helped form colonies at James River, Rhode Island and Philadelphia. Before immigrating, however, he (Alexander) confided to a family relative who had come from the old estate of Solway Firth, of the defeat of the Caldwell family and determined to make her his bride. Her name was Mary of Cauldwell, a distinct relative but too distant to form a barrier to a closer union. After a short aquaintance and a shorter courtship, they were married in Wales and the family emigrated to America with one brother of the groom (David) and two brothers of the bride, John and Andrew, both young men. They landed at Philadelphia and formed a colony, but poverty had overtaken the Caldwell family at the time of their emigration to America and instead of the wealth and honor with which they were surrounded in the palmy days of the Cromwell's they had now become exiles and had been hunted throughout England for their lives, which made it necessary for them to go into self-banishment for personal safety. These were dark days for the Caldwell families, and they had to sell themselves to the ship master to gain their passage over to America. The ship master in turn had to hire them out to service in Philadelphia to such as he could find, to pay their passage. This service, however, they accomplished with faithfullness and hearty good will, without a murmur, and when accomplished were glad to call themselves "Free men of America." And this freedom they ever afterwards maintained at the point of the sword and the mouth of the cannon and when kings and tyrants from the "mother country" sent armies to America to again subject them to vassalage, their breasts were bare to the conflict and, like Cromwell, their relative and preceptor, their war cry was "down with the tyrant." They fought through the war of the revolution in the cause of liberty. So we learn that the Caldwell families from the old estate in Scotland, known as the Cauldwell Estate, are numerous in America. Not only was Oliver Cromwell and many other members of the Revolution in England (of which he was head and leader) members of our family, but also Queen Elizabeth of England (1558-1603) is of the same family. Thomas H. Caldwell tells us that his mother, Mrs. Elenor Caldwell once had in her possesion a gold chain that belonged to Queen Elizabeth, and had been handed down through many generations but was lost during Mrs. Caldwell's lifetime. She was much grieved over the circumstance, of course. Our ancestors were descendants of Alexander Cauldwell; Oliver Cromwell, a descendant of Oliver, the younger brother; and John Caldwell Calhoun of South Carolina from the eldest brother John. Although our friends at the time of landing in Scotland were probably not religious, yet being raised up by Protestant parentage gave them partiality to that form of doctrine and church policy taught by John Knox, the great Scotish reformer. And settling among the Scottish people, a people preeminently religious and of the strictest order of faith, Presbyterianism, they were not long in falling in with the sentiments and religious views of their new neighbors. They no doubt also found their future partners for life among the daughters of that clime, reared and brought up within the pale of the church and deeply imbued with the principles and doctrines of the Presbyterian church. Thus the new generations became so thoroughly Presbyterian that in successive ages they have shown their attachment to the Presbyterian all their settlements, wherever they have gone. And ministers of the gospel, elders, deacons and numerous church members have been among their latest descendants. Our forefathers personally were men of stately mien and large physique and possessed of bright, open, and iteeligent countenances; were of dark skin, deep pentrating eyes, high rolling smooth foreheads, were affable and genial in their own manners, friendly and accomodating in their disposition and were disposed to be talkative and generous to a fault. Although naturally dark complexion, in mingling with the "blue-eyed belles of Scotland" through thirteen generations, the younger generations have shown many instances of the fair hair and blue eyes of the mother's family. Thus the blue eyes and the black eyes appear in almost every family. NOTE: Michael has several differing accounts of this narrative in his possesion and after having completed historical research has combined them forming the most accurate account he could determine in the process. The following is a quote from the first redition of this story which came into his possession: The information contained in the [above] historical sketch of the Caldwell family is based, in part, upon the memory and records which certains members of the family had many years ago. These records and histories were handed down and eventually came into the hands of John Caldwell Calhoun. He had them in his possession the remainder of his life. Then in 1852, after his death, E. N. Rogers of Franklin, Tennessee (another relative) transmitted these records and documents to the Tennessee Nashville Banner for publication, and for the first time, these records were made public. A copy of the paper found its way to Montgomery City, Montgomery County, Missouri, and to Mr. J. Caldwell of Mongomery City. He in turn loaned them to Newton Gamble Caldwell who loaned a copy to Thomas H. Caldwell. From this paper, Thomas H. Caldwell, wrote an historical sketch of the Caldwell family." A somewhat different version of this account is also on microfilm at the Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. That version is very detailed and includes significant reference to historical events of the same time period. Additional historical research has been conducted by Michel and the three sources combined to form this current narrative. Michael R. Caldwell 3598 S. Centennial Rd. Magna, Utah 84044 (801)250-7928
~1735 - <1773
Ann
Caldwell
38
38
~1695
Joseph?
Caldwell
~1755 - 1844
Joseph
Caldwell
89
89
~1753
James
Caldwell
~1695
John
Caldwell
1813 - 1843
Austin
Caldwell
29
29
1817 - <1886
James
Monroe
Caldwell
69
69
~1825
Mariah
Donnelly
1844 - 1908
Jane
Elizabeth
Caldwell
64
64
Elizabeth
Trail
~1820
Rhoda
Caldwell
~1822
Elizabeth
Caldwell
~1824
John
Caldwell
~1763 - ~1845
Augustine
(Austin)
Akers
82
82
Sources: Descendants of Austin (Augustine) Akers http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~banyantree/austindesc.html Augustine Austin Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William, William) was born about 1763 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1, 3, 5, 6) and died about 1845 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 3). On 7 September 1780 at the Chesterfield Co., Virginia Courthouse he entered the Revolutionary Army for a period of 18 months (1: Mentions Chestervield Co., Virginia Enlistment Rolls and Virginia Gazette), but in the Virginia Gazette on 18 November 1780 Brigadier General P. Muhlenburg advertised that Cpl. Valentine Akers and Augustine Akers had deserted camp (1). He married Rhoda Thompson on 9 February 1785 in Montgomery Co., Virginia by Richard Whitt (1: mentions Therese A. Fisher, Ed., "New River Valley (VA) Marriages, Heritage Books, Bowie MD, 1991, 3). She was born 23 October 1765 (3). Earl Akers lists the same date 23 October, but in 1767 and lists a Diary of Archibald Thompson as his source. Perhaps this was a blood relation to his wife? Further research needed. Rhoda Thompson died in Montgomery Co., Virginia (3). Notes from Correspondence with Earl Akers, Sr. (1): Commonwealth vs Austin Akers. "Montgomery County, to wit: to the jurors of the Commonwealth upon them oath present, that Austin Acres late of the parish of Montgomery and County aforesaid, on the first of Oct. in the year of our Lord 1793, at the parish and County aforesaid, unlawfully and willfully did sell the flesh of a sheep then and there bury dead of disease, to a certain William Terry against the form of the statute is such case proved against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth. William Terry, Tavernkeeper of the Town of Christiansburg and County of Montgomery - Prosecutor A TRUE BILL" Summons - Austin Akers and Jno. Elswick to testify at July Court on behalf of Valentine Akers vs Isaac Bates (Same 7 July 1796 & 1 Oct. 1796) Wm. Terry for Commonwealth vs Austin Akers Trespassing - founded on selling unwholesome flesh Damage 50 lb. Summoned as witnesses - Joseph Willson, Martha Luster, Nelly, Wm., Eliz., Abner Luster; Jacob Elswick, Jessee Simpkins, Archibald Thompson, & Christena Walters 320 acres, Mill Creek, from Josrph Fifer to Austin Akers for 100 lb Sold 100 acres on Mill Creek to Ezekiel Howard for 50 lb Land Transact 1: December 02, 1788, Montgomery Co VA (10) Land Transact 2: August 02, 1790, Montgomery Co VA (10) Misc 1: October 01, 1793, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 2: March 07, 1794, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 3: June 14, 1795, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 4: June 10, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Children of Augustine Akers and Rhoda Thompson are: 41. Didamia Akers 42. William A. Akers 43. Elizabeth Akers 44. Josiah Akers 45. Jonathan Akers 46. Delilah Akers 47. Bird Akers 48. Levicey Akers 49. James Akers
1767
Rhoda
Thompson
1785
William
Augustine
Akers
1789 - 1869
Josiah
Akers
80
80
Descendants of Austin (Augustine) Akers http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~banyantree/austindesc.html
1790 - 1855
Jonathan
Akers
64
64
~1795
Sarah
Cole
~1820
Sarah
Akers
1793 - 1884
Delilah
Akers
90
90
~1797 - ~1844
Didamia
Akers
47
47
1800 - 1867
Lovicy
Akers
67
67
~1804 - <1880
James
Akers
76
76
1796 - 1851
Anthony
Wayne
Sanders
54
54
Anthony and Lovicy settled at Henry County, Indiana in 1831 after living in Clark County, Ohio from 1820 to 1831, following their marriage in Christainsburg, Va.
1820
Flemon
Sanders
1823
James
Sanders
1823
John
Anthony
Sanders
1824
William
Sanders
1826
Thomas
Sanders
1828
Rhoda
Sanders
1830
Elizabeth
Jane
Sanders
1833
Diadama
Sanders
1835
Lovicy
Sanders
1838
Francis
Marion
Sanders
1842
George
Washington
Sanders
1845
Christopher
Columbus
Sanders
~1731 - 1786
Thomas
Blackburn
Akers
55
55
1. Blackburn Akers, Sr. (William, William, William) was born about 1731 - 1740 (1, 4) possibly in Albemarle Co., Virginia (5, 6) or Montgomery Co., Virginia (3) and died about 1786 - 1799 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 4). Sources 1, 2, 3, all state he died about 1786 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 2, 3), but data has also been seen for 1797 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (5, 6). Earl B.Akers, Sr. listed a Military date of March 31, 1781 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1). It is possible he may have served in Revolution and may have filed or received a pension on this date. Several Miscellaneous (Misc 1 - 11 in Notes section) dates were included with Earl B. Akers' correspondence before he died. They are listed in the notes section. It is unknown what they pretain to, but further research into Montgomery Co., Virginia records may prove fruitful in their discovery. For each of the miscellaneous dates he has "Montgomery Co., Virginia - The First Hundred Years" by Judge C. W. Crush as his source. I have been thusfar unable to obtain a copy to look at this source and it may provide the answer to what these dates pretain to. However, it is my belief that they pretain to either Land or Court records as there are several listed in the notes from him but no dates were given. He married Susannah Blackburn in about 1755 in Virginia (5,6), daughter of John Blackburn and Elizabeth (MNU). Note Earl B. Akers, Sr. has her only as ? Blackburn (1). She was born about 1730 in Virginia (5,6) and died about 1785 in Virginia (5,6). Notes for Blackburn Akers, Sr. (Unless otherwise noted from (source 1)) Misc 1: September 13, 1777, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 2: Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 3: 1771 (1) Misc 4: October 17, 1787, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 5: September 04, 1794, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 6: 1795, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 7: November 06, 1795, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 8: April 06, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 9: September 12, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 10: October 05, 1797, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 11: October 03, 1799, Montgomery Co VA (1) Witnessed the will of John Mossum, recorded in Cumberland Co. VA Will book 1, page 97, 7 Oct 1754. Shown on 1782 Montgomery Co VA personal property tax list with one tithe, eight cattle. Shown on the 1782 Montgomery Co VA land tax list with twenty acres, value seven pounds, ten shillings; tax one shilling six pence. On the unfit-for-duty list of the militia company of Captain Daniel Trigg, indicating he was 50 years of age. sworn to Allegiance to the American cause on the head of Little River, Botetourt Co , later Fincastle and then Montgomery Co VA. Walter Crockett vs. Blackburn Akers et al. Blackburn Akers and John Bishop held & bound unto Walter Crockett, Sheriff, the sum of 12 lb 11 shillings. (This stems from a suit of John Plank vs. estate of Blackburn Akers for the sum of 6 lb 5 shilling 6 pence. Note was signed by Blackburn Akrs and John Bishop. jno. Bishop signed in German. Witnessed by Marthy (?) Akers and Nancy Akers. William Hall vs Blackburn Akers - by acct. Blackburn Akers owes Hall 2 lb 12 shillings. Ingles & Russell vs Blackburn Akers. Blackburn Akers owes 7 lbs 14 shillings 5 pence & 5 lb damage. Note signed by Akers 29 Mar 1794 promised to pay 6 lb 17 shilling 4 pence on demand. This went on from 24 Mar 1794 to 1799. Many papers never served "for lack of time" and "for want of men". Note on back of one paper says "keep of by the force of arms". (kept off). Herd's Execs. vs Blackburn Akers, debtor to Mordecai Herd $3.00 for salt. summoned in Messenger Lewis vs Blackburn Acors for a note dated 11 May 1793 for 3 lb. John Van Lear vs Blackburn Akers et al. Owed 8 lb 16 sh & costs (et al was Samuel Merriday who was on Blackburn's bond). Geo. Taylor & Co. vs Blackburn Akers - note for 4 lb 6 shilling 1 penny for value recd. To appear in court Dec. 7, 1796. Ingles & Russell vs Blackburn Akers for 5 lb damages & 7 lb 14 sh - to appear in ct. Dec 3, 1795 John Van Lier (Lear) vs Blackburn Akers 8 lb 16 sh & damage 5 lb owed on April 2, 1793 Notes for Susannah Blackburn or ? Blackburn (1): Evidence indicates Unknown Blackburn was a daughter of John Blackburn II, making her and Blackburn Akers first cousins (1) Children of Blackburn Akers and Susannah Blackburn are: 2. Solomon Akers, Sr. 3. Jonathan Akers 4. John B. Akers 5. Valentine Akers 6. Augustine Austin Akers 7. William Akers 8. Claybourne Akers 9. Martha Akers 10. Jacob Akers 11. Blackburn Akers, Jr. 12. Susannah Akers 13. Adam Akers, Sr.
~1756
Solomon
Akers
Solomon Akers, Sr. (Blackburn, William, William, William) was born about 1756 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1, 3, 5, 6) although some evidence suggests he was born in Albemarle Co., Virginia (1) and died after April 1817 in Floyd Co., Kentucky (5,6,7). Earl Akers said that Solomon died about 1820 in Floyd Co., Kentucky (1), but Sonia Kinback stated a date as late as 1847 in Virginia (3). He married ? Lorton about 1780 in Virginia (1, 3, 5), a daughter of Jacob Lorton. She was born about 1750 Possibly in Virginia (5), but at least one source states 1750-1763 in Virginia (6) and Sonia Kinback said her birth occurred as late as 1763 (3) and died after July 1810 in Floyd Co., Kentucky (5, 6). Earl Akers said that her death occurred as late as 1848 (1, 3). Notes from Correspondence with Earl Akers (1): On the 1782 Montgomery Co VA personal property tax list with one tithe, one horse and three cattle. On the 1782 land tax list with twenty acres , value five pounds and tax one shilling. Solomon Akers vs Israel Lorton, admr. of Jacob Lorton - Trespassing - damage 12 lb Grizel Giles, Exor. vs Solomon Akers - debt due 2 lb 15 sh 4 pence - satisfied Solomon Akers vs David Branham - trespassing/assault/battery - damage $1000 - not executed by order of Solomon Akers - case dismissed Military: Virginia Frontier (1: lists Library of Virgina Electronic Card Index and Ruby (May) Foster Sanders) Misc 1: October 05, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: lists Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers and Ruby (May) Foster Sanders.) Misc 2: 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: Lists Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers and Ruby (May) Foster Sanders.) Misc 3: April 1798, Montgomery Co VA (1: Lists Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers and Ruby (May) Foster Sanders.) Unknown children listed in some sources: 1. unknown Female b. abt. 1794 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (5, 6) 2. unknown Female b. abt. 1799 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (5, 6) 3. unknown female b. abt. 1806 in Floyd Co., Kentucky (5, 6) Children of Solomon Akers and ? Lorton are: 14. Lavina Akers 15. John Akers 16. Jonathan Akers 17. Priscilla Akers 18. David Akers 19. William J. Akers 20. Solomon Akers, Jr. 21. Rhoda Akers
1758 - ~1834
John
B.
Akers
76
76
John B. Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William) was born about 1758 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1, 5). The Church of Jesus Christ Latterday saints has birth as 21 March 1758 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (6), Sonia Kinback reported same date but in Franklin Co., Virginia (3). He died about 1834 in Franklin Co., Virginia (1), note source 5 and 6 state death occurred after 1834 in Franklin Co., Virginia (5, 6). In 1832, John B. Akers applied for a Revolutionary War Pension (1). He married Anne Jefferies 21 March 1785 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1: mentions Campbell Co., Virginia Marriage Records, 3). Abner Lee was the surety on marriage bond found in Birmingham Co., Virginia (1). She was of age at the time of the Marriage bond as it states she was "of age" (1), sources point to possible birth between 1760 (5) and 1764 (1). She died before or about 1833 possibly in Virginia (1, 5). Children of John Akers and Anne Jefferies are: 25. Thomas Akers 26. Burwell Akers 27. Elizabeth Akers 28. Joel O. Akers 29. James Akers 30. Stephen Grover Akers 31. Luke Akers 32. Fleming Akers
~1762 - ~1834
Valentine
Akers
72
72
Valentine Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William) was born about 1762 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1, 2, 3, 5) and died about 1834 in Floyd Co., Kentucky (1). This is only estimated death date, but we know from census records that he died between 1830 and 1840 as his wife is listed as head of the house in 1840 (see notes). In 1777 Montgomery Co., Virginia he was Sworn to the State in Captain McCorkle's militia company (1: Mentions Montgomery Co., Virginia - The First Hundred Years by Judge C. W. Crush). On 7 September 1780 at the Chesterfield Co., Virginia Courthouse he entered the Revolutionary Army for a period of 18 months (1: Mentions Chestervield Co., Virginia Enlistment Rolls and Virginia Gazette), but in the Virginia Gazette on 18 November 1780 Brigadier General P. Muhlenburg advertised that Cpl. Valentine Akers and Augustine Akers (probably his brother) had deserted camp (1). He married Frances Branham in Virginia (1) some sources state this occurred about 1784 (5, 6), the daughter of David Branham and Frances Baskett. Her surname is sometimes confused with that of her mother, listing her as Frances Baskett instead of Branham (6), but research has shown that Branham is the correct surname. She was born 3 February 1770 in Virginia (1, 2, 3, 9 p 8), but some sources list her birth as about 1765 (5, 6) and died about 1850 in Floyd Co., Kentucky (1, 9 p 8). It is probable that she died between 1840 and 1850 in Floyd Co., Kentucky as she cannot be found in any household in the 1850 census either as the head or listed in one of her children's houses (see notes). Notes from Correspondence from Earl Akers, Sr.(1): Valentine Akers vs Isaac Bates to answer petition - acct due Akers 3 lb 10 sh - 1 cow & calf. Summoned in behalf of above case on 10 June 1796 - Austin Akers and John Elswick for testimony at July court - & Oct ct. Valentine Akers vs Eli Peterson for appearing in court in defense of Peterson vs Wm. Hall - $5.43 paid to Valentine Akers John Preston vs Valentine Akers. Owed 4 lb 5 sh on note to Preston dated 14 Aug 1791 - "I, Valentine Akers of Little River do promise to pay, etc - 42 sh 6 pence on demand. Signed by his mark and witnessed by Blackburn Akers (signed by him) Miscellaneous dates listed in notes given by Earl Akers (1: Mentions Montgomery Co., Virginia Miscellaneous Papers and "Montgomery Co., Virginia - The First Hundred Years" by Judge C. W. Crush) Misc 1: March 23, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 2: January 28, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1) Misc 3: October 03, 1799, Montgomery Co VA (1) Land Transact 1: on Dry Branch, New River, Little River, Montgomery County Virginia (1: Mentions VA Land Office Treasury Warrant and Montgomery Co VA - The First Hundred Years, by Judge C.W. Crush.) Virginia Land Office Treasury Warrant number 18,405 was issued 6 August 1783. The warrant was applied to a fifty acre tract lying and being in the County of Montgomery on Little River, the waters of New River bounded as followeth: Beginning at a white oak and a black oak, on the bank of the River by the mouth of a branch and running thence North sixty four degrees West fifty four poles to a white oak on the side of a ridge, South nine degrees East one hundred and sixteen poles to two pines on a ridge, South eleven degrees East forty eight poles to a red oak, South thirty degrees West fifty nine poles to a white oak and hickory sapling by the bank of the River and up the several courses of the River to the beginning. With it's appurtances; to have and to hold the said tract or parcel of land with it's appurt==ance, to the said Valentine Akers, and his Heirs forever. In witness whereof the said Valentine Brooke Esquire Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia hath hereunto set his Hand and Caused the lesser seal of the said Common==wealth to be affixed at Richmond, on the twenty ninth day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety one and of the Commonwealth the twenty first. ROBERT BROOKE (This certificate was miswitten, inserting the name Valentine instead of Robert as the Governor.) Land Transact 2: November 09, 1830, Mud Creek, Floyd County, Kentucky (1: Mentions Floyd Co KY Records, Indentures., and Montgomery Co VA - The First Hundred Years, by Judge C.W. Crush.) fifty acres to Thomas Howell: THIS INDENTURE, made and entered into this 9th day of November, 1830, between Valentine Akers, of the County and State of Kentucky, of the one part and Thomas Howell, of the same County and State of the other part. WITNESSETH; That the said Valentine Akers for and in consideration of the sum of $100 to him in hand paid the receipt hereof is hereby acknowledged hath bargained and sold unto the said Thomas Howell his heirs &c, one tract or parcel of land, lying in Floyd County and on Mud Creek, containing 50 Acres be the same more or less and bounded as followeth, Viz: BEGINNING at corner 5, pointers S.24.W.100 po. to a white oak S.72..E.76 po. to a beech S.1.W.106 po.to a beech; thence a straight line crossing the creek to a corner 41 a (written above a ^ signis this ' lynn: S.50.E.39 po. to a pointersL N.62.W. 74 po. to ') a sugar tree N.5.W. 56 po. to a sugar tree with all woods and ways, water & water courses, fences, houses, orchards and all other emoulments appertaining or in any wise belonging thereunto TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the same to him the said Thomas Howell his heirs &c but do warrant and defend the same against me my heirs &c against me and my heirs &c against John Preston his heirs &c against David Morgan his heirs &c and all other persons claiming under us or either of us. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day and date above written. his Valentine X Akers {seal} mark her FrancisX Akers {seal} mark Ackd. In presence of Caleb Justice Thomas Crance Turner Branham FLOYD COUNTY COURT CLERK'S OFFICE: 26 Apr 1831 I, Jacob Mayo, Clerk of the Court for the County aforesaid, do hereby certify that the within deed was this day produced to me and proven by the oaths of Caleb Justice and Thomas Crance two of the subscribing witnesses to be the hand and seal act and deed of the within named Valentine Akers and that the same is duly recorded in my office according to law. att. Jacob Mayo C.F.C.C. Census Records: 1810 Census of Floyd Co., Kentucky Akers, Valentine 3 males 0-9, 1 male 10-15, 1 male 45+, 2 females 0-9, 1 female 10-15, 1 female 16-25, 1 female 45+ 1820 Census of Floyd Co., Kentucky Akers, Valentine 1 male 16-18, 2 males 16-26, 1 male 45+, 2 females 10-16, 1 female 45+, 4 engaged in Agriculture 1830 Census of Floyd Co., Kentucky page 163, line 17 Akers, Valentine 1 male 5-9, 1 male 60-69, 1 female 60-69 1840 Census of Floyd Co, Kentucky page 252, line 15 Akers, Francis 1 female 70-80, no others listed in household Unknown children listed in notes: Unknown Daughter Akers born about 1808 of Kentucky (5, 6) Children of Valentine Akers and Frances Branham are: 33. Elizabeth Akers 34. Frances Akers 35. William Akers 36. David Daniel Akers 37. Thomas Blackburn Akers 38. Rhoda Akers 39. Susannah Akers 40. Sarah Akers
~1765 - 1815
Claybourne
Akers
50
50
Claybourne Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William) was born about 1765 in Virginia (3), although Earl Akers mentioned that he thought it was before 1765 (1) and some sources state about 1764 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (5, 6). He died before February 1815 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (3). Earl Akers stated that he thought he died before July 1814 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1: Lists Dr. H. Brackin). He married Elizabeth Thompson on 17 April 1789 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 3, 8, 11, 12). John Thompson was the surety (1). She was born about 1769 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (3), Earl lists her birth as 3 December 1770 (1: Lists Diary of Archibald Thompson). Notes from Correspondence with Earl Akers (1): Appraisal of estate in Feb 1815 Montgomery Co VA court. Will Book 2, page 281. Claiborne & Elizabeth, his wife, vs Thos Lewis and Eliz., his wife - damages by trespassing - 500 lb (for slanderous words) Claiborne & Elizabeth, his wife, vs Thos Lewis and Eliz., his wife - Damage by trespassing -500 lb (for slanderous words) "slanderous words spoken of Plaintiff, Eliz. Akers, by Defendant, Eliz. Lewis." Meredith Akers, an infant, and by Claiborne Akers, his father and next friend, vs Thos Lewis and Eliz., his wife - Damage $500 for slanderous words Claiborne Akers vs David Dennison - trespassing and assault and battery - damage $1000 Claiborne and wife & Blackburn Akers sued by Thos. Lewis & wife - "not executed for want of time." Claiborne sued by Thos. Lewis et al - counter suit to the slanderous words, etc. - damage sued for $1000 Claiborne vs Thos Lewis - "slanderous words to defame Elizabeth Akers" Samuel anghorn summoned to speak on behalf of Claiborne Akers and wife Children of Claybourne Akers and Elizabeth Thompson are: 52. Susan Akers 53. Burton Akers 54. Meredith Thompson Akers 55. Betsy Akers 56. Simpson Akers 57. Gideon Akers 58. Larkin Akers 59. Araminta Akers 60. Julia Ann Akers
~1766
Martha
(Patty)
Akers
Martha Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William) was born about 1766 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 3) or about 1767 in or around Buckingham Co., Virginia (6). She married Elswick Thompson on 27 November 1788 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1: Mentions New River Valley (VA) Marriages, Heritage Books, Bowie MD, 1991 and Montgomery Co., VA Marriage bonds, 3). Blackburn Akers was the Surety on the marriage bond (1). He is listed at Ancestry.com as the son of Archibald Thompson and Mary Elswick. He was born about 1764 (3), Earl Akers using the Diary of Archibald Thompson as a source stated the birth occurred on 13 October 1764 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1). Children of Martha Akers and Elswick Thompson are: 61. Mary Thompson 62. Elisha Thompson 63. Claiborne Thompson 64. Andrew Thompson 65. William Thompson 66. Archibald Thompson 67. Joshua Thompson 68. Lewis Thompson 69. Blackburn Thompson 70. Henry Thompson 71. Harmon Thompson 72. Elizabeth Thompson
1757
Jonathan
Akers
Jonathan Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William) was born 29 May 1757 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (3). Earl Akers at one time said he was born after 1765 in Montgomery Co., Virginia, but later stated same date as mentioned in source 3 (1). Another date is given in source 5 as about 1770 of Buckingham Co., Virginia (5). He died 11 December 1827 in Montgomery Co., VA (1, 3). Again several miscelaneous dates were given in correspondence with Earl Akers, Sr. and are listed in the notes section (1). He married Hannah Howard 25 March 1795 in Montgomery Co., VA (1, 3, 8), Jeremiah Pate and Blackburn Akers were surety. She was born about 1770 (1, 3). Notes from Correspondence with Earl Akers, Sr. (1): Jonathan Akers vs John Stephens - due part price of a cow $6.00 Jonathan Akers vs John Stephens - due part price of a cow $6.00 (second occasion) Jonathan Akers vs John Henry - 2 lb balance of note; same on 28 Aug 1799 - $2.00 cash and 12.0; same on 12 Nov 1799 and on back of paper is 90, 30, 26, 25, 40= 3.10 (may be costs or balance due) Jonathan Akers vs John Wright - 8 days attendance as a witness of John Wright in case vs Israel Lorton $4.24 and costs 18 cents - satisfied before trial date Allen & Reed vs Jonathan Akers 15 lb 12 sh and damages of 5 lb. (debt) Francis Charlton went his bail and signed F C Allen & Reed, agts of Thomas Owens vs Jonathan Akers and Francis Charlton, his bail - 15 lb 12 sh to be discharged on payment on payment of 7 lb 17 sh with interest from Nov. 1st 1798 and costs Misc 1: Bef. September 1799, Montgomery Co VA (1: mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 2: 1790, Montgomery Co VA (1: mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 3: September 12, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 4: 1798, Montgomery Co VA (1: mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 5: July 05, 1799, Montgomery Co VA (1: mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 6: September 08, 1799, Montgomery Co VA (1: mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Children of Jonathan Akers and Hannah Howard are: 22. Matilda Akers 23. Clarissa Akers 24. James A. Akers
~1774 - ~1859
Susannah
Akers
85
85
~1772 - >1850
Jacob
Akers
78
78
Jacob Akers (Blackburn, William, William, William, William) was born about 1772 in or around Buckingham Co., Virginia (5, 6). Earl has his birth after 1765 (1), possibly about 1775 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 3). He died after 1850 (1, 3). He married (1) Ruth Howard on 21 December 1791 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1, 3, 8). Boling Rodgers was surety (1). She was born about 1766 (1) and died before 1815 (3). Earl Akers listed her death as about 1815 in Indiana (1). He married (2) Catherine Rupe on 27 June 1815 in Carroll Co., Virginia (3). Earl Akers has marriage on 22 June 1815 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (1: mentions Lois Johnsten with Cousins, "Roop/Rupe Family," Private, Ravenna NE, June 1998, 8). Henry Rupe was surety (1). She was born about 1795 in Carroll Co., Maryland (3). Earl Akers has her born same year but in Baltimore Co., Maryland (1: mentions correspondence with Chuck Jennings <moocow@@megspo.megsinet.net> and Lois Johnsten with Cousins, "Roop/Rupe Family", private, Ravenna NE, Jun 1988, p. 2) and died before 1850 (1: mentions correspondence with Chuck Jennings, 3). Notes from Correspondence with Earl Akers (1): Jacob Akers vs Henry Pickelseimer for 2 days attendance at sale of Geo. Griffith for Henry Pickelseimer - 1.0.6 and costs of 72 cents - - not found Jacob Akers vs Henry Pickelseimer for 2 days witness for Pickelseimer vs Geo. Griffith - 1.0.6 and costs of 54 cents Same as 12 Sep 1796 and costs of 36 cents same as 12 Sep 1796 and $271 - $162 noted on back Misc 1: November 21, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 2: September 12, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 3: October 05, 1796, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Misc 4: January 04, 1797, Montgomery Co VA (1: Mentions Montgomery Co VA Miscellaneous Papers) Children of Jacob Akers and Ruth Howard are: 73. William Akers 74. Elizabeth Akers 75. Hannah Akers 76. Susan Akers 77. James Akers 78. Howard Akers 79. Samuel Akers 80. Tolbert Akers Children of Jacob Akers and Catherine Rupe are: 81. Alsace Lorraine Akers 82. Martha Akers 83. Lynch Akers 84. Samuel Akers 85. Sophia Akers 86. Mary Akers 87. Catherine J. Akers
~1777 - 1859
Blackburn
Akers
82
82
Suzannah
Skaggs
~1789
Adam
Akers
~1791
William
Blackburn
Akers
~1794
Greenberry
Akers
~1794
James
Joseph
Akers
~1796
Bird
Akers
~1706 - ~1796
William
III
Akers
90
90
William Akers, III (William, William, William) was born before 1706 (1, 3), probably after February 1702 (2) and died after 1751 (1, 2, 3). Source 5 has his death as being about 1790 in Montgomery Co., Virginia (5). Earl Akers lists his death as about 1796 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1).. He married Susannah Blackburn about 1730 in Buckingham Co., Virginina (4, 5). She was the daughter of William Blackburn and Elizabeth Tye. She was born about 1712 (1, 2, 3) and died about 1808 (2, 3). The Church of Jesus Christ Latterday Saints has her death as being about 1790 in Virginia (4, 5). Earl Akers has her death as being about 1801 in Buckingham Co., Virginia (1). Notes: "William Akers III is the son of William Akers II, husband of Susannah Blackburn, father of Blackburn Akers, Sr., William E. Akers IV and John Akers. They lived in the portion of Albemarle Co VA which eventually became Buckingham Co VA and he died there in the late 1790s" (1) Signed Power of attorney on 12 Apr 1751 in Cumberland Co VA stating that both his grandfather, William Akers I and his father, William Akers II, were deceased. (Cumberland Co VA Deed book 1, page 324) The will of William Akers I signed 24 Feb 1702 precluded his son, William II, from having clear title to inherited land unless he had legitimate offspring. William II sold 98 acres to James Bougham, Jr. on 10 Apr 1706, establishing the birth of William III as being between those dates. The Buckingham Co VA personal property tax roll for 1796 lists "estate of William Akers." He is on the Southam Parish, Goochland County VA list as are his brothers-in-law, John, William and Lambeth Blackburn and John Mossum. for 175 acres on the North branch of the Willis River bounded by the land of William Blackburn. This land later became part of Buckingham Co. Children: 6. i. Blackburn Akers, Sr. 7. ii. William E. Akers, III 8. iii. John Akers
~1712 - ~1801
Susannah
Blackburn
89
89
17 JAN 1735/36 - 1836
William
IV
Akers
~1748
John
Akers
~1675 - ~1729
William
Blackburn
54
54
~1680 - >1729
Elizabeth
Tye
49
49
~1707
John
Blackburn
~1708
William
II
Blackburn
~1710
Elizabeth
Blackburn
~1710
Lambeth
Tye
Blackburn
~1665 - ~1728
Lambeth
Tye
63
63
Mary
~1695
Allen
Tye
~1697
Jean
Tye
~1645 - ~1757
John
Blackburn
112
112
WILL OF JOHN BLACKBURN CUMBERLAND COUNTY VIRGINIA WILL BOOK # 1, PAGE 139 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ In the name of God Amen the 17th day of July 1757. I John Blackbourn of Amelia Co. being sick and weak in body but of sound and perfect mind and memory thanks be to Almighty God for the same do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following that is to say First I commend my soul into the hands of Almighty God hoping through the merits death and passion of my Saviour Jesus Christ to have full and free pardon of all my sins, and to inherit everlasting life, and my body I commit to the earth to be decently buried at the discretion of my Executors hereafter named and as t____ing the disposition of all such Temporal Estate it has pleased Almighty God to bestow upon me I give and dispose thereof as followeth First I will that my debts and funeral charges should be paid and discharged. Item. I give to my son William Blackborn my tract of land in Cumberland County it being 400 acres and lying on the branches of Fighting Creek to him and his heirs forever. Item. I give to my son James Blackborn the half of my tract of land lying in Albemarle County taking in the old plantation to him and his heirs forever. Item. I give the other half of my tract of land in Albemarle County to Solomon Akers Son of Blackburn Akers after his said Father's death to him the said Solomon Akers and his heirs forever. Item. I give to my brother Lambuthie Blackburn two hundred and fifty acres of land in Albemarle County adjoining his land wherein he now lives he not to debar my son James from getting timber from the said land nor to debar the heirs of my son James from the same. Item. I give to my son William after my wife Elizabeth's death or marriage my negroe Pompe. Item. I give to my son James one negroe woman that is to (be) bought after my death with the money due to him from sundry persons but my will is that my wife shall have the use of the said negroe when bought during her life in widowhood and after my wife's death the increase of the said negroe woman to be equally divided between my two sons. Item. I give the remainder of my estate to my loving wife Elizabeth, to be at her disposal. My will is that no appraisement be made of my estate and I constitute and appoint my loving wife Elizabeth and Wm. Maxey my Executors to this my last will and testament. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal to this my last will and testament the day and year above mentioned. John Blackburn Wm. Finney John Gibbs At a court held in Cumberland County the 26th of Sept. 1757 deed was proved and ordered recorded. Source: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~banyantree/jbburn.html Your comments, corrections or additions are welcome. E-mail Ebasr@@aol.com
Elizabeth
~1681
James
Blackburn
~1650
Lambuthie
Blackburn
~1670 - <1751
William
II
Akers
81
81
. William Akers, II (William) was born before 1683 in Virginia (1) and died before 1751 (1). He married Ann (MNU) before April 10, 1706 (1). Source 5 states about 1698 in Virginia for the marriage date (5). She was born about 1675 in Virginia (4, 5). Notes: "William Akers II is the son mentioned in the will of William I, where he was prohibited from inheriting land until he had legitimate offspring. He was married to Anne and was dead by 1751"(1). Birth date constructed based on the fact William witnessed the will of John Bougham on 2 Jan 1697 and of Alexander Durham on 8 Jan 1697. Minimum age for witnesses at that time was fourteen years. (1) William Akers III signed an affiavit in 1751 in Cumberland Co. VA stating that his grandfather, William I, and his father, William II, were deceased. Therefore William Akers, II died before 1751. (1) 98 acres of inherited land on main swamp of Piscataway Creek to James Bougham, Jr., for 2000 pounds tobacco. Adjoins Acres (Akers') Spring Branch and Brown's Swamp.Recorded in Essex Co. VA Deed book 10, page 216-217. Ann's name from Dower rights relinquished and recorded 10 April 1706 in conjunction with sale of 98 acres on Piscataway Swamp to James Bougham, Jr. This also proves that the marriage occurred before April 10, 1706 and they had at least one legitimate heir as William Akers, II was not able to claim his inherited land until he had one as stated in his father's will. Children: 4. i. William Akers, III
~1675
Ann
~1640 - ~1702
William
I
Akers
62
62
1. William Akers, Sr. was born before 1645 in England (1), Source 5 states about 1640 for birth (5), and died about February 1701/02 in Essex Co., Virginia (1), Source 4 states about August 1702 in Essex Co., Virginia (4). He married Katherine (MNU) in Virginia (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). She was born before February 1657/58 (1), source 4 has her birth as about 1650 (4) and source 5 has her birth between 1650 and 1658 (5). She died before February 1701/02 (1) as she is not listed in his will. Notes: William Akers, Sr.'s "wife was Katherine who preceded him in death. He died in 1702 after Rappahannock Co VA was split into Richmond Co and Essex Co. Besides William II he and Katherine had a daughter Ann"(1). "In Feb. 1665 he received a land grant of 595 acres from Governor Berkely in Rappahannock Co. VA for transporting twelve persons to the colony. This would indicate his birth date was probably before 1645, probably in England" (1) "Will was probated in the Essex Co VA court on 10 Aug 1702 and recorded in Will Book 10 on page 118. Named in the will are son William, daughter Anne (Smith) and granddaughter Elizabeth Smith. The will was witnessed by Hannah Ratliff, Jno Lamore and Jame Boughan and proven by the latter two" (1). - Will of William Akers written: 24 February 1702, probated 10 August 1702. (Essex County Virginia Deeds, Wills, etc. Book 10 (1699 - 1702) Page 118. Katherine's name was determined from the power of attorney to Thomas Gaines on February 3, 1679 in Essex Co., Virginia (Deed Book 6, pg. 99). Children: 2. i. William Akers, II 3. ii. Ann Akers ========================================================================== =================================== WILL OF WILLIAM AKERS Essex County Virginia Deeds, Wills, etc. Book 10 (1699 - 1702) Page 118 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ In the name of God Amen, I William Akues being sick of body but of perfect & Sound Memory praze be given to Allmighty God ffor the Same Do make and ordain this my last Will & Testament in manner & fform as follooth: First.....I Give & Bequeath my Solle to Allmighty God that Gave it to me hoping throue the Death & Merit of my Lords and Savor Jessus Christs to Etarnelle happiness after this painfull Life is Ended & my body to the Earth from whence it came to be descently buried at the hands of my Executor & Administrator named. FFIRST.....I Give & Bequeath all my land to my son William Akers & his heirs forever But if my sd son shall Be without issue off his body Lawfully begotten then its my will & desire that all my Land as shall gone to my Granddaughter Elizabeth Smith & her heirs forever. SECONDLY.....My will & desire is that my Dauffter Anne Smith shall live upon and have the use of my Plantation & all my land from my Spring Branch to the land of Richd Jones during her natural liffe. & THIRDLY.....My will & desire is that all my personal Estate shall be equally Divided Between my son William Akers and my Daffter Ann Smith & her heirs forever, Leaving & Ordering my son William Akers & my Daffter Ann Smith my holle & solle Executors of this my Lafte Will and Testament. As witness my hand & seale this 24 day of ffbury 1702 his William WA Akers mark Signed & Sealed in the presence of us Her hannah HR Ratliff Mark Jno Lamore James Boughan Prob'd in Essex County Court the 10th day of Augt 1702 by ye oath of James Boughan & John Lemore two of the witnesses thereto & truely recorded. Source: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~banyantree/wma1desc4.html Your comments, corrections or additions are welcome. E-mail Ebasr@@aol.com
BEF FEB 1657/58 - BEF FEB 1701/02
Katherine
~1677
Ann
Akers
Smith
~1702
Elizabeth
Smith
1864 - <1948
Joseph
Redford
Caldwell
84
84
1864
John
Morton
Caldwell
1849
Henry
Morton
Caldwell
1853
Andrew
Jackson
Caldwell
1851
Martha
(Mattie) B.
Caldwell
1854
Ernest
Caldwell
1855
Jennie
Caldwell
1857
Edith
Caldwell
~1845
B. W.
Patterson
Ernest
Patterson
Virgie
Patterson
~1860
Elma
Bryan
~1883
Luther
Caldwell
~1885
Jack
Caldwell
~1887
John
B.
Caldwell
~1889
William
Caldwell
~1891
Harriet
Caldwell
~1893
Irene
Caldwell
Ruby
Bradner
~1855
Kathleen
'Kate'
Bowden
~1880
Andrew
Bowden
Caldwell
Elizabeth
Steward
Horton
1874 - 1954
Helen
Lilley
Tyler
80
80
1829
Henry
Clay
Tyler
1833 - 1915
Cornelia
Elizabeth
Cusack
82
82
~1853
Alice
Tyler
~1856
Irene
Tyler
~1859
Mary
F.
Tyler
~1863
Cornelia
Tyler
~1866
Gertrude
Tyler
~1870
Edward
Tyler
~1855
Thomas
Elliot
~1883
Cornelia
Elliot
~1885
Mary
Elliot
~1887
Lucille
Elliot
Edgar
P.
Swain
~1881
Henry
Swain
~1883
Paul
Swain
~1885
Alene
Swain
~1887
Cornelia
Swain
~1860
James
Aranauh
Bardwell
~1890
James
Aranauh
Bardwell
~1892
Marjorie
Bardwell
~1894
Ruth
Bardwell
~1896
Cornelius
Bardwell
~1898
Elizabeth
Bardwell
~1860
Thomas
Eggleston
~1805 - 1867
James
William
Cusack
62
62
~1810
Jane
Cullen
~1835
Alice
Cusack
~1837
Irene
Cusack
Rachel
Cullen
1784
William
Nowlan
Tyler
1789
Mary
Frothingham
~1831
C. E.
Tyler
1746
Nathaniel
Frothingham
(VI) Nathaniel (5), son of Nathaniel (4) Frothingham, was born April 6, 1746. He was a coachmaker in Boston. This Nathaniel Frothingham was one of those patriots who took part in the Boston Tea Party, and disguised as Indians threw the tea overboard in Boston Harbor. In 1784 his father deeded him land on Main street. In 1785 he bought land with cellar of B. Bradish. He bought of Ebenezer Frothingham his levy on Soley & Stearns, and in 1801 he sold land to John Larkin. He married (first) May 16, 1771, Rebecca Austin. He married (second) December 22, 1785, Mary Townsend, who died October 12, 1800, aged forty-two (suicide). He married (third) May 2, 1804, Lydia Kettell. Children: Nathaniel, born 1779; Rebecca, 1781; Samuel, mentioned below; Mary, 1789; Susanna, 1792; Ruth, married John Redman, builder; others who died young. Series 1, New England Families Genealogical and Memorial, Page 82
1758 - 1800
Mary
Townsend
42
42
1787
Samuel
Frothingham
1791
Susannah
Frothingham
1793
Ruth
Frothingham
~1750
Rebecca
Austin
1779
Nathaniel
Frothingham
1781
Rebecca
Frothingham
~1760
Lydia
Kettell
1722 - 1791
Nathaniel
Frothingham
68
68
(V) Nathaniel (4), son of Nathaniel (3) Frothingham, was born June 2, 1722. He lived in Charlestown and Boston and was a coachmaker. In the shops at one period were four of the family bearing the name Nathaniel, each designated by some peculiar, significant term. He was taxed from 1756 to 1773. In 1746 his father deeded to him one-half house. In 1784 he deeded to his son Nathaniel a lot, and in 1786 he bought a house of Nathaniel and Hepzibah Rand. In 1788 he bought of Nathaniel Prentiss a house and one acre of land partly in Cambridge and partly in Charlestown. In 1796 his son Ebenezer with his heirs sold land to Page; Nathaniel Frothingham's executors in 1798 sold land to Nathaniel Prentiss, and also to John Page, and to Richard Frothingham in 1799. Nathaniel Frothingham married (first) March 1, 1743-44, Mary Whittemore, who died December 18, 1763, aged forty (gravestone). He married (second) in 1765. Ruth Taylor, who died October 12, 1800, aged sixty-one, and on the gravestone is written: "Husband and two wives were all buried here." He died in West street, Boston, March 14, 1791, aged sixty-nine. Children: Nathaniel, baptized February 24, 1744-45; Nathaniel, mentioned below; Richard, March 15, 1748; Mary, baptized July 14, 1754; Ebenezer, December 13, 1756; child, December 11, died December 12, 1758; Susanna, September 19, 1763; Katharine, May 14, died October 1, 1765; Thomas, November 30, 1767; Peter, November 24, 1775. Series 1, New England Families Genealogical and Memorial, Page 81
~1725 - 1763
Mary
Whittemore
38
38
24 FEB 1744/45 - 24 FEB 1744/45
Nathaniel
Frothingham
15 MAR 1747/48
Richard
Frothingham
1754
Mary
Frothingham
1756
Ebenezer
Frothingham
1758 - 1758
Infant
Frothingham
1763
Susanna
Frothingham
~1730
Ruth
Taylor
1765
Katherine
Frothingham
1767
Thomas
Frothingham
1775
Peter
Frothingham
1698 - 1749
Nathaniel
Frothingham
50
50
(IV) Nathaniel (3), son of Nathaniel (2) Frothingham, was born December 7, 1698, died May 7, 1749. aged fifty, according to his gravestone. He was taxed in 1727-48. In 1723 his father deeded to him a lot of land, and some purchases of other lands are recorded, as well as land which he sold. He was a painter. His widow was made administratrix, May 22, 1749, and the inventory amounted to one thousand four hundred and sixty-six pounds. He married, July 27, 1721, Susanna Whittemore. She married (second) Stephen Badger, in 1756. Children: Nathaniel, mentioned below; Joseph, born January 15, 1723-24; Susanna, October 23, 1725; Hannah, October 17, 1727; William, October 16, 1729; Jabez, July 23, 1731, died November 30, 1748; Jonathan, August 15, 1733; James, August 22, 1735. Series 1, New England Families Genealogical and Memorial, Page 81
~1702
Susanna
Whittemore
15 JAN 1723/24
Joseph
Frothingham
1725
Susanna
Frothingham
1727
Hannah
Frothingham
1729
William
Frothingham
1731
Jabez
Frothingham
1733
Jonathon
Frothingham
1735
James
Frothingham
~1700
Stephen
Badger
1671 - 1730
Nathaniel
Frothingham
59
59
Bunker and Thomas Ruck; west by E. Mellows and Abraham Pratt. He had eight other parcels of land on record. His will is dated September 31, 1651, and was proved February 6, 1652. The document itself has been in the possession of the family many years, though the records show that it was proved properly. He bequeathed his property to his wife, and the inventory places a value of fifty pounds on his house and orchard. His widow bought a house and land in Charlestown in 1656 of Grace Palmer. Her will, dated October 4, 1672, was proved October 6, 1674, bequeathing to her sons Samuel, J. Kettell, Peter and Nathaniel Frothingham, and Thomas White, who received her house orchard and barn. Children, born in Charlestown: Bethia, born February 7, 1631; John, August 10, 1633; Elizabeth, March 15, 1635; Peter, April 15, 1636; Mary, April 1, 1638; Nathaniel, mentioned below; Stephen, November 11, 1641; Hannah, March 29, 1642; Joseph, December 1, 1645; Samuel. (II) Nathaniel, son of William Frothingham, was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, April 16, 1640, died there December 12, 1688. His gravestone is preserved. He died the same day as his brother, Peter Frothingham. He joined the church with his wife, January 22, 1670-71. He lived in Charlestown and was granted two common rights there in 1681. He owned land on what is now called Bunker Hill. He was a legatee of the estate of William Croft, of Lynn, in 1689, or rather his eldest son was, together with the eldest children of his brother Peter. His estate was divided in 1708. He married, February 6, 1667, Mary Hett, and she married (second) in 1694, Samuel Kettell. Children: Mary, born September 25, 1668, died January 9, 1679; Nathaniel, April 16, 1670, died July 28 following; Nathaniel, mentioned below; Hannah, November 26, 1673, died young; Thomas, December 2, 1675; Joseph, October 31, 1677; Benjamin, December 26, 1679; Eliphalet, September 5, 1681; Mary, November 14, 1682; Hannah, May 30, 1685; Abigail, May 10, 1687; Abiel (daughter), May 26, 1689, died June 5, 1689. (III) Nathaniel (2), son of Nathaniel (1) Frothingham, was born July 2, 1671. He was admitted to the church with his wife, February 17, 1705-06. He was a carpenter. His name was on the tax lists of 1727 and 1729. In 1696, with his father's heirs, he deeded land to Kidder which had been inherited from his father. He bought of his brothers Benjamin and Thomas, in 1702, one-half house joining the north end of his father's house and land below, fifty-two feet broad, and in 1708 he bought of heirs of his father, one-third of an orchard. There are recorded also many other purchases made by him at different dates. His will was dated June 16, 1725-26, and proved August 24, 1730. He bequeathed to his wife and three daughters all the estate during his wife's life, and afterwards it was to be divided among all the children. On June 9, 1760, Benjamin Frothingham was appointed executor of his estate. He married, April 12, 1694. Hannah Rand, who died April 23, 1760, aged eighty-seven, according to her gravestone. He died July 31, 1730, aged fifty-nine (gravestone). Children: Hannah, born June 8, 1695, died August 15, 1714; Elizabeth, January 20, 1696-97; Nathaniel, mentioned below; Mary, January 19, 1700; Joseph, July 15, 1703; Sarah, December 8, 1705; Benjamin, April 6, 1708; Thomas, January 3, 1709-10; Ruth, August 10, 1712 Series 1, New England Families Genealogical and Memorial, Page 80
1673 - 1760
Hannah
Rand
87
87
1695
Hannah
Frothingham
20 JAN 1696/97
Elizabeth
Frothingham
19 JAN 1699/00
Mary
Frothingham
1703
Joseph
Frothingham
1705
Sarah
Frothingham
1708
Benjamin
Frothingham
3 JAN 1709/10
Thomas
Frothingham
1712
Ruth
Frothingham
1640 - 1688
Nathaniel
Frothingham
48
48
(II) Nathaniel, son of William Frothingham, was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, April 16, 1640, died there December 12, 1688. His gravestone is preserved. He died the same day as his brother, Peter Frothingham. He joined the church with his wife, January 22, 1670-71. He lived in Charlestown and was granted two common rights there in 1681. He owned land on what is now called Bunker Hill. He was a legatee of the estate of William Croft, of Lynn, in 1689, or rather his eldest son was, together with the eldest children of his brother Peter. His estate was divided in 1708. He married, February 6, 1667, Mary Hett, and she married (second) in 1694, Samuel Kettell. Children: Mary, born September 25, 1668, died January 9, 1679; Nathaniel, April 16, 1670, died July 28 following; Nathaniel, mentioned below; Hannah, November 26, 1673, died young; Thomas, December 2, 1675; Joseph, October 31, 1677; Benjamin, December 26, 1679; Eliphalet, September 5, 1681; Mary, November 14, 1682; Hannah, May 30, 1685; Abigail, May 10, 1687; Abiel (daughter), May 26, 1689, died June 5, 1689. Series 1, New England Families Genealogical and Memorial, Page 80 FROTHINGHAM, NATHANIEL, Charlestown, 8. of William, m. 6 Feb. 1668, Mary Hett, d. of Thomas, had Mary, b. 25 Sept. 1668, bapt. 29 Jan. 1671, d. young; Nathaniel, 16 Apr. 1670, d. soon; Nathaniel, again, 2, bapt. 9 July 1671; Hannah, 26 Nov. bapt. 28 Dec. 1673, a. young; Thomas, 2, bapt 5 Dec. 1675; Joseph, 31 Oct. bapt. 11 Nov. 1677; Benjamin, 26 Dec. 1679, bapt. 15 May 1680; Mary, again, 14, [[213]] bapt. 19 Nov. 1682; Hannah, again, 30, bapt. 31 May 1685; Abigail, 10 bapt. 15 May 1687; and Abiel, bapt. 26 May 1689, perhaps posthum. was freem. 1671, and d. 12 Dec. 1688. NICHOLAS, Charlestown, whose name is never seen by me, exc. in Gen. Reg. XI. 105, may be mistaken for Nathaniel. PETER,, Charlestown, s. of William, m. 14 Mar. 1665, Mary, d. of Richard Lowden, had William, b. 27, bapt. 29 Mar. 1668; Ann, 18, bapt. 21 May 1671; John, 19, bapt. 28 Feb. 1675; Sarah, 8 June 1679; Mary, 27 June, bapt. 2 July 1682; and Martha, 22, bapt. 29 Mar. 1685; was freem. 1668, and d. by the gr.stone, on the same day with Nathaniel, but this, tho. striking, is not more observable, than the carelessness in the rec. as to the ages of these brs. SAMUEL, Charlestown, br. of the preced. m. 1668, Ruth, d. of John George, had Ruth, b. 28 Nov. bapt. 4 Dec. 1670; Elizabeth 15 Oct. 1673, bapt. 22 Feb. foll. ; Samuel, 30 Dec. 1675, bapt. 9 Jan. foll. ; Rebecca, 25 Oct. 1677; Hannah, 24 Feb. bapt. 15 May 1680; and John, 24, bapt. 28 Jan. 1683; was freem. 1671, and d. 25 May 1683; and his wid. m. Abraham Bryant. WILLIAM, Charlestown, came, prob. in the fleet with Winthrop 1630, for in the ch. of Boston his name with that of Ann, his w. are Nos. 74 and 5, and in that yr. 19 Oct. he desir. adm. as freem. was sw. 6 Mar. 1632, had Bethia, b. 7 Feb. 1631; John, 10 Aug. 1633; Elizabeth 15 Mar. 1635; Peter, 15, bapt. 17 (not 18, wh. was Monday) Apr. 1636; Mary, 1, bapt. 8 Apr. 1638; Nathaniel, 16, bapt. 26 (not 23) Apr. 1640; Stephen, 11 Nov. 1641, bapt. same mo.; Hannah, 29 Jan. 1643; Joseph, 1 Dec. 1645, d. soon; and Samuel; perhaps William; was deac. and d. 10 Oct. 1651. His wid. d. 28 July 1674, aged 67. Her will, of 4 Oct. 1672, names ch. Samuel, Peter, Nathaniel, s.-in-law, Joseph Kettle, and Thomas White, and makes the last excor. Mary m. 17 Nov. 1663, White; Hannah m. 5 July 1665, Joseph Kettle. This has been the most com. name in the town for a large part of its exist. From: A GENEALOGICAL DICTIONARY of THE FIRST SETTLERS OF NEW ENGLAND, SHOWING THREE GENERATIONS OF THOSE WHO CAME BEFORE MAY, 1692, ON THE BASIS OF FARMER'S REGISTER. BY JAMES SAVAGE, FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY AND EDITOR OF WINTHROP'S HISTORY OF NEW ENGLAND. WITH TWO SUPPLEMENTS IN FOUR VOLUMES. [[Corrected electronic version copyright Robert Kraft, July 1994]] Baltimore GENEALOGICAL PUBLISHING CO., INC. Originally Published Boston, 1860-1862 Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139
1649 - 1710
Mary
Hett
61
61
1668 - 9 JAN 1678/79
Mary
Frothingham
1670 - 1670
Nathaniel
Frothingham
3m
3m
1673
Hannah
Frothingham
1675 - 1724
Thomas
Frothingham
48
48
1677
Joseph
Frothingham
1679 - 1728
Benjamin
Frothingham
48
48
1681
Eliphalet
Frothingham
1682
Mary
Frothingham
1685
Hannah
Frothingham
1687
Abigail
Frothingham
1689 - 1689
Abiel
Frothingham
10d
10d
1603 - 6 FEB 1651/52
William
Frothingham
FROTHINGHAM William Frothingham, immigrant ancestor of all the colonial families of this surname, was born in England about 1600, and came from the vicinity of Holderness in Yorkshire, the ancient seat of the family, which probably came thither from Scotland. The name spelled Fotheringham was common in Forfarshire, Scotland, before 1300, at the very beginning of the use of surnames. In the ancient History of Scotland by John Lesley, vol. i., p. vi., the family of Fodringhame together with Crychton, Giffert, Manlis, Borthik "and others" are said to have come from Wugre (Hungary) under Malcolm, King of Scotland, with his wife Queen Margaret. But Hailes raised a doubt of the accuracy of the statement. Indeed, it seems that the final syllable indicates a local origin of Fotheringham, though the surname may have been a place name taken by a Hungarian noble after the custom of the time, eventually becoming the family name. William Frothingham came from England in Winthrop's fleet, and was one of the proprietors of Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1630. He was admitted a freeman, March 6, 1631-32. With his wife Anne he was admitted to the church in Boston in 1630 and joined the new church at Charlestown in 1632. He was an adherent of Rev. John Wheelwright who founded Exeter, brother of the celebrated Mrs. Hutchinson, but Frothingham finally renounced his beliefs and remained in the established church of the Puritans at Charlestown. His wife Anne died July 28, 1674, aged sixty-seven years (see gravestone). He had a grant of land from the town on the Mystic side (Woburn) of ten acres. His house and four acres of land were bounded on the north by the Mystic river, east by homesteads of George Bunker and Thomas Ruck; west by E. Mellows and Abraham Pratt. He had eight other parcels of land on record. His will is dated September 31, 1651, and was proved February 6, 1652. The document itself has been in the possession of the family many years, though the records show that it was proved properly. He bequeathed his property to his wife, and the inventory places a value of fifty pounds on his house and orchard. His widow bought a house and land in Charlestown in 1656 of Grace Palmer. Her will, dated October 4, 1672, was proved October 6, 1674, bequeathing to her sons Samuel, J. Kettell, Peter and Nathaniel Frothingham, and Thomas White, who received her house orchard and barn. Children, born in Charlestown: Bethia, born February 7, 1631; John, August 10, 1633; Elizabeth, March 15, 1635; Peter, April 15, 1636; Mary, April 1, 1638; Nathaniel, mentioned below; Stephen, November 11, 1641; Hannah, March 29, 1642; Joseph, December 1, 1645; Samuel. Series 1, New England Families Genealogical and Memorial, Page 79 FROTHINGHAM WILLIAM , Charlestown, came, prob. in the fleet with Winthrop 1630, for in the ch. of Boston his name with that of Ann, his w. are Nos. 74 and 5, and in that yr. 19 Oct. he desir. adm. as freem. was sw. 6 Mar. 1632, had Bethia, b. 7 Feb. 1631; John, 10 Aug. 1633; Elizabeth 15 Mar. 1635; Peter, 15, bapt. 17 (not 18, wh. was Monday) Apr. 1636; Mary, 1, bapt. 8 Apr. 1638; Nathaniel, 16, bapt. 26 (not 23) Apr. 1640; Stephen, 11 Nov. 1641, bapt. same mo.; Hannah, 29 Jan. 1643; Joseph, 1 Dec. 1645, d. soon; and Samuel; perhaps William; was deac. and d. 10 Oct. 1651. His wid. d. 28 July 1674, aged 67. Her will, of 4 Oct. 1672, names ch. Samuel, Peter, Nathaniel, s.-in-law, Joseph Kettle, and Thomas White, and makes the last excor. Mary m. 17 Nov. 1663, White; Hannah m. 5 July 1665, Joseph Kettle. This has been the most com. name in the town for a large part of its exist. From: A GENEALOGICAL DICTIONARY of THE FIRST SETTLERS OF NEW ENGLAND, SHOWING THREE GENERATIONS OF THOSE WHO CAME BEFORE MAY, 1692, ON THE BASIS OF FARMER'S REGISTER. BY JAMES SAVAGE, FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY AND EDITOR OF WINTHROP'S HISTORY OF NEW ENGLAND. WITH TWO SUPPLEMENTS IN FOUR VOLUMES. [[Corrected electronic version copyright Robert Kraft, July 1994]] Baltimore GENEALOGICAL PUBLISHING CO., INC. Originally Published Boston, 1860-1862 Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139
~1607 - 1674
Anne
67
67
7 FEB 1630/31
Bethia
Frothingham
1633
John
Frothingham
15 MAR 1634/35
Elizabeth
Frothingham
1636 - 1688
Peter
Frothingham
52
52
1638 - 1710
Mary
Frothingham
72
72
1641
Stephen
Frothingham
1643 - 1693
Hannah
Frothingham
50
50
1645
Joseph
Frothingham
~1647 - 1683
Samuel
Frothingham
36
36
~1755
William
Tyler
~1760
Catherine
Morton
1911 - 1980
Joseph
Morton
Caldwell
69
69
1911 - 1995
John
Tyler
Caldwell
84
84
President of Alabama State University from 1947-1952; President of University of Arkansas at Fayetteville from 1952-1959; Chancellor of North Carolina State University at Raleigh 1959-1981; President of the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges from 1962-1963.
Carol
Erskine
1919 - 1961
Katherine
Zeek
42
42
1919 - 1992
Moselle
Smith
73
73
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
1884
John
Rundel
Smith
1892
Cherry
Mary
Bomer
~1860 - 1943
Edwin
Jefferson
Bomer
83
83
1863 - 1927
Mosella
DeObra
Anderson
63
63
1887
Charlotte
Bomer
1827 - 1888
Dr. Harrod
Clopton
Anderson
61
61
Papers, 1849-1888 (bulk 1885-1887) Anderson, Harrod C. (Harrod Clopton) Personal Author: Anderson, Harrod C. (Harrod Clopton) Title: Papers, 1849-1888 (bulk 1885-1887) Physical descrip: 7 items. Physical descrip: 3 ms. v. Biographical note: Harrod Clopton Anderson was a planter of Magnolia, Haywood County, Tennessee. Summary: Bound manuscript volumes include a cashbook (1885-1887) containing entries listing expenses and accounts and two diaries (1854-1862, 1887-1888) concerning activities on the plantation, personal matters, religion, and family life. The earlier diary entries record plantation accounts and expenses and contain entries related to local events, the growing of cotton and corn, animal husbandry, Negro agricultural laborers, weather, health, and remedies for various afflictions. Later diary entries discusse philosophical, moral, and religious issues and include the author's opinions on politics, secession, prohibition, and the Civil War. Summary: Items include letters from Anderson to his wife (1849) and to his daughter (1888), two photographs of Mr. and Mrs. Anderson with notations concerning the photographs, and a biographical sketch of Anderson by his granddaughter, Mrs. Rundle Smith. Cite as: Harrod C. Anderson Papers, Mss. 8, 490, 539, Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections, LSU Libraries, Baton Rouge, La. Other forms: Also available as bound typescript. Terms of use/reprod: Physical rights are retained by the LSU Libraries. Copyright of the original materials is retained by descendants of the creators of these materials in accordance with U.S. copyright law. Index notes: Finding aid is available in the library. Personal subject: Anderson, Harrod C. (Harrod Clopton)--Photographs. Subject term: Plantation life--Tennessee. Subject term: African American agricultural laborers--Tennessee. Geographic term: Haywood County (Tenn.)--History. Geographic term: Tennessee--History--Civil War, 1861-1865. Genre index term: Cashbooks. Genre index term: Diaries. Genre index term: Photoprints. Occupation term: Plantation owners--Tennessee. lcsh
1829 - 1912
Almira
Asenath
Cherry
83
83
~1795 - ~1861
Prof. Harrod
John
Anderson
66
66
~1805 - ~1867
Matilda
W.
Hope
62
62
1782 - 1843
Daniel
Cherry
61
61
V DANIEL CHERRY, b. Oct. 20, 1782, in that part of Martin Co. which later became Halifax Co., Va. He m. March 10, 1810, in Smith Co., Tenn., Sallie Turner, dau. of Frederick Turner (See Turner Line). Sallie was b. near Newbern, Craven Co., N.C., Sept. 22, 1787; d. July 15, 1870, in Ripley, Lauderdale Co., Tenn. Daniel and Sallie were bap. Sept. 5, 1821 by Rev. Elijah Maddox, in Cumberland River, near Benders Ferry, Tenn., as stated in Daniel's Bible. They lived in Wilson Co., Tenn., until about 1825-27 when they removed to Haywood Co., Tenn., where he d. Nov. 3, 1843 in Cherryville (Now Bellse) near Brownsville. His home is now owned by J.T. Leathers. His children, b. in Wilson Co., Tenn, except as noted, were: Narcissa, b. Oct. 8, 1811; m. July 4, 1827, John Harbert in Haywood Co., Tenn. Benjamin Franklin, b. June 2, 1813; d. ae 14 mo. Louanna, b. Feb. 24, 1815; m. July 9, 1829 in Haywood Co., Hiram Partee of Gilson Co., Tenn. Norman Turner, b. Apr. 6, 1817- m. Dec. 18, 1839, in Dyer Co., Tenn., Amanda Clay. Louisa Jones, b. Jan. 28, 1810; m. July 19, 1831, in Haywood Co., Capt. Edwin R. Jones, of Newbern, N.C. *Calvin Washington, Drusilla Butler, b. Dec. 11, 1822; m. Tues., Aug. 27, 1837, in Haywood Co., Edward Read, of Jackson, Tenn., formerly of Bardstown, Ky. Belinda Frances, b. Dec. 11, 1824; m. Sept. 5, 1839, in Haywood Co., Eason Jones, Sheriff, formerly of Bertie Co., N.C. Mosella Dearbon, b. July 11, 1827, in Haywood Co.; m. Hiram Partree, nephew of Hiram Partree. He or she d. in Little Rock, Ark. Almira Asenath, b. May 21, 1829, in Haywood Co.; m. 1849, Dr. Harrod Clopton Anderson, and had 7 sons and 2 daus.
1787 - 1870
Sarah
Turner
83
83
1811
Narcissa
Cherry
1813
Benjamin
Franklin
Cherry
1815
Louanna
Cherry
1817
Norman
Turner
Cherry
1819
Louisa
Cherry
1821
Calvin
Washington
Cherry
1822
Drucilla
Butler
Cherry
1824
Belinda
Frances
Cherry
1827
Marcella
Dearbra
Cherry
1762
Frederick
Turner
1762 - 1829
Mary
Jones
66
66
1789
Robert
Turner
1791
Lovey
Turner
1793
Polly
Turner
1797
Nancy
Turner
1799
William
Turner
1804
Betsy
Turner
~1735
Roger
Jones
~1740
Sarah
1740 - 1807
Jesse
Cherry
67
67
JESSE CHERRY, b. in Halifax Co., N.C., about July 4, 1749. In the 1790 census of Halifam Dist. Martin Co., N.C., Jesse had 5 sons under 16 and 5 females, probably his wife and dau. He m. Elizabeth Gaines (See Gaines Line). He was granted 649 acres. He was in the assembly 1790 representing Martin Co., also in 1792 and 1795, and again 1801. On Dec. 16, 1790, ordered that six members have leave to absent themselves from the service of this house after this day. Jesse was included in this list, the cause not shown. His name appears many times voting for or against measures; For a canal; against relieving insolvent debtors; for final settlement of unliquidated claims; for increasing pay of members to 25 shillings per day and mileage, and other matters of importance to the new State. His will not found. His sons were: *Daniel, Darling. Eli. Lawrence. CHERRY, JESSIE. Member of House of Commons, North Carolina, 1790, 1791, 1792, 1795, 1801. Roster of Soldiers from North Carolina in American Revolution, p. 256, No. 1155. Jesse Cherry heir of John Cherry, Prvt., granted 640 acres. Served eighty-four months, Oct. 14, 1783
1750 - 1836
Elilzabeth
Gainer
86
86
1770
Jesse
Cherry
1772
Mary
Ann
Cherry
1774
Eli
Cherry
1776
Sarah
Cherry
1778
Isham
Cherry
1780
Wiley
Cherry
1784
Lovey
Cherry
1787
John
Darling
Cherry
1789
Tabitha
Cherry
1791
Lawrence
Cherry
1794
Nancy
Cherry
1798
David
Cherry
~1723
Arthur
Gainer
~1725
Sarah
Butler
~1695 - 1766
John
Butler
71
71
~1700
Elizabeth
Hardy
~1690 - 1751
Samuel
Gainer
61
61
Ann
~1727
Benjamin
Gainer
~1731
Elizabeth
Gainer
~1715
James
Gainer
~1725
Joseph
Gainer
~1729
Mary
Gainer
~1717 - 1763
Samuel
Gainer
46
46
~1735
Sarah
Gainer
~1721
Thomas
Gainer
~1719
William
Gainer
~1640 - 1696
Samuel
Gainer
56
56
~1642 - <1696
Elizabeth
Eldridge
54
54
~1680
William
Gainer
~1685
Mary
Gainer
1724 - 1766
John
Cherry
42
42
JOHN CHERRY, of Beaufort Co., N.C., was allowed on Nov. 6, 1766, his claim of œ80 for a Negro named Luke, who had been executed in that county, and as valued by the court, as by certificate filed. On July 20, 1781, he bought of Hugh Parker, at Wilmington, the boat Snake for 20 guineas. His army pay in the Revolution œ105.18.10, was receipted for by Timothy McCarthy. He appears to have d. before the 1790 census was made. He served in the Revolutionary was as a Private.
~1725
Mary
Jordan
~1742
Elizabeth
Cherry
~1743
Martha
Cherry
~1745
Daniel
Cherry
~1747
John
Cherry
1749
Jesse
Cherry
~1695
Jesse
Jordan
1685 - 1754
Lemuel
"Samuel"
Cherry
69
69
~1683
Mary
Courtney
1710
Mary
Courtney
Cherry
~1715
Rebecca
Cherry
1718
Mary
Courtney
Cherry
1721
Rebecca
Cherry
1725
Courtney
Cherry
1728
William
Cherry
~1705
Gatsey
Ann
Llewellyn
1730
Charles
Cherry
1733
Elizabeth
Cherry
1735
Cader
Cherry
1736
Lemuel
Cherry
1736
Solomon
Cherry
1739
Samuel
Cherry
1742
Abigail
Cherry
1746
George
Cherry
1748
Willis
W.
Cherry
1750
Patience
Cherry
1640 - 1698
James
Courtney
58
58
~1646
Mary
Jenkins
~1678
Hannah
Courtney
~1674
James
Courtney
~1676
Frances
Courtney
~1681
Martha
Courtney
~1685
William
Courtney
~1688
John
Courtney
~1616
Nicholas
Jenkins
Ann
~1610 - 1698
James
Courtney
88
88
1663 - 1734
Samuel
Maund
Cherry
71
71
~1665
Frances
Ballentine
~1687
Aaron
Cherry
~1689
Elizabeth
Cherry
~1691
Patience
Cherry
~1693
Frances
Cherry
~1695
Dunson
Cherry
~1647
George
Ballentine
~1650
Frances
Yates
~1641 - 1699
John
Cherry
58
58
~1647
Rebecca
Maund
1666
Sarah
Cherry
1667
Solomon
Cherry
1668
Joseph
Cherry
1671
John
Cherry
1672
Rebecca
Cherry
1674
Patience
Cherry
1675
Thomas
Cherry
1678
Faithful
Cherry
1680
William
Cherry
1684
Elizabeth
Cherry
1685
Lemuel
Cherry
1623 - 18 JAN 1698/99
John
Cherry
John Cherry came to Norfolk, Va. from England in 1635. He wasTransported by Oliver Spry.Patent book 1, part 2, page 487 shows an Oliver Sprye who received 300 acres in Upper Norfolk Co VA on 24 October 1637 for transporting six persons from England, by court order on 6 June 1635: "James Hicks, John Longworthy, Tho. Bush, John Dawson, George Wilcock, John Cherry," by order of the court on 6 June 1635. Based on records of Norfolk Co. Va., as examined by Rubicam in the originals, in Norfolk Co.; Wills as published; N.C. Wills and other sources mentioned; and research in Va. State Library by Mrs. Nellie P. Waldenmaier, in Vestry Book of Elizabeth River Parish and elsewhere. JOHN CHERRY the earliest mentioned in Va. records, is named in the following Patent, in Patent Book No. 1, Part 2, p. 487: Oliver Sprye, 300 acres in Upper County of New Norfolk, 24 Oct., 1637. Being called by the name of the Thickett, beginning, upon land of Mr. Daniel Gookins, S.W. along the maine river, N.W. into the woods and S.E. upon the river. Due by order of Ct. 6 June, 1635, & alsoe due for transportation of 6 persons; James Hicks, John Longworthy, Tho. Bush, John Dawson, Goerg Wilcock, John Cherry. Thus did John Cherry reach Upper Norfolk Co. Va. in 1635. He was probably young, and working out the cost of his transportation. John Cherry Sr. and William Maund witnessed the will of W. H. Whelten, in Lower Norfolk Co. 13 Sept. 1690 and witnessed the will of Joseph Miller, Sr. of same locality 4 Jan. 1689. Both testified at the proofs of these wills 13 Sept. 1693. John Cherry made his will in Norfolk Co. 12 Jan. 16[98/9] which was proved 18 July 16[99]. Recorded in Book of Deeds No. 6, p. 130, but in a fragmentary condition. He may have been a son of John and Frances in the English line, and was certainly father of JOHN CHERRY, Jr. The Norfolk Co. records show an assignment, 6 May, 1699 from (???) Etheridge and Ann his wife to John Cherry. John purchased 14 Feb. 1731, of Lemuel Powell and wife Sarah, for œ 8.0, 100 acres on the Southern Branch of Elizabeth River, Norfolk Co. Va. As John Cherry, Jr., cooper, he bought, 25 Feb. 1732, of William Mercer and wife Elizabeth, 50 acres on west side of the Southern Branch. On 13 Feb. 1747, he purchased of John Biggs and wife Sarah, for œ25, 100 acres on Biggs' Creek, east side of Southern Branch. This was witnessed by Solomon Cherry. Pursuant to an Order of Norfolk County Court bearing date the day of November 1751, the Vestry of Elizabeth River Parish met and appointed the several Persons to "Procession" in the several Precincts. Lott Maund & Jno. Cherry, son of Jno. Cherry, from Sugg's Millhead to New Mill Creek. (Vestry Book of Elizabeth River Parish). Processioners were always men of established standing, and more often past middle life. It appears that the above are direct ancestors of the following. The names in the 1790 Census and in the Norfolk Co. records show the following Cherrys, and the number of them, which indicates a large and undoubtedly related family; Benjamin, 3; Bryan, 8; Charles, 6; Faithful, 2; Jean, 5; Joseph, 3; John,13; Luke,2; Matthew,5; Paul,8; Samuel,3; Theophilus, 6; Thomas,18; these all on the Western Branch of Elizabeth River.
1625
Elizabeth
Faithful
1643
Edward
Cherry
1648
Elizabeth
Cherry
~1650
Solomon
Cherry
~1652
Sarah
Cherry
~1654
William
Cherry
~1656
Thomas
Cherry
1658
Joseph
Cherry
1660
Martha
Cherry
1662
Faithful
Cherry
1 JAN 1593/94 - 1657
Thomas
Cherry
THOMAS CHERRY of Maidenhead and Bray, 2d son and heir, bap. 1 Jan. 1596/7. He m. in 1621, Ellen, sole dau. of Richard Powney, lessee of the Manor of Old Windsor. She was b. 1598. They were both bu. 20 Sept. 1657. On a gravestone in the churchyard of Bray is the inscription, "Heere Lye interred the bodies of Thomas Cherry of Maydenhead, in this parish who died 14th Sept. 1657, Anno Aetalis 61. And of Ellen his wife, who died 19th Sept. 1657, Anno Aetalis 59. They lived together in wedlock 35 yeares, and had 8 sons and one Daughter, and were both interred here in one grave Sept. 20, 1657". Only 4 of their children are given in the pedigree: Arthur, of Cassington. *John, the elder, Richard of Maidenhead and Bray. William of Maidenhead, Bray, and by purchase, Lord of the Manor of Shottebrook, Founder of Bray School there. CHERRY. Arms: Argent, a Fess, engrailed, between three Annulets Cules. Crest: a demi-Lion Argent holding in the dexter paw a Gem-Ring Or, enriched with a precious stone ppr. Motto: Cheris L'Espoir. (page 72 in Pedigrees of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Surrey Families by Wm. Berry, fifteen years Registering Clerk in the College of Arms, London).
1598 - 1657
Ellen
Powney
59
59
1621
Ann
Cherry
1622
Arthur
Cherry
1624
Richard
Cherry
1629
Thomas
Cherry
1631
Henry
Cherry
1632
Edward
Cherry
1633
William
Cherry
1635
George
Cherry
~1568
Richard
Powney
1571 - 1639
Thomas
Cherry
68
68
~1575
Margaret
Watkins
1595
Edward
Cherry
1596
Ann
Cherry
1597
Robert
Cherry
~1545
Robert
Watkins
1548 - 1615
John
Cherry
67
67
1550 - 1598
Agness
Pratt
48
48
1525 - 1615
John
Cherrie
90
90
1529
Agnes
1545
Richard
Cherry
1546
Thomas
Cherry
1550
Edward
Cherry
1552
Sir
Francis
Cherry
1554
Robert
Cherry
1556
Henry
Cherry
1480 - 1588
Thomas
Cherrie
108
108
1504 - <1588
Elizabeth
Cheyney
84
84
1523
Thomas
Cherrie
1527
William
Cherrie
1529
Churche
Cherrie
1531
Richard
Cherrie
1532
Elizabeth
Cherrie
1465 - 1578
Richard
Cherrie
113
113
Mary
1435
John
De
Che'rie
1390
Jean
"John" De
Che'rie
1365 - 1415
Thomas
De
Che'rie
50
50
~1820 - 1920
Thomas
Green
Bomer
100
100
1822 - 1860
Mary
Jane
Powell
38
38
1798 - >1850
Squire
Powell
52
52
1799
Mary
Naylor
1774 - 1863
Elias
Burke
Powell
89
89
1773 - 1855
Elizabeth
Day
82
82
1795
Mary
Powell
1796
Sarah
Powell
1801
Rev.
William Litle
Powell
1802
Elizabeth
Powell
1805
Elias
Powell
1807
Jane
Powell
1809
John
Wesley
Powell
1811
Nancy
Powell
1812
Honour
Powell
1814
Argin
Powell
1816
Celia
Powell
~1745 - 1815
Nicholas
Day
70
70
~1745
Blair
1774
Sarah
Day
1776
Mary
Day
1778
Isabel
Day
1779
John
Day
1780
Nicholas
Day
1781
Nancy
Day
1716 - ~1790
John
R. Day
74
74
~1720
Isabell
Blair
1755
John
Day
1758
James
Day
1760
Laban
Day
1762
Edward
Day
1685 - 1739
Nicholas
Day
54
54
1688 - 1779
Elizabeth
Cox
91
91
25 FEB 1709/10
Nicholas
Day
1713
Mary
Day
17 MAR 1717/18
Elizabeth
Day
29 JAN 1719/20
Sarah
Day
1723
Thomas
Day
1726
Laban
Day
1728
Hannah
Day
11 MAR 1729/30
Samuel
Day
1734
Nicholas
Day
1736
Betty
Day
~1650 - 1713
Christopher
Cox
63
63
~1660
Mary
Symonds
~1635 - 1704
Nicholas
Day
69
69
~1650 - 1736
Sarah
Lowe
86
86
1686
Sarah
Day
1689
Edward
Day
1691
Elizabeth
Day
1694
Dinah
Mercia
Day
1756 - 1827
Ambrose
Powell
71
71
~1756
Margaret
Holt
1769
Lewis
Powell
1772
Margaret
Powell
1784
William
Powell
1785
Rachel
Powell
1788
Peter
Powell
1790
Mary
Polly
Powell
1793
John
Powell
1795
Sarah
Powell
1797
Polly
Marian
Powell
Margaret
"Peggy"
Knox
1734
Elias
Powell
1733
Elizabeth
Blair
1745
Elias
Powell
1750
Robert
Powell
1752
Margaret
Powell
1758
James
Powell
1761
Benjamin
Powell
1763
Thomas
Powell
1765
Catherine
Powell
1768
Elijah
Powell
1769
Lewis
Powell
~1747
Elizabeth
Powell
~1749
George
Powell
~1751
Mary
Powell
~1753
Philip
Powell
~1754
William
Powell
~1755
Rachel
Powell
~1771
Peter
Powell
~1773
John
Powell
~1775
Sarah
Powell
1686
John
Powell
Notes from Ellisue Barber Morris: John and Mary O'Neal lived in Culpeper Co., VA in 1750 when their daughter, Anna, Was born. In 1755 they migrated to Orange Co., NC with many friends and relatives including: O'Neals, Albrights, Holts, allens, Murrays, Griders, and many others. In addition to Anna, They had at least three sons: William Powell, Robert and Elias Powell, Jr., who was named for his father's brother and was named junior to distinguish between uncle and nephew. Elias Powell, Jr. and his wife, Barbara Albright, had a son, George Powell who was the father of Nelson Albright Powell, 1816-1910, author of many newspaper articles on local history of that section of NC. John and Mary O'Neal owned land in culpeper, VA and in Orange Co., NC on little Alamance Creek and moved in 1779 to Burke Co., now Caldwell Co. NC. They settled on Middle fork of Lower Creek, later called Poweltown, but now part of the City of Lenoir, NC. (Ref: Pam - Wordsert@@aol.com
1710 - 1799
Mary
O'Neal
89
89
1739
John
Powell
1741
Joseph
Powell
1750
Anna
Powell
1756
Robert
Powell
1760
Elizabeth
Powell
1763
Benjamin
Powell
1767
Elijah
Powell
1632 - 1698
John
Powell
66
66
1637
Mary
Coghill
1669
Robert
Powell
1674
Henry
Powell
1676
Elias
Powell
1680
Place
Powell
1680
James
Powell
1689
Thomas
Powell
~1645
Jane
Lucas
1696
Lucas
Powell
~1607
James
Coghill
1605 - 1695
William
Powell
90
90
1607
Elizabeth
Gorusch
1634
Nathaniel
Powell
1636
Jacob
Powell
1638
William
Powell
1640
Thomas
Powell
1648
Elizabeth
Powell
~1575 - 9 FEB 1686/87
Thomas
A. P.
Powell
~1585
Elizabeth
Welles
~1545 - 1623
Capt.
William
Powell
78
78
~1860 - 1891
Jasper
W.
Smith
31
31
1862
Emily
Broadnax
Rundel
~1830
Capt.
W.W.
Smith
~1830
Capt. David
Brainard
Rundel
~1835
Margaret
Lundie
Mr.
Erskine
Living
Erskine
Living
Erskine
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Caldwell
Living
Steele
Living
Steele
Living
Steele
Living
Elaine
Living
Pierce
Living
Sweeney
Living
Sweeney
Living
Sweeney
D. >1723
Mary
Tarpley
~1690
Mary
Metcalfe
1715
Col.
William
Brockenbrough
~1710
Samuel
Dalton
Mary
Brockenbrough
Nancy
Dalton
~1691
Mary
Brockenbrough
~1693
Margaret
Newman
Brockenbrough
Henry
Miskell
~1700
Thomas
Stanfield
~1725
Marmaduke
Stanfield
1723
Betty
Stanfield
~1710
Jonathan
Lyell
Lyle
~1646
Thomas
Newman
~1650 - 1704
Bridgett
Wilson
54
54
~1673
Anne
Newman
~1629 - 1681
Samuel
Dalton
52
52
1628 - 1695
Mehitable
Palmer
67
67
1590 - 1662
Philemond
Dalton
72
72
~1600
Henry
Palmer
Hannah
Cole
1555
John
Dalton
~1530
Philip
Dalton
~1500
Sir
Walter
Dalton
1386
Margaret
de
Perche
~1402
Joanna
de
Vernon
1370
Sir
Richard VI
de Vernon
1374
Johanna
Stackpole
~1312
Richard
Stackpole
~1315
Robert
De
Tyrwhitt
~1266 - >1328
Sir
Payne de
Turberville
62
62
~1270
Gwenillian
De
Talbot
~1285
Agnes
De
Tuberville
~1240 - 1318
Adam
de la
Bere
78
78
~1299
Joan
de
Talbot
~1314 - 1361
Julian
de
Grey
47
47
1317 - 1355
Sir John
De
Talbot
37
37
~1295
Elizabeth
de
Hastings
~1177 - 1234
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
57
57
~1407 - ~1460
Eleanor
De
Lucy
53
53
~1181 - 1227
Juliana
le
Despencer
46
46
~1154
Amabel
de
Cheney
~1208 - 1252
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
44
44
~1212
Nichole
~1237
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
~1241 - >1316
Ellen
75
75
1267
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
~1269 - >1329
Desideree
de
Leyburne
60
60
21 JAN 1286/87 - 1346
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
~1298 - ~1361
Katherine
63
63
~1324 - 12 FEB 1398/99
Geoffrey
de
Lucy
~1315
Margery
1359 - 1437
Reginald
de
Lucy
78
78
~1361
Margaret
~1387 - 1444
Walter
de
Lucy
57
57
1383 - 1447
Alienor
L'Archedekne
64
64
~1360 - 1401
Warin
L'Archedekne
41
41
1364 - 1407
Elizabeth
De
Talbot
43
43
1337 - 18 FEB 1374/75
John
De
Talbot
~1339
Catherine
~1360
Thomas
Hopton
~1364
Joanne
Jane De
Mortimer
~1330
Walter
De
Mortimer
~1330
Walter
Hopton
~1335
Joan
Yonge
~1300
John
Hopton
~1310
Elizabeth
Burley
~1280
John
Burley
~1285
Alice
De
Grey
~1270
John
Hopton
~1280
Alice
Le
Strange
~1240
Walter
Hopton
~1040
Basita
Flaitel
~1085
Hugh
De
Talbot
~1058
Basilie
de
Gournay
~1120 - 1178
Richard
DeTalbot
58
58
~1125
daughter
Bulmer
~1099
Stephen
Bulmer
~1255 - 1283
Richard
de
Turberville
28
28
~1252
Agnes
Wilcock
~1225
Roger
Wilcock
~1225 - <1281
Gilbert
de
Turberville
56
56
Mabel
1175
Gilbert
de
Turberville
~1180
Mallt Maud
(Agnes)
Verch Morgan
~1150
Morgan
ap
Gam
~1140
Peganus
de
Turberville
~1200
Sybil
Verch
Morgan
~1120
Gilbert
de
Turberville
~1090
Payne
de
Turberville
~1100
Sybilla
Ferch
Morgan
~1060
Hugh
de
Turberville
1342 - 1376
Sir
Richard V
de Vernon
34
34
1348 - 1409
Julianna
Pembrugge
61
61
~1320
Robert
Pembrugge
~1325 - 1345
Julianna
Trussel la
Zouche
20
20
1238 - >1317
William
Inge
79
79
1292 - 21 JAN 1325/26
Fulke II
de
Pembrugge
~1290
Matilda
de
Birmingham
~1279
William
de
Birmingham
~1271 - 20 FEB 1295/96
Fulke I
de
Pembrugge
Isabel
~1250 - <1279
Henry
de
Pembrugge
29
29
~1290
Richard
IV de
Vernon
~1296 - 1342
Maud
de
Camville
46
46
~1260
William
de
Camville
~1220
Lucy
~1210 - 1260
William
de
Camville
50
50
~1180
Leucia
de
Braose
~1260 - 1330
Richard
III de
Vernon
70
70
~1260
Julianne
de
Vescy
1169 - 1236
Eustache
de
Vescy
67
67
~1125 - 1184
William
de
Vescy
59
59
~1137
Burga
De
Stuteville
~1125
Richard
De
Beaumont
~1127
Raoul
VI De
Beaumont
~1145
Margaret
de
Hythus
~1115
Adam
de
Hythus
~1170
Margaret
Dunkeld
~1100
Beatrice
de
Vescy
~1070
Yves
de
Vescy
~1070
Jane
Tyson
~1040
John
de
Vescy
~1050
William
Tyson
~1030 - 1066
Sir
Gilbert
Tyson
36
36
~1000
Rodulfi
Taisson
~1230 - 1263
Richard
II de
Vernon
33
33
~1232
Margaret
de
Vipont
1400 - 1475
Sir Baldwin
II de
Montfort
75
75
~1200
Margery
de
Stokeport
~1360 - 1386
John
de
Perche
26
26
~1180
William
de
Vernon
~1365
Katherine
~1320 - 1376
John
de
Perche
56
56
~1327 - >1384
Eleanor
de
Ferre
57
57
~1300 - <1341
John
de
Perche
41
41
~1274 - 1338
John
de
Perche
64
64
~1234
John
de
Perche
~1240
Joan
1200
Richard
de
Perche
~1204
Hawise
de
Arderne
~1178
William
de
Arderne
~1384 - 1460
Robert
Booth
76
76
1396
Dulcia
Venables
1587
Elizabeth
Brooke
~1685
Sherwood
Lightfoot
Sources: 1. Title: Book-Genealogies of Virginia Families Vol 5 Author: Thompson and Yates Publication: From Wiliam & Mary College Quartery Historical Maginze Note: Published 1982. While this book was published in 1982; however, the articles on the Thornton family seemed to have been written around 1900 based on comments by the author Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 61
~1600 - ~1657
Sir
John
Meaux
57
57
~1632 - 1697
Sir
William
Meaux
65
65
~1687 - 1756
Elizabeth
Meux
69
69
~1570 - 1638
Sir
William
Meaux
68
68
~1550 - 14 FEB 1628/29
Sir
John
Meaux
Knighted by the King in 1605
~1498 - 1544
Margaret
Manners
46
46
~1495 - >1544
Sir
Henry
Strangeways
49
49
1532 - 1591
Eleanor
Strangeways
59
59
~1520 - 1589
Sir
William
Meaux
69
69
~1580
Winifred
Barrington
~1560 - 1628
Sir
Francis
Barrington
68
68
~1525 - 1601
Winifred
Pole
76
76
~1520
John
Barrington
~1621 - 1692
Henry
Meaux
71
71
~1642 - 1721
Anne
Brightwell
79
79
~1534
Giles
Strangeways
~1536
Henry
Strangeways
~1538
Anne
Strangeways
~1540
Elizabeth
Strangeways
~1550 - <1625
Cecilie
Button
75
75
~1575
Bartholomew
Meaux
~1520
William
Button
~1580
Radcliffe
Gerard
~1485 - 1536
Sir
Richard
Meaux
51
51
~1500 - >1583
Dorothy
Cooke
83
83
~1470 - 1520
Thomas
Cooke
50
50
~1462 - 1512
Sir
William
Meaux
50
50
~1462
Jane
Cooke
~1435
John
Cooke
~1438 - 1470
Sir
Thomas
Meaux
32
32
~1447
Alice
~1384 - >1450
Lewis
Meaux
66
66
~1390 - 1472
Alice
Drew
82
82
~1360 - <1428
William
Drew
68
68
~1330
John
Drew
~1300 - >1375
William
Drew
75
75
~1310 - >1375
Eleanor
De
Kingston
65
65
~1270 - >1356
John
Drew
86
86
Matilda
~1240 - 1305
Jordan
De
Kingston
65
65
~1210
William
De
Kingston
~1351 - ~1399
Richard
Meaux
48
48
~1367 - 1448
Margaret
James
81
81
~1330 - 1376
Sir
Walter
Meaux
46
46
~1300 - 1344
John
De
Meaux
44
44
~1310 - 1347
Margaret
37
37
~1270
Sir
Thomas
De Meaux
~1240
Walter
De
Meaux
~1200 - >1244
Thomas
De
Meaux
44
44
~1220
Mazelina
Fitzgols
~1190
Thomas
Fitzgols
~1160
Walo
Fitzgols
1160 - 1219
John
De
Meaux
59
59
~1170
Amice
De
Everingham
~1140
Thomas
De
Everingham
~1135 - ~1182
Peter
De
Meaux
47
47
Beatrice
~1105 - >1138
Gamel
De
Melsa
33
33
~1075 - >1076
Ketel
De
Melsa
1
1
~1465
Sir
Henry
Strangeways
~1466
Dorothy
Arundel
1401 - 1449
John
Chidiocke
48
48
~1400 - 1461
Catherine
Lumley
61
61
~1377
Ralph
de
Lumley
~1379
Alianore
De
Neville
7 JAN 1420/21
John
Arundel
~1392 - 1423
John
Arundel
31
31
~1398 - 1424
Margaret
De
Berghersh
26
26
~1368
John
De
Berghersh
~1370
Ismarria
De
Hanap
~1372 - ~1436
John
Arundel
64
64
~1400
Elizabeth
Rochford
~1374
Annora
Eleanor
Lambourne
~1394 - 1443
Thomas
Arundel
49
49
~1396
Humphrey
Arundel
~1402
Joan
Arundel
~1404
Philippa
Arundel
~1340
William
Lambourne
~1345
Joan
Le
Soor
~1336 - ~1400
John
Arundel
64
64
~1344 - 31 JAN 1395/96
Joan
De
Luscote
~1373
Ralph
Arundel
~1376
Joan
Arundel
~1378
William
Arundel
~1380
Catherine
Arundel
~1382
Bernard
Arundel
~1315 - ~1379
John
Arundel
64
64
~1338
Rose
Arundel
~1346
Margaret
Arundel
~1314 - ~1356
Elizabeth
De
Carminow
42
42
~1320
Isabella
De
Multon
~1278 - >1345
Oliver
De
Carminow
67
67
~1285
Elizabeth
Pomeroy
~1240
Roger
De
Carminow
~1244
Joanna
Dinham
~1200 - 1258
Geoffrey
Dinham
58
58
~1170 - 1221
Oliver
Dinham
51
51
~1145 - ~1204
Geoffrey
Dinham
59
59
~1210
Roger
De
Carminow
~1214
Sarah
Hornacote
~1188
Gervais
Hornacote
~1185 - >1256
Roger
De
Carminow
71
71
~1155 - >1222
Roger
De
Carminow
67
67
~1294 - ~1379
John
Arundel
85
85
~1299
Isabella
Joan de
la Bere
~1272 - <1309
John
Arundel
37
37
~1272
Joan
Le
Soor
~1270 - >1334
John
de la
Bere
64
64
~1296
Margaret
Arundel
~1298
Ralph
Arundel
~1300
Felice
Arundel
~1302
Joan
Arundel
~1304
Thomas
Arundel
~1306
Jane
Arundel
~1250
John
Le
Soor
~1255
Rosea
~1240 - ~1280
Reinfred
De
Arundel
40
40
~1244 - <1280
Alice
De La
Hurne
36
36
~1270
Ralph
Arundel
~1274
Ellen
Arundel
~1276
Benedict
Arundel
~1278
Rose
Arundel
~1214
John
de la
Hurne
~1222
Margaret
FitzJohn
~1208 - 1275
Ralph
De
Arundel
67
67
~1210 - >1283
Eve
De
Ros
73
73
~1232
Odo
De
Arundel
~1234
Reinfrick
De
Arundel
~1236
Thomas
De
Arundel
~1240
John
De
Arundel
~1242
Joan
De
Arundel
~1180
Reinfred
De
Arundel
~1165
Margaret
Everard
~1205
Odo
De
Arundel
~1215
Lawrence
De
Arundel
~1435
Henry
Strangeways
~1410
James
Strangeways
1417 - 1461
Elizabeth
D'Arcy
44
44
~1365
Henry
Strangeways
~1385
Joan
Orrell
~1355
Nicholas
Orrell
~1570
Henry
Strangeways
1581 - 1631
Elizabeth
Leonard
50
50
1544 - 1615
Sampson
Leonard
71
71
1541 - 10 MAR 1610/11
Margaret
De
Fiennes
Sir Francis
Ralph
Barnham
1516 - 1541
Thomas
De
Fiennes
25
25
1520
Mary
de
Neville
1490 - 1539
Joan
Sutton
49
49
~1495 - 1528
Thomas
De
Fiennes
33
33
1459 - 31 JAN 1531/32
Edward
Sutton
~1463 - 1539
Cecilia
Willoughby
76
76
~1430
William
Willoughby
~1427 - 24 FEB 1483/84
Joan
Strangeways
~1387
Thomas
Willoughby
~1390
Jane
Arundel
~1366 - 1419
Richard
FitzAlan
Arundel
53
53
~1370 - 1436
Alice
66
66
~1367 - >1405
Lucy
Le
Strange
38
38
~1345 - <1412
Alice
Skipwith
67
67
~1425 - 1483
Edmund
Sutton
58
58
~1430 - <1470
Joyce
Tiptoft
40
40
1400 - 1487
Sir John
VI De
Sutton
86
86
<1422 - 1478
Elizabeth
De
Berkeley
56
56
~1353
Elizabeth
Betteshorne
~1327
John
Betteshorne
1380 - 1406
Sir John
V De
Sutton
26
26
~1380 - 1432
Constance
Blount
52
52
~1350 - 1403
Sir
Walter
Blount
53
53
1361 - 10 MAR 1395/96
Sir John
IV De
Sutton
~1362 - 1392
Alice
Le
Despenser
30
30
1471 - 1534
Thomas
De
Fiennes
63
63
1470 - 1529
Anna
Bourchier
59
59
~1444 - 1471
Sir
Humphrey
Bourchier
27
27
~1450 - 1497
Elizabeth
Tilney
47
47
~1430
Sir
Frederick
De Tilney
~1432 - 1473
Elizabeth
De
Cheney
41
41
1396 - 1461
Sir
Lawrence
De Cheney
65
65
~1414
Elizabeth
Cokayne
~1370 - 1429
John
Cokayne
59
59
~1365 - 1399
William
De
Cheney
34
34
1372 - 1436
Catherine
Pabenham
64
64
~1340
John
Cokayne
~1430
Mary
De
Cheney
~1433
John
De
Cheney
~1436
Catherine
De
Cheney
~1405
Philip
De
Tilney
~1410 - 1436
Elizabeth
De
Thorpe
26
26
~1343 - 1418
Edmund
De
Thorpe
75
75
~1363 - 3 JAN 1414/15
Joan
De
Northwood
~1380
Frederick
De
Tilney
~1382
Margaret
De
Rockforde
~1392
Richard
Berners
~1398 - 1421
Philippa
Dallingridge
23
23
~1372
Walter
Dallingridge
~1376
Margaret
Chamond
1345 - 1397
Eleanor
De
Louvaine
52
52
~1300
William
Bourchier
~1448 - 1516
Alice
FitzHugh
68
68
~1476
Richard
De
Fiennes
~1478
Edward
De
Fiennes
~1480
Roger
De
Fiennes
~1483
William
De
Fiennes
~1496
Mary
De
Fiennes
~1497
John
De
Fiennes
~1518
John
De
Fiennes
~1523
Anne
De
Fiennes
1538
Thomas
De
Fiennes
1539
George
Gregory
De Fiennes
1569
Henry
Leonard
1572
Anne
Leonard
1573
Gregory
Leonard
1577
Thomas
Leonard
1578
Margaret
Leonard
1583
Frances
Leonard
1584
John
Leonard
1587
Lydia
White
~1325
John
Strangeways
~1335
Alice
~1300
Thomas
Strangeways
~1300
Alice
~1270
Geoffrey
Strangeways
~1275
Sybil
Girard
De
Furnival
Peter
de
Chaworth
~1298
Otho
De
Grandison
~1300
Agnes
De
Grandison
~1245
Simon
de
Patteshull
~1250
Isabel
de
Steingreve
~1230
John
de
Steingreve
~1210
Hugh
de
Patteshull
Hugh de Patteshull, uncle to Maud, wife of Nigel de Mowbray, gave to Hubert de Burgh 300 marks fine on behalf of the said Maud that she might marry whom she thought fit and enjoy her dowery.
~1180
Sir
Simon de
Patteshull
In the time of King Henry III, 1216-1272, Simon de Patteshull held the Manor of Bletnesho, Bletsho, Bletso, County Bedford, by the services of one knight's fee
~1383
Margaret
de
Beauchamp
~1375
Robert de
Mawtby-
Maltby
~1400
John
de
Mawtby
~1400
Margaret
Berney
~1440 - 1479
Margaret
de
Mawtby
39
39
~1530
Robert
Littleton
~1380
Agnes
Berry
~1530
Elizabeth
Stanley
~1442
Richard
Conyers
~1450 - 1507
Elizabeth
Claxton
57
57
~1420
Sir
Robert
Claxton
~1470
Robert
Conyers
~1475
Margery
Bamforth
~1500
Christopher
Conyers
~1505
Elizabeth
Jackson
~1475
John
Jackson
~1530
Richard
Conyers
~1535
Isabel
Lumley
~1505
Robert
Lumley
~1560
Christopher
Conyers
~1565
Anne
Hadworth
~1535
John
Hedworth
~1597
Mary
Conyers
~1590
William
Wilkinson
1352 - 1399
Philip
D'Arcy
47
47
~1312
Maud
Botetourt
~1285
John
Botetourt
Thomas
Langton
1311 - 1370
Reginald
De
Grey
58
58
~1475
Joan
D'Arcy
~1290
Anne
De
Rockley
1605 - 1665
Joseph
Metcalfe
60
60
~1645
Thomas
Metcalfe
~1285 - 1328
Richard
De
Talbot
43
43
~1370 - 1403
Sir
Giles
Daubeny
32
32
1306 - 13 FEB 1370/71
John
L'Arcedekne
~1310 - >1364
Cecily
Haccombe
54
54
~1280
Jordan
Haccombe
~1284
Isabel
de St
Aubin
~1254
Mauger
de St
Aubin
~1275 - 1331
Thomas
L'Arcedekne
56
56
~1287
Alice
De La
Roche
~1250 - 1314
Thomas
de La
Roche
64
64
~1254
Margaret
~1220 - >1251
John
de La
Roche
31
31
~1224
Maud
Le
Waleys
~1256 - 1290
Otes
L'Arcedekne
34
34
~1259
Amice
~1220 - ~1278
Thomas
L'Arcedekne
58
58
~1230
Alice
~1417 - 1467
Sir
Roger
Corbet
50
50
It is interesting to note that Roger Corbet who had married Elizabeth Hopton fought on the winning side, the Lancastrians. Family against family!! I believe Roger Corbet was beheaded in 1467.
~1230
Ralph
Hussey
~1210
John
de
Arundel
1451 - 1493
Sir
Richard
Corbet
42
42
~1455
Elizabeth
Devereux
1432 - 1485
Sir
Walter
Devereux
53
53
1438 - 9 JAN 1467/68
Agnes
De
Ferrers
1412 - 1450
Sir
William de
Ferrers
38
38
~1420
Elizabeth
Bealknap
~1415
William
Vernon
~1385 - 1451
Sir
Richard
Vernon
66
66
~1390
Benedicta
Ludlow
~1395
William
Swinfen
~1400
Joyce
Spernor
1539 - 1602
Richard
Cotton
63
63
~1480
Joan
Lacon
~1434
Jane
De
Sutton
~1329 - 1370
John III
De
Sutton
41
41
~1304 - 1359
John II
De
Sutton
55
55
~1308 - 1397
Isabel
de
Cherleton
89
89
1260 - >1295
Isabel
Patrick
35
35
~1230
William
Patrick
~1240 - 1290
Bernice
de
Malpas
50
50
~1240 - 8 MAR 1272/73
Robert
de
Sutton
~1245
Joanna
~1215 - 1267
Sir
William
de Sutton
52
52
~1220
Matilda
~1195 - <1259
Rowland
de
Sutton
64
64
~1195
Alice
De
Lexington
~1170
Richard
De
Lexington
~1175
Matilda
de
Cauz
~1150 - >1195
Harvey
IV De
Sutton
45
45
~1115
Harvey
III De
Sutton
~1120
Elizabeth
Patrick
~1090
Harvey
II De
Sutton
~1050
Harvey
De
Sutton
~1478
Sir
John
Mainwaring
~1469 - <1516
Cicely
Mainwaring
47
47
~1465
John
Cotton
~1432
William
De
Coton
~1440
Agnes
Younge
~1505 - 1545
Sir
George
Cotton
40
40
~1510
Mary
Onley
~1485
John
Onley
~1490
Jane
Pontesbury
~1460 - 1514
Thomas
Pontesbury
54
54
~1470 - 1514
Elizabeth
Grafton
44
44
~1440
Richard
Grafton
~1460
John
Onley
1573
Frances
Cotton
~1410
Philip
Younge
~1400
William
de
Coton
~1360
Roger
de
Coton
~1370
Ellen
Grymelond
~1336
Richard
de
Coton
~1310 - ~1360
Hugh
de
Coton
50
50
~1460
Margery
Horde
~1330
John
Mainwaring
~1266
Joan
Corbet
1306 - 1343
Sir John
III De
Beauchamp
36
36
~1308 - 1361
Margaret
De Saint
John
53
53
~1327 - 1391
Eleanor
De
Beauchamp
64
64
~1326
Margaret
De
Beauchamp
20 JAN 1328/29 - 1361
John
IV De
Beauchamp
~1330
Edward
De
Beauchamp
~1331
William
De
Beauchamp
~1334 - 1394
Cecily
De
Beauchamp
60
60
~1308 - 1358
Sir
John
Blount
50
50
~1299
Sir
Walter
Blount
~1352
Thomas
Blount
~1330
Richard
Tuberville
~1330
Sir
Roger III
Seymour
1273 - 1329
John De
Saint
John
55
55
~1325
Henry
Lunet
1309
William
De Saint
John
1310 - 1335
Hugh
De Saint
John
25
25
~1315
Merebelle
De
Wake
~1136
Fulk
de
Reaufou
Reynold
Paveley
~1302
Aleanore
De
Beauchamp
~1304
Beatrice
De
Beauchamp
~1305
William
De
Beauchamp
~1308
Thomas
De
Beauchamp
~1310 - >1343
Joan
De
Beauchamp
33
33
~1300
John
de
Cobham
~1320
John
de
Meriet
~1225 - 1302
John De
Saint
John
77
77
~1382
Sir
James
Blount
~1384
Peter
Blount
~1386
Anne
Blount
~1388
Sir
John
Blount
~1334
Diego
Gomez
de Toledo
~1338
Inez
Alfonsa
de Ayala
~1306
Fernan
Perez de
Ayala
~1310
Elvira
Alvarez
de Zaval
~1282
Diego
Gutierrez
de Zavallos
~1284
Juana
Garcia
Carrillo
~1256
Garci
Gomez
Carrillo
~1258
Elvira
Alvarez de
Ossorio
~1254
Rhy
Goncalez
de Zavallos
~1256
Maria
Cavieres
~1225
Gontalo
Diaz de
Zavallos
~1228
Antozina
de
Hoz
~1278
Pero (Pedro)
Lopez de
Ayala
~1282
Sancha
Fernandez
de Barroso
~1254
Fernan
Perez de
Barroso
~1256
Mencia
Garcia de
Soto-Mayor
~1230
Garci
Melendez de
Soto-Mayor
~1232
Ines La
Gorda de
Toledo
~1227
Pedro
Gomez de
Barroso
~1230
Lamila
de
Acevedo
~1202
Fernan
Perez de
Acevedo
~1206
Maria
de
Acevedo
~1246
Sancho
Lopez
de Ayala
~1250
Aldonza
de
Velasco
~1308
Gomez
Perez de
Vazquez
~1312
Teresa
Garcia de
Toledo
~1284
Diego
Garcia de
Toledo
~1297
Maria
Garcia
Gudiel
~1257 - 1288
Juan
Garcia de
Toledo
31
31
~1261
Ines
Garcia
~1232 - 16 JAN 1259/60
Garcia Ibanez
O Yanez de
Toledo
~1224
Maria
Fernandez
Gudiel
~1183
Fernan
Gudiel
~1189
Urraca
Barroso
~1208
Juan
Perez de
Toledo
~1184
Pedro
Garcia
~1185
Maria
Dominico
~1160
Diego
Garcia
~1132
Garcia
Rodiguez
~1282
Fernan
Gomez
de Toledo
~1285
Teresa
Vazquez
de Acuna
~1256 - 27 JAN 1290/91
Gomez
Perez de
Palomeque
~1259
Arabuena
Armildez
~1231
Gutierre
Armildez
~1237
Mayor
Fernandez
~1229
Pedro
Fernandez de
Toledo Illan
~1233
Urraca
Palomeque
~1203
Fernan
Perez de
Toledo
~1206
Luna
Illan
~1178
Esteban
Illan
~1183
Luna
~1177
Pedro
Gutierrez
~1150
Gutierre
Perez
~1120
Pedro
Suarez
~1270 - 1316
Sir
Walter
Blount
46
46
~1274 - ~1331
Johanna
de
Sodington
57
57
~1250
William
Soddington
~1233 - 1316
Sir
William
Blount
83
83
~1197 - 1288
Robert
Blount
91
91
~1202
Isabel
de
Odingsells
~1166 - 1235
Stephen
Le
Blount
69
69
~1170
Marie
(Maria)
Le Blount
~1149 - >1216
William
Le
Blount
67
67
~1123
William
Le
Blount
~1097
William
Le
Blount
~1120 - ~1188
Gilbert
Le
Blount
68
68
<1130 - >1198
Agnes
De
L'Isle
68
68
~1096 - ~1169
William
Le
Blount
73
73
~1097
Sarah
de
Munchensey
~1065 - 1139
Hubert
de
Munchensey
74
74
~1035 - 1107
Hubert
de
Munchensey
72
72
~1300
Matilda
De
Ferrers
~1302
Alice
Blount
~1310
Isolda
De
Mountjoy
~1416
Sancha
Blount
~1418
Agnes
Blount
~1422 - 1468
Sir
Thomas
Blount
46
46
~1424
Elizabeth
Blount
~1432
Agnes
(Anna)
Hawley
~1453
Anna
Blount
~1454
Elizabeth
Blount
~1459
Robert
Blount
~1446
William
Marbury
1367 - 1456
Sir
Thomas
Gresley
89
89
1369
Margaret
Walsh
~1343
Thomas
Walsh
~1348
Katherine
~1315
John
Walsh
~1285
Thomas
Walsh
~1290
Katherine
~1255
John
Walsh
~1225
Robert
Walsh
~1190
John
Walsh
~1160
Robert
Walsh
~1165
Elizabeth
~1130
William
Walsh
~1100
Roger
Walsh
~1345 - ~1380
Sir
Nicholas
Gresley
35
35
~1345
Thomasine
de
Wasteneys
~1321 - 1364
Sir Thomas
De
Wasteneys
43
43
~1325 - 1392
Johanna
Toly
67
67
~1301
John
Toly
~1274
Isabella
Hay
~1130
Sir William
De
Wasteneys
~1134
Alice
Acton
~1165
Sir William
De
Wasteneys
~1169
Matthania
de
Colton
~1190 - 1226
Sir Philip
De
Wasteneys
36
36
~1198
Amphilis
FitzWalter
~1219 - ~1260
Sir William
De
Wasteneys
41
41
~1223
Margaret
~1244
Sir William
De
Wasteneys
~1250
Constance
~1271
John
de
Wasteneys
~1296
Sir William
De
Wasteneys
~1298
Joanna
Brett
~1325 - ~1395
Sir
John
Gresley
70
70
~1325 - ~1350
Alice
De
Swynnerton
25
25
~1298 - 1332
Sir
Geoffrey
Gresley
34
34
~1304 - ~1352
Margaret
De
Gernon
48
48
~1277
Sir John
De
Gernon
~1273 - ~1310
Sir
Peter
Gresley
37
37
~1278 - ~1342
Johanna
de
Stafford
64
64
~1251
Sir Robert
De
Stafford
~1243 - 1306
Geoffrey
Gresley
63
63
~1248
Agnes
~1206 - 1254
Sir
William
Gresley
48
48
~1212
Elizabeth
Bakepuiz
~1184
John
de
Bakepuiz
~1169
Roesia
~1110
Robert
Bakepuiz
~1120
Miss
Grimbald
~1046
Ralph
Bakepuiz
~1172 - ~1240
Geoffrey
Gresley
68
68
~1176 - ~1244
Margaret
Somervile
68
68
~1149
Roger
Somervile
~1154
Maud
~1151
William
Gresley
~1151
Basilia
~1125 - ~1183
Robert
Gresley
58
58
~1130
Basilia
~1090 - ~1166
William Fitz
Nigel de
Gresley
76
76
~1095
Elena
~1040 - ~1115
Nigel
de
Gresley
75
75
5 JAN 1642/43 - 1674
Hannah
Templer
Posted by Cathy - treetracer@@attbi.com
1665
James
Stuart
1667
John
Stuart
1669
Samuel
Stuart
24 JAN 1671/72
Hannah
Stuart
1674
Margaret
Stuart
~1615
Richard
Templer
~1620
Hannah
Pritchard
~1640
Robert
Stuart
1673
Katherine
Stuart
1676
Alexander
Stewart
~1670
Elizabeth
Alberti
~1575
John
Campbell
~1535
Archibald
Campbell
~1550
Marion
Campbell
~1520
Colin
Campbell
~1530
Isabella
Montgomery
~1510 - 28 FEB 1537/38
Angus
Campbell
~1480 - 1513
Alexander
Campbell
33
33
~1450
Ian
Campbell
~1490
daughter
of Dugal
Campbell
~1460
Dugal
Campbell
~1385 - ~1443
Sir
David
Dunbar
58
58
~1380 - 17 JAN 1445/46
David
Lindsay
~1448 - 1509
Elizabeth
Lindsay
61
61
~1355 - 1391
Sir
Walter
Ogilvy
36
36
~1360
Isabel
Ramsay
~1330
Sir
Malcolm
Ramsay
~1325
Walter
Ogilvy
~1295
Patrick
Ogilvy
~1300
Marjorie
Ramsay
~1270
Robert
Ramsay
~1265
Patrick
Ogilvy
~1235
Patrick
Ogilvy
~1200
Gilbert
Ogilvy
~1177
Gilbert
Ogilvie
~1360 - 1438
Alexander
Lindsay
78
78
~1360 - >1429
Marjorie
Dunbar
69
69
~1330 - FEB 1405/06
David
Lindsay
~1310 - 1381
Sir
Alexander
Lindsay
71
71
~1310
Katherine
Stirling
~1280
Sir
John
Stirling
~1280
Sir David
De
Lindsay
~1290
Mary
de
Abernethy
~1270
Sir
Alexander de
Abernethy
~1240 - 1291
Sir
Hugh de
Abernethy
51
51
~1173
Orm
de
Abernethy
~1210
Lawrence
de
Abernethy
~1135
Eoghin
de
Abernethy
~1100 - 1136
Gillemichael
MacDuff
36
36
~1070
Edelrad
MacDuff
Abbott of Dunkeld
~1040 - <1098
Earl of
Moray
Æthelred
58
58
~1050
daughter
of King
Lulach
~1032 - 17 MAR 1056/57
Lulach
Macrory
~1034
Fimmghuala
Mormaer
~1005
Sinill
Mormaer
~1000 - 1032
Gillecomgain
Macrory
32
32
~1010
Gruoch
MacDuff
~0980 - <1033
Boedhe
MacDuff
53
53
~0935 - 0966
King of Alba
and Scotland
Dhubh
31
31
~0960 - 1005
III
Kenneth
45
45
~0962
King of
Strathclyde
Malcolm
~0978
II Giric
~0982
Prince of
Scotland
Dunegal
~0970
Maelbrighde
Macrory
~0940
Ruaidhri
Ruadel
~0910
Domnall
~0880
Morgund
~0850
Domnall
~0820
Ruadri
~0790
Ferchar
~0760
Muiredach
~0730
Bartan
~0700
Eochaid
of
Argyll
~0670 - 0736
Muiredach
King of
Argyll
66
66
~0640 - >0698
King of
DalRiada
Ambchellach
58
58
~0620 - 0697
Fearachar
Fada "The
Long"
77
77
~0600
Feradach
Finn
~0580
Fergus
~0560
Nechtan
~0540
Malcolm
Coluim
~0510
Baedan
~0490
Eochaidh
~0470
Muiredach
~0445
Loarn
Mor
~0420
Loarn
~0425
Geodnaid
Erc
~0400
Eochaid
Muin
~0370
Áengus
Fert
~0340
Fedlimid
Aisling
~0320
Áengus
Buaidnech
~0300
Fedelmid
Ruamnach
~0275
King of
Dal Riada
Senchormac
~0255
Cruithluithe
~0235
Finn
Fiacc
~0215
Achir
Cirre
~0195
Eochaid
Antóit
~0175
Fiachra
Cathmáil
~0155
Eochaid
Cairbre
~0135
II
Conaire
~0100
Mogh
Lamha
~0120
Saraid
of
Ireland
Fearadhach
Finnfeachtnach
Clothia
Fer
Anarath
King of
Denmark
Lochlin
Baine
Balbh
Clothfionn
Uchtleathan
~1160 - ~1236
William
De
Lindsay
76
76
~1130 - ~1200
Sir William
De
Lindsay
70
70
~1140
Aleanora
De
Limesay
~1120
Lord of
Limesay
Gerard
~1100
Walter
De
Lindsay
~1070
William
De
Lindsay
~1040
Sir Walter
De
Lindsay
~1010
Baldric
De
Lindsay
~1420 - 1470
Sir
Malcolm
Drummond
50
50
~1432
Mariot
Murray
~1390 - 1452
Sir
David
Murray
62
62
~1415 - ~1454
Margaret
Colquhoun
39
39
~1395 - 1479
Sir
John
Colquhoun
84
84
~1375
Malcolm
Colquhoun
~1355 - 1439
Sir
John
Colquhoun
84
84
~1329
Sir
Humphrey
Colquhoun
~1300
Sir
Robert
Colquhoun
~1270
Humphrey
De
Colquhoun
~1360
Sir
David
Murray
~1370
Isabel
Stuart
~1340 - 1421
Sir
John
Stuart
81
81
~1300 - <1358
Sir
John
Murray
58
58
~1280 - <1352
Sir
William
Murray
72
72
~1260 - 1332
Andrew
Murray
72
72
~1240
Sir William
De
Moravia
~1240
Ada
Malise
~1210 - <1289
Sir Malcolm
De Moravia
79
79
~1220
daughter of
Sir Geoffrey
de Cask
~1190
Sir
Geoffrey
de Cask
~1380
Sir
Walter
Drummond
~1382
Margaret
Ruthven
~1350
Sir
William
Ruthven
~1350
Sir
John
Drummond
~1365
Elizabeth
Sinclair
~1340
Henry
Sinclair
~1310
William
Sinclair
~1322
Isabella
Malise
~1290
Earl
Malise
~1320
Sir
John
Drummond
~1330
Mary
Montifex
~1300
Sir
William
Montifex
~1290
Sir
Malcolm
Drummond
~1300
daughter
de
Graham
~1270
Sir
Patrick de
Graham
~1652
Donald
Stuart
~1654
John
Stuart
1750 - 1816
Isabella
Cook
66
66
1715 - 1766
Alexander
Caldwell
51
51
Alexander was born, according to some family histories, near Loung Neagh or Lake Yoh in Northern Ireland. Family stories have reported Alexander's date of birth as early as 1690 and as late as 1723. The date of 1723, I believe was based on the fact that son Robert was born in 1747. His family believed Robert was the oldest child and backed into Alexander's date of birth based on Robert's age. It was known that son William's children intermarried with his brother Alexander's and other histories connected the children through other stories. The children were believed to be Robert, born 1747; William 1750; Alexander 1752; and John 1754. Currently, stories and other records make it clear that son William was born 1730-1740, as his son Robert was born in 1757. Alexander is said to have gone to Wales to visit his cousins and there married his cousin Mary Colwell (Cauldwell). They had little money, but wanted to go to America, so they bonded themselves to a ship's captain for a term of servitude. Alexander was able to pay off his debt within a year, and then worked a little longer to help Mary pay off her portion. They bought land about 6 miles North of Philadelphia. I had found records where Alexander was born in 1690 and died in 1766. This information seemed more believable, until I recently found records of another Alexander who was born in New Hampshire in 1690 and died in January of 1766 in Connecticut. Th is seems too coincidental, and I believe that someone has picked up these dates and passed them along as our Alexander. At this point, it appears that Alexander and Mary may have married closer to 1727-1735. They were said to be friends of William Penn, and I must assume this was the grandson of William Penn the founder of Pennsylvania. William, the grandson, was born in Ireland in 1703 and inherited his grandfather's estate after his older brother died without issue. As Alexander and Mary were said to have come to America after their marriage, I must assume all of their children were born in Pennsylvania. They may have come to America as early as 1727, at the time when a John Caldwell is said to have come to America. They may have had several daughters before their sons were born, but there are no records available or information passed down on the daughters. At some point, the family moved to Westmoreland Co., Pennsylvania. Alexander died there, but his body was taken to the old family site near Philadelphia for burial according to various family histories. At this point, I'm not sure if Alexander actually died in 1766 or if this was a date picked up from the other Alexander. It is hard to know what stories are based on fact and what are from people related stories they have found on other Alexander's. As most of the children began to move to Kentucky around 1784, I believe Alexander may have died before that time. - Taken from a Rootsweb WorldConnect member's Gedcom (dkrglasserG@@aol.com) 3/8/2002.
1775 - ~1837
George
Washington
Caldwell
62
62
1783 - 1833
Andrew
Caldwell
49
49
1785 - 1833
David
Caldwell
47
47
1787 - 1839
Daniel
Cook
Caldwell
51
51
1790 - 1795
Nancy
Caldwell
5
5
~1720
Andrew
Cook
~1725
Mary
Means
1783
Rhoda
Bishop
1810 - 1845
James
Caldwell
35
35
http://www.starbase21.com/kybiog/butler/caldwell.sj.txt Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 2nd ed., 1885, Butler Co. SAMUEL J. CALDWELL, Butler County, was born March 12 1840, in this county, and is the son of James and Martha (Ried) Caldwell. The former was a native of this county; was born March 10, 1810; he was a wealthy farmer, and died in 1845. His father was George W. Caldwell, a native of Virginia, and who in early youth came to Logan County, now Butler, where he died about 1837. He was the son of Oliver Caldwell, who came from Scotland, and lived and died in Virginia. The father of subject, James Caldwell, married Martha Ried, a daughter of Cunningham and Peggy (Ewing) Ried, of Butler County. To them were born George W., William C., Samuel J., Daniel C., and Mary m. (Mansfield). Samuel J. was brought up on a farm, and received but a limited education. He was married January 15, 1863, to Margaret R., daughter of William and Margaret (Wright) Caldwell. She was born September 30, 1839, and died December 3, 1872. This union was blessed with the birth of the following children: James W., Margaret L., and Lille B. A coincidence in the history of this branch of the Caldwell family is the fact that subject, his wife, both their parents and their children were born and reared in the same house, and the homestead of the grandfather still remains in possession of the family. Mr. Caldwell is a man temperate in all his habits, industrious and economical. He owns 1,061 acres of improved land. His dwelling is one of the finest and best in the county, and his barns and other buildings are excellent; he has six barns, one of which is 161X50 feet, and twenty feet high to the eaves. He has also fifty acres in fruit, 200 pear trees and other varieties of fine fruit. He owns nearly 100 horses and mules, and fifty head of cattle. He deals in tobacco, and frequently has on hand at one time 400,000 pounds of the leaf. He is a member of the Masonic order, and in politics a Democrat.
1807
John
Caldwell
1820
William
Caldwell
1815 - 1896
Martha
Cunningham
Reid
80
80
1840
Samuel
J.
Caldwell
SAMUEL J. CALDWELL, Butler County, was born March 12 1840, in this county, and is the son of James and Martha (Ried) Caldwell. The former was a native of this county; was born March 10, 1810; he was a wealthy farmer, and died in 1845. His father was George W. Caldwell, a native of Virginia, and who in early youth came to Logan County, now Butler, where he died about 1837. He was the son of Oliver Caldwell, who came from Scotland, and lived and died in Virginia. The father of subject, James Caldwell, married Martha Ried, a daughter of Cunningham and Peggy (Ewing) Ried, of Butler County. To them were born George W., William C., Samuel J., Daniel C., and Mary m. (Mansfield). Samuel J. was brought up on a farm, and received but a limited education. He was married January 15, 1863, to Margaret R., daughter of William and Margaret (Wright) Caldwell. She was born September 30, 1839, and died December 3, 1872. This union was blessed with the birth of the following children: James W., Margaret L., and Lille B. A coincidence in the history of this branch of the Caldwell family is the fact that subject, his wife, both their parents and their children were born and reared in the same house, and the homestead of the grandfather still remains in possession of the family. Mr. Caldwell is a man temperate in all his habits, industrious and economical. He owns 1,061 acres of improved land. His dwelling is one of the finest and best in the county, and his barns and other buildings are excellent; he has six barns, one of which is 161X50 feet, and twenty feet high to the eaves. He has also fifty acres in fruit, 200 pear trees and other varieties of fine fruit. He owns nearly 100 horses and mules, and fifty head of cattle. He deals in tobacco, and frequently has on hand at one time 400,000 pounds of the leaf. He is a member of the Masonic order, and in politics a Democrat.
Cunningham
Reid
Peggy
Ewing
~1836
George
W.
Caldwell
~1838
William
C.
Caldwell
1841 - 1917
Daniel
Cook
Caldwell
75
75
~1844
Mary
Mansfield
Caldwell
1839 - 1872
Margaret
R.
Caldwell
33
33
William
Caldwell
Margaret
Wright
~1864
James
W.
Caldwell
~1866
Margaret
L.
Caldwell
~1868
Lillie
B.
Caldwell
~1548 - 1601
Elizabeth
Mainwaring
53
53
~1547 - 1613
Sir
Thomas
Aston
66
66
~1565
Grace
Aston
~1570
John
Aston
~1571
Arthur
Aston
~1572
Thomas
Aston
~1574
Frances
Aston
~1575
Grace
Aston
~1577
Margaret
Aston
~1579
Elizabeth
Aston
~1580
Mary
Aston
~1581
Ann
Aston
~1584
Katherine
Aston
~1513
John
Aston
~1549
John
Aston
~1560
Mary
Unton
~1560
John
Hocknell
~1590
Elizabeth
Hocknell
~1570
Robert
Davis
~1570
Owen
Longford
~1564
Anthony
Sweetenham
1605 - 1660
Mary
Sweetenham
55
55
~1519
Lawrence
Sweetenham
~1520
Elizabeth
Oldfield
1603 - 19 FEB 1638/39
John
Caldwell
1630 - 1692
John
Caldwell
61
61
1637
Joseph
Caldwell
1634
James
Caldwell
1577 - 1658
William
Caldwell
81
81
1635 - 1691
Mary
Holmes
56
56
~1605
James
Holmes
~1610
Jane
Jennings
~1655
Margaret
Caldwell
9 JAN 1656/57
Joseph
Caldwell
~1659
Mary
Jane
Caldwell
~1661
William
Caldwell
~1663
Andrew
Caldwell
~1665
David
Caldwell
~1667
Daniel
Caldwell
~1635
Margaret
Porter
~1726
David
Caldwell
1709 - 1791
Mary
Cauldwell
82
82
~1754
John
Caldwell
~1736 - 1839
William
Caldwell
103
103
1747 - 1836
Robert
Caldwell
88
88
1752 - 1821
Alexander
Caldwell
68
68
Judge
Dudley
1708 - 1788
Mary
Rogers
79
79
1732
Thomas
Chase
Mary
White
1734
Rogers
Chase
1736
Stephen
Chase
1737
Moses
Chase
(X) Moses (2), son of Benoni Chase, was born in Sutton, New Hampshire. October 5, 1737. He was a soldier in the revolution from Sutton in Captain Samuel Sibley's company on the Lexington Alarm; also in 1776 in Captain Benjamin Richardson's company, Colonel Dike's regiment; also in Captain Andrew Eliot's company, Colonel Jonathan Holman's regiment in 1776 and 1777 and he was at the taking of Burgoyne. He removed to Douglas, Massachusetts, and later in life to Williamstown, Vermont, and finally to Rochester, Vermont. Children: Asa, born 1765, died October 9, 1847, married Olive (???) and settled in Alstead New Hampshire; Simeon, married Jemima Holden: Aaron, never married; Abner (
1739 - 1745
Mary
Chase
6
6
1744
Hannah
Chase
18 FEB 1746/47 - 1748
Elijah
Chase
1749
Mary
Chase
1752
David
Chase
1765 - 1847
Asa
Chase
82
82
~1768
Simeon
Chase
Jemima
Holden
~1772
Aaron
Chase
~1775
Abner
Chase
1735
Mary
Chase
Nathan
Rawson
1737
Thankful
Chase
1739
Isaac
Chase
Betty
Yates
1741
Lydia
Chase
Jonathan
Goldthwait
1744
Solomon
Chase
1748
Hannah
Chase
Simon
Chase
Daniel
Chase
1750 - 1806
Abel
Chase
55
55
1753 - 1818
Elizabeth
Elliott
65
65
Jonathon
Elliot
Hannah
Wheeler
1694
Stephen
Sanborn
~1633
Lydia
Perkins
~1637
Rebecca
Perkins
1639
Isaac
Perkins
1640 - >1711
Jacob
Perkins
71
71
1645
Rebecca
Perkins
~1646
Caleb
Perkins
17 FEB 1648/49
Benjamin
Perkins
1671
Stephen
Sanborn
1651
Mary
Philbrick
~1568 - 1604
Nicholas
Knapp
36
36
19 MAR 1653/54 - >1700
Apphia
Philbrick
1 MAR 1655/56
Esther
Philbrick
13 MAR 1657/58 - 1 JAN 1710/11
Thomas
Philbrick
14 FEB 1659/60
Sarah
Philbrick
1663 - 1755
Joseph
Philbrick
92
92
1668
Mehitable
Philbrick
1666
Elizabeth
Philbrick
1645
Timothy
Hilliard
1670
Benjamin
Hilliard
1679
Elizabeth
Hilliard
1686
Apphia
Hilliard
1656
Mehitable
Ayers
1684
Jerimiah
Philbrick
1689
Timothy
Philbrick
14 MAR 1690/91
Ann
Philbrick
1693
Mehitable
Philbrick
1700
Jedidiah
Philbrick
1663
Tryphena
Marston
19 FEB 1686/87
Joseph
Philbrick
11 MAR 1687/88
Zachariah
Philbrick
1691
Sabina
Philbrick
13 JAN 1693/94
Anna
Philbrick
1696
Ephraim
Philbrick
1701
Phebe
Philbrick
1703
Joses
Philbrick
1660
Nathaniel
Berry
1695
Nathaniel
Berry
1654
Bethia
Philbrick
1657
Jonathan
Philbrick
1660
Samuel
Philbrick
1663
Elizabeth
Philbrick
Hannah
French
White
1671
Isaac
Perkins
1674
Jacob
Perkins
1678
Mary
Perkins
1635
John
Hussey
1660
Theodate
Hussey
1664
John
Hussey
1665
Mary
Hussey
1670
Huldah
Hussey
1651 - 1723
James
Philbrick
72
72
16 MAR 1716/17
Jonathan
Sanborn
1671
Thomas
Rollins
~1701
Dorcas
Rollins
~1702
Tabitha
Rollins
~1703
Katherine
Rollins
~1704
Phebe
Rollins
~1705
Mary
Rollins
~1707
Rachel
Rollins
~1700
Caleb
Rollins
1681
John
Sanborn
1709
Ruth
Abigail
Sanborn
1720
Anne
Philbrick
1608 - 1683
Abraham
Perkins
75
75
~1608 - 1706
Mary
Wyeth
98
98
1639 - 1677
Abraham
Perkins
37
37
1640
Mary
Perkins
1647 - 1731
James
Perkins
84
84
1650
Jonathan
Perkins
28 FEB 1652/53
David
Perkins
1655
Abigail
Perkins
1657
Caleb
Perkins
1661
Humphrey
Perkins
~1640
Elizabeth
Sleeper
1671
Mercy
Perkins
1673
Mary
Perkins
1676
Elizabeth
Perkins
1629
Giles
Fifield
~1658
Giles
Fifield
1665
Richard
Fifield
1661 - 19 FEB 1747/48
Leah
Cox
30 JAN 1687/88 - 1723
Lydia
Perkins
1691 - ~1740
Hannah
Perkins
49
49
~1693 - 1736
Elizabeth
Perkins
43
43
17 MAR 1694/95
James
Perkins
1719
John
Clifford
1721
Joseph
Clifford
1666
Ezekiel
Woodward
~1730
Stephen
Woodward
1594 - 1687
Moses
Cox
93
93
~1620
Prudence
Marston
1641
John
Folsom
23 FEB 1674/75
Abigail
Folsom
1677
Abraham
Folsom
1680
Sarah
Folsom
1685
Mercy
Folsom
1590
Humphrey
Wyeth
~1595
Susan
Pakeman
1590 - 1672
William
Marston
82
82
1593
Goody
1560
Henry
Marston
11 MAR 1624/25
William
Marston
1637
Rebecca
Page
1656
Hannah
Marston
1660
Rebecca
Marston
1661
Samuel
Marston
1665
Lucy
Marston
1672
Maria
Marston
1575
John
Roberts
~1637
Thomas
Philbrick
~1639
Elizabeth
Philbrick
~1640
Hannah
Philbrick
~1643
Mary
Philbrick
~1640
John
Brackett
1650 - 1737
John
Philbrick
87
87
Sources: 1. Title: History of Hampton N.H. 1638-1892 J.Dow Abbrev: History of Hampton N.H.~~1638-1892~~ J.Dow Page: 909
1651
Hannah
Philbrick
1651
Martha
Philbrick
1654
Abigail
Philbrick
1656
Ephraim
Philbrick
~1635 - 1667
Ann
Palmer
32
32
1618 - 1657
Anne
Knapp
38
38
~1570 - 1638
Alice
Howlat
68
68
1592 - 1670
Nicholas
Knapp
78
78
1610
Eleanor
Lockwood
1635 - 1674
Caleb
Knapp
39
39
1537 - 1617
Robert
Knappe
80
80
1531
Margaret
Foley
1486 - 1548
Edmund
Foley
62
62
~1493 - 25 FEB 1557/58
Mirabelle
Garneis
1455 - 1524
John
Garneis
69
69
~1456 - 1539
Elizabeth
Sulyard
83
83
~1439 - 1487
Henry
Foley
48
48
~1453
Constance
Geddinge
<1427
William
Geddinge
<1431
Margerie
Watkins
~1408 - 1485
Simon
Foley
77
77
~1412 - 1492
Margaret
Alcocke
80
80
<1386
Edmund
Alcocke
~1375
Richard
Foley
~1379
Margaret
Blyant
<1353
Simon
Blyant
<1357
Agnes
De
Bresworth
~1341
Thomas
Foley
~1344
Maude
Geslingham
~1492
Henry
Knappe
~1500 - 1552
Jyllian
52
52
~1718 - 1780
Benjamin
Philbrick
62
62
1671
Ebenezer
Cass
~1625
James
Walls
8 JAN 1654/55
Mary
Ann
Walls
17 MAR 1656/57
Hannah
Walls
~1620
Edward
Tuck
12 FEB 1649/50
John
Tuck
1649
Edward
Tuck
~1563 - 1663
Elizabeth
Read
100
100
1580 - <1651
Judith
Tue
71
71
~1540
John
Tue
~1553 - 1605
Cicely
52
52
~1483
William
Bloise
1540
Martha
Bloise
~1513
Richard
Bloise
~1510
Rose
Fisher
~1440 - ~1528
Thomas
Bloise
88
88
1536 - 1604
John
Knappe
68
68
~1452
Margaret
Style
~1428
William
Style
~1400 - ~1470
Thomas
Bloise
70
70
~1410
Joanne
Canham
~1380
Robert
Canham
~1370
Thomas
Bloise
~1370
Alice
3 FEB 1609/10 - 1676
William
Knapp
1613 - 1667
Mary
Knapp
53
53
1608
Elizabeth
Knapp
20 JAN 1621/22 - 22 JAN 1694/95
John
Knapp
Sarah
Young
1626 - 1696
James
Knapp
70
70
1629 - 1668
Judith
Knapp
39
39
1627
Nicholas
Cady
Thomas
Smith
~1625
Margaret
Dean
Mary
Knox
1629 - 1715
Elizabeth
Warren
86
86
Sources: [1] Genealogies and History of Watertown, by Henry Bond [2] Worcester County History [3] American Ancestry, Volume VII, 1982 [4] Colonial Families of the United States of America, Volume VI [5] New England Families,Volume IV,1914,by William Richard Cutter [6] Watertown Records,1894 (Land, Grants, and Possessions),Volume 1 [7] Middlesex County Probate (First Series Docket 23862),Volume 3 [8] Adair GEDCOM (ADAIR.GED),23 SEP 1994,by Matthew Adair,InterNet [9] The Winthrop Fleet of 1630,by Charles Edward Banks Michael Roman: Email: mroman@@clariion.com Doug Olson : Email: DOlson@@aol.com Stephen M. Lawson: Email: lawson@@tscnet.com The Warren-Scarlett ancestry in England is primarily based on the material presented in The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton 1878-1908: Part I The Ancestry of Warren Francis Kempton 1817-1879, by Dean Crawford Smith and edited by Melinde Lutz Sanborn (Boston, 1996), pages 462-474. This work contains much additional supporting material, and additional details on family members.
1654 - 1717
Prudence
Swain
63
63
1680 - 1747
Elias
Philbrick
67
67
1677
Rhoda
Perkins
~1619 - 1657
William
Swain
38
38
~1595
Richard
Swain
~1600
Basselle
1592 - >1634
Priscilla
Akers
42
42
1642
Priscilla
Knapp
1655
Elizabeth
Knapp
~1613
Anthony
Brackett
~1636 - 1689
Capt.
Anthony
Brackett
53
53
~1642
Thomas
Brackett
~1645
Eleanor
Brackett
~1651
Jane
Brackett
~1652
Susannah
Drake
Ann
Mitton
7 FEB 1678/79
Jane
Brackett
1680
Zipporah
Brackett
~1635
Joseph
Walker
~1635
John
Seavey
John
Buttery
1687
Hannah
Philbrick
1687
Abigail
Philbrick
~1690
John
Philbrick
~1692
Susanna
Philbrick
1690
Sabrina
Locke
~1710
Elias
Philbrick
~1712
Caleb
Philbrick
~1714
Eliphalet
Philbrick
~1716
John
Philbrick
~1720
Bethia
Philbrick
~1722
Rhoda
Philbrick
1639 - >1708
Thomas
Frame
69
69
31 JAN 1647/48 - >1708
Mary
Rowell
1618 - 1662
Valentine
Rowell
44
44
~1621 - 1690
Joanna
Pinder
69
69
1594 - 1662
Thomas
Rowell
68
68
~1594 - 1649
Margaret
Milner
55
55
1699
Mary
Challis
1701
Jacob
Challis
17 MAR 1702/03
Hannah
Challis
1705
Susanna
Challis
1707 - 1782
John
Challis
74
74
1709 - >1741
Jacob
Challis
32
32
15 MAR 1710/11
Sarah
Challis
1712
Eleanor
Challis
8 JAN 1713/14
Lydia
Challis
1716
Gideon
Challis
1718
Philip
Challis
1720
Thomas
Challis
Mary
Currier
7 FEB 1706/07 - 1748
Anne
Sargent
1676 - 1745
Gastret
Davis
68
68
1652 - 1710
Francis
Davis
57
57
12 JAN 1652/53
Mary
Taylor
~1623 - 11 FEB 1686/87
Walter
Taylor
~1630
Alice
Wells
1626 - 1709
Francis
Davis
83
83
~1629 - 1702
Gertrude
Emerson
73
73
1729
Gertrude
Challis
~1685
Elizabeth
Baxter
1731
Anna
Challis
1738
Timothy
Challis
1745
John
Challis
1748
Hannah
Challis
1750
Dorothy
Sleeper
~1720
William
Sleeper
~1725
Dorothy
Blaisdell
1773 - 1856
Anne
Challis
83
83
~1770
John
Philbrick
~1645 - 1657
Sarah
Philbrick
12
12
1620
Henry
Robey
~1660
Elizabeth
Barron
1638
Phillip
Lewis
Alice
~1560
John
Akers
~1585 - 1667
John
Warren
82
82
John WARREN b. abt 1585, Nayland, Suffolk, England,{4}; son of John and Elizabeth (SCARLETT) WARREN Baptized: 1 Aug 1585, Nayland, Suffolk, England,{5} m. in Nayland, Suffolk, England, Margaret CLEAR. John died 13 Dec 1667, Watertown, Middlesex, MA.{6} John Warren came to New England from Nayland, Suffolk, England, with the fleet of Sir Richard Saltonstall. [4/462] The fleet arrived at Salem June 12,1630. John Warren traveled with Governor Winthrop aboard the "Arabella".[9] From Salem, he with the rest of the company went to Charlestown, whence, after a brief stay they moved to Watertown.[2/252] John Warren settled in Watertown, Massachusetts at age 45. He was admitted as a freeman on May 18,1631; and was Selectman from 1636 to 1640 [1/619-620] which was a position of high regard. In 1635, he and Abraham Browne were appointed to lay out all highways, and to see that they were repaired.[1/619-620,7] ..... However, he does seem to have lost some favor with the authorities sometime thereafter as can be seen from the old records.[8] He sympathized with the Quakers, and was at odds with the Puritan Church.[2/130] In October 1651, he and Thomas Arnold, were each fined 20 shillings for an offence against the laws concerning baptism. On April 4, 1654, he was fined, for neglect of public worship, 14 Sabbaths, each 5 shillings = 3 pounds, 10 shillings. On March 14, 1658/59, he was to be warned for not attending public worship; but "old Warren is to be found in town". On May 27, 1661, the houses of "old Warren and goodman Hammond", were ordered to be searched for Quakers. [1/619-620] He appears to have agreed in religious sentiments with Dr. John Clark, of Newport, Nathaniel Briscoe, Sr., who returned from Watertown to England, Thomas Arnold, who moved from Watertown to Providence, RI. They were probably all Baptists.[1/960] Despite his lack of conviction for the established church and his leanings toward the Quaker faith, John never gave up or lost his church membership. He may have kept his membership to avoid losing some privileges, such as voting, etc.[5/1975,1/619] ..... By the time the first inventory of grants and possessions was taken in Watertown in 1639, John had acquired 278 acres of land, including 1) a homestall of 12 acres bounded west with the highway, east by William Hammond, north by John Biscoe, and south by Isaac Stearns; 2) 9 acres of upland bounded south by John Biscoe, north by William Hammond, end east and west with his own land; 3) 3 acres of meadow bounded east by William Hammond, north by John Simson, and west with his own; 4) 13 acres of plowland in the further plain, lot 84; 5) thirteen of meadow in the remote meadows, lot 50; 6) 16 1/2 acres upland beyond the further plain, lot 19; 7) 60 acres of upland being a great Divident in the fourth division, lot 26; 8) a farm of 152 acres upland in the third division.[6/42-43] His homestall lot of 12 acres, in 1642, was bounded west by the highway, east by William Hammond, north by John Biscoe, south by Isaac Sterne. He, also, then owned 7 other lots, amounting to about 176 acres.[1/619-620] In the second inventory taken in 1644 the 152 acre farm had been dispose of, but John has been granted: 8) 1 1/2 acres of meadow in Wards Meadow bounded by Thomas Arnold; 9) 1 1/2 acres of meadow near the little plain adjoining to John Eddy; 10) 2 acres of marsh southeast with the river and the west by the backlane.[6/100] By the end of his life, John still owned 188 acres of land.[3/161] ..... His wife, Margaret, died November 6,1662, and he died December 13,1667, aged 82. [1/619- 620] John Warren's Will, dated November 30, proved December 17, 1667, mentions the following children, probably all born in England; John, Mary, Daniel, Elizabeth.[1/619-620] The Will gives to son Daniel the 16 acres of land he now lives on; to daughter Mary Bigelow, 16 acres of land in lieu of township, now in her possession; to daughter Elizabeth Knapp, 16 acres of plowland, now in possession of her husband, James Knapp. The residue to sons John and Daniel. [Prob. Rec.III.,p.345].[1/960] In his Will he gave his daughter Elizabeth a book titled "the playnes man path way to heaven". He also mentioned his sons Daniel and John, daughter-in-law Mary Warren, wife of Daniel, daughter Mary Bigelow, Elizabeth Knap, wife of James Knap, grand children Warren, Mary Bigelow, and Michal Bloyce, daughter of Richard Bloyce. The Will was witnessed by Joseph Taynter and John Randall.[7/60] Inventory of the estate was taken Dec.16, 1667 by John Coolidge, and Henry Freeman and amounted to 167.4.0.[7/62] Sources: [1] Genealogies and History of Watertown, by Henry Bond [2] Worcester County History [3] American Ancestry, Volume VII, 1982 [4] Colonial Families of the United States of America, Volume VI [5] New England Families,Volume IV,1914,by William Richard Cutter [6] Watertown Records,1894 (Land, Grants, and Possessions),Volume 1 [7] Middlesex County Probate (First Series Docket 23862),Volume 3 [8] Adair GEDCOM (ADAIR.GED),23 SEP 1994,by Matthew Adair,InterNet [9] The Winthrop Fleet of 1630,by Charles Edward Banks Michael Roman: Email: mroman@@clariion.com Doug Olson : Email: DOlson@@aol.com Stephen M. Lawson: Email: lawson@@tscnet.com The Warren-Scarlett ancestry in England is primarily based on the material presented in The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton 1878-1908: Part I The Ancestry of Warren Francis Kempton 1817-1879, by Dean Crawford Smith and edited by Melinde Lutz Sanborn (Boston, 1996), pages 462-474. This work contains much additional supporting material, and additional details on family members.
~1590 - 1662
Margaret
Clear
72
72
~1555
John
Warren
~1560
Elizabeth
Scarlett
1615 - 1622
Mary
Warren
7
7
1620 - 1621
Sarah
Warren
1
1
1622 - 27 JAN 1701/02
John
Warren
Michal
Blois
1619 - 1622
Elizabeth
Warren
3
3
1624 - 1691
Mary
Warren
67
67
~1617 - 1703
John
Bigelow
86
86
25 FEB 1626/27 - 13 FEB 1714/15
Daniel
Warren
Mary
Barron
~1775
Abraham
Brower
~1780
Philotha
Webster
~1800
Judge
Hammond
Healy Brower
~1800
John
Regal
~1805
Lucinda
Laughlin
1856
Wallace
A.
Regal
1858
Jesse
Regal
1863 - 1958
Mary
L.
Regal
95
95
She founded the music appreciation curriculum for U.S. high schools, @@ Springfield Central High, in 1896.
1865
Francis
Ernest
Regal
He received a Doctor of Letters from Oberlin College in 1921. He was a renowned music critic & foreign affairs expert. He was associate editor of The Springfield Republican. one child Re: Descendants of Abel KRUM & his wife, Mary N. BROWER Charlie Cabiac 3/23/03
~1868
Frederick
A.
Regal
He was a conductor for the Springfield Street Railway Co. in 1897. He removed to Cleveland, Ohio, circa 1899.
~1870
Elizabeth
Perkins
Cady
~1835
Elijah
Perkins
Cady
1847
Ella
Maria
Falkenbury
1894
Margaret
Regal
~1890
James
W.
Marshall
~1880
Grace
Brand
Phelon
Capt.
Henry A.
Phelon
Grace
Brand
1906 - 2002
Grace
Gildemeister
Regal
95
95
She was a nurse, r. West Springfield, MA, in 1959, 1963, & 1965.
Elizabeth
Knight
1685
John
Perkins
3 FEB 1687/88
Katherine
Perkins
1690
Phebe
Perkins
1692
Jacob
Perkins
1695
Ruth
Perkins
1699
Mary
Perkins
1702
Joseph
Perkins
1658 - 1740
John
Towne
82
82
2 FEB 1658/59
Jacob
Towne
1664
Ruth
Towne
1665
Deliverance
Towne
1666
Edmund
Towne
18 MAR 1596/97 - ~1672
William
Towne
* Emigration: Abt. Jun 1637 To New England - Salem MA on 'ROSE' from Greater Yarmouth, ENGLAND * Event: Moved Unknown Abt. 1652 Topsfield, Essex Co., MA * Will: 24 Apr 1673 Administered by Joanna Towne * - THE PIONEERS OF MASSACHUSETTS, William, gardiner, Salem, frm. April 18, 1637. Rem. to Topsfield. With wife Joanna deeded land to son Joseph in 1663, when he was about to marry Phebe, dau. of Thomas Perkins. Joanna was recd. from Sal. chh. to that of Tops. 19 (4) 1664. She deposed in 1670, ae. 70 years; he deposed in 1660, ae. about 60 years. ******************************* Perley in his 'History of Salem' states that William Towne was the son of John and Elizabeth Towne of Yarmouth, and that he was baptized in the Saint Nicholas Parish Church there on March 18, 1598/9. William1 Towne and his wife remained at Yarmouth, and six children were born to them there, but in or about 1640 they emigrated to New England, and settled at Salem, Massachusetts. At Salem, on October 11, 1640, the town "Graunted to William Townde a little neck of land right over against his howse on the other side of the riuer to be sett out by the towne." In June and July, 1640, he had brought an action of debt against John Cook, at Salem. He and Francis Nurse asked the town for a grant of land on March 20, 1647, and it was then ordered that the land be surveyed before a decision should be made as to granting it. In 1652 he removed to Topsfield, Massachusetts, where he purchased forty acres of land, and made further purchases in 1656. In 1652 he sold his land at Salem. He was listed among those to share in the common lands at Topsfield in 1661. In 1663 he gave his son, Joseph Towne, two-thirds of his property at Topsfield, reserving only a third share for himself. He died at Topsfield in 1673, and administration on his estate was granted to his widow, June 24, - 1673. His widow died in or about 1682, and on January 17, 1682, the six children signed a petition for the settlement of her estate. According to "The Four Blessing Sisters", by Walter Goodwin Davis, an article in the American Genealogists, Vol 33 pages 199 - 206; "Although William is first recorded at Salem in 1640, it is possible that the family emigrated a few years earlier, with the Buffums and the Firmages. The eldest son, Edmund, who was apprenticed to Henry Skerry in Great Yarmouth, sailed with his master in 1637, either on the Rose of Great Yarmouth, or the Henry and Dorothy of Ipswich, two vessels commanded by Wm. and William Andrews Jr., arriving in Boston in June. Skerry and his family settled in Salem." - "Upon the east coast of England, 120 miles northeast from London is the old town of Yarmouth. Among its venerable buildings is St. Nicholas Church (founded A.D. 1123). In which on 25 March, 1620, William Towne and Joanna Blessing were m. They were the grandparents of John, the leading man in the English settlement at Oxford. Twenty years after this m. six of their ch. had been baptized in that Church and the family joined the emigrants to America. They resided first at "Northfields," Salem, removed 1652 to Topsfield, there they settled (History of Oxford - page 720) - 1637; Came to America on ship Rose from Great Yarmouth, leaving Ipswich and arriving 6/1637 with wife and 5 or 6 children. (Currents of Malice - McMillen) - 4/18/1637; "Towne, William, gardiner, Salem, freeman 4/18/1637. (George Towne book) - 5/1/1640; Plaintiff against Jonathan Cook, defendant in an action of debt, Jury found for the plaintiff "some to be deputed to measure John Cook's land and what is remaining to make up Goodman Town's land and if it be fyve acres to pay Towne fyve marks and ___ is wanting of fyve acres to abate 13s, 4d. p. acre; and costs 4s, : 0 " (NEHGS, Vol. 21, p. 15) - 8/11/164
~1594 - 1674
Joanna
Blessing
80
80
- "The origin of the Blessing family is obscure. The name Blessing has not been found after considerable search in the Norfolk County (ENGLAND) records at Norwich, and as the name Jone is the only instance of the name in the Yarmouth register for the period 1558 - 1611, it is possible that she was a foreigner. A general search for the name Blessing in records covering all England has been unavailing, and families of the name Blessing in now living in the United States claim a German origin. A glance at the map of Europe will show that Great Yarmouth in Norfolk and just south of it, Ipswich in Suffolk (the ancestral home of the Estys), are directly opposite the Low Countries across the North Sea to the west. Many emigrants from Germany and the Low Countries were attracted to Yarmouth by the herring fisheries in the sixteenth century." (Currents of Malice - McMillen) - February 08, 1655/56, bequeathed "old cloth gowne" by sister Alice66,66,67,68 - "Relations between the Gould family and the Townes and Estys had been strained ever since the quarrrel over their minister, the Reverend Mr. Gilbert, when Mary Esty's mother, old Joanna Towne, had supported him against the Goulds faction."(Currents of Malice - Persis W. McMillen) - 1670; She deposed that she was 70 years old in this year. (Pope's Pioneers of MA) - 4/24/1673; Administration granted to Joanna Towne of the estate of William Towne. She was to bring inventory to the next Ipswich court. (Salem Quarterly Court Records) - 1692; Of Joanna's daughters Mary, Sarah and Rebecca; "Apparently young John Putnam had said that it was no wonder they were witches since their mother had been a witch herself." (Currents of Malice - Persis W. McMillen)
FEB 1618/19 - 1692
Rebecca
Towne
~1621
Sarah
Towne
16 FEB 1622/23
John
Towne
~1625
Susannah
Towne
1628 - 1678
Edmund
Towne
49
49
1634
Mary
Towne
1639
Joseph
Towne
8 JAN 1615/16
Francis
Nurse
~1645
John
Nurse
~1647
Rebecca
Nurse
~1648
Sarah
Nurse
~1653
Mary
Nurse
9 JAN 1655/56
Elizabeth
Nurse
3 FEB 1658/59
Francis
Nurse
26 JAN 1663/64
Benjamin
Nurse
1637 - 1717
Mary
Browning
80
80
~1672 - ~1714
Samuel
Towne
42
42
~1653
Mary
Towne
~1657
Sarah
Towne
~1658
William
Towne
~1664
Abigail
Towne
~1666
Benjamin
Towne
~1668
Rebecca
Towne
~1669
Elizabeth
Towne
~1655
Thomas
Towne
~1675
Elizabeth
Knight
~1697
Elizabeth
Towne
~1549
John
Blyssynge
~1553
Joan
Preaste
~1580
Margaret
Blessing
~1571
Julian
Blessing
~1575
William
Blessing
~1577
Alice
Blessing
~1590
Robert
Buffum
~1470
John
Towne
~1475
Elizabeth
1869 - 1923
Mary
Chaplin
Cady
53
53
1757
Abraham
Venable
1784
Samuel
Venable
~1786
James
Venable
~1788
Hampden
Venable
~1790
George
Venable
1734 - 1814
James
H.
Venable
80
80
1739 - 1826
Judith
Morton
87
87
1709 - 1782
Joseph
Morton
72
72
27 FEB 1710/11 - 1802
Agnes
Woodson
1662 - 1724
Richard
Woodson
62
62
1662 - 1730
Anne
Smith
68
68
~1630
Obediah
Smith
~1640
Mary
Cocke
1634 - >1707
Robert
Woodson
73
73
1638 - 1689
Elizabeth
Ferris
51
51
~1610
Richard
Ferris
~1586 - 1644
John
Woodson
58
58
1590 - 17 JAN 1659/60
Sarah
Winston
~1560
Isaac
Winston
1560
Alexander
Woodsonne
22 MAR 1699/00 - 1769
Abraham
II
Venable
1. He lived first on the Pamunky River in what was then New Kent Co., Va., afterwards, King and Queen, which was cut off from New Kent in 1691, and later and at present, King William County, which was cut off from King and Queen County in 1701. Abraham Venables II moved from the Pamuky region and ettled in what was then Goochland County, in the fork between the Rivanna and the James Rivers. This region was cut off into Albemarle County in 0744 and 1777 that end of Albemarle was formed into the present county of Fluvanna. The land upon which the village of Columbia is situated is a portion of the original home tract of this Abraham Venables II." This is taken from the records of Abram B. Venable of "Scott-Greene," Prince Edward Co., Va., written about 1870. Abraham Venables II owned immense tracts of land in Hanover, Louisa, Goochland , and Albemarle counties, on the Hardware River in South Garden and "Ye Byrd Creek." he was prominent in the affairs of his country and church; justice of the peace of Hanover County, Va., before 1742; one of the first justices of Louisa County, Dec. 24, 1742; after 1742, County Lieutenant of Louisa; Captain in the Colonial Militia, Louisa County; Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Louisa for over twenty years, 1742-1751-1753-1755-1762, and other years. He was vestry man of St.Paul's Parish, Hanover County, Va., prior to 1742, of Trinity Parish 1762-1768, and of Fredericksville Parish, 1742-1761. He was friend, political supporter, and client of Patrick Henry. 2. Abraham Venable II was born on 22 March 1700 in New Kent, Lousia Co.,VA. He was appointed Justice of the Peace in Louisa & Hanover Co. in Dec 1742. He was a Lieutenant in the Louisa County Colonial Militia from that time, and later promoted to Captain. He was a member of the House of Burgesses from Lousia Co. for 20 years 1742-1762; 1748, 1749, 1752-1755; a Vestryman of St. Paul's, Trinity Parish, 1762-68, and Fredericksville Parish, bef. 1742. He owned large tracts of land in Hanover, Louisa, Goochland and Albemarle Counties. He died on 16 December 1769/1779 in Lousia Co.,VA. Ref: Venables of VA by Samuel Venable; 3. GIVN Abraham SURN Venable NSFX Jr. Papers of Harriet V. Miller - cites Colonial Dames: Abraham served in House of Burgesses, VA, for 20 yrs.; was a friend of Patrick Henry. He owned land in Hanover, Louisa,Goochland and Albemarle Cos., VA; was one of the first Justices of the Peace, Louisa Co., VA, 24 Dec 1742; was Louisa Co. LT,Capt. of the Colonial Militia; vestryman, St. Paul's Parish, Hanover Co., VA 1742-1761. DAR # 649174 Magazine of VA Genealogy, Aug. 1985, p. 31: Accounts from the store of Thos. Patridge and Co., Hanover Co., VA, 1734-1756:"Mr. Abraham Venable, 20 Sept 1736, pd. Capt. Charles Anderson, pd Harmer and King, 11 Dec. 23, six gallons Rum; Jan 7, 1 pr.nee bruckels, Feb. 10, 1/2 lb. pepor and 1 pr. mens yarn hose." Genealogies of Va Families, Vol. 1, p. 659. "Charles Scott Venable," by Wm. M. Thornton, p. 4. REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net ABBR Ancestry.com file 14810.ged DATE 4 MAR 2000 TIME 21:00:00 GIVN Abraham SURN Venable NSFX Jr. Papers of Harriet V. Miller - cites Colonial Dames: Abraham served in House of Burgesses, VA, for 20 yrs.; was a friend of Patrick Henry. He owned land in Hanover, Louisa,Goochland and Albemarle Cos., VA; was one of the first Justices of the Peace, Louisa Co., VA, 24 Dec 1742; was Louisa Co. LT,Capt. of the Colonial Militia; vestryman, St. Paul's Parish, Hanover Co., VA 1742-1761. DAR # 649174 Magazine of VA Genealogy, Aug. 1985, p. 31: Accounts from the store of Thos. Patridge and Co., Hanover Co., VA, 1734-1756:"Mr. Abraham Venable, 20 Sept 1736, pd. Capt. Charles Anderson, pd Harmer and King, 11 Dec. 23, six gallons Rum; Jan 7, 1 pr.nee bruckels, Feb. 10, 1/2 lb. pepor and 1 pr. mens yarn hose." Genealogies of Va Families, Vol. 1, p. 659. "Charles Scott Venable," by Wm. M. Thornton, p. 4. REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net ABBR Ancestry.com file 14810.ged DATE 4 MAR 2000 TIME 21:00:00 4. From "Venables of Virginia," by Elizabeth Marshall Venable, at pages 15-18: "Abraham Venables II, only surviving son of Abraham Venables I of New Kent Co., Va., was born on March 22, 1700, O.S. baptized . . . April 27, 1701, in St. Peters Parrish, New Kent Co., Va. 'He lived first on the Pamunky River in what was then New Kent Co., Va., afterwards King and Queen, which was cut off from New Kent in 1691, and later and at present, King William County, which was cut off from King and Queen County in 1701. Abraham Venables II moved from the Pamunky region and settled in what was then Goochland County, in the fork between the Rivanna and James Rivers. This region was cut off into Albemarle County in 1744 and in 1777 that end of Albemarle was formed into the present county of Fluvanna. The land on which the village of Columbia is situated is a portion of the original home tract of Abraham Venables II.' This is taken from the records of Abram B. Venable of 'Scott-Greene,' Price Edward County, Virginia, written about 1870. Abraham Venables II owned immense tracts of land in Hanover, Louisa, Goochland and Albemarle counties, on the Hardware River in South Garden and on 'Ye Byrd Creek.' He was prominent in the affairs of his country and church; justice of the peace of Hanover County before 1742; one of the first justices of Louisa County, December 24, 1742; after 1742, County Lieutenant of Louisa; Captain of the Colonial Militia, Louisa; Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Louisa for over twenty years, 1742-1751-1753-1755-1762, and other years. He was a vestryman of St. Paul's Parish, Hanover County, Va., prior to 1742, of Trinity Parish 1762-68, and of Fredericksville Parish 1742-1761. He was a friend, political supporter and client of Patrick Henry. "Will of Abraham Venables of Louisa Co., Va. -- recorded Jan. 9, 1769. " 'In the name of God Amen: " 'Abraham Venable of Trinity Parish in Louisa County being in health of Body & of Perfect Mind & memory thanks be given to Almighty God & calling to mind the Mortallity and knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die, Do make & ordain this my Last Will & Testament that is to say, Principally & first of all I recommend my soul unto the Hands of God that gave it & my Body first of all I Recommond to the earth to be Decently Buried at the Discretion of my Executors, nothing doubting But that at the General Resurrection I shall receive the same again by the Mighty Power of God & Touching such Worldy Estate wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me, I give & dispose of the same in the following manner & form: First I will that all my Lawful Debts & Funeral Expenses be paid & Discharged, & that each of my children to whom any part of my estate is now given do pay their respective parts of my Debts & legacies left to be paid in money in proportion to what they receive of my estate after my decease (Land only excepted) and that their respective parts be subject to pay each of their proportionate parts of debts & legacies aforesaid. ITEM: I give & Bequeath unto my son John Venable my seven hundred & Eighty three acres of land with the plantation whereon I now live situate lying & being on both sides the South Anna river in Louisa County, the s'd dividend of land, be the same more or less, to him the s'd Jno. Venable & to his Heirs & assigns forever & I also give & bequeath unto my s'd son Jno. Venable my four negroes (viz) Jack, David, Daniel & my negro girl Joyce & their increase, f'rever, & I also give to my son John one feather bed, bedstead & furniture which of my beds he shall chuse, my young bay miar & grey horse colt & that he keep the sorrel horse Cedall heretofore verbially given him & I likewise give to my s'd son John, Three cows & calves, his choice out of my stock & six young cattle all not under two years old, Ten sheep, my copper still & brass kettle all my books both stitcht & bound, all my Kitchen Lumber & Cider casks & it is my will that he my s'd son John doth not pay above Twenty pounds current money of my debts or less than that sum if his portion doth not amount to so much, anything above mentioned to the contrary Notwithstanding. ITEM, I give & bequeath unto my Daughter, Mary Moreman, wife to Charles Moreman Jr. &, to her Heirs & assigns forever, my negro Boy Ben. ITEM, I give & bequeath unto my son Nathaniel Venable & to his Heirs & assigns forever my four negros, Isaac, Phillis, & two children Milly & Isham, children of Phillis, he paying fifteen Pounds current money to my daughter Mary Moreman besides her proportion of the remaining value towards my debts as above mentioned but if any of the s'd negro shall die before he is possessed of them, then & in that case, he to be exemted from paying the s'd fifteen pounds. ITEM, I give & bequeath unto my son Jas. Venable & my daughter Ann King, wife to Phillip King & to their respective heirs & assigns forever, my Three negros, Peter, Sarah & Sam, child of Sarah & their increase to be divided between them in the following manner, that is to say, my s'd son James to have one third part & my s'd daughter Ann to have two third parts & being unwilling to part the said Negros, I am desirus if it should suit my s'd son & Daughter, but not to compel them, that my s'd son Jas. do take all the s'd three negroes & pay to my s'd daughter Ann two third part of the value of the three negroes according to appraisement as they can agree, & whereas I have undertaken to bring up Sarah Tucker, an orphan child, it is my, request that my sons Nathl. & Jas. do take care of her as far as necessary. ITEM. I acquit my son in law Phillip King the ballance of his old account being fifty six shillings & four pence half penny. " 'ITEM. I give unto my daughter Elisabeth Morton wife of Josiah Morton & to her Heirs and assigns forever my negroe girl Judith & her increase. I will that my negro woman Hannah may go to which of my children she shall chuse I will that my negro man Tom may go to which of my children legasees he shall chuse or to be sold at the s'd negro Election, if he can be sold for his value in the judgm't of my exect'rs (or one of them). " 'ITEM. I give & bequeath unto my son William Venable my surveyors Instrument now in his possession. ITEM. I give to Sarah Tucker Ten pounds current money. I will that my crop of Tobc. on hand at my death after cloathing my negroes according to the season the remainder may be applyed as far as necessary towards paying my debts & the Legasie left to be paid in money & at the division of my negros may be left on the plantation for the support of my son, John, & his negroes & stock apportionable part of the corn wheat & oats then remaining. All the rest of my estate of what nature soever I give & bequeath to my son Jn. Venable & my three daughters Ann King, Elizabeth Morton, & Mary Moreman, to be equally divided among them, in such manner as they shall agree, or on their disagreement, the same to be done according to the Rules of Law & I do constitute appoint my friend Mr. Waddi Thomson & my sons Abraham Venable, Nathaniel Venable, Hugh Lewis Venable & Jn. Venable, Exors. of this my last will & Testament & I do appoint my friend Mr. Patrick Henry, my trustee & I do hereby revoke all former wills by heretofore made ratifying and confirming this my last will & testament. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand & seal this Eleventh Day of April one thousand seven Hundred & Sixty eight. Signed, sealed & Published. Abraham Venable (Seal) " 'Declared In the presence of James Tate Love Statham James Arnet Jns. Byars Jns. Lea " 'At a Court held for Louisa County Jan'y 9th, 1769. " 'This will and testament was this day in open Court proved by the oaths of three witnesses thereto and by the Court O. to be recorded. Teste:---John Nelson, C.L.C. A Copy:--- Teste:---P. B. Porter, Clerk' " From "The Venables of Virginia," by Elizabeth Marshall Venable, at page 24: "The three brothers: Abram B. Venable (1725-1778) who married Elizabeth Michaux; Charles Venable, who married Elizabeth Smith of Port Royal; and Nathaniel Venable (1733-1804) who married Elizabeth Woodson, -- of the seven sons of Abraham Venable II (b. 1700; d.1768), settled in Prince Edward County at an early date. They came from the home of their father in Goochland, afterwards Albemarle and now Fluvanna County, Virginia. Their settlement antedated the establishment of the County which was formed out of a portion of Amelia County in 1753. Abram and Charles located in what was known as Prospect neighborhood, near the Appomattox River, which separates Prince Edward from Buckingham County. Nathaniel settled near the center of the County and owned lands on which the old Court House and its surrounding village, now Worsham, stands. Something over a mile in a southwesterly direction from Worsham is the ancient family seat of 'Slate Hill' where Nathaniel Venable lived, reared his family, and died." More About Capt. Abraham Venables II: Baptism: April 27, 1701, in St. Peters Parish, New Kent County, Virginia891 Church Service: Bef. 1742, Vestryman, St. Paul's Parish, Hanover County891 Church Service #2: Bet. 1742 - 1761, Vestryman, Fredericksville Parish, Louisa County892 Church Service #3: Bet. 1762 - 1768, Vestryman, Trinity Parish, Louisa County893 Occupation: Planter894 Public Service: Bef. 1742, Justice of the Peace of Hanover County895 Public Service #2: 1742, One of the first justices of Louisa County896 Public Service #3: Bet. 1742 - 1762, Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Louisa County896 Religion: Church of England/Episcopalian896 More About Martha Davis: Observation: An earnest Quakeress897 Observation #2: She was an aunt of Dr. William Cabell's first wife897 Religion: Quaker897
1702 - 1765
Martha
Hannah
Davis
62
62
1676 - 1771
Nathaniel
Robert
Davis
95
95
1680 - <1750
Abadiah
Lewis
70
70
~1652 - 1689
Hugh
Ap
Lewis
37
37
Elizabeth
12 JAN 1661/62 - 1710
Abraham
Venable
1. Will of Abraham Venables of Louisa Co. Va.--recorded Jan. 9, 1769. IN THE NAME OF GOD AMEN: In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand & seal this Eleventh Day of April one thousand seven Hundred & Sixty eight. Signed, sealed Published & Abraham Venable (Seal) Declared In the presence of James Tate Love Statham James Arnet Jns. Byars Jns. Lea At a Court held for Louisa County Jan'y 9th, 1769. This Will & Testament was this day in open Court proved by the oaths of three witnesses thereto & by the Court O. to be Recorded. Teste:--John Nelson, C. L. C. A Copy:-- Teste:--P. B. Porter, Clerk Abraham Venable of Trinity Parish in Louisa County being in health of Body & of Perfect Mind & memory thanks be given to Almighty God & calling to mind the Mortallity of my body and knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die, Do make & ordain this my Last Will & Testament that is to say, Principally & first of all I recommend my soul unto the Hands of God that gave it, & my Body I Recommond to the earth to be Decently Buried at the Discretion of my Executors, nothing doubting But that at the General Resurrection I shall receive the same again by the Mighty Power of God & Touching such Worldy Estate wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me, I give & dispose of the same in the following manner & form: First I will that all my Lawful Debts & Funeral Expenses be paid & Discharged, & that each of my children to whom any aprt of my estate is now given do pay their respective parts of my Debts & legacies left to be paid in money in proportion to what they receive of my estate after my decease (Land only excepted) and that their respective parts be subject to pay each of their proportionate parts of debts & legacies aforesaid. ITEM: I give & Bequeath unto my son John Venable my seven hundred & Eighty three acres of land with the plantation whereon I now live situate lying & being on both sides the South Anna river in Louisa County, the s'd dividend of land, be the same more or less, to him the s'd Jno. Venable & to his Heirs & assigns forever & I also give & bequeath unto my s'd son Jno. Venable my four negroes (viz) Jack, David, Daniel & my negro girl Joyce & their increase, to him and his heirs & assigns forever, & I also give to my son John one feather bed, bedstead & furniture which of my beds he shall chuse, my young bay mair & grey horse colt & that he keep the sorrel horse Cedall heretofore verbially given him & I likewise give to my s'd son John, Three cows & calves, his choice out of my stock & six young cattle not under two years old, Ten sheep, my copper still & brass kettle all my books both stitcht & bound, all my Kitchen Lumber & Cider casks & it is my will that he my s'd son John doth not pay above Twenty pounds current money of my debts or less than that sum if his proportion doth not amount to so much, anything above mentioned to the contrary Notwithstanding. ITEM, I give & bequeath unto my Daughter, Mary Moreman, wife to Charles Moreman Jr. & to her Heirs & assigns forever, my negro Boy Ben. ITEM, I give & bequeath unto my son Nathaniel Venable & to his Heirs & assigns forever my four negros, Isaac, Phillis, & two children Milly & Isham, children of Phillis, he paying fifteen Pounds current money to my daughter Mary Moreman besides her proportion of the remaining value towards my debts as above mentioned but if any of the s'd negro shall die before he is possessed of them, then & in that case, he to be exemted from paying the s'd fifteen pounds. ITEM. I give & bequeath unto my son Jas. Venable & my daughter Ann King, wife to Phillip King & to their respective heirs & assigns forever, my Three negros, Peter, Sarah & Sam, child of Sarah & their increase to be divided between them in the following manner, that is to say, my s'd son James to have one third part & my s'd daughter Ann to have two third parts & being unwilling to part the said Negros, I am desirus if it should suit my s'd son & Daughter, but not to compel them, that my s'd son Jas. do take all the s'd three negroes & pay to my s'd daughter Ann two third part of the vallue of the three negroes according to appraisement as they can agree, & whereas I have undertaken to bring up Sarah Tucker, an orphan child, it is my request that my sons Nathl. & Jas. do take care of her as far as necessary. ITEM. I acquit my son in law Phillip King the ballance of his old account being fifty six shillings & four pence half penny. ITEM. I give unto my daughter Elisabeth Morton wife of Josiah Morton & to her Heirs and assigns forever my negroe girl Judith & her increase. I will that my negro woman Hannah may go to which of my children she shall chuse I will that my negro man Tom may go to which of my children legasees he shall chuse or to be sold at the s'd negro Election, if he can be sold for his value in the judgm't of my exect'rs (or one of them). ITEM. I give & bequeath unto my son William Venable my surveyors Instrument now in his possession. ITEM. I give to Sarah Tucker Ten pounds current money. I will that my crop of Tobc. on hand at my death after cloathing my negroes according to the season the remainder may be applyed as far as necessary towards paying my debts & the Legasie left to be paid in money & at the division of my negros may be left on the plantation for the support of my son, John, & his negroes & stock apportionable part of the corn wheat & oats then remaining. All the rest of my estate of what nature soever I give & bequeath to my son Jn. Venable & my three daughters Ann King, Elizabeth Morton, & Mary Moreman, to be equally divided among them, in such manner as they shall agree, or on their disagreement, the same to be done according to the Rules of Law & I do constitute & appoint my friend Mr. Waddy Thomson & my sons Abraham Venable, Nathaniel Venable, Hugh Lewis Venable & Jn. Venable, Exors. of this my last will & Testament & I do appoint my friend Mr. Patrick Henry, my trustee & I do hereby revoke all former wills by me heretofore made ratifying and confirming this my last will & testament. 2. Abraham Venable I was born in 1673 at Devonshire, England. Abraham was the original Venable immigrant to this country. He came to VA about 1685, on the "Friend's Adventure" and settled in New Kent Co, VA. He died in 1710 at Hanover, New Kent Co., VA The Venables trace their ancestry to Gislebertus de Venables, in 1052. Gilbert, in English translation, fought with William the Conqueror in the Battle of Hastings, and was awarded estates more than 700 years. The emigrant to America was Abraham in 1680. 3. SURN Venable GIVN Abraham _UID C41445A8C0315B479A5EFA54CFC5C7282105 Papers of Harriet V. Miller - cites Colonial Dames "Charles Scott Venable," by Wm. T. Thornton, p. 4 Abraham crossed from Chester Co., England to VA before 1685,prob. 1682. He owned 27,000 acres in Virginia. William and Mary Quarterly, Series 1, Vol. 15, pp. 246-7:Abraham married the widow of John Nicks; she was the daughter of(first name unknown) Lewis; left issue one son, Abraham. (CitesNathaniel Venable, Pr. Edw. Co., VA, 25 Dec. 1790) REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net DATE 12 Oct 1999 TIME 01:00:00 4. ABRIDGED COMPENDIUM, Frederick Virkus VENABLE, Abraham, from Eng. in the "Friend~s Adventure," to New Kent Co., Va. ca. 1682; m Elizabeth (Lewis) Nix, dau. of Hugh Lewis, and widow of John Nix
1665
Mildred
Elizabeth
Lewis
~1643 - <1733
Thomas
Venables
90
90
~1643
Margeria
Shaw
~1603
Peter
Venables
~1600
Frances
Cholmondeley
~1669
Mary
Venable
~1670
Joseph
Venable
~1675
John
Venable
~1701
Isaac
Venable
~1703
Joseph
Venable
~1665
Sara
13 FEB 1687/88
John
Venable
13 FEB 1687/88
Isaac
Venable
~1723
Ann
Venable
9 JAN 1724/25 - 1778
Abraham
Bedford
Venable
1. will dated, March 13, 1778, proved in Prince Edward Co., at the April Court, 1778. 2. settled in Prince Edward County, Virginia, at an early date. They (he and brothers, Charles & Nathaniel) came from the home of their father in Goochland, afterwards Albemarle and now Fluvanna County, Virginia. Their settlement antedated the establishment of the County which was formed out of a portion of Amelia County in the year 1753. Abram and Charles located in what is known as Prospect neighborhood, near the Appomattox River, which separates Prince Edward from Buckingham County. 3. Will dated 3-13-1778; probated, April 1778 4. WILL DATE 13 MAR 1778 PLAC Date will written PROB DATE APR 1778 PLAC Will proven in Prince Edward Co. at April Court 1778 EVEN TYPE Executors of Will PLAC Wife, Nathaniel Venable, Samuel Venable, Jr. & Charles Allen. 5. Early Records of Georgia vol1 and 2 Page 58--VENABLE, ABRAHAM, bond to Benj. Catching to sell to Benj. Welch land on Fishing creek bought of John Robinson. Sept. 4, 1787. Daniel Price, Joshua Sanders, Test.
1727
Hugh
Lewis
Venable
1730
Charles
Venable
1733 - 1804
Nathaniel
E.
Venable
71
71
1. Nathaniel settled near the center of the County (Prince Edward, formed from Amelia County. 1753) and owned the lands on which the old Court House and its surrounding village, now Worsham, stands. Something ove a mile in a southwesterly direction from Whorsham is the ancient family seat of "Slate Hill" where Nathaniel Venable lived, reared his family, and died. 2. SURN Venable GIVN Nathaniel _UID 95B128ABEDDFBA48A84A6B52A4E6811DBECE Nathaniel Venable "of Slate Hill," was member of House ofBurgesses, and VA House of Delegates, 1766-1769-1776 and StateSenator, 1780-1785, Pr. Edw. Co., VA. In 1783 Va tax list, 10 whites, 43 blacks, making Nathaniel thethird largest slave owner in Pr. Edw. Co.; in 1785, 5 shites,one dwelling, 9 other bldgs (tax list). Rev. War service: Member of Comm. of Safety; DAR #649174 &28306. Journal, VA House of Burgesses Venables of VA, pp. 25, 25, 28 Genealogies of VA Families, Vol. 1, p. 658 History of Prince Edw. Co., VA, H. C. Bradshaw, pp. 832, andplastes #1 and 28; also pp. 844-845. Photo of Slate Hill. William and Mary Quarterly, Series 1, Vol. 15, pp. 245-8 Papers of Harriet V. Miller: Nathaniel owned 20-30 thousandacres and 100 slaves; was vestryman of St. Patrick's Pariesh andorganized the first Presbyterian Church in Pr. Edw. Co.; wasfirst Episcopalian (which was the state church of Va before Rev.War) and later Presbyterian. Founder of Hamden-Sidney College. REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net DATE 20 May 2001 TIME 11:05:33 2. He first settled in Buckingham County, Virginia. 3. Nathaniel Venable was born 21 Oct 1733 in Hanover County, VA. His father was Abraham Venable II and his mother Martha Davis. He married Elizabeth Woodson on 29 March 1755 in VA. He was a member of the Virginia House of Delegates, Justice of Prince Edward County, officer in the militia, member of the House of Burgesses, one of the foundrs and member of the Board of Trustees of Hampden-Sidney College, and a vestryman at St. Patricks Episcopal Church. Nathaniel died 27 dec 1804 in Prince Edward County and is buried in the Slate Hill Family Cemetery, VA. 4. Nathaniel Venable "of Slate Hill," was member of House ofBurgesses, and VA House of Delegates, 1766-1769-1776 and StateSenator, 1780-1785, Pr. Edw. Co., VA. In 1783 Va tax list, 10 whites, 43 blacks, making Nathaniel thethird largest slave owner in Pr. Edw. Co.; in 1785, 5 shites,one dwelling, 9 other bldgs (tax list). Rev. War service: Member of Comm. of Safety; DAR #649174 &28306. 4. From "The Venables of Virginia," by Elizabeth Marshall Venable, at pages 25-28: "The 'Slate Hill' plantation was an extensive estate of twenty or thirty thousand acres, served by something like a hundred slaves. The house was a simple story and a half affair, the unostentatious dwelling of a pioneer in a new country -- for that is what Prince Edward County was when Nathaniel Venable came to live there -- though the spacious rooms, lofty ceilings, massive fireplaces, and extensive bookcases gave it an unmistakable charm. "Nathaniel Venable seems to have taken a more active part in public affairs than any of his brothers. In the 'Life of Rev. Archibald Alexander, D.D.' by Dr. J. W. Alexander, p.128, we find the following reference to him: " 'Three brothers were among the first settlers in Prince Edward. Nathaniel owned the place on which the Court House was built, and for a long time was an Elder in the church and represented the County in the Legislature. He was also an active trustee of Hampden-Sidney College.' "Nathaniel Venable had been a member of the House of Burgesses prior to the Revolution and of the Virginia House of Delegates, 1766, 1769, 1776, and as indicated in this extract, was a member of the State Senate, 1780-82, after the change of state government. "We find from Footes' 'Sketches of Virginia,' that Nathaniel Venable was one of the leading spirits among the founders and early supporters of Hampden-Sidney College. It may be said that the College had its birth in the library of his house. A special session of the Presbytery met at his residence, 'Slate Hill,' on the first day of February, 1775, for the purpose of taking measures to establish at once an Academy of Learning. A Board of Trustees was elected, consisting of twelve gentlemen, of whom Nathaniel Venable was one. At the same meeting he was appointed on a committee to draw plans for the necessary buildings, and to let out their construction. He was also appointed on a committee to survey and mark out the bounds of a hundred acres of land donated by Peter Johnstone (the grandfather of Gen. J. E. Johnstone), for the purposes of the Academy, and to secure title to the same. At the first meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Academy, of which there is any record, an order was passed allowing 'N. Venable and P. Carrington to build cabins for the use of their boys.' A few years after the inauguration of the Academy it encountered great difficulties in consequence of the state of the country resulting from the war, and it was thought for a time that it would have to be discontinued. " 'The chief difficulty was in procuring provisions for the students and in securing some one to attend to its preparation. Nathaniel Venable and James Allen, Sr., came to the rescue, pledged themselves to furnish twelve months' provisions, and contracted with Mr. Young to act as Steward and furnish board at twenty pounds per student, per annum.' "In 1783, Prince Edward Academy was chartered as a college by the legislature. Its Board of Trustees comprised of twenty-seven persons. The names of Nathaniel Venable, his brother, James, his eldest son, Samuel Woodson Venable, are found among the number. In the list we find the names of Patrick Henry, James Madison, Paul Carrington, Francis Watkins, John Morton, John Nash and others prominent in state and local history. In speaking of the name adopted for the college, the historian says: " 'The names of such men as Morton, Venable, Nash, Watkins, Allen, Henry, Carrington, men honored for their patriotism and religion, sound well in conjunction with two patriots of England, Hampden and Sidney, whose names were early and significantly united to indicate the principles that should be taught there and to give it a name. (Footes "Sketches of Virginia" p.399)' "Nathaniel Venable was an earnest patriot, one who contributed his utmost to the cause of the colonies. " 'When Tarleton and Arnold invaded Virginia, a detachment passed through Prince Edward on a general plundering expedition. This they could do with impunity as all the able-bodied men were absent in the American Army. They visited 'Slate Hill' with the purpose of capturing Nathaniel Venable; but he escaped them, having received timely warning of their approach. They committed some robberies, destroyed some furniture, and one of their number, with a pistol pointed at the breast of Mrs. Venable, demanded that she reveal her husband's whereabouts, or he would shoot her down. Her calm reply was, 'Fire away! My husband has his country to defend!.' At this instance an officer intervened and ordered away the man who had offered the indignity, severely reprimanding him.' "As evidence of the public spirit of Nathaniel Venable we quote the following: " 'When the Government was greatly embarrassed on account of the condition of its finances, and Continental money had depreciated until it was denounced as worthless all over the country, and the people were almost in rebellion on that account, he advertised his faith in the Government by proclaiming his readiness to accept Continental money for all of his dues. Among the early recollections of this writer (Abraham B. Venable of 'Scott-Greene') is the memory of his seeing a large quantity of this money in an old chest in the 'office' in the yard at 'Slate Hill.' "William M. Thornton, L.L.D., of the University of Virginia, in a Sketch of Charles Scott Venable, published in 1901, makes the following remarks: " 'Col. Nathaniel Venable of 'Slate Hill', a roistering blade in early youth, but always a man of force and later a pious, strenuous life, was merchant, planter, member of the House of Burgesses, and later of the Legislature of Virginia, and was a Lieutenant of Prince Edward County . . . . Educated at William and Mary College, Williamsburg, he was a mathematician of some local renown, witness the clergyman who preached the sermon at his funeral and began the discourse by saying that 'his late friend had gone to the land where neither calumny nor praise could reach him; but it was simply due to the truth to state that he had been the best mathematician in Prince Edward County.' Always, in all things a strenuous, forceful, eager man, an Episcopalian at first, vestry-man of St. Patrick's Parrish in Prince Edwards County (the vestry book in his own hand writing is now at the Episcopal Seminary at Alexandria Virginia) and bearing on dissenters with a hard and, forbidding the Presbyterian clergymen to preach in the churches and the like, he later became a Republican, and, an even more zealous Presbyterian; tore down the Episcopal church at Kingsville; raised funds and built a Presbyterian church at Farmville; and as we have seen was the mainstay and founder of the college at Hampden-Sidney.' " The "office" of Nathaniel Venable that stood in the yard at "Slate Hill," which was recalled by Abraham B. Venable in the excerpt quoted above, is now on the grounds of the campus at Hampden-Sydney near Farmville, Virginia. The building, first built in the 1750s, is on numerous historical registers. Nathaniel Venable was undoubtedly a close acquaintance of John Witherspoon. Venable sent three sons to Princeton at a time when John Witherspon was travelling about Virginia to generate interest in Princeton among the southern states. It is said that Witherspoon suggested that Hampton Sidney be founded. We know for sure that his son-in-law, Samuel Stanhope Smith, was the first president of Hampton Sidney, and it is very likely Witherspoon made a number of trips to Prince Edward Coutny to visit his eldest child. A letter has been preserved fron Nathaniel's brother Abraham to Witherspoon relating details of the mariage of a mutual acquaintance. * Education: William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia More About Col. Nathaniel Venable: Military service: William and Mary College680 Occupation: Planter and Merchant681 Public Service: Member, Virginia House of Burgesses681 Public Service #2: Member, Virginia House of Delegates, 1766, 1769 and 1776681 Public Service #3: Member, Virginia State Senate, 1780-1782681 Public Service #4: 1775, Leading founder of Hampden-Sidney Academy682 Public Service #5: 1783, Among first trustees of Hampden-Sydney College683 Religion: Presbyterian684 HISTORY OF HAMDPEN-SYDNEY COLLEGE Hampden-Sydney began as the southernmost representative o f the "Log College" form of higher education established b y the Scotch-Irish Presbyterians in America, whose academi c ideal was the University of Edinburgh, seat of the Scotti sh Enlightenment. The first president, at the suggestion of Dr. Witherspoon , the Scottish president of the College of New Jersey (no w Princeton University), chose the name Hampden-Sydney to s ymbolize devotion to the principles of representative gover nment and full civil and religious freedom which John Hampd en (1594-1643) and Algernon Sydney (1622-1683) had outspoke nly supported, and for which they had given their lives, in Pokeberries England's two great constitutional crises of the previous c entury. They were widely invoked as hero-martyrs by America n colonial patriots, and their names immediately associate d the College with the cause of independence championed b y James Madison, Patrick Henry, and other less well-known b ut equally vigorous patriots who composed the College's fir st Board of Trustees. Indeed, the original students eagerl y committed themselves to the revolutionary effort, organiz ed a militia-company, drilled regularly, and went off to th e defenses of Williamsburg, and of Petersburg, in 1777 an d 1778 respectively. Their uniform of hunting-shirts — dye d purple with the juice of pokeberries — and grey trouser s justifies the College's traditional colors, garnet and gr ey. The College, first proposed in 1771, was formally organize d in February 1775, when the Presbytery of Hanover, meetin g at Nathaniel Venable's Slate Hill plantation (about two m iles south of the present campus), accepted a gift of one h undred acres for the College, elected Trustees (most of who m were Episcopalian), and named as Rector (later President ) the Rev. Samuel Stanhope Smith, valedictorian of the Prin ceton class of 1769, who had been actively promoting the id ea of establishing a college in the heavily Scotch-Irish ar ea of south-central Virginia since he began his ministry th ere in 1774. Within only ten months, Smith secured an adequ ate subscription of funds and an enrollment of 110 students . Intending to model the new college after his own alma mat er, he journeyed to Princeton to secure the founding facult y, which included his younger brother, John Blair Smith. O n that 1775 trip he also visited Philadelphia to enlist sup port and to purchase a library and scientific apparatus. St udents and faculty gathered for the opening of the first wi nter term on 10 November 1775. The College has never suspen ded operations.
1736
William
Venable
1739
Elizabeth
Venable
1739
Mary
Venable
1740
John
S.
Venable
1731 - 1811
Elizabeth
Michaux
80
80
1. 1791. "The next morning brought us to the Hospitable Mansion of old Mrs. Venable, in the edge of Prince Edward County. She was of the Micheaux family and a descendant of Huguenots who had settled on James River, a matron of great shrewdness, information, and piety. Her husband had long been dead and her children grown up." 2. Will, 5-24-1809; probated 9-16-1811
1700 - 1744
Jacques
Jacob
Michaux
44
44
1707
Judith
Woodson
1739
Joseph
Michaux
1740
Judith
Michaux
~1741
Jacob
Michaux
1690 - 1773
Richard
Woodson
83
83
1697
John
Woodson
1699
Elizabeth
Woodson
1700
Joseph
Woodson
1707
Mary
Woodson
1712
Obadiah
Woodson
~1715
Robert
Woodson
23 FEB 1670/71 - 1717
Abraham
Michaux
1. Michaux, Abraham, 12 May 1705. "Naturalizations and Denizations", The National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 73, Naturalizations and Denizations in Colonial Virginia, p 113. 2. Virginia Vital Records #1, 1600s-1800s, Virginia Tax Records, The Vestry Book of King William Parish, Va., 1707-1750, p125. "*A curious instance of Clerk Reynaud's carelessness with regard to proper names. He writes here the names of father and son with different final consonant - in pronunciation of course a mute consonant. For details regarding the Champagnese patriarch Abraham Michaus and his large family cf. Brock, p. 133, note. Baird, II, 109, gives a thrilling account of the escape of his wife, Suzanne, from Sedan." 3. Virginia Geneaologies and Birographies, 1500s-1900s, Valentine Papers, Vol. I, Bacon Family, Albemarle County Records, p86. John Bacon, witness for Robert Tucker against the heir at Law of Abraham Michaux, decd. Ordered that sd. Robert Tucker pay him for 6 days attendence. Aug. Court 1748, Ibid. p. 71. John Bacon, came into Court and voluntarily renounced the executorship of the noncupative will of, Abraham Michaux, decd. whereupon Lyddall Bacon, Gent. the other executor, together with said John Bacon and Lewis Delaney Gent. his security entered into and acknowledged a Bond according to Law for his Faithful execution of the will. Oct. Court. 1748, Ibid. p. 76. 4. Genealogical Records: Virginia Colonial Records, 1600s-1700s, English Duplicates of Lost Virginia Records, Patents, p81. List of Patents Signed Oct. 1706 Henrico County, 850 acres, Abraham Michaux, surveyed by Richard Ligon, April 11, 1705.
1667 - 1744
Susanna
Laroch
Rochette
77
77
1. Family History: Virginia Genealogies #1, pre-1600s to 1900 Genealogies of Virginia Families IV, He-S, The Huguent Abraham Michaux and Descendants, p 318, J. D. Eggleston. The story of "Little Nightcap" is well known to Michaux descendants. Brtiefly it is as follows: After the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, Moses Rochet tried to get his youngest daughter Susanne to Amsterdam, Holland, where many refugees had fled to escape persecution received by Christian friends. They wrote their father to send their little sister to them, but fearing that their letters might fall into the hands of enemies of the Huguenots, they asked him to send the little nightcap they had left behind. After several unsuccessful attempts to get little Susanne out of France, her father arranged to have her shipped in a large cask, or hogshead, which was entrusted to a friendly sea-captain, who had the cask placed on board his ship. When they had sailed and were safely past the guards who were posted on vessels in the harbour, the cask was opened and Susanne was lifted out of her narrow, dark chamber, and brought safely to Amsterdam, where her sisters received her with great joy.
~1691
Elizabeth
Michaux
1693
Olive
Judith
Michaux
1693 - 1796
Ann
Madelin
Michaux
103
103
3 JAN 1695/96
Jane
Magdalaine
Michaux
1698
Susanne
Michaux
1699
Isaac
Michaux
~1701
Abraham
Michaux
1703
Easter
Mary
Michaux
7 MAR 1706/07
John
Paul
Michaux
~1641 - 1686
Jean
Moses
Rochet
45
45
~1641 - >1667
Marie
Truffet
26
26
~1615 - 1649
Thierri
Rochet
34
34
~1615
Suzanne
Rondeau
~1585
Thomas
Rochet
~1590
Marguerite
Beauciel
22 JAN 1642/43
Jacob
Michaux
14 FEB 1637/38
Anne
Severin
~1610
Paul
Severin
~1615
Elizabeth
De
Serignon
1608
Abraham
Michaux
1610 - 1672
Marie
Gaudin
62
62
JAN 1627/28
Rachel
Michaux
1631
Jeremie
Michaux
1635
Pierre
Michaux
1637
Daniel
Michaux
1638
Susanne
Michaux
1640
Elizabeth
Michaux
1642
Jacques
Michaux
1645
Abraham
Michaux
14 FEB 1647/48
Madelaine
Michaux
1650
Abraham
Michaux
1652
Jeanne
Michaux
30 JAN 1654/55
Elizabet
Michaux
1673
Paul
Micheaux
1675
Elizabet
Micheaux
1677
Jacques
Micheaux
1678
Henri
Micheaux
1680
Jean
Micheaux
1681
Madelaine
Micheaux
1687
Jacob
Micheaux
3 MAR 1687/88
Samuel
Micheaux
1740 - 1791
Elizabeth
Michaux
Woodson
51
51
* Note: 1. The story is told that when Tarleton's troop "passed through Prince Edward on a general plundering expedition", they visited "Slate Hill"' with the purpose of capturing Nathaniel Venable, who had been collecting supplies for the Virginia soldiers; but he escaped, having received timely warning. Some of these supplies were at "Slate Hill", and Mrs. Venable at once had them stored in empty tobacco hogsheads, headed these up and had them rolled out in front of the barns as if ready to be shipped to the tobacco market. The ruse suceeded. "They committed some robberies, destroyed some furniture, and one of their number with a pistol pointed at the breast of Mrs. Venable, demanded that she reveal her husbend's whereabouts, or he would shoot her down. Her calm reply was, 'Fire away! My husband has his country to defend!' At this instant an officer intervened and ordered the man away who had offered the indignity, severely reprimanding him". From the manuscript book of Abraham B. Venable. The book of public claims of Prince Edward Co., allowed by the General Assembly of 1782, show certain items that indicate that Madam Venable was very active in behalf of the American cause, while her husband was absent on war duties: "Elizabeth Venable, for 7 days service of a waggoner furnished John Morton". (Commissary). "Seven days service her waggoner and team to remove public flour, found by herself." "78 1/2 lbs. Lead furnished the Militia (when Lord Cornwallis was at Dan River) and was carried to Gen'l. Green." 2. SURN Woodson GIVN Elizabeth Michaux AFN J4X8-5N _UID F4EB1ECA3AA0E24E95125DD49F03544BEA05 Papers of Harriet V. Miller: "When Tarleton and Arnold invadedVA, a detachment of their forces passed through Pr. Edw. Co. ongenearl plundering expedition. They raided 'Slate Hill,' withthe purpose of capturing Nathaniel Venable, but he escaped them,having received in time warning of their approach. Theycommitted some robberies, destroyed some furniture and one oftheir number pointed at the breast of Mrs. Venable, demandedthat she reveal her husband's whereabouts or he would shoot herdown. Her calm reply was , "Fire away, my husband has hiscountry to defend." At this instant an officer intervened andordered away the man who had offered the indignity, severelyreprimanding him." [Note from Sandra Lake Lassen, 1999: I don't know the source ofthis family story, but find it spurious, as what "hero" wouldhide from the enemy, and leave his wife there to deal withthem?] REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net REPO @@REPO62@@ TITL Ancestral File (R) AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998 DATE 20 May 2001
1748
Agnes
Woodson
1756 - 1821
Samuel
Woodson
Venable
64
64
* Education: Hampden-Sydney; Nassau Hall or Princeton, 1780, honor man, delivered valedictory in Latin. * Occupation: Planter, merchant 1. Trustee of Hampsen-Sidney 1782 intil death. 2. He was at Hampden-Sidney when he joined the Student Company and entered the War of the Revolution, and was afterwards an officer in the company organized by his brother-in-law, Captain Thomas Watkins. He enter Princeton and graduated with first honours. he established his seat at "Springfield", was a planter and merchant, "the leading mind in that whole region", a man of great influence, "eminiently a practical man, a stern patriot and friend of good order in society, public spirited, and a patron of all improvements". 3. His Revolutionary record is creditable. In 1776, the students of Prince Edward Academy, of whom he was one, organized themselved into a military company and elected one of their tutors, Rev. John Blair Smith, their captain. Samuel W. Venable was ensign. In Sept., 1777, this company of school boys marched to Williamsburg to help defend it against an anticipated invasion by the British. After the danger was passed, Governor Henry complimented the company and dismissed it. On the call of General Greene for troops, when he was retreating from the South toward Virginia, before Conrwallis, a company of dragoons, Prince Edwrd Dragoons, commanded by captain Thomas Watkins, repaired to his camp. Samuel Woodson Venable was cornet (equivalent to Lieutenant) of this company and participated in the battle of Guilford Court House, March, 1781, at which the "Queens Guards' was defeated. He also served as side on General Greene's staff. Captain Watkins' company served in general Lawson's Brigade under Colonel Washington. After the action at Guilford, Colonel Washington wrote a letter to Captain Watkins, in which the bravery and skill of the Prince Edward troop and their commander were highly extolled and commended. )See: Recollections of Henry W. Allen by Sarah A. Dorsey, Book I, p. 19.) 4. The Venables trace their ancestry to 1052 with Gislebertus de Venables in France. In 1066 Gilbert, in English translation, fought with William the Conqueror in the Battle of Hastings, and was awarded vast estates in England. The Venables held the title of Baron of Kinderton for more than 700 years there. The emigrant to America in 1680 was Abraham, referred to as Abraham I. His son, known as Abraham II, acquired vast tracts of land in Fluvanna County, VA. His son Samuel Woodson Venable, Elizabeth's father, was in the House of Representatives, on the Board of Trustees of Hampden-Sydney College, and a friend of George Washington. In return for a donation to the College of 100 shares of James River stock that he obtained from George Washington, Samuel was responsible for renaming it Washington College. Robert E. Lee became President of the College at the conclusion of the Civil War and it was then renamed Washington and Lee University. Samuel was a student at Hampden-Sydney College when the Revolutionary War broke out. He Joined the student company there and later became an officer in the company organized by Thomas Watkins, aide on General Greenes staff. Samuel then attended Princeton and was Valedictorian, class of 1780. Samuel Woodson Venable was a planter and merchant at "Springfield". Samuel d. 7 Sep 1821, VA. The exact place is not known. His site of burial is not known. 5. SURN Venable GIVN Samuel Woodson NPFX Col. TITL DAR Lineage Books AUTH Daughters of the American Revolution PAGE DAR ID Number: 68407 TITL DAR Lineage Books AUTH Daughters of the American Revolution PAGE DAR ID Number: 68407 _UID 30974CD489B3914C9CC2973A917E57B24730 "Word Pictures of Longwood," by Harriet V. Miller, private printing, 1941, pp. 15-16: At Princeton...."he was an honorable man,delivering the valedictory in Latin, as was usual." He was a trustee of Hampden-Sidney College. DAR papers for Mary E. Miller; also #548112: Revolutionary War Vet, served under Lighthorse Harry Lee, Watkins' Legion Cavalry, Pr. Edw. Co., VA; Ensign, Cornet and Captain. He participated in the battle of Guilford Courthouse, 1781, helping to defeat the Queen's Guards; was aide on Gen. Greene's staff. "Venables of Virginia," pp. 41 and 42. VA State enumerations, Pr.Edw. Co.: 1783: 5 whites, 15 blacks; 1785: 13 whites, 2 dwellings, 13 other bldgs . REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net TITL DAR Lineage Books AUTH Daughters of the American Revolution PAGE DAR ID Number: 68407 DATE 20 May 2001 1 NOTE REF: Meade, "Old Churches and Families", 2:32; Morrison, "Dictionary of 2 CONT Biography", pg.31; Alice Rouse's "Reads and Their Relatives", pp. 127,128. 5. American Biographical Library The Biographical Cyclopdia of American Women Volume II Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army During the War of the Revolution Alphabetical List of Officers of the Continental Army V Fifteenth Virginia page 560 Venable, Samuel (Va). Lieutenant of Virginia Dragoons at Guilford in March, 1781. 2.Will of Samuel Woodson Venable of "Springfield," Prince Edward Co., Va. I, Samuel W. Venable, being of sound and disposing mind and memory do make and constitute this my last will and testament. In the first place it is my will and desire that all my just debts be paid. It is my will and desire that all the debts due to me on any account be collected as well those due on my private books as those which fall to me on the dissolution and settlement of the business now carried on at Union Mills under the firm of Venable & Co. in which my son Nathaniel and myself are partners the terms of the partnership will be seen in our agreement now in my possession. It is my desire also that my executors dispose of the goods and property which belongs to me in that concern as soon as circumstances and the interest of my estate will permit. It is my will and desire that the money which shall arise from my stock in trade, crops on hand, cash in hand, debts due in any way, or from bank stock or stock of any kind which I may possess at my decease and which I may hereafter direct to be sold, shall constitute a fund for the payment of my debts and legacies in the first place and then for such other purposes as I shall hereafter direct. It is my will that so much of my personal and perishable estate as my executors and my beloved wife shall think the family can conveniently spare shall be sold also a negro woman Sall now living at my plantation in Halifax, also some Georgia certificates which I hold and the proceeds to be applied as I have above directed. I wish my executors to sell the negro woman Sall to a humane master and if possible to such as she will choose to go to and therefore the mode of sale and price is entirely left to their discretion. It is my will and desire that my son Abraham W. Venable be supported from my estate until he shall have studied his profession and at least one year after he comes of age. I wish also the expense necessary to finish the education of my daughter Mildred in such way as my beloved wife and my executors may judge best and also the expense necessary for her support till she marries or comes of age to be paid out of my estate. I have directed that my son Abraham W. Venable and my daughter Mildred C. Venable should be supported out of my estate until a certain period when funds come into the hands of my executors over and above what may be necessary to pay my debts and legacies. It is my desire that they appropriate a full and sufficient fund to answer this purpose and pay any other moneys which I may hereafter direct to be paid out of my estate and this sum so appropriated they may put out to interest upon landed or other undoubted security and it is my will that the interest so long as it is sufficient and then so much of the principal as may be necessary shall be applied for the purposes above mentioned. When monies or funds belonging to my estate over and above what may be necessary for the last mentioned appropriation shall come into the hands of my executors-- It is my will and desire that they from time to time as such funds accumulate so as to make them in their judgment an object to distribute do distribute the same among those children to whom I shall leave the residue of my estate and so continue to do from time to time untill my daughter Mildred shall marry or become of age when I will and desire that the general distribution of my estate shall take place. If I should leave any negroes undisposed of I will that my executors hire them out untill the general distribution of my estate and consider their hire as belonging to the fund for supporting my daughter Mildred untill she becomes of age or marry which I have mentioned above. Now I give and bequeath in the following manner my estate real and personal(???). I give and bequeath to my beloved wife during her natural life the land and plantation whereon I now live except a small part which I shall hereafter dispose of, also the following negroes to-wit Jack, Patty, Abram, Molly and Jenny and their children now born or to be born hereafter except such as are hereafter disposed of in this will old Dick, Barbara and her son, William, Judy, Congo these are also given to her during her natural life. I give her absolutely and at her own disposal four horses such as she shall choose out of my stock of horses twenty cattle as many of the sheep and hogs as she may wish to have all of her choice--likewise as many of the plantation tools and household and kitchen furniture as she may think necessary our riding carriage and harness as much forage and provisions as will at least last a year if so much is on hand. I give her also twenty bank shares such as I may possess or the value thereof in money if I should not possess so many at the time of my decease these last are given to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Elisabeth W. Watkins wife of William Watkins one undivided half of my tract of land on Difficult creek having a mill on the same which said tract of land in the whole will contain about eight hundred acres after taking off a . . . part adjoining the land bought by me of William Boyd which said land I have willed to my daughter Mary C. Womack. Also George a negro boy the son of Patty and Jack and one undivided third part of my lot in Richmond received by inheritance of my brother Abraham B. Venable and four hundred pounds in money all of which is given to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Peggy R. Cabell the proceeds of the following lands which I desire my executors to sell for her use to-wit, one tract in Kentucky Iying on the Chaptain fork of Salt River and containing five hundred acres one other tract lying in Monroe County near the Red Sulphur Spring and containing five hundred and seventy acres one young negro man named Oliver and two hundred pounds in money all of which I give to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Ann Mayo Read my tract of land lying near the college of Hampden-Sidney and adjoining the lands of my brother Richard and containing about three hundred and seventeen acres. Also Adam a negro boy received from the estate of Colo. Read and two hundred and fifty pounds in money all of which I give to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Mary C. Womack my tract of land in Halifax County which I bought of William Boyd commonly called Cannons Tract containing about three hundred and eighty acres also fifty acres adjoining the same which I reserved of the tract bought of Scott and others when I gave my son Paul his tract of land also fifty acres more lying adjoining to it belonging to the tract bought of the heirs of Charles Edwards to be laid off by my executors in the manner most suitable to both tracts--that is to say the tract now given to my daughter Mary C. Womack and the balance of the tract bought of Edwards' heirs now given to my daughters Elisabeth W. Watkins and Agness W. Watkins. I give her also Sam called waggoner Sam also Griffin, Lucy and their child and future increase also two hundred and fifty pounds in money all of which I give to her and her heirs forever with this exception nevertheless that if my son Abraham W. Venable needs a settlement on account of his mother possessing the tract of land left him he shall have the use of the tract of land given to my daughter Mary C. Womack untill his mother's death at which time he shall possess the tract of land left him and my daughter Mary C. Womack shall possess the tract of land left her. I give and bequeath to my daughter Clementina Reid wife of William S. Reid that part of my tract of land lately bought of Blake B. Woodson which said Woodson bought of William Jones containing about three hundred and nineteen acres also twenty acres of wood land to be taken from the other part of the tract bought of Blake B. Woodson and lying most convenient to the Jones' Tract also Amos a lad the son of Barbary and Jesse the oldest son of Molly and Abraham and two hundred pounds in money all of which is given to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Henningham C. Anderson the wife of Robert Anderson the tract of land bought by me of John P. Metauer at two purchases and commonly called Providence except twenty acres joining and most convenient to the tract of land on which I now live and which I intend for my son Abraham at his mother's decease. This land my executors shall lay off according to the directions here given as they shall judge most suitable for Abraham's tract. I give her also forty acres of land to be laid off from the tract on which I live one half on each side of the river to serve as a supply of wood and timber to her tract and to be laid off as conveniently for Abraham's tract as circumstances will permit. This land also I wish my executors to lay off as they judge best according to my directions here given. I give to her besides the negroes now in her possession a negro man called Cooper Joe and Henry the son of Patty who now lives in Halifax also two hundred and fifty pounds in money all of which I give to her and her heirs forever. I give her also Lewis at her mother's death to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Agnes W. Watkins wife of Henry E. Watkins one undivided half of my tract of land and mill on Difficult creek the other half of which I have given to my daughter Elisabeth W. Watkins being the tract bought of the heirs of Charles Edwards and heretofore described. I give her also one undivided third part of my lot in Richmond inherited of my brother Abraham B. Venable. I give her also a young man Sam Cook and two hundred and fifty pounds in money. All of which I give to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my daughter Mildred C. Venable all that part of the tract of land which I lately bought of Blake B. Woodson which I have not willed to my daughter Clementina Reid containing about four hundred acres with the buildings etc. I give her also the following negroes to-wit Harry bought of Andrew Johnson's estate Finnetta daughter of Patty and any increase she may have before my decease Sally or Sarah daughter of Polly and her increase Betsy daughter of Molly and Abram Billy a cooper at the mill and William at her mother's decease. Also the sum of four hundred pounds all of which I give to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my son Nathaniel E. Venable one undivided half of my interest or estate in the mills called Union Mills and of the lot of land on which the same stands containing by estimation about sixty acres in which my brother holds an interest with me he owning one fourth of said land and mill. I give him also two negroes Robin and Letty now in his possession. I give him also Charles wishing him however not to separate him from his wife and children. I wish him to have possession of the mill at the end of the year whenever my decease shall happen. All these I give to him and his heirs forever. I have already given my son Paul C. Venable by deed a tract land which I intended for him. I have also given him the following negroes which are now in his possession viz: David, Len, Peter, Biddy and her child and future increase. I give him also the tract of land bought of George Salmon by me through his attorney Isaac Medley containing about one hundred and twenty nine acres 44 acres however subject to some uncertainty. All these I give to him and his heirs forever. I give unto my son Samuel W. Venable, Jr. one undivided half of my interest or estate in the mills now called Union Mills and of the lot of land on which it stands containing about sixty acres on which the said mill stands which said lot and mill is now owned by me and my brother William. I give him also two small tracts of land near or adjoining the mill lot one bought by me of Charles F. Nash and the other of my brother Abraham B. Venable the first containing about ninety six acres the second about fifty acres for which however I have given him a deed, also a small piece of land adjoining the same bought of Colo. Charles Allen or Edward Reaford, I give him also two hundred and ninety seven acres of land or about that quantity bought of James Daniel being the same land that fell to his children as the distributees of the estate of Abraham B. Venable deceased and for two undivided sixths of which I have given him a title by deed, for the remainder I have not as yet got a legal title but I have a mortgage on James Daniel's land to secure the title. If the title to said land should not be made to me complete in my life time it is my will that the title be made to my son Samuel W. Venable and I will and bequeath to him my right or claim to the land of James Daniel to secure him in case of failure. I give him also the following negroes to-wit Hannah and her children now in his possession Ephriam, Alleck or Alexander and Isac. I have given him Billy and Peter two negro men bought of Miller's Estate. All of which I give to him and his heirs forever. I give him also Ben a cooper at the mill to him and his heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my son Abraham W. Venable the tract of land on which I now live at his mother's decease except about forty acres which I have directed my executors to lay off in wood land adjoining the Providence Tract which I have willed to my daughter Henningham. I give him also twenty acres of land which I have directed my executors to lay off from the Providence Tract for him. I give him also the following negroes to-wit Harry Patty's son and Mary his wife and their present and future increase John and Frank son of Judy and Andrew all of which I give to him and his heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife over and above what I have given her old Aggy, Lewis, son of Patty and Hampton a lad during her natural life. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Ann Mayo Read over and above what I have given her one undivided third of a lot in Richmond which I inherited from my brother Abraham B. Venable. I give and bequeath to my daughter Peggy R. Cabell over and above what I have given her my lot in Farmville to her and her heirs forever. It is my will that my old men Caesar and Warwick live where they choose among the family and be supported out of my estate. If any of my family choose to take them I authorise my executors to make a contract and pay such member of my family at once from my estate what may be deemed a reasonable compensation for their support. I give and bequeath to my daughter Mildred C. Venable over and above what I have given her two negro men Douglas and shop Dick to her and her heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my son Samuel W. Venable over and above what I have given him one negro man cooper Peter to him and his heirs forever. I give and bequeath to my son Abraham W. Venable after the decease of his mother a negro boy Hampton to him and his heirs forever. It is my will and desire that all the residue of my estate real and personal be equally divided between between my eight daughters and youngest son. When my three eldest sons receive their legacies they will all things considered be about as well provided for as the other children of the family. When my beloved wife shall decease that which I have given her for life shall belong to this residue. It is my will that the division of the residue of my estate take place when my daughter Mildred marries or comes of age. I give to each of my children above mentioned viz my eight daughters and youngest son their share of the residue to them and their heirs forever. I appoint my sons Nathaniel E. Venable, Samuel W. Venable, Abraham W. Venable and Isaac Read my son in law executors of this my last will and testament. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the 26th. day of January in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty one. Interlined before signing. Samuel W. Venable (Seal) Witness Temple D. Richardson. Nath. I. Venable. Andrew Bigger. William D. Epes. Richd. N. Venable. Margaret M. Reid. I have given to my beloved wife during her natural life by this will Molly and Janney two negro women and such of their children now born or hereafter to be born if not by will I disposed of otherwise it is my will that my beloved wife either in her life or at her decease as she shall choose, shall have the right of giving the said negro women and children in any way she chooses so that they are given to some of our children. This alteration I make this 8th. day of August 1820 as witness my hand and seal on that day and date. Samuel W. Venable (Seal) Richd. N. Venable. Margaret M. Reid. Temple D. Richardson. At a court held for Prince Edward County September the 17th. 1821, This last will and testament of Samuel W. Venable Dec'd, was presented in court and proved by the oaths of Temple D. Richardson, Nathaniel I. Venable and Richard N. Venable three witnesses thereto, and the codicil to said will was also proved by the oaths of Temple D. Richardson and Richard N. Venable two witnesses thereto, ordered that the said will and codicil be recorded: on the motion of Nathaniel E. Venable and Abraham W. Venable two of the executors therein named, they with Samuel W. Venable, Jr. William S. Reid and Isaac Read their securities entered into and acknowledged their bond for the purpose in the penalty of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars conditioned according to law and took the oath required by law, certificate for obtaining a probat thereof in due form is granted them. Teste B. J. Worsham, D. C. A copy, Teste:-- Horace Adams Clerk of the Circuit Court of Prince Edward County, Virginia.
1758
Abraham
Bedford
Venable
1760 - 1826
Bettie
Ann
Venable
65
65
1763 - 1838
Richard
Nathaniel
Venable
75
75
also given February 16 susposedly of heart failure, found near his home, "Slate Hill", face down in a shallow stream, two inched deep. Diuguid Mortuary 1. Educated at Hampden-Sydney and Princeton, and having studied law at William and mary, he settled in Prince Edward. "He was a public spirited man, interested in agricultural betterments, canals, railroads, education and politics. He was a member of the Virginia Convention of 1829, and was now and then in the legislature. A member of the Board of Trustees of Hampden-Sydney College for more than forty years, Mr. Venable was careful to preserve papers, college programmes, etc. Hence, a collection of invaluable local documents, and hence on debt to this good friend of the old times." 2. Lieutenant in the Reviolutionary War, member of the State Sentate and the convention of 1829. 3. Educated at Hampton-Sidney and Princeton, and having studied law at William and Mary, he settled in Prince Edward county. "He was a public spirited man, interested in agricultural betterments, canals, railroads, education and politice. He was a member of the Virginia Convention of 1829, and was now and then in the legislature. A member of the Board of Trustees of Hampton-Sidney College for more than forty years, Mr. Venable was careful to preserve papers, college programmes, etc. Hence, a collection of invaluable local documents, and hence one debt to this excellent good friend of the old times." Morrison's "Dictionary of Biography," pages 38 and 39. Richard and his wife left issue, six children. 4. SURN Venable GIVN Richard Nathaniel TITL DAR Lineage Books AUTH Daughters of the American Revolution PAGE DAR ID Number: 101614 TITL DAR Lineage Books AUTH Daughters of the American Revolution PAGE DAR ID Number: 101614 _UID 5180AC193F371440A88D1B2BDBD38DDFF508 DAR # 649174 TITL DAR Lineage Books AUTH Daughters of the American Revolution PAGE DAR ID Number: 101614 REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net DATE 28 Mar 2001 TIME 18:28:33
1765 - 1858
Martha
Venable
93
93
1767 - 1768
Ann
Venable
2m
2m
1768
Ann
Venable
1771
Agnes
Venable
1773
Mary
Venable
1776
Nathaniel
E.
Venable
1778
Frances
Venable
1782
Thomas
Venable
1784 - 1851
Elizabeth
Woodson
Venable
66
66
1780 - 1824
William
Lewis
Venable
44
44
SURN Venable GIVN William Lewis _UID 5CB4F18ED7D53649A604078D6879A4DC59FE Papers of Harriet V. Miller. DAR # 649174 REPO @@REPO2@@ TITL Ancestry.com file 14810.ged AUTH slassen@@InfoAve.Net DATE 20 May 2001 TIME 11:05:33 From "Venables of Virginia," by Elizabeth Marshall Venable, at pages 157 to 161: "William Lewis Venable of 'Haymarket,' Prince Edward Co., Va. (son of Nathaniel Venable of 'Slate Hill' and Elizabeth Woodson Venable, his wife) was born at 'Slate Hill,' Prince Edward Co., Va., May 30, 1780; d. before Aug. 17, 1824, at 'Haymarket,' Prince Edward Co., Va. A.B. Hampden-Sidney College, 1800; 'trustee and an active trustee' of Hampden-Sidney College from May 6, 1807, to his resignation, April 25, 1823. 'He was a lieutenant in Capt. Samuel V. Allen's company of cavalry, 1st Reg. (Holcomb's) Virginia Militia in War of 1812.' 'He saw service in the so-called Battle of Craney Island, near Norfolk, Va., where the British Admiral Warren, in June, 1813, attempted an attack on a battery placed on the island for the defence of the approach to Norfolk and Portsmouth. The attack ended in a fiasco, the British losing some thirty or forty men, mostly by desertion and capture.' He married, in Kentucky, near Springfield, about 1808, Frances Watkins Nantz (b. about 1793 in Springfield, Kentucky, a daughter of Lieut. Frederick Nantz of the Revolutionary Army, and Martha Hughes Watkins, his wife). He and his wife met when her uncle, Gen. Matthew Walton, on his way from Kentucky to U. S. Senate, brought her to Virginia to complete her education. William Lewis Venable was owner of extensive lands in both Virginia and Kentucky, a planter and merchant. His home was his plantation, 'Haymarket,' near Farmville, Va. The house in which he and his wife lived has long ago been burned and the only traces of it are a few straggling boxwood bushes and the uncared for burying ground, all overgrown with honeysuckle, in the midst of a cultivated field of tobacco. "Will of William Lewis Venable of 'Haymarket,' Prince Edward Co., Va. " 'I, William L. Venable, of the County of Prince Edward, do hereby make my last will and testament in manner and form following, that is to say; I desire that my Executors hereafter named should pay all my just debts that remain unpaid at my death, out of the debts that are due me and my crop of tobacco, if there should be one on hand made but unsold at my death. I give my wife, Frances W. Venable, all the negroes that I received by her of Gen'l. Matthew Walton as her marriage portion, to-wit: Anthony, Rachael and her children, now in the State of Kentucky, also a negro boy named George who fell to her by the will of her grandfather, likewise John and Ned Pleasants, my half of the Farmsville Warehouse, my carriage and my whole stock of horses, cattle, sheep, hogs, all my household and kitchen furniture and plantation utensils, carts, wagons, &c. together with the crop of grain and forage of every kind that may be on hand at my death, to her and her heirs forever. " 'Also I give my wife Frances W. Venable during her widowhood or life, if she should not marry the plantation on which I live including all the land on the north side of the road leading from the Union Mills to Farmsville, which are supposed to be three hundred and sixty acres or thereabouts, also the following negroes, Lucy, Nancy and her children Betty, Stephen's wife, old Stephen, Frank Green, Anderson, Henry, Ben, Jerry, Billy, Adam, Glasgow and Lucy's two youngest children, Sally and Eliza. " 'I give to my daughter Frances M. Venable when she is of age or married one undivided half of a tract of land in the State of Kentucky and County of Ohio, known by the name of Crow's Pond tract and containing three thousand acres, also the following negroes, Jack, Frank, Cate and children, Sam, Anne, Phillis, Fanny, James and Abraham, to her and her heirs forever, also the increase that may take place among the said negroes, after date of this will. " 'I give to my son Thomas F. Venable one fourth part of the Union Mills, also all the land I have on the south side of the road, leading from the said Mills to Dr. Goodridge Wilson's, supposed to be three hundred acres, when he arrives to the age of twenty three years. Also the following negroes, Coachman Dick, John Brown and Lucy's sons, Dick and Peter, and Betty's two daughters, Betsy and Rhoda, and their increase, to him and his heirs forever. " 'I give my son, Nath'l. A. Venable, all the land I have at Prince Edward Courthouse, called the Courthouse tract, and all unsold lots in the plan of the town of Hampden, at the age of twenty-three years, also the following negroes, John Barrie, Dick, son of Betty, Tom, Daniel and Dosha and their increase, to him and his heirs forever. " 'I give to my daughter, Martha W. Venable, when she is of age or marries, one undivided half of a tract of land in the State of Kentucky and County of Ohio, containing three thousand acres called the Crow's Pond tract, also the following negroes, guinea Sam, Martha and her children Lucy, Mary, Louisa, Millie and Bob, son of Lucy, to her and her heirs forever. " 'I give to my son, William Goodridge Venable, my Hay-market tract of land, it being all the land left to my wife during her life widow-hood, at her death or marriage, supposed to contain about three hundred and sixty acres, also the following negroes, Little Stephen, Moses, Jesse, Lidia, Edward and Shadrack their increase, to him and his heirs forever. " 'All the negroes which I have given to my wife during her life or widowhood with their increase, it is my will that she shall at any time, or in any way, she shall judge best, either by will or otherwise give them to my children. It is my wish that she should distribute this property among my children as she pleases. " 'In every case where the increase of negroes is mentioned I wish it understood to be the increase after the date of this will. " 'The balance that may remain after payment of my debts from the funds mentioned in the first clause of this will, together with my stock in trade, I desire my executors to put at interest, the interest to be drawn annually for the support of my family if necessary, the principal to be divided equally among my children in the following manner; -- when one becomes of age or marries, they shall be entitle to receive their proportion of the money and so on till all have received. " 'If any of my negroes should become vicious or troublesome, I desire my executors to sell them, the proceeds to go to the child to whom said negro has been given by will, or my wife as the case may be. I desire my executors to sell all the lots in the town of Hamden that remain unsold, except the store-house lot, provided there should be a demand for them and they think it to the interest of my son, Nath'I A. Venable, to sell; the money arising from the sale to be put to interest, and the interest to go to the support and education of my children but the principal to remain entire, to be paid to my son N. A. Venable when he comes of age. " 'Should my sons, Thomas F. Venable or Nath'l. A. Venable not live until they are twenty-one years old, and die without heir, I give their portion of my real estate to my son William. The balance of my estate I give to my wife. " 'I appoint Frances W. Venable, N. E. Venable [of 'Longwood,'] Henry E. Watkins and Wm. H. Venable executors of this last will. I appoint N. E. Venable guardian of my children. In witness of the above will I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal this twentieth day of Feb. One thousand eighteen hundred and twenty-four. " 'Wm. L. Venable. (Seal) " 'May 11th, 1824. The following codicil is to be considered as part of my will. Should the land now held by my brother Richard N. Venable on the south side of Appomattox adjoining me be for sale I hereby authorize my executors to purchase the same should they think proper, and pay for it with my outstanding debts and stock in trade; " 'Should the said land be purchased it is to be held to the use of my wife during her life should she remain a widow and then one hundred acres of said land adjoining the land I have given my son William I devise to him and his heirs and the residue of said tract I give to all my children jointly. " ' W. Venable (Seal). " 'Witness. R'd. N. Venable Mary R. Venable G. Wilson " 'At a Court held for Prince Edward County August 17th, 1824. " 'The last will and testament of William L. Venable, dec'd., was presented in Court, and there being no witness to the original will, Abraham W. Venable and James D. Wood being sworn, severally said, they were well acquainted with the handwriting of Wm. L. Venable, that the whole of said original will, together with the signature, thereto, is in the proper handwriting of the said Wm. L. Venable. And the codicil to said will was proved by the oaths of Richard N. Venable and Goodrich Wilson, two witnesses thereto; ordered that the said will and codicil be recorded. On motion of Henry E. Watkins, one of the executors in said will named, -- he with Abraham W. Venable, Asa Dupuy, Richard N. Venable, John Booker, James D. Wood and Goodrich Wilson, his securities, entered into and acknowledged their bond for the purpose in the penalty of Fifty Thousand Dollars, conditioned according to law, and took oath required by law, certificate for obtaining probate thereof in due form is granted him. " 'Teste: -- B. J. Worsham, D. C. " 'A copy Teste: -- Horace Adams Clerk. ' " "Extracts from records of the War Department. " 'The records of this office show that one William L. Venable served in the War of 1812 as a 1st Lieut. in Capt. Samuel V. Allen's Co. of Cavalry, 1st Regt. (Holcombe's) Va. Militia. His services commenced June 29, 1813, and ended October 4, 1813. " 'His name also appears on a muster roll of that organization dated Camp Bottoms Bridge, Sept. 13, 1814, with remark, 'absent sick never joined the troop.' " 'The roll shows that this Co. was from Prince Edward County.' " More About William Lewis Venable: Burial: "Haymarket", Prince Edward County, Virginia540 Military service: Lieutenant., War of 1812540 Military service #2: Fought in the Battle of Craney Creek, near Norfolk, Virginia540 Occupation: Planter and Merchant540 Public Service: He was an active trustee of Hampden-Sidney College from May 6, 1807 to 1823540 Religion: Presbyterian
1791 - 1862
Frances
Watkins
Nantz
71
71
1812
Thomas
Frederick
Venable
1809
Francis
Matthews
Venable
1814
Nathaniel
Abraham
Venable
1816
Martha
Watkins
Venable
1819
William
Goodridge
Venable
1756
Mary
Scott
Carrington
1782
Elizabeth
Woodson
Venable
1782
Margeret
Read
Venable
1784
Ann
Mayo
Venable
1786
Mary
Carrington
Venable
1788
Clemintina
Venable
1790
Henningham
Venable
1791
Nathaniel
E.
Venable
1793
Paul
Carrington
Venable
1796
Agnes
Woodson
Venable
1797
Samuel
Woodson
Venable
1799
Abram
Watkins
Venable
1803
Mildred
Coles
Venable
1761
Thomas
Watkins
~1793
Anne
Venable
Watkins
1779
Mary
Morton
~1737
Josiah
Morton
1743 - 1820
William
Morton
77
77
26 FEB 1745/46
Agnes
Morton
1749
Joseph
Morton
29 JAN 1750/51
Jacob
Morton
1754
Elizabeth
Morton
1774
Jane
Morton
1744 - 1814
Susannah
Watkins
70
70
~1767
Fanny
Morton
~1769
Agnes
Morton
~1771
Nancy
Morton
~1773
Martha
Morton
~1775
Henry
Morton
~1777
Lucy
Morton
~1781
Joseph
Morton
~1783
Mildred
Morton
~1785
Susan
Morton
~1777
Elizabeth
Morton
1799
Frances
A.
Venable
1813
Mary
Watkins
Venable
1758
Nathaniel
Venable
1798
Abraham
Michaux
Venable
1801
Mary
Elizabeth
Venable
1802
Nathaniel
Joseph
Venable
1803
Samuel
Lewis
Venable
1813
Virginia
Woodson
Bransford
1805
Martha Ann
Woodson
Venable
1808
Thomas
Henry
Venable
1776
Goodridge
Alexander
Wilson
Benjamin
F.
Wilson
Elizabeth
Woodson
Wilson
William
Venable
Wilson
James
Willis
Wilson
Martha
Agnes
Wilson
1806
Anna
Thomas
Wilson
~1812
Samuel
Venable
Wilson
1813
Nathaniel
Venable
Wilson
1815
Goodgridge
Alexander
Wilson
1761
Joseph
Morton
Venable
~1767
Mary
Ann
Venable
1769
Martha
Davis
Venable
1778
James
Henry
Venable
1780
Frances
Venable
1784
Samuel
Venable
1785
Agnes
Venable
1790
Elizabeth
Jane
Venable
~1709
Mary
Goode
1733
Mary
Morton
1683
Josiah
Morton
~1687
Elizabeth
Davis
1629 - 1722
John
Morton
93
93
~1645
Joane
Hughes
1562 - 1601
Sir
Hugh
Cholmondeley
39
39
~1563
Mary
Hargrave
~1562 - 1626
Mary
Holford
64
64
1584
Robert
Cholmondeley
~1586
Lettice
Cholmondeley
2 MAR 1593/94
Thomas
Cholmondeley
~1530
Christopher
Holford
~1530
Peter
Shakerley
~1555
Eleanor
Shakerley
~1535
Ann
Dutton
1508 - 1569
Sir
Thomas
Holford
61
61
~1504
Margaret
Boteler
~1482 - ~1545
Sir
John
Holford
63
63
~1480
Thomas
Boteler
~1408
Ellen
Boteler
~1405
Alice
Boteler
~1410
Anne
Boteler
~1390
Nicholas
Croft
~1394
Elena
Boteler
Agnes
1364 - ~1419
Sir
John
Croft
55
55
1368
Mabel
Bradshaw
~1486
Margery
Brereton
~1456
George
Holford
1538 - 6 JAN 1596/97
Hugh
Cholmondeley
~1518
Anne
Dorman
1496 - 1563
Richard
Cholmondeley
67
67
1520
Katherine
Mainwaring
~1516 - 1557
John
Davenport
41
41
~1507 - ~1577
Elizabeth
Fitton
70
70
~1497 - ~1546
Thomas
Davenport
49
49
~1524
Alice
Davenport
~1518
Hugh
Davenport
~1526
Katherine
Davenport
~1528
Amy
Davenport
~1530
Joan
Davenport
~1520
Peter
Davenport
~1522
Roger
Davenport
~1478 - >1525
Thomas
Davenport
47
47
~1436
Katherine
Radcliffe
~1499
Katherine
Davenport
~1382 - 1442
John
Radcliffe
60
60
Matthew
Villiers
~1532
Richard
Cholmondeley
1423
Joan
Vernon
~1370 - 1408
Richard
Vernon
38
38
~1387
Eleanor
Hulse
~1340
Richard
Vernon
~1342
Isabel
Malbank
~1315
Richard
Vernon
~1318
Elizabeth
Dokinfield
~1397
Thomas
Fouleshurst
~1294
Matilda
Grosvenor
~1401
Cecily
Mainwaring
~1360
Thomas
Fouleshurst
~1367
Eva
De
Venables
~1335
Robert
Fouleshurst
~1337
Elizabeth
Praers
~1310
Thomas
Praers
~1310
Richard
Fouleshurst
~1465
Richard
Cholmondeley
~1437 - 1494
Richard
Cholmondeley
57
57
~1439
Eleanor
Dutton
1421 - 1459
Sir
Thomas
De Dutton
38
38
~1412
Ellen
Davenport
~1320
Thomas
Davenport
~1322 - 11 JAN 1382/83
Ralph
Davenport
~1324
Richard
Davenport
~1326
Roger
Davenport
~1328
Arthur
Davenport
~1330
Isabel
Davenport
~1332
Margaret
Davenport
~1334
Uriah
Davenport
~1336
John
Davenport
~1254
Ellen
De
Davenport
~1260
Agnes
De
Macclesfield
~1300
Roger
Davenport
~1302
Millicent
Davenport
~1304
Peter
Davenport
~1306
Roger
Davenport
~1285
Roesia
De
Davenport
~1310
Agnes
Bradford
~1355
Joyce
~1310
Elizabeth
Leigh
~1294
Peter
Leigh
~1297
Ellen
Bechton
~1340
Margaret
Done
~1340
Johanna
Delves
~1363
Ellen
Davenport
~1365
Nicholas
Davenport
~1367
Griffin
Davenport
~1369
Elizabeth
Davenport
~1371
Agnes
Davenport
~1376
Margaret
Davenport
1378 - 1415
Ralph
Davenport
37
37
~1380
Richard
Davenport
~1385 - >1428
Joan
De
Leigh
43
43
~1409
Ralph
Davenport
~1411
Margaret
Davenport
~1413
William
Davenport
~1402
Joan
Mainwaring
~1433
John
Davenport
~1435
Thomas
Davenport
~1437
Robert
Davenport
~1439
William
Davenport
~1385
William
Cholmondeley
~1385
Maud
Cheyney
~1355
John
Cheyney
~1360
Matilda
Capenhurst
~1352
Richard
Cholmondeley
~1360
Alice
Henhull
~1323
William
Cholmondeley
~1327
Elizabeth
Brereton
~1289
Hugh
Cholmondeley
~1305
Catherine
De
Spurstow
~1261
Richard
Cholmondeley
~1265
Margery
De
Kingsley
~1235
Robert
Cholmondeley
~1242
Beatrix
Saint
Pierre
~1209
Hugh
De
Cholmondeley
~1215
Felice
De
Blundeville
~1183
Robert
De
Cholmondeley
~1176
Mabel
FitzNigel
~1457 - 1497
Richard
Cotton
40
40
~1438
Mary
de la
Pole
~1410
Ralph
de la
Pole
~1382 - 1432
Peter
de la
Pole
50
50
~1384
Elizabeth
Lawton
~1335
John
Lawton
~1332 - >1373
Eleanor
Chandos
41
41
~1290
Edward
Chandos
~1295
Elizabeth
Isabell
Twyford
~1270
Robert
Twyford
~1270 - >1300
John
Chandos
30
30
~1272
Elizabeth
De
Brailsford
1253
Sir Henry
De
Brailsford
~1248
Sir
Henry
Chandos
~1252
Eleanor
~1221
Sir
John
Chandos
~1225
Margaret
Fitzrobert
FitzWakelin
1199 - ~1238
Robert
FitzWakelin
39
39
1203
Margaret
De
Grendon
~1185
John
Chandos
~1200
Margery
De
Ferrers
~1354
John
de la
Pole
~1358
Cecelia
Wakebruge
1332
Peter
Wakebruge
1334
Joane
~1408
Richard
Cotton
~1412
Johanna
Venables
~1333
John
de la
Pole
~1330
Joan
Harrington
1395
Cecily
1316
Baldwin
de
Langton
~1382
John
Cotton
~1386
Isabella
Fauconer
~1354
William
Fauconer
~1358
Cicely
~1330
Richard
Fauconer
~1335
Catherine
~1350
William
Cotton
~1339 - 1434
Agnes
Ridware
95
95
~1315
Walter
Ridware
~1317
Joan
Walsheis
~1285
Walter
Walsheis
~1289
Juliana
Bafyng
~1257
John
Bafyng
Living
Oliphant
~1290
Walter
Ridware
~1293
Julian
Waldeschef
~1262
Thomas
Ridware
~1266
Margaret
Ridware
~1227
Roger
Ridware
1231
Agnes
FitzHerbert
~1205 - <1255
Walter
Ridware
50
50
~1207
Matilda
Peche
~1187
Nicholas
Peche
1191
Alice
De
Syffervast
~1162
Ralph
Peche
~1165
Hawise
Petch
~1140
Thomas
Petch
~1238
Walter
Ridware
~1240
Ellen
FitzHerbert
~1229
John
Ridware
~1231
Alice
Ridware
~1233
Margaret
Ridware
~1235
William
Ridware
~1237
Nicholas
Ridware
~1292
John
Ridware
~1294
Robert
Ridware
~1288
Agnes
Ridware
~1330
Edmund
Cotton
~1354
Robert
Cotton
~1334
Katherine
~1300
William
Cotton
~1302
Isabella
~1305
Johanna
~1265
William
Cotton
~1269
Joan
~1230
William
Cotton
~1234
Isabella
~1200
Simon
Cotton
~1432
Richard
Cotton
~1438
William
Cotton
~1440
Mary
Wedenham
~1465
Thomas
Cotton
~1458
Audrey
Cotton
~1435
Johanna
FitzHerbert
~1460
Catherine
Cotton
~1473
Margaret
Cotton
~1475
John
Cotton
~1415 - 1472
Nicholas
FitzHerbert
57
57
~1417
Alice
Booth
~1365
John
Findhern
~1372
Catherine
~1365
Henry
FitzHerbert
~1369
Miss
Downes
~1330
William
FitzHerbert
~1330
Alice
Longford
~1290
Nicholas
Longford
~1263
Roger
De
Herdeburgh
~1235
Hugh
De
Herdeburgh
~1240
Miss
Raymes
~1210
Robert
de
Raymes
~1210
Roger
de
Herdeburgh
~1215
Petronilla
Croft
~1445
Thomas
Powtrell
~1480
Bridget
Powtrell
~1489
Sir
Edmund
Molyneux
~1490
Anthony
Molyneux
~1492
Richard
Molyneux
~1493
Ellen
Molyneux
~1507
Margaret
Molyneux
~1491 - 1539
Robert
Molyneux
48
48
~1505
Dorothy
Belgrave
~1490
John
Belgrave
1460
Richard
Belgrave
1492
Margaret
Troutbeck
~1515
Anne
Talbot
~1517
Mary
Talbot
~1521
Constance
Christina
Talbot
~1527
Dorothy
Talbot
~1486
Isabel
Cotton
~1482
Richard
Cotton
1485
Thomas
Cotton
~1490
Catherine
Cotton
1488
Matilda
Cotton
~1483
Robert
Cotton
~1485
John
Bradborne
~1510
Humphrey
Bradborne
~1521
Maud
Bradborne
1493
Sir
William
Basset
~1402
Sir
Nicholas
Byron
~1408
Ralph
Byron
~1414
Jane
Byron
~1418
Elizabeth
Byron
~1400
Richard
Byron
~1415
Margaret
Byron
~1433
Sir
John
Byron
~1435
Sir
Nicholas
Byron
~1437
Alice
Byron
~1440
Elen
Byron
~1442
Margaret
Byron
~1444
Elizabeth
Byron
~1462
Joan
Bushier
~1487
Sir
John
Byron
~1489
Mary
Byron
~1491
Elizabeth
Byron
~1495
Jane
Byron
~1497
Dorothy
Byron
~1440 - 1492
Henry
Sutton
52
52
~1422 - 1500
Robert
Sutton
78
78
~1422
Elizabeth
Stanley
~1420
Anne
Stanley
~1400
Elizabeth
De
Bar
~1426
George
Stanley
~1460
Thomas
Sutton
~1472
Robert
Sutton
~1470
Catherine
Basset
~1425
Thomas
Basset
~1435
Margaret
Meringe
~1400
William
Meringe
~1435
John
Booth
~1394
Thomas
Booth
~1395
Matthew
Booth
~1398
Joan
Booth
~1400
William
Booth
~1396
Johanna
Booth
~1404
Richard
Booth
~1406
Roger
Booth
~1407
John
Booth
~1409
Ralph
Booth
~1410
Lucy
Booth
~1400
Isabell
Carrington
~1375 - <1426
Sir
George
Carrington
51
51
~1342
Sir
William
Carrington
~1318
Cecily
Hyde
~1315
John
Carrington
~1380
Elizabeth
De
Warren
~1301
William
Carrington
~1433
Hugh
Beeston
~1458
Tochett
Beeston
~1460
James
Beeston
~1473
Joanna
Donne
~1415
Margaret
Vernon
~1365 - 1404
Thomas
Beeston
39
39
~1367
Margaret
~1327 - <1395
Henry
Beeston
68
68
1264
Randolph
De
Thornton
~1290 - >1342
Henry
De
Beeston
52
52
1266
Katherine
Saint
Pierre
~1249
Ellen
~1249 - >1342
David
De
Bonbury
93
93
~1259
Agnes
~1229 - <1283
Henry
De
Bonbury
54
54
~1231
Margery
De
Beeston
~1360
William
Beeston
~1368
David
Beeston
~1361 - >1384
Isabell
Stoke
23
23
~1346
Randall
Stoke
~1350
Beatrice
Caddington
1371 - <1403
John
Beeston
32
32
~1379
Agnes
Beeston
~1381
Randle
Beeston
~1377 - 1419
Margaret
Hulgreve
42
42
1344
William
Hulgreve
~1397
Isabel
Beeston
~1389
Robert
Aston
~1413
Sir
Richard
Aston
~1415
David
Aston
~1417
Alice
Aston
~1550
Edward
Aston
~1551
Bridget
Aston
~1552
Elizabeth
Aston
~1553
Margaret
Aston
~1555
Mary
Aston
~1556
Elinore
Aston
~1558
Winnifred
Aston
~1560
Ellen
Aston
~1561
Ursula
Aston
~1563
Richard
Aston
1526 - 1608
Hugh
Beeston
82
82
1501 - 1601
George
Beeston
100
100
1506 - 1591
Alice
Davenport
85
85
~1478
John
Beeston
~1482
Katherine
Calveley
~1456
George
Calveley
~1485
Thomas
Aston
~1485
Bridget
Harewell
~1458 - 1505
John
Harewell
47
47
~1460
Anne
Middleton
~1430 - 1473
Richard
Middleton
43
43
~1422 - 1496
Maud
Throckmorton
74
74
~1412
John
Throckmorton
~1415 - 1472
Sir
Thomas
Throckmorton
57
57
~1418
Mary
Throckmorton
~1421
Margaret
Throckmorton
~1425
Eleanor
Throckmorton
~1427 - 1502
Elizabeth
Throckmorton
75
75
~1427
Richard
Knightley
~1426
Margaret
Olney
~1421
Thomas
Greene
~1445
Thomas
Greene
~1450
John
Greene
~1400 - 1474
Sir
William
Middleton
74
74
~1402
Margaret
Hamerton
~1380 - 1449
Laurence
Hamerton
69
69
~1384
Isabel
Tempest
~1336 - >1390
Maria
Talbot
54
54
~1358
Nicholas
Tempest
~1360
Catherine
Tempest
~1362
Margaret
Tempest
~1364
Robert
Tempest
~1358
Isabel
Leygard
~1380
Peter
Tempest
~1382
Sir
Robert
Tempest
~1384
Roger
Tempest
~1386
John
Tempest
Margaret
De
Stainforth
~1317
Sir
Richard
Tempest
~1263 - 1305
Sir
Richard
Tempest
42
42
~1242 - <1293
Sir
Roger
Tempest
51
51
~1243 - 8 MAR 1300/01
Alice
De
Waddington
~1265
Nicholas
Tempest
1217
Sir Walter
De
Waddington
~1221 - >1286
John
Tempest
65
65
~1246
Elias
Tempest
~1248
John
Tempest
~1200 - 1273
Sir
Richard
Tempest
73
73
~1223
Sir
Richard
Tempest
~1225
William
Tempest
~1201
Elena
De
Tonge
~1174 - 1209
Roger
Tempest
35
35
~1178 - <1222
Alice
De
Rillieston
44
44
1152
Elias
De
Rillieston
1156
Alice
De
Hebden
~1148 - >1178
Richard
Tempest
30
30
~1152
Alice
De
Meschines
~1356
Richard
Hamerton
~1360
Elizabeth
Radcliffe
~1334
Adam
Hamerton
~1336
Katherine
Knoll
1288
Elias
Knoll
~1308
John
Hamerton
~1313
Agnes
~1254
Stephen
Hamerton
~1226
Richard
Hamerton
~1230
Agnes
~1380
Sir
John
Middleton
~1382
Alice
Mauleverer
~1355
Sir
Peter
Mauleverer
~1360
Sir
Nicholas
Middleton
~1362
Alice
~1331
Thomas
Middleton
~1335
Eliza
Gramary
~1300
Sir
Robert
Gramary
~1300
Sir Peter
De
Middleton
~1302
Eustacia
Plumpton
~1296
Marmaduke
Plumpton
~1298
Isabella
Plumpton
~1300
Robert
Plumpton
~1281
William
De
Middleton
~1283
Agnes
Le
Boteler
~1259
Sir
Nigel Le
Boteler
~1255
Peter
De
Middleton
~1229
Sir Robert
De
Middleton
~1233
Aeneas
~1435
William
Harewell
~1440
Agnes
Wogan
~1402 - 1469
Henry
Wogan
67
67
~1410
Margred
Thomas
~1380 - 1446
William
Thomas
66
66
1378 - 1454
Gwladys
Verch
Dafydd
76
76
~1351
Sir Dafydd
"Gam" Ap
Llewelyn
~1355
Gwenllian
Verch
Gwilym
~1325
Gwilym
ap
Howell
~1330
Llywelyn
Ap
Hywel
~1329
Mawd
Verch
Ieuan
~1304
Hywel
"Fychan"
Ap Hywel
~1306
Alice
Verch
Llewelyn
~1281
Hywel
Ap
Einion
~1285
Letis
Verch
Cadwaladr
~1240
Cadwaladr
Ap
Gruffydd
~1202
Gruffydd
Ap
Cadwaladr
~1255 - >1271
Einion
"Sais"
Ap Rhys
16
16
~1372 - 1438
Thomas
Ap Guillem
Herbert
66
66
~1380
Maud
Morley
1354
John
Morley
~1315
Robert
Morley
~1320
Joan
Teyes
~1380
John
Wogan
~1383
Joan
Joes
~1355
John
Joes
~1350
Wiliam
Wogan
~1355
Katherine
Wiriott
~1404
Roger
Harewell
~1405
Agnes
Clopton
~1375 - 1419
Sir
William
Clopton
44
44
~1380 - 1430
Alice
Johanna
De Besford
50
50
~1340 - 1404
Beatrice
de
Thornton
64
64
~1240
Uriah
Saint
Pierre
~1355
Mary
Charlton
~1192
Alice
Pincerna
~1160
Ralph
De
Arundel
~1350
John
Clopton
~1140
Roger
Everard
~1135
Renfried
De
Arundel
~1137
Miss
De
Novant
~1110
Guy
De
Novant
~1034
William
II Brito
d'Albini
~1055
Ralph
d'Albini
~1075
Roger
d'Albini
~1078
Adelicia
~1100
Ralph
d'Albini
~1330
Roger
Charlton
~1335
Elizabeth
Besyn
~1310 - 1361
John
Besyn
51
51
~1320
William
Clopton
~1325
Anne
De La
Morehall
~1295
John
Clopton
~1270
William
Clopton
~1240
Richard
Clopton
~1210
Robert
Clopton
~1468 - 1529
Richard
Aston
61
61
~1465
Douce
Warburton
1520 - 1572
Sir John
Peter
Warburton
52
52
~1397 - ~1448
Sir
Geoffrey
Warburton
51
51
1386 - 1415
Thomas
Gerard
29
29
1402
Constance
Gerard
~1401
Beatrix
De
Dutton
~1404
John
Gerard
1360
Thomas
Gerard
1364
Isabel
~1400
Sir
Alexander
Standish
~1381 - 1431
John
Gerard
50
50
1407
Peter
Gerard
~1360 - 1416
Thomas
Gerard
56
56
~1330
Peter
Gerard
~1365
John
Gerard
~1368
Helen
Ince
~1415
William
Gerard
~1512 - 15 JAN 1610/11
Eleanore
Radcliffe
1390
Clemence
De
Standish
~1339
Hugh
De
Standish
~1347
Alice
De
Standish
~1316 - 1396
Henry
De
Standish
80
80
~1409 - 1476
Alexander
Radcliffe
67
67
~1425
Joan
Radcliffe
~1441 - 1497
Isabella
Radcliffe
56
56
~1432
William
Radcliffe
~1442
James
Harrington
~1425 - 1488
Sir
William
Harrington
63
63
~1425
Elizabeth
Pilkington
~1400
Edmund
Pilkington
~1404
Elizabeth
Booth
~1379
Thomas
Booth
~1388
Elizabeth
Pilkington
~1354
Sir John
De
Assheton
~1358
Katherine
Standish
~1372
Katherine
De
Assheton
~1398
Robert
Pilkington
~1401
Richard
Harrington
1329
Ellen
DAwney
~1403
Elizabeth
Bradshaw
~1378
William
Bradshaw
1381
Joan
~1355 - <1394
Sir
William
Bradshaw
39
39
~1364
Ellen
Urswick
~1345
Johanna
Hertforth
~1342
Thomas
Urswick
~1300
John
De
Verdon
~1280 - 1316
Miles
de
Verdon
36
36
~1285
Miss
De
Exeter
~1254
Margery
de
Bohun
~1300
William
Bradshaw
~1303
Mabel
Norris
~1464
Agnes
Harrington
~1466
William
Harrington
~1468 - 4 MAR 1527/28
Sir
Ralph
Egerton
~1471
Alice
Harrington
~1474
Joana
Harrington
~1475
Margaret
Harrington
~1486
Clemence
Harrington
~1478
Anne
Harrington
1473
Alexander
Radcliffe
~1463
Anne
Radcliffe
~1433
Jane
Trafford
~1420
Sir
John
Trafford
~1476
William
Hanford
~1462
Margery
Trafford
~1465
Nicholas
Longford
~1485
Sir
Ralph
Longford
1475
John
Radcliffe
1477
Alice
Booth
1502
Wiliam
Radcliffe
1510
Anne
Radcliffe
~1523
Richard
Molyneux
~1527
Anthony
Molyneux
~1529
Alexander
Molyneux
~1530
William
Molyneux
1531
Alice
Molyneux
~1534
James
Molyneux
~1537
Maria
Molyneux
~1539
Ann
Molyneux
1540 - 1606
John
Molyneux
66
66
~1541 - 1617
Margaret
Molyneux
76
76
~1543
Jane
Molyneux
~1545
Robert
Molyneux
~1548
Ellen
Molyneux
~1549
Eleanor
Molyneux
~1552
Arthur
Molyneux
~1554
Thomas
Molyneux
~1554
Anne
Radcliffe
~1510 - 1577
Richard
Radcliffe
67
67
~1520 - 1564
Elizabeth
Gerard
44
44
~1490
William
Gerard
~1450
Thomas
Gerard
~1455
Elizabeth
Norris
~1438
Cecily
Standish
~1422
Lawrence
Standish
~1425
Jane
1465 - 15 MAR 1546/47
Owen
Radcliffe
~1468
Alice
1432
James
Radcliffe
1436
Joan
1407
James
Radcliffe
~1410
Agnes
Eubey
1369
Sir
Richard
Radcliffe
~1370
Cecelia
Aston
~1328
Hugh
Aston
~1330
Cicely
~1305
Robert
Aston
~1310
Felice
Hawarden
~1270
Richard
Aston
~1274
Anabella
de
Rode
~1375
Elizabeth
Radcliffe
1574
Eleanor
Molyneux
~1577
Richard
Molyneux
~1579
Thomas
Molyneux
~1582
Elizabeth
Molyneux
~1584
Bridget
Molyneux
~1586
Francis
Molyneux
~1538
Sir
John
Warren
1563
Edward
Warren
~1511 - 1558
Edward
Warren
47
47
1510 - 19 MAR 1583/84
Dorothy
Booth
1496
Edward
Booth
~1498
William
Booth
~1502
Hammet
Booth
~1504
Henry
Booth
~1506
Andrew
Booth
1508
Anne
Booth
~1500
Margaret
Booth
1501 - 1558
Elizabeth
Winnington
57
57
~1525
Richard
Warburton
1527 - 9 JAN 1572/73
Anne
Warburton
~1520
Mary
Brereton
1564
Anne
Warburton
~1497
Lady
Elizabeth
Somerset
1329 - 1422
Francois
De
Baux
93
93
~1460
Katherine
Plantagenet
~1463
Jane
Dunne
1370
Justine
Ursins
1320
Nicola
Orsini Des
Ursins
1322
Giovanna
De
Sabran
~1308
William
Sabrano
~1310
Francesca
Celano
~1290
Ermengaud
de
Sebrano
~1293 - 1312
Elise
De
Baux
19
19
~1261 - <1320
Raymond
de
Baux
59
59
~1235 - 1300
Elzear
de
Sebrano
65
65
~1240 - 1300
Cecile
de
Agoult
60
60
~1263
Eustachie
Etendard
~1225 - 1266
Bertrand
de
Baux
41
41
~1240
Alix
~1192 - 1235
Raymond
de
Baux
43
43
1193 - 1228
Alix
de
Marseille
35
35
~1165
Hugh
de
Marseille
~1165
Bertrand
De
Baux
~1170
Etienette
de
Baux
~1135
Bertrand
De
Baux
~1140
Thiburgend
De
Montpelies
1294 - 1350
Robert
Des
Ursins
56
56
1296
Sueva
De
Baux
~1285
Hughes
De
Baux
~1287
Joan
Marra
~1260 - 1281
Bertrand
III De
Baux
21
21
~1262
Stephenetta
de
Baux
~1235
Guillaume
IV De
Baux
~1230
Raymond
II De
Baux
~1235
IIlaura
Adhemar
~1210
Aymar
Adhemar
~1205
Guilliaume
II De
Baux
~1175
Guilliaume
De
Baux
1270 - 1326
Raymond
Des
Ursins
56
56
~1272
Anastasie
De
Montfort
~1240 - ~1287
Guy
De
Montfort
47
47
1245
Margarite
Aldobrandeschi
~1220
Aldobrandin
Aldobrandeschi
~1225
Francoise
De
Baschi
1220
Pietro
II De
Ruffo
1222
Joan
D'
Aquina
~1290 - <1350
Bertrand
III De
Baux
60
60
~1295
Margaret
D'Aulnay
~1255
Vilain
D'Aulnay
~1265
Jeanne
Helene
De Briel
~1222
Guyot
D'Aulnay
~1224
Amicie
des
Barres
~1140
William
I des
Barres
~1192 - 1227
Beatrix
de
Châlon
35
35
1150 - 1206
Guillaume
De
Châlon
56
56
1121 - 1171
Hugues
De
Bourgogne
50
50
~1125 - 1166
Isabelle
De
Thiern
41
41
~1100
Guillaume
De
Thiern
~1190 - 1249
William
III des
Barres
59
59
~1082 - 1162
Mathilde
De
Turenne
80
80
1370 - 1397
Jean
De
Luxemburg
27
27
~1372
Marguerite
de
Enghien
~1335 - 17 MAR 1393/94
Louis
De
Enghien
~1340
Giovanna
De San
Sevrino
~1323 - 1384
Anthony
De San
Severino
61
61
~1324 - 1379
Isabel
De
Baux
55
55
~1300 - 1358
Thomas
De San
Severino
58
58
~1275
Henri
De San
Severino
~1250
Thomas
De San
Severino
~1225
Roger
De San
Severino
1202 - 10 FEB 1279/80
Countess Of
Flanders &
Hainault Marguerite
~1171 - 1204
Marie
De
Champagne
33
33
1148 - 1191
Thibaud
V "The
Good"
43
43
~1170
Countess
of Blois
Marguerite
1167 - 2 JAN 1199/00
Otto
von
Hohenstaufen
PFALZGRAF OF BURGUNDY
~1172
Konrad
II von
Hohenstaufen
~1198 - 1231
Beatrix
Von
Hohenstaufen
33
33
~1224
Guillaume
De
Dampierre
~1225 - 7 MAR 1304/05
Guy
De
Dampierre
~1227
Jean
De
Dampierre
~1229
Jeanne
De
Dampierre
~1231
Marie
De
Dampierre
~1230 - 1264
Mathilde
De
Bethune
34
34
~1205
Robert
VII De
Bethune
1248 - 1322
Robert
III De
Flanders
74
74
1270
Nicolaus
III Van
Putten
~1360
Jean
De
Beauvau
1267
Jean I
De
Dampierre
~1224 - 1275
Marguerite
De
Bar
51
51
~1220
Henri
~1247
Isabelle
De
Luxembourg
~1279 - 1323
Isabel
De
Dampierre
44
44
~1265
Marguerite
De
Dampierre
~1251 - 1280
Yolande
De
Bourgogne
29
29
~1280
Yolande
De
Flanders
1401 - 1436
Jacobaea of
Bavaria-
Straubing
35
35
~1285 - 1323
Robert
De
Flanders
38
38
~1268
Gautier
II De
Enghien
1302 - 1345
Gautier
III De
Enghien
43
43
1305 - 1360
Isabel
De
Brienne
55
55
~1280 - 1311
V
Gautier
31
31
~1281
Jeanne
De
Chatillon
~1325
Simon
de
Roucy
1264 - 1300
Isabeau
De
Dreux
36
36
~1290
Guy
De
Chatillon
~1290 - >1348
Jeanne
D'Argies
58
58
~1220
Clémence
De
Châteaudun
~1231 - 1261
Gaucher
IV De
Chatillon
30
30
~1235
Isabelle
De
Villehardouin
~1204
Hughes
De
Chatillion
~1204 - 0241
Marie
D'Avesnes
963
963
~1230 - 12 MAR 1288/89
Guy II
De
Chatillion
~1181 - 1246
Gautier
II
D'Avesnes
65
65
~1181 - 1230
Countess
de Blois
Marguerite
49
49
~1206
Isabelle
D'Avesnes
~1208
Thibaut
D'Avesnes
~1155 - 1191
Jacques
D'Avesnes
36
36
~1159
Adelphie
De
Guise
~1182 - 1244
Bouchard
D'Avesnes
62
62
~1183
Mathilde
D'Avesnes
~1184
Jacques
D'Avesnes
~1185
Ida
D'Avesnes
~1186
Ada
D'Avesnes
~1187
Guy
D'Avesnes
~1188
Adelaide
D'Avesnes
1133
Bernard
De
Guise
1137
Alix
~1130 - 1170
Nicolas
"Plukiel"
D'Avesnes
40
40
~1133
Countess
de la Roche
Mathilde
~1157
Ida
D'Avesnes
~1159
Fastré
D'Avesnes
~1161
Mathilde
D'Avesnes
~1163
Radulph
D'Avesnes
~1107
I Henri
~1111
Mathilde
De
Limbourg
~1105 - 1147
Wauthier
D'Oisy
42
42
~1109
Princess Of
Mortagne
Ade
~1132
Thierry
D'Avesnes
~1134
Everard
D'Avesnes
~1136
Petronille
D'Avesnes
~1138
Gossum
D'Avesnes
~1140
Fastré
D'Avesnes
~1080 - 1111
Fastré
D'Oisy
31
31
~1080
Richilde
~1107
Sara
D'Oisy
~1055
Fastré
D'Oisy
~1059
Ada
D'Avesnes
~1082
Gossum
D'Oisy
~1185
Guy
De
Chatillon
~1365
Isabeau
de
Enghien
~1245
Hughes
De
Brienne
~1250
Isabella
De La
Roche
~1262
Eleni
Byzantine-
Komenos-Dukaina
~1260
Guillaume
De La
Roche
~1316
Sir Robert
De La
Roche
~1235
Ioannis
Dukas
~1237
Princess Of
Wallachia
Hypomone
1263
Guy
De La
Roche
1234
Orthon
De La
Roche
~1175
Pons
De La
Roche
~1240
Geoffrey
De
Cricon
1205
Gautier
IV De
Brienne
~1210
Maria
De
Lusignan
1193 - 10 JAN 1217/18
Hugues
I De
Lusignan
3 MAR 1216/17 - 1253
Henri
De
Lusignan
~1218
Isabella
De
Lusignan
1195 - 1247
Alix
De
Champagne
52
52
1166 - 1197
Henri II
De
Champagne
31
31
Count De Champagne He rulled Jerusalum after the death of King Fulk until his death in 1197. He died when he fell from a window of his palice in Acre. At the time of his death Acre was the capital of Jerusalem but they had not conquered the actural city of Jerusalem. This was very much supported by King Richard.
~1197
Alice
De
Champagne
~1172 - 1206
Isabelle
D'Anjou
34
34
She became queen of Jerusalum on the death of King Fulk. She died in child birth and left a son Conrad by Frederick II of Germany who became regent. There are problems with the dates of her birth since her father died in 1143 in Jerusalem.
1144 - 1217
Maria
Comnena
73
73
~1133 - 1164
IV
Istvan
31
31
~1116 - ~1144
Theodora
Kamaterina
28
28
1087 - 1143
Ioannis
II
Comnenus
55
55
~1135
Alexios
Comnenus
~1136
Ioannis
Comnenus
~1138
Irini
Comnena
~1141
Anna
Comnena
~1135
Theodora
Comnena
1090
Gregorios
Kamaterios
1092
Irini
Dukas
~1137
Andronikos
Dukas
Kamaterios
FEB 1105/06
Alexios
Comnenus
FEB 1105/06
Maria
Comnena
~1108 - 1142
Andronikos
Comnenus
34
34
~1110
Anna of
Byzantine-
Komenos
~1116
Theodora of
Byzantine-
Komenos
~1119
Eudoxia of
Byzantine-
Komenos
1122
I
Manolis
~1130
Theodora of
Byzantine-
Komenos
1088 - 1134
Piroska
Iren
46
46
~1041 - 1095
I
Laszlo
54
54
~1067 - 1090
Princess
of Swabia
Adelheid
23
23
~1090
Princess
of Hungary
Berta
~1031
King of the
Germans
Rudolf
~1035
Countess
of Savoy
Adelaide
1075
II
Siegfried
~1055 - 1127
Irene
Augusta
Doukaina
72
72
~1148
Ioanna
Karatzaina
Phokaina
~1136 - 1190
Dedo
V "Der
Fieste"
54
54
~0924
Nikola
Kumet
1107 - 1170
II
Goswin
63
63
~0970 - ~1015
Gavriil
Radomir
45
45
~0975
Princess
of Bulgaria
Irini
~0974
Princess
of Bulgaria
Miroslava
~0948 - 0976
Samuil
"Kometopulos"
28
28
1110 - >1170
Aleidis
Von
Sommerschenburg
60
60
~0926
Ionnis
Chryselios
1121
Count Palatine von
Sommerschenburg
Friedrich
~0927
Countess of
West Bulgaria
Ripsimia
~0952
David
"Kometopulos"
1085 - 1140
III
Gerhard
55
55
~0975
Andronicus
Ducas
~1018 - 1067
Johannes
Comnenus
49
49
~1045
I
Siegfried
1167 - 1201
V
Thibault
34
34
~1169
Scholastique
De
Champagne
~1170
Eustace
De
Champagne
~1130
Geoffrey
De
Lusignan
~1145 - 1205
Almeric
II De
Lusignan
60
60
~1164
Raoul
De
Lusignan
1197
Guy
de
Lusignan
1201
Pierre
De
Lusignan
1203
Guillaume
De
Lusignan
~1150 - 1197
Ichive
d'
Ibelin
47
47
~1125
Baudouin
de
Ibelin
~1127
Richildis
von
Bessan
~1100
Thomas
von
Bessan
~1100 - 1152
Barisanus
Ibelin
52
52
~1104 - >1158
Helvis
von
Rama
54
54
~1075
Baudouin
von
Rama
~1170
Gautier
III De
Brienne
~1175 - ~1210
Melun
Elvira
Lecce
35
35
~1242
Gautier
De
Enghien
I
Guillaume
Guillaume
I De
Champlitte
~1245
Marie
De
Rethel
~1215
Jean
De
Rethel
~1218
Marie
de
Baucignies
~1205
Sohier
I De
Enghien
~1210
Aleide
De
Zotteghem
~1180
Walter
De
Zotteghem
~1182
Richilda
van
Doornick
1337 - 1371
Guy
De
Luxembourg
34
34
~1230
Mathieu
II De
Beauvoir
~1363
Marie
De
Luxemburg
1359 - 1415
Waleran
III De
Luxemburg
56
56
~1305 - 1344
Jean
De
Chatillion
39
39
~1310 - 1353
Jeanne
de
Fiennes
43
43
4 JAN 1238/39 - 1305
Jean II
De
Dreux
1201 - 1253
Theobald
VI "the
Great"
52
52
1211 - 1256
Marguerite
De
Bourbon
45
45
1189 - 1242
Archambaud
VIII De
Bourbon
53
53
1218 - 1272
Yolande
De
Dreux
54
54
~1210
Marguerite
De
Commoquiers
1241
Pierre
De
Dreux
1245 - 1246
Thiébaut
De
Dreux
1
1
1247 - 1247
Thiébaut
De
Dreux
1248
Aliénor
De
Dreux
1249
Nicholas
De
Dreux
6 MAR 1250/51
Robert
De
Dreux
~1320 - 1364
Jean
De
Luxembourg
44
44
~1322 - 1346
Alice
De
Dampierre
24
24
~1295 - 1345
Guy V
De
Dampierre
50
50
~1297 - 1354
Beatrix
Van
Putten
57
57
~1255 - 1311
Guillaume
IV De
Dampierre
56
56
~1270
Alix
de
Clermont
1274
Aleijda
Van
Strijen
~1250
Wilhelm
Strijen
~1245
Nikolaus
II Van
Putten
~1246
Beatrix
~1215
Nikolaus
I Van
Putten
~1190
Johann
Van
Putten
~1195
Aleylis
Von
Artena
~1250
Raoul
II de
Clermont
~1245
Yolanda
De
Dreux
~1220
Isabell
D'Avesnes
~1225
Alix
De
Montfort
~1184 - 1241
Amaury
VI De
Montfort
57
57
1205 - 1248
Béatrix De
Bourgogne-
Viennois
43
43
1184 - 14 MAR 1236/37
André
Guignes VI De
Bourgogne
~1188 - 1215
Béatrix
De
Sabran
27
27
~1180
Jean
De
Nesle
~1160 - 1193
Garsende
De
Forcalquier
33
33
~1175
Simon
De
Clermont
~1178
Mathilda
de
Breteul
~1140
Renaud
III De
Clermont
~1292 - >1353
Waleran
II De
Luxembourg
61
61
~1295 - 1338
Giuota
De
Chatelain
43
43
~1258
Jean
IV De
Chatelain
~1260
Beatrix
de
Clermont
~1230
Jean III
De
Chatelain
~1200
Jean II
De
Lille
~1202
Mathilde
De
Bethune
~1170
Jean
De
Lille
~1240
Mathilda
De
Tournai
~1212
Arnoul
De
Mortagne
~1215
Yolande
De
Coucy
~1188
Robert
I de
Coucy
~1200
Baldwin
III De
Guines
~1186
Raoul
de
Coucy
~1190
Agnes
de
Coucy
~1142 - ~1168
Agnes
De
Hainault
26
26
~1166
Isabeau
de
Coucy
1198
Jean
De
Dreux
~1168
Ada
de
Coucy
1174
Philippe
I de
Hainault
~1181
Eustach
de
Hainault
~1186 - >1255
Mathilde
De
Rethel
69
69
~1161
Hughes
II De
Réthel
~1163
Felicite
De
Broyes
~1211
Thomas
III De
Coucy
~1213
Jean
De
Coucy
~1219
Agnés
De
Coucy
~1221
Elisende
De
Coucy
~1222 - 1307
Félicité
De
Coucy
85
85
1219 - 1295
Baudouin
D'Avesnes
75
75
~1241
Jean I
D'Avesnes
~1242 - 25 FEB 1320/21
Beatrice
D'Avesnes
1251
Bouchard
II
D'Avesnes
~1225
Isabelle
D'Avesnes
1367
Philippa
De
Coucy
~1245 - 1281
Aline
Basset
36
36
~1272
Margery
Bigod
~1215 - 1276
Joan
De
Burnett
61
61
1245 - 1306
Roger
Bigod
61
61
~1190
Robert
De
Burnett
~1193
Joan
De
Stuteville
~1273 - 1317
Alix
D'Avesnes
44
44
~1270 - 1314
William
Mareschal
44
44
1173 - ~1266
Aliva
De Rie
93
93
~1214 - 1264
William
Mareschal
50
50
~1242
Elizabeth
De
Ferrers
~1240 - 1283
John
Mareschal
43
43
~1235
William
Mareschal
~1237
Anselm
Mareschal
Petronilla
De
Ortiaco
~1254
Hawisa
~1279
John
Mareschal
~1164
Alicia
1147
Hubert
De Rie
~1280
Christina
FitzWalter
1300
John
Mareschal
1302
Hawise
Mareschal
~1304
Denise
Mareschal
~1205 - 1258
Sir Walter
Fitz
Robert
53
53
1247 - 18 JAN 1325/26
Robert
Fitz
Walter
~1249
Baudouin
D'Avesnes
~1252 - 1311
Countess de
Luxembourg
Philippine
59
59
~1271
Henri
D'Avesnes
~1274
Marguerite
D'Avesnes
~1275
Isabelle
D'Avesnes
~1278
Jean
D'Avesnes
~1279
Jeanne
D'Avesnes
~1280 - 1354
Marie
D'Avesnes
74
74
~1282
Valeran
D'Avesnes
~1286
William
D'Avesnes
~1294
Ida
D'Avesnes
~1245 - 1302
II
Robert
57
57
~1275
Raoul
III de
Clermont
1313
Marguerite
de
Bourbon
~1315
Béatrice
de
Bourbon
~1315
Marie
de
Bourbon
1316
Phillipe
de
Bourbon
10 JAN 1479/80
Archduchess
of Austria
Margarethe
1481 - 1481
Archduke
of Austria
Franz
3m
3m
1433 - 1477
Charles
"Le
Téméraire"
44
44
~1434 - 1465
Isabelle
De
Bourbon
31
31
1407 - 1476
Agnés
De
Bourgogne
69
69
1666 - 1726
Sofie
Dorothea
60
60
1367 - 1434
Marie
De
Berry
67
67
1371 - 1419
Jean
De
Bourgogne
48
48
1357 - 1433
I João
76
76
1360 - 1415
Philippa
Plantagenet
55
55
Diniz
de
Portugal
~1336
Teresa
Gille
Lourenco
1396 - 1467
Philippe
III "Le
Bon"
70
70
21 FEB 1396/97 - 1472
Princess
of Portugal
Izabel
1363 - 23 JAN 1422/23
Princess
of Bavaria
Margarethe
~1389
Isabelle
De
Bourgogne
1390
Marguerite
De
Bourgogne
~1392
Catherine
De
Bourgogne
~1393 - 2 FEB 1440/41
Marie
De
Bourgogne
1399
Jeanne
De
Bourgogne
~1404
Anne
De
Bourgogne
~1560
Margaret
Savage
1336 - 1404
I
Albrecht
68
68
~1340 - 26 FEB 1385/86
Princess
of Breig
Malgorzata
~1311 - 1398
I
Ludwik
87
87
~1321 - 1362
Princess of
Glogau Sagan
Agnieszka
41
41
~1292 - 22 JAN 1341/42
IV
Henryk
1296 - 1321
Princess of
Brandenburg
Mathilde
25
25
~1271 - 1 FEB 1307/08
Margrave of
Brandenburg
Hermann
~1278 - 19 MAR 1327/28
Princess
of Austria
Anna
1248 - 1308
Albrecht
I Von
Hapsburg
59
59
Duke of Austria
1263 - 1313
Countess of
Tirol and Gorz
Elisabetha
50
50
1241 - 1295
IV
Meinhard
54
54
1227 - 1273
Duchess
of Bavaria
Elisabeth
46
46
~1267
Princess of
Carinthia
Agnes
1206 - 1253
Otto VI Duke of
Bavaria and
Pfalzgraf am Rhein
47
47
1202 - 1267
Countess
of the Rhein
Agnes
65
65
1173 - 1227
Heinrich
IV "The
Long"
54
54
Pfalzgraf of the Rhein
1176 - 1204
Countess
of Lorraine
Agnes
28
28
1135 - 1195
Konrad
Von
Lorraine
60
60
~1136 - 1197
Countess of
Henneberg
Ermengard
61
61
~1108 - 1157
Berthold
49
49
1117 - 1190
Countess
of Saxony
Berthe
73
73
1085 - 1125
Count Palatine
of Saxony
Friedrich
40
40
1089 - 1136
Countess
of Limberg
Agnes
47
47
1055 - 1119
Henri
64
64
Count of LimbergCount of Limbourg
~1008
II
Walram
~1029
Botho
Von
Botenstein
~1065 - 1144
I
Gotwald
79
79
~1075
Lukard
Von
Hohenberg
1049
Berthold
Von
Hohenberg
~1025 - 1098
I
Poppo
73
73
~1045
Countess
of Thuringia
Hildegard
~1027 - 1080
Ludwig "mit Dem
Barte" Count of
Thuringia
53
53
1013
Countess of
Sangerhausen
Cacilie
0999
Count Of
Grabfeld
Otto
1110
Countess of
Saarbrucken
Agnes
~1090 - 12 JAN 1139/40
III
Ludwig
1015 - 1094
Count of
Buren
Friedrich
79
79
1017 - 1095
Hildegarde
Von
Hohenlohe
78
78
0987
II Otto
~1137 - 1195
Heinrich
V "The
Lion"
58
58
1172
Princess
of Saxony
Mathilde
1176
Otto
1178
Prince of
Saxony
Lothar
1180
Princess
of Saxony
Eleanore
1184 - 1213
Duke of
Brunswick
Wilhelm
29
29
Princess of
Zahringen
Klementie
Ida
Von
Bliescastel
~1110 - 1139
Heinrich
IV "The
Proud"
29
29
~1139
Adam
Von
Salzburg
1074 - 1126
Heinrich
III "The
Wolf"
52
52
1174 - 1231
I
Ludwig
56
56
~1045 - 1106
Duke of
Saxony
Magnus
61
61
1141 - 1189
Duke of
Bohemia
Bedrich
48
48
~1149 - 12 JAN 1188/89
Princess
of Hungary
Erszébet
1054
I
Heinrich
~1117 - 18 JAN 1174/75
II
Vladislav
~1136
Princess
of Bohemia
Gertrude
~1142
Princess
of Bohemia
Anezka
~1143
Prince of
Bohemia
Svatopluk
~1147
Prince of
Bohemia
Vojtech
~1149
Princess
of Bohemia
Agnes
~1163
Princess
of Bohemia
Markéta
~1164
Princess
of Bohemia
Helena
~1165
Princess
of Bohemia
Sofie
~1171
Prince of
Bohemia
Vratislav
~1163
Princess
of Bohemia
Olga
~1140 - 1183
V Otto
43
43
Count of Wittelsbach Otto V was invested with the Duchy of Bavaria as Otto I, after the fall of Henry the Lion, 16 Sep 1180.Otto II (1206-1253) invested as Count Palatine of the Rhine (PfalzGraf bei Rhein) 1214 following his m to Agnes (1201-1267), dau and heiress of Heinrich I, Count Palatine of the Rhine, giving him sovereign privileges in parts of the ancient Duchy of Franconia west of the Rhone, centered around Heidelberg. Ludwig III, Duke of Bavaria (1229-1294), divided his inheritance with his younger brother Henry (1235-1290) but these possessions returned to the senior line on the extinction of Henry’s male line in 1339.
~1146 - 1191
Countess of
Looz and
Rieneck Agnes
45
45
~1100
IV
Otto
~1103
Heilike
Von
Pettendorf
~1215
III
Meinhard
~1217
Adelheid
of
Tirol
1218 - 1291
Rudolf
I Von
Hapsburg
73
73
Count of HapsburgCount Von Hapsburg
~1225 - 16 FEB 1280/81
Countess of
Hohenberg
Gertrude
~1201 - 1253
III
Burkhard
52
52
~1205
Countess
of Tubingen
Mathilde
1179
II
Rudolf
1183
Countess of
Wurttemberg
Adelheid
~1176 - <1225
II
Burkhard
49
49
~1148 - ~1193
I
Burkhard
45
45
~1152
Wilpurgis
Von
Simmern
1126
Albrecht
II Von
Simmern
1130
Beatrix
Von
Urslingen
~1188 - 1240
Albrecht
IV Von
Hapsburg
52
52
~1192 - 1260
Countess
of Kyburg
Hedwige
68
68
1162
Count of
Kyburg
Ulrich
1158
II
Rudolf
1162 - 1252
Agnes
Von
Staufen
90
90
1158
Gottfried
Von
Staufen
1138 - 1199
II
Albrecht
61
61
Landgrave of the Upper Alsace
1141
Countess of
Pfullendorf
Ita
1121
Count of
Pfullendorf
Rudolf
~1246 - 1299
Otto V
"Der
Lange"
53
53
~1247 - 1327
Countess of
Henneberg
Jutte
80
80
~1223 - 1290
I
Hermann
67
67
~1230 - 1277
Countess
of Holland
Margaretha
47
47
~1226 - 1283
Countess
of Avesnes
Aleida
57
57
~1228
VI
Floris
~1232
Countess
of Holland
Machteld
~1167 - 4 FEB 1221/22
I
Willem
~1187 - 4 FEB 1217/18
Aleid
Van
Guelders
~1150 - 1207
I Otto
57
57
~1173 - 1231
Duchess
of Bavaria
Richardis
58
58
1130 - 1182
II
Hendrik
52
52
~1145 - 1221
Henri
76
76
~1091 - 1134
II
Gerard
43
43
1084 - 1134
Countess
of Zutphen
Irmgard
50
50
~1063 - 1125
Gerard
III Von
Wassenberg
62
62
1065
Countess of
Wassenberg
Clemence
1033 - 1075
Heinrich
Von
Wassenberg
42
42
1013 - 1082
II
Gerard
69
69
0988
I
Gerard
~1141 - 1190
Floris
III "The
Crusader"
49
49
1054 - 1093
Countess
of Holland
Othelhildis
39
39
~1091 - 1157
Floris
II "De
Vette"
66
66
~1117 - 1176
Countess
of Rheineck
Sofie
59
59
~1077 - <1150
Count
of Salm
Otto
73
73
~1114 - 1157
VI Dirk
43
43
~1086 - 1144
Duchess of
Oberlothringen
Petronille
58
58
~1116
Domherr
of Utrecht
Simon
~1117
Nun at
Rijnsberg
Hadewig
1079
Countess
of Northeim
Gertrud
~1040 - 1088
I
Hermann
48
48
1014
Count
of Salm
Giselbert
~1202
Nun at
Rijnsburg
Ada
~1203
Countess
of Holland
Richardis
~1206
Count of
Holland
Willem
~1208
Bishop of
Utrecht
Otto
~1165
VII
Dirk
~1163
Margravine of
Brandenburg
Ada
~1163
Countess
of Holland
Mathilda
~1171
Count of
Holland
Boudewijn
~1173
Count of
Holland
Robrecht
~1175
Beatrix
Countess
of Holland
~1177
Countess
of Holland
Elisabeth
~1164
Countess
of Kleve
Margaretha
~1169
IV
Floris
~1179
Countess
of Holland
Hedwig
~1181
Countess
of Holland
Agnes
1139
Count of
Holland
Pelgrim
~1143
Count of Bentheim
Burggraf Van
Coeverden Otto
~1145
Bishop of
Utrecht
Boudewijn
~1147
Bishop of
Utrecht
Dirk
~1149
Count of
Holland
Robbrecht
~1151
Abbess of
Fontanell
Sophia
~1151
Nun at
Rijnsburg
Hedwig
~1155
Countess
of Holland
Geertruid
~1157
Countess
of Holland
Petronella
~1183 - 21 MAR 1244/45
VII
Poppo
~1183 - 1235
Countess
of Thuringia
Jutte
52
52
1153 - 1217
I
Hermann
64
64
~1147 - 1189
Countess of
Sommerschenburg
Sofie
42
42
1121
Count Palatine of
Sommerschenburg
Friedrich
1128 - 1172
IV
Ludwig
44
44
1135 - 1191
Duchess
of Swabia
Jutta
56
56
1113
Countess of
Gudensberg
Hedwig
~1057
Ludwig II "der
Salier" Count
in Thuringia
~1102
Margravine of
Stade & Nordmark
Adelheid
~1073 - 9 FEB 1122/23
Otto
"The
Rich"
~1080 - 16 JAN 1141/42
Duchess
of Saxony
Eilika
~1043
Count of
Anhalt-Ballenstedt
Adalbert
~1047
Countess of
Anhalt-Ballenstedt
Adelheid
~1013 - 1059
Count of
Anhalt-
Ballenstedt Esiko
46
46
~1017
Countess of
Anhalt-Ballenstedt
Mathilde
~0983
Adalbert
Von
Ballenstedt
~0987
Countess
of Görlitz
Hidda
~1140 - 1191
VI
Poppo
51
51
~1154 - 2 JAN 1217/18
Countess
of Andechs
Sofie
1128 - 1185
V
Berthold
57
57
~1128 - 1178
Hedwig
of
Bavaria
50
50
~1100
Otto
IV of
Bavaria
~1090 - 1151
IV
Berthold
61
61
~1113 - 6 SEP 112
Countess of
Krain-Istrien
Sofie
1039 - 1098
III
Berthold
59
59
~1041
Duchess
of Swabia
Gisele
~1010
II
Berthold
~0980
I
Berthold
~1004 - 1057
Duke of
Swabia
Otto
53
53
Margrave of Schweinfurt
~0950 - 1017
Margrave of the
Nordgau &
Schweinfurth Heinrich
67
67
0972
Countess
of Gleiberg
Gerberge
~1228 - 1286
Princess
of Bohemia
Bozena
58
58
~1226
Princess
of Bohemia
Aneska
~0926 - 1015
Countess
of Walbeck
Heilika
89
89
~1168 - 19 MAR 1237/38
Henryk
I "The
Bearded"
~1169 - 25 FEB 1219/20
II
Albrecht
~1184 - 1255
Margravine of
Lower Lusatia
Mathilde
71
71
~1160 - 1210
Margarve of
Lower Lusatia
Konrad
50
50
~1153 - 1209
Princess of
Great Poland
Elzbieta
56
56
~1100 - 1170
Albrecht
I "The
Bear"
70
70
Margrave of Brandenburg
~1104 - 1180
Sophie
Von
Brandenburg
76
76
~1253 - 1309
III
Henryk
56
56
~1276 - 29 JAN 1318/19
Princess of
Brunswick
Grubenhagen Mathilde
1236 - 1279
Albrecht
43
43
~1237 - 6 FEB 1284/85
Marquesse
of Montferrat
Alessina
~1202 - 1255
Bonifacio
53
53
~1225 - 1254
Countess
of Savoy
Margherita
29
29
~1172 - 1225
Guglielmo
53
53
~1182 - >1224
Berta Clavesana
Mambascaro
Cortemiglia
42
42
~1150 - 1207
Bonifacio
57
57
~1151 - <1204
Elena
Di
Busca
53
53
1204 - 1252
Otto I
"das
Kind"
48
48
~1209 - 1261
Margravine of
Brandenburg
Mathilde
52
52
~1176 - 1233
Princess of
Denmark
Helene
57
57
14 JAN 1130/31 - 1182
Valdemar I
"The Great"
Knutsson
~1141 - 1198
Sofiya
Vladimorovna
57
57
~1123 - >1139
Vladimir
Dmitrij
Vsevolodich
16
16
1106 - 1134
Magnus
"the Strong"
Nielssen
28
28
~1129
Knut III
Magnusson
~1131
Niels
Magnusson
~1132
Christoffer
Magnusson
~1134
Ryksa
Magnusdotter
~1142
Margarita
Magnusdotter
~1115
Sverker
I
Eriksson
~1102 - 11 FEB 1135/36
Vsevolod
Gavriil
~1103
Princess of
Chernigov
Svyatoslavna
~1080 - 1142
Svyatoslav
Davidovich
"The Holy"
62
62
~1055 - JAN 1122/23
David
Svyatoslavich
~1060
Duchess of
Chernigov
Feodosiya
~1031
Countess of
Dithmarschen
Killikiya
~1005
Count Of
Dithmarschen
Etheler
~1047
Vysheslava
Svyatoslavna
~1049
Predslava
Svyatoslavna
~1051
Gleb
Svyatoslavich
~1053
Roman
Svyatoslavich
"The Fair"
~1058 - 1115
Oleg
Mikahil
Svyatoslavich
57
57
~1062
Boris
Svyatoslavich
~1064
Igor
Svyatoslavich
~1060
Yaroslav
Pankratij
Svyatoslavich
~1083
III
Izyaslav
~1086
Vsevolod
Davidovich
~1089
Rostislav
Davidovich
~1091
Vladimir
Davidovich
1096 - 1154
II
Izyaslav
58
58
~1078 - 18 JAN 1121/22
Christina
Ingesdatter
~1050
Inge I
Stenkilsson
~1070
Helena
Torildsdatter
Blot-Sven
~1020
Torild
Totilsson
~1025 - 1066
Stenkil
Ragnvaldsson
41
41
~0970 - 1066
Rognvald
"The Old"
Ulfsson
96
96
~1023
Astrid
Edmundsdatter
~0985 - >1066
Astrid
Njalsdatter
81
81
~1000
Astrid
Nialsdotter
~0975
Nial Of
Sandnes
~0878
Finn
"Skjalge"
Eyvindsson
~0930 - 1011
Njal
Finnsson
81
81
~0950 - 2 FEB 1013/14
Swietoslava
Sygryda 'The
Haughty'
~0865
Halfdan
Earlsson
~0870
Ingeborg
Haraldsdatter
~0855
Ingebjorg
Haakonsdatter
~0838 - ~0917
Haakon
Grjotgardsson
79
79
~0800
Grjotgard
Herlauggsson
~0768
Herlaug
Haraldsson
~0810
Kaare
"Berdlu-Kaare"
Vemundsson
~0780 - 0866
Vemund
(Edmund)
Vikingsson
86
86
~0770
Viking
Skaanoyskjelmer
~1097
Christina
Mstislavna
~1098
Princess
of Kiev
Kseniya
~1099
Princess
of Kiev
Ingeborga
~1100
Queen of Norway
and Denmark
Malmfrida
~1101 - 1179
Mariya
Agafiya
Mstislavna
78
78
~1102
Dobredeya
"Irina"
Evpraksia
~1104
Prince
of Kiev
Roman
~1106
Rogneda
Mstislavna
~1108
Duke of
Novgorod
Svyatopolk
~1110 - 14 MAR 1167/68
Rostislav
I
Mikhail
1131
Grand Duke
of Kiev
Vladmir
12 MAR 1090/91 - 7 JAN 1130/31
Knut
"Lavard"
Eriksson
~1055 - 1103
Erik I
"Eiegod"
Svendsson
48
48
~1061 - 1103
Bothild
Thorgatsdatter
42
42
~1032
Thorgaut
"Fagrskinna"
Ulfsson
~1000
Ulf
Galicia
~1036
Thorugnn
Vohnsdatter
~1014
Bothild
Hakonsdatter
~0997 - 1030
Hakon
Eriksson
33
33
~1000
Gunhild
De
Vortigern
~0975
Prince of
Venden
Vortigern
~1015 - 1076
Svend
Ulfiusson
61
61
~0997
Estrid
Margarete
Svendsdatter
~1196 - 1249
Princess of
Eastern Pomerania
Jadwiga
53
53
1220
I
Przemysl
~1160 - 1220
I
Mestwin
60
60
~1166 - 1240
Princess of
Great Poland
Zwinislawa
74
74
~1131
Evdokiya
Izyaslavna
1159
Prince of
Kujavia
Boleslaw
~1160
Princess of
Great Poland
Salomea
~1161
Princess of
Great Poland
Anastazja
~1162
Prince of
Kalisch
Mieszko
~1164
III
Wladislaw
~1144 - 1194
Prince of
Poznan and
Kalisch Odon
50
50
~1146
Prince of
Great Poland
Stefan
~1150
Wierzchoslawa
Ludmilla
~1152 - 1201
Princess of
Great Poland
Judyta
49
49
~1130
I
Sobieslav
1085
Countess
of Komburg
Gertrud
~1107
Bertha
Von
Hohenstaufen
~1191 - 1241
Henryk
II "The
Pious"
50
50
Henryk II "The Pious", Prince Of SILESIA, KRAKOW AND GREAT POLAND
~1344
VIII
Henryk
1180 - 1240
Princess
of Hungary
Konstancia
60
60
~1167 - 1243
Hedwig
"The
Saint"
76
76
~1129 - 1201
Boleslaw
IV "The
Tall"
72
72
1026
I
Berengar
1030
Countess
of Diessen
Adelheid
1291 - 1352
III
Boleslaw
60
60
21 FEB 1295/96 - 1322
Princess
of Bohemia
Marketa
1271 - 1305
Václav
II
(Wenzel)
33
33
13 MAR 1270/71 - 1297
Jutte
Von
Hapsburg
1233 - 1278
Premysl
Otakar
45
45
~1243 - 1285
Kunegunda
Rostislavna
42
42
~1211 - 1263
Rostislav
Mikhailovich
52
52
Ban of Macho
~1225 - 1274
Princess
of Hungary
Anna
49
49
~1156 - 1212
Anna
Komnene
Angelina
56
56
~1156 - ~1212
Euphrosyia
Kamatera
56
56
~1126
Androikes
Kamateros
~1131
Theodora
Kalusine
1035 - 1082
Dietrich
Von
Wassenberg
47
47
~1040
Miss
De
Montague
~1009
Gozelo
(Goswin)
1098 - 5 FEB 1156/57
Konrad
"Der
Grosse"
~1100 - 1145
Countess
of Swabia
Luitgard
45
45
1072
Count of
Wettin
Thimo
~1190 - 1234
Otto II
Von
Andechs
44
44
~1120
V
Berthold
~1125
Hedwig Von
Formback-
Puthen
~1090
IV
Berthold
~1223 - 8 MAR 1278/79
Alise
Von
Andechs
~1286 - 21 JAN 1328/29
Jeanne
De
Bourgogne
1265 - 17 MAR 1301/02
Othon
1268 - 1329
Mathilde
(Mahaut)
D'Artois
61
61
1250 - 1275
Amicie
De
Courtenay
25
25
1269 - 1298
Philippe
D'Artois
29
29
1271
Robert
III
D'Artois
~1237
Agnes
De
Bourbon
~1190 - 1240
Mahaut
De
Mehun
50
50
~1232
Pierre
I de
Courtenay
~1237 - 1282
Petrenelle
De
Joigny
45
45
~1207 - >1223
Gauchier
II De
Joigny
16
16
~1213 - 23 FEB 1252/53
Amicie
De
Montfort
1287 - 1342
Robert
IV
D'Artois
55
55
1319
Catherine
D'Artois
1320
Louis
D'Artois
1321
Jean "Sans
Terre"
D'Artois
1323
Jeanne
D'Artois
1325
Jacques
D'Artois
1326
Robert
V
D'Artois
1328
Charles
D'Artois
1275 - 1318
Margaret
Plantagenet
43
43
~1289
Jeanne
D'Artois
~1291
Marie
D'Artois
~1293 - 1368
Catherine
D'Artois
75
75
1308 - 1347
Jeanne
Capet
39
39
1190
Mahaut
De
Viennois
~1187 - 1267
Jean I
D'Auxonne
80
80
~1220 - 1266
Hugo IV de
Chalon-
Salins
46
46
1312
Isabelle
Capet
~1314
Blanche
Capet
1316
Louis
Capet
1310 - 1382
Marguerite
Capet
72
72
~1290
Blanche
De
Navarre
~1295
Béatrice
De
Berruere
1166 - 1218
Eudes
52
52
1295 - 1349
Eudes
IV De
Bourgogne
54
54
1188
Alix
De
Vergy
9 MAR 1211/12 - FEB 1272/73
Hugues
Duke of Burgundy
~1207 - 1231
Princess
of Hungary
Erzsebet
24
24
~1190
Ivan
Asen
~1208
Prince of
Hungary
Kalman
1200
Ludwig
IV "der
Heilige"
20 MAR 1223/24 - 1275
Princess of
Thuringia
Sophie
~1207 - 1 FEB 1246/47
II Henri
1244 - 1308
Heinrich
I "Das
Kind"
64
64
~1255
Countess
of Cleves
Matilde
~1244 - 1274
Duchess of
Brunswick-
Lüneburg Adelheid
30
30
~1272
Landgrave
of Hesse
Otto
~1264
Princess
of Hesse
Sofie
~1265
Heinrich
II "Der
Jüngere"
~1267
Princess
of Hesse
Matilde
~1268
Princess
of Hese
Adelheid
~1269
Elisabeth
"Die
Altere"
~1230
Duchess of
Brunswick
Margarethe
~1234
Duchess of
Brunswick
Elisabeth
~1229
Matilde
Princess
~1231 - 1273
Duchess of
Brunswick
Helene
42
42
~1232
Duke of
Brunswick
Otto
~1241
I
Johann
~1243
Duke of
Brunswick
Konrad
~1246
Duchess of
Brunswick-
Lüneburg Agnes
1184
Countess
of Thuringia
Hedwig
~1186 - ~1244
Countess
of Thuringia
Irmgard
58
58
~1206
Countess
of Thuringia
Agnes
~1210
Prince of
Hungary
Andras
~1224
Princess
of Hungary
Kunignuda
~1226
Princess
of Hungary
Margit
~1229
Princess
of Hungary
Katalin
~1232
Princess
of Hungary
Erzsebet
~1190 - 1239
Wladislaw
Odonic
49
49
~1242
Princess
of Hungary
Margit
~1243
V Bela
~1245
Princess
of Hungary
Szabina
~1258
Princess
of Hungary
Katalin
~1259
IV
Ladislas
~1259 - 1281
Princess
of Hungary
Anna
22
22
~1261
Princess
of Hungary
Erzsebet
~1268
Prince of
Hungary
Andras
~1272
Prince of
Hungary
Salamon
~1274
Prince of
Hungary
Kalman
~1255
Andronikos
II
Palaeologus
1277 - 1330
Michael
Palaeologus
53
53
~1279
Konstantinos
Palaeologus
~1294
Maria
Palaeologina
~1210
Countess
of Galicia
Erzsebet
~1176
Count of
Galicia
Mstislav
~1180
Erzsebet
of
Polowzes
~1150
Kotak
of
Polowzes
~1240
Ivan
Mitso
Rostislavich
~1133 - <1180
II
Yaroslav
47
47
~1152
Bertha
Yaroslavna
~1150 - 1180
Count of
Novgorod and
Smolensk Mstixlav
30
30
~1244
Maria
Rostislavna
~1246
Konstantin
Rostislavich
~1248
Agrippina
Rostislavna
~1249
Bela
Rostislavich
~1250
Margareta
Rostislavna
4 JAN 1264/65
Princess
of Bohemia
Kunhuta
1269
Princess
of Bohemia
Aneska
~1185 - 1246
Mikhail
Vsevolodovich
61
61
~1194
Mariya
Romanovna
1168
Roman
Mstislavich
1172
Predslava
Ryurikovna
~1153 - 1215
Vsevolod
III
"Chermnij"
62
62
1164 - 1194
Princess of
Sandomierz
Anastazja
30
30
~1120 - 1194
Svyatoslav
III
Vsevolodovich
74
74
~1116
Mariya
Vasilkovna
~1085 - ~1144
Vasilko
I
Svyatoslavich
59
59
~1064
Svyatoslav
Yurij
Vseslavich
~1039 - 1101
Vseslav I
Vasilij
Bryachislavich
62
62
~1000 - 1044
Bryachislav
I
Izyaslavich
44
44
~1079 - 1146
Vsevolod
II Yurij
Olegovich
67
67
~1061
Theophano
Mouzalonissa
~1204 - 1248
Kunigunde
von
Hohenstaufen
44
44
~1230
Margrave
of Moravia
Vladislav
~1254
II
Boleslaw
1289
III
Václav
1289
Princess
of Bohemia
Anezka
1288
Premysl
Otakar
1290
Princess
of Bohemia
Anna
20 JAN 1291/92 - 1330
Queen of
Bohemia
Eliska
1296 - 1346
King of Bohemia
& Duke of
Luxembourg Jan
50
50
4 MAR 1292/93
Princess
of Bohemia
Juta
21 MAR 1294/95
Prince of
Bohemia
Jan
~1303
I
Waclaw
1322
Prince of
Liegnitz-
Luben Mikolaj
~1300
Princess
of Croatia
Katarina
~1248
Henryk
V "The
Stout"
1263
Princess
of Kalisch
Elzbieta
~1222 - 1279
Boleslaw
"The
Pious"
57
57
~1238 - 6 MAR 1297/98
Ilona
Jolan
~1224 - 15 FEB 1280/81
Princess
of Kalisch
Eufemia
~1226
Prince of
Kalisch
Ziemomysl
~1228
Prince of
Kalisch
Mieszko
~1230
Princess
of Kalisch
Zofia
~1203
Prince of
Oppeln
Wladislaw
~1168 - >1194
Vyacheslava
Yaroslavna
26
26
~1135 - 1187
Yaroslav
Vladimirkovich
52
52
~1112 - 1181
Olga
Evfrosiniya
Yurevna
69
69
~1091 - 1157
Yurij I
"Dolgorukij"
66
66
~1092
Princess of
the Kumans
Aepovna
1066
Aepa II
Osenevich Khan
of the Kumans
~1095 - FEB 1152/53
Vladimirko
Volodarevich
~1114
Princess
of
Hungary
~1065 - 19 MAR 1123/24
Volodar
Rostislavich
~1045 - 3 FEB 1066/67
Rostislav
Vladimirovich
~1047 - <1095
Princess
of Hungary
Lanka
48
48
~1225 - 1278
Boleslaw
II The
Bald
53
53
~1023 - >1060
Countess
of Stade
Oda
37
37
0997
Count of
Stade
Leopold
~1228 - 1259
Princess
of Anhalt
Hedwig
31
31
~1170 - 1252
I
Heinrich
82
82
1140 - 9 FEB 1211/12
III
Bernhard
1204 - 1265
Princess
of Bohemia
Anna
61
61
~1346
Prince of
Breig Luben
Waclaw
~1349
Princess
of Breig
Jadwiga
~1351
Princess
of Breig
Katarzyna
1356
Queen of
Bohemia
Johanne
1360
Princess
of Bavaria
Katharine
1365 - 1417
II
Wilhelm
52
52
1369
Prince of
Bavaria
Albrecht
1374
Duke of
Bavaria
Johann
REGENT OF STRAUBING
~1377
Princess
of Bavaria
Sofie
1374 - 8 MAR 1440/41
Marguerite
De
Bourgogne
15 JAN 1341/42 - 1404
Philippe II
"Le Hardi"
Capet
1373
Charles
De
Bourgogne
1377
Louis
De
Bourgogne
1378
Catherine
De
Bourgogne
1379
Bonne
De
Bourgogne
~1385
Jeanne
De
Luxembourg
1386 - 1422
Marie
De
Bourgogne
36
36
~1389
Philippe
De
Bourgogne
1350 - 16 MAR 1404/05
Countess
of Flanders
Marguerite
1330
III
Louis
9 FEB 1322/23
Countess
of Brabant
Marguerite
1300 - 1355
III Jean
55
55
~1303 - 1335
Marie
D'Evereaux
32
32
~1272
Marie
De
Brabant
~1285 - 1311
Marguerite
D'Artois
26
26
1276 - 1311
Marguerite
De
Brabant
35
35
1249 - 1323
V
Amadeo
74
74
24 FEB 1359/60 - 1391
VIII
Amadeo
~1185
Comte di
Fieschi
Theodore
~1190
Capocorao
1255
Sibella
De Saint
Bonnet
~1275
Blanche
De
Savoie
1291 - 1343
Aimon
"The
Peaceable"
51
51
~1305 - 1336
Countess
of Savoy
Caterina
31
31
~1290 - 28 FEB 1325/26
Leopold
I "The
Glorious"
1298 - 1358
Albrecht
II "The
Wise"
59
59
~1302
Princess
of Austria
Jutte
1281
Queen of
Hungary
Agnes
~1282
Rudolf
III "The
Meek"
1286
Friedrich
"The
Fair"
~1288
Princess
of Austria
Elisabeth
1295
Princess
of Austria
Katharine
1299
Prince of
Austria
Heinrich
~1300
Prince of
Austria
Meinhard
1301
Otto
"The
Wise"
~1322
Duchess
of Austria
Agnes
9 FEB 1319/20
Duchess
of Austria
Katherina
1274 - 1313
Heinrich
39
39
1240 - 1288
Henri
48
48
~1263 - 1300
Jeanne
De
Beauvoir
37
37
1180 - 1226
Waleram
46
46
1186 - 17 FEB 1246/47
Ermensinde
de
Luxembourg
~1155 - 1196
II Henri
41
41
1156 - 1185
Agnes
Van
Guelders
29
29
1138 - 1179
Agnes
Von
Arnstein
41
41
~1163 - >1214
Countess of
Saarbrucken
Sofie
51
51
~1115
I
Simon
~1120
Mathilde
de
Lorraine
~1084
Adelheid
de
Louvain
~1111 - 1167
Henri
56
56
1087
Duke Von
Saffenberg
Adolf
~1085 - 1139
Walram
54
54
~1093 - 1151
Jutta
Von
Wassenberg
58
58
1059 - 1106
Countess
of Arlon
Adelheid
47
47
~1010 - 1057
Countess of
Luxembourg
Jutta
47
47
1305
Marie
De
Luxembourg
1307 - 1319
Queen of
Hungary
Beatrix
12
12
~1300
Karoly
II
Robert
12 FEB 1321/22
Jan
Jindrich
1313
Duchess of
Lower Bavaria
Márketa
1315 - 1349
Jutte
Bonne
34
34
1316
Vacvel
Karel
1318
Prince of
Bohemia
Otakar
1319
Duchess
of Austria
Anna
1319
Princess
of Bohemia
Eliska
1338
Catherine
Capet
~1245 - 1305
Robert
60
60
1347
Marguerite
Capet
~1325
Countess of
Auvergne
Jeanne
~1337 - 1411
Robert
De
Bar
74
74
~1295 - 1337
Edward
De
Bar
42
42
1298
Marie
De
Bourgogne
~1315
Henri
IV De
Bar
~1315
Jolande
De
Flandres
1296 - 24 MAR 1362/63
Jeanne
De
Bretagne
~1270 - 1322
Yolande
De
Dreux
52
52
~1220 - 1249
Jean
De
Montfort
29
29
~1211
Joan
de
Chateaudun
~1360
Philippe
De
Bar
~1362 - 1396
Henri
V De
Bar
34
34
~1365
Yolande
De
Bar
~1366
Marie
De
Bar
~1367
Edouard
III De
Bar
~1369
Louis
De
Bar
~1370
Charles
De
Bar
~1371
Jean
De
Bar
~1375
Jeanne
De
Bar
~1375
Bonne
De
Bar
~1343 - 1404
Marie
De
Chatillion
61
61
~1370
Marie
De
Naples
1377
Louis
II
D'Anjou
~1380
Charles
De
Naples
~1318
Charles
De
Chatillion
~1320
Jeanne
De
Bretagne
~1346 - 15 MAR 1386/87
Jeanne
D'Armagnac
1308
II
Louis
~1283 - 1322
Louis I
De
Flanders
39
39
~1285 - 1325
Jeanne
De
Réthel
40
40
1403 - 1427
Jean
IV De
Bourgogne
23
23
~1419
Charles
De
Bourgogne
~1437
Elizabeth
De
Bourgogne
1398
Jean
De
Touraine
1384 - 1514
Antoine
De
Bourgogne
130
130
~1259 - 1288
Walreran
29
29
~1360
Mahaud
De
Roeux
1339
Mahaut
De
Chatillion
~1235
Mathilda
~1205
Baudouin
De
Beauvoir
~1205
Odile
~1175
Mathieu
De
Beauvoir
~1178
Elisabeth
de
Encre
~1230 - 1269
Eudes
De
Bourgogne
39
39
~1231
Mahaud
De
Bourbon
~1207 - 15 JAN 1248/49
Archambaud
IX De
Bourbon
~1210 - 1254
Yolande
De
Chatillion
44
44
1418 - 1475
Louis
De
Luxembourg
57
57
~1420
Thibaud
De
Luxembourg
1415 - 1462
Jeanne
De
Bar
47
47
~1446
Jacqueline
De
Luxembourg
1448 - 1482
Pierre
De
Luxembourg
34
34
1450
Helene
De
Luxembourg
1452
Charles
De
Luxembourg
1454
Jean
De
Luxembourg
1454
Antoine
De
Luxembourg
1456
Philippe
De
Luxembourg
~1387 - 1415
Robert
de Bar
28
28
~1398 - 1459
Jeanne
De
Bethune
61
61
~1370
Robert
De
Bethune
~1368
Isabel
de
Ghistella
1366 - 1405
Marie
De
Coucy
39
39
1342 - 18 FEB 1396/97
Enguerrand
VII De
Coucy
1332 - 1379
Isabel
Plantagenet
46
46
1218 - 1257
Jean I
D'Avesnes
39
39
~1253
Guy
D'Avesnes
1254
Guillaume
D'Avesnes
1255
Floris
D'Avesnes
1256
Jeanne
D'Avesnes
~1376
Percival
De
Coucy
~1330
Ralph
De
Ufford
1439 - 9 MAR 1482/83
Duchess
of Savoy
Margherita
1464 - 1546
Marie
De
Luxembourg
82
82
1474
Louis
De
Luxembourg
1476
Claude
De
Luxembourg
1478
Antoine
De
Luxembourg
1482
Francoise
De
Luxembourg
~1430
John
IV
Palaeologus
24 FEB 1401/02 - 29 JAN 1464/65
I Louis
1415 - 1462
Anne
De
Lusignan
47
47
1383 - 7 JAN 1450/51
VIII
Amadeo
~1365 - 1435
Duchess
of Berry
Bonne
70
70
4 JAN 1333/34 - 1 MAR 1382/83
VI
Amadeo
~1340
Bonne
De
Bourbon
~1225
Guy De
Saint
Bonnet
1313 - 1388
Isabelle
De
Valois
75
75
~1290 - 1338
Theodore I
Palaeologus
Di Montferrat
48
48
~1265
Yolanda
Irene di
Montferrat
~1224 - 1282
Michael
VIII
Palaeologus
58
58
~1240 - 4 MAR 1302/03
Theodora
Dukaina
Batatzaina
~1215
Ioannis
Batatzes
~1222
Eudoxia
Komnene
Angelina
~1185 - 1259
Ioannis
Komnenos
Angelus
74
74
~1147
Ioannis
Komnenos
Angelus
~1194 - 1261
Isaak
Dukas
Batatzes
67
67
~1129
Eudoxia
Anemaina
1099
Manolis
Anemas
~1153 - ~1193
Basileios
Batazes
40
40
~1167
Theodora
Angelina
~1135 - ~1170
Isaak
Angelus
35
35
~1192
Andronikos
Dukas
Palaeologus
~1200
Theodora
Palaiologina
~1168 - <1204
Alexios
Komnenos
Palaeologus
36
36
~1172
Irini
Komnene
Angelina
~1152 - >1211
Alexius
III
Angelus
59
59
~1148
Irini
Komnene
Kantakuzene
~1112 - 1176
Ioannis
Kantakuzenos
64
64
~1126 - 1144
Maria
Comnena
18
18
~1109 - 1151
Irini of the
Byzantine
Empire
42
42
~1119 - 1156
Michael
Dukas
Palaeologus
37
37
~1090 - >1117
Nikephoros
Dukas
Palaeologus
27
27
1374 - 1432
Janus
II De
Lusignan
58
58
~1384 - 1434
Charlotte
De
Bourbon
50
50
1344 - 1393
Jean I
De
Bourbon
49
49
~1348 - 1412
Catherine
De
Vendôme
64
64
~1325
VI
Jean
~1325 - 1376
Jeanne
De
Ponthieu
51
51
~1290 - 16 JAN 1342/43
Jean II
De
Ponthieu
~1266
Jean I
De
Ponthieu
~1270
Ida De
Meullert
4 JAN 1255/56 - 1327
Fernando
de la
Cerda
1239 - <1267
Comte d'Aumale
and Ponthieu
Fernando
28
28
1221 - 1284
Alfonso
X "El
Sabio"
63
63
Alfonso "The Wise" of Castile, King of the Romans
Henry
VII De
Grandpre
~1320 - 1387
Blanche
De
Ponthieu
67
67
~1316 - 1356
Jean
De
Harcourt
40
40
~1295 - 26 FEB 1350/51
V
Bouchard
1298 - 1377
Alix
De
Bretagne
79
79
1262 - 1312
II
Arthur
50
50
~1267
Eleanor
De
Montfort
~1230 - <1274
Philippes
II De
Montfort
44
44
~1233
Jeanne
De
Levis
~1205 - >1230
Philippes
I De
Montfort
25
25
~1210
Eleanor
De
Courtenay
~1215
Guiburge
De
Montfort
~1210
Guy
De
Levis
~1240
IV
Bouchard
~1247
Marie
De
Roye
1314 - 1362
Jacques
I De
Bourbon
48
48
~1285
Hugues
De
Chatillon
~1260
Renaud
D'Argies
1349 - 1398
Jacques
I De
Lusignan
49
49
~1353 - 25 JAN 1420/21
Duchess of
Brunswick
Heloise
~1332 - 1369
Duke of
Brunswick
Philip
37
37
~1334 - <1368
Alisia
Heloise De
Dampierre
34
34
~1304 - >1330
Eudes
De
Dampierre
26
26
Marie
d'Ibelin
1243 - 1267
Hugues
II De
Lusignan
24
24
~1210 - 1276
Henri
de
Poitiers
66
66
~1147
Agnes
de
Courtenay
<1248
Isabelle
D'Ibelin
~1218
Jean II
D'Ibelin
~1220
Alix
D'Athens
~1272 - 1310
Amaury
II De
Lusignan
38
38
Amaury II, Constable of Jerusalem IV.1289, Seigneur de Tyrus 1290, Regent of Cyprus ("Governor and Rector" of Cyprus) (26.4.1306-1310), *ca 1272, +murdered at Nicosia 5.6.1310, bur Santa Sophia, Nicosia; m.Nicosia 1292/93 Pss Zabel of Armenia (*1275-80 +murdered in Armenia before 9.4.1323)
~1241 - 6 FEB 1323/24
Isabelle
D'Ybelin
~1235 - 24 MAR 1283/84
Hughues
III De
Lusignan
Hughues III "le Grand" de Lusignan Regent of Cyprus 1261, Regent of Jerusalem 1264, King of Cyprus (5.12.1267-84) -cr Santa Sophia, Nicosia 24.12.1267, King of Jerusalem (1267-55) -cr Tyrus 24.9.1269, he adopted his mother's surname de Lusignan 1267, *1235, +Tyros 24.3.1284, bur Santa Sophia, Nicosia; m.after 23.1.1255 Isabelle d'Ybelin (*ca 1241 +2.6.1324)
~1267 - 1285
Jean II
De
Lusignan
18
18
~1268 - 11 MAR 1280/81
Bohemund
de
Lusignan
1271 - 1324
Henri II
De
Lusignan
53
53
~1275 - 1344
Constanza
of
Sicily
69
69
D. 1377
V
Leon
D. 1375
Jean
de
Lusignan
~1275 - 1323
Zabel
of
Armenia
48
48
Hugues
de
Lusignan
Henri
de
Lusignan
D. 1344
Guy
de
Lusignan
Guy de Lusignan, Governor of Serres (1328-41), elected 1st Latin King of Armenia (1342-44) as Constantine III , +murdered in Armenia 17.4.1344; 1m: ca 1318 N Kantakuzene (+ca 1330), cousin of Emperor Joannes VI of Byzantium; 2m: 1330-32 Theodora Syrgiannaina (+1347/49), dau.of Syrgiannes Palaiologos the pinkernes
Theodora
Syrgiannaina
Syrgiannes
Palaiologos
D. 1343
Jean
de
Lusignan
Soulthana
of
Georgia
V
Giorgi
Bohémond
de
Lusignan
1325
Euphemia
of
Neghir
~1295
Marshal
of Neghir
Baldwin
Marie
de
Lusignan
1273
Marie
De
Lusignan
II
Jaime
~1274
Aimery
de
Lusignan
~1275
Guy
de
Lusignan
~1276
Marguerite
de
Lusignan
~1278
Alice
de
Lusignan
~1279
Helvis
de
Lusignan
~1280
Isabelle
de
Lusignan
~1220
Guy
D'Ibelin
~1306
Hughes
IV De
Lusignan
~1190
Jean I
D'Ibelin
~1221
Guy de la
Roche-sur-
l'Ognon
~1192
Melisende
Arsur
~1308 - >1340
Isabelle
De
Lusignan
32
32
~1289 - 1351
Heinrich
62
62
~1308
Heloise
D'Ibelin
1282
Philipp
D'Ibelin
1286
Marie
De
Gibelet
1267 - 1322
Heinrich
55
55
~1222
Philippa
Berlais
~1265
Guy
D'Ibelin
~1264 - 1 FEB 1335/36
Princess of
Thuringia
Agnes
1240 - 1315
Albrecht
"Der
Entartete"
75
75
1241 - 1270
Margaret
von
Hohenstaufen
28
28
1212 - 1243
Duchess of
Austria and
Styria Konstantze
31
31
~1179 - 1230
Leopold
VI "The
Glorious"
51
51
~1179 - 1246
Theodora
Angelina
67
67
~1147 - >1189
Ioannis
Angelus
42
42
~1136
Alexios
Comnenos
~1133 - 2 JAN 1183/84
Theodora
Comnena
~1130
Eudoxia
Comnena
~1128
Ioannis
Dukas
Comnenos
~1138
Andronikos
Comnenos
~1151
Duchess
of Austria
Agnes
~1157 - 1194
V
Leopold
37
37
~1158
III
Heinrich
~1175
Duke of
Austria
Friedrich
~1177
Duchess
of Austria
Agnes
~1210
Duchess
of Austria
Margarethe
19 FEB 1205/06 - 1226
Duchess
of Austria
Agnes
1207
VII
Leopold
1208
I
Heinrich
~1211
II
Friedrich
~1180 - 1261
I
Albrecht
81
81
~1183
Duchess
of Saxony
Sofie
~1185
Duke of
Saxony
Magnus
~1189
Duchess
of Saxony
Hedwig
1249
I
Johann
~1253
Duchess
of Saxony
Helen
1247
II
Albrecht
1223
II
Hermann
~1223
Duke of
Saxony
Albert
~1225
Marie
Anna
~1225
Queen of
Denmark
Jutta
1216
Erik IV
"Plovpenning"
~1282
Princess of
Brunswick
Alsine
~1283
Prince of
Brunswick
Otto
~1284
Prince of
Brunswick
Albrecht
~1285
Princess of
Brunswick
Adelheid
~1286
Princess of
Brunswick
Facie
~1287
Princess of
Brunswick
Agnes
~1291
Prince of
Brunswick
Friedrich
~1293
Adelheid
Irini
~1294
Prince of
Brunswick
Konrad
1295
Princess of
Brunswick
Mechtild
1297
Duke of
Brunswick
Ernst
~1298
Duke of
Brunswick
Wilhelm
~1300
Princess of
Brunswick
Richardis
~1300
Princess of
Brunswick
Margarethe
~1301
Prince of
Brunswick
Johann
~1333
Princess of
Brunswick
Heloise
~1334
Prince of
Brunswick
Riddag
~1336
Prince of
Brunswick
Balthasar
~1338
Prince of
Brunswick
Thomas
1341
Prince of
Brunswick
Melchior
~1297
Duchess of
Brandenburg
Jutte
1318 - 1371
Princess of
Brunswick
Agnes
53
53
1320
Duke of
Brunswick
Otto
1321
Prince of
Brunswick
Johann
1323
Prince of
Brunswick
Ludwig
~1298
III
Barnim
~1355
Duke of
Brunswick
Johann
~1335
Alix
D'Ibelin
~1265 - 1303
Guy
de
Lusignan
38
38
~1275
Eschive
d'Ibelin
~1295 - 1359
Hugues
III De
Lusignan
64
64
1304 - 1386
Alice
D'Ibelin
82
82
~1280
Guy
D'Ibelin
~1282
Isabella
D'Ibelin
~1257
Margaret
De
Gibelet
~1255
Baudouin
D'Ibelin
~1225 - 1258
Bertrand
De
Gibelet
33
33
~1200
Hugh
De
Gibelet
~1175
Bertrand
I De
Gibelet
~1177
Princess
of Armenia
Doleta
~1150
King of
Armenia
Stephen
~1120
I Leo
~1152 - ~1210
Princess
of Paperon
Rita
58
58
~1120 - 1153
I
Smbat
33
33
~1090 - 1143
II
Hetum
53
53
~1060
I
Oshin
~1065
Artsruni
~1040
Abulgharin
Artsrunigovernor
1010
Hasan
Artsruni
~0985
Khachi
Artsruni
~1255 - 1302
Balian
D'Ibelin
47
47
1258
Alice
of
Lampron
~1225 - 1250
Hetum
IV of
Lampron
25
25
~1190 - 1249
Constantine
"the Thagadir"
of Lampron
59
59
~1160 - 1218
III
Hetum
58
58
~1125 - 1170
II
Oshin
45
45
~1240
Jean III
D'Ibelin
~1250
Alice
De La
Roche
~1266
Philippa
Berlais
1229 - 1294
II
Ludwig
65
65
Ludwig II was appointed an Elector of the Empire as Count Palatine of the Palatinate 15 May 1275, had with other issue two sons, Rudolf (1274-1319) who succeeded him as Elector, and founder of the Electoral Branch A (Palatinate, see later), and Ludwig III or IV (1282-1347), Duke of Bavaria, who succeeded to the entire Bavarian estates after the extinction of the line of Heinrich, and was founder of Branch B (Bavaria); he was elected King of the Romans (Germany) in 1314 and crowned Emperor 1328. The junior Bavarian line B continued to rule in Bavaria, and remained Catholic at the reformation; William V, Duke of Bavaria (1546-1628), named his elder son Maximilian (1573-1651) co-Duke of Bavaria 1594, and abdicated as ruler in his son’s favour 15 Oct 1597. Maximilian was elevated to the dignity of Elector of the Empire with the deprivation of that title from the Elector Palatine 25 Feb 1623 (this title restored by the Treaty of Westphalia 1648, increasing the number of Electors). Charles VII (1697-1745), Elector of Bavaria, was elected King of Bohemia 7 Dec 1741 (in opposition to the Archduchess Maria Theresia) but never took possession, and was elected Emperor 24 Jan 1742 (crowned 12 Feb 1742); his son Maximilian III Joseph, Elector of Bavaria, died without male issue 30 Dec 1777 when the junior line became extinct in the male line. The Electorate of Bavaria passed to the Elector Palatine, head of the senior line, by the terms of the Treaty of Westphalia. HISTORY OF HOUSE OF WITTELSBACH Royal House of Bavaria and Princely House of Löwenstein http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/bavarhis.htm
1282 - 1347
III
Ludwig
65
65
Ludwig III or IV (1282-1347), Duke of Bavaria, who succeeded to the entire Bavarian estates after the extinction of the line of Heinrich, and was founder of Branch B (Bavaria); he was elected King of the Romans (Germany) in 1314 and crowned Emperor 1328. The junior Bavarian line B continued to rule in Bavaria, and remained Catholic at the reformation; HISTORY OF HOUSE OF WITTELSBACH Royal House of Bavaria and Princely House of Löwenstein http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/bavarhis.htm
~1313 - 1356
Margaretha
D'Avesnes
43
43
1274 - 1319
I
Rudolf
44
44
1275
Princess
Of Bavaria
Mathild
1277
Princess
Of Bavaria
Agnes
~1280
Countess
Of Nassau
Mathilde
~1251 - 1304
Mathilde
Von
Hapsburg
53
53
~1254
Friedrich
Von
Hapsburg
~1255
Rudolf
Von
Hapsburg
~1256
Katherine
Von
Hapsburg
~1258
Hedwig
Von
Hapsburg
~1260
Agnes
Gertrude Von
Hapsburg
~1263
Hartmann
Von
Hapsburg
~1268
Rudolf
II Von
Hapsburg
~1272
Klementie
Von
Hapsburg
~1274
Eufhemie
Von
Hapsburg
19 FEB 1275/76
Karl
Von
Hapsburg
1235
I
Heinrich
1236
Countess
Of Bavaria
Sophie
~1238
Countess
Of Bavaria
Agnes
~1297
Count Of
The Rhine
Ludwig
1300 - 29 JAN 1326/27
Count Palatine
Of The Rhein
Adolf
1306
II
Rudolf
1309
I
Ruprecht
1312
Countess Of
The Rhine
Mathilde
1304
Countess
Of Hottingen
Irmengarde
~1290
Beatrycza
(Beatrix)
~1070 - 1156
IV
Otto
86
86
~1040
II Otto
Otto II, Count of Dachau acquired the castle of Wittelsbah, and was father of Otto IV, Count Palatine in Bavaria (d 1156)
~1010 - 1072
I Otto
62
62
HISTORY OF HOUSE OF WITTELSBACH Royal House of Bavaria and Princely House of Löwenstein http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/bavarhis.htm Catholic: Once thought to have descended from the family of Lords of Babenberg (modern Bamberg), rulers or MarkGrafs of the Ostmark, the Wittelsbach line was founded by Luitpold (d 5 Jul 907), cousin and General of the Carolingian Emperor Arnulf, m to Kunigunde, dau of Cout Palatine Berthold of Swabia. He had with other issue (1) Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria 907-37, who was succ by his son Eberhard, whose 2nd son Arnulf, Count Palatine of Bavaria (d 954), whose male line became extinct with Konrad, Count of Diesen (d 1258); (2) Luitpold, MarkGraf of the Ostmark (d 984), father of Ernst, Duke of Swabia (d 1015), whose 2nd son Ernst (d 1030) was ancestor of MarkGraf Leopold IV, Duke of Bavaria (1108-1141), and his brother Heinrich II, Duke of Austria (1112-1177), this male line extinct with Duke Friedrich of Austria (d 1246); (3) Berthold, MarkGraf in Bavaria (d 980), was ancestor of Otto I, Count of Scheyern (d 1072), whose 3rd son Otto II, Count of Dachau acquired the castle of Wittelsbah, and was father of Otto IV, Count Palatine in Bavaria (d 1156), whose son Otto V was invested with the Duchy of Bavaria as Otto I, after the fall of Henry the Lion, 16 Sep 1180. Otto V's 2nd son Ludwig I (1174-1231) was father of Otto II (1206-1253) invested as Count Palatine of the Rhine (PfalzGraf bei Rhein) 1214 following his m to Agnes (1201-1267), dau and heiress of Heinrich I, Count Palatine of the Rhine, giving him sovereign privileges in parts of the ancient Duchy of Franconia west of the Rhone, centered around Heidelberg. Ludwig III, Duke of Bavaria (1229-1294), divided his inheritance with his younger brother Henry (1235-1290) but these possessions returned to the senior line on the extinction of Henry’s male line in 1339.
1325
Princess
of Bavaria
Margarethe
~1326
Nun at
Fontenelle
Anna
1328
V
Ludwig
1330
I
Wilhelm
~1340
Princess
of Bavaria
Anna
1344
Queen of
Sweden
Beatrix
1345
Princess
of Bavaria
Agnes
1346
V Otto
1347
Prince of
Bavaria
Ludwig
1313
II
Stefan
~1309
Princess
of Bavaria
Mathilde
1314
Princess
of Bavaria
Beatrix
1315
Princess
of Bavaria
Anna
1316
IV
Ludwig
1318
Princess
of Bavaria
Agnes
~1375
Countess of
Kleve-Mark
Margarethe
Maria
Van
Bronckhorst
Agnes
Van
Brigdamme
~1400
Princess
of Artois
Bonne
Catherine
De
Tiesferiers
Catherine
Scaers
Célie
Isabelle
De La
Vigne
Jacoba
Van
Steengergen
Jeanne
De
Presles
Margarethe
Post
Margarethe
Scupelins
Nicolette
De
Bosquiel
~1400
Katherine
FitzAlan
~1430
Elizabeth
De
Bourgogne
~1420
Thomas
"Hynaf" Ap
Gruffydd
Countess
of Nevers
Michelle
1391 - 1438
Duarte
I "The
Eloquent"
46
46
1388
Princess
of Portugal
Branca
1390
Prince of
Portugal
Alfonso
1392
Prince of
Portugal and the
Algarves Pedro
4 MAR 1393/94
Henrique
"The
Navigator"
~1395
Princess
of Portugal
Leonor
13 JAN 1399/00
II João
1402
Fernando
"The
Saint"
~1404
Princess
of Portugal
Joanna
~1406
Prince of
Portugal
Diniz
1402 - 19 FEB 1444/45
Leonora
De
Aragón
1429
III João
1430
Princess
of Portugal
Filippa
15 JAN 1431/32
Affonso
V "The
African"
1432
Princess
of Portugal
Maria
1433
Duke of
Viseu
Fernando
1435
Prince of
Portugal
Duarte
1436 - 1467
Princess
of Portugal
Leonore
30
30
1437
Nun at
St.Clara
Catarina
20 MAR 1438/39
Queen of
Castile
Joanna
Joanna
Manuel
De Seia
~1391 - 1429
Princess
of Czersk
Cymbarka
38
38
1284
Pedro
Nunez De
Guzman
1288
Beatriz
Ponce
De Leon
~1365 - 1434
Princess of
Lithuania
Aleksandra
69
69
1351 - 1386
III
Leopold
34
34
~1352 - 11 MAR 1413/14
Verde
Di
Visconti
~1317 - 1385
Barnabo
Di'
Visconti
68
68
~1321 - 1384
Beatrice
Della
Scala
63
63
~1300 - 1351
Mastino
II Della
Scala
51
51
~1304
Taddea
De
Carrarra
~1289
Stefan
Di
Visconti
~1293
Valentina
Doria
~1263
Barnabes
Doria
~1260 - ~1322
Mathew
Magnus Di
Visconti
62
62
~1263
Bonocosa
Burrus
~1230
Theobald
Di
Visconti
~1235
Anastasia
Perovana
1300 - 1351
Countess
of Pfirt
Johanne
51
51
1274
III
Ulrich
1278
Jeanne De
Chalon-
Montbeliard
1379
I Adolf
22 JAN 1396/97
Duke of
Guyenne
Louis
~1570 - 1621
Lawrence
Smith
51
51
~1572
Anne
Mainwaring
~1532
Anne
Leicester
~1513 - FEB 1571/72
Sir
Ralph
Leicester
~1502
Ellen
De
Legh
~1425 - 1460
John
De
Legh
35
35
~1400
John
De
Legh
~1375
John
De
Legh
~1350
James
De
Legh
1488
Ralph
Leicester
~1498
Eleanor
Egerton
~1460
John
Leicester
~1463
Elizabeth
Harrington
~1472
Margaret
Basset
~1450
Ralph
Basset
~1458
Eleanor
Egerton
1426 - 1505
Hugh
Egerton
79
79
~1430 - 1498
William
Basset
68
68
~1430 - 1499
Margaret
De
Dutton
69
69
~1429
Joan
Byron
~1393
Lucy
De
Assheton
~1374 - 1428
Sir John
De
Assheton
54
54
1372
Jane
Savile
~1404
William
Basset
~1405
Alice
Moton
1375 - 1457
Robert
Moton
81
81
~1379
Margery
Mallory
~1379
Ralph
Basset
~1385 - 1466
Margaret
(Maud)
Dethick
81
81
~1340
John
Savile
~1342
Isabel
Radcliffe
~1300
Robert
Radcliffe
~1265
Robert
de
Radcliffe
~1270
Margaret
De
Shoresworth
~1240
Robert
De
Shoresworth
1329
Sir
John
Savile
1331
Isabel
Eland
Thomas
Eland
~1290
John
Savile
~1292
Margery
Rushworth
~1260
John
Savile
~1340 - 1393
Anketil
Mallory
53
53
~1270
Isabel
De
Lathom
1314
Kirkby
Mallory
~1335 - 1412
Alice
De
Driby
77
77
~1260
Ernaud
De
Gaveston
~1260
Clarmunda
De
Marsau
1354 - 1391
Sir
William
Moton
37
37
~1349
Agnes
~1330 - 1367
Robert
Moton
37
37
1328 - 1390
Alice
Bassett
62
62
~1272
Elizabeth
Coleville
~1225 - 1276
Walter
Coleville
51
51
~1229
Isabella
De
Albiniaco
~1270
Ralph
Bassett
~1290
Simon
Bassett
~1305
Isabel
Le
Boteler
~1310 - 1378
Ralph
Bassett
68
68
~1310
Sibyl
De
Astley
~1300 - 1331
William
Moton
31
31
~1308 - 1335
Joan
de la
Zouche
27
27
~1260
William
Moton
~1245 - <1295
Simon
Bassett
50
50
~1222
Millicent
De
Chacomb
~1362
Reginald
Dethick
~1365
Thomasine
Meynell
1362 - 1389
Sir
Ralph
Meynell
27
27
~1365 - 1397
Christiana
Chute
32
32
1334 - 1376
Richard
De
Meynell
42
42
~1340 - 1398
Joan
58
58
~1303 - 1364
Hugh
De
Meynell
61
61
~1274 - 1333
Hugh
De
Meynell
59
59
1275 - 1344
Joan
de la
Ward
69
69
1249
Robert
de la
Ward
~1255 - 1314
William
De
Meynell
59
59
~1225 - <1285
Hugh
De
Meynell
60
60
1232 - 1285
Philippa
Le
Savage
53
53
1206
Geoffrey
Le
Savage
1208
Lettice
De
Arden
~1185 - ~1240
William
De
Meynell
55
55
~1153 - ~1200
William
De
Meynell
47
47
1342
Sir
Geoffrey
Dethick
1311
Sir
William
Dethick
~1330
Alice
Adderley
~1357
Ralph
Basset
~1358
Margaret
(Maud)
Beke
~1330
Thomas
Beke
~1330
John
Basset
~1332
Joan
De
Brailsford
~1392
William
Egerton
~1357
Helen
Hawkestone
~1380
Sir
John
Hawkestone
~1380
Annabella
Bromley
~1340
William
Bromley
~1342
Annabella
Chelttleton
~1300
Matthew
Chelttleton
~1305
Joan
De
Clifton
~1300
John
Bromley
~1302
Joan
~1275
Ranulph
Bromley
~1370
Ralph
Egerton
~1335
Miss
Haselwall
~1347
Ralph
Egerton
~1323
David
Egerton
~1264
Jane
Pichard
~1282
Uryan
Egerton
~1296
Amelia
Caldcotte
~1449
Helena
Egerton
~1259
Margaret
Wrenbury
1233
Richard
Wrenbury
1235
Catherine
De
Courtenay
~1458 - MAR 1527/28
John
Egerton
~1456
Anne
Egerton
~1480 - ~1534
Philip
Egerton
54
54
~1460
Ellen
Egerton
~1458
Catherine
Egerton
~1155
Margrett
Eynion
~1464
William
Egerton
~1120
Tanghurst
De
Chester
~1448
Robert
Egerton
~1450
Richard
Egerton
~1452
Sir
John
Egerton
~1454
Alice
Egerton
~1456
Ralph
Egerton
~1465
Isabel
Egerton
~1460
Eleanor
Brereton
~1496
Isabel
Egerton
~1480
Ellen
Egerton
1455
Thomas
Harcourt
~1430 - 1474
Philip
Egerton
44
44
~1404 - 1459
Sir
John
Egerton
55
55
~1408
Margaret
Fitton
~1388
John
Fitton
~1375 - 14 FEB 1455/56
Lawrence
Fitton
~1379 - 3 JAN 1441/42
Agnes
Hesketh
~1322 - MAR 1396/97
Thomas
Fitton
~1330 - 1379
Margaret
De
Legh
49
49
~1290
Thomas
Fitton
~1300
Isabel
De
Orreby
~1245 - >1311
John
de
Orreby
66
66
~1250
Isabella
De
Tattershall
~1275
Thomas
De
Orreby
~1238
Joyce
~1432
William
Egerton
~1434
Ralph
Egerton
~1436
Hugh
Egerton
~1438
Peter
Egerton
~1440
John
Egerton
~1362 - 1446
Philip
Egerton
84
84
~1377
Matilda
De
Malpas
1351
David
De
Malpas
~1312 - ~1396
Urian
Egerton
84
84
~1325
Amelia
Warburton
~1299
John
Warburton
1252
Richard
Fulleshurst
~1483
Radus
Egerton
~1484
Jane
Smith
~1507
Margaret
Egerton
~1509 - 1563
Sir
Philip
Egerton
54
54
~1522
Jane
Egerton
~1520
George
Alsopp
~1547 - 1602
John
Alsopp
55
55
~1549
Thomas
Alsopp
~1551
George
Alsopp
~1553
Elizabeth
Alsopp
Anne
~1564
Anthony
Alsopp
~1565
Jane
Smith
~1591
Jane
Alsopp
~1587
Thomas
Milward
1610 - 1653
Thomas
Milward
43
43
~1618
Robert
Milward
~1622
John
Milward
~1624
William
Milward
~1626
Christian
Milward
~1615
Mary
Milward
1600
Anna
Goodell
1642
Ann
Milward
1643
Rebecca
Milward
1644
Elizabeth
Milward
1458
Sir
Gilbert
Smith
~1394
Hugh
Done
~1345
John
Done
~1398 - 1459
James
Tuchet
61
61
1334
Richard
Heton
1510 - 6 JAN 1578/79
Sir
Ralph
Egerton
~1508
Elizabeth
Egerton
~1509
Mary
Alice
Grosvenor
~1530
Ralph
Egerton
~1532
Elizabeth
Egerton
Alice
Sparke
Alice
Bickerton
~1505
John
Dodd
~1530
Margaret
Dodd
~1546
Elizabeth
Leicester
~1553 - 1612
Randal
Mainwaring
59
59
1562
Mary
Fitton
1507 - 1556
Mary
Harbottle
49
49
6 JAN 1484/85 - 1513
Sir
Guiscard
Harbottle
~1485
Jane
Willoughby
1527 - 1579
Sir
Edward
Fitton
52
52
~1455 - 1529
Henry
Willoughby
74
74
~1465
Margaret
Markham
1435 - 1495
Sir
Robert
Markham
60
60
~1437
Jane
Frances
Daubeny
~1472 - 1536
Sir
John
Markham
64
64
~1475
Robert
Markham
~1477
Elizabeth
Markham
~1481
Catherine
Markham
1493
Dorothy
Powtrell
~1510
Richard
Molyneux
~1512
Thomas
Molyneux
~1514
Anne
Molyneux
~1516
Catherine
Molyneux
~1517
Margaret
Molyneux
~1517
Robert
Molyneux
~1518
Edmund
Molyneux
~1520
Elizabeth
Molyneux
~1521
William
Molyneux
1476
Alice
Skipwith
~1500 - 1559
Sir
John
Markham
59
59
~1502
Alice
Markham
~1502
Margaret
Langford
~1505
Anne
Strelley
~1524
Frances
Markham
1527
Isabella
Markham
1527 - 1582
John
Harrington
55
55
~1520
Henry
Babington
~1406
Sir
Robert
Markham
~1408
Elizabeth
Bourdon
~1380
Sir
Nicholas
Bourdon
~1384
Millicent
De
Beckering
1368
Sir
John
Markham
1378 - 1408
Elizabeth
De
Cressy
30
30
1331 - 1383
John
De
Cressy
52
52
1335
Agnes
1313 - 16 FEB 1346/47
Hugh
De
Cressy
1314 - 1356
Matilda
Paunton
42
42
1291 - 1334
William
De
Cressy
42
42
~1266
Roger
De
Cressy
~1272
Christine
1248 - 1311
William
De
Cressy
63
63
~1250
Joanna
~1222
Roger
De
Cressy
~1224
Sibilla
Braytoft
~1322
Sir
Robert
Markham
~1335
Isabelle
Caunton
1309
Sir
John
Caunton
~1290 - 1329
Sir
John
Markham
39
39
~1300
Joan
Bothumsell
1274
Sir
Nicholas
Bothumsell
1264
Sir
Robert
Markham
1238
John
Markham
1212
John
Markham
1216
Isabelle
1186
Sir
Alexander
Markham
1395 - 11 JAN 1445/46
Giles
Daubeny
~1405 - 1455
Mary
Leeke
50
50
~1385
Simon
Leeke
~1357
Jane
Talbot
1325
John
Talbot
~1335
Alice
Moton
~1300
Philip
Talbot
~1302
Elizabeth
De
Frene
~1275
Richard
De
Frene
~1275
Alan
De
Talbot
~1374 - 1420
Marguerite
De
Beauchamp
46
46
~1337
Giles
Daubeney
~1337 - 1400
Alianore
Willington
63
63
1314 - 1349
Henry
Willington
35
35
1315
Isabel
Walesbreu
1289
Sir
John
Walesbreu
~1281 - 22 MAR 1353/54
Edmund
Plantagenet
1187
Reginal
De
Valletort
~1190
Hawise
De
Dunstanville
~1268
Joan
FitzAlan
1293
Lamellen
Plantagenet
~1282
Richard
Plantagenet
~1284 - 1335
Sir
Geoffrey
Plantagenet
51
51
~1286
William
Plantagenet
~1287
Joan
Plantagenet
1294
Elizabeth
De
Brampton
~1372
Thomas
De
Poynings
1360
Lop
Dias de
Sousa
~1386
Beatrice
de
Sousa
1278
Otho
Bodrugan
~1266
Margaret
Champernon
~1234 - 1304
William
Champernon
70
70
~1208 - >1272
Sir Henry
De
Champernon
64
64
~1212
Dionisia
English
~1240
Christian
Bertram
~1192
Christian
Bertram
1186
Robert
English
~1171 - >1210
Sir Oliver
De
Champernon
39
39
~1175
Eva
Andea
~1145 - >1191
Henry
De
Champernon
46
46
~1149
Rohais
Campo
Ernalda
~1096 - <1190
Jordan
De
Champernon
94
94
~1100 - >1170
Mabel
De
Gloucester
70
70
1074
Earl of
Gloucester
Robert
1253
Sir
Henry
Bodrugan
1257
Sibylla
De
Mandeville
~1225
Philip
Bodrugan
~1200
Henry
Bodrugan
~1285 - ~1327
Henry
Willington
42
42
1287
Margery
Treville
~1252
Ralph
De
Willington
~1258
Juliana
Lomene
1232
Sir
Richard
Lomene
~1194 - 1253
Ralph
De
Willington
59
59
~1220
Joane
Champernon
~1180
Sir William
De
Champernon
~1190
Eve
De
Whitchurch
~1160
Reynold
De
Whitchurch
~1121 - >1152
Jordan
De
Champernon
31
31
~1160
Ralph
De
Willington
~1167
Olympias
Franc
1141
William
Franc
1311
Alice
De
Montague
3 MAR 1303/04 - 1378
Ralph
D'Aubeney
~1261 - 1305
Elias
D'Aubeney
44
44
~1270 - ~1311
Joan
41
41
~1214 - 25 JAN 1291/92
Ralph
D'Albini
~1222 - 1294
Isabel
Mawley
72
72
~1134 - ~1192
Ralph
d'Aubigny
58
58
~1173 - ~1220
Ralph
d'Aubigny
47
47
~1185
Mahet
De
Montsorel
1159
William
De
Montsorel
3 MAR 1303/04
William
D'Aubeney
~1298
Oliver
D'Aubeney
~1300
John
D'Aubeney
~1302
Elias
D'Aubeney
~1425
Robert
Willoughby
~1422
Margaret
Griffith
~1400 - 1471
Sir
John
Griffith
71
71
~1400 - 1457
Catherine
De
Tyrwhitt
57
57
~1375 - JAN 1427/28
Robert
De
Tyrwhitt
~1378
Alice
Kelke
~1350
Roger
Kelke
~1345
William
De
Tyrwhitt
~1350
Margaret
Grovale
~1325
John
Grovale
~1327
Margaret
de
Turberville
~1320
Anne
Wycliffe
~1290
William
Wycliffe
~1375 - 1431
Thomas
Griffith
56
56
~1345
Margaret
la
Zouche
~1340 - 1380
Rhys
Griffith
40
40
~1315 - 1356
Rhys
ap
Gruffudd
41
41
~1320
Joanna
Somerville
~1295 - 23 JAN 1354/55
Philip
Somerville
~1300 - 1352
Margaret
De
Pipe
52
52
~1280
Thomas
De
Pipe
~1260
Robert
Somerville
~1262
Isabel
De
Merlay
~1212
Roger
De
Merlay
~1215 - FEB 1291/92
Margery
D'Umfreville
~1160
Eustace
de
Baliol
~1163
Agnes
De
Percy
~1128
Alan
De
Percy
~1127
Walter
De
Percy
~1130
Richard
De
Percy
~1132
William
De
Percy
~1134 - 1204
Agnes
De
Percy
70
70
~1136
Maud
De
Percy
~1144
Alice
De
Percy
~1146
Emma
De
Percy
~1142
Adam
Staveley
~1175
Alice
Staveley
~1169
Lucy
De
Percy
~1182
Agnes
de
Baliol
~1163 - 1226
Richard
D'Umfreville
63
63
~1125 - ~1171
Odinel
D'Umfreville
46
46
~1094 - ~1162
Odinel
D'Umfreville
68
68
~1060 - ~1120
Robert
D'Umfreville
60
60
~1030 - ~1086
Robert
D'Umfreville
56
56
~1235 - 1280
John
Somerville
45
45
~1200
Roger
Somerville
~1180 - 1201
Roger
Somerville
21
21
~1182 - <1220
Matilda
38
38
~1160
Roger
Somerville
~1162
Edeline
Le
Boteler
~1130
Robert
le
Boteler
~1175
Roger
De
Merlay
~1275
Gruffudd
Ap
Heilyn
~1279
Efa
Verch
Gruffydd
~1252
Gruffyd
Ap
Tudor
~1230
Tudor
Ap
Madog
~1235 - >1282
Heilyn
Ap
Tudur
47
47
~1254
Annes
Verch
Owain
~1230
Owain
Ap
Bleddyn
~1232
Gwenllian
Verch
Madog
~1178
Tudur
Ap
Ednyfed
~1180
Adles
Verch
Richard
~1150
Richard
Ap
Cadwaladr
~1154
Annes
Verch
Gwyn
~1155 - 1246
Ednyfed
"Fychan"
Ap Cynwrig
91
91
~1132
Cynwrig
Ap
Iorwerth
~1139
Angharad
Verch
Hwfa
~1120
Hwfa
Ap
Cynwrig
~1124
Gwenllian
Verch
Owain
~1400 - 1491
Margaret
De
Freville
91
91
~1400
Hugh
Willoughby
1368 - 1401
Baldwin
De
Freville
33
33
~1377 - >1418
Maud
Le
Scrope
41
41
~1350 - 1419
Joyce
De
Botetourt
69
69
1318
John
De
Botetourt
~1316 - 1372
Joyce
De
Mortimer
56
56
~1240
Isabel
~1277
Maud
(Matilda)
Strathhearn
1317 - 1346
Alan
De
Mortimer
29
29
1319
Eleanor
1338
Hugh
La
Zouche
~1340
Isabella
La
Zouche
~1345
Joyce
La
Zouche
~1292 - 1322
Thomas
De
Botetourt
30
30
1292 - 18 JAN 1326/27
Joan
De
Somery
1264 - 1329
Maud
FitzThomas
65
65
1232 - 1274
Thomas
FitzOtes
42
42
~1232 - 1285
Beatrice
De
Beauchamp
53
53
1187
William
De
Beauchamp
~1158
William
FitzGeoffrey
De Mandeville
~1162
Olive
De
Beauchamp
~1129
Eustache
De
Champagne
~1134
Agnes
~1104 - ~1141
Hugh
De
Beauchamp
37
37
~1156
Geoffrey III
FitzGeoffrey
De Mandeville
~1160
Robert
FitzGeoffrey
De Mandeville
~1134
Matilda
De
Biden
~1104
John
De
Biden
~1108
Alice
De
Maudit
~1240 - 1316
Guy
De
Botetourt
76
76
~1242
Ada
1292 - 1375
Baldwin
De
Freville
83
83
~1270
Alexander
De
Freville
~1265
Joan
De
Cromwell
~1218
Philip
De
Marmion
~1245
Macerie
(Mazere)
De Marmion
~1196
Joan
De
Kilpek
~1169
Hugh
De
Kilpek
~1130
Matilda
(Maud) De
Beauchamp
~1375
Edmond
Willoughby
~1378
Isabella
Annesley
~1368 - 1424
Hugh
Annesley
56
56
~1368
Benedicta
Babington
~1335 - 1409
John
Babington
74
74
~1343
Benedictia
Ward
~1320
Simon
Ward
~1300
John
Babington
~1313
Alice
~1267
Bernard
Babington
~1245
William
Babington
~1345 - >1413
Thomas
Annesley
68
68
~1348
Agnes
De
Clifton
~1350 - 1403
John
De
Clifton
53
53
~1328 - ~1356
Robert
De
Clifton
28
28
~1357
Catherine
De
Cressy
~1385
Gervaise
De
Clifton
~1386
Catherine
De
Clifton
~1352
Isabell
Monboucher
~1330
Agnes
De
Grey
1315 - 1391
Maud
De La
Vache
76
76
~1290
Richard
De La
Vache
~1292
Mabel
Mansel
~1255
Thomas
Mansel
~1318 - >1347
Gervaise
De
Clifton
29
29
~1318
Margaret
De
Pierrepont
~1282 - 6 MAR 1332/33
Robert
Simon de
Pierrepont
~1252 - 1299
Henry
De
Pierrepont
47
47
~1254 - 1314
Annora
Manvers
60
60
~1225
Michael
Manvers
1226
Henry
De
Pierrepont
~1193 - 1285
Robert
De
Pierrepont
92
92
~1195
Maud
~1160
William
De
Pierrepont
~1129
Hugh
De
Pierrepont
~1133
Clemence
(Agatha)
De Réthel
1103
William
De
Pierrepont
1298 - <1327
Sir
Robert
De Clifton
29
29
~1302
Emma
Moton
~1301 - >1380
Sir John
De
Annesley
79
79
~1315
Isabell
De
Ireland
~1297
Margaret
Chandos
~1290 - 25 JAN 1356/57
Sir John
De
Annesley
~1289
Matilda
MacGregor
1253
Thomas
MacGregor
~1265 - 1316
Sir John
De
Annesley
51
51
~1270 - 1336
Annora
De
Pierrepont
66
66
~1230
Reginald
De
Annesley
~1240
Hawise
Houskerle
~1195
Reginald
De
Annesley
~1165 - 1218
Ranulph
De
Annesley
53
53
~1167
Aubrey
~1140
Richard
De
Annesley
~1106
Reginald
De
Annesley
~1118
Hawise
~1060
Ralph "Rito
Brito" De
Annesley
~1084
Aubrey
~1020 - >1079
Richard
De
Annesley
59
59
~1345
Edmond
Willoughby
~1352
Elen
De La
Pole
~1300 - 1345
Richard
De La
Pole
45
45
~1303
Joan
De
Chaworth
~1285 - ~1371
Sir Thomas
De
Chaworth
86
86
~1282
Joanna
Luttrell
~1255
Geoffrey
Luttrell
~1364
Andrew
Luttrell
Joan
De
Talboys
1313 - 1390
Sir
Andrew
Luttrell
77
77
~1290
Sir
Geoffrey
Luttrell
~1315
Hawise
Le
Despenser
~1295
Agnes
De
Sutton
~1265 - 1347
Thomas
De
Chaworth
82
82
~1262
Alice
Houby
~1245
William
De
Chaworth
1226
Thomas
De
Chaworth
~1228
Alice
~1178
William
De
Chaworth
~1192
Alice
Alfreton
~1285 - <1328
William
De La
Pole
43
43
~1322 - 1368
Ralph
Basset
46
46
~1261
Ralph
De
Stourton
~1305
Joan
De
Stourton
1300
Ralph
Basset
1265 - 1314
Richard
Basset
49
49
~1278
Joan
De
Huntingfield
~1232 - 1291
Ralph
Basset
59
59
~1239 - 1293
Alianore
Wade
54
54
~1250 - 1302
Sir Roger
De
Huntingfield
52
52
~1220
Sir Eudes
De
Stourton
~1225
Grace
Hungerford
1186
Walter
Hungerford
<1160
Everard
De
Hungerford
~1185
Sir Michael
De
Stourton
~1195
Mary
De
Mauduit
~1138
Isabel
De Saint
Liz
~1150 - >1185
Sir William
De
Stourton
35
35
~1110 - >1177
Sir Robert
De
Stourton
67
67
~1114
Agnes
~1075
Bartholomew
De
Stourton
~1085
Ann
Godwin
~1288
Eudo
Edward De
Stourton
~1290
Sir William
De
Stourton
~1298
Joan
De
Vernon
~1313 - >1377
Sir John
De
Stourton
64
64
~1240
Richard
De
Vernon
1272
Richard
De
Vernon
~1347
Joan
Basset
~1378
Katherine
Payne
~1418
Johanna
de
Stourton
~1421
Alice
de
Stourton
~1385
Joan
De
Banastre
~1410
Cecily
de
Stourton
~1369
Roger
De
Stourton
~1371
Mary
Margaret
De Stourton
~1373
Sir William
De
Stourton
~1378
Huskin
De
Stourton
~1380
Richard
De
Stourton
~1383
Anastasia
De
Stourton
~1385
Elizabeth
De
Stourton
~1387
Robert
De
Stourton
~1391
Edmund
De
Stourton
~1345
Ralph
Basset
~1315 - 1362
Sir
Richard
Willoughby
47
47
~1295 - 1324
Sir
Richard
Willoughby
29
29
~1245 - 1267
Bryan
FitzAlan
22
22
~1248
Agnes
~1282
Agnes
Maud
Balliol
~1462
Margaret
De
Percy
~1286
Anne
Balliol
~1280
Edward
Balliol
~1284
Henry
Balliol
~1429
Eleanor
De
Acton
1403
Lawrence
De
Acton
1407
Matilda
1434 - 15 FEB 1509/10
Edward
Fitton
~1438 - 1500
Emma
Sidington
62
62
1412
Robert
Sidington
~1402
Thomas
Fitton
~1404 - 25 FEB 1480/81
Ellen
Mainwaring
1589 - 1675
Thomas
Smith
86
86
~1592
Stephen
Smith
~1510
Sir
Laurence
Smith
~1515
Anne
Fouleshurst
~1490
Thomas
Fouleshurst
~1492
Elizabeth
Brooke
~1465
Richard
Brooke
~1465 - 1514
Robert
Fouleshurst
49
49
~1467
Jane
~1440
Thomas
Fouleshurst
~1440
Anne
~1420
Robert
Fouleshurst
1619 - 1687
Henry
Smith
68
68
1625 - 1649
Hannah
George
24
24
1594 - 1647
John
George
53
53
~1598 - 1670
Anna
Cutler
72
72
~1578
Henry
Cutler
~1578
Heather
Fish
~1570
Robert
George
~1572
Margaret
Oldsworth
1591
Mary
Smith
~1575 - 1627
Sir
Hugh
Smith
52
52
~1577 - 1658
Elizabeth
Gorges
81
81
1536 - 1610
Sir
Thomas
Gorges
74
74
1549 - 1635
Helena
Snachenberg
86
86
~1500 - 8 JAN 1582/83
Ulf "Snakenborg
Baat"
Henriksson
~1518
Agneta
Knutsdotter
~1480
Knut
Andersson
~1504
Marta
Goransdotter
~1482 - 11 FEB 1564/65
Sir
Edward
Gorges
~1505 - <1565
Mary
Poyntz
60
60
1480 - 1535
Sir
Anthony
Poyntz
55
55
~1479
Elizabeth
Huddesfield
~1442 - 1512
Sir
Edmund
Gorges
70
70
~1450
Anna
Howard
Elizabeth
Palmer
~1599
Sarah
Gore
~1590
John
Wallingford
1664
Mary
Tuttle
1688 - 1755
Joseph
Noyes
66
66
~1697
Hannah
Wadleigh
1648 - 1730
Thomas
Noyes
81
81
~1661
Elizabeth
Greenleaf
1608 - 1656
James
Noyes
48
48
1610 - 1691
Sarah
Browne
81
81
1637
Joseph
Noyes
11 MAR 1638/39
James
Noyes
1641
Sarah
Noyes
1643
Moses
Noyes
1651
Rebecca
Noyes
1653
William
Noyes
21 MAR 1654/55
Sarah
Noyes
Sarah
Oliver
~1580
Joseph
Browne
~1585
Sarah
1568 - 1622
William
Noyes
54
54
1575 - 1657
Anne
Parker
82
82
1543 - 1591
Robert
Parker
48
48
1530 - 1614
Robert
Noyes
84
84
1545
Joan
Attridge
~1515
Thomas
Parker
Prince of
Roman
Britain Beli
D. ~0164
King of
Roman Britain
Amalech
Prince of
Britain
Eugein
King of
Britain
Eudelen
Joshua
Friend
~1815 - <1854
William
Sutton
39
39
Adeline
Long
Mariah
Donnelly
Elizabeth
Trail
D. >1850
Campbell
Sutton
~1795 - ~1887
Sarah
"Sally"
Garrett
92
92
1815 - 1869
Barbara
Akers
53
53
~1818 - 1855
Austin
Akers
37
37
~1810 - ~1897
Josiah
L.
Terry
87
87
Mary
Jane
Hart
1822 - 1915
Kittie
Ann
Akers
92
92
Abner
H.
Pearl
~1823
Sarah
Akers
Joseph
Beatty
1825 - 1891
Rebecca
Akers
65
65
1827 - 1893
Henry
P.
Beatty
66
66
~1826 - ~1881
William
George
Akers
55
55
~1835 - ~1887
Ann
M.
White
52
52
~1829 - ~1910
James
Akers
81
81
1828 - ~1861
Martha
Hart
33
33
1834 - 1915
America
Akers
81
81
~1831 - 1911
John
Woolridge
80
80
~1823 - ~1850
Mary
Akers
27
27
~1815 - ~1850
Moses
Hart
35
35
~1820
Lucinda
Akers
~1817
Aaron
Hart
~1808
John
S.
Terry
~1844
William
Akers
Margaret
Burkhead
1798 - 1879
Mary
Elizabeth
Ament
81
81
1820
Abigail
Adela
Akers
~1822 - ~1851
Elizabeth
"Betsy"
Akers
29
29
~1824 - 1905
Rachel
Ann
Akers
81
81
William
Doran
1825 - 1881
George
Washington
Akers
56
56
Ann
Mary
White
~1829
John
Henry
Akers
Mary
Jane
Hodges
~1831 - 1851
Catherine
Akers
20
20
~1834
Andrew
Jackson
Akers
1837 - 1876
Mary
Elizabeth
Neighbors
39
39
Mary
Rhodes
~1835 - ~1855
Austin
Harrison
Akers
20
20
~1792
John
Thomas
Simpkins
~1832
Robert
Simpkins
~1836
Austin
Simpkins
~1840
Martha
Simpkins
~1843
Thomas
Simpkins
~1795 - 1872
James
Fuller
77
77
~1804 - ~1895
Eliza
Thompson
91
91
~1826 - 1904
Elsey
Akers
78
78
Silas
B.
Lawrence
~1828 - ~1918
Wyatt
Akers
90
90
Julia
A.
Muncey
~1830 - ~1890
Amanda
Akers
60
60
~1818 - ~1887
Hamilton
Willis
69
69
~1834 - ~1903
Oscar
Akers
69
69
~1835
Eliza
Heaton
~1837
James
Akers
~1839
Larkin
Akers
Martha
Bays
~1841
William
Roland
Akers
Ellen
Sumpter
~1844
Jackson
John
Akers
Octavia
Peterman
~1846
James
Monroe
Akers
Pemetice
Summer
~1849
Emily
V.
Akers
Nancy
~1815 - ~1850
Diana
Akers
35
35
~1820 - 1876
Elizabeth
Akers
56
56
1819 - ~1913
Samuel
Akers
94
94
~1846
William
Burl
Akers
Helen
Crumpacker
1848 - 1927
Charles
Edward
Akers
78
78
1849
Sarah
Elizabeth
Akers
1436
II
Louis
1438 - 1497
Philippe
II "Senza
Terra"
58
58
1440
Giovanni
De
Savoy
1445
Duchess
of Savoy
Charlotte
1449
Duchess
of Milan
Bona
1434
Amadee
IX
1444 - 1483
Marguerite
De
Bourbon
39
39
1660 - 1727
George
I (Georg
Ludwig)
67
67
1428
Marie
De
Bourbon
~1430
Philippe
De
Bourbon
1629 - 23 JAN 1697/98
Ernst
Augustus
~1440
Count of
Geldern
Adolf
1438
Pierre
II De
Bourbon
~1441 - 1469
Catherine
De
Bourbon
28
28
1442
Jeanne
De
Bourbon
1477 - 1531
Louise
De
Savoy
54
54
1683 - 1760
George
II
August
76
76
~1405
Louis
III "Le
Bon"
Count of Montpensier
~1363
II Jean
~1362
Comte de
Montpensier
Charles
~1364
Louis
De
Berry
1307 - 1373
I Jean
66
66
1310 - 1361
Béatrice
De
Clermont
51
51
~1283 - 1316
Jean
De
Clermont
33
33
~1290 - >1348
Jeanne
D'
Argies
58
58
~1260
Renaud
D'
Argies
~1281
Blanche
De
Clermont
~1285
Marie
De
Clermont
~1287
Pierre
De
Clermont
~1289
Marguerite
De
Clermont
~1270 - 1319
VI
Bernard
49
49
1283 - 1313
Cecile
De
Rodez
30
30
~1255
Henri
De
Rodez
~1260
Mascarose
de
Comminges
~1225 - 1285
V
Geraud
60
60
~1240 - 1317
Mathe
De
Bearn
77
77
~1215
Vicomte
De Bearn
Gaston
~1220
Mathe
De
Bigorre
~1187
Roger
D'Armagnac
~1200
Pincelle
D'
Albret
~1155 - 1190
Bernard
IV
D'Armagnac
35
35
~1165
Etiennette
De
Barthe
~1120 - 1160
III
Geraud
40
40
~1125
Anicelle
De
Lomagne
1096 - 1130
Bernard
III
D'Armagnac
34
34
~1097
Alpaide
De
Turenne
~1070
Boson
De
Turenne
~1060
Geraud
II
D'Armagnac
~1072
Naupazie
~1020 - 19 JAN 1060/61
Bernard
II
D'Armagnac
~1030
Ermengarde
~0990
Geraud
I
D'Armagnac
~0960
Bernard
I
D'Armagnac
1676 - 1744
Elisabeth
Charlotte
68
68
~1710
Dorothy
Guelph
1640 - 1701
Philippe
I De
Bourbon
60
60
1652 - 1722
Elisabeth
Charlotte
70
70
1617 - 1680
Karl
Ludwig
62
62
1627 - 16 MAR 1685/86
Princess of
Hesse-Kassel
Charlotte
13 FEB 1601/02 - 1637
V
Wilhelm
Wilhelm V "The Constant"
29 JAN 1601/02 - 1651
Amalie
Elisabeth
1518 - 1562
Antoine
De
Bourbon
44
44
1601 - 20 JAN 1665/66
Princess
of Spain
Anna
1578 - 1621
Felipe
III "The
Pious"
42
42
1584 - 1611
Archduchess
of Austria
Margarethe
26
26
1553 - 1610
Henri IV
"The Great"
De Bourbon
56
56
7 JAN 1527/28 - 1572
Jeanne
D'
Albret
1492 - 1549
Marguerite
De
Valois
57
57
1459 - 1 JAN 1495/96
Charles
De
Valois
1404 - 1467
Jean
D'Orléans
62
62
~1412 - 1497
Marguerite
De
Rohan
85
85
1366 - 1408
Valentine
Visconti
42
42
~1488
Jean
D'Albret
~1486 - 1517
Catherine
De
Foix
31
31
1444
Gaston
De
Foix
~1443
Francoise
De
Champagne
1489 - 1537
Charles
De
Bourbon
47
47
~1489
Françoise
D'Alençon
~1459
Renaud
D'Alençon
~1462
Duchess
de Lorraine
Marguerite
1470 - 1495
François
De
Bourbon
25
25
1376 - 1446
Louis
De
Bourbon
70
70
1406 - 1468
Jeanne
De
Montfort
62
62
1428
Jean II
De
Bourbon
~1380
Anne
De
Bourbon
~1365
Louis
VII De
Bartige
~1363
Jean II
De
Berry
1448
Isabelle
De
Beauvau
~1420 - 1465
Louis
De
Beauvau
45
45
~1423 - 1456
Marguerite
De
Chambley
33
33
~1390
Ferry
V De
Chambley
~1395
Joan
De
Launay
~1360
Gualtier
De
Launay
~1395
Pierre
De
Beauvau
~1395 - 1421
Jeanne
De
Craon
26
26
~1370 - JAN 1413/14
Pierre
De
Craon
~1370
Jeanne
De
Chatillon
~1327 - 1355
Gaucher
VI De
Chatillon
28
28
~1325
Marie De
Guines
Coucy
~1290 - 1344
Enguerrand
VI De Guines
Coucy
54
54
~1292
Marie
De
Vienne
~1264
II
Philippe
~1268
Marie
De
Cernay
~1227 - 1272
I
Philippe
45
45
~1231 - 1289
Marie
De
Perwez
58
58
1205
Godefroi
De
Perwez
1207
Alix
Berthout
~1195 - 1252
I Henri
57
57
~1194 - 1270
Marguerite
De
Courtenay
76
76
~1160
II
Ferry
~1170
Mathilde
Von Der
Neurerburg
~1134
Comte
de Salm
Friedrich
~1132
Countess
of Salm
Elise
~1105
III
Hermann
~1109
Mathilde
De
Paroy
~1075 - <1138
II
Hermann
63
63
~1046 - <1059
Sofie
13
13
~1113
I Ferry
~1164
Comte
De Salm
Hermann
~1170
I
Wilhelm
~1132
Comte De
Vianden
Sigefroi
~1136
Comte De
Vianden
Gérard
~1138
Adelaide
De
Vianden
~1140
Comte De
Vianden
Guillaume
~1094
Gérard
II De
Vianden
~1095
Adelaide
Von
Sponheim
~1116
Comte de
Clervaux
Gérard
~1078
I
Gérard
~1096
Count of
Sponheim
Engelbert
~1050 - 25 FEB 1117/18
Count of
Sponheim
Stefan
~1060 - 1118
Sofie
Von
Hamm
58
58
~1085
Count of
Sponheim
Meinhard
~1087
Count of
Sponheim
Rudolf
~1089
Count of
Sponheim
Hugo
~1091
Countess of
Sponheim
Jutte
1034
Berthold
I Von
Hamm
~1078
Miss
De
Vianden
~1046
Comte De
Vianden
Bertolf
~1193
Comte De
Vianden
Gérard
~1197
Comte De
Vianden
Sigefroi
~1199
Mathilde
De
Vianden
~1201
Friedrich
I Von Der
Neurerburg
~1219
Jolanthe
De
Vianden
~1221
III
Ferry
~1223
Comte De
Vianden
Pierre
~1225
II Henri
~1260
I
Godefroi
~1258 - 8 MAR 1315/16
Marguerite
De
Vianden
~1262
Engine
De
Vianden
1272
III
Henri
~1264
Aleidis
Van
Audenarde
~1255
IV
Arnoud
~1290
Comte De
Vianden
Louis
~1243 - >1321
Enguerrand
V De Guines
Coucy
78
78
~1265
Catherine
De
Lindsay
1250 - 1283
William
De
Lindsay
33
33
~1248
Ada
De
Baliol
~1226 - 1271
Walter
De
Lindsay
45
45
~1227
Christian
De
Lindsay
~1205 - ~1247
William
De
Lindsay
42
42
~1211
Alicia
De
Lancaster
~1182
William
De
Lindsay
~1216 - >1282
Arnoul
III De
Guines
66
66
~1219
Alix
De
Coucy
~1182 - 1242
Enguerrand
III De
Coucy
60
60
~1184 - ~1267
Marie
De
Montmirail
83
83
~1160 - 1217
Jean
De
Montmirail
57
57
~1205
Mahaut
De
Fiennes
~1241
Baudouin
De Guines
Coucy
~1245
Jean De
Guines
Coucy
~1247
Mahaut
De Guines
Coucy
~1249
Isabeau
De Guines
Coucy
~1251
Alix De
Guines
Coucy
~1254
Beatrix De
Guines
Coucy
~1288 - 1335
Guillaume
De Guines
Coucy
47
47
~1292
Baudouin
De Guines
Coucy
~1294
Robert De
Guines
Coucy
~1296
Arnoul IV
De Guines
Coucy
~1290
Isabeau
De
Chatillon
~1320
Philippe
De Guines
Coucy
~1323
Jeanne
De Guines
Coucy
~1300
Allemande
Flotte De
Revel
~1333 - 1396
Marie
De
Chatillon
63
63
~1315 - 15 MAR 1351/52
Marie
De
Clacy
~1295
Baudouin
II De
Clacy
~1270
Baudouin
I De
Clacy
~1272
Ada
~1245
Gerard
III De
Clacy
~1249 - 1329
Gaucher
V De
Chatillon
80
80
~1350
Marie
de
Roucy
1318 - 1387
Guillaume
I
Craon
69
69
~1320
Marguerite
De
Dampierre
~1292
Jean
De
Dampierre
~1295 - >1350
Beatrix
De
Chatillon
55
55
~1363
Jeanne
de
Tigny
1473
Louis I
De
Bourbon
Blanche
De
Roucy
1493
Antoinette
De
Bourbon
1496 - 1550
Claude
I De
Lorraine
53
53
1551 - 1553
Henri
De
Bourbon
1
1
19 FEB 1553/54
Louis
Charles De
Bourbon
7 FEB 1557/58
Catherine
De
Bourbon
Louise
De La
Beraudiere
1607
Nicholas
De
Bourbon
1579
Catherine
Henriette
De Balsac
1601
Henri
V De
Bourbon
21 JAN 1602/03
Gabrielle
Angelique
De Bourbon
1600
Antoine
De
Bourbon
Diane
D'
Andouins
Françoise "la
Belle Fosseuse"
De Montmorency
Gabrielle
D'
Eestrées
Jacqueline
De
Bueil
Charlotte
Des
Essars
1638 - 1715
Louis
XIV De
Bourbon
76
76
1660
Maria
Teresa
Françoise
D'
Aubigné
Françoise
Athénaïs De
Rochechouart
Claude De
Vin Des
Oeuillets
Marie
Angélique
De Scorailles
Louise
Françoise De La
Baume Le Blanc
1673
Alexander
Louis
1674
Duke of
Orléans
Philippe
~1475
Lawrence
Booth
~1477
Roger
Booth
~1479
Alice
Anne
Booth
~1481
Ellen
Booth
~1493
Edward
Booth
1443
Anne
Boothe
1446
Ellen
Boothe
1447
Richard
Boothe
1449
Lawrence
Ralph
Boothe
1451
Marjorie
Boothe
1453
John
Boothe
1455
William
Boothe
1458
Isabella
Boothe
1462
Alice
Boothe
1464
Catherine
Boothe
1466
Joanna
Boothe
1464
Elizabeth
Boothe
1468
Matilda
Boothe
1470
Dulcia
Boothe
~0430
Gwyddno
~0435
Arwystli
Gloff
~0437
Llyr
Merini
~0427
Pabo Post
Prydyn
ap Cenue
~0430
Maeswig
Gloff ap
Cenue
Arddun
verch
Pabo
~1076 - 1127
Ralph
Basset
51
51
* Few families in the early annals of England can boast of a more eminent progenitor than the Bassets, and the descendants of few of the Anglo-Norman nobles attained a higher degree of power than those of Ralph Basset (son of Thurstan, the Norman), who was justice of England under King Henry I. We find his son Ralph, in the reign of Stephen, "abounding in wealth and erecting a strong castle upon some part of his inheritance in Normandy." Ralph Basset, the justice of England, required none of the artificial aids of ancestry to attain distinction; he had within himself powers sufficient at any period to reach the goal of honour, but particularly to the rude age in which he lived. To his wisdom we are said to be indebted for many salutary laws, and among others for that of frank pledge. Like all the great men of his day, he was a most liberal benefactor to the church. He d. in 1120, leaving issue, Thurstine, Thomas, Richard, Nicholas, and Gilbert. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 26, Basset, Barons Basset, of Welden]
~1106
Nicholas
Basset
~1099 - ~1182
Thomas
Basset
83
83
Thurstine
~1110
Thurston
Basset
~1108
Gilbert
Basset
~1118
Alice
de
Dunstanville
Eustachia
~1132
Richard
Basset
~1106
Robert
de
Caus
1136 - 1224
Maud
de
Caus
88
88
~1110
Emma
de
Lascelles
1142
Margaret
de
Caus
~1140
Otuel
de
Sudeley
~1162 - 26 FEB 1220/21
Sir
Ralph de
Sudeley
Ralph de Sudeley, in the 10th Richard I [1199], gave 300 marksto the king for livery of his lands, in which sum 30 marks wereincluded, which had been imposed upon his deceased brother as afine for the defect of a soldier whom he ought to havemaintained in Normandy. This Ralph was s. by his son, anotherRalph de Sudeley. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,1883, p. 520, Sudeley, Barons Sudeley]
1165 - >1241
Isabel
de
Stafford
76
76
~1192 - 19 MAR 1240/41
Sir
Ralph de
Sudeley
~1198 - >1247
Imenia
Isabel
Corbet
49
49
~1175
Hawise
Foliot
~1228 - 1280
Sir
Bartholomew
de Sudeley
52
52
Bartholomew (Sir); knighted by 1269; Sheriff of Herefs 1272;married Joan and died by 29 June 1280. [Burke's Peerage] * This feudal lord, Bartholomew de Sudeley, was sheriff of Herefordshire and governor of the castle of Hereford in the latter end of the reign of Henry III. He m. Joane, dau. of William de Beauchamp, of Elmley, and sister of William, 1st Earlof Warwick, and dying in 1274, was s. by his son John deSudeley. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883,p. 520, Sudeley, Barons Sudeley]
~1257 - 1336
Sir
John de
Sudeley
79
79
* Note: John de Sudeley, 1st Lord (Baron) Su(de)ley(e) in the English peerage, deemed by later doctrine to have been so created by writ of summons to Parliament 29 Dec 1299; born c1275, served against the Scots and Welsh on land and the French at sea1282-1336; Chamberlain of the Household 1306; pardoned 1321 for having opposed Edward II's favourites, the Despensers; died by 18 April 1336. [Burke's Peerage] I am assuming a missprint in his birth date (c1275). AncestralRoots has 1257. --------------------------------- John de Sudeley, an eminent soldier in the reign of Edward I and lord chamberlain to that king. He was in the French and Scottish wars and had summons to parliament as a Baron, from 29 December,1299, to 15 May, 1321., He m. a dau. of William, Lord Saye, dying in 1336. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeitedand Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England,1883, p. 520, Sudeley, Barons Sudeley]
~1255
Aliva
de
Saye
~1275 - 1327
Bartholomew
de
Sudeley
52
52
1305 - 19 FEB 1338/39
Sir
John de
Sudeley
John de Sudeley, 2nd Lord (Baron) Su(de)ley(e); born c1304/5,not called to Parliament; married Eleanor de Scales, thought tohave been daughter of Robert, 2nd Lord (Baron) Scales, and diedby 19 Feb 1339/40. [Burke's Peerage]
1308 - 1349
John
de St.
John
41
41
~1281 - 1323
John
de St.
John
42
42
~1285 - 24 FEB 1343/44
Margery
~1250 - 1316
John
de St.
John
66
66
1260
Margaret
~1221 - 1265
Roger
de St.
John
44
44
~1196
John
de St.
John
~1200 - >1265
Emma
De
Harcourt
65
65
1150 - 1215
Roger
de St.
John
65
65
~1168
Cecily
de
Lucy
Adeliza
de
Meschines
~1070
Eldred
de
Lancaster
~1040
Earl of
Mercia
Hereward
~0900
Wulfrith
Redburch
~0895
Duke of the
East Angles
Manne
~1242
Robert
de
Radclyffe
~1244
Adam
de
Radclyffe
~1302
Adam
Radcliffe
~1304
William
Radcliffe
~1306
Alice
Radcliffe
~1308
Agnes
Radcliffe
~1310
Elizabeth
Radcliffe
~1312
Margaret
Radcliffe
~1314
John
Radcliffe
~1316
Maud
Radcliffe
Anne
de
Leycester
~1331
Christopher
Radcliffe
~1333
Thomas
Radcliffe
~1335
Roger
Radcliffe
~1337
Nicholas
Radcliffe
~1339
Elena
Radcliffe
~1364
Thomas
Radcliffe
~1366
Robert
Radcliffe
~1371
Henry
Radcliffe
~1373
Peter
Radcliffe
~1377
William
Radcliffe
~1379
Roger
Radcliffe
~1381
Margaret
Radcliffe
~1409
Henry
Radcliffe
~1413
Richard
Radcliffe
~1411
William
Radcliffe
~1415
Helen
Radcliffe
~1430
John
Radcliffe
~1434
Richard
Radcliffe
~1436
Ellen
Radcliffe
~1438
Elizabeth
Radcliffe
~1435
Isabel
Tyldesley
1455
Richard
Radcliffe
1457
Henry
Radcliffe
1459
John
Radcliffe
1461
Roger
Radcliffe
1463
Hugh
Radcliffe
1465
Margery
Radcliffe
1467
Lucy
Radcliffe
~1162
Richard
de
Radclyffe
1164 - 1220
William
de
Radclyffe
56
56
~1170
Cecelia
De
Montbegon
1188
Adam
de
Radclyffe
~1190
Geoffrey
de
Radclyffe
~1192
Hugh
de
Radclyffe
~1190
Alice
De
Curwen
~1160
Adam
De
Curwen
~1215
Robert
de
Radclyffe
~1217
William
de
Radclyffe
~1220
John
de
Radclyffe
~1242
Roger
Radclyffe
~1244
Adam
Radclyffe
Matthew
de
Radclyffe
Simon
de
Radclyffe
~1125
Miss
Booth
1097
Gilbert De
Frunesco
De Taillebois
~1075
Goditha
~1465
Anne
Tyldesley
1485
John
Radcliffe
~1487
Ellen
Radcliffe
~1489
Agnes
Radcliffe
~1491
Roger
Radcliffe
1529
John
Radcliffe
Alice
1549
John
Radcliffe
~1551
Edward
Radcliffe
~1553
Robert
Radcliffe
~1555
Lettys
Radcliffe
~1557
Alys
Radcliffe
~1559
Ellen
Radcliffe
~1577
John
Radcliffe
Susanne
~1612
James
Radcliffe
1614
Richard
Radcliffe
~1616
Lettice
Radcliffe
~1618
Edward
Radcliffe
~1620
John
Radcliffe
~1622
Susanne
Radcliffe
~1620
Alice
Rawsthorne
~1644
Richard
Radcliffe
~1635
Hannah
Rhodes
1642 - 5 FEB 1727/28
William
Fiske
1638
Hannah
Pickworth
1606 - 1663
John
Pickworth
57
57
1610 - 1682
Ann
72
72
1638
Ruth
Pickworth
1638
John
Pickworth
12 FEB 1641/42
Joseph
Pickworth
1646
Rachel
Pickworth
1648
Benjamin
Pickworth
1650
Sarah
Pickworth
1652
Abigail
Pickworth
1653 - 1675
Samuel
Pickworth
22
22
1654
Jacob
Pickworth
1660
Hannah
Kilham
1662 - 13 FEB 1743/44
Samuel
Kilham
4 MAR 1672/73
Ann
Kilham
3 FEB 1673/74
Benjamin
Kilham
Samuel
Masters
1703
Elizabeth
Goodell
~1649
Thomas
Cousins
~1613 - 1702
Isaac
Cousins
89
89
~1620 - 1656
Elizabeth
36
36
~1703
Samuel
Littlefield
Abilgail
Wardwell
1742
Deborah
Perkins
4 FEB 1737/38
Stephen
Littlefield
1777
Deborah
Littlefield
~1575
John
Gorball
~1576
Christian
Filby
~1652
Elizabeth
Hutton
1669 - 1670
James
Kilham
1
1
1672 - 1672
Ephraim
Kilham
1673 - 1673
Ruth
Kilham
1613 - 1654
William
Fiske
41
41
~1620 - 1703
Bridgett
Muskett
83
83
30 JAN 1662/63 - 1745
William
Fiske
5 FEB 1663/64 - 1712
Sarah
Fiske
~1660
John
Cooke
2 MAR 1665/66
Ruth
Fiske
2 MAR 1666/67 - 16 FEB 1669/70
Samuel
Fiske
1668 - 1763
Martha
Fiske
94
94
Thomas
White
10 FEB 1668/69 - 1670
Joseph
Fiske
16 FEB 1669/70
Samuel
Fiske
1671
Elizabeth
Brown
~1640
Josiah
Brown
~1645
Mary
Fellows
1672 - 1745
Joseph
Fiske
73
73
Susannah
Warner
Elizabeth
Fuller
1674 - 1742
Benjamin
Fiske
68
68
Mary
Quarles
1676
Theophilus
Fiske
~1680
Phebe
Lamson
10 FEB 1676/77 - 1678
Ebenezer
Fiske
22 MAR 1678/79 - 1771
Ebenezer
Fiske
Martha
Kimball
Elizabeth
Fuller
1681 - 14 FEB 1704/05
Jonathon
Fiske
1684
Elizabeth
Fiske
~1638 - 1716
Samuel
Fiske
78
78
~1640
Phebe
Bragg
~1640
Martha
Fiske
1649 - 1649
Benjamin
Fiske
1654
Samuel
Fiske
1654
Benjamin
Fiske
~1660
Bathsheba
Morse
1654
Joseph
Fiske
~1657
Elizabeth
Harmon
1621 - 1670
Sarah
Masterson
49
49
1628
Nathaniel
Masterson
~1550
Edmonde
Masterson
~1560
Joan
Bechyng
John
Atwood
Elizabeth
Cogswell
1798
Polly
Stuart
1804
John
Stuart
~1450
Edward
Knowlton
~1460
Elizabeth
Peyton
~1430
Sir
John
Peyton
~1410
John
Knowlton
~1425
Dorothy
Tyndal
~1330
Sir William
De
Langley
~1340
Christian
Knowlton
~1300
Lord
Knowlton
Perot
Among the stories of the Middle Ages, there is a tradition of two brothers enlisting in the service of William the Conqueror, and fighting so bravely during his invasion of Wales that they readily won their spurs. Having observed that they resided, the one, on a hill and the other on a knoll, or lesser hill, the king, on investing then with the honours and insignia of knighthood, dubbed them Hill-ton and Knoll-ton. Whatever of truth may attach to the tradition, it is certain that the name is an ancient one, born out of its own native soil. A large proportion of English proper names has been suggested by local situations and associations, and of these the name Knowlton is one of the most striking, as it is one of the most ancient. The suffix ton is the old Saxon tun, town, so that in its primary use it meant the people, or town, on the knoll, but in process of time it lost this collective force, and was applied to the chief family, or personae, resident thereon. For the purpose both of government and revenue, the English people were grouped in Hundres, so called because one hundred families were made to comprise one district, or borough. In Doomsday Book, that curious and quaint record of estates and surveys which the Conqueror ordered in 1083, that he might know the extent of his realm and provide for the royal revenues, there was a Knowlton Hundred, originally but a mere hamlet in Dorset, which became by royal appointment a Fair Town, and a rural centre of considerable importance. [Knowlton Church, all that is left of the Knowlton Hamlet] Knowlton Church, Dorset Arial view & more information The original hamlet and manor have long since passed away, but-the name survives as does the Knowlton church, and its present boundaries include Knowlhill, Moor Crichel, Crichel-Govis, Gussage All Saints, Gussage St Michael, Wimborne St Giles, and the Parish of Woodlands. This estate was anciently held by Anagar, and in Doomsday Book, the name is Chenoltone, while in subsequent books it is indifferently spelled Knowlton, Knolton, Knollton, Knowton and Knowlden. A careful inspection of the Wills and Administrations in the Prerogative Courts of Canterbury and York reveals these varied spelling of the one and the same name, for it is differently spelled in the same document, and by the same person. It is well documented that proper names were, until a very recent date spelled phonetically, or according to their sound, this is a ready explanation of these singular orthographies. The name spelt as Knowlton, the strongest spelling over the years, reaches back traditionally to the time of William the Conqueror, 1066-87. Knowlton Parish and Knowlton Hall still designate a Manor and Baronial Residence in Kent County, six miles from the city of Canterbury. It originally belonged to Odo, Bishop of Baieux, who was subsequently disgraced, and his property confiscated to the Crown. In the fifteenth year of the Conqueror, the estate was surveyed, and given to one of his followers, from whom it passed by Knight’s service to Perot, and thence to the owners in later years. In the thirty-third year of Edward the First, Perot assumed the title of Lord Knollton, an early example of the transfer of a proper name from the soil to its owner. Lord Knowlton left the estate to his daughter Christian, who married William de Langley, High Sheriff under Edward III. (1327-77). His son called himself William Knollton, Esq., during the reign of Henry VI (1429-71). In the twentieth year of Henry VII (1505) William’s son John (whose son and successor, Edward, married Elizabeth Peyton, daughter of Sir John Peyton, who was the next owner) came into possession, and he married Dorothy Tyndal, daughter of Sir John Tyndal, Governor of the Tower of London. His grandson and heir, Thomas, had children, Dorothy, Catherine, William, and Thomas. From the time when Sir Perot adopted the title Lord Knollton, down to the day of Sir D’Aetb, it is matter of history that the lords of this manor were known indifferently both by their surnames and by their adopted titles, and the Parish and Hall now perpetuate that historic fact. Knowlton Hall is a fine residence situated on a knoll in a beautiful park of two hundred acres, which are kept in a high state of cultivation, and adorned with the choicest creations of the gardener’s artistic genius. The land is gently rolling, affording an agreeable diversity of hill and dale, and the beautiful walks and paths entice one into the shade of grand old trees that have delighted for ages the eyes that faded out of human life centuries ago. An examination of the fragmentary histories and ecclesiastical records of the sixteenth century discloses the fact that the names of these Kentish Knowlton’s are precisely those that appear and reappear, again and again, among the families of the Knowlton’s of at least five succeeding generations. Every Knowlton of this period was found mainly within, or near, the county of Dorset and smaller quantities in Kent, and the conclusion would appear to be irresistible that the surname itself would have come from from the Hamlet of Knowlton in Dorset. Indeed, the name could never have been used in Kent in its original and wider significance, for there is not at present, nor has there ever been, even a village settlement there. Besides the Hall, there are only the Rectory and two farm houses on the estate and the whole parish reports but twenty-six souls. In regard to the Knowlton Hamlet in Dorset, it appears that after the demise of the village through the Black Death, most Knowlton's migrated to Southampton (25miles) and Bournemouth area (20 miles), in fact you will find in both these areas the most concentrated amount of the Knowlton name in England with some of them even holding the position of Mayor of Southampton. Therefore, Dorset & Hampshire being the more populated counties over the past 1000 years of the Knowlton name. Thomas Knowlton, an antiquarian who emigrated to the new world (USA), was fond of telling of the distinction enjoyed by one of his ancestors, a retainer of the Earl of Warwick, who always appeared in Court dress, with a silver and jewelled sword at his belt, and other insignia of rank, and who stood high with the King. He had charge of one of the Earl’s castles in Kent, and was a descendant of the Knowlton’s referred to above. This has been passed on by the grandchildren over the years and many other interesting facts told by the Knowlton’s concerning the position of their ancestors. There were Knowlton's in Canterbury, and in the City of London as early as 1550, and the published "Visitations and Allegations of the Provinces of York and Canterbury" clearly show that they were never a numerous or scattered family, but that until the year 1728 they were confined entirely to the counties of Dorset, Hampshire, Middlesex and Kent. They invariably married by license instead of by banns, which as invariably indicates a recognized social position and condition of comfort, for such license could be obtained only from the Archbishop of Canterbury, and at considerable expense of about 50 pounds. In these old records the titles of Mr. and Esq. frequently used, indicating a social status above that of the common people.
~1617
Elizabeth
Rice
~1640
Elizabeth
Knowlton
~1645
Margery
Knowlton
1591 - 7 JAN 1652/53
William
Green
20 MAR 1595/96 - 1657
Hannah
Carter
20 JAN 1643/44 - >1684
Mary
Green
1649 - <1687
John
Green
38
38
1651 - 1717
William
Green
66
66
1653 - 1675
Ebenezer
Green
22
22
~1640
John
Snow
~1655
Sarah
Bateman
~1655
Mary
Felch
~1590
Thomas
Browne
1670 - 1730
Thomas
II
Knowlton
60
60
Margery
Carter
Susannah
Sarah
Benjamin
1672 - 1736
Hannah
Knowlton
64
64
20 JAN 1670/71 - 1736
Benjamin
Baldwin
~1640
Henry
Baldwin
~1650
Phebe
Richardson
1672
Robert
Knowlton
1676 - ~1735
Ephraim
Knowlton
59
59
1678 - 1684
Zerrubbabel
Knowlton
6
6
1678
Ebenezer
Knowlton
1678
Sarah
Lowell
1681 - 9 MAR 1747/48
Mary
Knowlton
~1675
John
Williams
~1645
John
Williams
~1650
Mary
Fuller
1686 - 13 MAR 1705/06
Patience
Knowlton
~1680
William
Rollo
~1640
Joseph
Richardson
1615 - 1683
Rice
Edwards
68
68
1620 - >1680
Elnor
60
60
Joanna
1670 - 1728
John
Knowlton
58
58
1680
Abigail
Batcheldor
8 MAR 1652/53 - ~1682
Joseph
Batcheldor
JAN 1656/57
Merriam
Knowlton
1660 - 1729
Freeborn
Balch
69
69
Sarah
Gardner
Abigail
Clarke
Grace
Mallet
Elizabeth
Fairfield
1699
John
Knowlton
1701
Joseph
Knowlton
1705
Abigail
Knowlton
5 MAR 1706/07
Churchill
Knowlton
1711
Marion
Knowlton
28 FEB 1713/14
Lucy
Knowlton
1718
Prudence
Knowlton
5 MAR 1719/20
Andrew
Knowlton
Abigail
Stone
1750 - 1819
Johnathan
Knowlton
69
69
1748 - 1825
Mary
Blunt
77
77
5 MAR 1719/20
Samuel
Knowlton
13 MAR 1722/23
Hannah
Knowlton
1672 - <1713
Mary
Knowlton
41
41
~1670
James
Patch
1676 - 1766
Rice
Knowlton
90
90
~1680
Mary
Dodge
Elizabeth
Smith
~1678 - >1715
Suzanna
Knowlton
37
37
~1680 - 1764
Benjamin
Knowlton
84
84
Susannah
~1683
Bethia
Knowlton
~1686 - 1755
Thomas
Knowlton
69
69
1687
Timothy
Knowlton
~1689
Elizabeth
Knowlton
~1685
Malachi
Corning
1690 - 1756
Abigail
Knowlton
66
66
~1685 - 1737
Isaac
Giddings
52
52
William
Dodge
~1692
Miriam
Knowlton
~1690
Joseph
Day
1672
Robert
Knowlton
1679 - 1706
Ezekiel
Knowlton
27
27
1680 - 18 MAR 1733/34
Sarah
Leach
7 MAR 1706/07
William
Knowlton
~1664
Martin
Ford
1678
Susannah
Knowlton
1688
Margaret
Knowlton
~1680
Moses
Mitchell
1677
Mary
Knowlton
Increase
Licks
1679 - 1745
Benjamin
Knowlton
66
66
~1685
Elizabeth
Phelps
1682
Sarah
Knowlton
~1680
Johnathan
Taylor
1685 - <1690
Mercy
Knowlton
5
5
3 JAN 1686/87 - 1718
Joseph
Knowlton
1690 - 3 MAR 1750/51
Mercy
Knowlton
~1685
William
Stebbens
1669 - <1686
Elizabeth
Knowlton
17
17
16 JAN 1670/71
Sarah
Knowlton
1672 - 1756
Samuel
Knowlton
83
83
16 MAR 1677/78 - 1728
Jonathon
Knowlton
Elizabeth
1684 - 10 MAR 1742/43
Ebenezer
Knowlton
~1690
Elizabeth
Poland
1715
Samuel
Knowlton
1717
Sarah
Fellows
1682 - 1753
Jonathon
Fellows
70
70
1686 - 1725
Sarah
Potter
39
39
1759
Anna
Knowlton
1737
Samuel
Knowlton
1717 - 1782
Nathaniel
Knowlton
65
65
~1720
Elizabeth
Dean
1686
Elizabeth
Knowlton
1678
Elisha
Knowlton
~1685
Lydia
Hawkins
1 FEB 1680/81
Joseph
Knowlton
Deborah
1693
Daniel
Knowlton
1698 - 1778
Anna
Knowlton
80
80
~1690
Jabez
Fitch
1686 - 1693
William
Knowlton
7
7
1674 - 1674
Jonathon
Abbe
13 FEB 1715/16
Gideon
Abbe
~1720 - 1742
Mary
Wood
22
22
~1720 - JAN 1746/47
Keziah
Walker
1746 - 1840
Solomon
Abbe
94
94
~1725
Bathsheba
Smith
Ann
Durey
2 FEB 1706/07
Sarah
Palmer
1710 - 1710
Martha
Palmer
1d
1d
1711
Samuel
Palmer
25 JAN 1713/14
Ebenezer
Palmer
1716
Ichabod
Palmer
1718
Zebulon
Palmer
6 MAR 1719/20 - 1807
John
Palmer
12 MAR 1721/22 - 1778
Aaron
Palmer
1725 - 1819
Moses
Palmer
94
94
1727 - 1727
Elizabeth
Palmer
1730 - 1813
Ann
Palmer
83
83
~1585
John
Abbe
14 FEB 1594/95 - 1 MAR 1674/75
Ursula
Scott
~1610 - 1660
John
Guilford
50
50
~1625
Dorothy
1644
Elizabeth
Knowlton
14 JAN 1648/49
John
Knowlton
26 JAN 1649/50
James
Knowlton
1652
Mary
Knowlton
~1625 - 10 FEB 1652/53
Susan
24 JAN 1643/44
Ann
Knowlton
Marcus
Gilmanothe
1646 - 1649
John
Knowlton
3
3
1648 - 7 JAN 1649/50
Dorothy
Knowlton
1652 - 1713
William
Knowlton
61
61
~1655 - >1713
Maria
58
58
1688 - 1781
John
Knowlton
93
93
1690
Thomas
Knowlton
~1370
William
Knowlton
~1485
Thomas
Knowlton
~1527
William
Knowlton
~1435
Dorothy
Beaudre
~1395
Sir
John
Tyndal
(Governor of the Tower of London
1533
Richard
Smith
~1543
Eliza
Canty
1651 - 1719
Joseph
Knowlton
68
68
~1656 - 1720
John III
Knowlton
64
64
Sarah
~1685
John
IV
Knowlton
~1690
Rebecca
Young
~1635
Abraham
Jewett
~1640
Ann
Allen
1 MAR 1659/60 - 1738
Elizabeth
Knowlton
1663 - 1743
Timothy
Dorman
80
80
1644 - 9 JAN 1714/15
Thomas
Dorman
1642 - 1725
Judith
Wood
83
83
1673
Susannah
Knowlton
Adopted
Samuel
III
Corning
1693 - 1774
Robert
Knowlton
81
81
1696 - 1777
Hannah
Robinson
81
81
1694 - 1694
Margery
Knowlton
1695
Margery
Knowlton
22 MAR 1685/86 - 1774
Jabez
Dodge
9 MAR 1696/97 - ~1760
Joseph
Knowlton
~1700
Abigail
Poland
1698
Deborah
Knowlton
~1695
Thomas
Adams
5 MAR 1699/00
Sarah
Knowlton
~1695
Samuel
Poland
1703 - 1768
Abraham
Knowlton
65
65
~1710
Martha
Lamson
~1710
Elizabeth
~1735 - 1785
Susannah
Blackburn
50
50
1770 - <1850
Frances
Branham
80
80
1805
Thomas
Blackburn
Akers
~1795
Kesiah
Meade
~1810
Robert
N.
Akers
~1815
Nancy
Rebecca
Porter
John
C.
Akers
Lucinda
Davis
Albert
Lee
Akers
Elon
Octavia
Burchett
Nancy
Louisa
Akers
William
Halsey
Howell
Howard
Dayton
Howell
Marcella
Jean
Pickrell
Living
Howell
1594 - 1682
Richard
Goodell
88
88
1595 - 27 JAN 1663/64
Dorothy
Katherine
Whiterent
~1623 - 1678
Ann
Goodell
55
55
23 MAR 1610/11 - 1686
William
Allen
1645
Martha
Allen
~1570 - 1607
Bridget
Portler
37
37
28 JAN 1588/89
Frances
Goodell
~1580
William
Marston
1591
Ellen
Goodell
1593 - 1593
John
Goodell
~1625
Richard
Goodell
1596 - 1596
Thomas
Goodell
15d
15d
1598
Rebecca
Goodell
~1600 - 2 JAN 1601/02
Elizabeth
Goodell
~1595 - 1647
Elizabeth
Taylor
52
52
1607
Susanah
Goodell
1609
Joanna
Goodell
1864
George
Witty
1867
Lena
Witty
1869
William
M.
Witty
~1915
Gladys
Wilke
~1917
Alice
Wilke
1874 - 1965
Frauke
(Kate)
Eikamp
91
91
1872 - 1941
Benjamin
Buss
69
69
1839 - 1915
Hinderk
(Henry)
Jacob Buss
76
76
1862 - 1917
Jacob
Eikamp
55
55
1866 - 1867
Johann
(John)
Eikamp
1
1
1868 - 1946
Anna
Dorothea
Marie Eikamp
78
78
1871 - 1956
Johann
(John)
Eikamp
85
85
1879 - 1934
Alderk
Eikamp
54
54
1881 - 1960
Clara
Eikamp
79
79
1867 - 1934
Anne
Bruisker
66
66
1888
Clara
Eikamp
1889
Fred
Eikamp
1890
Anna
Dorothea
Eikamp
1892
Carrie
Eikamp
1894
Barbara
Dena
Eikamp
1896
Johanna
Eikamp
1900
Aldkerk
"Ollie"
Eikamp
1903
Elsie
Eikamp
1866 - 1947
George
Heit
Bauman
80
80
1912
Calvin
Bauman
1901 - 1994
Clara
Margrette
Eikamp
92
92
1905 - 1998
Martha
Emma
Eikamp
93
93
1913 - 1983
Allen
John
Eikamp
70
70
1916
Ruth
Anna
Eikamp
1918
Arthur
Raymond
Eikamp
1921
Dorothy
May
Eikamp
1895 - 1988
Roy
Sears
Hubbs
92
92
1906 - 1967
Fred
Melvin
Miller
61
61
1920 - 1989
Florence
Ellen
Kidwell
69
69
1910 - 1978
Harold
Oscar
Sigman
68
68
1927
Norma
Helen
Bluett
1920 - 1995
Wendell
James
Duitsman
74
74
1889 - 1979
Maude
Caroline
Wells
90
90
1874 - 1904
Martin
Abbas
30
30
1904
Martha
Hebe
Abbas
1873 - 1950
Charles
J.
Seba
77
77
1913
Margaret
Seba
~1910 - 1935
Fred
Ward
25
25
1917 - 1917
Charlotte
Seba
1m
1m
1919 - 1990
Charles
R.
Seba
71
71
1924
Richard
Robert
Smith
~1927
Donna
Hoke
1881 - 1957
George
W.
Johnson
76
76
1909
Wiert
Johnson
1891 - 1958
Christopher
"Crist"
Olthoff
67
67
1917
Simon
"Bud"
Olthoff
1920
Richard
Olthoff
1922
Genevieve
Olthoff
1929
Laurence
"Leroy"
Olthoff
1898 - 1976
Mildred
Bronson
78
78
1926 - 1958
Leigh
Beving
32
32
1927
Vernon
Beving
~1927
Ione
Swedlund
1894 - 1978
John
McDougall
83
83
1920
Robert
Nelson
McDougall
1927
Eunice
Mae
McDougall
1895 - 1970
Roy
Earl
Wentworth
74
74
1924
Margie
Fae
Wentworth
1926
Phyllis
Wentworth
1899 - 1958
William
Larson
59
59
1923
Lavonne
Kathleen
Larson
1927
Willis
Leslie
Larson
1850 - 1931
Maggie
Alberts
81
81
1899
Harry
Samuel
Buss
1901 - 1989
Lillian
Clara
Buss
87
87
~1903 - 1938
Esther
Martha
Buss
35
35
1906
Irene
Annette
Buss
1909
Benjamin
Alvin
Buss
1905
Ruth
V.
Korf
~1901
John
H.
Meiners
~1927
John
Jay
Meiners
~1929
Roger
Keith
Meiners
~1900
Richard
Johnson
~1911
Jesse
W.
Drake
1916
Ruth
Page
Overett
1868 - 1942
Mary
Elizabeth
Huffman
73
73
1907
Mabel
Allene
Eikamp
1910 - 1913
Allen
Jacob
Eikamp
3
3
1913
Claremont
Allen
Eikamp
Adopted
1901
Frederick
Peter
Hassebroek
Living
Hassebroek
1877 - 1955
Helmer
Krull
78
78
1913
Elmer
Clarence
Krull
~1790
Jan
Freeksen
~1789
Ubbo
Everts
Beving
Dirk (b 1814) was adopted by his uncle (Ubbo, b abt 1788) and received the same surname as his uncle. Dirk's mother, prob Antje, had him out of wedlock and when she died (an unmarried woman), her brother (Ubbo, b. abt 1788) adopted the little boy and gave him the Beving family Surname (the same name as Dirk's natural mother, Antje and his adopted uncle, Ubbo). The explanation comes from Trientje (who married Spekker). She told the story to her great-granddaughter Anni Kromminga (who married Johan Peter Skekker) and Anni told the story to her grand-daughter Almuth who lives in Munich (year 2003). Trientje was the sister of Antje and Ubbo (b. abt 1788), so she was little Dirk's (b 1814) aunt. Dirk's father is referred to as "Uncle Everts Beving" who adopted little dirk. Uncle Beving's name was Ubbo Everts Beving - and little Dirk was given the family surname.
~1792
Antje
Janssen
~1816
Evert
Ubbens
Beving
1820
Diertje
Beving
~1795
Engel
Geerdes
Frey
~1827
Trientje
Beving
1753
Evert
Ubben
Beving
~1757
Diertje
Dirks
1788
Trientje
Everts
Beving
~1792
Antje
Beving
~1722
Ubbe
Evers
Beving
~1726
Tryntje
Gerrits
~1755
Evert
Beving
~1757
Hinderk
Beving
~1759
Roesken
Beving
~1761
Klaas
Beving
~1778
Etje or
Etta
Ihnen
~1764
Geerd
Janssen
Smit
1794
Hilke
Smidt
~1768
Heike
Henrichs
~1741
Hinricus
Geerds
~1737
Jan
Geerds
Smit
1858
Wopke
Muntenga
1876 - 1936
Fannie
Smith
59
59
1882
Katie
Smith
~1884
Dena
Smith
1885 - 1965
William
Smith
79
79
1895 - 1971
Clara
Smith
76
76
1897
Jacob
(Jimmie)
Smith
~1893
Mr.
Kline
~1905
Marie
Miller
~1872
Mr.
Hutchins
~1875
Mr.
Lettermeier
~1878
Mr.
Thompson
~1880
Mr.
Carlson
~1891
Anne
Banghoff
1928
Waiva
Jean
Salisbury
~1924
John
Menefee
1931 - 1931
Leila
Mae
Salisbury
1628 - 1710
Joseph
French
82
82
1634
Anne
French
1628 - 12 FEB 1686/87
Susanna
Stacy
1641 - 1721
Mary
Noyes
79
79
1594 - 1682
Richard
Goodell
88
88
1740 - 1830
Mary
"Polly"
Blackburn
90
90
~1765
James
Akers
~1770
Lucy
Webster
1784
Lucy
Akers
1785 - 1858
Elizabeth
Akers
72
72
~1786
Louisa
Akers
1788
Susanna
Akers
~1789
Sylvia
Akers
1790
Frances
Akers
1794
Jonathan
Wesley
Akers
1796
Sarah
"Sallie"
Akers
1798
William
Akers
1801
David
Akers
1804
Toliver
Akers
1797 - 1846
Abraham
Hart
49
49
1800 - 1887
Amelia
Terry
87
87
~1857
Rachel
Ann
Akers
1852
Andrew
Hart
1788 - 1862
Frances
Terrill
Morton
73
73
Deborah
1676 - 1748
William
Morton
72
72
~1678
Jane
Morton
1698 - <1748
Ann
Mothershead
50
50
~1600 - 1694
John
Morton
94
94
Laswell - Bosley Legacy http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2479463&id=I523648834 Posted by Martha Laswell mc192546@@earthlink.net
~1668
George
Mothershead
~1675
Mary
Quisenberry
1722
Elijah
Morton
~1724
Jane
Morton
~1728
Elizabeth
Morton
~1732
Joseph
H.
Morton
~1735
George
Morton
~1739
Mary
Morton
~1746
Jeremiah
Morton
~1747
Ann
Morton
~1725
Elizabeth
Hawkins
1753 - 1811
William
R.
Morton
57
57
William emigrated from Virginia to Kentucky about 1785, after selling "Soldier's Rest" - near Berryville, Virginia - to General Daniel Morgan.He died in the Home of his cousins (Marmaduke Beckwith Morton?) in Russelville Kentucky.
1746
George
Morton
~1748
Joseph
Morton
~1750
John
Morton
~1755
Sallie
Morton
~1757
Frankie
Terrill
Morton
~1759
Betsy
Morton
1764
Elizabeth
Hite
Smith
~1785
Rebecca
Hite
Morton
~1786
Charles
Smith
Morton
~1787
George
Washington
Morton
~1789
Abraham
Bowman
Morton
1790
Joseph
Hite
Morton
~1792
Gabriel
J.
Morton
1783
William
Ragland
Morton
Kitty
Morton
1799
Mary
Morton
Elizabeth
Hite
Morton
Sallie
Morton
1847 - 1912
George
Washington
Ditmore
65
65
1880 - 1963
John
Henry
Ditmore
82
82
~1871
Mary
Elizabeth
Ditmore
~1872
Joseph
H.
Ditmore
1878
Anna
Ditmore
1884
George
Washington
Ditmore
1885
Charles
H.
Ditmore
1894 - 1966
Lula
Frances
Durham
71
71
~1915
Clifton
Lee
Ditmore
~1916
Mary
Jo
Ditmore
1918
Pauline
Elizabeth
Ditmore
1925
John
Henry
Ditmore
~1927
Clarence
David
Ditmore
1929
Charles
Edward
Ditmore
Living
Ditmore
1912
James
Cornelius
Ditmore
~1920
Charlotte
Jo
Mills
Living
Ditmore
Living
Ditmore
~1790
Elizabeth
Morehead
Louisa
A.
Harrison
1803
Elizabeth
King
1848 - 1923
Winnie
Jane
Givens
74
74
1868
Laura
Manthus
Caldwell
1873
Rhoda
Lyzetta
Caldwell
1863
Margaret
Frances
Caldwell
~1865
John
Caldwell
1875
Tolavore
Lindsey
Caldwell
1878
Bertha
Cunnigan
Caldwell
1881
Lizzie
Caldwell
1883
Mae
Caldwell
~1885
Infant
Caldwell
~1887
Sara
Martha
Caldwell
~1465
Richard
De
Warren
~1492
Ralph
Warren
1496
Joan
Trelake
1534 - 1592
Joan
Warren
58
58
1538 - 6 JAN 1603/04
Sir Henry
Williams
Cromwell
1560 - 1617
Sir Robert
Williams
Cromwell
57
57
~1565 - 1654
Elizabeth
Stewart
89
89
1599 - 1658
Oliver
Cromwell
59
59
1603
Anna
Cromwell
1598 - 1665
Elizabeth
Bourchier
67
67
1621
Robert
Cromwell
1623
Oliver
Cromwell
1624
Bridget
Cromwell
1626
Richard
Cromwell
1628
Henry
Cromwell
1629
Elizabeth
Cromwell
1631
James
Cromwell
1637
Mary
Cromwell
1638
Frances
Cromwell
~1570
James
Bourchier
Frances
Crane
~1535
Sir
William
Stewart
~1565
Thomas
Stewart
1562
Philip
Williams
Cromwell
1563
Oliver
Williams
Cromwell
1569
Richard
Williams
Cromwell
1571
Henry
Cromwell
1573
Ralph
Cromwell
1574
Elizabeth
Williams
Cromwell
~1560
Joan
Williams
Cromwell
1579
Frances
Williams
Cromwell
1579
John
Cromwell
1580
Mary
Cromwell
1583
Dorothy
Cromwell
1495 - 1547
Sir Richard
Williams
Cromwell
52
52
1499 - 20 FEB 1542/43
Frances
Murfyn
1518
Thomas
Williams
Cromwell
1520
Richard
Williams
Cromwell
~1530
Francis
Williams
Cromwell
~1540
Anne
Williams
Cromwell
1465 - 1523
Thomas
Murphin
58
58
1475 - >1503
Elizabeth
Donne
28
28
~1455 - 1506
Angel
Donne
51
51
~1455
Anne
Haywardine
~1477
Edward
Donne
~1479
Francis
Donne
~1481
Gabrielle
Donne
~1430 - <1506
John
Donne
76
76
~1435
Agnes
Breten
1435
George
Murfine
~1440
Alice
Squire
~1410
Oliver
Squire
~1465 - ~1504
Morgan
Ap
Williams
39
39
~1477
Katherine
Cromwell
~1497
Elizabeth
Williams
~1498
Walter
Williams
~1500
Morgan
Williams
~1453 - 1516
Walter
Smyth
Cromwell
63
63
~1485 - 1540
Thomas
Cromwell
55
55
~1458
Katherine
Glossop
~1444
John
Cromwell
~1442
Joan
Smyth
~1415
William
Smyth
~1440
Richard
Smyth
~1420
Margaret
Cromwell
1390 - 1461
Robert
Cromwell
71
71
~1416
William
Cromwell
~1364 - 1461
John
Cromwell
97
97
~1388
Walter
Cromwell
1338
Richard
Cromwell
~1250
John
De
Cromwell
~1390
Joan
~1385
John
Smyth
~1310
Ulker
De
Cromwell
~1416
Margaret
Smyth
~1490
Elizabeth
Wykys
1443
William
Ap
Yevan
~1445
Katherine
Tudor
D. <1850
Fannie B.
Elizabeth
Caldwell
~1610 - 1647
Alexander
Winchester
37
37
Sarah
Paine
1705
Hannah
Stuart
1703
Samuel
Trask
1706 - 1748
Elizabeth
Stuart
42
42
15 FEB 1701/02 - 1796
Ebenezer
Gove
1737
Nathan
Gove
1712
Sarah
Stuart
1680
William
Wentworth
28 FEB 1679/80
Sylvanaus
Wentworth
1682
Paul
Wentworth
1683
Ebenezer
Wentworth
9 FEB 1683/84
Martha
Wentworth
1686
Mercy
Wentworth
1 JAN 1687/88
Aaron
Wentworth
1689
Moses
Wentworth
1694
Katherine
Wentworth
1696
Sarah
Wentworth
1697
Benjamin
Wentworth
1700
Edward
Wentworth
1689
Elizabeth
Wentworth
15 MAR 1612/13 - 1697
William
Wentworth
~1619 - ~1698
Elizabeth
Kenney
79
79
~1641
Samuel
Wentworth
~1644
John
Wentworth
~1646
Gershom
Wentworth
~1648
Ezekiel
Wentworth
1649
Gershom
Wentworth
~1650
Elizabeth
Wentworth
~1656
Timothy
Wentworth
~1658
Sarah
Wentworth
~1660
Ephriam
Wentworth
~1662
Benjamin
Wentworth
~1593
William
Kenney
~1615
Thomas
Kenney
1584
William
Wentworth
~1592
Susanna
Carter
18 JAN 1616/17
Edward
Wentworth
4 JAN 1618/19
Christopher
Wentworth
~1556 - 1633
Christopher
Wentworth
77
77
~1565 - ~1633
Catherine
Marbury
68
68
1585
Ann
Wentworth
1587
Faith
Wentworth
1589
Elizabeth
Wentworth
1590
Frances
Wentworth
~1591
Frances
Wentworth
24 MAR 1592/93
Francis
Wentworth
1595
Priscilla
Wentworth
27 FEB 1595/96
Christopher
Wentworth
~1535
William
Marbury
~1540
Agnes
Lenton
~1525 - 1574
William
Wentworth
49
49
~1523 - 1579
Ellen
Gilby
56
56
~1552
Oliver
Wentworth
~1554
Thomas
Wentworth
~1495
John
Gilby
~1500 - ~1558
Oliver
Wentworth
58
58
~1500
Jane
~1527
Francis
Wentworth
~1529
Martin
Wentworth
5 FEB 1641/42 - 1704
Samuel
Dresser
1649 - 1714
Mary
Leaver
64
64
1618 - 1663
Thomas
Leaver
45
45
1626 - 1684
Mary
Bradley
58
58
1600 - ~1660
Daniel
Bradley
60
60
1605 - ~1665
Elizabeth
Unk
60
60
~1630
Margaret
Pryor
~1631
Mary
Pryor
~1640
Patience
~1473 - 23 MAR 1527/28
Sir
John
Mallory
~1476
Margaret
Thwaites
~1461
Robert
Wyville
~1465
Anne
Norton
~1360 - 1420
Richard
Norton
60
60
~1365 - 1431
Katherine
Manningham
66
66
~1517
Marmaduke
Slingsby
1485 - 1537
Christopher
Stapleton
52
52
~1490 - 1521
Alice
Aske
31
31
~1464
William
Aske
~1458 - 1518
Bryan
Stapleton
60
60
~1463 - 1542
Jane
Threlkeld
79
79
~1435 - 1493
Lancelot
Threlkeld
58
58
1436 - 1493
Margaret
Bromflete
57
57
~1390 - 6 JAN 1467/68
Henry
Bromflete
~1294
Warren
D'Insula
1286 - 7 FEB 1338/39
Herbert
St.
Quintin
~1290
Lore
Fauconberg
~1264
William
Fauconberg
~1264
Herbert
St.
Quintin
~1264
Anastasia
Maltravors
1314
Richard
St.
Quintin
1317
William
St.
Quintin
1340
Elizabeth
Saint
Quintin
~1340
Thomas
De La
Pole
~1340
John
De
Clinton
1432 - 1503
William
Stapleton
71
71
~1442 - 1474
Margaret
Pickering
32
32
1419 - 1497
James
Pickering
77
77
~1420 - 1499
Margaret
Lascelles
79
79
~1395
Robert
Lascelles
~1398
Catherine
De
Grey
~1370
Thomas
De
Grey
~1360
William
Lascelles
~1378
Isabel
Woodrington
~1340
Walter
Lascelles
~1342
Miss
Eland
~1316
John
Eland
~1322
Sir
Walter
Lascelles
~1325
Agnes
Radcliffe
~1299
Robert
Rocliff
~1270
Ralph
Lascelles
~1290
Maud
Constable
~1245
Ralph
Lascelles
~1250
Joan
Burdett
~1220
John
Burdett
~1262
Sir
John
Lascelles
~1268
Ann
Skipwith
~1242
William
Skipwith
~1209
Richard
Lascelles
~1204
Picot
Lascelles
~1176
Roger
Lascelles
~1152
Picotus
Lascelles
~1126
Geoffrey
Lascelles
~1396 - 1460
James
Pickering
64
64
~1400
Mary
Lowther
~1368
Robert
Lowther
~1370
Margaret
de
Strickland
~1330 - 1419
William
de
Strickland
89
89
1300
Thomas
de
Strickland
~1260 - 1343
William
de
Strickland
83
83
~1270
Maude
de
Washington
~1242 - 1305
William
de
Strickland
63
63
~1240 - 1272
Elizabeth
Deincourt
32
32
~1210 - 1251
Ralph
II
Deincourt
41
41
~1215
Alice
de
Thursby
~1185
William
de
Thursby
~1180 - 1228
Ralph
Deincourt
48
48
~1185
Eleanor
le
Fleming
~1155 - 1210
Anselm
le
Fleming
55
55
~1160
Agnes
de
Dunbar
~1120
Edgar
de
Dunbar
~1135
Alice
De
Greystoke
~1124 - 1186
Michael
II le
Fleming
62
62
~1128
Christina
de
Stainton
~1059
William
le
Fleming
~0890
Duncan
of Dull
~1215 - 1278
Robert II de
Vaux-
Strickland
63
63
~1185
Robert de
Vaux-
Strickland
~1190
Beatrice
de
Cotesford
~1160
Walter de
Vaux-
Strickland
~1160
Christina
de
Leham
~1135
Adam
de
Vaux
~1110
Eustace
de
Vaux
~1100
Miss
de
Gisland
~1070
Bueth
of
Gilsland
~1040
Giles
of
Gilsland
~1010
Bueth
of
Gilsland
~1087 - ~1115
Hubert
de
Vaux
28
28
~1090
Grecia
~1345
Robert
Lowther
~1072
Miss
de
Munchensey
~1035
Hubert
de
Munchensey
~1035
Robert
de
Vaux
~1345
Margaret
Kendall
~1340
Hugh
Lowther
~1345
Margaret
Quale
~1320
William
Quale
~1313
Hugh
Lowther
~1318
Matilda
de
Tilliol
~1300
Peter
de
Tilliol
~1300
Isabella
~1280
Robert
de
Tilliol
~1260
Jeoffrey
de
Tilliol
~1280
Hugh
Lowther
~1241
Hugh
Lowther
~1255
Margaret
De
Lucy
~1220
John
De
Lucy
~1215
Miss
Ross
~1180
Thomas
Lowther
~1160
William
Lowther
~1160
Miss
Viponte
1374
John
Pickering
~1384
Ellen
Harington
~1355
Richard
Harington
~1364
Elizabeth
Bradshaw
~1315
Robert
de
Urswick
~1320
Ellen
Radcliffe
~1290
Richard
Radcliffe
~1285
Adam
de
Urswick
~1290
Sarah
Tilliard
~1260
Robert
Tilliard
~1255
Adam
de
Urswick
~1230
Adam
de
Urswick
~1200
John
de
Urswick
~1170
Adam
de
Urswick
~1130
Gamel
de
Urswick
~1090
Gilbert
de
Urswick
<1066
Bernulph
de
Urswick
1318
Margaret
le
Brun
~1300 - >1342
Richard
le
Brun
42
42
1284 - 1339
Robert
le
Brun
55
55
1288 - >1312
Margaret
24
24
1256 - 1313
Richard
le
Brun
57
57
~1230 - >1260
Richard
le
Brun
30
30
~1295
William
English
~1300
Isabel
de
Warthecop
~1270 - 1344
Thomas
de
Warthecop
74
74
~1240 - 1324
Henry
de
Warthecop
84
84
~1245
Gundreda
de
Helbeck
~1215
Thomas
de
Helbeck
~1265
William
English
1271
Iseud
~1235
Adam
I'Engleys
~1210 - 1240
William
I'Engleys
30
30
~1180
Richard
I'Engleys
1206
Thomas
de
Haverington
1181
Robert
de
Haverington
1186
Christine
de
Workington
~1445 - 1498
William
Mallory
53
53
~1450
Joan
Constable
~1420 - 1473
Sir
John
Constable
53
53
~1384
Sir
John
Constable
~1390 - 1444
Margaret
D'Umfreville
54
54
~1400
William
Lodington
~1360 - ~1390
Thomas
D'Umfreville
30
30
~1365 - 1420
Agnes
De
Grey
55
55
~1335
Sir
Thomas
De Grey
~1325 - 1387
Thomas
D'Umfreville
62
62
~1335
Joan
Rodham
~1305
Adam
De
Rodham
~1290 - 1325
Robert
D'Umfreville
35
35
~1305
Alianor
~1255 - 1296
Gilbert
D'Umfreville
41
41
~1255 - 17 FEB 1327/28
Elizabeth
Agnes
Comyn
~1379
William
Tempest
~1395
Alianora
Washington
~1365
William
Washington
~1370 - 2 JAN 1450/51
Margaret
Morvil
1286
Richard
Tempest
~1336 - 1421
Isabel
De
Bourne
85
85
1310
Sir
Thomas
De Bourne
~1087
Archil
Tempest
~1118 - 1181
Roger
Tempest
63
63
~1235
Thomas
De
Hertford
~1372
Mary
De
Clitheroe
~1366
Sir
John
Tempest
~1346
Hugh
De
Clitheroe
~1310
John
De
Gras
~1320
Pauline
~1315
Robert
De
Clitheroe
~1320
Sibell
~1280
Adam
De
Clitheroe
~1240
John
De
Clitheroe
~1265
Joan
De
Hertford
~1062
Urchil
Tempest
~1417 - 7 JAN 1464/65
Margaret
Norton
~1318
Richard
Lascelles
~1196
Richard
Burdett
~1198
Maud
De
Somery
~1171
William
Burdett
~1174
Alice
Bassett
~1140
Fulco
Bassett
~1292
John
Lascelles
~1294
Geoffrey
Lascelles
~1296
Helen
Lascelles
~1243 - 1294
Simon
Constable
51
51
~1242 - 1294
Katherine
Cumberworth
52
52
~1210
Sir
Robert
Cumberworth
~1152
Fulco
D'Oyli
~1069
Richard
FitzNigell
De Lacy
~1075
Sir Ulbert
FitzNigell
De Lacy
~1080
Ernaburga
Burton
~1322
Elizabeth
Lascelles
~1324
Joan
Lascelles
~1268
John
de
Radclyffe
~1278
Richard
de
Radclyffe
~1281
Margery
de
Radclyffe
~1280
Johanna
de
Holand
~1301
Richard
Radcliffe
~1292
Thurston
de
Holand
~1301
Mary
Collyer
~1325
Richard
Holand
~1327
William
Holand
~1329
Mary
Holand
~1275
John
Collyer
~1310
Adam
de
Banastre
~1247
Adam
de
Holand
~1249
Richard
de
Holand
~1251
Roger
de
Holand
~1253
William
de
Holand
~1256 - >1324
Margaret
de
Holand
68
68
~1255
Sir John
De
Blackburn
~1271
Alicia
De
Blackburn
~1273
Agnes
De
Blackburn
~1275
Joan
De
Blackburn
~1330 - 1361
Sir
Richard
Sherborne
31
31
~1345
Richard
De
Bayley
~1430
Hugh
Sherborne
~1539 - 1567
John
Wheeler
28
28
1541 - >1567
Alice
Sayre
26
26
1504 - 1564
William
Sayre
60
60
~1505 - 1567
Alice
Squire
62
62
~1567 - 1643
Thomas
Wheeler
76
76
1563 - 22 JAN 1643/44
John
Wheeler
Elizabeth
1609
Obadiah
Wheeler
1607 - 24 MAR 1647/48
Susanna
Wheeler
~1637
Josiah
Wheeler
27 JAN 1640/41 - 21 MAR 1720/21
John
Wheeler
1642
Ruth
Wheeler
1643
Thomas
Wheeler
22 FEB 1644/45
Samuel
Wheeler
17 MAR 1646/47
Susanna
Wheeler
1648 - 1715
Obadiah
Wheeler
67
67
~1572
Dorothy
Holloway
23 MAR 1605/06 - 1687
George
Wheeler
George came to Concord, Massachusetts about the year 1638 with his wife Katherine and several children. George Wheeler and Katherine Pin were among the early settlers of Concord. They both lived out their life at Concord. Thomas Wheeler, The son of Thomas Wheeler and Rebecca, was one of the early settlers of Fairfield moving there from Concord. The Wheeler Family in America by A. G. Wheeler, The Wheeler Genealogy by R. D. Wheeler and The Wheeler Family by M. Molyneaux have well research history of the children of Thomas and Rebecca and none list a son named George. The three Thomas Wheelers of Cranfield as well as the multiple Thomas' of New England have made this a real difficult problem. I am inclined to believe the Wheeler Genealogy is correct. " ++++++++++++++++++ Steve Wheeler wrote 4/2/98 "I wish I could, but I do not have information about the parents of George Wheeler of Concord. Here is what Florence Wheeler (librarian in Leominster, Mass, 1902-1950, and former Wheeler genealogist) had to say on this subject, abt 1950: "Owing to the confusion in the numerous Wheeler families in Concord, Mass and the duplication of names in Cranfield, England, George Wheeler's back- ground is uncertain . In the July, 1937 issue of the American Genealogist, an article by Mrs. William Anderson, with comments by Donald Lines Jacobus refutes previous suppositions. Here, they quote the will of Thomas Wheeler, the Elder, of Cranfield, in which this George is not mentioned, and on that ground he is no longer assigned to this family. Aside from this one item, the information given by Mr. Homer W. Brainard previously (July, 1935, American Genealogist) is accepted." My e-mail was directed solely at the parentage of George of Concord (d. 1687), which was listed in a previous e-mail as Thomas. I believe this was accepted until this 1937 article was researched and published. This information supersedes both Brainard and Albert Gallatin Wheeler's works." Steve Wheeler <73527.630@@compuserve.com>
16 MAR 1618/19 - 1670
Ephraim
Wheeler
1620 - 1708
Ann
Turney
88
88
~1594
Robert
Turney
1642 - 1712
Isaac
Wheeler
69
69
1646
Martha
Parke
1670
Martha
Wheeler
1673
Isaac
Wheeler
1681
William
Wheeler
1652 - 1735
Elizabeth
White
83
83
1615
Resolved
White
1619
Judith
Vassall
1673 - 1718
Obadiah
Wheeler
45
45
1675
Josiah
Wheeler
1678
Uriah
Wheeler
1680
Samuel
Wheeler
1683
Jonathan
Wheeler
7 FEB 1684/85
Elizabeth
Wheeler
7 MAR 1689/90
Joseph
Wheeler
1693
Benjamin
Wheeler
1696
Joshua
Wheeler
~1609 - 2 JAN 1684/85
Katherine
Pinn
1633 - 1687
Thomas
Wheeler
54
54
30 JAN 1629/30 - 1683
William
Wheeler
3 JAN 1635/36 - 1704
Elizabeth
Wheeler
30 JAN 1639/40 - 1713
Sarah
Wheeler
23 FEB 1641/42 - 1713
Ruth
Wheeler
19 JAN 1642/43 - 1713
John
Wheeler
1645 - 1678
Mary
Wheeler
33
33
~1654 - 1697
Hannah
Wheeler
43
43
1652 - 1697
Samuel
Fletcher
45
45
1674 - 1752
Hannah
Fletcher
77
77
12 JAN 1646/47
Sarah
Larkin
1678
Esther
Wheeler
1682
Thankful
Wheeler
1645
Samuel
Hartwell
1666
Samuel
Hartwell
~1640
Francis
Dudley
1666
Samuel
Dudley
1636
Francis
Fletcher
1657
Samuel
Fletcher
1661
Joseph
Fletcher
1663
Elizabeth
Fletcher
28 FEB 1664/65
John
Fletcher
24 FEB 1667/68
Sarah
Fletcher
1672
Hezekiah
Fletcher
~1640
Eliphalet
Fox
18 FEB 1640/41 - MAR 1693/94
Hannah
Buss
~1670 - 1737
George
Wheeler
67
67
1668 - 1717
Abigail
Hosmer
49
49
1704 - 1772
Peter
Wheeler
67
67
17 JAN 1730/31 - 1792
Peter
Wheeler
1730 - 1802
Mehitabel
Jewett
71
71
1766 - 1829
Joseph
Wheeler
62
62
1770
Naomi
Grover
1622
William
Fletcher
1622
Lydia
Fairbanks
1703
Hannah
Wheeler
1707
Phineas
Wheeler
8 MAR 1708/09 - 1783
Josiah
Wheeler
1710
Peregrine
Wheeler
1719 - 1804
Anna
Grosvenor
84
84
1676
Leicester
Grosvenor
FEB 1687/88
Mary
Hubbard
1669
Ruth
Hartwell
1671
William
Hartwell
1673
John
Hartwell
1675
Hannah
Hartwell
1677
Elizabeth
Hartwell
16 FEB 1677/78
Mary
Hartwell
1679
Sarah
Hartwell
1681
Abigail
Hartwell
14 FEB 1682/83
Rebecca
Hartwell
1684
Jane
Hartwell
1686
Jonathan
Hartwell
1691
Joseph
Hartwell
1625 - 1670
Hannah
Harwood
45
45
1658
Hannah
Wheeler
1659
Dorcas
Wheeler
~1655
Robert
Blood
1 JAN 1658/59
Thomas
Wheeler
1661 - 1721
John
Wheeler
60
60
1666
Elizabeth
Wells
1686
Josiah
Wheeler
1689
Rachel
Wheeler
14 JAN 1690/91
Dorcas
Wheeler
1695
John
Wheeler
1698
Martha
Wheeler
1700
Joseph
Wheeler
1702
Ephraim
Wheeler
1704
Daniel
Wheeler
1600
John
Harwood
1599
Dorothy
~1607
Mary
Studd
1583
William
Pinn
29 FEB 1751/52
Mehitable
Wheeler
1753
Peter
Wheeler
1755 - 1833
Samuel
Wheeler
78
78
1758
Esther
Wheeler
1760
Hannah
Wheeler
1763
Benjamin
Wheeler
1768
Jonathan
Wheeler
1774
Nathan
Wheeler
~1704
Hannah
Colburn
~1755
Anna
Todd
1783 - ~1865
Thomas
Wheeler
82
82
~1785
Samuel
Wheeler
~1680
Joseph
Andrews
1790
Peter
Wheeler
1793
Anna
Wheeler
1798
Lucy
Wheeler
1787
Sally
Blodgett
1806
Thomas
Wheeler
~1785
Lydia
Austin
1803
Margaret
Wheeler
1804
Hope
Austin
Wheeler
1806
Joseph
Wheeler
1809
Judith
Austin
Wheeler
1812
Samuel
Wheeler
~1814
Anna
Wheeler
~1790
Sally
Seavey
1818
Nathan
Wheeler
1820
James
Monroe
Wheeler
1823
Albion
Paris
Wheeler
1825
George
Washington
Wheeler
~1751
Elias
Colborn
~1753
Betsey
1728
Love
Wheeler
1733
Hannah
Wheeler
1735
Abigail
Wheeler
1739
Benjamin
Wheeler
1744
Lucy
Wheeler
1745
Alice
Wheeler
1748
Ebenezer
Wheeler
1750
Lebbens
Wheeler
1756
Jemima
Wheeler
16 JAN 1695/96
Tabitha
Wheeler
6 FEB 1696/97
Abigail
Wheeler
1700
Jemima
Wheeler
1702
James
Wheeler
1707
Daniel
Wheeler
~1709
Simon
Wheeler
~1702
Mary
Minott
1725
Mary
Wheeler
10 MAR 1726/27
Keziah
Wheeler
11 MAR 1728/29
Lydia
Wheeler
1731
James
Wheeler
23 MAR 1733/34
Elizabeth
Wheeler
1735
Daniel
Wheeler
1738
Azubah
Wheeler
1742
Thaddeus
Wheeler
~1674
Abigail
Smith
1660 - 1673
Hannah
Wheeler
12
12
25 FEB 1660/61 - 1739
Rebecca
Wheeler
2 JAN 1662/63
Elizabeth
Wheeler
8 FEB 1664/65 - 1752
William
Wheeler
1668 - 1706
John
Wheeler
37
37
1672 - 1689
Richard
Wheeler
16
16
~1656
Nicolas
Shevally
26 JAN 1698/99
Joseph
Shevally
~1662
James
Burley
27 FEB 1692/93
William
Burley
1695
Joseph
Burley
1697
Thomas
Burley
1699
James
Burley
1701
Josiah
Burley
1703
Giles
Burley
22 FEB 1668/69
Sarah
Fletcher
9 JAN 1693/94
William
Wheeler
2 FEB 1695/96
Joseph
Wheeler
8 FEB 1697/98
Francis
Wheeler
1700
Hezekiah
Wheeler
1702
Nathaniel
Wheeler
1704
Elizabeth
Wheeler
8 MAR 1706/07
Sarah
Wheeler
1709
Jeremiah
Wheeler
1670 - 1706
Elizabeth
Perkins
36
36
~1690
William
Wheeler
~1692
Richard
Wheeler
~1694
Joseph
Wheeler
~1615
William
Buss
~1615
Ann
1604 - 1687
Capt.
Timothy
Wheeler
82
82
1608 - >1627
John
Wheeler
19
19
18 FEB 1609/10 - >1678
Joseph
Wheeler
17 JAN 1612/13 - 1637
Abiah
Wheeler
1614 - 9 FEB 1675/76
Richard
Wheeler
1615 - 1616
Mary
Wheeler
1
1
27 FEB 1610/11
Elizabeth
Wheeler
~1604
Jane
~1604
Susan
Knight
1636
Mary
Brooks
~1657
Mary
Wheeler
~1660
Rebecca
Wheeler
~1665
Elizabeth
Wheeler
1666
Elizabeth
Wells
~1608
Alice
Morton
~1634
John
Wheeler
~1609
Elizabeth
1602
Sarah
Goldstone
~1614
Elizabeth
Turner
4 FEB 1644/45
Sarah
Wheeler
1646
Mary
Wheeler
1648
John
Wheeler
4 JAN 1650/51
Samuel
Wheeler
1653
Hannah
Wheeler
5 FEB 1655/56
Joseph
Wheeler
1637
Sarah
Prescott
2 JAN 1664/65
Zebediah
Wheeler
1659
Abraham
Wheeler
1661
Isaac
Wheeler
1663
Jacob
Wheeler
1 FEB 1666/67
Sarah
Wheeler
1669
Elizabeth
Wheeler
1671
Samuel
Wheeler
1644
Mary
Wheeler
1646
Hannah
Wheeler
1648
Rebecca
Wheeler
1648
Ruth
Wheeler
1652
Judith
Wheeler
1656
Ephraim
Wheeler
1660
Timothy
Wheeler
1661
Abigail
Wheeler
1662
Samuel
Wheeler
~1571 - ~1630
Jane
Mitchell
59
59
14 MAR 1626/27
John
Wheeler
~1580
Elizabeth
Claye
~1395
Joan
~1390
John
Robyn
~1439
John
Wheler
~1442
Richard
Wheler
~1806
Carlos
Wheeler
1814 - 1906
Sarah
Pratt
91
91
1482
Henry
Wheeler
~1469
Joan
~1491 - <1555
Thomas
Wheeler
64
64
19 JAN 1743/44 - 1826
Mary
Peters
~1495
William
Wheeler
~1500
Alice
Wheeler
1503
Henry
Wheeler
~1505
John
Wheeler
~1507
Richard
Wheeler
~1491
Ellen
1534
Joan
Wheeler
1505
Alice
Sugar
1520
Obadiah
Wheeler
~1503
Isabel
Allen
Amos
Willard
Wheeler
Eliza
Wheeler
Frank
Ransted
1837
Marcus
Pratt
Wheeler
1842
Sarah
Anne
Wheeler
1846
Edward
Gilman
Wheeler
1850 - 1919
Ella
Wheeler
68
68
Wilcox, Ella Wheeler (b. Johnstown Center, Wis., Nov. 5, 1850--d. Oct. 30, 1919), poet, novelist. Mrs. Wilcox, whose work is rife with platitudes and sentimentality, was in her day an extremely "marketable" poetess. Lloyd Morris gave the most effective description of her in Postscript to Yesterday (1947): "A stately figure, Mrs. Wilcox was softly enveloped by plumes, chiffons, and Oriental metaphysics. Her life was blameless, but her imagination simmered. Over the land millions of women throbbed to her verses." She wrote a sentimental novel when she was ten, her first essay was published when she was fourteen, and her first poem not long after. She tried college for a while, but didn't like it and turned to newspaper work. When her Poems of Passion (1876) appeared, the work became famous overnight, because of its "daring" quality, and her reputation was made. Mrs. Wilcox published more than forty volumes from Drops of Water (1872) to The Worlds and I (1918). Most of these were verse, some were fiction, two were autobiographical. The most famous of her poems is Solitude, which begins: "Laugh and the world laughs with you,/ Weep and you weep alone." Herzberg, Max J. (ed.) The Reader's encyclopedia of American literature. New York: Crowell, 1962. p. 1229 and 314 For more biographical information and the poetry of Ella Wheeler Wilcox see: http://www.ellawheelerwilcox.org/
D. 1907
Lois
Couillard
1874
Francis
Marcus
Wheeler
1877
Leslie
Couillard
Wheeler
Dr.
Elnathan
Bond
Ella
Wheeler
Bond
Rollin
Bond
Delphia
Charlena
Hill
Archie
E.
Wheeler
~1848 - 1916
Robert
Marcus
Wilcox
68
68
1887 - 1887
Robert
Wilcox
~1819
Lyman
Wilcox
~1825 - 1855
Maria
Bulkeley
30
30
1659 - 1741
Nathan
Wheeler
82
82
1653
John
Wheeler
2 FEB 1655/56 - 1742
Abigail
Wheeler
6 JAN 1656/57
Jonathan
Wheeler
~1652 - 1732
Sarah
Wheeler
80
80
1662
Lydia
Wheeler
1664 - 1725
Jethro
Wheeler
61
61
1666
William
Wheeler
~1668
Benjamin
Wheeler
1669
Joseph
Wheeler
1667
Rebecca
Safford
1694
Rebecca
Wheeler
1698
Abigail
Wheeler
1701
Nathan
Wheeler
1692
Sarah
Wheeler
1696
Mercy
Wheeler
~1698
Elizabeth
Wheeler
~1701
Margaret
Wheeler
1707
David
Wheeler
~1650
Samuel
Hills
9 FEB 1681/82
Nathaniel
Hills
1686
Abigail
Hills
1688
Henry
Hills
1689
William
Hills
1691
Josiah
Hills
1695
Abigail
Hills
1700
Daniel
Hills
1706
Smith
Hills
Mary
1686
Jonathan
Wheeler
9 FEB 1692/93
Mary
Wheeler
1698
Mehitable
Wheeler
~1700
Ebenezer
Wheeler
1648 - 1696
John
Spofford
47
47
1678
Capt.
John
Spofford
9 MAR 1679/80
Mary
Spofford
1681
David
Spofford
1684
Jonathan
Spofford
1686
Martha
Spofford
1690
Ebenezer
Spofford
1691
Nathaniel
Spofford
1693
Sarah
Spofford
~1655
Caleb
Hopkinson
~1702
Caleb
Hopkinson
1666 - >1719
Hannah
French
53
53
1691
Hannah
Wheeler
1692
Jethro
Wheeler
1695
Benjamin
Wheeler
1697
Hannah
Wheeler
12 MAR 1698/99 - 1789
Moses
Wheeler
1700
Samuel
Wheeler
1702 - 1782
Abijah
Wheeler
79
79
1710
John
Wheeler
~1695
Sarah
Haraden
1717
Jethro
Wheeler
1721
Sarah
Wheeler
~1722
Moses
Wheeler
~1724
Haraden
Wheeler
~1705
Jane
Plummer
1730
Moses
Wheeler
1735
Jonathan
Wheeler
1737
Jane
Wheeler
1740
Rufus
Wheeler
14 FEB 1742/43
Hepsibah
Wheeler
3 JAN 1746/47
Samuel
Wheeler
1751
Mary
Wheeler
~1708 - 1782
Elizabeth
Andrews
74
74
1731 - 1731
Abijah
Wheeler
1729
Elizabeth
Wheeler
1733 - 1735
Abijah
Wheeler
2
2
1735 - 1735
Moses
Wheeler
1736
Moses
Wheeler
1736
Stephen
Wheeler
1738
Lucy
Wheeler
1740
Abijah
Wheeler
1741
Samuel
Wheeler
1744
Hannah
Wheeler
1747
Susanna
Wheeler
~1742
Sarah
Allen
1762 - 1836
Amos
Wheeler
73
73
~1787
Amos
Wheeler
1722
Francis
Haskill
1747
Francis
Haskill
1748
Elizabeth
Haskill
1750
Jemima
Haskill
28 FEB 1751/52
Francis
Haskill
1754
Abijah
Wheeler
Haskill
1755
Jonathan
Haskill
~1757
Jonathan
Haskill
~1759
Solomon
Haskill
1761
Hannah
Haskill
1761
Lucy
Haskill
~1764
Susan
Haskill
1767
Tristram
Haskill
~1769
Elsie
Wheeler
Haskill
~1771
Abigail
Haskill
~1735
Samuel
Proctor
~1745
Richard
Goss
1765
Mary
Molly
Hosford
1769
Sarah
Hosford
1771
Lydia
Hosford
1773
Joseph
Hosford
1776
Susannah
Hosford
1778
Phoebe
Hosford
1780
Herman
Hosford
1782
Loton
Hosford
1784
Phoebe
Hosford
1786
Lucinda
Hosford
~1790
Tencey
Hosford
1717 - 1804
John
Peters
86
86
1723 - 1784
Lydia
Phelps
60
60
16 MAR 1690/91 - 1761
Joseph
Phelps
1699 - 1778
Susannah
Eno
79
79
1651 - 1714
James
Eno
62
62
1661 - 1728
Abigail
Bissell
66
66
1633 - 1697
Samuel
Bissell
64
64
6 JAN 1637/38 - 1688
Abigail
Holcomb
1605 - 1657
Thomas
Holcomb
52
52
1615 - 1679
Elizabeth
Ferguson
64
64
1565 - 1634
Gilbert
Holcombe
69
69
1568 - <1642
Anne
Courtenay
74
74
~1340 - 1406
Philip
de
Courtenay
66
66
~1332 - 2 FEB 1367/68
Edward
de
Courtenay
1326
Margaret
de
Courtenay
22 MAR 1326/27
Hugh
de
Courtenay
~1335
Catherine
de
Courtenay
~1339
Matilda
de
Courtenay
~1344 - 1390
Anne
Wake
46
46
~1240
Joan
De
Wolverton
~1280 - 15 MAR 1346/47
Thomas
Wake
~1295
Elizabeth
Cransley
~1319 - 1383
Thomas
Wake
64
64
~1384 - 1406
John
De
Courtenay
22
22
~1382 - 1419
Joan
Champernon
37
37
~1360
Joan
De
Ferrers
1404 - 1463
Philip
De
Courtenay
59
59
~1406 - 1476
Elizabeth
Hungerford
70
70
1378 - 1449
Walter
Hungerford
71
71
1382 - 1426
Katherine
Peverell
44
44
~1340 - <1422
Thomas
Peverell
82
82
~1352 - 1422
Margaret
De
Courtenay
70
70
~1300
Hugh
Peverell
~1302
Elizabeth
Margaret
De Cobham
~1275
James
Peverell
~1280
Margaret
De
Cornwall
~1428 - 1485
William
De
Courtenay
57
57
~1419 - <1487
Margaret
Bonville
68
68
1393 - 18 FEB 1460/61
William
Bonville
~1453 - 1 MAR 1508/09
Edward
De
Courtenay
~1473 - 1533
Alice
Wooton
60
60
~1495 - 1555
Edward
De
Courtenay
60
60
1505 - 1576
Margaret
Trethurfe
71
71
1536 - 1606
Peter
Courtenay
70
70
1546 - 1576
Katherine
Reskymer
30
30
1540 - 1579
Thomas
Holcombe
39
39
~1480
Reynold
Trethurfe
~1480
Margaret
Nauskill
~1451 - 1510
John
Trethurffe
59
59
~1447
Elizabeth
De
Courtenay
~1330 - 28 FEB 1370/71
Emmeline
Dauney
~1348 - 15 MAR 1424/25
Hugh
De
Courtenay
1422
Margaret
Carminowe
1477 - 1529
Thomas
Trethurfe
52
52
~1482
Jane
Trethurfe
Mary
Trevisa
~1501
Elizabeth
Trethurfe
~1505
Margaret
Trethurfe
1521
William
Reskymer
1526 - 24 JAN 1563/64
Alice
Densell
1459
John
Reskymer
~1465
Katherine
Trethurffe
1437 - 11 FEB 1470/71
William
Reskymer
~1144 - 1207
Simon
d'
Aubigny
63
63
1165 - 1243
Richard
d'
Aubigny
78
78
~1703 - 1762
Moses
Hale
59
59
22 JAN 1728/29
Nathan
Hale
~1705 - 1780
Elizabeth
Wheeler
75
75
1427
Elizabeth
Arundel
~1406 - 1477
Elizabeth
Paulet
71
71
28 FEB 1730/31
Moses
Hale
1733
Enoch
Hale
1736
Elizabeth
Hale
1739
Eunice
Hale
1741
Lucy
Hale
1743
Nathan
Hale
1665
Hannah
French
1622 - 1701
Mary
Cutting
79
79
~1615 - 1701
Nicholas
Noyes
86
86
1663
Mary
French
1660
John
French
~1726
Zacharias
Wheeler
1669
Sarah
French
1672
Edward
French
1673
Jane
French
1675
Abigail
French
1677
Nicholas
French
1679
James
French
1681
Timothy
French
1643
Hannah
Noyes
20 JAN 1644/45 - 1692
John
Noyes
1647
Nicholas
Noyes
1649
Cutting
Noyes
1651
Sarah
Noyes
1653
Sarah
Noyes
1655
Timothy
Noyes
1657
James
Noyes
1659
Abigail
Noyes
20 MAR 1660/61
Rachel
Noyes
1663
Thomas
Noyes
1665
Rebecca
Noyes
1586 - 1659
John
Cutting
73
73
1592 - 6 MAR 1632/33
Mary
Ward
1613
John
Cutting
~1620
Judith
Cutting
1628
Sarah
Cutting
~1632
Thomas
Cutting
~1570 - 9 JAN 1619/20
Edward
Ward
~1570
Judith
~1560
Francis
Cutting
1588
Edward
Cutting
1583
Thomas
Cutting
1585
Ann
Cutting
1589
Francis
Cutting
1591
Elizabeth
Cutting
1581
William
Cutting
1596
Ephraim
Noyes
1597
Nathan
Noyes
1610
Anne
Noyes
~1611
Nathan
Noyes
1612
John
Noyes
1613
Mowit
Noyes
1617
Anne
Noyes
1623
Anne
Noyes
1555
Mary
Edythe
Burge
~1585
Thomas
Parker
1569
Robert
Parker
1572
Richard
Parker
~1574
Robert
Parker
1583
Sarah
Parker
1565
Richard
Noyes
1570
Robert
Noyes
1678
James
Noyes
1679
Thomas
Noyes
1681
Parker
Noyes
28 FEB 1682/83
Elizabeth
Noyes
1686
Stephen
Noyes
29 JAN 1690/91
Moses
Noyes
~1650 - 1674
Martha
Pierce
24
24
1670
Sarah
Noyes
24 FEB 1671/72
Martha
Noyes
1674
Daniel
Noyes
1671
Nicholas
Noyes
1673
Daniel
Noyes
1675
Mary
Noyes
19 FEB 1676/77
John
Noyes
1679
Hannah
Noyes
1680
Martha
Noyes
1681
Nathaniel
Noyes
1684
Elisabeth
Noyes
1688
Moses
Noyes
5 FEB 1690/91
Samuel
Noyes
~1627
Samuel
French
~1638 - 1700
Hannah
French
62
62
23 FEB 1642/43 - 1692
Samuel
French
~1645
Abigail
Brown
~1635
John
White
1616
Benjamin
Wise
1618
Joseph
Wise
1620
Edmund
Wise
1621
Abigail
Wise
1624
Ann
Wise
1627
Benjamin
Wise
1629
Joseph
Wise
1630
Alice
Wise
1631
Em
Wise
1635
Anne
Wise
~1858
Emma
Goodale
~1504
Roger
Sargent
~1860
Katherine
(Kate)
Goodale
~1862
Ella
Goodale
~1864
Elizabeth
(Lizzie)
Goodale
~1872
Webster
Goodale
~1879
Burt
Goodale
1788 - 1858
Cyrus
Brackett
69
69
1834
Myron
Howard
Brackett
1770
Abigail
Tilton
1790
Jerusha
Brackett
1793
Joseph
Brackett
1795
Samuel
Brackett
1798
Mary
Brackett
1800
Samuel
Brackett
1803
Reuben
Brackett
1804
Josiah
Brackett
1807
Nabby
Brackett
1810
Abigail
Lucretia
Brackett
1811
Charles
Whiting
Brackett
1815
Charles
Brackett
~1740
Capt.
John
Tilton
~1745
Mary
1744 - 1773
Jacob
Goodale
28
28
Hannah
Upton
1744
Mehitable
Goodale
Ezra
Upton
1744 - 1834
Hannah
Goodale
89
89
1747
Sarah
Goodale
David
Upton
1751 - 1796
William
Goodale
45
45
1754
Mary
Goodale
1756 - 1784
Asa
Goodale
28
28
1759
Elizabeth
Goodale
Jeremiah
Shelden
~1673 - 19 JAN 1723/24
Joseph
Chase
1677 - 1748
Sarah
Sherman
70
70
~1780
William
Pratt
~1790
Abigail
Connor
~1813
Annie
Pratt
~1816 - 1853
Elizabeth
Pratt
37
37
~1818
Abigail
Pratt
~1820
Edward
Pratt
~1822
Mary
Ann
Pratt
~1810
Joseph
Warren
Downs Parker
~1833
Warren
E.
Parker
~1835
Marion
Parker
~1815
Stebbins
Barker
~1835
Georgiana
Barker
~1825
Fidelia
Sessions
~1845
Arthur
Pratt
~1847
Edward
Pratt
Shuyler
Sessions
~1820
Strong
Sessions
~1842
Arthur
Sessions
~1845
Ada
Sessions
~1750
William
Pratt
~1750 - 1841
Elizabeth
Currier
91
91
~1775
Edward
Pratt
~1782
Hannah
Pratt
~1784
Betsy
Pratt
~1660
Prudence
Willis
Jane
Prestley
~1705
Elizabeth
Talbot
~1728
Jesse
Thornton
1709 - 1787
Anne
Meaux
77
77
1737
John
Thornton
~1731
Elizabeth
Thornton
~1733
Anne
Thornton
~1735
William
IV
Thornton
~1739
Meax
Thornton
~1741
Richard
Thornton
~1685 - 19 MAR 1725/26
John
Meaux
1711 - 1776
Richard
Meaux
65
65
Sources: 1. Title: Book-Genealogies of Virginia Families Vol 5 Author: Thompson and Yates Publication: From Wiliam & Mary College Quartery Historical Maginze Note: Published 1982. While this book was published in 1982; however, the articles on the Thornton family seemed to have been written around 1900 based on comments by the author Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 61
1713
John
Meaux
1714
Elizabeth
Meaux
~1630
Bartholemew
Meaux
~1635
Radcliffe
Gerard
~1660
Henry
Meaux
~1665
Anne
Brightwell
~1635
Thomas
Brightwell
~1640
Anne
Blagrave
~1689
Elizabeth
Lanley
1737
Thomas
Meaux
1585
Robert
Pryor
~1590
Elizabeth
1688
Philip
Pryor
1697
Christopher
Pryor
1701
Luke
Pryor
1703
Daniel
Pryor
1705
Richard
Pryor
1723 - 1780
Martha
Pryor
56
56
1721 - 1773
Thomas
Gardner
52
52
1742
Betty
Gardner
1744
William
Gardner
17 JAN 1745/46
Thomas
Gardner
1748
John
Gardner
1750
George
Gardner
1752
Christopher
Gardner
1754
Camp
Gardner
1759
Betty
Gardner
1762
Sterling
Gardner
1762
Mary
Gardner
1758
Pryor
Gardner
1756
Thomas
Gardner
Lorton
Lavinia
Akers
John
Akers
Jonathan
Akers
Priscilla
Akers
David
Akers
William
J.
Akers
Solomon
Akers
Rhoda
Akers
~1770
Hannah
Howard
Matilda
Akers
Clarissa
Akers
James
A.
Akers
Anne
Jefferies
Thomas
Akers
Burwell
Akers
Elizabeth
Akers
Joel
O.
Akers
James
Akers
Stephen
Grover
Akers
Luke
Akers
Fleming
Akers
~1764
William
Akers
~1786
Lydia
Elkins
Moses
Akers
Randolph
Akers
1770
Elizabeth
Thompson
Susan
Akers
Burton
Akers
Meredith
Thompson
Akers
Betsy
Akers
Simpson
Akers
Gideon
Akers
Larkin
Akers
Araminta
Akers
Julia
Ann
Akers
~1764
Elswick
Thompson
~1735
Archibald
Thompson
~1740
Mary
Elswick
Mary
Thompson
Elisha
Thompson
Claiborne
Thompson
Andrew
Thompson
William
Thompson
Archibald
Thompson
Joshua
Thompson
Lewis
Thompson
Blackburn
Thompson
Henry
Thompson
Harmon
Thompson
Elizabeth
Thompson
~1766 - <1815
Ruth
Howard
49
49
William
Akers
Elizabeth
Akers
Hannah
Akers
Susan
Akers
James
Akers
Howard
Akers
Samuel
Akers
Tolbert
Akers
~1795
Catherine
Rupe
Alsace
Lorraine
Akers
Martha
Akers
Lynch
Akers
Samuel
Akers
Sophia
Akers
Mary
Akers
Catherine
J.
Akers
~1760 - ~1847
Susannah
Skaggs
87
87
William
B.
Akers
Bird
Akers
Greenberry
Akers
Joseph
Akers
Elinor
Howard
Esther
Akers
Davidson
Akers
~1758 - ~1851
Francis
Charlton
93
93
John
W.
Charlton
~1780 - <1850
Adam
Akers
70
70
~1790
Nancy
Altizer
Sarah
Akers
Adam
Akers
Emery
B.
Akers
Russell
Elswick
Akers
Mary
Akers
Blackburn
C.
Akers
Andrew
Jackson
Akers
Susannah
Akers
George
B.
Akers
Robert
Akers
Michael
Akers
Stephen
Akers
Nancy
Akers
~1320
Nicholas
De
Stapleton
~1324 - <1360
Katherine
De
Stapleton
36
36
~1326
Avicia
De
Stapleton
~1327
John
De
Stapleton
~1378
Isabella
Stapleton
~1380
Elena
Stapleton
~1385
Margaretta
Stapleton
~1390
Johana
Stapleton
~1434 - 1498
Miles
Stapleton
64
64
~1435 - 1508
John
Stapleton
73
73
~1438
Thomas
Stapleton
~1440 - 1505
Christopher
Stapleton
65
65
~1442 - 1498
Brian
Stapleton
56
56
~1444
Elizabeth
Stapleton
~1446
Isabella
Stapleton
~1448 - ~1505
Katherine
Stapleton
57
57
~1450
Agnes
Stapleton
~1459 - ~1481
Henry
Stapleton
22
22
~1463 - ~1508
John
Stapleton
45
45
~1499
Margaret
Stapleton
~1470
John
Copley
~1463
Lancelot
Threlkeld
~1451
Ann
Threlkeld
~1459
Margaret
Threlkeld
~1467
James
Threlkeld
~1469
Elizabeth
Threlkeld
~1471
Christopher
Threlkeld
~1415
Elizabeth
Norton
~1460
Thomas
De
Clifford
1822
Virginia
Sophia
Anderson
~1829
Thomas
Anderson
~1831
Edmond
Anderson
~1833
John
Anderson
~1835
Horace
Franklin
Anderson
~1837
Monroe
Anderson
~1839
Mary
Frances
Anderson
~1841
Virginia
Anderson
~1843
Harradine
Anderson
~1845
Lucy
Ann
Anderson
~1847
Comelia
Anderson
~1785
Richard
Hope
~1790
Frances
Terrell
1767 - 1830
John
Anderson
63
63
1769 - 1832
Mary
Trevilian
62
62
1792
Thomas
Bates
Anderson
1793
Edmund
Monroe
Anderson
1797
Sophia
Trevilian
Anderson
1799
Eliza
Anderson
1802
Mary
Trevilian
Anderson
1805
John
Montgomery
Anderson
1808
Frances
Virginia
Anderson
1814
Horace
Franklin
Anderson
1814
Lucy
Ann
Anderson
10 FEB 1731/32 - 1794
Thomas
Anderson
1737
Frances
Jones
Harrod
~1763
Matthew
Anderson
~1770
Martha
Turner
~1745
Sophia
Terry
~1520
Watt
Pratt
~1395
Ellen
Kerry
1851 - 1926
Pierce
B.
Anderson
75
75
1852
Jane
Lewis
Read
~1733
Shipwright
Gainer
~1770
Alfred
Kennedy
1802
Elizabeth
Kennedy
~1570
Christopher
Frothingham
~1598
Edward
Frothingham
~1540
Christopher
Frothingham
~1510
Edward
Frothingham
~1515
Katherine
Egmanton
~1485
Christopher
Egmanton
~1480
Edmond
Frothingham
~1485
Elizabeth
Hutton
~1455
James
Hutton
~1450
Peter
Frothingham
~1455
Elizabeth
Thorpe
~1425
John
Thorpe
~1430
Ann
Wells
~1440
Elizabeth
DeLariver
~1420
Robert
Frothingham
~1425
Elizabeth
Hansard
1681
Elizabeth
Frothingham
1685
John
Deland
~1609 - 1668
Thomas
Hett
59
59
1613 - 1688
Ann
Needham
75
75
~1633
Eliphlet
Hett
~1635
Mehetable
Hett
~1637
Hannah
Hett
~1644
Thomas
Hett
MAR 1652/53
Israel
Hett
~1580
Thomas
Hett
~1585 - 1624
Ann
Searcye
39
39
~1611
Ann
Hett
~1613
Sarah
Hett
~1615
John
Hett
~1617
William
Hett
~1650
Ruth
George
15 FEB 1672/73
Elizabeth
Frothingham
28 JAN 1634/35 - 1716
Thomas
White
~1665
Thomas
White
1645
Mary
Lowden
1668
William
Frothingham
1671
Anna
Frothingham
19 FEB 1673/74
John
Frothingham
1679
Sarah
Frothingham
1682
Mary
Frothingham
22 MAR 1684/85
Martha
Frothingham
1684
Mary
Stimpson
1681
Mercy
Hunting
15 FEB 1639/40
Joseph
Kettell
3 FEB 1679/80
William
Kettell
William
Jordan
~1731
John
Morton
Jordan
Living
Keller
Sarah
bint
Yehoshua
~1840
Josephine
Neal
~1850
Fannie
Courts
1597
William
Caldwell
1599
Joseph
Caldwell
1601
David
Caldwell
~1558
Alexander
Caldwell
1580
Elizabeth
Wallace
~1530
Alexander
Caldwell
~1560
Oliver
Caldwell
~1562
John
Caldwell
~1535
Ann
1628 - 1698
William
Caldwell
70
70
~1630
Elizabeth
Huston
1625
Robert
Caldwell
1645 - 12 FEB 1715/16
John
Caldwell
~1650
Jane
Elizabeth
Caldwell
~1755
Dorcan
Clive
~1760
Elizabeth
Colvin
~1735
Mary
McClellan
1750 - 1824
Mary
Stephenson
74
74
1752
Elizabeth
'Betsy'
Stephenson
~1760
Mary
Littler
Griffith
Joseph
Cauldwell
Daniel
Cauldwell
John
Cauldwell
Andrew
Cauldwell
~1660
Jane
Jennet
McGhee
1805
Lockwood
Lobdell
P 185 Lobdell book, portion of a letter written by her son Henry Lockwood Lobdell to the author of the Lobdell book. "My mother, Fanny Krum was b. on a farm at Chatham, Four Corner, Columbia Co, NY. This farm of 100 acres was lost by her father's mismanagement, and the family of half-grown children went to face life in the wilds of Montgomery Co, NY...at Oppenheim, and there is where my parents met." Lockwood age 23 and Fanny 20 when married. "In the spring of 1829, they with my uncle, Abel Krum, moved to Ashtabula Co, Ohio. At first my parents settled in Wayne, where they bought 30 acres of land, moved into what had been a stable, and with not much but their hands began the struggle for a home and competence."
1832
John
M.
Lobdell
1834
Elvira
Lobdell
1840
Henry
Lockwood
Lobdell
1846
Dudley
Clarence
Lobdell
1825
C. L.
Bushnell
1862
Emory
L.
Bushnell
1871
Sarah
Miner
Lobdell
Charles
Robert
Ross
1866
Lee S.
Bushnell
1789 - 1843
Claas
Classen
Soorholz
53
53
1789 - 1832
Taalke Alberts
Jacobs
Roskam
43
43
1838 - 1847
Taalke
Kruger
9
9
1867 - 1898
Rev. Harm
Tammen
Kruger
31
31
1869 - 1941
Christian
Kruger
71
71
1872 - 1946
Henry
K.
Kruger
74
74
1879 - 1952
Reneltje
Pruisner
72
72
1877 - 1895
Naunia
Kruger
18
18
1879 - 1929
Klaas
Barney
Kruger
50
50
1881 - 1920
Gertie
Kruger
38
38
1885 - 1942
Barney
Kruger
57
57
1889 - 1971
Albert
John
Kruger
81
81
1862
Chris
Dilly
1870
Johanna
Dilly
1873
Louis
Dilly
1875 - 1925
Fred
Dilly
50
50
1877
Claus
Dilly
1879 - 1969
William
Dilly
90
90
1880 - 1962
Nona
Dilly
82
82
1882 - 1966
Lottie
Dilly
83
83
1884 - 1967
Henry
Dilly
82
82
1886 - 1937
Emma
Dilly
51
51
1907 - 1942
John
Dilly
34
34
Emma
Bowman
1885 - 1973
Nancy
Kruger
87
87
1888 - 1960
Dena
Kruger
71
71
1890 - 1961
Chris
Kruger
71
71
1892 - 1971
Herman
Kruger
78
78
1900 - 1990
Tena
Stahl
89
89
1894 - 1967
Claus
Kruger
73
73
~1899
Anna
Virt
~1880
Frank
Robertson
~1889
Emma
Kruger
~1891
Nona
Kruger
~1888
John
Lindsey
~1890
Ed
Rusche
~1893
Chris
Kruger
~1895
Klaus
Kruger
~1897
Henry
Kruger
~1900
Beth
Blair
~1899
Albert
Kruger
Bess
McCaully
~1900
William
Kruger
~1905
Maud
Blair
1876 - 1950
Mary
Ann
Berends
73
73
1878 - 1968
Nona
Caroline
Berends
90
90
1880 - 1968
Jacob
Henry
Berends
87
87
1882 - 1963
Lottie
Maud
Berends
80
80
1885 - 1950
Chris
Cleveland
Berends
65
65
1888
Tillie
Lenore
Berends
1892
Dena
Laverna
Berends
1898
Allie
Grace
Berends
~1870
Anna
Johanna
Kramer
1894 - 1894
Son
Kruger
1d
1d
1895
Berendina
Naunia
Kruger
1884 - 1983
Anna
Stopplemore
98
98
1918
Jennie
Kruger
1909 - 1990
Marie
Kruger
81
81
1904 - 1987
Klaas
Christian
Kruger
82
82
1912 - 1998
Berdene
Anona
Kruger
86
86
1912 - 1968
Leona
Kruger
56
56
Edward
Decknadel
~1906
Gertie
Kruger
~1908
Christ
Kruger
~1916
Anona
Kruger
~1914
Ruth
Kruger
1907 - 1988
Harm
Kruger
81
81
~1875
Amos
Pabst
1895 - 1895
Naunia
Pabst
1m
1m
1882 - 1964
Hauke
Pruisner
81
81
~1850
John
Pruisner
~1855
Brechtje
Antons
1903 - 1985
Klaas
Christian
Kruger
81
81
1905 - 1905
Infant
Kruger
~1907
Bessie
Kruger
~1902
Howard
Starn
1909 - 1969
Berendia
Kruger
59
59
~1911
Gertie
Kruger
~1905
Raymond
Kuelper
~1913
Harm
Kruger
~1915
Hattie
Kruger
~1917
Henry
Kruger
~1875
Joseph
Itzen
~1903
Fannie
Itzen
~1900
Jake
Stickfort
~1905
Claus
Itzen
~1907
Berdene
Itzen
~1903
John
Fink
~1909
John
Itzen
1911 - 1981
Hermene
Itzen
69
69
1913
Margaret
Itzen
1914 - 1983
Louise
Itzen
68
68
1887 - 1971
Ora
Meintz
83
83
1907 - 1988
Berendina
Berdene
Kruger
81
81
1909 - 2000
John
Paul
Kruger
90
90
1911 - 2003
Claradean
Kruger
91
91
1913 - 1993
Klaas
Christian
Kruger
79
79
1916 - 1985
Onieta
Kruger
68
68
1919
Bernard
H.
Kruger
~1921
Neona
Kruger
1922 - 1922
Infant
Kruger
1892 - 1959
Talena
Anna
Wolthoff
67
67
~1860
Ontje
Wolthoff
~1865
Margaraetha
Koch
1913 - 1958
Klaus
Vernon
Kruger
44
44
1920
Anona
Margaret
Kruger
1922
Orlen
Albert
Kruger
1929 - 2000
Berdene
Leona
Kruger
71
71
Living
Kruger
~1865
Lena
Vietmere
1896
Ed
Dilly
ED DILLY: Fact 1: A Railroad man Fact 2: Retired in Aberdeen SD
1903
Ralph
Dilly
~1865
Elmer
Stablefeldt
~1895
Mary
Stablefeldt
~1897
Nona
Stablefeldt
~1899
Elmer
Stablefeldt
~1880
Bernadine
DeVries
~1902
Arnold
Dilly
~1904
Charlotte
Dilly
~1906
Clara
Dilly
~1908
George
Dilly
~1910
Mary
Dilly
~1912
Laura
Dilly
~1914
Fred
Dilly
~1916
Lawrence
Dilly
~1880
Cora
Robertson
~1914
Roy
Dilly
~1916
Merle
Dilly
1918
Hazel
Dilly
~1880
Maude
Van
Horssen
1901 - 1979
Lawrence
Dilly
78
78
~1903 - 1965
Queenie
Dilly
62
62
~1905
Forrest
Dilly
~1875
Milton
Wolfle
1900
Arthur
Wolfle
~1905
Lillian
Milton
1902 - 1966
Clarence
Wolfle
64
64
1905
Leona
Wolfle
1909
Glen
Wolfle
1905
Lucille
Robertson
1906
Vera
Robertson
1908
Bernice
Robertson
~1885
Nett
Ely
1905
LaVilla
Dilly
1907
Vernon
Dilly
~1909
Walter
Dilly
~1911
Lester
Dilly
~1913
Doris
Dilly
~1880
Ralph
Eggleston
~1902
Ralph
Eggleston
1892 - 1959
George
Rudolph
Bosma
67
67
1894
Clarence
M.
Bosma
1896 - 1922
Kathryn
Bernice
Bosma
25
25
1897 - 1952
Matilda
Ann
Bosma
55
55
1907 - 1908
Neona
Bosma
1
1
1894 - 1981
Ernest
H.
Hindt
86
86
1895 - 1911
Clarence
Hindt
15
15
1897 - 1965
George
C.
Hindt
68
68
1899
Matilda
Hindt
1903
Raymond
Hindt
1904
LeRoy
Hindt
1918
Ruth
M.
Smith
1921
Richard
Theodore
Smith
1925
Kathryn
Lucille
Smith
1911
Leroy
G.
Smith
1913
Howard
Smith
1916
Gertrude
Smith
~1910
George
Summa
1918
Matilda
Smith
1926
Glen
Smith
Living
Smith
1911
Earl
Francis
Smith
1914 - 1917
Glen
Robert
Smith
2
2
1916
Donald
Vernon
Smith
1918
Harriett
Lucille
Smith
1923
Bernice
Kathryn
Smith
1927
Robert
Eugene
Smith
~1870
Harm
Anderson
~1895
Freda
Anderson
~1897
Alice
Anderson
~1899
Harry
Anderson
~1901
Clarence
Anderson
1883 - 1977
Kathryn
Wagens
93
93
~1908
Harry
Boelkes
~1911
Zelma
Boelkes
~1914
Helen
Boelkes
1918 - 1973
Alfred
Boelkes
54
54
1884 - 1972
Alice
Bruning
88
88
~1903
Anna
Boelkes
~1905
Nona
Boelkes
~1907
Alva
Boelkes
~1909
Grace
Boelkes
~1911
Jennie
Boelkes
~1913
Alice
Boelkes
?
Purcell
?
Cheeseman
~1915
Frederick
Boelkes
~1917
Helen
Boelkes
~1880
Frank
Gershbaugh
~1906
Josephine
Gershbaugh
~1908
Albert
Gershbaugh
~1910
George
Gershbaugh
~1912
Harry
Gershbaugh
~1914
Frank
Gershbaugh
~1888
Louisa
Parker
~1916
Marie
Boelkes
~1917
Clara
Boelkes
~1919
Frederick
Boelkes
~1920
Henry
Boelkes
~1922
Chris
Boelkes
1924 - 1976
Lewis
Boelkes
52
52
1879 - 1964
George
Ennenga
85
85
~1907
John
Schwartz
Ennenga
1889
Theordore
Westerbur
1911
Freda
Westerbur
1913
Anna
Marie
Westerbur
1915
Theodore
Westerbur
1920
Melvin
Westerbur
~1895
Edna
Coddington
~1920
Claus
Kruger
~1922
Margaret
Kruger
~1924
Kathryn
Kruger
~1870
John
J.
Stahl
1902 - 1956
Fred
Stahl
54
54
1905 - 1980
John
Bernard
Stahl
75
75
1906
Jessie
Stahl
?
Larson
~1900
Alice
Larson
~1885
Minnie
Boerenson
~1906
Allie
Berends
~1908
Alvin
Berends
~1877
Hans
Skow
~1912
Ernest
Skow
~1888
Jennie
Noble
~1918
Pearl
Berends
~1920
Irmay
Berends
~1922
Lesley
Berends
1925 - 1977
Archie
Berends
52
52
?
Newkirk
~1910
Jessie
Dale
Newkirk
~1887
Elmer
Hakeman
~1919
Merle
Hakeman
~1893
William
Vetter
~1924
Marlyn
Vetter
~1926
Betty
Lou
Vetter
1915
Jake
Van
Hauen
Living
Van
Hauen
Living
Andersen
Living
Van
Hauen
~1900
Elmer
Eiklenborg
~1928
Cheryl
Eiklenborg
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Eiklenborg
~1905 - 1973
Louie
Pruin
68
68
Living
Pruin
Living
Pruin
~1910
Hermina
Kruger
Living
Kruger
1925 - 1992
Harlen
Knipfel
66
66
Living
Knipfel
Living
Knipfel
Living
Younker
1911 - 1983
Jerry
Bolhuis
72
72
~1880
Fred
Bolhuis
~1885
Dorothy
Boelman
Living
Bolhuis
Living
Rewerts
Living
Bolhuis
Living
Eunice
1938 - 1992
Chris
Clarence
Bolhuis
54
54
Living
Ann
Living
Bolhuis
1908 - 1939
Fern
Ramona
Wandling
30
30
FERN RAMONA WANDLING: Mrs. Klaas C. Kruger, mother of five small children, the oldest of whom is 7 years and the youngest 16 months, died at St. Thomas hospital in Marshalltown about six o'clock Tuesday morning. The day previous she had submitted to an operation for the removal of a tumor. The operation seemed to be wholly successful and the patient appeared to have rallied satisfactorily and there was every assurance that she would get well. Early Monday evening she began to show effects of the shock from the operation in iregular heart action that continued to get worse until the end came early the following morning. The body was brought from the hospital to the Stephen funeral home in Grundy Center. Services will be held at the funeral home at 12:30 Friday and at one o'clock at the First Presbyterian church in Grundy Center. Rev. Oliver Stevenson will have charge of the services. Burial will be in the cemetery adjoining the Colfax township Presbyterian church. Mrs. Kruger was 30 years old on the 16th of last November. Her maiden name was Fern Ramona Wandling. She was born at Blairstown, Iowa, and she attended the rural schools in that vicinity and resided there until she was married to Klaas Kruger October 8, 1928. Follwing their marriage the couple began housekeeping in Grundy Center and they have made their home here ever since. Mrs. Kruger's mother died when she was a small child. Her father married again. Surviving are the husband, the five children and her father. The children are Ramona, 7, Klaas, 6, Lawrence, 4, Bernita, 3, and Arnold, 16 months.
Living
Kruger
~1926
Paul
Meyeraan
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Huss
Living
Kruger
1903 - 1963
Wilhelm
Dirks
59
59
1930 - 2002
William
Henry
Dirks
71
71
Living
Dirks
Living
Biersner
~1915
IvaDean
Heronimus
Living
Itzen
1911 - 1970
Albert
Meyer
58
58
Living
Meyer
Living
Meyer
Living
Van
Hauen
~1906
Kermit
Kiewiet
Living
Kiewiet
~1905
Hank
Bergman
Living
Bergman
1913 - 1983
Lester
Harken
70
70
Living
Harken
Living
Harken
Living
Peters
Living
Harken
Living
Harken
Living
Harken
Living
Harken
~1916
John
J.
Seehusen
Living
Seehusen
1906 - 1973
George
Eggo
Harms
67
67
Living
Harms
Living
Harms
~1928
Duane
Tommson
Living
Harms
1910 - 2001
Henrietta
Hempen
91
91
Living
Kruger
Living
JoAnn
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Diane
Living
Kruger
Living
Beninga
1943 - 1944
Byrna
Jean
Kruger
1
1
1912 - 1973
Herman
B.
Harrenstein
60
60
Living
Harrenstein
Living
Harrenstein
~1885
Albertus
Harrenstein
~1890
Margaret
Meints
1910
Elsie
Harrenstein
~1880
Berend
Harrenstein
~1885
Altje
Oswold
Living
Kruger
1941 - 1990
Clarice
Ann
Kruger
49
49
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
1922 - 1993
John
J.
Meyer
71
71
Living
Meyer
Living
Meyer
1922
Carrie
D.
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Jungling
1914
Annette
Laverna
Tack
~1885
Philip
Tack
~1890
Reka
Kiewiet
1942 - 1994
Karen
Elaine
Kruger
52
52
Notes for KAREN ELAINE KRUGER: Karen attended and graduated from Wartburg College in Waverly, Iowa. She was a music teacher at Holy Family School in Davenport and had previouly taught at Oelwein and Adams School in Davenport, Iowa. She also gave private music lessons. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Davenport and a member of the choir. She was also a member of PEO, Chapter I.C.. She enjoyed sewing, needlecraft, cooking and music.
1945 - 1994
Arlen
Paul
Kruger
48
48
Notes for ARLEN PAUL KRUGER: Arlen received his education by attending Grundy Center schools where he graduated in 1963. He attended college at Wartburg College in Waverly, Iowa. He then received his Masters Degree from Northeast missouri State University in Kirksville, Missouri. Arlen Paul Kruger taught school in Miles, Iowa, then was junior high school principal and teacher at West Branch Community School for seven years. In 1977, he becam principal, athletic director and teach at Hubbarb Radcliffe Community School. He was a member of the Iowa Athletic Directors Association. He was a member of the Salem united Methodist Church in Hubbard. Death came to Arlen suddenly on Monday evening, April 18, 1994, at the Wllsworth Municipal Hospital in Iowa Falls, Iowa.
1918 - 1997
Clarence
Jacob
Arends
79
79
Living
Arends
Living
Arends
Living
Arends
Living
Arends
~1890
Joe
Arends
~1895
Ordie
Rindels
1928
Dorthea
Woodward
~1900
Edgar
Woodward
1956 - 1956
Judy
Ann
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
1927
Kenneth
Wayne
Pruisner
~1899
Henry
Pruisner
~1904
Grace
Freese
Living
Pruisner
Living
Pruisner
Living
Pruisner
Living
Pruisner
Living
Troe
Living
Pruisner
Living
Pruisner
Living
Klinehart
~1905
Ernest
Klinehart
~1910
Martha
Mack
Living
Klinehart
Living
Klinehart
~1900
Amy
Olson
1919
Bob
Dilly
BOB DILLY: Fact 1: Contractor who built Chapel in the Hills
1921
Margie
Dilly
1923
Russell
Dilly
1925
Carroll
Dilly
~1905
Hilda
Ellingson
~1927
Jeri
Dilly
~1929
Darlene
Dilly
~1890
?
Anderson
~1916
Trudeaux
Anderson
~1918
Irealda
Anderson
~1920
Douglas
Anderson
~1922
Charles
Anderson
~1900
?
Senbert
~1928
David
Senbert
Living
Senbert
Living
Senbert
~1900
?
Lucken
~1925
Linda
Lucken
~1927
Larry
Lucken
~1929
Leroy
Lucken
~1906
Abbey
Peterson
~1928
Constance
Dilly
~1905
Clarice
Pacy
~1928
Donald
Wolfle
Living
Wolfle
Living
Wolfle
~1900
Art
Nelson
~1927
Harold
Nelson
Living
Nelson
~1910
Rose
Martin
Living
Wolfle
~1900
Roy
Fitch
1928
James
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Anderson
Living
Fitch
~1900
Glen
Klingensmith
1927
David
Klingensmith
1928
Richard
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Hoffman
Living
Klingensmith
~1903
Jack
Gray
1929
Thomas
Jackson
Gray
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
1958 - 1958
Elizabeth
Smith
3m
3m
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1895
Hazel
Ritterhouse
1917
Virginia
Bosma
~1900
Beatrice
Kollman
~1922
Betty
Lou
Bosma
~1890
Ralph
Wolfe
1928
Robert
Leland
Wolfe
~1899
Trina
Meyer
Living
Hindt
~1902
Josephine
Virt
1922
Josephine
Hindt
1923
Clara
Hindt
1925
Evelyn
Hindt
1926
Dorothy
Hindt
1928
Marion
Hindt
Living
Hindt
1933 - 1965
Donald
Hindt
32
32
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
~1895
John
Onken
1920
Marion
John
Onken
1922
Ilona
Mae
Onken
1923 - 1951
Leona
Gale
Onken
28
28
~1920
James
Mercer
1925
Lorraine
Faye
Onken
~1908
Janette
Hurbut
1927
Alice
Mae
Hindt
1928
Vera
Jean
Hindt
Living
Hindt
1932 - 1932
Laverna
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Scott
~1910
Dorethella
Hurbut
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Giger
1950 - 1950
Nancy
L.
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Ulmer
Living
Hindt
~1915
John
Sterling
Persell
Living
Persell
Living
Persell
Living
Jones
~1925
Martha
Anderson
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1920
Floyd
Hillman
Living
Hillman
Living
Hillman
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Kern
Living
Sorbo
Living
Kern
Living
Kern
~1915
Tresia
Smith
Living
Smith
~1918
La
Vonne
Wilson
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1915
William
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Nesheim
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1925
Jim
Sullivan
Living
Sullivan
~1925
Robert
Fukutaki
~1915
Elizabeth
Ann
Brown
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1920
Mary
Margaret
Harris
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1915
Vincel
Jack
Stockdale
Living
Stockdale
Living
Stockdale
Living
Stockdale
Living
Stockdale
~1918
Vernon
Charles
Kaiser
Living
Kaiser
Living
De
Oever
Living
Bosch
Living
Smith
1955 - 1955
Diane
Lynn
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
~1905
?
Beers
Living
Beers
Living
Ring
Living
Beers
Living
Beers
1908
James
Albert
McCartney
Living
McCartney
~1917
Dorothy
Meyers
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Irene
Kevelighan
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
~1905
Maxine
McDonald
~1927
Bilie
Stahl
~1929
Ronald
Stahl
Living
Stahl
~1910
Elizabeth
Flynn
Living
Stahl
~1901
Arthur
Schuck
~1928
Donna
Schuck
Living
Schuck
Living
Schuck
Living
Schuck
~1900
?
Dopp
~1928
Larry
Dopp
Living
Dopp
Living
Berends
Living
Skow
Living
Skow
Living
Skow
~1915
?
Frerichs
Living
Frerichs
Living
Frerichs
Living
Frerichs
Living
Frerichs
~1915
?
Gonnerman
Living
Gonnerman
Living
Gonnerman
~1927
Lois
Mohni
Living
Berends
Living
Berends
Living
Berends
Living
Berends
Living
Berends
~1920
Lenora
Showalter
Living
Hakeman
Living
Hakeman
Living
Hakeman
1917 - 1985
Kenneth
Hakeman
68
68
Living
Ahrensdorff
Living
Vetter
Living
Vetter
Living
Vetter
~1920
?
Baish
Living
Baish
Living
Baish
Living
Payne
Living
Payne
Living
Payne
Living
Idleman
Living
Smith
Living
Menefee
Living
Menefee
Living
Menefee
Living
Menefee
Living
Fiskop
Living
Fiskop
Living
Fiskop
Living
Fiskop
Living
Fiskop
Living
Johnson
Living
Hindt
~1925
Allen
Smeins
Living
Smeins
Living
Ackerman
Living
Smeins
Living
Smeins
Living
Gutknecht
Living
Gutknecht
Living
Gutknecht
Living
Adelmund
~1908
Marvin
Adelmund
~1910
Elizabeth
Knock
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Meyer
Living
Kruger
~1900
Kenneth
Wendt
Living
Wendt
Living
Wendt
~1925
Allen
Meyer
Living
Wendt
Living
Dillard
Living
Dillard
Living
Johnson
~1901
Thomas
Johnson
~1905
Caroline
Freese
1959 - 1998
Clark
Douglas
Dirks
38
38
Notes for CLARK DOUGLAS DIRKS: Clark was an Eagle Scout as a member of Troop #85 and was a Vigil Honor Member in the Order of the Arrow. He graduated from Jefferson High Schoo and later received a Bachelor of Science Degree from Iowa State University at Ames, Iowa and recently completed a Mechanical Maintenance Program at Kirkwood College in Cedar Rapids. He was also a former member of the Marine Reserve Unit in Waterloo attaining the rank of Gunnery Sgt. and Platoon Leader.
Living
Dirks
Living
Dirks
Living
Meggers
Living
Meggers
Living
Meggers
Living
Meggers
Living
Meggers
Living
Boujnah
Living
Diekman
Living
Kiewiet
Living
Kiewiet
Living
Kiewiet
Living
Kiewiet
Living
Lowrey
Living
Bergman
Living
Bergman
Living
Renken
Living
Harken
Living
Harken
Living
Hayungs
Living
Harms
Living
Besore
Living
Harms
Living
Harms
Living
Harms
Living
Jansen
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
1930 - 2001
Verne
Loren
Eberline
71
71
~1900
Ford
Eberline
~1905
Rena
De
Neui
Living
Eberline
Living
Eberline
Living
Shoupe
Living
Harrenstein
Living
Harrenstein
1936 - 1986
Darlene
Irma
Boren
50
50
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Ziesman
Living
Conrad
Living
Kruger
Living
Lamfers
Living
Lamfers
Living
Eslinger
Living
Lamfers
Living
Ralston
Living
Ralston
Living
Aalfs
Living
Aalfs
Living
Aalfs
Living
Dix
Living
Dix
Living
Dix
Living
Dix
Living
Thoren
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Henningsen
Living
Henningsen
Living
Henningsen
Living
Grant
Living
Henningsen
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Aswegan
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Varney
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Shoemaker
Living
Kuhn
Living
Arends
Living
Mesenbrink
~1920
Jarvis
Mesenbrink
~1925
Twyla
Wigg
Living
Arends
Living
Arends
Living
Arends
Living
Arends
Living
Vaskey
~1925
Ray
Vaskey
Living
Besler
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kopsa
Living
Kopsa
Living
Barge
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Kasten
Living
Kasten
Living
Thomas
Living
Kruger
Living
Kruger
Living
Heronimus
~1919
Benjamin
Heronimus
~1924
Grace
Meyer
Living
Heronimus
1976 - 1996
Jamie
Jo
Heronimus
20
20
Living
Luiken
~1925
Floyd
Luiken
Living
Bausman
Living
Luiken
Living
Luiken
Living
Luiken
Living
Luiken
Living
Stahl
~1925
Alvin
Stahl
Living
Stahl
1976 - 1995
Amanda
Lea
Stahl
19
19
Living
Stahl
Living
Stahl
Living
Fairbanks
Living
Konkin
Living
Konkin
Living
Eiklenborg
Living
Konkin
Living
Konkin
Living
Gage
Living
Gage
Living
Joan
Living
Gage
Living
Gage
Living
Gage
Living
Winter
Living
Winter
Living
Sherry
Living
Klinehart
Living
Klinehart
Living
Hilpipre
Living
Hilpipre
Living
Hilpipre
Living
Harmelink
~1900
Raymond
Hindt
~1905
Jeanette
Hurbot
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
~1925
Eldon
Good
1950 - 1962
Connie
Good
12
12
Living
Good
Living
Robertson
Living
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Pahl
Living
Pahl
Living
Pahl
Living
Pahl
Living
Gehl
Living
Gehl
Living
Gehl
Living
Gehl
Living
Gehl
Living
Baker
Living
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Fitch
Living
Harrison
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Hiensich
Living
Hiensich
Living
Hiensich
Living
Hiensich
Living
Hiensich
Living
Watcher
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Frank
Roecehler
Living
Roecehler
Living
Roecehler
Living
Roecehler
Living
Roecehler
Living
Susman
~1928
Aaron
Hastings
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Metcalf
Living
Metcalf
Living
Oberdeck
Living
Oberdeck
Living
Turec
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Klingensmith
Living
Norton
Living
Gray
Living
Gray
Living
Gray
~1915
Paul
Armstrong
Living
Armstrong
Living
Armstrong
Living
Armstrong
Living
Armstrong
Living
Michael
Living
Gayle
Living
Richards
Living
Wolfe
Living
Thorne
Living
Wolfe
Living
Wolfe
Living
Wolfe
Living
Larson
Living
Larson
Living
Larson
~1920
William
Taylor
Living
Taylor
Living
Taylor
Living
Taylor
Living
Hagel
Living
Taylor
Living
Samuelson
Living
Taylor
~1920
Frank
Spartz
Living
Spartz
Living
Spartz
Living
Spartz
Living
Spartz
Living
Spartz
Living
Spartz
Living
Lais
~1923
William
Lentz
1954 - 1954
Valerie
Kay
Lentz
~1925
Howard
Gehlson
Living
Gehlson
Living
Gehlson
Living
Gehlson
Living
Gehlson
Living
Gehlson
Living
Widbloom
1929
Richard
Hindt
Living
Severson
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
~1928
Irvin
Greger
Living
Greger
Living
Greger
Living
Greger
Living
Buckentine
Living
Urke
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Vogel
1957 - 1957
Lois
Vogel
Living
Vogel
Living
Vogel
Living
Vogel
Living
Knutson
Living
Knutson
Living
Knutson
Living
Knutson
Living
Knutson
Living
Knutson
Living
Urke
1962 - 1962
Jennifer
Hindt
1962 - 1962
Jeffrey
Hindt
1d
1d
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Urke
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Kuhl
Living
Kuhl
Living
Kuhl
Living
Kuhl
Living
Richter
Living
Hindt
~1925
Rosella
Groenke
Living
Onken
Living
Onken
1920 - 1995
Stanley
Glista
75
75
Living
Glista
Living
Glista
Living
Glista
~1921
Harold
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
Living
Webster
~1922
Richard
Duba
Living
Duba
Living
Duba
Living
Duba
~1925
Frank
Johnson
Living
Johnson
Living
Johnson
Living
Harmelink
Living
Harmelink
Living
Harmelink
Living
Harmelink
Living
Eggleston
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Gronert
Living
Gronert
Living
Gronert
Living
Wilder
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Gardner
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hylinski
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Hindt
Living
Miland
Living
Miland
Living
Miland
Living
Wagonhoffer
Living
Hindt
Living
Gott
Living
Gott
Living
Spencer
Living
Spencer
Living
Spencer
Living
Briggs
Living
Kern
Living
Regintter
Living
Nelson
Living
Nelson
Living
Duckworth
Living
Smith
Living
Strub
Living
Strub
Living
Strub
Living
Cole
Living
Cole
Living
Cleland
Living
Cleland
Living
Cleland
Living
Cleland
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Westerbur
Living
Gorder
Living
Gorder
Living
Gorder
Living
Pulse
Living
Pulse
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Smith
Living
Hakeman
1749 - 1843
Claas
Reinders
Soorholz
93
93
~1716 - 1775
Reiner
Classen
Soorholz
59
59
~1760
Albert
Roskam
~1765
Gesche
Koller
1816 - 1846
Gaesche
Claasson
Soorholz
30
30
1820 - 1825
Wobke
Soorholz
5
5
1822
Alberdena
Soorholz
1824 - 1860
Klaasina
Soorholz
35
35
1826
Johann
Jacobs
Soorholz
1828 - 1829
Klaas
Reinders
Soorholz
5m
5m
~1752 - 1792
Neone
Loerts
40
40
1774 - 1791
Reinder
Claasson
Soorholz
17
17
1776 - 1776
Loert
Claasson
Soorholz
14d
14d
1777 - 1778
Wobke
Claasson
Soorholz
6m
6m
1778 - 1809
Lauert
Claasson
Soorholz
30
30
1781
Wobke
Claasson
Soorholz
1783
Berte
Claasson
Soorholz
~1760
Foelke
Berends
1795 - 1795
Mettje
Soorholz
4m
4m
1797 - 1803
Engel
Soorholz
6
6
1799
Berend
Soorholz
1806 - 1857
Engel
Soorholz
51
51
~1712 - 1782
Wobke
Janssen
70
70
17 FEB 1742/43 - 17 MAR 1742/43
Clarss
Soorholz
1744
Johann
Soorholz
1746 - 1764
Engel
Soorholz
17
17
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