[JamesLinage.GED]
Note:
from BURKE:
"ADAM SALWEY, of Cannoc, whose son, John SALWEY .
Sources:
Abbrev: Raven Genealogy Online
Title: Raven Genealogy and Family History
Online database
http://genweb.net/~raven/home.htm
RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project web site
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=raviac&id=I21542
Author: Alice Raven
Abbrev: Burke's Commoners
Title: A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britainand Ireland
For the period up to and including the early 19th century, TheCommoners is the standard genealogical guide to families in GreatBritain and Ireland who enjoyed territorial possession or officialrank, but were uninvested with heritable honors. In the narrativestyle so characteristic of Burke formulations, the contemporaryrepresentative of the family is introduced with an illustration of hisarms, a brief statement regarding his parentage and present position,the names and dates of birth of his wife and children, and suchincidental information as might be helpful to the reader. There thenfollows his lineage, commencing with the earliest ancestor of recordand proceeding in a straight line of descent through successivegenerations, enumerating births, marriages, and deaths and otherdetails relevant to the pedigree. The four volumes together comprisesomething on the order of 2,000 pedigrees.
Author: John Burke
Publication: London: Henry Colburn, 1834-1838 and 1907
Page: Vol. 1, p. 152[Direct Linage1.FTW]
[JamesLinage.GED]
Note:
from BURKE:
"ADAM SALWEY, of Cannoc, whose son, John SALWEY .
Sources:
Abbrev: Raven Genealogy Online
Title: Raven Genealogy and Family History
Online database
http://genweb.net/~raven/home.htm
RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project web site
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=raviac&id=I21542
Author: Alice Raven
Abbrev: Burke's Commoners
Title: A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britainand Ireland
For the period up to and including the early 19th century, TheCommoners is the standard genealogical guide to families in GreatBritain and Ireland who enjoyed territorial possession or officialrank, but were uninvested with heritable honors. In the narrativestyle so characteristic of Burke formulations, the contemporaryrepresentative of the family is introduced with an illustration of hisarms, a brief statement regarding his parentage and present position,the names and dates of birth of his wife and children, and suchincidental information as might be helpful to the reader. There thenfollows his lineage, commencing with the earliest ancestor of recordand proceeding in a straight line of descent through successivegenerations, enumerating births, marriages, and deaths and otherdetails relevant to the pedigree. The four volumes together comprisesomething on the order of 2,000 pedigrees.
Author: John Burke
Publication: London: Henry Colburn, 1834-1838 and 1907
Page: Vol. 1, p. 152