Coombs Genealogies


Discovering our American and European Ancestors

First Name Last Name

Notes


Matches 351 to 400 of 2,118

      «Prev «1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ... 43» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
351 The history and antiquities of the seigniory of Holderness
By George Poulson
page 466 
HILDYARD, Robert 2nd Lord of Winestead (I31711)
 
352 The history and antiquities of the seigniory of Holderness
By George Poulson
page 466 
HILDYARD, Robert 1st Lord of Winestead (I31732)
 
353 The Publications of the Harleian Society, Volume 20
Page 10 
BOSOME, Robert (I28252)
 
354 The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising ..., Volume 1, Pages 1-452
Page 378 
FULFORD, Edmund (I28265)
 
355 The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, Parts 69-72
Page 372

Age 7 at father's death. 
CLIFFORD, Henry 10th Lord Clifford (I28362)
 
356 Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian ..., Volumes 9-10
edited by James Simpson, Richard Saul Ferguson, William Gershom Collingwood
Page 316.
List brother Robert's will, where Elizabeth is mentioned as sister and married to Marmaduke Thirkeld.
https://books.google.com/books?id=91dAAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA316&lpg=PA316&dq=marmaduke+thirkeld&source=bl&ots=M7uvJbDOBj&sig=Jv6cfIOxy2fgbI7FipWlVLdx5qs&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiSw5HW3J_MAhXBcj4KHYefA1wQ6AEILTAE#v=onepage&q=marmaduke%20thirkeld&f=false 
HILTON, Elizabeth (I28910)
 
357 William de Lowedre of Lowedre, Sheriff of Perth in 1251 and who witnessed a charter of King Alexander III (r.1249-1286). He had a brother, David. William was followed by his son. LAWEDRE, William de (I22972)
 
358 A claim by John son of John de Knoll in 1292 has been mentioned. He also claimed common of pasture against John son of Jordan de Mitton, giving his pedigree as son and heir of John, brother and heir of Richard (s.p.), son and heir of Richard de Knoll [Assize R. 408, m. 55 d]. 

As early as 1302, John de Knoll held of the Earl of Lincoln the eighth part of a knight's fee in Thornley and Wheatley [Lancs. Inq. and Extents, i, 319]. John shortly afterwards acquired two messuages, 2 oxgangs of land, &c, in Thornley, which had been granted by Thomas son of Hugh le Surreys to John son of Jordan de Mitton. The two messuages and 2 oxgangs of land seem to have been acquired by John de Knoll from John de Mitton and Alice his wife about 1308 [De Banco R. 171, m. 23 d]. In reply to the claim of John de Mitton in 1308-09, John de Knoll, here styled 'lord of Wheatley,' averred that the 2 oxgangs were in Wheatley, and not in Thornley [Assize R. 423, m. 1 d].

~'Townships: Thornley with Wheatley', A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume VII, (1912), pp. 32-36 
KNOLL, John de (I28355)
 
359 A cook stationed at Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City according to Svlyia Toolson. STUART (I15858)
 
360 A daughter of Richard Bold of Chester, her marriage settlement with Richard Bold of Bold was dated Jun. 25, 1439 [see Beamont MSS #567]. She died some time after Mar. 1486/7 [see Beamont MSS ~ #592]. Gracia (I33339)
 
361 A Norman baron called Ansculf de Picquigny (Ausculph de Penchengi) was granted many manors in the county of Warwickshire, and elsewhere, at the time of the Norman Conquest. They were centred upon Dudley Castle. Ansculf was observed by Sir William Dugdale (who mistakenly confused him with his son William) to have been a great man in the time of the conquest as evidenced by the extent of the lands granted to him, i.e., ten lordships in Berkshire, one in Middlesex, one in Oxfordshire, one in Huntingdonshire, one in Cambridgeshire, seven in Surrey, four in Northamptonshire, seven in Warwickshire, twenty in Buckinghamshire, twenty-five in Staffordshire and fourteen in Worcestershire. By the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 Ansculf's lands had passed onto his son, William Fitz Ansculf (or Ausculph). Ansculf de Picquigny (c1014–c1084) was a French baron who followed William the Conqueror to England. He was born the son of Guermond de Picquigny of Picquigny, a village near Amiens in Picardy and with his brother Gilo, crossed to England with Duke William of Normandy. Their names are inscribed on the Battle Abbey Roll. Ansculf must have played a significant role in the invasion as he was awarded some 80 manors covering 11 counties (Worcestershire, Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Northampton, Rutland, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, Oxfordshire, Middlesex and Surrey) and made sheriff of Surrey and Buckinghamshire (1066–c1084). After Earl Edwin's abortive revolt in 1070 he was given some of Edwin's lands in the west Midlands, including Dudley. It was there that he built a Norman style motte and bailey castle, which formed a part of a defensive chain protecting the Midlands from the Welsh, and the centrepiece of his barony of Dudley. He died before 1086 and was succeeded by his son William Fitz Ansculf. The Pinckney family are their present day descendants. PICQUIGNY, Ansculf de (I33140)
 
362 A rare view of the Anglo-Norman society of that day is given by the Domesday Books, a listing of English Lands and Properties compiles under King Williams reign for levy purposes.
Baron Robert Guernon – aka Robert de Guernon, Robert Gernon etc. referred to all the same man.  This Baron was always listed within the first 15 names of these lists, as a major Baron, a large landholder who held lands in at least 10 of the 24 shires mentioned, with manors and extensive lands mainly centred near London, Essex and Middlesex.
Though the London Domesday Book didn’t survive to today, extensive holdings of his can be presumed to have existed within London, judging from the quantity of manors and villages held by him and his relatives.
In 1066 Robert de Guernon constructed a wooden hilltop castle in Stansted, Mountfitchet, which was later built in stone.  The Name of the village is both old English and Norman.  In old English “Stan” meant stone and “Sted” a place or “a stoney place” and Mountfitchet was added after the ancestral village in Normandy.  Stansted is found 45 miles north of London.  The stone castle was destroyed in the middle ages; however a recent reconstruction of the first wooden castle and Norman village has been built there and is a popular attraction.  You can find all information on the internet.
It is said by some historians that in Normandy and in England, within five years of the conquest, some of Robert’s sons, grandsons and relatives were replacing the Gernon name with de Monfitchet, meaning from the old village of Monfitchet.
In London of King William’s day contemporary to the construction of William’s Tower of London, were also Baynard’s Castle and the short lived Montfichet castle and tower, two palaces of medieval London that are most frequently mentioned in studies of English architecture.  The Montfichet bridge and Blackfriars gate, its foundations are said to lie somewhere under the medieval Abbey of that name.
Later Gernon Generations in England
 
A grandson of Robert de Gernon, Gilbert de Montfichet, was a well-known and successful man in his day.  He commissioned the church and the Abbey of Stratford Langthcane, south of London, in what is now Newham, which was destroyed in the 1600’s.  It was said that he had other churches built such as the church of Leyton, north of London.  In Normandy Gilbert de Monfichet is recorded as having commissioned the church of St. Thomas in Monfiquet among others.
Another grandson of Robert de Gernon was Baron de Monfichet, was a figure in history recorded as one of the youngest Barons who revolted against the unpopular King John (Lackland).  At this time of the Baron’s revolt, another Gernon family member, William Gernon was a trusted advisor of the King, who travelled with the King’s signet ring to Normandy to find support there to counter the revolt.

https://ourfamilytimecapsule.wordpress.com/gernon-history/first-part-of-the-gernon-history/ 
GERNON, Robert de (I31935)
 
363 Aaron is illegimiate. He is sealed to John Jenkins since Margaret married him
latter. 
COOMBS, Aaron (I259)
 
364 About Peter Stead and Jane Ashton Connecting to Thomas Steed I
· 31 August 2014 · 1 Comments
Letter to A. Merlin Steed January 17, 1932
from Mrs. Mathilda Cecilia Giauque Steed 3rd wife of Thomas Steed III b. 1826
(The person named “Aunt Sarah Steed” would be a niece of Thomas Steed III’s)
Everything in these type of brackets [ ] has been added by Shannon Howells

My Dear Merlin,
Your welcome and kind letter of Dec. 16 [1931] is before me – came to hand from Lucy, your sister, Friday 15 inst. Yes, your lists of names arrived O.K. Ever since, I am trying to give you another set, some are in the Index Bureau. I know you want them for February.

Now to your question: If you have found the father of Thomas Stead married 1783.
When my dear husband [Thomas Steed III] was on his deathbed in the hospital, he said he would help us all he could to find the father of his grandfather [Thomas Stead 1st was his grandfather]. About a year after his [Tom Steed III] death [died 26 Jun 1910 so this would be about 1911] when Aunt Sarah Steed was visiting at my home, overnight – she told me in morning; “Uncle Tom visited me; he sends his best regards to you; he told me that his great grandfather was Peter Stead.” Then I took a pencil and first piece of paper at hand and wrote the names. I copy them now from page 78 of the Steed Book I on the sheet annexed.

At that time Aunt Sarah was sick; your father had administered to her; she had been the genealogist of the Steed family, being the first child of the first son [John]. I remembered that the promise had been given in tongue to your grandfather (when his house was dedicated) that he would have power to reveal his genealogy from beyond the veil & that he had told me, “I will help you all I can, for this question has been on my mind all my life.” Still some doubt was in my mind because of Aunt Sarah’s condition; but I noted every name she gave me. When I spoke of it to aunt Fanny [Fanny Steed Meadows, daughter of Thomas Steed III] she unhesitantly rejected the thought. I went to Bro. MeCallister, chief Recorder in the Temple, told him as above, to know what to do with those names. His answer was: “Do as the Spirit prompts you.”

The bapt. was done for Peter & four of his sons 14 Feb 19--. I did not have bapt. done for the women.

Now, as genealogists we need confirmation of the family; of this couple & the 9 children must be found somewhere in England. Your grandfather used to say, “I know I have some Welsh blood in me.” There are some Steeds of Monmouthshire claimed by the family of Levi Richards, father of the painter Lee Green Richards, husband of Lulu Green Richard – His grandfather was a Michael Steed, if I am correct. They want to do the work themselves.

If you will study all this, my dear Merlin, I will be glad to co-operate with you. We should write to Withington Parish asking if they had a marriage of Peter Steed & Jane Ashton about 1750. If so then find their children & check up with our names. They charge the minister 25 cents per year for searching the records.

If the sons, Peter, James, John, and [Se]ssions[??] (note this name) were born before Thomas, we have him about 1760 & the daughters were born in succession, 2 years apart, the marriage of the parents would be about 1750. We would search Withington, Hereford, because of that other Peter & Ann Collins married 1776. George Meadows, when on a mission, went to the cemetery & brought some names from there.

Of Niblet names I found some in Gloucest., they will also pass the Index Bureau to be sure they are not done. No names of Masons – we don’t know were to look –perhaps Colwall? Hereford. Your grandfather always said his people were of Herefordshire until we found that Mathon is enclosed nearly in Worcestershire.

I will be glad to send you or to leave for you some books of your grandfather; I am glad you care about it; but they were given to the Relief Society with the bookcase to start their library. You know I have paid for the books, the furniture, the horse & everything $250.00. The History of Utah by Whitney, 4 large volumes, gilt-edge containing portraits & biographies of the Pioneers including the portrait & biography of your grandfather Thos. Steed, I would be glad to give you, when you can have them taken in auto going to California by some of the family sometime. But the Books you mention, I gave them as told above and I doubt if ever I received any credit or mention of it in the Farmington Ward – abt. 1917. There are four Steed names for Endt men & women and a few sealings of wives & children. I have a great joy to think of your work in the genealogy & temple activities, my dear Merlin. May the Lord inspire you concerning your direct lines of Steed, Niblet & Mason in England & do all you say to help in correspondence, or otherwise.

Love to Alice & all the children. Heard of marriage of Amasa. Fine.

Very Affectionately Yours,
Aunt Cecilia G. Steed

Shannon Howells added the following in 2014 and has no idea if it is accurate but hoping it was the list Cecila took down from what Aunt Sarah Steed told her

Peter Stead of Withington, Herefordshire, England
1726-1767 LHGN-5C4

Jane Ashton of Withington, Hereforshire, England
2 Nov 1729-1809 LCJT-QTP
Married about 1752
Withington, Herefordshire, England

Children
1.Peter Steed Jr. 
1752-1835 KG3Q-Q77
2. James Steed [Shannon Howells added as per Merlin Steed letter above]s
3. Jane Steed 
1755-1757 KG3Q-7R5
4. John Steed 
1756-1835 KG3Q-4B3
5. Session Steed 
1758-1830 2ZBR-2JZ
6. Thomas Steed 
1757-1826 L85D-238 [Mathon – ended up in Great Malvern, Worcs., Eng. And raised his children here]
7.Elizabeth Steed 
1760-1830 LZGJ-LGD
8.Mary Steed 
1764-1830 KG3Q-7L8
9.Rebecca Steed 
1766-1835 KG3Q-7W6 
STEAD, Peter (I12750)
 
365 AFN C8S6-3Q. VAUGHN, David (I15806)
 
366 After the death of his father Adalbert II in 815, he was the Count and Duke of Lucca and Margrave of Tuscany until his own death in 928 or 929. His mother Bertha was his regent from his father's death until 916.
He kept court at Mantua around the year 920. In 924 or 925, he became the second husband of Marozia, a Roman noblewoman who had the title senatrix patricia Romanorum.
In order to counter the influence of Pope John X (whom the hostile chronicler Liutprand of Cremona alleges was one of Marozia lovers), Marozia subsequently married his opponent Guy of Tuscany, who loved his beautiful wife as much as he loved power. Together they attacked Rome, arrested Pope John X in the Lateran, and jailed him in the Castel Sant'Angelo. Either Guy had him smothered with a pillow in 928 or he simply died, perhaps from neglect or ill treatment. Marozia seized power in Rome in a coup d'état. Guy died 3 February 929.
The following popes, Leo VI and Stephen VII, were both her puppets. In 931 she even managed to impose her son as Pontiff, under the name of John XI. John was only twenty-one at the time.[2]
He had one daughter, Theodora (or Bertha), and probably a few other children of which nothing else is known. None of his children survived him and when he died in 928 or 929 his brother Lambertsucceeded him as count and duke of Lucca and margrave of Tuscany. 
Guido Margrave of Tuscany (I26334)
 
367 Age 73 in 1910 Census with sister Letitia. Margaret's name is listed as Margaret Eruikshank. CRUIKSHANK, Margaret (I18179)
 
368 Age at death 66 years 11 months MÖLLER, Johann Jacob (I32091)
 
369 Alf (Finnalf) is a legendary figure from "Hversum Noreg Byggdist", part of Flateyabok.
He is the son of Raum the Old by Bergdis the Jotne, and was raised by his mother's brother Bergfinn; he's therefore called Finnalf.
Kong Raum hadde drikkelag i jula med Bergfinn, sønn av Thrym jotun fra Vorma og gikk da i seng med Bergdis, hans søster. Etter dette fikk hun tre sønner: Bjørn, Brand og Alf. Alf ble fostret av Bergfinn og ble kalt Finnalf. Bjørn bodde hos sin mor og ble kalt Jotunbjørn. Hun sendte Brand til Rauma, hans far, som ga ham til gudene; han ble kalt Gudbrand. Kong Raum ga ham den dalen som het Gudbrandsdalen, Jotunbjørn ga han Raumsdal og Alf Østerdalen og alt nord for Veneren og fra Gøtaelv og nord til Glomma. Dette ble da kalt Alfheim
http://www.norsesaga.no/hvorledes-norge-ble-bosatt.html 
RAUMSSON, Alf (I34565)
 
370 Alias: /(Betteris)/ HAMPSON, Beatrice (I15805)
 
371 alph (who m. Basilie), son and heir of Walter d'Aincurt, the Domesday lord of Blankney. [Complete Peerage IV:118 note (c)]

--------------------------

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] 
DEINCOURT, Ralph (I29824)
 
372 Also baptized 15 Jun 1897 and endowed 23 Jun 1897.

CHR-MARR-DEATH: Research by Hans Ogaard 
CLAUSEN, Cornelius (I2419)
 
373 Also baptized 21 May 1934, and endowed 21 Aug 1934. PARKER, John (I3664)
 
374 Also baptized 6 Jun 1905 and endowed 11 Mar 1908. JONSSON, Per (I950)
 
375 Also Emperor of the West

-- MERGED NOTE ------------


Profession : Empereur Germanique de 840 à 855

also Lothar. King of Italy, Emperor of the West

==================

de Germanie
s:Auréjac

==================

Hij is als monnik overleden in de nacht van 28 op 29 sep 855.
Koning der Franken en Lombarden; (onder)koning van Beieren (mrt. 814); bij de Ordinatio Imperii (juli 817) als bestuurder en opvolger aangewezen en door zijn vader tot keizer van het Heilige Roomse Rijk gekroond (Aken juli 817). Hij bestuurt Italië sinds de herfst van 822.
Nogmaals tot keizer gekroond door paus Paschalis I op 08-04-823 te Rome en regelt het bestuur van de Kerkelijke Staat als onderdeel van het rijk via de Constitutio Romanus.
Feitelijk mede-regent van zijn vader van 825 tot aug. 829 wanneer deze samenwerking door diens begunstiging van Karel de Kale abrupt eindigt en hij terugkeert naar Italië; keert zich (na diverse, kortstondige verzoeningen) echter samen met zijn broers Pippijn en Lodewijk tegen hun vader begin 833, die nadat zijn leger op het 'Leugenveld' bij Colmar naar hen is overgelopen zich door hen gevangen laat nemen en die hij nadien feitelijk laat afzetten (Compiègne; Soissons); houdt ook nadiien zijn vader in Aken gevangen en beperkt (strevend naar volle uitvoering van de Ordinatio Imperii) invloed en machtsgebied van zijn broers, waarop deze alsnog de kant van hun vader kiezen; verliest een reeks gevechten tegen hen en wordt wederom op Italië beperkt herfst 834; verzoent zich opnieuw met zijn vader op de rijksdag van Worms juni 839 en wordt op diens sterfbed tot opvolger gedesigneerd; verlaat Italië en herneemt de suprematie over zijn broers naar de (nooit opgeheven) Ordinatio, maar verliest een uiterst bloedige veldslag tegen hen bij Fontenoy (bij Auxerre) 25-6-841, hetgeen als een godsoordeel voor een wezenlijke rijksdeling wordt gezien ten gunste van zijn broers Lodewijk 'de Duitser' en Karel 'de Kale', die hun bondgenootschap bevestigen door in de wederzijdse talen voor hun aanhang afgelegde eden bij Straatsburg op 14.2.842; sluit na langdurige onderhandelingen met hen het verdelingsverdrag van Verdun aug. 843, waarbij hij bij zijn langgerekte middenrijk wel de keizerstitel behoudt, maar daaraan geen suprematie over het West- en Oostfrankische rijk zal kunnen ontlenen; proclameert met beide broers in 'fraternitas' te zullen regeren in Thionville okt. 844, maar krijgt een heftig geschil met Karel wanneer diens vazal Giselbert zijn dochter ontvoert 846, waarna pas vrede gesloten wordt (met legitimatie van het voltrokken huwelijk) Péronne jan. 849; verdeelt, ziek geworden, zijn rijk over zijn drie zoons; treedt in het klooster te Prüm op 23.9, overl. 29.9.855 en begraven aldaar, tr. okt. 821 Ermengard, sticht uit haar morgengave het klooster Erstein; overl. 20.3.851; dr. van Hugo graaf van Tours en Ava N. Voorts had hij voor april 851 een relatie met Doda, overl. na 9.7.855, van onbekende herkomst en tussen 851 en 853 met een onbekende vrouw.

Regierte (817-829/833/840) - 855p> Als ältester Sohn Ludwigs des Frommen war er 817 im Zuge der Ordinatio imperii zum Mitkaiser ernannt worden. Mit der Geburt seines Stiefbruders Karls des Kahlen verlor er seine Mitregentschaft und wurde nach ItItalien verwiesen, während das fränkische Kernland unter die Brüder Pippin, Ludwig und Karl aufgeteilt wurde. Daraufhin lehnte sich Lothar gegen seinen Vater auf. Es gelang ihm mehrmals sich seiner zu bemächtigen (830 und 833-834), mußte ihn aber auf Druck seiner Brüder Pippin und Ludwig wieder freigeben. Inzwischen hatte sich auch der mittlere und kleinere Adel Ostfrankens und Aquitaniens gegen ihn verbündet. 834 wurde Lothar abermals nach Italien verwiesen. Auf Betreiben seiner Stieffmutter, der Welfin Judith, kam es 839 zur Versöhnung zwischen Lothar und Ludwig den Frommen. Nach dem Tod des Vaters am 20. Juni 840 gipfelte das Ringen um die Nachfolge im offenen Kampf der Brüder über die Reichseinheit. Obwohl Lothar dabei vor allem auf die Unterstützung der Ostfranken, Schwaben und Sachsen zählen konnte, gelang es ihm nicht, die Oberhand in dem Streit zu gewinnen. Nachdem Lothar am 25.6.841 in Burgund von den Heeren seiner Brüder geschlagen wurde, mußte er nachgebeben. Im Vertrag von Verdun vom 10.8.843 kam es zur Reichsteilung. Als Ausgangspunkt für die Verhandlungen diente der Besitzstand der Brüder beim Tod Ludwig des Frommen. Somit hatte Lothar Anspruch auf Italien, Ludwig auf Bayern und Karl der Kahle auf Aquitanien. Diese Gebiete wurden nun jeweils ergänzt durch Teile des fränkischen Kernlandes, der Reichsmitte. Karl der Kahle herrschte fortan über die westlichen Gebiete, Lothar über die Mitte des Reiches und Ludwig im Osten. Lothar behielt weiterhin die Kaiserwürde. 844 setzte er seinen ältesten Sohn Ludwig als König in Italien ein und ließihn am 6. April 850 in Rom zum Mitkaiser krönen. 855, kurz vor seinem Tod, teilte er seinen Reichsteil unter seine drei Söhne auf. Kaiser Ludwig II. behielt die Kaiserkrone und Italien, Lothar II. erhielt den nördlichen Teil des Mittelreiches und Karls wurde Burgund zugeteilt. Anschließend zog sich Lothar I in die Benediktinerabtei Prüm zurück, und starb dort noch im gleichen Jahr. 
Lothaire I Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (I13781)
 
376 Also Empress of the West

-- MERGED NOTE ------------


Mittelalter DE.dir\irmingard_von_tours_frankenkoenigin_+_851.html

Irmingard von Tours Frankenkönigin
---------------------- römische Kaiserin
um 805/-20.3.851

Tochter des Grafen Hugo von Tours und der Ava

Heinrich Büttner:
*************
"Geschichte des Elsaß I" 1991
In Remiremont stellte LOTHAR I. auch eine Urkunde aus, in der auf Bitten seiner Gemahlin Irmgard der Abtei Erstein die villa Greßweiler bei Molsheim schenkte. Kurz vorher hatte Kaiserin Irmgard das Gut, das sie einst als Morgengabe von LOTHAR I I. erhalten hatte, mit dessen Einverständnis zur Errichtung eines Frauenkonvents benutzt, an dessen Spitze als 1. Äbtissin ihre jüngste Tochter Rugrundis trat. Irmgard erbat vom Papst Leo IV. Reliquien für ihre Stiftung. Sie holte die päpstliche Genehmigung zur Klostererbauung ein und erbat durch kaiserliche Gesandte, die in anderen Geschäften zur Kurie reisten, ein Privileg für Erstein.
Franz Vollmer: Seite 167
***********
"Die Etichonen"
Aus der Ehe Hugos von Tours mit Ava entsprossen 3 Töchter und 2 Söhne. Die Töchter Ermengardis/Irmgard, Adelais und Bertha heirateten Angehörige der obersten Adelsschicht des fränkischen Reiches. Irmgard/Ermengard wird die Gemahlin des KAROLINGERS LOTHAR I. Diese Kaiserin bleibt mit der elsässischen Heimat durch ihre Stiftung des Klosters Erstein in besonderem Maße verbunden. Auch das Straßburger ETICHONEN -Kloster St. Stephan zählt sie zu seinen Wohltäterinnen, da ihr die Schenkung des breisgauischen Munzingen zu verdanken ist. Irmgard starb 851 und hinterließ 7 nachgewiesene Kinder, 3 Söhne und 4 Töchter. Die weitere Geschichte des ETICHONEN -Hauses und die Oberrheinlande berührt aber nur ihr Sohn Lothar durch seine umstrittene Verbindung mit der - elsässischen - Waldrada und beider Sohn Hugo.



821
oo LOTHAR I.
795-29.9.855


Kinder:
LUDWIG II.
825-12.8.875
Helletrud (Hiltrud)
826- 856/66
oo Berengar Graf
- 865/66

Bertha Äbtissin von Avenay
830-7.5.852

Tochter
830-
846 entführt
846
oo Giselbert Graf im Moosgau
- 916

Gisla Äbtissin von S. Salvatore zu Brescia (851-860)
830- 860
Lothar II.
835-8.8.869
Rotrud
-

oo Lambert II. Graf von Nantes
- 852

Karl König von Provence
845-24.1.863 
TOURS, Ermengarde de EMPRESS OF HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE (I13783)
 
377 Also from this valley comes the branch of the Rule Family whose name is now Turnbull. As the story is told, in the history of Selkirkshire, a William Rule, who was a giant of a man , was on one occasion (about 1315) on a hunting trip with King Robert the Bruce when he, the king, was attacked by a wild bison or bull. Grasping it by it’s horns, he turned its head to one side and killed it. He was given the name of “Turn-E-Bull” by King Robert and from him has descended a quite extensive family. This story is referred to in the register of the great seal of Scotland. Leyden describes the incident in verve as follows TURNBULL, William Baron of Minto (I34695)
 
378 Also known as “John Ochtery”. He joined David II. with
a considerable body of his followers, whom he commanded
HISTORY OF THE CAMERONS 11in the third Division of the Scots army, at the battle of
Hallidon Hill, on the 15th of July, 1333. He continued in the
king’s service until the English were expelled from the
kingdom, and the king firmly settled in the government of
Scotland.*
He married Ellen de Montealto, or Mouat,†with issue –
http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/atoc/History%20of%20the%20Camerons%20to%20p%2021.pdf page 11 and 12. 
CAMERON, John de (I22745)
 
379 An Act of Kindness "Some years after Milford was settled by the English, a company of Mohawks came within the borders of the town, and secreted themselves in a swamp, where they awaited an opportunity of making an attack upon the Milford Indian (the Pequots). Some Englishmen saw the Mohawks, and were friendly enough to inform their swarthy neighbors of their danger. They immediately rallied in great numbers, raised the warwhoop and rushing suddenly upon the Mohawks gained a complete victory. Among the prisoners was a stout Mohawk warrior, whom the captors decided to kill by famine and torture. They stripped him naked, and having tied him to a stake, left him in the tall grass of the salt meadows to be eaten up by mosquitoes. An Englishman named Hine, who found the poor wretch in this deplorable condition, shocked at this barbarous mode of torture, cut the thongs from his limbs and set him at liberty. He then invited him to his house, gave him food, and helped him to escape. This kind act was never forgotten by the Mohawks. They treated the English of Milford ever after with marked civility and did many kind and friendly acts that testified their gratitude towards their deliverer and his family." (from Hollister's History of Connecticut, Vol. l, page 145)
"For this act he was held in high regard by the neighboring Indians who said that when Hine or his descendants died the Great Spirit took them at once to his big Wigwam." (Baldwin's Genealogy,p 117) 
HINE, Thomas (I1659)
 
380 An Elspeth Clerk married Thomas Aiken in Cupar on 2 Jul 1686. CLERK, Elspeth (I18832)
 
381 AN-SANTA-WAU WAS THE "SACHEM AT MILFORD". HE AND HIS TRIBE WERE THE
INDIANS THAT HAD THE FIRST THANKSGIVING WITH THE PILGRIMS. THIS IS THE
SAME HOLIDAY THAT WE CELEBRATE IN NOVEMBER. 
An-Santa-Wau (Nun-San-Tau-Ay) (I1629)
 
382 Angilbert was a diplomat of Charlemagne, a poet, and an abott of St Riquier. Angilibert (I23163)
 
383 Ann Semark was the daughter of; Thomas Semarc, daughter of Alice Lexham [father William Lexham of Norfolk].
 
Sir William Lexham daughter Agnes married Sir John Cheyne. [not Sir Thomas Laxham as stated by Adeline Bedford see below]
 
Sir John Cheyne devised the manor of Chenies to his wife Agnes, daughter of Sir William Lexham, who being childless, left it by her will, dated 1494, to Sir David Phelyp and his wife, her niece Anne Semark and their heirs, remainder in tail to Guy Sapcote, the son of her niece by her first marriage.  Sir David and his wife dying without issue the manor came to Anne, daughter of Sir Guy Sapcote.
 
Anne Semark was a Kinswomen to the wife of David Cecil.
 
Extract from Chenies Church and Monuments by Adeline Marie Bedford published 1901
 
 The first appearance of the name Cheney or Cheyne in the pages of history dates from the year 1364, when Edward III granted the Manor of Drayton Beauchamp to one Thomas Cheyne, his shield-bearer, a gentleman of some repute in the county of Buckingham, inasmuch as he was the owner of the manor of Cheynes (or Isenhampsted-Cheynes), which had come into the possession of his family a century earlier. This manor had been originally a royal hunting-box, Edward I and Edward II having occasionally resided there. Sir John Cheyne, who next emerges into view, bequeathed the manor before his death, which took place in August, 1468, to his wife Agnes, the daughter and co-heiress of Sir Thomas Laxham. This Lady Cheyne, who was childless, married a second time one Edward Molineux , who died in 1484, the brass which commemorates her and second husband must have been removed to its present place near the porch, from the floor of the Church, as the inscriptions are much worn. This Agnes, Lady Cheyne, left the estate by her will, dated 1494, to her niece Anne Semark, wife of Sir David Phelip.
 
 An interesting brass, bearing an inscription from the book of Job, commemorates this lady. Anne was the heiress of the Semarks, and the possessor of Thornhaugh, Eaton Socon [See Below], and other goodly manors, but Sir William Sapcote (her first husband) , whose family would seem to have been partisans of the White Rose, suffered sequestration of his own and his wife’s estates, and the attainder was only reversed on the petition of his son, Sir Guy Sapcote.
 
 It was probably in this period of straitened for fortunes that Agnes, Lady Cheyne, selected Anne, Lady Phelip, and her son, Sir Guy Sapcote, as her heirs, in tail, the remainder in fee being awarded to John Cheyne of Bois. This selection caused some irritation in the Cheyne family, and , as Dame Agnes had made two wills in her lifetime, litigation ensured. The arbitrators decided in favour of Lady Phelip and her son, thus awarding Chenies to the Sapcotes and their heirs, John Cheyne receiving some other lands under dispute. An abstract of the will of Dame Agnes is given in Coles’ MSS., vol xxxix., pp.38-49. This work contains a great many notes collected by Browne Willis relating to the Cheyne family, one of which is an echo of the asperity with which the disposal of the property of the heiress of the Semarks was regarded. “Dame Agnes Cheyne” he says was the daughter of Sir Nicholas Cogenho (which statement is incorrect, though she owned a manor of that name). “She gave away Chenies from the family.” In process of time the estate (with the redeemed manors) passed to the only daughter of Sir Guy Sapcote, Anne, who married Sir John Broughton of Toddington, in Bedfordshire, and by him had one son and two daughters, The son died young, and the daughters were under the wardship of Cardinal Wolsey in virtue of one of his high offices. Sir Thomas Cheyne (the then representative of the Cheyne family) married the elder daughter, doubtless to strengthen his claim on the estate, and involved himself in a fierce dispute with both King and Cardinal, regarding the wardship of the younger. Anne Boleyn supported him, and feeling ran high on the subject.
 
 This Sir Thomas was a remarkable character, even in his vigour and originality, and his eulogy by Holinshed is worth quoting : “ He kept so bountiful a house and was so liberall and good to his men that well was that nobleman’s son, or gentleman’s son or other that might happen to be preferred into his service.”
 
 The picture of this prosperous household, in which “great wages were trulie paid every quarter and bord wages every Sundaie,” contrasts with the ill-regulated house at Toddington, of which Sir John Russell complains when writing from Ampthill to Cardinal Wolsey in 1529. The youth of his “son Broughton,” as the step-father affectionately calls him, accounted for some disorder; but the ferment created by the alliance with the Cheyne family was a more serious matter. Sir Thomas was, however, a great gentleman. “ The Frenchman,” continues the chronicler, “ both feared and loved him wonderfullie.” He served three Kings and two Queens, as pleased them all. “In the end he was so worthie a gentleman, as his want cannot be lamented by all good and true English hearts. But the Almightie must be served when His good will and pleasure is.” Such was Sir Thomas Cheyne.
 
 The family retained the estates of Chesham Bois, and in1680 a peerage was conferred upon its representative with the title of Viscount Newhaven, which peerage became extinct in 1728.
 
 But to return to the descendant of the Sapcotes, Anne, Lady Broughton. On the death of her first husband she married Sir Richard Jerningham, a well-known personage at the court of Henry VIII. Sir Richard, with his wife, was present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
 
 In 1524 (six years after her second marriage) she again became a widow, and shortly after bestowed her hand on Sir John Russell, afterwards created first Earl of Bedford in 1550.
 On the death of her son by her first marriage, the question of the succession to the Chenies estates was again raised, but a final settlement was made in 1560, with consent of John Cheyne, the descendant of the ancient proprietors, in favour of Francis, her only son by her third marriage, who succeeded his father as second Earl of Bedford in 1556. The chronicler Leland visited the manor house during the life-time of the first Earl and Countess of Bedford, and thus describes his impressions:
 “ The old house of the Cheynies is so translated by my Lord Russel that hath that house in the Righte of his Wife that little or nothing of it yet in a manner remaineth ontranslatid : and a great deal of the House is even newley set up made of Brick and Timber : and fair loggings be new erected in the Garden. The House is within diverse Places richly painted with antique workes of White and Black. And there be about the House two Parkes as I remember. The Manor Place standeth at the West Ende of the Parishe Churche. In the Parishe Churche on the North side of it as in a Chapelle, be two Tumbes of the Cheynies Lords of the Manor and the small village being their name.” (Leland’s Itinerary, fol 122)
 
 The tombs mentioned are in the Bedford Chapel, and Sir George Scharf was of opinion that the mutilated figure of the Knight represents one Sir John Cheyne, who died between 1395 and 1401.
 “ The costume of the Lady,” he adds, “ is that of the fifteenth century and closely resembles that in the effigy of Joan of Navarre, second wife of Henry IV at Canterbury.”
 
Footnotes from the book

 
The ancient estate of Cogenho was sold by the Cheynes to buy Chelsea from the Duke of Hamilton – hence Cheyne Walk, Chelsea.
 
Anne, Countess of Bedford, bequeathed the sum of £50, by her will, dated 1557, to Henry, son of her daughter, Lady Cheyne.
 
Cogenho Note: Northamptonshire
 
1584 Nov. 9.Francis Cheyne.Second son of John C. of Cogenho, and Chesham Bois, Bucks, whom he succ. in the estates on his death 1585, (his elder bro. John being disinherited,) ent. the Inner Temple Nov. 1568, was knighted July 1603, M.P. Cardigan 1584-5, 1586-7 and d.s.p. 1619. His great nephew was cr. Viscount Newhaven 1681, which title became extinct 1738. Francis Cheyne's sister m. Sir John Perrott (Pembrokeshire).
 
Bridges Cogenho [Cogenho Northants]

 
In the 5th year of Edw 1V Richard Barry clerk made a conveyance of the Manor and advowson of Cogenho to Sir John Cheyne and Agnes his wife, daughter of William Lexham.
 
The interesting footnote/pedigree : This William Lexham must be the same person with William de Cogenho who in the Fine Roll, anno 12 Ric II is expressly named the father of the said Agnes.
 
Bridges then draws the Cheyne pedigree with Agnes d of William de Cogenho, Agnes ob as we know 1494. Bridges also states that Agnes and John had one child, Alex ob 1445.
 
The Cogenho estate was sold to purchase Duke Hamilton's estate in Chelsea [1660] ,Cheyne Walk
 
 
Eaton Socon Note from further research:  From A History of Bedfordshire [Victorian] – No mention of Ann Semark but would seem to be the correct Cheney/Cheyne family.
 
In 1399 Katherine daughter of Laurence de Pabenham received pardon, on payment of a fine of 10 Marks, for acquiring two-thirds of Eaton Manor from her father without licence. This was probably on the occasion of her marriage with Sir William Cheney, on whose death she married Sir Thomas Aylesbury , who died in 1418. Eaton Manor next passed to Laurence Cheney, who held one fee of Eaton Barony in 1428. His son Sir John Cheney died seised in 1489. In 1492 Thomas son of John Cheney, and the last of the name to hold the manor, was engaged in litigation with John Ormond and Joan his wife, who declared that Thoms d’Engayne (ob 1367) did not die witout issue, and that they represented such issue. Their claim came to nothing as regards Eaton, which Elizabeth sole daughter and heir of Thomas Cheney, bought in marriage to Thomas Lord Vaux of Harrowden…… In 1708 the Duke of Bedford purchased the Manor.
  
SEMARC, Anne (I28272)
 
384 Annie married second Lino Noel Andreatta on Aug. 16, 1950. GRIFFIN, Annie Lu Dene (I15451)
 
385 Anthony Pierce is thought to have had three wives, but there is a problem with
the first and third wife's children. So for now, we will assume that there are
only two wives. 
Sarah (Mary) (I1286)
 
386 ARONY OF SUTTON OF HOLDERNESS (I) 1332

JOHN DE SUTTON, son and heir, born 24 June 1270. In 1293 and 1296 he was engaged in legal proceedings. In 1301, as Sir John de Sutton, knight, he was witness to a charter granting the manor of Sculcoates and land in Sutton. On 14 December 1303 he had a grant to himself and his heirs of free warren in Sutton, Southcoates and Bransholme. On 5 January 1303/4 he was pardoned, by reason of his services in Scotland, for taking hares in the King's warren of Holderness. From 1306/7 onwards until 1338 he was in commissions as John de Sutton of Holderness. In 1312, after Piers de Gavaston had been beheaded, he, with his brother Nicholas, was fined 100 marks and was in prison at York. On 16 October 1313 John de Sutton was one of the adherents of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, who were pardoned for the death of Piers de Gavaston. In 1314/5 he was involved in a dispute with the Prioress of Swine for taking her cattle at Drypool. From 1311/2 to 1325 a number of summonses to service and to treat with the magnates were issued; but it is difficult to assign any of them with certainty to John de Sutton of Holderness, though some probably relate to him. In 1317 he and his son were charged with violence at Barton-on-Humber. He fought for the King at the Battle of Boroughbridge, 16 March 1321/2. In 1327 he lodged a complaint of trespass on his free warren. On 27 January 1331/2 he was summoned to Parliament by writ directed Johanni de Sutton de Holdernesse, whereby he is held to have become LORD SUTTON OF HOLDERNESS; he was similarly summoned until 14 January 1336/7. In March 1332 he petitioned the King in Council for the restoration of his ferry at Drypool. On 4 December 1335 a commission was appointed on a complaint that he (as John de Sutton, knight, the elder) and others had carried away certain goods at Sutton in Holderness. In 1337, as John de Sutton of Holderness senior, he was party to a settlement by fine of the manors of Southcoates and Sutton in Holderness in connection with his son's marriage. 

On 27 August 1294 he married Constance, daughter of John SAMPSON, of York. He died on or before 24 September 1338. She survived him, and died before 10 February 1345/6. [Complete Peerage XII/1:573-4, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
SUTTON, John de 1st Baron of Holderness (I29807)
 
387 Article in Wikipdia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Vassall#Vassal_family_and_the_Mayflower 
VASSALL, William (I19309)
 
388 At Ye Church of Bendochy, Ye day of Sep 6, 1684, George, lawful son of Patrick
Meik and Elizabeth Ogilvie, was Baptized. Film #993519. Film #l02690 Records
of Birth and Marriages
George Meik became a minister
 
!George Meik, Son of Patrick Meik and Elizabeth Ogilvie, on the 6 Sep 1684
of Bendochy, Redgorton, and Moneydie, Perth, Scotland, and Bapt the 23 Sep
1684 at ye Church of Bendochy. Film #993519
!Marriages of Eli, Fifeshire . 
MEIK, George (I736)
 
389 Baptism 18 Mar 1940? NICLASSON, Britta (I971)
 
390 Baptism 19 May 1908
Endowment 29 Oct 1908
Sealing 23 Mar 1909 
MATSSON, Karna (I919)
 
391 Baptism also 12 Mar 1938 and endowment on 13 May 1938 ANDERSSON, Ingar (I2043)
 
392 Baptism also 18 Mar 1940 and Endowment 28 Nov 1940. HERMANSSON, Niclas (I1002)
 
393 Baptism also 9 May 1905.
Endowment also 21 May 1907 
JEPPSSON, Thomas (I894)
 
394 Baptism also on 15 Apr 1935.
Endowment also on 12 Jul 1935 
ARP, Trin (I1066)
 
395 Baptism also on 8 Nov 1954
Endowment also on 26 Jan 1955 
MOGENSDATTER, Marchen (I1136)
 
396 Baptism is also stated as 6 June 1905 and 19 Mar 1909 for endowment. ANDERSSON, Mans (I909)
 
397 Baptism was also done 16 Mar 1936 and Endowment 27 Jun 1951 LAGE, Hinrich (I2204)
 
398 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5217)
 
399 Baptized also 15 Jun 1897 and endowed 24 Jun 1897. PEITERSEN, Tryne (I2415)
 
400 Baptized by Parley P. Pratt on 13 May 1833. TURNER, Thomas (I6367)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ... 43» Next»